LONG-TERM STUDY IN THE HOME; DIET AND RESULTS

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 652-667

A long-term metabolic balance study of healthy infants was performed in their homes to determine food consumption and the intake and retention of calcium, phosphorus, stable strontium, and strontium-90. Balances were measured in consecutive 28-day periods. The diets were selected by the parents on the advice of their pediatricians, and consisted of milk, commercially available premodified milk formulas, and packaged infant foods. The only strontium-90 fed to the infants was that which was present in foods and water due to fallout. Aliquots of all foods were analyzed for the substances of interest. Excreta were collected in paper diapers for analysis. Calcium, phosphorus, and strontium-90 balances are available for 30 infants in a total of 214 periods; stable strontium balances are available for 10 infants in 56 periods. The average age of the 30 infants was 164 days and the average weight was 7.4 kg. The average daily intake of milk and formula decreased from 654 ml at age 31 to 60 days to 590 ml at age 271 to 300 days; in the same interval, the average daily consumption of all other infant food increased from 80 to 413 gm. The diet in this study differed from uncontrolled diets mainly in the use of formula instead of cows' milk for the older infants, and the substitution of a packaged cereal mix for the more common dry cereal that is mixed with milk just before feeding. Use of the dry cereal would have added approximately 80 ml to the measured average consumption of 615 ml of milk per day. A major problem in performing an accurate metabolic balance study of strontium lies in the small fractional retention of the substance. As a result, small systematic errors in determining intake and collecting excreta lead to fractionally large systematic retention errors, and small random errors in intake and excreta analysis lead to large random retention errors. Fortunately, the large number of retention values reduces the random error of the mean. Typical individual retentions of stable strontium and strontium-90 have standard deviations of 38 and 24%, respectively; standard deviations of the mean of 56 stable strontium and 200 strontium-90 retentions are 5 and 2%, respectively. Based on numerical estimates of the recognized systematic errors, the respective true values of stable strontium and strontium-90 retention are believed to be 20 and 13% lower than the measured averages. The average retentions have been corrected by these percentages. The probable error of the systematic correction is undoubtedly large, but is smaller than the correction factor, according to three comparisons with independently derived values. This study demonstrates the feasibility of long-term metabolic balance studies in the home; it also indicates the need for internal controls in the samples, highly precise analyses, and methods for reducing systematic errors. For information on intake, this type of study complements surveys by questionnaires and interviews by providing more accurate values for a much smaller population. For retention, the study may be less accurate than one performed in a metabolic ward, but can be extended over a long time with less stress on the infant. Results of this type of study may be tested for accuracy by comparison with studies in metabolic wards, by tissue analyses for accumulated retention, and by in vivo measurements of the retention of radionuclides, although each of these has its own inherent inaccuracies that must be considered.

1986 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 175-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert R Luther ◽  
Clemeth J Maurath ◽  
Michael J Klepper ◽  
Robert O Peckinpaugh ◽  
Gary L Ringham ◽  
...  

The long-term safety and antihypertensive efficacy of carteolol were evaluated in an open-label, multicenter trial of 245 hypertensive patients. For those patients maintained on carteolol monotherapy, three months of treatment with once-daily oral doses of carteolol ranging from 2.5 to 60 mg reduced the mean recumbent blood pressure by 12/14 mm Hg from baseline values of 151/100. Blood pressure reductions observed at three months were maintained throughout the study. The final daily dose of carteolol for most patients was 10 mg or less. Carteolol was shown to be safe and well tolerated by most patients.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (9) ◽  
pp. 3692-3697 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hehua Ye ◽  
Jiming Zhang ◽  
Yiyong Qian

Objective To investigate the long-term safety and efficacy of Nd:YAG laser anterior capsulotomy for the treatment of anterior capsular phimosis. Methods We retrospectively analyzed a consecutive case series of Nd:YAG laser anterior capsulotomy in patients with anterior capsular phimosis, who were treated between November 2012 and April 2014. Data collected included risk factors, interval between surgery and capsulotomy, best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), and diameter of anterior capsule opening before and after Nd:YAG laser anterior capsulotomy. Results Eleven eyes of 11 patients were included in the study. The mean follow-up time was 30.1 ± 4.5 months (range: 26–42 months). At the last follow-up, the mean diameter of the anterior capsule opening was 5.1 ± 0.2 mm, which was significantly greater than the diameter before laser capsulotomy (2.2 ± 0.8 mm). BCVA remained stable or improved in nine eyes (81.8%) following capsulotomy. No patients experienced recurrence of phimosis. Conclusions In a long-term study of >2 years, we found that Nd:YAG laser anterior capsulotomy is safe and effective for the treatment of anterior capsule phimosis.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 743-748

