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1.
Sleep Disord ; 2017: 2760650, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28352476

ABSTRACT

Untreated obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has numerous negative health-related consequences. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is generally considered the treatment of choice for OSA, but rates of nonadherence are high. It is believed that OSA is more prevalent among men; therefore understanding how OSA presents among women is limited and treatment adherence has received little research attention. For this study, 29 women were recruited from primary care offices. They completed a questionnaire battery and underwent a night of nocturnal polysomnography (PSG) followed by a visit with a sleep specialist. Women diagnosed with OSA were prescribed CPAP; 2 years later CPAP adherence was evaluated. Results show that approximately half the sample was adherent. There were no significant differences between adherent and nonadherent women on OSA severity; however CPAP adherent women had worse nocturnal and daytime functioning scores at the time of diagnosis. Moreover, when the seven nocturnal and daytime variables were used as predictors in a discriminant analysis, they could predict 87% of adherent and 93% of the nonadherent women. The single most important predictor was nonrefreshing sleep. We discuss the implications of the findings for identifying women in primary care with potential OSA and offer suggestions for enhancing treatment adherence.

2.
Int J Med Inform ; 78(5): 321-9, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19117798

ABSTRACT

CONTENT AND OBJECTIVE: Health professionals now routinely use electronic knowledge resources (EKRs). Few studies have considered EKR-related tensions which may arise in a clinical decision-making context. The present study aims to explore three types of tension: (1) user-computer tension, (2) social tensions, and (3) organizational tensions (constraints associated with organizational routines and health policies). DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, INTERVENTION, SETTING: We conducted a multiple case study, examining Family Medicine residents' searches for information in everyday life. Cases were defined as critical searches for information among 17 first year family medicine residents using InfoRetriever 2003/2004 on a PDA over 1.5 months at McGill University. InfoRetriever-derived information was used within a resident-patient decision-making context in 84 of 156 cases. For each case, residents were interviewed, and extracts of interview transcripts were assigned to themes using specialized software (presence of tension; type of tension). Further computer-assisted lexical-semantic analysis was performed on transcripts. Authors reached consensus on assignments. RESULTS: Twenty-five cases with tension were identified (one case had two types of tension), and illustrate the above mentioned types of tensions: (T1) tension between the resident and InfoRetriever (N=16); (T2) InfoRetriever-related tension between the resident and other social actors, specifically supervisors, other health care professionals and patients (N=7); (T3) InfoRetriever-related tension between the resident and the health organization/system (N=3). CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest EKR usage in a clinical decision-making context may have negative consequences when three types of tension arise in a clinical decision-making context. Illustrated types of tension are interrelated and not mutually exclusive. Awareness of EKR-related tensions may help clinicians to integrate EKRs in practice.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Medical Informatics , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Cohort Studies , Quebec
3.
J Eval Clin Pract ; 10(3): 413-30, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15304142

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: Information retrieval technology tends to become nothing less than crucial in physician daily practice, notably in family medicine. Nevertheless, few studies examine impacts of this technology and their results appear controversial. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: Our article aims to explore these impacts using the medical literature, an organizational case study and the literature on organizations. METHODS: The case study was embedded in an evaluation of the implementation of medical and pharmaceutical databases on handheld computers in a Canadian family medicine centre. Six physicians were interviewed on specific events relative to the use of these databases and on their general perception of impacts of this use on clinical decision making and the doctor-patient relationship. A thematic data analysis was performed concomitantly by both authors. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: Findings indicate six types of impact: practice improvement, reassurance, learning, confirmation, recall and frustration. These findings are interpreted in accordance with both a medical and organizational perspective. The fit with the literature on inter-organizational memory supports the transferability of the findings. In turn, this fit suggests how information retrieval technology may change physician routine. This study suggests a new basis for evaluating the impact of information retrieval technology in daily clinical practice. In conclusion, our paper encourages policy-makers to develop, and physicians to use, this technology.


