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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-42970

ABSTRACT

Decreased bone mineral density (BMD) with age is an increasing health problem, especially for postmenopausal women. Multiple factors have been reported to affect BMD including both genetic and environmental factors such as calcium intake and physical activity. For Thailand, people residing in different regions may differ in BMD due to these factors. However, there is a paucity of data concerning this issue. The objectives of this study were to identify the lifestyle factors which may influence BMD and to investigate the association between BMD and these factors in postmenopausal women who have been living in Bangkok and other provinces in Thailand. Subjects consisted of 466 postmenopausal women aged 46-90 years including 236 Bangkokians (116 early postmenopausals and 120 late postmenopausals) and 230 non-Bangkokians (134 early postmenopausals and 96 late postmenopausals). All were healthy and ambulatory. BMD was measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA, Expert XL). Calcium intake was assessed by food-frequency questionnaire. Data were expressed by mean + /- SEM. There were 22 per cent (n=52), 5.9 per cent (n=14), and 4.2 per cent (n=10) of postmenopausal Bangkokians while 13.9 per cent (n=32), 4.3 per cent (n=10), and 2.2 per cent (n=5) of postmenopausal non-Bangkokians who had low BMD at spine, femoral neck, and at both sites, respectively. Spine BMD (SPBMD) and femoral neck BMD (FNBMD) increased significantly across the quartiles of calcium intake in both groups of subjects (P<0.05) and a significant difference was found between the lowest and the highest quartiles of calcium intake (P<0.05). Moreover, BMD at both regions was shown to be correlated with calcium intake, exercise and sunlight exposure in these subjects (P<0.001). Further analysis revealed higher BMD at spine (0.992 + 0.02 vs 0.945 +/- 0.02 g/cm2, P<0.05) and at femur (0.780 +/- 0.01 vs 0.740 +/- 0.01 g/cm2, P<0.05), calcium intake (348.9 +/- 12.7 vs 316.3 +/- 8.0 mg/day, P<0.05), exercise (2.8 +/- 0.1 vs 2.4 +/- 0.1 h/wk, P<0.001) and sunlight exposure (2.9 +/- 0.06 vs 1.9 +/- 0.04 h/day, P<0.001) were found in late postmenopausal women in other provinces than their counterparts in Bangkok. Nevertheless, no significant difference of BMD at both sites, calcium intake and exercise was found in the early postmenopausal groups of these two areas. CONCLUSIONS: There were significant differences in BMD and lifestyle factors between late postmenopausal women in Bangkok and other provinces. Environmental factors especially calcium intake, exercise and sunlight exposure, may influence BMD in late postmenopausal Thai women.


Subject(s)
Absorptiometry, Photon , Bone Density , Calcium, Dietary/administration & dosage , Exercise , Female , Femur Neck/physiology , Humans , Life Style , Middle Aged , Postmenopause/physiology , Regression Analysis , Spine/physiology , Thailand
2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-45500

ABSTRACT

The study was carried out in 10 females with type 2 diabetes aged 32-60 yrs. All of them were receiving weight-maintaining diets composed of 12 per cent protein, 30 per cent fat and 58 per cent carbohydrate. The only difference among all study-diets was the types of complex carbohydrate used. High-glycemic diet (HG) or low glycemic diet (LG) consisted mainly of glutinous rice or mungbean noodles and the intermediate-glycemic diet (DM) was solely white rice. After the metabolic evaluation of the baseline diet (BL), each subject was placed on DM and followed randomly by HG and LG or vice versa for 4 weeks each. The diurnal plasma glucose levels tended to be lowest after LG. The integrated plasma glucose levels among all diets were not different. The integrated insulin levels after DM and LG did not differ but they were lower than HG and BL. Long-term ingestion of all test-diets spilt less urinary glucose than BL, the lowest was LG. HbA1 levels and nitrogen balance after all diets were better than BL, the best was LG. It was concluded that in addition to strict dietary control, ingestion of mungbean noodles (a low glycemic diet) without increasing fiber intake, can improve diabetic control and protein conservation in type 2 diabetes.


