Adverse childhood events (ACE) may have lasting consequences throughout the life course. We focus on one particular type of ACE, parental loss in Cambodia-a country that lost nearly 25% of its population during the 1975-79 Khmer-Rouge regime-and on mental health disorders, one of the potential mechanisms through which ACE may have long-term consequences. Self-reports of symptoms that map on to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Health Disorders (DSM) criteria for anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were collected from 4,405 adults aged 20 and over.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe U.S. Air Force asked RAND Project AIR FORCE (PAF) to help assess the well-being of its wounded members and the quality of services provided to facilitate their recovery and reintegration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aims: Although malnutrition is common in liver disease, there are limited data on fat soluble vitamins in various diseases. The aims of this study were to: (i) determine fat soluble vitamin levels in patients assessed for liver transplantation; (ii) compare levels between different disease etiologies (hepatocellular and cholestatic) and between subgroups of hepatocellular disease; and (iii) assess the multivariate contribution to vitamin levels of etiology and various indicators of disease severity.
Methods: This was a cross-sectional study of 107 inpatients awaiting liver transplantation, mean age 47 years.
Background/aims: Although vitamin A deficiency is common in chronic liver disease, limited data exist on impairment of dark adaptation and response to therapy. The aims were (1) to assess dark adaptation in patients, (2) to assess the relationship between dark adaptation and vitamin A status, zinc and Child-Pugh score, (3) to compare perceived and measured dark adaptation and (4) to assess the dark adaptation response to intramuscular vitamin A.
Methods: This was a prospective study of 20 patients (alcoholic liver disease 10, other parenchymal diseases six, cholestatic diseases four) awaiting liver transplantation.
Aim: To evaluate the correlation between raised soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) and stainable marrow iron, and to define the utility of sTfR in discriminating between the presence or absence of iron-deficient erythropoiesis in patients with anaemia of chronic disease.
Methods: Seventy-six consecutive adult patients without accelerated erythropoiesis who had undergone bone marrow (BM) aspiration/trephine for various clinical reasons during 2003-2006 were studied. All patients had serum iron studies (iron, transferrin and ferritin) and sTfR performed within 1 week of BM aspiration/trephine.
Background: Potassium is usually the most important analyte affected by in vitro haemolysis and the result obtained may falsely indicate or disguise a life-threatening abnormality and so give rise to inappropriate treatment. The purpose of the study was to provide a solution to the problem of reporting potassium on haemolysed samples, taking into account both clinical needs and analytical concerns (inter-individual and inter-sample variability).
Methods: Using a new procedure that mimics the collection process in an actual clinical setting, haemolysed samples were prepared from 41 volunteers with a range of inter-individual factors - haemoglobin 80-173 g/L, red blood cells 2.
Background: The practice of screening the neonatal population for certain diseases by biochemical testing of a dried blood spot is an established public health initiative in many countries. The diseases for which screening is done vary from region to region, based on ethnic, financial and political considerations. Criteria have been established to identify diseases suitable for neonatal screening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnaesth Intensive Care
October 2001
We investigated whether red cell 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) concentrations are reduced in critical illness, whether acidaemia, hypophosphataemia or anaemia influence 2,3-DPG, and whether there is any net effect on in vivo P50. Twenty healthy, non-smoking, male volunteers were compared with 20 male intensive care patients with APACHE 2 scores >20 on the preceding day. Those transfused in this time were excluded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Cardiol
October 2000
Objectives: We studied the incidence of myocardial injury in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) using the more sensitive cardiac troponin I (cTnI) assay, correlated changes in cTnI with creatine kinase, MB fraction (CK-MB), myoglobin, and catecholamine metabolite assays, and examined the predictive value of changes in cTnI for myocardial dysfunction.
Background: Myocardial injury in aneurysmal SAH as evidenced by elevated CK-MB fraction has been reported. Little published data exist on the value of cTnI measurements in aneurysmal SAH.