Subject(s)
Family Practice/organization & administration , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Canada , Computers, Handheld , Interviews as Topic , Organizational Case Studies
4.
Fam Med ; 33(8): 602-6, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11573717

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: This paper describes and evaluates several years of a seminar series designed to stimulate residents to seek evidence-based answers to their clinical questions and incorporate this evidence into practice. METHODS: At the first session, 86 of 89 (97%) residents completed a baseline needs assessment questionnaire. Post-course self-assessment questionnaires measured change from the first to the final seminar session in six domains of interest and skill, as well as residents' preferred sources of information for clinical problem solving up to 2 years after the course. RESULTS: Before the seminars, 48% of residents reported that textbooks were their most important source of information for solving clinical problems. A total of 58 of 75 (77%) residents completed the first post-course questionnaire. Residents reported significant increases in skill at formulating clinical questions and searching for evidence-based answers, appraising reviews, and deciding when and how to incorporate new findings into practice. Use of secondary sources of information such as "Best Evidence," moved up in importance from before the course to after the course. CONCLUSIONS: First-year family practice residents who completed our seminar series have reported increased skill at blending consideration of a clinical problem with the use of secondary sources of information to access evidence to support their health care decisions.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Medicine/education , Family Practice/education , Internship and Residency , Teaching , Clinical Competence , Humans , Information Services/statistics & numerical data , Program Evaluation , Quebec , Surveys and Questionnaires
6.
JAMA ; 285(4): 421-9, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11242426

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Rising costs of medications and inequities in access have sparked calls for drug policy reform in the United States and Canada. Control of drug expenditures by prescription cost-sharing for elderly persons and poor persons is a contentious issue because little is known about the health impact in these subgroups. OBJECTIVES: To determine (1) the impact of introducing prescription drug cost-sharing on use of essential and less essential drugs among elderly persons and welfare recipients and (2) rates of emergency department (ED) visits and serious adverse events associated with reductions in drug use before and after policy implementation. DESIGN AND SETTING: Interrupted time-series analysis of data from 32 months before and 17 months after introduction of a prescription coinsurance and deductible cost-sharing policy in Quebec in 1996. Separate 10-month prepolicy control and postpolicy cohort studies were conducted to estimate the impact of the drug reform on adverse events. PARTICIPANTS: A random sample of 93 950 elderly persons and 55 333 adult welfare medication recipients. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mean daily number of essential and less essential drugs used per month, ED visits, and serious adverse events (hospitalization, nursing home admission, and mortality) before and after policy introduction. RESULTS: After cost-sharing was introduced, use of essential drugs decreased by 9.12% (95% confidence interval [CI], 8.7%-9.6%) in elderly persons and by 14.42% (95% CI, 13.3%-15.6%) in welfare recipients; use of less essential drugs decreased by 15.14% (95% CI, 14.4%-15.9%) and 22.39% (95% CI, 20.9%-23.9%), respectively. The rate (per 10 000 person-months) of serious adverse events associated with reductions in use of essential drugs increased from 5.8 in the prepolicy control cohort to 12.6 in the postpolicy cohort in elderly persons (a net increase of 6.8 [95% CI, 5.6-8.0]) and from 14.7 to 27.6 in welfare recipients (a net increase of 12.9 [95% CI, 10.2-15.5]). Emergency department visit rates related to reductions in the use of essential drugs also increased by 14.2 (95% CI, 8.5-19.9) per 10 000 person-months in elderly persons (prepolicy control cohort, 32.9; postpolicy cohort, 47.1) and by 54.2 (95% CI, 33.5-74.8) among welfare recipients (prepolicy control cohort, 69.6; postpolicy cohort, 123.8). These increases were primarily due to an increase in the proportion of recipients who reduced their use of essential drugs. Reductions in the use of less essential drugs were not associated with an increase in risk of adverse events or ED visits. CONCLUSIONS: In our study, increased cost-sharing for prescription drugs in elderly persons and welfare recipients was followed by reductions in use of essential drugs and a higher rate of serious adverse events and ED visits associated with these reductions.