Subject(s)
Adult , Anthropometry , Blood Glucose/analysis , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/diagnosis , Diet, Diabetic/methods , Diet, Protein-Restricted/methods , Dietary Proteins/metabolism , Energy Metabolism , Female , Humans , Long-Term Care , Medicine, Traditional , Middle Aged , Statistics, Nonparametric , Thailand , Treatment Outcome
3.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-41791

ABSTRACT

Red cells and reticulocytes from patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) were analysed using laser and computer technology of H*3 hematology analyzer. Four groups of diabetes mellitus patients: diabetes with normolipemia (DM) (n = 12) and DM patients with excess triglyceride (DM-T) (n = 7) or cholesterol (DM-C) (n = 21) or both (DM-TC) (n = 21) were studied. Mean corpuscular volume of mature red cells (Mean +/- SD = 93.6 +/- 5.5 fl) and reticulocyte (119.1 +/- 12.3 fl) of patients with DM-T was not significantly increased from normal (red cell, 90.0 +/- 3.5 fl; reticulocyte, 115.2 +/- 7.3 fl). Plasma triglyceride levels had no significant correlation with red cell MCV, reticulocyte MCV and %Hb A1c. This suggests that high triglyceride levels in DM are not dose-dependent in producing increased MCV of red cells and reticulocytes. Comparing between DM-T and DM-C, red cells and reticulocytes from DM-C patients had significantly decreased MCV (red cell, 85.5 +/- 6.1 fL; reticulocyte, 103.8 +/- 7.4 fL). Plasma cholesterol levels were inversely correlated with MCV of red cells (r = -0.377, p = 0.003) and also MCV of reticulocytes (r = -0.418, p = 0.001). In addition, cholesterol levels showed considerable correlation with Hb A1c (r = 0.572, p = 0.004). The red cell volume change in DM-C patients may be partly due to the shift in balance of cholesterol exchange between red cell membranes and serum lipoproteins.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Diabetes Mellitus/blood , Erythrocyte Indices , Female , Humans , Hypercholesterolemia/blood , Hypertriglyceridemia/blood , Male , Probability , Reference Values , Reticulocyte Count , Reticulocytes/physiology , Sensitivity and Specificity
4.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-42388

ABSTRACT

This study was conducted to evaluate the possible alteration of serum Cu and Zn levels in 118 medical inpatients (53 women and 65 men) in Ramathibodi Hospital. Patients were classified according to their main clinical diseases: pulmonary (n = 12), renal (14), infectious (30), malignant (9), cardiovascular (22), GI & hepatic (13) and hematological (18) diseases. Significantly increased serum Cu concentrations were found in patients with pulmonary, malignant, cardiovascular and infectious diseases; moreover, 75, 75, 50 and 37 per cent of these diseases, respectively, had serum levels greater than the normal mean + 2SD (23.6 mumol/L). Besides, 5 per cent of patients (3 in renal, 1 in infectious and 2 in GI & hepatic diseases) had low serum Cu levels suggestive of Cu depletion. By contrast, significantly decreased serum Zn concentrations were found in patients with GI & hepatic, infectious, renal, cardiovascular and malignant diseases. Serum Zn levels below the normal mean - 2SD (8.1 mumol/L) were presented in 46, 37, 29, 23 and 22 per cent of cases, respectively. It was found that serum Cu/Zn ratio in our patients not only with cancer but also with other diseases were statistically significant from the normal group. Hence, the use of serum Cu/Zn ratios as markers for the diagnosis of cancer or for staging tumors must be interpreted cautiously.


