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1.
Hipertens Riesgo Vasc ; 37(2): 56-63, 2020.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32122810

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have a higher cardiovascular risk (CVR). The development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in this population involves traditional CVR factors and factors related to the infection itself, such as chronic inflammatory status, immune dysfunction, as well as the antiretroviral therapy received. Cystatin C (CC) has shown to be useful in assessing the presence of CVR factors and CVD established in the general population, the elderly population, and patients with chronic kidney disease. An analysis was performed on this association in an HIV positive population (HIV+). MATERIAL AND METHODS: Analytical, observational, cross-sectional study was conducted, and included collecting information about CVR factors and CVD in HIV+, as well as measuring CC. The patients were divided into 2 groups: Group1=high CC (≥0.95mg/L) and Group2=normal CC (<0.95mg/L). RESULTS: A total of 95 patients were included. Group1=27 (28.4%) and Group2=68 (71.5%). A value of CC≥0.95mg/L was related to the presence of CVD (P=.01). It was also related with and an increase in waist circumference (P=.05), neck circumference (P=.04), systolic blood pressure (P=.04), diastolic blood pressure (P=.01), Framingham score (P=.03), and Framingham score adapted for HIV (P=.01). After performing multivariate analysis with incorporation of variables associated with CVD in the bivariate analysis, only CC≥0.95mg/L continued to be related to CVD. CONCLUSION: CC≥0.95mg/L was independently associated with CVD. This cut-off point was also linked to higher levels of blood pressure, and higher CVR at 10 years using the Framingham Score and Framingham Score adapted for HIV population.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Cystatin C/metabolism , HIV Infections/complications , Adult , Biomarkers/metabolism , Blood Pressure/physiology , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Heart Disease Risk Factors , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Waist Circumference/physiology , Young Adult
2.
Phlebology ; 26(6): 235-6, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21597047

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Insurance companies have criteria for a venous intervention to be a covered procedure, including symptoms, vein size, and a trial of conservative therapy with compression stockings. The goal of this study was to see the impact of such mandated stocking use on ultimate intervention. METHOD: A retrospective review was done of prospectively gathered data entered in the electronic medical record. Two-hundred consecutive new patients evaluated at our vein center were included. RESULTS: Forty-four of the 200 patients did not require any procedures and 39 patients had procedures scheduled for small or asymptomatic venous changes that did not meet insurance criteria. This left 117 patients with venous symptoms in whom evaluation concluded that a corrective procedure could be performed. These interventions included largely radiofrequency ablation and phlebectomy. Of these 117 patients, 48 had previously used compression stockings. In the remaining 69 patients, stockings were provided on the day of initial consultation and these 69 patients served as the subjects for this review. At three month follow up, one patient reported the stockings help enough that she did not want to pursue correction. Two patients had continued pain and were planning correction once other unrelated issues resolved. Three patients said they never wore the stockings. Sixty-one patients had procedures performed. The average length of stocking use in patients who chose corrective procedures was 103 days. One patient could not be reached. CONCLUSION: Of the patients that reported they used the stockings as prescribed, one chose chronic stocking therapy and 63 patients either had procedures or were planning procedures. Use of prescription stockings was effective in avoiding intervention in one of 64 cases (2%), despite an average trial of 103 days. These results cast doubt on the merits of the use of an insurance company mandated stocking trial.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records , Insurance, Health , Patient Compliance , Stockings, Compression , Venous Insufficiency/therapy , Catheter Ablation/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors
4.
RBM rev. bras. med ; 52(5): 512-9, maio 1995. tab, ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-158761

ABSTRACT

O efeito da ciprofloxacina em pacientes com exacerbaçaoda doença pulmonar obstrutiva crônica (DPOC) foi estudado num ensaio aberto, prospectivo, conduzido em oito centros do Brasil. Setenta e seis pacientes com exacerbaçao aguda purulenta, associada a piora da dispnéia, foram tratados com ciprofloxacina 500 mg, duas vezes ao dia, por sete a dez dias(x=8,2). O VEF1 era de 1,20 / + - 0,50 /. O escarro de 51 pacientes revelou um número significativo de bactérias e polimorfonucleares. Pelo gram, os patógenos predominantes sugeridos foram S.pneumoniae(33 por cento), bacilos gram negativos(22 por cento), M. catarrhalis(18 por cento) e H. influenzae(16 por cento). Avaliaçao clínica e bacteriológica foi repetidaapós 7, 10 e 21 dias da avaliaçao inicial. Sucesso clínico (desaparecimento ou melhora acentuada dos sintomas e sinais) foi observada em 80 por cento dos pacientes. O número de bactérias foi reduzido no escarro em 86 por cento dos casos. Efeitos adversos relacionados ao tratamento foram relatados por 17 por cento dos pacientes. A ciprofloxacina oral é um tratamento efetivo para exacerbaçoes agudasde DPOC.