Subject(s)
Cost Sharing/legislation & jurisprudence , Drug Prescriptions/economics , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Insurance, Pharmaceutical Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Compliance , Self Administration/economics , Adult , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Female , Health Policy , Humans , Insurance, Pharmaceutical Services/economics , Logistic Models , Male , Middle Aged , Poisson Distribution , Poverty , Proportional Hazards Models , Quebec , Self Administration/statistics & numerical data , Social Welfare , Socioeconomic Factors
9.
J Am Geriatr Soc ; 47(2): 184-8, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9988289

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine if recent hospital admission was associated with new outpatient prescribing of benzodiazepines among community-dwelling older people. DESIGN: Nested case-control study using administrative data sets of the provincial health insurance board. SETTING: Province of Quebec. PARTICIPANTS: Cases were 4127 community-dwelling older people who were newly dispensed a benzodiazepine during an 8-month period in 1990. Controls were 16,486 community-dwelling older people who were dispensed any drug (except a benzodiazepine) on the same day as the case-defining index prescription. EXPOSURE AND OUTCOME MEASURES: Admission to an acute care hospital within a 30-day period before a new dispensing of a benzodiazepine. Other variables measured were patient age, gender, number of ambulatory physician visits, healthcare region, Chronic Disease Score (CDS), and use of drugs for depression and psychosis. RESULTS: Cases were more than three times as likely as controls to have been hospitalized in the 30-day period before the index date (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 3.09; 95% CI, 2.78-3.45). The use of prescription drugs for physical health problems modified this association in that cases who used more medication were also more likely to receive a new benzodiazepine prescription following a recent hospital admission (adjusted OR 4.09; 95% CI, 3.59-4.65 when the CDS was equal to 5 vs adjusted OR 1.96; 95% CI, 1.66-2.31 when the CDS was equal to 0). CONCLUSIONS: Recent hospitalization confers an increased risk of a new outpatient benzodiazepine prescription among community-dwelling older people in Quebec. Those who use more medication, and who may be more vulnerable to drug-related adverse events, are more likely to be newly dispensed a benzodiazepine following a recent, acute-care hospital admission.


Subject(s)
Anti-Anxiety Agents/therapeutic use , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Patient Discharge/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Ambulatory Care/statistics & numerical data , Anti-Anxiety Agents/adverse effects , Benzodiazepines , Case-Control Studies , Cohort Studies , Drug Utilization , Female , Humans , Male , Quebec , Risk
10.
Can Fam Physician ; 44: 2666-72, 1998 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9870120

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the annual incidence of patient-defined emergencies and patients' use of emergency services at a family medicine teaching unit. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: Hospital-based family medicine teaching unit in Montreal. PARTICIPANTS: Registered patients attending a family medicine teaching unit during 11 consecutive weekdays. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Annual incidence of patient-defined medical emergencies and use of emergency services at the unit. RESULTS: Eligible patients made 815 visits during the study period; 584 usable questionnaires were returned for a response rate of 71.7%. In the previous 12 months, 37% of patients reported at least one medical emergency. For their last emergency, 42% reported using at least one of the emergency services offered by the clinic. Only 19% of patients with after-hours emergencies reported using our on-call system. Although socioeconomic and clinical variables did not predict the incidence of patient-defined emergencies, multivariate analysis revealed three significant predictors for use: patients with the practice for 5 or more years were more likely to use our services, while patients 75 and older and those with emergencies after hours were less likely to use our services. CONCLUSIONS: In an urban group family practice, annual incidence of medical emergencies among registered patients was 37%. Those whose most recent emergency occurred after hours used the clinics' emergency on-call services disappointingly little.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services , Family Practice , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , Cross-Sectional Studies , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Emergency Service, Hospital , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Middle Aged , Multivariate Analysis , Odds Ratio , Quebec , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , Urban Population
11.
Fam Med ; 30(10): 705-11, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9827341

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: This study compared the effectiveness of two booster strategies designed to improve retention of skills and knowledge in neonatal resuscitation by family practice residents. METHODS: Residents were randomly allocated to one of three groups: video, hands on, or control. Residents in the two experimental groups received a "booster" 3-5 months after the Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) course. All participants completed the follow-up test 6-8 months after taking the course. The main outcome measures consisted of the NRP written examination and the performance checklists. RESULTS: A total of 44 residents completed the study (video, n = 13; hands-on, n = 14; control, n = 17). Overall, participants had significantly lower scores at follow-up than at baseline, indicating deterioration in both neonatal skills and knowledge. Residents in the hands-on booster group made significantly fewer errors across all five checklists in life-supporting but not in lifesaving scores than those allocated to the control and video groups. CONCLUSIONS: The beneficial effect of mannequin practice or video boosters on skills and knowledge retention was less than what had been anticipated, and no benefit could be demonstrated in comparison to the control group. Deteriorating knowledge and skills remain a major concern, since boostering by hands-on or video at 3-5 months do not seem to have an impact on the retention of knowledge or lifesaving skills.