UNCONTROLLED EXCRETORY PATHS Estimates of the order of magnitude of calcium and phosphorus losses by uncontrolled paths (see Part 1–Accuracy) indicated that only sweating and drooling were significant. No commonly accepted values are available for losses by either of these paths, probably because the daily amounts are small and extremely variable. The daily amounts of calcium and phosphorus in sweat listed in Table XXXII are the averages from 14 infants between the ages of 14 and 196 days who consumed cows' milk.1 The range of reported values is large, as expected for a function that depends on so many factors. A fraction of the amount attributed to sweat may be desquamation of the skin.2 The study cited was the only one found in the literature that pertained to infants. Neither the average amount of saliva lost by infants between meals nor its calcium and phosphorus concentrations are known. See Table in the PDF File. The values in Table XXXII are based on the assumption that 100 ml saliva is lost daily between meals and that the calcium and phosphorus concentrations are those in adults' saliva.3 Daily losses of strontium in sweat and saliva were computed from the product of the daily calcium losses, the strontium/calcium ratio in the exchangeable pool (Figure 21 ), and the respective ORsweat/plasma and ORendogenous/plasma. The ORsweat/plasma was taken to be 1.5, the average value for three adults given intravenous infusions of stable strontium.4 An ORendogenous/plasma of unity5 was used. Average losses of strontium-90 in sweat and saliva (Table XXXIII ) were assumed to be in the same proportion relative to the exchangeable pool as losses of stable strontium, in view of their identical chemical behavior.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ng Jonathan Patrick ◽  
Lau Lawrence Chun Man ◽  
Chau Wai-Wang ◽  
Ong Michael Tim-Yun ◽  
Cheung Kin Wing ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The literature comparing the long-term outcomes and survivorship of computer navigation-assisted and conventional total knee replacement (TKR) is sparse. Moreover, of the available comparative studies with follow-up duration of more than 10 years, the results seem to be conflicting. The purpose of this long-term study was to compare the clinical and radiological outcomes, and implant survivorship, of TKR performed with and without computer navigation. Methods We retrospectively compared the results of 49 computer-navigated TKRs and 139 conventional TKRs. The mean age of the patients was 67.9 (range 52–81) years for the navigation group and 67.1 (range 50–80) years for the conventional TKR group. The mean duration of follow-up for the conventional and navigation TKR groups was 12.9 and 13.2 years, respectively. Clinical and radiographic follow-up examinations of the patients were performed at 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months and 6 months post-operatively, and at 1-year intervals thereafter. Results There were no significant differences in the post-operative Knee Society knee and function score between the two groups. The mean overall deviation from neutral alignment and the radiological outliers were significantly higher in the conventional TKR group. The overall survival rates at 17 years were 92.9% for the navigation group and 95.6% for the conventional TKR group (p = 0.62). Conclusions Navigated TKR resulted in fewer radiological outliers; however, this did not translate to better long-term functional outcomes or implant survival.


2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 421-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.F. Barrowclough ◽  
M.A. Schroeder

Natal dispersal distances are difficult to measure, yet important for estimating the genetic structure and demographic connectedness of natural populations. Here we provide estimates of the distributions of male and female natal dispersal distances from a long-term study of Spruce Grouse (Falcipennis canadensis (L., 1758)) in southwestern Alberta, Canada, based on individuals marked as brood chicks and re-observed as adults during subsequent breeding seasons. The mean distance dispersed by females (2.33 km) was twice that of males (1.13 km), and both dispersal distributions were leptokurtic. Given estimates of population density and survivorship, we estimated the genetic effective neighborhood size of this population as approximately 541 individuals. We computed equivalent estimates for two additional long-term studies of this species, based on data available in the literature; mean natal dispersal distances, averaged across sexes, ranged from 1.73 to 2.73 km for the three populations; effective deme sizes ranged from 541 to 890. Consequently, three widespread populations of Spruce Grouse yielded roughly similar estimates of demographic and genetic structure.


1999 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 108-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Werner Verschueren ◽  
Marc David ◽  
Myriam Vrancken

AbstractWe present the first results of a long-term study to increase the external accuracy of (relative and absolute) radial velocities of early-type stars below the 1 km/s level. The accuracy suffers mainly from important systematic errors caused by intrinsic object-template mismatch in cross-correlation. Based on synthetic spectra, the magnitude of these mismatch errors is shown in different spectral regions and for different rotational velocities around spectral-type mid-A. A line selection and combination scheme is proposed which optimizes the accuracy (systematic errors) in view of the precision (random errors) required.


