Development of a brief questionnaire (ICQ-S) to monitor inhaled corticosteroid side-effects in clinical practice

Allergy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 372-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Foster ◽  
S. Schokker ◽  
R. Sanderman ◽  
D. S. Postma ◽  
T. van der Molen
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (28) ◽  
pp. 4720-4740 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ting Yang ◽  
Xin Sui ◽  
Bing Yu ◽  
Youqing Shen ◽  
Hailin Cong

Multi-target drugs have gained considerable attention in the last decade owing to their advantages in the treatment of complex diseases and health conditions linked to drug resistance. Single-target drugs, although highly selective, may not necessarily have better efficacy or fewer side effects. Therefore, more attention is being paid to developing drugs that work on multiple targets at the same time, but developing such drugs is a huge challenge for medicinal chemists. Each target must have sufficient activity and have sufficiently characterized pharmacokinetic parameters. Multi-target drugs, which have long been known and effectively used in clinical practice, are briefly discussed in the present article. In addition, in this review, we will discuss the possible applications of multi-target ligands to guide the repositioning of prospective drugs.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Sandra Magnoni ◽  
Andrea Rizzi ◽  
Alberto Visconti ◽  
Claudio F. Donner

Background: COPD is characterized by considerable diversity in terms of clinical signs and symptoms, physiopathological mechanisms, response to treatment and disease progression. For this reason, the identification of different patient subgroups (or possible phenotypes) is important both for prognosis and for therapeutic objectives. Based on the foregoing, AIMAR has decided to conduct a survey on the perception of the prevalence of the different clinical COPD phenotypes/subtypes in the clinical practice of physicians who treat patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and on their therapeutic objectives. Methods: The survey consisted of 19 multiple-choice questions, compiled through a form published online. All the data and answers entered into the system were checked for consistency and completeness directly online at the time they were entered, and each respondent could only complete the questionnaire once. Results: The survey took place from May through October 2012. A total of 1,434 questionnaires (60% of the sample approached) were eligible for analysis, broken down as follows: 537 pulmonologists, 666 general practitioners (GPs), 72 internal medicine specialists, 36 allergists, 30 geriatricians, 93 other specialists. The results show that a significant proportion of GPs (33%) identified more than 50 patients in their practices with a diagnosis of COPD. Although most patients are or have been in treatment with a long-acting bronchodilator, the most common reasons for seeing a GP or a specialist were exacerbations and worsening of the symptoms, suggesting the importance of an appropriate background therapy in order to reduce the risk of disease instability. The frequent exacerbator phenotype was the most commonly found phenotype in clinical practice (by 75% of specialists and 66% of GPs); patients with a prevalent phenotype of chronic bronchitis were reported more often by GPs, while specialists reported a higher number of patients with a prevalent phenotype of emphysema. A medical history of exacerbations and the extent of deterioration of the spirometry parameters were considered to be the major indicators for COPD severity and clinical risk. In managing the frequent exacerbator phenotype, the therapeutic objectives – both for GPs and for specialists – included reducing airway inflammation, improving bronchial dilation, and reducing pulmonary hyperinflation. For this type of patients at high clinical risk, specialists selected a first-line therapeutic option based on a predetermined combination of an inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) and a long-acting β2-agonist bronchodilator (LABA) and a second-line three-drug therapy (combination of ICS and two long-acting bronchodilators), while GPs’ choices are more diversified, without a clear-cut prevalence of one type of treatment. In patients with COPD and concomitant cardiovascular diseases, frequently observed in clinical practice by all physicians, the combination of ICS and LABA was considered the first-choice option by the highest proportion of GPs (43%) and specialists (37%), while a smaller number of specialists (35%) opted for the long acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMA). Both GPs and specialists believe that therapeutic continuity is of primary importance for the achievement of clinical outcomes with all classes of drugs. Conclusions: A good knowledge of COPD has been observed in a high percentage of GPs, indicating an increased awareness of this disease in Primary Health Care. The frequent exacerbator phenotype is viewed by all physicians as the most prevalent in clinical practice, bearing a high risk of hospitalization. For specialists, therapeutic measures aimed at reducing the number and severity of exacerbations are primarily based on the combination of inhaled corticosteroid and bronchodilator, presumably because of the complementary pharmacological action of its components, whereas while GPs’ choices tend to be more diversified. Adherence to medication regimens is of the essence for the achievement of clinical outcomes.