Subject(s)
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation/education , Clinical Competence , Family Practice/education , Intensive Care, Neonatal , Internship and Residency , Teaching/methods , Adult , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male
12.
JAMA ; 278(14): 1164-8, 1997 Oct 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9326476

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: As medical costs are increasingly being scrutinized, there is heightened interest in defining variations in physician behavior in clinical settings. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate if standardized patient (SP) technology is a reliable and feasible method of studying interphysician variations in test ordering, referral requests, prescribing behavior, and visit costs. DESIGN: The study was conducted with blinded SP visits to family medicine and internal medicine residents, university-affiliated family physicians, and community-based family physicians. Resource utilization and visit costs were assessed using test requisitions, consult requests, and prescriptions that were collected by the SPs. SETTING: Physicians' offices in ambulatory care, hospital-based clinics and in the community. PARTICIPANTS: Four persons (aged 57-77 years) trained to simulate having osteoarthritis of the hip. In one simulation, the patient had gastropathy due to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use, and in the other, the patient sought therapy for hip discomfort. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Reliability of cost estimates of physician services, tests, consultations, prescriptions, and total visits and test-ordering behavior for nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory gastropathy. RESULTS: Overall, 112 (63%) of the physicians who were sent invitations to the study agreed to participate. Of 312 total SP visits conducted over a 1-year period, unblinding due to SP detection occurred on 36 occasions (11.5%). Reliable cost estimates of physician services, tests, and consultations, and moderately reliable estimates of total visit costs, were obtained with 4 visits per practicing physician and with 2 visits per resident. There were extreme variations in total visit costs generated by the study physicians. A small number of physicians had a major impact on this variability. CONCLUSION: Standardized patient technology provides a reliable, feasible method to assess variations in resource utilization between physicians.


Subject(s)
Health Resources/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Research/methods , Patient Simulation , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , Diagnosis-Related Groups , Diagnostic Tests, Routine/economics , Diagnostic Tests, Routine/statistics & numerical data , Drug Utilization/statistics & numerical data , Feasibility Studies , Health Resources/economics , Humans , Logistic Models , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/economics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends , Referral and Consultation/statistics & numerical data , Reproducibility of Results , United States
13.
Ann Intern Med ; 127(6): 429-38, 1997 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9312999

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) increases the risk for hospitalization and death from gastrointestinal bleeding and perforation. OBJECTIVES: To 1) estimate the extent to which NSAIDs are prescribed unnecessarily and NSAID-related side effects are inaccurately diagnosed and inappropriately managed and 2) identify the physician and visit characteristics associated with suboptimal use of NSAIDs. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Montreal, Canada. PARTICIPANTS: 112 physicians representing academically affilliated general practitioners, community-based general practitioners, and residents in family medicine and internal medicine. INTERVENTIONS: Blinded, office-based assessment of the management of two clinical cases (chronic hip pain due to early osteoarthritis and NSAID-related gastropathy) using elderly standardized patients. MEASUREMENTS: Quality of drug management and potential predictors of suboptimal drug management. RESULTS: Unnecessary prescriptions for NSAIDs or other drugs were written during 41.7% of visits. Gastropathy related to NSAID use was correctly diagnosed in 93.4% of visits and was acceptably managed in 77.4% of visits. The risk for an unnecessary NSAID prescription was greater when the contraindications to NSAID therapy were incompletely assessed (odds ratio, 2.3 [95% CI, 1.0 to 5.2]) and when the case was managed by residents in internal medicine (odds ratio, 4.1 [CI, 1.2 to 14.7]). The risk for suboptimal management of NSAID-related side effects was increased by incorrect diagnosis (odds ratio, 16.6 [CI, 3.6 to 76.5]) and shorter visits. CONCLUSIONS: Unnecessary NSAID prescribing and suboptimal management of NSAID-related side effects were sufficiently common to raise questions about the appropriateness of NSAID use in the general population. If these results reflect current practice, prescribing patterns may contribute to avoidable gastrointestinal morbidity in elderly persons.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/adverse effects , Drug Prescriptions , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/drug therapy , Intestinal Perforation/drug therapy , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Aged , Chronic Disease , Contraindications , Female , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/chemically induced , Hip Joint , Humans , Intestinal Perforation/chemically induced , Logistic Models , Male , Odds Ratio , Office Visits , Osteoarthritis/drug therapy , Prospective Studies , Single-Blind Method , Time Management
15.
Med Educ ; 31(2): 132-7, 1997 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9231109

