New surgical suture materials with varying knot properties are continuously introduced. A method to measure and describe the knot properties of these different fibres is wanted but, today, no generally accepted method is available. During recent years, however, two different methods, the single strand and the loop technique, have been introduced. In the present report these two methods are compared. It is shown that the values obtained with the loop technique were influenced by other factors than the knot properties of the material while the single strand technique allowed an elective estimation of the knot properties of a fibre.
A randomized prospective double-blind study of the analgesic effect of 50 mg. intravenous indomethacin, a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor, was done on 47 consecutive patients with acute ureteral colic. The placebo used was 5 mg. intravenous riboflavin because of the same color as indomethacin. Indomethacin provided complete relief in 78 per cent of the cases, while riboflavin provided relief in 30 per cent. The difference is statistically significant. No side effects were observed with indomethacin.
In a prospective, randomized study, the prophylactic effect of indomethacin (150 mg daily) in regard to recurrence of ureteral colic was investigated in 78 patients. Severe recurrent attacks were experienced in 78 patients. Severe recurrent attacks were experienced by 4 of 37 patients in the test group and by 16 of the 41 controls without indomethacin. The mean duration of recurrent pain including the severe attacks was 5.6 +/- 1.1 hour/patient/week in the test group and 12.5 +/- 2.9 in the control group. Passage of stone within 7 days was not influenced by indomethacin (22/37 and 25/41 cases). Indomethacin administration for 7 days after an acute attack of ureteral colic thus reduced the frequency of severe attacks and the total duration of recurrent pain, without influencing the stone passage.
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