Background: Meta-analyses of the prevention of major vascular events by aspirin suggest therapeutic equivalence of all dosages. However, the optimal dosage still remains problematic, and a recent trial found aspirin 160 mg/day to be more effective than 80 mg/day for secondary prevention of ischaemic stroke.
Objective: To evaluate two low dosages of aspirin in terms of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (inhibition of platelet thromboxane generation and urinary excretion of thromboxane and prostacyclin metabolites).
Objective: To assess the efficacy, safety and extent of perceived indications of acarbose, a new antidiabetic agent, under routine clinical practice conditions in an unselected Northern Italian population of type II diabetic patients.
Methods: The study population was assigned to three different groups according to the physician's clinical judgement: group A (acarbose considered as an elective treatment); group B (acarbose considered to be of uncertain benefit): group C (acarbose deemed not to be appropriate). Group B patients were randomized either to continue their standard treatment or to add acarbose to it.
The aim of this study was to analyse the long-term survival and the relationships between prognostic factors at presentation, chemoresponsiveness and disease outcome in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radical surgery (RS). Two consecutive studies of neoadjuvant chemotherapy containing cisplatin, bleomycin plus/minus methotrexate followed by radical hysterectomy and systematic aortic and pelvic lymphadenectomy were carried out between January 1986 and September 1990 on 130 patients with > or = 4 cm stage IB2-III cervical cancer. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan and Meier test and Cox's multivariate regression analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetic lower extremity complications may be influenced by a number of factors, including those related to the interaction between patients and the health-care system. Our objective is to identify risk factors for the development of lower limb complications, by looking for classical clinical variables and those related to quality of care. A case-control study was carried out between December 1993 and June 1994 by interviewing 348 patients with lower-limb diabetic complications and 1050 controls enrolled from 35 diabetes outpatient clinics and 49 general practitioner's offices in Italy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe set out to describe patterns of care of an Italian diabetic population, with reference to the recommendations of the St Vincent Declaration. We investigated different aspects of care received by 2707 patients, of whom 2196 in the charge of 35 Diabetes Outpatient Clinics (DOCs) and 511 cared for by 49 General Practitioners (GPs). Data were collected by interviewing the patients, their physicians and by reviewing medical records.
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