ABSTRACT

Drug prescribing for the elderly is an important area of medical knowledge since inappropriate prescribing may lead to significant adverse drug events. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between knowledge of drug use and quality of drug management by general practitioners in practice. A cross-sectional study design was used to evaluate a sample of 37 GPs in practice. A set of common musculoskeletal problems was chosen to evaluate doctors' knowledge of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug use, while performance in practice was assessed using elderly standardized patients. The reliability of knowledge test scores was evaluated using measures of internal consistency. The relationship between knowledge of drug use and quality of therapeutic management in practice was evaluated by rank order and linear correlation analysis. Demographic characteristics of participating and non-participating doctors were similar. The reliability of the knowledge test was 0.55. The reliability of performance scores was 0.66. The correlation between overall performance on the standardized patient cases and total knowledge test score was 0.22 (95% confidence interval = 0-0.63). Knowledge test scores were poorly correlated with quality of therapeutic management in office practice. This indicates that knowledge tests alone cannot predict quality of performance with regard to drug prescribing for the elderly in primary care office practice.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Drug Therapy/standards , Family Practice , Health Services for the Aged/standards , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Quality of Health Care , Quebec
16.
Chem Res Toxicol ; 10(10): 1123-32, 1997 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9348435

ABSTRACT

Experimental studies involving the carcinogenic aromatic amine 2-(acetylamino)fluorene (AAF) have afforded two acetylated DNA adducts, the major one bound to C8 of guanine and a minor adduct bound to N2 of guanine. The minor adduct may be important in carcinogenesis because it persists, while the major adduct is rapidly repaired. Primer extension studies of the minor adduct have indicated that it blocks DNA synthesis, with some bypass and misincorporation of adenine opposite the lesion [Shibutani, S., and Grollman, A.P. (1993) Chem. Res. Toxicol. 6, 819-824]. No experimental structural information is available for this adduct. Extensive minimized potential energy searches involving thousands of trials and molecular dynamics simulations were used to study the conformation of this adduct in three sequences: I, d(C1-G2-C3-[AAF]G4-C5-G6-C7).d(G8-C9-G10-C11-G12-C13-G14+ ++); II, the sequence of Shibutani and Grollman, d(C1-T2-A3-[AAF]G4-T5-C6-A7).d(T8-G9-A10-C11-T12-A13-G14); and III, which is the same as II but with a mismatched adenine in position 11, opposite the lesion. AAF was located in the minor groove in the low-energy structures of all sequences. In the lowest energy form of the C3-[AAF]G4-C5 sequence I, the fluorenyl rings point in the 3' direction along the modified strand and the acetyl in the 5' direction. These orientations are reversed in the second lowest energy structure of this sequence, and the energy of this structure is 1.4 kcal/mol higher. Watson Crick hydrogen bonding is intact in both structures. In the two lowest energy structures of the A3-[AAF]G4-T5 sequence II, the AAF is also located in the minor groove with Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding intact. However, in the lowest energy form, the fluorenyl rings point in the 5' direction and the acetyl in the 3' direction. The energy of the structure with opposite orientation is 5.1 kcal/mol higher. In sequence III with adenine mismatched to the modified guanine, the lowest energy form also had the fluorenyl rings oriented 5' in the minor groove with intact Watson-Crick base pairing. However, the mispaired adenine adopts a syn orientation with Hoogsteen pairing to the modified guanine. These results suggest that the orientation of the AAF in the minor groove may be DNA sequence dependent. Mobile aspects of favored structures derived from molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent and salt support the essentially undistorting nature of this lesion, which is in harmony with its persistence in mammalian systems.


