The finding that chronic periodontitis is associated with plasma TNF-alpha levels in subjects with type 2 diabetes supports the hypothesis that periodontal infection and inflammation may contribute to insulin resistance.
The risk of family history of ischemic heart disease independent of other well described risk factors has remained difficult to quantitate. Significant coronary artery disease was determined by coronary arteriography to be present in 223 patients and absent in 57 control subjects. Age, sex, blood pressure, serum cholesterol, cigarette smoking and the presence of diabetes and left ventricular hypertrophy on the electrocardiogram were tabulated for each patient and the data used to assign a risk score based on the American Heart Association multivariate model. Subjects were stratified and matched according to risk score to estimate risk of family history independent of familial aggregation of these seven other risk factors. Angina, myocardial infarction, cardiac death and any ischemic heart disease were ascertained in 1,319 first degree relatives. Odds ratios for overall, stratified and matched comparisons of these end points in relatives of patients and control subjects ranged between 2.0 and 3.9 (p less than 0.01 for all comparisons), indicating a higher frequency of all ischemic heart disease end points in relatives of patients with documented coronary artery disease. Life table comparison of patients at lowest risk with those at higher risk showed significantly greater cumulative frequency and earlier age of onset of all ischemic heart disease end points in relatives of low risk patients. These observations indicate that some of the risk associated with family history is independent of familial aggregation of other known risk factors and suggest that the independent effects of family history may be most important in individuals who otherwise are at low risk.
A computerized method for measuring relative coronary arterial stenosis by cinevideodensitometric analysis of 35 mm coronary arteriograms was developed and validated. Video images of projected coronary arteriographic frames were digitized into a 512 x 512 matrix (256 gray levels) by computer analysis that compared integrated contrast density measured over stenotic and normal arterial segments after background subtraction. Pixel density was 70 to 80 pixels/mm2 actual area. In phantom studies performed on plexiglass cylinders, cinevideodensitometric measurements correlated linearly with concentration of contrast medium (r = .99), with cross-sectional areas (r = .99) of contrast-filled cylinders 1 to 4 mm in diameter over a wide range of contrast concentrations (25% to 100%), and with relative stenosis of eccentric lesions in the cylinders (r = .99, SEE -3.9%). In another. Second, an estimation of relative stenosis based on minimal cross-sectional area is a more accurate indicator of blood flow than is that based on the degree of relative narrowing expressed in terms of relative diameters,9-U0 which is the traditional method for interpreting coronary arteriograms subjectively.The fact that there are no techniques for accurately grading the severity of coronary atherosclerotic narrowings from coronary arteriograms is a major limitation in the study of ischemic heart disease. DIAGNOSTIC METHODS-CORONARY ARTERY DISEASEAngiograms recorded on conventional 35 mm arteriographic film can be rapidly digitized by computer processing of the projected angiographic image. The projected image is recorded with a vidicon camera, and the resulting video signal is digitized into a 512 x 512 matrix with 255 gray levels, providing quantification of the optical density of each region of the film. The optical density of each arterial segment recorded on the angiographic frame reflects the volume of contrast medium within the arterial lumen, which directly represents the volume of the arterial segment.In this study a method for measuring the cross-sectional area of coronary stenotic lesions by videodensitometric analysis of 35 mm coronary arteriograms was developed and validated in experiments with phantom models and postmortem human hearts. The hypothesis that videodensitornetric analysis of the optical density of contrast medium within an artery reflects the crosssectional area of the arterial lumen was tested. MethodsRadiographic equipment. Coronary cinearteriograms were recorded on 35 mm cine film (Kodak CFR) at 32 frames/sec with an Arriflex camera. The radiographic equipment consisted of a Philips modular generator, an SRN 10/80 x-ray tube, and a trimodal (6, 10, 14 inch) cesium iodide image intensifier mounted on a Poly Diagnost A arm and scanned with a Plumbicon video tube. The focal spot size for coronary cine fluorography was 0.7 mm. The image intensifier was operated in the 6 inch mode, and x-ray exposure time was 5 msec. Due to the large size of the 14 inch image intensifier, the curvature of the input phosphor va...
