scholarly journals Effects of Ranolazine on Disease-Specific Health Status and Quality of Life Among Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes

2008 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzanne V. Arnold ◽  
David A. Morrow ◽  
Kaijun Wang ◽  
Yang Lei ◽  
Elizabeth M. Mahoney ◽  
...  
Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (Suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Suveen Angraal ◽  
Vittal Hejjaji ◽  
Yuanyuan Tang ◽  
Laith Derbas ◽  
Manesh R Patel ◽  
...  

Introduction: Improving health status; symptoms, function, and quality of life (QoL) are key treatment goals in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and claudication. Hypothesis: Compared with medical management only, early revascularization in patients with claudication is associated with greater improvements in disease-specific health status. Methods: Patients with new or worsening claudication, who underwent revascularization within 3 months of enrolment or were treated non-invasively (statin, aspirin, cilostazol, supervised exercise therapy, risk factor management) were identified from 16 vascular medicine clinics in the US, Netherlands and Australia participating in the PORTRAITregistry. Patients were propensity-matched on the likelihood of receiving invasive therapy. The Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ) was used to assess patients’ disease-specific health status at enrollment, and at 3, 6 and 12 months of follow-up using hierarchical Generalized Linear Models for repeated measures. Results: Among 1142 patients (mean age of 67.7 years, 63.0% male), 229 (20.1%) underwent early revascularization while 913 (79.9%) were managed non-invasively. At baseline, patients who underwent invasive vs. non-invasive management had lower PAQ summary (mean ± SD; 44.41 ± 19.98 vs 50.98 ± 21.79, P<0.001) and quality of life scores (45.52 ± 23.95 vs 52.43 ± 26.19, P<0.001). Compared with patients treated non-invasively, patients who underwent revascularization reported improved health status over time, through 1 year of follow up (P <0.001 for all PAQ domains) ( Figure 1 ). Conclusion: Patients who underwent early revascularization had worse baseline health status but a greater improvement over 1 year of follow-up when compared with patients managed without revascularization. Summarizing real-world health status benefits following a PAD diagnosis can support preference-sensitive decisions for PAD management.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1592
Author(s):  
Laura Al-Dakhiel Winkler ◽  
Claire Gudex ◽  
Mia Beck Lichtenstein ◽  
Michael Ejnar Røder ◽  
Carol E. Adair ◽  
...  

A better understanding of explanatory factors for disease-specific health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in anorexia nervosa (AN) could help direct treatment providers to aspects of the most relevance for patient wellbeing and recovery. We aimed to investigate whether factors associated with HRQoL are the same for women with AN and normal-weight controls. The participants in this study were women with AN recruited from specialized eating disorder centers in Denmark and healthy, normal-weight controls invited via online social media. Participants completed online questionnaires on medical history, disease-specific HRQoL (Eating Disorders Quality of Life Scale, EDQLS) and generic HRQoL (SF-36), eating disorder symptomatology, depression, psychological wellbeing, and work and social adjustment. Questionnaires were fully completed by 211 women with AN (median age 21.7 years) and 199 controls (median age 23.9 years). Women with AN had poorer scores on all measures, i.e., worse HRQoL, psychological health, and work/social functioning. Eating disorder symptomatology affected EDQLS score in both groups, but poorer HRQoL in women with AN was also significantly associated with worse scores on bulimia, maturity fears, depression, vitality, and with older age. The factors investigated together explained 79% of the variance in EDQLS score. Management of disordered self-assessment and thought processes may be of particular importance to women with AN. Greater emphasis on these aspects alongside weight gain could enhance patient–clinician alliance and contribute to better treatment outcomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
P Pijpops ◽  
S Apers ◽  
C Meuleman ◽  
C Tomassetti ◽  
E Dancet

Abstract Study question Which pre-operative endometriosis pain symptom is most troublesome for the quality-of-life of women assessed at different meta-levels? Summary answer Of five pain symptoms chronic pelvic pain is most troublesome or has the strongest correlation to women’s overall quality-of-life and overall and endometriosis-specific health status. What is known already Endometriosis affects women’s quality of life negatively, and its impact seems to depend more on women’s symptoms than on their degree of endometriosis. Experts proposed to include ‘the most troublesome symptom’ and ‘overall pain’ as core outcomes but did not define how to assess these outcomes. It would be interesting to find out which pain symptom (i.e. assessed for presence and intensity) has most impact on women’s quality-of-life assessed at different meta-levels, including: overall quality-of-life (depending on amongst others one’s professional and relational life besides health), general health status and endometriosis-specific health status. Study design, size, duration A prospective survey addressed 277 adult women scheduled for diagnostic and/or therapeutic surgery in a University endometriosis clinic between October 2016 and November 2019. Women were reminded twice of our request to fill out the coded but anonymous questionnaire package assessing five pain symptoms (i.e. chronic pelvic pain, dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia, dysuria and dyschezia) and assessing quality-of-life at three different meta-levels. Participants/materials, setting, methods Women scored five endometriosis symptoms between 0 (no pain) and 10 (worst imaginable pain), combined into ‘overall pain’ (0-50). ‘Overall quality-of-life’ was assessed with the Linear Analogue Scale (LAS; the higher, the better). General and endometriosis-specific health status were assessed with the overall scores of the EuroQol-5D and the Endometriosis-Health-Profile-30 (the higher, the better). Pearson correlation coefficients between the six pain scores and three measures of quality-of-life were computed (p = 0.003; 0.05/18 as Bonferroni correction). Main results and the role of chance A total of 227 women took part (participation rate=82%) and the data of 202 women (mean age 31±5 years old) with surgically confirmed endometriosis were analysed. In the previous six months, the majority of women reported chronic pelvic pain (56%), dyspareunia (55%), dysmenorrhea (56%) and/or dyschezia (58.4%), while only some reported dysuria (25%). Women’s mean overall pain score was 20 (±12). Women’s mean overall quality-of-life was 65 (±16). On average women rated their general health status to be 62 (±18) and their mean endometriosis-specific health status was 53 (±18). Only the pain symptom chronic pelvic pain was correlated (p &lt; 0.001) to assessments of quality-of-Life at all three meta-levels. The correlation for endometriosis-specific health status was large (r= -0.574), while the others were medium (r= -0.343 & r= -0.324). After taking account of the Bonferroni correction for multiple testing the remaining four pain symptoms only had a medium correlation (p &lt; 0.001) to endometriosis-specific health status (r= -0.356 – -0.265; p &lt; 0.001) and they were not correlated to overall quality-of-Life or general health status. Overall pain had a medium correlation (p &lt; 0.001) to Overall quality-of-Life (r= -0.270) and general health status (r= -0.259) and a strong correlation (p &lt; 0.001) to endometriosis-specific health status (r= -0.529). Limitations, reasons for caution The majority of patients (60%) of the recruiting University endometriosis clinic had severe endometriosis (AFS-IV) and this study could be repeated in another setting. Directly asking women which pain symptom is most troublesome to them would be interesting besides exploring correlations between pain symptoms and quality of life. Wider implications of the findings Nurses, midwives and other health care professionals should devote attention to chronic pelvic pain during the anamnesis and women-centred care as this pain symptom is most troublesome for women’s quality of life. Whether surgery decreases chronic pelvic pain and overall pain is currently followed-up in the studied prospective cohort. Trial registration number Not applicable


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica K. McCaig ◽  
Owen S. Henry ◽  
Danielle A. Stamm ◽  
Gaby Dorval ◽  
Alexis Hurley ◽  
...  

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