scholarly journals Efek Pemberian Jamu Selama 45 Bulan terhadap Fungsi Ginjal pada Pasien Geriatri dengan Hipertensi dan Diabetes Mellitus di Rumah Riset Jamu Tawangmangu: Studi Kasus

2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 061-066
Author(s):  
Fajar Novianto ◽  
Agus Triyono ◽  
Peristiwan R Widhi Astana

Pasien geriatri adalah pasien usia lanjut yang memiliki karakteristik multipatologi, daya faali menurun, dan dengan tanda penyakit yang tidak khas. Terapi pengobatan yang diterima pasien geriatri sangat kompleks sehingga sering menimbulkan Drug Related Problem terutama pada organ ginjal. Jamu menjadi terapi alternatif pada pasien geriatri yang memerlukan terapi jangka lama. Tujuan studi kasus ini adalah untuk melihat pengaruh pemberian jamu pada pasien geriatri yang sudah berobat dalam jangka waktu 45 bulan terhadap fungsi ginjal. Metode penelitian ini merupakan studi kasus berdasarkan data rekam medis di Rumah Riset Jamu Tawangmangu terhadap pasien geriatri yang secara rutin kontrol dan periksa ureum atau kreatinin selama 45 bulan dan masih mengkonsumsi jamu hingga bulan April 2018. Untuk melihat pengaruh jamu pada ginjal dilakukan pemeriksaan Glomerulus Filtration Rate (GFR). Hasil: Seorang laki-laki umur 61 tahun dengan keluhan tangan kanan merasa kesemutan. Pasien memiliki riwayat penyakit hipertensi dan diabetes mellitus lebih dari 15 tahun. Tekanan darah 140/90 mmHg dan tanda vital serta pemeriksaan fisik lainnya dalam batas normal. Pemeriksaan laboratorium Gula Darah Puasa (GDP) 227 mg/dL, ureum dan kreatinin diperiksa setelah bulan kelima pasien minum jamu yaitu ureum 35 mg/dL dan kreatinin 0,89 mg/dL. Selama minum jamu terjadi fluktuasi nilai GFR pasien tetapi tidak sampai menurun hingga kategori berat. Pada akhir bulan ke-45 meskipun terjadi penurunan GFR pasien dibanding pemeriksaan GFR yang pertama tetapi masih dalam kategori yang sama dengan nilai GFR pertama kali periksa (kategori ringan). Kesimpulan: Pemberian jamu dalam jangka waktu 45 bulan secara berturut-turut pada pasien geriatri tidak menyebabkan penurunan GFR signifikan.   Geriatric patients are elderly patients who have the characteristics of multi pathology, decreased physiology, and atypical symptom of a disease. Treatment received by geriatric patients is very complex so it often leads to Drug-Related Problems, especially in the kidney organs. Jamu is an alternative therapy for geriatric patients who need long-term therapy. The objective of this case study was to evaluate the effect of Jamu (herbs) on kidney function of geriatric patients who have been treated for 45 months. The research method was a case study based on the medical record of geriatric patients at Jamu Research Center in Tawangmangu who routinely control and examine for their urea or creatinine levels for 45 months and still consume herbs until April 2018. In order to evaluate the effect of jamu on the kidney, Glomerulus Filtration Rate (GFR) was examined. Results:  A 61-year-old male with a right hand feeling tingling. Patients have a medical history of hypertension and diabetes mellitus for more than 15 years. His blood pressure was 140/90 mmHg, meanwhile, the vital signs and other physical examinations were within normal levels. Laboratory tests of Fasting Blood Sugar (GDP) showed a level of 227 mg / dL, urea and creatinine levels were examined after the fifth month consumed jamu, the urea level was 35 mg / dL and creatinine level was 0.89 mg / dL. During jamu consumption there was a fluctuation in the patient's GFR but not until the severe category. At the end of the 45th month, despite a decrease in the patient's GFR compared to the first GFR examination but still in the same category as the first GFR score (mild category). Conclusion: Jamu consumption for 45 consecutive months in geriatric patients did not cause a significant reduction in GFR

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shadi Doroudgar ◽  
Gurjit Bains

The underlying pathophysiology of anxiety disorders revolve around neurotransmitter transmission, the pharmacologic target of common medication treatments. Pharmacologic treatment of anxiety disorders generally consists of benzodiazepines for short-term relief of anxiety symptoms and antidepressants as a long-term therapy. Benzodiazepines use should be limited because of habit-forming properties, dependence, and risk of adverse effects. Antidepressants are the typically preferred initial agents for long-term use due to efficacy and lack of dependence. Anxiety disorders may occur as comorbidities with other psychiatric disorders. Other pharmacologic agents are utilized as alternative therapy for patients who do not respond to mainstay therapy or are not candidates for the treatment with antidepressants. This review contains 1 figure, 6 table and 77 references Key Points: anxiety disorders, benzodiazepines, generalized anxiety disorder, norepinephrine, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 382-385
Author(s):  
Bruce Taubman ◽  
Daniel E. Hale ◽  
Richard I. Kelley

A 20-month-old girl with a family history of two siblings who died of an encephalopathy diagnosed as Reye syndrome presented to an emergency room in hypoglycemic coma and was found to have medium-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency. The salient clinical and biochemical features of this newly described inborn error of fatty acid metabolism are described and contrasted to those of classical Reye syndrome. Important clues that should lead the clinician to suspect this disorder, methods of diagnosis, and appropriate acute and long-term therapy are also discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (Sup9) ◽  
pp. S14-S20
Author(s):  
Georgeanne Cornell ◽  
Martin Kade Hardy ◽  
Jonathon Wilson

Soft tissue ulceration resulting from chronic venous insufficiency is a common condition that requires standardised long-term therapy, which has been thoroughly established. We report a patient with a five-year history of persistent venous stasis ulcers despite treatment consistent with traditional wound care. Resolution of the ulcers began only upon deviation from conventional therapy. This report considers non-standard treatments in patients with venous ulcers that do not progress.