Subject(s)
Humans , Ciprofloxacin/administration & dosage , Ciprofloxacin/therapeutic use , Lung Diseases, Obstructive/therapy
5.
Comput Nurs ; 9(1): 7-14, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1997141

ABSTRACT

In the nursing literature, the term computer simulation refers exclusively to an educational tool that requires the user to respond to simulated events and to engage in the decision-making process. However, computer simulations are frequently constructed to model dynamic systems (systems that change with time) and to randomly simulate real life events in an effort to study complex problems. In this context, computer simulation is a research methodology and is used in a wide variety of disciplines including the behavioral sciences and business management. Nurses will inevitably encounter research studies where computer simulation has been employed. It is also very likely that this methodology will be used as a nursing research tool in the near future. This article introduces and describes the use of computers to model dynamic systems, the theory that supports simulation modeling as a research methodology, and the issues of model validation. Included are examples of four different research problems from diverse fields of study where computer simulation has been applied.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Research , Nursing Research , Reproducibility of Results , Systems Theory
6.
Am J Surg ; 158(2): 95-9; discussion 100, 1989 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2757150

ABSTRACT

Although the use of shunts for carotid artery surgery remains controversial, the hemodynamics of the shunts currently available have not been carefully evaluated in vivo. We developed an animal model using contralateral carotid artery ligation, which produced ipsilateral carotid blood flows (640 +/- 44 ml/min) and internal carotid stump pressures (52 +/- 4 mm Hg) over a range commonly seen in carotid artery surgery. Seven shunts were tested and included Javid; 10F and 8F Brener; and 14F, 12F, 10F, and 8F Argyle shunts. The hemodynamic features evaluated for each shunt included maximum shunt flow, the pressure gradients occurring across each shunt, the increase in cerebral perfusion pressure over occlusion pressure associated with shunt placement, and the distal pressure pulse waveform. The larger diameter shunts were consistently better than the smaller diameter shunts. The correlation between shunt flow and the increase in distal pressure produced by shunt placement was high (r = 0.98, p less than 0.05), confirming that high flow rates maintained high perfusion pressure. By relating maximum shunt flow and the pressure gradient to the change in the pressure pulse contour for each shunt, it could be demonstrated that at the larger diameters, straight shunts displayed superior hemodynamic characteristics compared with tapered shunts, whereas at smaller diameters, tapered shunts were superior.


Subject(s)
Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical , Carotid Artery, Internal/surgery , Hemodynamics , Animals , Blood Flow Velocity , Blood Pressure , Brain/physiology , Carotid Artery, Internal/physiology , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Goats , Intraoperative Period
7.
Acta Morphol Hung ; 37(3-4): 135-45, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2486457

ABSTRACT

The submandibular glands of mice show "masculinization" during pregnancy and lactation. In this work involving morphological, morphometric and histochemical analyses we observed an increase in the volume fraction and area of the granular ducts and the apical granulation of their cells. The maximum response to the masculinization occurred on the 15th day of pregnancy. From this day on a decrease in the volume fraction of the granular ducts starts, even though the gland keeps the "masculine pattern" throughout the end of the lactation phase. Our observations support the intermodulation between striated and granular ducts. In our opinion, the "masculinization" process of the submandibular gland is related to the progesterone increase which takes place during pregnancy; its maintenance during lactation is also connected to prolactin.