Subject(s)
Adult , Biomarkers/analysis , Cardiovascular Diseases/blood , Communicable Diseases/blood , Copper/blood , Digestive System Diseases/blood , Female , Humans , Lung Diseases/blood , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasms/blood , Reference Values , Sensitivity and Specificity , Thailand , Zinc/blood
5.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-39166

ABSTRACT

Thiamin status was assessed by erythrocyte transketolase activity (ETKA) and thiamin pyrophosphate effect (TPPE) and riboflavin status by erythrocyte glutathione reductase activity (EGRA) and activity coefficient (AC) in 165 medical inpatients in Ramathibodi Hospital. Based on TPPE > 15 per cent, 9 per cent of the medical inpatients had thiamin depletion. Most of them were patients with renal, cardiovascular, hematological and infectious diseases. Based on AC > or = 1.2, 17 per cent of these inpatients had riboflavin depletion. Most of them were patients with pulmonary, cardiovascular and hematological diseases. Only one patient with pulmonary disease had both thiamin and riboflavin depletion. The proportion of thiamin depletion (2/37) in subjects with thiamin supplementation (mean 32.4, median 6, mode 2 md/d) tended to be less than those without (9/98). But, subjects with riboflavin supplementation (mean 3.3, median 4, mode 1 md/d) had the proportion of riboflavin depletion (0/31) significantly (Z-test, p < 0.005) lower than without supplementation (23/104). The data suggested that although the usual dose of vitamin supplementation in medical inpatients is beneficial thiamin depletion can still be present in catabolic patients.


Subject(s)
Adult , Female , Glutathione Reductase/blood , Hospitalization , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Riboflavin Deficiency/diagnosis , Thiamine Deficiency/diagnosis , Thiamine Pyrophosphate/blood , Transketolase/blood
6.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-38338

ABSTRACT

Twenty-one chronic hemodialysis patients underwent nutritional evaluation and regular dietary counseling to improve the protein and energy intake for 8 weeks. As a result, the mean serum potassium and phosphorus concentrations were increased but were still within the normal ranges. After counseling, the frequency of abnormal TPPE and EGRAC were decreased (9.5 to 4.8 per cent and 19 to 14.3 per cent, respectively) while the frequency of hypervitaminosis A was increased from 67 to 81 per cent. Though the evidence of zinc deficiency was decreased from 81 to 62 per cent after counseling, mean serum zinc levels were low in both periods and inadequate vitamin B status cannot be totally eradicated due to the limitation of food selection. Therefore, regular supplementation of vitamin B complex is required, whereas, vitamin A supplementation must be prohibited in chronic HD patients. Small daily doses of potassium chelator and phosphate binder are mandatory if improvement of nutritional status is aimed to be one of the therapeutic goals.


Subject(s)
Adult , Chelating Agents/administration & dosage , Counseling , Dietary Supplements , Female , Humans , Kidney Failure, Chronic/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Nutritional Status , Phosphorus/blood , Renal Dialysis/adverse effects , Riboflavin/administration & dosage , Thiamine/administration & dosage , Zinc/administration & dosage
7.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-38395