We report the first direct molecular prenatal diagnosis, undertaken for the autosomal dominant form of dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DDEB). The proband had a moderately severe form of DDEB, with episodic blistering of skin and mucosal involvement. Diagnostic histopathological examination, using electron microscopy to evaluate skin from a fresh blister, demonstrated a zone of cleavage beneath the epidermal-dermal junction, thereby assigning the EB as dystrophic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnd-stage renal failure (ESRF) is associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) than predicted by the major risk factors. We investigate the hypothesis that metalloproteins such as transferrin and ceruloplasmin and the inflammatory response are associated with CVD risk in this population. In this cross-sectional study of 81 subjects stable on haemodialysis (HD), 43 with CVD and/or peripheral vascular disease (PAD) were compared to 38 subjects without clinical evidence of CVD/PAD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The primary objective of this study was to investigate the effects of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, ramipril, on carotid atherosclerosis in patients with coronary, cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular disease.
Background: Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors have been shown to reduce the risk of coronary events in various patient groups and to prevent the development of atherosclerosis in animal models. It has been hypothesized that the clinical benefits of ACE inhibitors may, therefore, be mediated by effects on atherosclerosis.
Objectives: To determine whether glycolate, a toxic metabolite of ethylene glycol that is chemically similar to lactate, can cause artifactual elevation of measured L-lactate concentrations.
Design: Prospective in vitro study.
Setting: Intensive care unit and chemical pathology laboratory in a university-affiliated hospital.
Context: Lysosomal storage disorders represent a group of at least 41 genetically distinct, biochemically related, inherited diseases. Individually, these disorders are considered rare, although high prevalence values have been reported in some populations. These disorders are devastating for individuals and their families and result in considerable use of resources from health care systems; however, the magnitude of the problem is not well defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis laboratory-based bench study was undertaken to evaluate the accuracy and equilibration characteristics of air and saline respectively as CO2 equilibrating media in the silicone balloon of a gastric tonometer and to compare two methods of measuring air PCO2. Two gastric tonometers were suspended in a bath containing 0.9% saline maintained at 37 degrees C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 20 month old Caucasian male child, after a five week illness, developed liver failure which was successfully treated by liver transplantation. The explanted liver had a histology identical to that seen in Indian childhood cirrhosis and its copper content was increased tenfold. Water used to prepare the child's milk feeds came from a bore via copper conduits and at times contained 120 mumol/l of copper, eight times the recommended maximum for human consumption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To relate findings from a novel approach, ejaculate cytology, to the established reference, histopathology from transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS)-guided prostatic biopsies, in patients at risk of having prostatic cancer on the basis of an abnormal digital rectal examination (DRE) and/or an elevated serum prostate specific antigen (PSA). PATIENTS SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Thirty-seven men suspected of having prostatic carcinoma provided ejaculate specimens which were collected in Hanks solution. The specimens were centrifuged to form a pellet from which smears were made for cytological examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) and the Cancer-Associated Serum Antigen (CASA) assay for the MUC1 mucin were compared in the serum of 303 patients with malignant or benign prostatic disease. Using cutpoints of 4, 10, and 20 micrograms/l, PSA was elevated in 93%, 81%, and 64% of patients with prostate cancer (n = 113), with corresponding specificities of 55%, 84%, and 96% in benign prostate disease (prostatic hyperplasia or prostatitis, n = 190). Using the recommended cutpoint of 4 Units/ml, CASA was elevated in 38% of patients with prostate cancer, with a specificity of 91% in benign disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParaquat and diquat were shown to interfere significantly in the measurement of plasma creatinine by the alkaline picrate (Jaffé) reaction in a young man who ingested a massive dose of a mixture of the 2 herbicides. It is likely that these bipyridylium compounds react in a manner similar but at different rates compared with creatinine in the Jaffé reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand Suppl
April 1996
We have designed a quality control tool for haemoximetry using the principle that standard p50, calculated from blood gas and haemoximetry measurements using the Siggaard-Andersen algorithm, remains unchanged when a specimen of venous blood is oxygenated progressively to 97% saturation of haemoglobin. If the haemoximeter is inaccurate, progressively larger deviations of standard p50 from the constant value occur above 80% saturation. Deviations too small to be detected by analysis of quality control materials comprised of non-haemoglobin dyes and yet sufficient to cause significant errors in derived extractivity parameters can be detected by this method.
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