scholarly journals Thrombolytic Therapy in the Acute Period of Aortic Thromboembolism in Cats

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Billy Hannabuss

<strong>PICO question</strong><br /><p>Of cats that present with aortic thromboembolism, do patients that receive thrombolytic therapy in the acute phase have improved survival as compared to those who do not?</p><strong>Clinical bottom line</strong><br /><p>Based on the current available evidence, the use of thrombolytic therapy in the acute phase of aortic thromboembolism (ATE) does not appear to improve survival when compared to conventional supportive therapy. Frequently reported adverse side effects further questions its merits, and large scale controlled clinical trials would be required to further evaluate any benefit in the use of this therapy.</p><br /> <img src="https://www.veterinaryevidence.org/rcvskmod/icons/oa-icon.jpg" alt="Open Access" /> <img src="https://www.veterinaryevidence.org/rcvskmod/icons/pr-icon.jpg" alt="Peer Reviewed" />

1985 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 349-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter W. Letendre ◽  
Douglas J. DeJong ◽  
Donald R. Miller

The use of methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis is reviewed. Methotrexate, a folic acid antagonist, is sometimes employed in an attempt to symptomatically control patients whose disease does not respond adequately to conventional therapies. Systemic administration of 7.5–15 mg/wk in a “pulse” fashion appears to be effective without precipitating severe adverse effects. However, concern over potentially serious side effects and a lack of well-controlled clinical trials have limited its use to severe, refractory disease. Further studies are needed before its role in rheumatoid arthritis can justifiably be expanded.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürgen Barth ◽  
Jiani Wang ◽  
Jesus Lopez-Alcade ◽  
Christoph Kramm ◽  
Daniel Pach ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Chronic conditions have a big impact on disability, morbidity, and mortality worldwide. Smartphone health applications (apps) have the potential to improve the health of patients with chronic conditions and to enhance the quality and efficiency of healthcare. The number of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of smartphone health apps is increasing but a collection of the available evidence in one database is still missing. OBJECTIVE To describe Smartphone-RCCT, which is a database of randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs) of smartphone apps for chronic conditions. METHODS Smartphone-RCCT is an open-access database collecting bibliographic references and important characteristics of RCTs. For a study to be included, the following criteria had to be met: a) RCT published in a peer-reviewed journal; b) adult study participants with one or several chronic conditions that represent the main health problem addressed by the study intervention. c) Intervention: smartphone health app used by the patient. d) Comparator: any control condition. e) Outcomes: any patient-reported health outcome (studies exclusively measuring the patients’ knowledge about the chronic conditions or their satisfaction with the smartphone app were excluded). f) Sample size: at least 15 participants per study arm. We searched in electronic databases and other resources to identify relevant studies. Two reviewers selected the studies and extracted data independently. RESULTS The database is available in Open Science Framework (OSF): https://osf.io/nxerf/. Annual updates are planned. CONCLUSIONS Smartphone-RCCT is the first systematic open-access database collecting peer-reviewed publications of RCTs of smartphone apps for patients with chronic conditions. The database accelerates the delivery of evidence-based information in a dynamic research field. It represents an essential resource for different stakeholders, such as professionals working in evidence synthesis, meta-epidemiological studies, or planning a RCT. CLINICALTRIAL https://osf.io/nxerf/


1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 69-73
Author(s):  
LC Simko ◽  
JH Walker

Administration of vitamin E, vitamin C, and allopurinol to reduce reperfusion-induced injury remains controversial. Clinical trials are being conducted, and the results are promising. No adverse side effects have been reported with the short-term use of these drugs. The cost of the pre-operative medication is approximately $5 per week, which favors its use. The ability of nurses to be effective advocates of patients receiving these drugs is vital. What appears to be a trivial medication regimen may save myocardial cells and promote an uncomplicated postoperative period.


Biomolecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1640
Author(s):  
Tomáš Zimmermann ◽  
Pavel Drašar ◽  
Silvie Rimpelová ◽  
Søren Brøgger Christensen ◽  
Vladimir A. Khripach ◽  
...  