2003 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 170-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Gogovska ◽  
R. Ljapcev ◽  
M. Polenakovic ◽  
L. Stojkovski ◽  
M. Popovska ◽  
...  

Background All patients with thymomatous Myasthenia Gravis (MG) should undergo early and total thymectomy, but controversy abounds in the choice of chronic immunosuppressive agents. The value of plasmaexchange (PE) in MG has been clearly estabilshed in preoperative preparation and treatment of myasthenic crisis. Whether PE may be used in the chronic long-term therapy of patients with thymomatous MG in addition to conventional immunosuppressive agents and cholinesterase inhibitors is yet to be answered. Case history We present a 40-year old woman with an 11 year history of MG. Thymectomy was done during the first year of the disease and the histopathologic finding was thymoma. To sustain clinical remission after thymectomy she continued with immunosuppression with methylprednisolone and cyclosporin A (or azathioprine) in addition to cholinesterase inhibitors. Despite the almost continuous immunosuppression, the disease course continued with fluctuating myasthenic weakness which few times progressed to myasthenic crisis requiring mechanical ventilation. During myasthenic crisis we performed 6–8 plasmapheresis at 2–3 day intervals in addition to conventional immunosuppressive therapy. The disease rapidly worsened in January 2000 and we started with intermittent plasmapheresis (3–6 procedures at 2–3 day intervals, every 6–8 weeks) in order to sustain remission. With this therapeutic protocol, during 20 months follow-up we managed to prevent myasthenic crisis and to avoid ventilatory support. Conclusions Plasmaexchange could be used as a successful and safe therapeutic tool in chronic long-term therapy in addition to conventional immunosuppressive agents to sustain remission in patients with MG. This is particularly important in the treatment of patients with thymomatous MG because they have an increased frequency of myasthenic crisis and often respond poorly an to immunosuppression with steroids or other immunosuppressants.


2000 ◽  
Vol 319 (3) ◽  
pp. 143-148
Author(s):  
Kitabchiphd Abbas E. ◽  
Elizabeth Kaminska ◽  
Joseph N. Fisher ◽  
Amy Sherman ◽  
Pitts Kathy ◽  
...  

1983 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arturo Zárate ◽  
Elías S. Canales ◽  
Carlos Cano ◽  
Carlos J. Pilonieta

Abstract. The effects of bromocriptine discontinuation after a 2 year course of therapy on prolactin (Prl) serum levels and the radiological size of the sella turcica were investigated in 16 women with amenorrhoea-galactorrhoea due to prolactinoma. During therapy, all but 2 patients had normalized serum Prl levels, and 4 women with macroprolactinomas exhibited a reduction in the size of the tumour as documented by CT-scanning and tomography of the sellae. After bromocriptine withdrawal and follow-up during 2 additional years, Prl levels remained normal in 6 patients, 2 of them with microprolactinomas and 4 with macroprolactinoma. The remaining 10 women developed hyperprolactinaemia associated with amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea within 3 months after discontinuation of therapy. No tumour expansion was observed in any case during the 4 year observation period. In the present study bromocriptine treatment seemed to result in permanent cure in 6 out of 16 cases of prolactinomas; nevertheless it is difficult to justify an indefinite medical treatment since the natural history of prolactinoma remains unknown. We presently feel that bromocriptine is more appropriate than neurosurgical transsphenoidal exploration for the primary treatment of prolactinomas. Further investigation is needed before a more definitive conclusion regarding the management of prolactinomas can be reached.


2000 ◽  
Vol 319 (3) ◽  
pp. 143-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abbas E. Kitabchi ◽  
Elizabeth Kaminska ◽  
Joseph N. Fisher ◽  
Amy Sherman ◽  
Kathy Pitts ◽  
...  

1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Tyrer ◽  
R. G. Schacht ◽  
M. J. McCarthy ◽  
K. N. Menard ◽  
S. Leong ◽  
...  

SynopsisRenal concentrating capacity following 18 hours of fluid deprivation was measured in 75 patients receiving prophylactic lithium therapy, and in 30 affectively ill subjects receiving other drugs. The lithium-treated patients had significantly lower urine osmolality and higher serum osmolality than the control subjects. Older subjects, patients maintained at higher serum lithium levels and those with a history of previous neurotoxicity showed the most impairment. Ten patients with urine osmolalities of less than 700 mOsm/l following this test were investigated further. Inulin and para-amino hippurate (PAH) clearance rates were determined and the effect of a subpressor challenge of dopamine on these measures was observed. Half of the patients showed some reduction in inulin and PAH clearance, which was greatest in those patients who had been taking lithium for over 10 years. However, all of the patients tested showed the expected increase in renal blood flow and sodium and water excretion in response to dopamine. Six additional patients had clearance estimations made before starting lithium treatment which were repeated after a period of 3–6 months on the drug. No consistent changes in haemodynamics were observed.Lithium clearly reduces renal concentrating capacity, but other measures of renal tubular function were well preserved in patients receiving long-term therapy. Glomerular function may be slightly reduced in patients taking lithium for long periods. The results show that prophylactic lithium treatment does not affect renal cortical function adversely in the majority of patients, but impaired renal concentrating ability is a common accompaniment.


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