Acta Paediatr Scand
January 1986
Aldosterone was measured in the saliva of 20 patients with cystic fibrosis and a group of 20 normal children matched for age and sex. Mean levels were higher in the patient group but overall differences were small and statistically not significant. For the first time a link between aldosterone level and disease severity in patients with cystic fibrosis was established using a simple scoring system to assess disease activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new system (Wescor) for sweat collection and analysis was examined with respect to its suitability for the investigation of children suspected to have cystic fibrosis. The effects of iontophoresis current, sweat collection time, sweat storage and analysis were examined, and as a result the technique was modified to allow collection and storage of sufficient sweat for sodium and potassium as well as osmolality assays in 10-20 minutes. The small electrodes and speed of the procedure make it practical for use with small children, with a reproducibility of 13-24% (coefficient of variation for whole procedure).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Antimicrob Chemother
July 1983
We have investigated the use of the new cephalosporin ceftazidime for the treatment of pseudomonas infection in cystic fibrosis, using 100 to 240 mg/kg intravenously daily. The clinical and microbiological results of 18 courses of therapy, lasting from 1 to 4 weeks have been satisfactory, particularly since the patients had previously proved refractory to treatment with most other appropriate antibiotics. However, in common with other anti-pseudomonal antibiotics, a first course of ceftazidime proved the most successful, subsequent courses being less effective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSerum alphafetoprotein concentrations were measured by three different types of radioimmunoassay in 30 patients with cystic fibrosis of the pancreas and in 55 controls. The highest value obtained in cystic patient was 10.2 ng/ml and in a control 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEstablished respiratory infections with mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa in patients suffering from cystic fibrosis were treated with conventional as well as larger doses of tobramycin. The infection was eradicated in four of the 17 patients treated, but the duration of follow-up study of one patient was short. It appeared that treatment was most successful in those patients in whom the highest peak concentrations of tobramycin in sputum were obtained.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of chronic benign neutropenia is described in association with circulating leucoagglutinins. IgG and IgM leucoagglutinins demonstrated by Sephadex G-200 chromatography agglutinated neutrophils and monocyte enriched leucocyte preparations. Total IgG, IgA, IgM and IgE, total haemolytic complement, C3 and C4 complement components were all within normal limits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA review has been carried out of patients diagnosed as having coeliac disease some years previously and subsequently lost to follow-up. Most were unaware of the need for continuing treatment and had returned to a normal diet. The resulting morbidity was slight, although one patient had died of a small-bowel lymphoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of 100 infants born after prolonged rupture of membranes was studied to evaluate the risk of infection to the infant due to this circumstance alone, and to assess the effect of prophylactic antibiotics in its prevention. Evidence of bacterial colonization at birth was limited to 6 cases and no clinical infection ensued. Neonatal infection was uniformly low but the administration of antibiotics led to clinical candidiasis in 18% and the development of a replacement flora of fungi in the intestinal tract in 70%.
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