In spite of the impressing cytotoxicity of thapsigargin (Tg), this compound cannot be used as a chemotherapeutic drug because of general toxicity, causing unacceptable side effects. Instead, a prodrug targeted towards tumors, mipsagargin, was brought into clinical trials. What substantially reduces the clinical potential is the limited access to Tg and its derivatives and cost-inefficient syntheses with unacceptably low yields. Laser trilobum, which contains a structurally related sesquiterpene lactone, trilobolide (Tb), is successfully cultivated. Here, we report scalable isolation of Tb from L. trilobum and a transformation of Tb to 8-O-(12-aminododecanoyl)-8-O-debutanoylthapsigargin in seven steps. The use of cultivated L. trilobum offers an unlimited source of the active principle in mipsagargin.


Author(s):  
Antti Malmivaara ◽  
Pekka Kuukasjärvi ◽  
Ilona Autti-Ramo ◽  
Niina Kovanen ◽  
Marjukka Mäkelä

Objectives:Despite controversies, endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy (ETS) has been used as a treatment for excessive sweating of hands and face and for facial blushing. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of ETS for the current indications in a systematic review.Methods:Controlled clinical trials and cohort studies with more than 100 patients were included. Abstracts were searched from MEDLINE and CCTR from 1966 to June 2004. Two reviewers extracted the data and assessed study quality. Data on effectiveness and safety were synthesized qualitatively.Results:We did not find any controlled clinical trials. Fifteen prospective studies were included. The internal and external quality of these studies were poor overall. Follow-up was commonly less than 2 years, during which time excessive sweating and facial blushing seemed to decrease among most patients. Immediate complications related to thoracoscopy occurred in up to 10 percent of patients. Compensatory sweating below breast level was reported in up to 90 percent of the patients. Other common side effects included dryness of face and hands, gustatory sweating, and neuralgic pain. Several other less common side effects were reported.Conclusions:The evidence of the effectiveness of ETS is weak due to a lack of randomized trials. The intervention leads to severe immediate complications in some of the patients, and to persistent side-effects for many of the patients.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Avril McGinn

PICO question In dogs with chronic enteropathy does treatment with oral cobalamin compared to parenteral cobalamin provide serum cobalamin levels greater than 270 ng/L? Clinical bottom line The evidence provided by block randomised controlled clinical trials indicates that oral dosing of cobalamin results in normocobalaminaemia, with levels similar to that achieved with parenteral dosing. These studies provide veterinary professionals with dosing schedules, and monitoring serum cobalamin levels is recommended to ensure normocobalaminaemia is achieved. It has been shown that supplementation with both oral and parenteral cobalamin correlates with increased intracellular cobalamin levels. Future studies are needed to investigate the outcome of oral cobalamin dosing in dogs with extra-gastrointestinal disease.  


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-38
Author(s):  
Z. S. Khabadze ◽  
M. E. Balashova

Reducing the orthodontic treatment duration is an important issue, especially for adult patients who want to complete treatment faster due to social or aesthetic reasons. In addition, an increase in the duration of orthodontic treatment has a number of side effects, therefore, orthodontists and patients are interested in the use of techniques that can accelerate the movement of teeth. Shorter treatment times can be achieved through a combination of orthodontic and surgical or non-surgical techniques.Aim. To systematically evaluate scientific data on the effectiveness and side effects of surgical and non-surgical methods in accelerating orthodontic treatment in situations with the removal of premolars and subsequent closure of the post-extraction spaces.Materials and methods. Electronic search of articles was carried out using search engines and databases: Cyberleninka, eLIBRARY, Google Scholar, Pub Med, SCOPUS. The publication date criterion was selected from January 2010 to January 2021. Articles included in the systematic review had to meet the following inclusion criteria: controlled clinical trials and randomized controlled clinical trials conducted in humans and published in the last 11 years in English language. The systematic review included and analyzed 15 full-text articles.Result. According to the systematic review, the speed of movement of teeth increases 2 times with corticotomy, and 1.5 times with piezocorticotomy, which is consistent with the data of other studies. At the same time, the effectiveness of the movement remains for no more than 2 months after the intervention.Conclusions. The corticotomy procedure reduces the treatment time in comparison with traditional methods by 30-50% (6-8 months). The investigated techniques did not have a significant effect on the depth of probing, the level of attachment, on the density of bone tissue, rotation and inclination of the moved teeth. Since no complications were identified for 2-4 months of observation, further studies are required to assess long-term results in the long term.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Galeano ◽  
Alberto Paccanaro

