Objective. Aspirin is known to have a bimodal effect on the renal handling of uric acid (UA). High dosages (>3 gm/day) are uricosuric, while low dosages (1-2 gm/day) cause UA retention. Although very-low-dose (mini-dose) aspirin is used increasingly as a plate-let aggregation inhibitor, no studies have been published on whether aspirin's renal effects occur at dosages of <0.5 gm/day. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effects of commonly used mini-dosages of aspirin on renal function and UA handling in elderly patients. Methods. The study included 49 elderly inpa-tients (age 61-94). Patients were excluded if they had renal failure, hyperuricemia, gout, or a history of bleeding, or if they were receiving anticoagulants, aspirin, or nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Previous medications and diet were kept unchanged. Aspirin was administered as follows: 75 mg/day (week 1), 150 mg/day (week 2), 325 mg/day (week 3), and 0 mg/day (week 4). Baseline and weekly samples of blood and urine were evaluated for UA, creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine clearance, UA excre-tion, UA clearance, and plasma levels of aspirin. Results. At the lowest dosage, aspirin caused a 15% decrease in the rate of UA excretion (P 0.045 by t-test), which was associated with a slight but significant increase in serum levels of UA (P 0.009). These effects on UA levels were gradually reduced with increasing dosages of aspirin (multivariate analysis of variance with repeated measures showed no statistically significant difference in the rate of UA excretion between weeks 1-3 and week 0 [baseline], but the difference in serum UA levels for the same comparison was statistically significant [P 0.038]). Generally, creatinine and UA clearance rates paralleled each other during aspirin treatment. However, 1 week after aspirin was discontinued , creatinine clearance remained decreased while UA clearance returned to baseline. Plasma aspirin concentrations were low and variable. However, patients with above-median aspirin levels had significantly greater changes in serum creatinine levels, urinary UA excre-tion rates, and UA clearance rates following the first week of aspirin treatment. Hypoalbuminemia and con-comitant treatment with diuretics enhanced the effects of aspirin on renal function and UA retention. Conclusion. Mini-dose aspirin, even at a dosage of 75 mg/day, caused significant changes in renal function and UA handling within 1 week in a group of elderly inpatients, mainly in those with preexisting hypoalbu-minemia. Given the widespread (and often unmoni-tored) use of mini-dose aspirin, especially among the elderly, these findings call for clinician alertness as well as for further studies to clarify the mechanisms underlying these phenomena.
Introduction: Long-term care (LTC) residents, especially the orally fed with dysphagia, are prone to dehydration. The clinical consequences of dehydration are critical. The validity of the common laboratory parameters of hydration status is far from being absolute, especially so in the elderly. However, combinations of these indices are more reliable. Objective: Assessment of hydration status among elderly LTC residents with oropharyngeal dysphagia. Methods: A total of 28 orally fed patients with grade-2 feeding difficulties on the functional outcome swallowing scale (FOSS) and 67 naso-gastric tube (NGT)-fed LTC residents entered the study. The common laboratory, serum and urinary tests were used as indices of hydration status. The results were considered as indicative of dehydration and used as ‘markers of dehydration’, if they were above the accepted normal values. Results: The mean number of dehydration markers was significantly higher in the FOSS-2 group (3.8 ± 1.3 vs. 2 ± 1.4, p = 0.000). About 75% of these FOSS-2 patients had ≧4 dehydration markers versus 18% of the NGT-fed group (p = 0.000). A low urine output (<800 ml/day) was significantly more common in the FOSS-2 group (39 vs. 12%, p = 0.002). Above normal values of blood urea nitrogen (BUN), BUN/serum creatinine ratio (BUN/SCr), urine/serum osmolality ratio (U/SOsm), and urine osmolality UOsm, were significantly more frequent in the dehydration-prone FOSS-2 group. This combination of 4 indices was present in 65% of low urine output patients. In contrast, it was present in only 36% of the higher urine output patients (p = 0.01). Patients with a ‘normal’ daily urine output (>800 ml/day) also had a significant number (2 ± 1.5) of positive indices of dehydration. Conclusions: Dehydration was found to be common among orally fed FOSS-2 LTC patients. Surprisingly, probable dehydration, although of a mild degree, was not a rarity among NGT-fed patients either. The combination of 4 parameters, BUN, BUN/SCr , U/SOsm and UOsm, offers reasonable reliability to be used as an indication of dehydration status in daily clinical practice.
Background: The refeeding syndrome (RS) is an underappreciated but clinically important entity characterized by acute electrolyte abnormalities, mainly hypophosphatemia, fluid retention and dysfunction of various organs and systems, which can result in significant morbidity and occasionally death. Objective: To examine the incidence of death cases and death causes following nasogastric tube (NGT) feeding initiation in frail elderly with particular reference to RS. Methods: Forty patients with feeding problems for at least 72 h before restarting of alimentation by NGT were included. Excluded were those in any critical clinical situation. Clinical parameters and nutritional assessment were recorded before and after refeeding. Blood samples were taken before, daily for the first 3 days and 1 week after refeeding initiation. Results: During the 1st week of refeeding, 9 patients (22.5%) died and within 1 month 10 more, summing to 47.5%. Most deaths were due to infectious causes [15 out of 19, (79%)]; some were due to no obvious reason [4 out of 19, (21%)]. Significant electrolyte changes were observed in the 2–3 days following refeeding. Significant were the decreases in phosphorus and elevations in potassium and lymphocytes (day 7). We found no correlations between the severity of decreases in levels of phosphorus and mortality. Conclusions: Mortality after NGT feeding initiation was high, mainly due to infectious complications. However, in a considerable number of patients hypophosphatemia was noted, suggesting that RS could be a contributory factor of mortality. Since this is a treatable condition, more attention should be paid to detecting and coping with this problem.
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