Subject(s)
2-Acetylaminofluorene/metabolism , Carcinogens/metabolism , DNA Adducts/chemistry , Molecular Conformation
17.
Arch Fam Med ; 5(7): 384, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8664995
18.
J Protein Chem ; 15(1): 11-5, 1996 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8838585

ABSTRACT

rap-1A, an anti-oncogene-encoded protein, is a ras-p21-like protein whose sequence is over 80% homologous to p21 and which interacts with the same intracellular target proteins and is activated by the same mechanisms as p21, e.g., by binding GTP in place of GDP. Both interact with effector proteins in the same region, involving residues 32-47. However, activated rap-1A blocks the mitogenic signal transducing effects of p21. Optimal sequence alignment of p21 and rap-1A shows two insertions of rap-1A at ras positions 120 and 138. We have constructed the three-dimensional structure of rap-1A bound to GTP by using the energy-minimized three-dimensional structure of ras-p21 as the basis for the modeling using a stepwise procedure in which identical and homologous amino acid residues in rap-1A are assumed to adopt the same conformation as the corresponding residues in p21. Side-chain conformations for homologous and nonhomologous residues are generated in conformations that are as close as possible to those of the corresponding side chains in p21. The entire structure has been subjected to a nested series of energy minimizations. The final predicted structure has an overall backbone deviation of 0.7 A from that of ras-p21. The effector binding domains from residues 32-47 are identical in both proteins (except for different side chains of different residues at position 45). A major difference occurs in the insertion region at residue 120. This region is in the middle of another effector loop of the p21 protein involving residues 115-126. Differences in sequence and structure in this region may contribute to the differences in cellular functions of these two proteins.


Subject(s)
GTP-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/chemistry , ras Proteins/chemistry , Algorithms , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites/genetics , Computer Graphics , GTP-Binding Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Guanosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation/genetics , Peptides/pharmacology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/genetics , Sequence Alignment , rap GTP-Binding Proteins
20.
J Fam Pract ; 41(5): 473-81, 1995 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7595266

ABSTRACT

To critically assess and summarize the beneficial effects of benzodiazepine therapy for insomnia in community-dwelling elders, a systematic search was undertaken to review all published clinical trials and sleep laboratory studies. The risk of injury for benzodiazepine users was also reviewed. Ten studies met inclusion criteria for assessing benefit. There are no studies regarding the long-term effectiveness of benzodiazepines for the treatment of sleep disorders in the elderly. In the sleep laboratory setting, triazolam 0.125 mg, flurazepam 15 mg, and estazolam 1 mg improved sleep latency by 27 to 30 minutes and increased total sleep time by 47 to 81 minutes for the first 2 to 3 nights of treatment, compared with baseline measurements taken while the patients were receiving placebo. In contrast to these modest short-term benefits, there is an association between the use of benzodiazepines with a long half-life, eg, flurazepam, diazepam, and chlordiazepoxide, and an increased risk of hip fracture in the elderly. Triazolam can cause rebound insomnia as well as anterograde amnesia. Clinicians should discontinue their prescribing of long-acting benzodiazepines for elderly patients with insomnia. More research is needed on the effects of nondrug interventions as well as on short- and intermediate-acting benzodiazepines, such as oxazepam and temazepam, to treat insomnia in community-dwelling elderly.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care , Benzodiazepines/therapeutic use , Hypnotics and Sedatives/therapeutic use , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/drug therapy , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Benzodiazepines/adverse effects , Benzodiazepines/pharmacology , Clinical Trials as Topic , Female , Hip Fractures/etiology , Humans , Hypnotics and Sedatives/adverse effects , Hypnotics and Sedatives/pharmacology , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Risk , Sleep/drug effects
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