ABSTRACT

Measuring bone mineral density (BMD) is currently the best modality to diagnose osteoporosis and predict future fractures. The use of risk factors to predict BMD and fracture risk has been considered to be inadequate for precise diagnostic purpose, but it may be helpful as a screening tool to determine who actually needs BMD assessment. Recently, artificial neural network (ANN), a nonlinear computational model, has been used in clinical diagnosis and classification. In the present study, we evaluated the risk factors associated with low BMD in Thai postmenopausal women and assessed the prediction of low BMD using an ANN model compared to a logistic regression model. The subjects consisted of 129 Thai postmenopausal women divided into 2 groups, 100 subjects in the training set and the remaining 29 subjects in the validation set. The subjects were classified as having either low BMD or normal BMD by using BMD value 1 SD lower than the mean value of young adults as the cutoff point. Decreased body weight, decreased hip circumference and increased years since menopause were found to be associated with low BMD at the lumbar spine by logistic regression. For the femoral neck, increased age and decreased urinary calcium were associated with low BMD. The models had a sensitivity of 85.0 per cent, a specificity of 11.1 per cent and an accuracy of 62.0 per cent for the diagnosis of low BMD at the lumbar spine when tested in the validation group. For the femoral neck, the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy were 90.5 per cent, 12.5 per cent, and 69.0 per cent, respectively. Models based on ANN correctly classified 65.5 per cent of the subjects in the validation group according to BMD at the lumbar spine with a sensitivity of 80.0 per cent and a specificity of 33.3 per cent while it correctly classified 58.6 per cent of the subjects at the femoral neck with a sensitivity of 76.2 per cent and a specificity of 12.5 per cent. There was no significant difference in terms of accuracy, sensitivity and specificity in the prediction of low BMD at the lumbar spine or the femoral neck between ANN model and logistic regression model. We concluded that ANN does not perform better than convention statistical methods in the prediction of low BMD. The less than perfect performance of the prediction rules used in the prediction of low BMD may be due to the lack of adequate association between the commonly used risk factors and BMD rather than the nature of the computational models.


Subject(s)
Aged , Bone Density , Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted/standards , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Middle Aged , Neural Networks, Computer , Odds Ratio , Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal/diagnosis , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Sensitivity and Specificity , Women's Health
8.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-45185

ABSTRACT

The present study was to investigate the levels of plasma lipid peroxide products including malondialdehyde (MDA) and conjugated dienes (CD), and antioxidants including enzyme superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, catalase, plasma vitamin E and vitamin C in diabetic patients. Fifty-eight diabetic subjects; 16 males and 42 females, aged 30-75 years, were recruited. Eighteen of them had diabetes and forty of them had diabetes with hyperlipidemia. Twenty-seven healthy subjects, 8 males and 19 females, aged 30-75 years, were used as the control group. The results showed that the concentrations of plasma MDA in diabetic patients with or without hyperlipidemia tended to be increased when compared to the controls but there were no significant differences. The CD values were increased significantly in both diabetic groups when compared with control subjects. Significantly elevated levels of plasma MDA and CD were found in diabetic patients with hypertriglyceridemia (> 150 mg%). This increment did not change the antioxidant status in both enzymes and vitamins except that the plasma vitamin E levels and the ratios of tocopherol: cholesterol were increased significantly. An increase of lipid peroxide in plasma may be one important factor in the development of vascular complication and atherosclerosis seen in diabetic patients.


Subject(s)
Adult , Aged , Antioxidants/analysis , Arteriosclerosis/etiology , Ascorbic Acid/blood , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Catalase/blood , Diabetes Mellitus/enzymology , Female , Glutathione Peroxidase/blood , Humans , Hyperlipidemias/metabolism , Lipid Peroxidation , Male , Malondialdehyde/blood , Middle Aged , Superoxide Dismutase/blood , Vitamin E/blood
9.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-40453

ABSTRACT

Serum zinc and copper concentrations were evaluated in 312 healthy adults aged 20-80 years, living in Bangkok and surrounding districts, Thailand. Serum zinc and copper levels were related to a range of factors such as sex, age, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, drinking and smoking habits. Serum zinc and copper concentrations in this population were 12.7 +/- 2.3 (mean +/- S.D.) and 18.0 +/- 2.8 mumol/L. Mean serum zinc concentrations in males and females were 12.7 +/- 2.2 and 12.7 +/- 2.3 mumol/L, whereas, mean serum copper was 17.0 +/- 2.8 and 18.6 +/- 2.7 mumol/L, respectively. Serum copper concentrations in women were significantly higher than in men (p < 0.001) while there were significant differences in serum zinc and copper levels with age. Serum copper was found to be elevated in hypertensives. In general, the results of this study agree with previously reported values from different countries.


Subject(s)
Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Body Mass Index , Copper/blood , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reference Values , Sex Factors , Thailand , Zinc/blood
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