Subject(s)
Lactation , Pregnancy, Animal , Submandibular Gland/anatomy & histology , Animals , Body Weight/physiology , Female , Histocytochemistry , Lactation/metabolism , Mice , Organ Size/physiology , Pregnancy , Pregnancy, Animal/metabolism , Submandibular Gland/metabolism
9.
Urology ; 30(4): 333-6, 1987 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3310366

ABSTRACT

The relative mean DNA content calculation was performed by flow cytometry on single cell suspensions prepared from fresh and paraffin-embedded specimens of 10 patients with surgically resected urogenital cancer. Samples were processed by a modified method of Hedley et al. including two hours of pepsinizing time, ribonuclease digestion, and propidium iodide staining. The mean DNA content which is a quantitative description of flow cytometric characteristics was significantly correlated between the fresh and paraffin-embedded materials (n = 10, r = 0.869, p less than 0.01). This method allows for the objective, retrospective analysis of DNA content in relation to diagnosis and prognosis of urogenital cancer.


Subject(s)
DNA, Neoplasm/analysis , Urogenital Neoplasms/analysis , Fixatives , Flow Cytometry , Formaldehyde , Histological Techniques , Humans , Kidney Neoplasms/analysis , Male , Paraffin , Prostatic Neoplasms/analysis , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/analysis
10.
Arch Surg ; 121(8): 908-12, 1986 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3729708

ABSTRACT

We reviewed records of 18 patients with external duodenal fistula. Fourteen patients developed duodenal fistulas following an operation, two following abdominal trauma, and two as a complication of other diseases. Copious drainage of intestinal juice from the abdomen was the most common presenting sign. Contrast fistulography, upper gastrointestinal tract roentgenography, and T-tube cholangiography were useful diagnostic studies. Nine patients were treated nonoperatively; nine patients required at least one operation. Complications occurred frequently; of special interest were three patients who developed postoperative acute cholecystitis. Six patients died (33% mortality). Factors associated with mortality were advanced age (greater than 65 years), uncontrolled infection and multiple organ failure, high-output fistula, malnutrition, delay in diagnosis (more than three days), and multiple reoperations to treat the fistula or complications. External duodenal fistula continues to be a life-threatening problem whether it is postoperative, posttraumatic, or secondary to a disease process.


Subject(s)
Duodenal Diseases/etiology , Intestinal Fistula/etiology , Abdominal Injuries/complications , Adult , Aged , Digestive System Surgical Procedures , Drainage , Duodenal Diseases/complications , Duodenal Diseases/therapy , Female , Humans , Intestinal Fistula/complications , Intestinal Fistula/therapy , Intestinal Secretions , Male , Middle Aged , Postoperative Complications
11.
Rev. bras. ortop ; 19(3): 111-6, 1984.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-21044

ABSTRACT

Devido a facilidade das provas de tracao, pela solicitacao transversa dos cilindros, comparou-se a tensao de ruptura classica longitudinal com a tensao de ruptura de cilindros longitudinais, radiais e transversos. Os resultados nao se mostraram uniformes, devido a extensa anisotropia ossea


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Bone and Bones , Fractures, Bone , Traction
14.
Pediatrics ; 66(2): 228-32, 1980 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6773022

ABSTRACT

Oxygen consumption ((Vo2), carbon dioxide production (Vco2), and insensible water loss (IWL) were measured simultaneously in nine nondistressed, appropriately grown, premature infants less than 2 weeks old, nursed in a conventional, blow-warmed incubator, and were compared with measurements made on the same infants under a radiant heater. The infants had a pronounced increase (148% on average) in IWL when under the radiant heater (P < .001) whereas Vo2 increased by only 4.6% (P = .073). Abdominal skin temperature (servocontrolled to maintain 36.5 C) and esophageal temperature were the same under both conditions, but ambient air temperature was 0.7 C higher in the incubator (P < 05). Although a positive correlation was found between the increase in IWL and the change in Vo2 (r = .75, P < .01), the large increase in IWL (and, therefore, evaporative heat loss) under the radiant heater is out of proportion to, and cannot be accounted for, by the change in metabolic heat production. The heat transfer processes involved in maintaining body temperature constant under these conditions require further study.


Subject(s)
Incubators, Infant , Infant, Premature , Oxygen Consumption , Water Loss, Insensible , Body Temperature Regulation , Calorimetry , Carbon Dioxide/biosynthesis , Energy Metabolism , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male
16.
Appl Opt ; 14(1): 94-6, 1975 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20134836

ABSTRACT

We describe the construction of a compact and relatively inexpensive external cavity to be used with III-V compound semiconductor injection lasers. The operation of a typical GaAs diode in the cavity and some of the limiting performance factors are discussed.

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