To determine the influence of diet on serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels among adults, 24-hr dietary recall interviews were conducted among 957 men and 1,082 women resident in the community of Tecumseh, Michigan. Trained interviewers obtained detailed description of all foods consumed during 24 hr before venipuncture for lipid determination. Using a list of nutritional composition of 2,706 foods prepared from standard references, nutritionists determined quantities of all nutrients common to the American diet which were consumed by each participant according to a 24-hr diet record. For analysis, men and women were grouped into lower middle, and upper tertiles according to serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels. The mean daily consumption of each dietary component was virtually identical in all tertiles for men and women but differed between sexes. Cholesterol and triglyceride levels were unrelated to quality, quantity, or proportions of fat, carbohydrate, or protein consumed in the 24-hr recall period.
Background Hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia are common in preterm infants and have been associated with increased risk of mortality and morbidity. Interventions to reduce risk associated with these exposures are particularly challenging due to the infrequent measurement of blood glucose concentrations, with the potential of causing more harm instead of improving outcomes for these infants. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is widely used in adults and children with diabetes to improve glucose control, but has not been approved for use in neonates. The REACT trial aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of CGM in preterm infants requiring intensive care. Methods This international, open-label, randomised controlled trial was done in 13 neonatal intensive care units in the UK, Spain, and the Netherlands. Infants were included if they were within 24 h of birth, had a birthweight of 1200 g or less, had a gestational age up to 33 weeks plus 6 days, and had parental written informed consent. Infants were randomly assigned (1:1) to real-time CGM or standard care (with masked CGM for comparison) using a central web randomisation system, stratified by recruiting centre and gestational age (<26 or ≥26 weeks). The primary efficacy outcome was the proportion of time sensor glucose concentration was 2•6-10 mmol/L for the first week of life. Safety outcomes related to hypoglycaemia (glucose concentrations <2•6 mmol/L) in the first 7 days of life. All outcomes were assessed on the basis of intention to treat in the full analysis set with available data. The study is registered with the International Standard Randomised Control Trials Registry, ISRCTN12793535.
The effect of balloon size on the success of coronary angioplasty was studied to develop quantitative criteria for optimal selection of balloon size. Coronary dimensions of 165 stenotic lesions were measured by computer-assisted cinevideodensitometry in 120 patients who had undergone angioplasty with a balloon selected by visual estimates. Cross-sectional areas and diameters of normal and stenotic arterial segments were measured before and after angioplasty by a previously validated cinevideodensitometric technique. The diameter of the inflated balloon compared with that of the normal arterial segment was expressed as a ratio for sizing balloons. Oversized balloons with a ratio greater than 1.3 (n = 35) caused a high (37%) incidence of dissection, with three severely compromised arterial lumens. Undersized balloons with a ratio less than 0.9 (n = 29) often resulted in significant (greater than 50% diameter stenosis) residual stenotic lesions (21%) and a significantly (p less than 0.05) higher rate of repeat angioplasty for restenosis. Selection of balloon sizes with ratios in the 0.9 to 1.3 range (n = 101) resulted in a low (4%) incidence of dissection with few patients (3%) having significant residual stenosis. Mean residual stenosis (percent diameter reduction) was most severe for undersized (35.0 +/- 18%) or oversized (23.1 +/- 19%) balloons and least severe for balloons with a ratio of 0.9 to 1.3 (18.7 +/- 14%) (p less than 0.001). Repeat angioplasty for restenosis was more frequently required (p less than 0.05) for lesions dilated with undersized balloons. Thus, selection of angioplasty balloons that approximate or slightly exceed the diameter of the normal arterial diameter yields optimal angiographic results with minimal dissections and minimal residual stenotic lesions.
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