Early and late responses to treatment with either oral (600 mg/day) or intravenous (20 mg/day) (3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene)-1,1-bisphosphonate (aminohydroxypropylidene bisphosphonate; APD) were studied in 142 patients with Paget's disease of bone who had not previously been treated with bisphosphonate. The efficacy of three therapeutic regimens was compared: (a) oral aminohydroxypropylidene bisphosphonate given continuously until six months after the serum alkaline phosphatase activity had returned to normal (long term); (b) oral aminohydroxypropylidene bisphosphonate given until urinary hydroxyproline excretion had returned to normal (short term); (c) intravenous aminohydroxypropylidene bisphosphonate for 10 days. With either oral or intravenous treatment the decrease in urinary hydroxyproline excretion was rapid and always preceded the fall in serum alkaline phosphatase activity. Normal urinary hydroxyproline excretion is essential for return of the serum alkaline phosphatase activity to normal. Complete biochemical remission, defined as return of the serum alkaline phosphatase activity to normal, was obtained in 129 patients (91%). The
Two outbreaks of multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii occurred in our hospital. The outbreak strains were eventually isolated from respiratory ventilators, an apparatus used to cool or warm patients, and four continuous veno-venous hemofiltration machines. Removing dust from the machines and replacing all dust filters brought the outbreaks to an end.
IntroductionUse of selective decontamination of the digestive tract (SDD) and selective oropharyngeal decontamination (SOD) in intensive care patients has been controversial for years. Through regular questionnaires we determined expectations concerning SDD (effectiveness) and experience with SDD and SOD (workload and patient friendliness), as perceived by nurses and physicians.MethodsA survey was embedded in a group-randomized, controlled, cross-over multicenter study in the Netherlands in which, during three 6-month periods, SDD, SOD or standard care was used in random order. At the end of each study period, all nurses and physicians from participating intensive care units received study questionnaires.ResultsIn all, 1024 (71%) of 1450 questionnaires were returned by nurses and 253 (82%) of 307 by physicians. Expectations that SDD improved patient outcome increased from 71% and 77% of respondents after the first two study periods to 82% at the end of the study (P = 0.004), with comparable trends among nurses and physicians. Nurses considered SDD to impose a higher workload (median 5.0, on a scale from 1 (low) to 10 (high)) than SOD (median 4.0) and standard care (median 2.0). Both SDD and SOD were considered less patient friendly than standard care (medians 4.0, 4.0 and 6.0, respectively). According to physicians, SDD had a higher workload (median 5.5) than SOD (median 5.0), which in turn was higher than standard care (median 2.5). Furthermore, physicians graded patient friendliness of standard care (median 8.0) higher than that of SDD and SOD (both median 6.0).ConclusionsAlthough perceived effectiveness of SDD increased as the trial proceeded, both among physicians and nurses, SOD and SDD were, as compared to standard care, considered to increase workload and to reduce patient friendliness. Therefore, education about the importance of oral care and on the effects of SDD and SOD on patient outcomes will be important when implementing these strategies.Trial registrationISRCTN35176830.
A 19-year-old female, known to have had hypertension and hypokalemic alkalosis since the age of 9 months, was found to have suppressed renin, negligible plasma and urinary aldosterone and low plasma levels of other known sodium-retaining steroids. Despite the normal plasma cortisol the urinary excretion of 17-oxosteroids and 17-oxogenic steroids was low as was the cortisol secretion rate, suggesting a diminished metabolic clearance of cortisol. This was confirmed by the demonstration of a prolonged t 1/2 of 14C-cortisol. The abnormally high urinary excretion ratios of cortisol to cortisone, tetrahydracortisol to tetrahydrocortisone and 11-hydroxy-aetiocholanolone to 11-oxy-aetiocholanolone indicate that the diminished cortisol breakdown is the result of deficient 11 beta-oxidation. Moreover, the urinary excretion of free cortisol was elevated, probably due to diminished tubular reabsorption of cortisol. Hypokalemic alkalosis did not respond to spironolactone, but was partly corrected by amiloride. No response to dexamethasone was observed, but dexamethasone combined with aminogluthetimide normalized blood pressure and serum K. These findings support the involvement of a sodium-retaining, kaliuretic steroid in this rare syndrome.
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