1979 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 677-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terry L. Wiley ◽  
Michael G. Block

The basic principles of deriving static acoustic-immittance measurements in human ears are presented. Problems caused by differences in instrumentation, computations, and measurement technique are discussed in terms of the utility and comparisons of static acoustic-immittance measurements. Data are provided regarding the short- and long-term variabilities inherent to static measurements. Although our subject pool was relatively small, certain patterns were apparent in the short- and long-term variability inherent to static acoustic-impedance measurements. The intra-event variability about the mean static acoustic impedance was small and varied inversely with probe-tone frequency. Standard deviations were less than 50 acoustic ohms for a 220-Hz probe tone and less than 25 acoustic ohms for a 660-Hz probe tone. Session-to-session variability in static measurements varied little within subjects but varied greatly across subjects. There was little correlation between the mean and standard deviation for within-subject measurements. Standard deviations across subjects approximate a relatively constant proportion (30–40%) of the mean static value. The need for large population studies of static acoustic-immittance measurements is noted.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 405
Author(s):  
Luisa Frizziero ◽  
Andrea Calciati ◽  
Tommaso Torresin ◽  
Giulia Midena ◽  
Raffaele Parrozzani ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of 577-nm subthreshold micropulse laser (SMPL) treatment in a large population of patients affected by mild diabetic macular edema (DME) in a real-life setting. We retrospectively evaluated 134 eyes affected by previously untreated center-involving mild DME, and treated with 577-nm SMPL, using fixed parameters. Retreatment was performed at 3 months, in case of persistent retinal thickening. Optical coherence tomography (OCT), along with short and near-infrared fundus autofluorescence, were used to confirm long-term safety. At the end of at least one year follow-up, a significant improvement in visual acuity was documented, compared to baseline (77.3 ± 4.5 and 79.4 ± 4.4 ETDRS score at baseline and at final follow-up, respectively), as well as a reduction in the mean retinal thickness of the thickest ETDRS macular sector at baseline. A reduction in the central retinal thickness and the mean thickness of the nine ETDRS sectors was also found, without reaching statistical significance. No patients required intravitreal injections. No adverse effects were detected. This study suggests that 577-nm SMPL is a safe and repeatable treatment for mild DME that may be applied to real-life clinical settings using fixed parameters and protocols.


Author(s):  
Achyut N. Pandey ◽  
Parul Singh ◽  
Manoj Tyagi

The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency and intraoperative difficulties associated with pseudoexfoliation (PXF) syndrome at a tertiary eye care center in Garhwal Himalayan region. Methods: This study included patients scheduled for cataract surgery who were diagnosed with PXF syndrome. All patients had gone through a complete ophthalmologic evaluation, including slit-lamp examination, tonometry, gonioscopy, and ophthalmoscopy prior to the surgery. Cataract surgeries were done by a single surgeon who reported the intra-operative difficulties. Results: In total, 424 phakic eyes of 934 patients were evaluated, 126 of whom (22.1%) were diagnosed with PXF syndrome. Most eyes (n = 81, 35.8%) with PXF syndrome were ≥81 years old. Eighty-six eyes (38.1%) had bilateral involvement, whereas 70 (30.9%) had right or left eye involvement. Further, PXF material was distributed on the iris, pupil, and lens in 70 eyes (30.9%) and on the pupillary margin in 36 eyes (15.9%). The mean pupillary dilation was 5.1 (±1.4) mm in patients with PXF syndrome compared with 7.2 (±1.6) mm in those without it (P = 0.03). Grade VI cataract was observed in 93 eyes (41.2%) and hypermature cataract was the most commonly observed cataract stage. Twenty-one eyes (9.3%) had increased intraocular pressure. Intraoperative difficulties were encountered in 62 eyes (27.4%) with poor pupillary dilation being the most common problem (32 eyes, 14.2%), followed by zonular dehiscence (18 eyes, 8%). Conclusion: This hospital-based study showed that PXF syndrome is common in rural population of Garhwal region and that the intraoperative complication rate in these patients is high. Surgeons should be aware of the potential complications of cataract procedures in patients with PEX. Caution should be taken at every stage of the surgery to prevent these complications, and surgeons should be knowledgeable and skilful in complication management should they arise.


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