Author(s):  
Peter Wolf ◽  
Thomas Scherer

SummaryGiven the growing use of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy in oncology, the prevalence of endocrine side effects is rapidly increasing. As clinicians are nowadays frequently confronted with these side effects in routine clinical care, awareness, better knowledge of endocrine irAEs and their clinical presentation and diagnosis is crucial for an adequate management. In this short-review we give a compact overview of the recent recommendations for the management of endocrine irAE related to ICIs and highlight difficulties and uncertainties in current clinical practice.


The aim of this chapter is to give the reader a brief overview of the main groups of drugs used in the field of cardiac nursing. For each group of drugs, there is a brief description of why they are used, their mechanism of action, examples commonly used in clinical practice, and nursing considerations. However, it is important that nurses keep themselves updated in the use of drugs by reading research papers and international, national, and local guidelines. For doses of drugs, methods of administration, contraindications, and side effects, use a recognized formulary, in addition to any local policy.


1989 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 470-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonella Goisis ◽  
Maurizio Gorini ◽  
Riccardo Ratti ◽  
Patrizia Luliri

Pain symptomatology is present in 60 % – 80 % of patients affected by advanced cancer, but in most cases it is not adequately treated. Our series, composed of 45 patients affected by cancer in an advanced stage, demonstrates how the application of common concepts of pharmacotherapy, standardized according to a sequential scheme proposed by the WHO, makes it possible to reach total control (in 24.4 % of our cases) or only slight residual persistence (in 68.8 % of our cases) of pain from cancer, with scarce side effects that are easily controlled with symptomatic therapy. According to the type of pain, its behavior in relation to the therapy effected and any previous pharmacologic treatment, the proposed pharmacologic scheme foresees, as the first step, the use of nonnarcotic drugs, eventually associated or substituted with weak narcotics or finally with strong narcotics. Attention is given to modulation of the administration, to guarantee an analgesic effect throughout the day, thus preventing the pain. Irrespective of the analgesic scheme employed, it is more effective if patients affected by chronic oncologic pain (who present an important emotional component) are treated contemporaneously with ansiolytic and antidepressive drugs and those in which nerve structures are involved are treated with steroids. In conclusion, pain of an oncologic patient in an advanced stage can almost always be alleviated or often eliminated by the rigorous application of therapeutic concepts well known by physicians but for various reasons often neglected in clinical practice.


Author(s):  
Aparna Das ◽  
Rebecca Minner ◽  
Lewis Krain ◽  
John Spollen

Treatment resistant schizophrenia (TRS) is often encountered in clinical practice. Clozapine remains the drug of choice in the management of TRS. Several studies have shown that clozapine is the most effective antipsychotic medication to date for TRS. But it is also well known that it has multiple side effects. Some side effects are transient and relatively benign, while other adverse effects are menacing, serious and life-threatening. Delirium may occur with clozapine and is a therapeutic challenge as there is always a risk of precipitating delirium on clozapine rechallenge. Limited management strategies are available as alternatives for the management of psychiatric illness stabilized on clozapine. In this case report, we describe an older adult patient who developed delirium on clozapine. The aims of this case report are to discuss the mechanism by which clozapine leads to delirium, revisit various factors which could possibly lead to delirium, and discuss the different management strategies available for management of psychiatric illness for a patient previously stabilized on clozapine.


1997 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 568-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. DELAERE ◽  
U. MENNEN ◽  
W. VAN HEERDEN ◽  
E. RAUBENHEIMER ◽  
A. M. WIESE ◽  
...  

Rinsing rat femoral arteries with various fluids in experimental conditions similar to those in clinical practice was found to have deleterious effects on the intimal and medial layers of the vessels. No statistically significant difference was found between the effects of Ringer’s lactate and normal saline. Heparinized saline produced significantly less damage to the medial layer and less platelet cell deposition. Lignocaine 2% was found to be extremely damaging to the whole vessel wall, and highly thrombogenic. Nevertheless, all the arteries in each group remained patent 4 days after rinsing.


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