AbstractPair-input associations for drug-side effects are obtained through expensive placebo-controlled experiments in human clinical trials. An important challenge in computational pharmacology is to predict missing associations given a few entries in the drug-side effect matrix, as these predictions can be used to direct further clinical trials. Here we introduce the Geometric Sparse Matrix Completion (GSMC) model for predicting drug side effects. Our high-rank matrix completion model learns non-negative sparse matrices of coefficients for drugs and side effects by imposing smoothness priors that exploit a set of pharmacological side information graphs, including information about drug chemical structures, drug interactions, molecular targets, and disease indications. Our learning algorithm is based on the diagonally rescaled gradient descend principle of non-negative matrix factorization. We prove that it converges to a globally optimal solution with a first-order rate of convergence. Experiments on large-scale side effect data from human clinical trials show that our method achieves better prediction performance than six state-of-the-art methods for side effect prediction while offering biological interpretability and favouring explainable predictions.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1046-1046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria E. Ferrer Argote ◽  
Christian O. Ramos Peñafiel ◽  
Merit Hernández Sánchez ◽  
Juan José García García ◽  
Humberto Castellanos Sinco ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Androgens are considered ineffective for the treatment of severe aplastic anemia (SAA) and are currently acknowledged a minor place as adjuvants of immunosuppressive therapy (IST). However, many institutions in developing countries, like ours, have been forced to continue their use as monodrugs even for the severe forms of the disease due to the unavailability of stem cell transplantation (SCT) or IST. Objective: To evaluate the results of androgen therapy as monodrug in adult patients with acquired aplastic anemia (AAA) regardless of its severity. Materials and Methods: We carried out a retrospective study of adult patients with AAA treated with androgens with or without low doses of prednisone from January 1986 to December 2006 at Hospital General de México. We analyzed the records of patients who had a CBC and bone marrow study by aspiration and biopsy which allowed the diagnosis of AA and its classification as moderate (MAA), severe (SAA) or super severe (SSAA) and had been treated with androgens alone or associated with low doses of prednisone. The treatment consisted of either oxymetholone 150 mg/d P.O., mesterolone 100 mg/d P.O. or testosterone 150 mg/w I.M. until remission + 6 months after which they were tapered and eventually discontinued except for those who were dependent on minimal doses of androgens to sustain remission. Prenisone 5–20 mg/d was given intermittently for variable periods of time to control mucocutaneous bleeding. Complete remission (CR) was defined by Hb 310.0 gr/dL, TNC 31x109/L and BPC 3100x109/L, partial remission (PR) when the patient did not meet the criteria for CR but there was hematologic improvement and he became transfusion-independent and failure when there was no improvement or the condition of the patient worsened. For the statistical analysis we used Kaplan-Meier survival curves, results of log-rank tests and cumulative incidence curves. Results: We had 72 cases which fulfilled the inclusion criteria, 40 males and 32 females aged 17–75 (median 35) years. Twenty (28%) had MAA, 46 (64%) SAA and 6 (8%) VSAA. The overall response rate was 77.7% with 44.4% CR and 33.3% PR. The tendency to achieve remission was similar among patients with MAA, SAA and VSAA. The mean time to reach PR was 14.8 months and 25.58 months for CR. OS was 65% at two years and 46.9% at 5 years. The only adverse side effects recorded were mild liver and skin toxicity. There were 11(15.2%) deaths, 6 (8.3%) relapses, 8 (11.1%) evolved to PNH and 1 (1.3%) to MDS. No transformations to LA were seen. Discussion: Even with the limitations of a retrospective study, the high remission rate in patients with SAA and VSAA in this series of Mexican patients is remarkable. Furthermore, the quality of the remissions was excellent and the rate of relapses low. Besides, the fact that some patients needed very low doses of androgens to sustain their remission argues against the hypothesis that the remissions could be spontaneous. If we compare these results with our data three decades ago in a similar population with the same treatment at our hospital, with a median survival time of &lt; 6 months and &lt;1% alive at 2 years, it would seem that improvement in supportive therapy with blood derivatives and antibiotics helped these new patients buy time to allow their bone marrow to respond to androgens. This hypothesis is supported by the long time required to achieve remission. Besides, androgens are inexpensive and easy to use in an outpatient setting with minor adverse side effects in adults compared to SCT and IST. However, the time required to achieve remission and the longer need for supportive therapy with blood derivatives discourages their use as single agents for AAA but they might prove helpful in improving the quality and duration of remission with IST. Conclusion: These results show that androgens can induce long lasting remissions of MAA, SAA and SSAA in adult patients with minor adverse events and warrant further study with prospective randomized trials.


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