SUMMARYBackground: Eradication rates of Helicobacter pylori with standard triple therapy are disappointing, and studies from several countries confirm this poor performance. Aim: To assess the eradication rate of a new sequential treatment regimen compared with conventional triple therapy for the eradication of H. pylori infection. Methods: One thousand and forty-nine dyspeptic patients were studied prospectively. H. pylori-infected patients were randomized to receive 10-day sequential therapy [rabeprazole (40 mg daily) plus amoxicillin (1 g twice daily) for the first 5 days, followed by rabeprazole (20 mg), clarithromycin (500 mg) and tinidazole (500 mg) twice daily for the remaining 5 days]
Antiproteases are known to be present in amyloid deposits. We evaluated the possibility of using an anti-serine protease (aprotinin) labelled with technetium-99m (TcA), usually employed as a cortical renal tracer, for the imaging of amyloid deposits. Because of the known high uptake of TcA by the kidneys, we limited our analysis to extra-abdominal amyloid localizations. We report the scintigraphic findings observed in 24 patients with light chain amyloidosis (AL) and one with a hereditary form who were known or suspected to have extra-abdominal involvement. Planar scans obtained 100min after i.v. TcA administration showed myocardial accumulation in 11 patients, pleuropulmonary accumulation in nine, pericardial accumulation in two and localization in the neck region (thyroid, salivary glands and tongue) in eight. TcA scintigraphy was negative in five patients without clinical or laboratory evidence of extra-abdominal involvement, as well as in 12 control group patients with cardiac and renal diseases. These preliminary results indicate TcA to be a low-cost, readily available radiopharmaceutical for imaging of extra-abdominal involvement in AL type amyloidosis.
Serum IL-6 levels have been shown to correlate with disease severity and prognosis in patients with plasma cell dyscrasias. Among its pleiotropic actions, IL-6 is also the major regulator of the acute phase response in humans. The possible impact on survival of the major serum acute phase proteins (s.APP) [C-reactive protein (s.CRP), alpha-1-antitrypsin (s.AAT), haptoglobin, acid alpha-1-glycoprotein and alpha-2-macroglobulin (used as control)] was assessed on a population of 103 consecutive, previously untreated myeloma patients. Univariate analysis showed that among the acute phase proteins only s.AAT (P = 0.015) and s.CRP (P = 0.027) were significantly correlated with survival. The multivariate Cox proportional hazard model applied to s.APP and other common parameters showed that s.beta-2-microglobulin (s.b2M), s.calcium, s.creatinine, BM plasma cell percentage, age and s.AAT correlated significantly with survival. Combining s.b2M and s.AAT allowed stratification of myeloma patients: those with low levels of s.b2M (< or = 3 mg/l) and of s.AAT (< or = 3 g/l) presented an excellent prognosis (median survival exceeding 10 years) while those presenting higher values of the two parameters presented a median survival of 2.5 years (P = 0.002).
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