For the first time, a weak clinical efficacy of a 12-week therapy with garlic powder (daily dose, 800 mg) is demonstrated in patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease stage II. The increase in walking distance in the verum group by 46 m (from 161.0 +/- 65.1 to 207.1 +/- 85.0 m) was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than in the placebo group (by 31 m, from 172.0 +/- 60.9 to 203.1 +/- 72.8). Both groups received physical therapy twice a week. The diastolic blood pressure, spontaneous thrombocyte aggregation, plasma viscosity, and cholesterol concentration also decreased significantly. Body weight was maintained. It is quite interesting that the garlic-specific increase in walking distance did not appear to occur until the 5th week of treatment, connected with a simultaneous decrease in spontaneous thrombocyte aggregation. Therefore, garlic may be an appropriate agent especially for the long-term treatment of an incipient intermittent claudication.
The basic therapy of peripheral arterial occlusive disease stage IIb, according to Fontaine, is exercise. It should be determined whether a mild hypervolaemic haemodilution with hydroxyethyl starch or Ringer lactate can produce a further increase in walking distance. For this purpose, three groups of 25 patients each were formed. One group exercised three times weekly and the second group, in addition to exercise, underwent a mild hypervolaemic to isovolaemic dilution therapy with HES for a period of 6 weeks. In the final group the haematocrit was reduced to the same extent by venesections and volume substitution using Ringer lactate. The walking distance in the HES group increased from 216 m to 311 m (44%), in the Ringer lactate group from 214 m to 258 m (20%), and in the exercise group from 213 m to 242 m (14%). On comparison of the groups, the increase in pain-free walking distance in the HES group differs significantly (P less than 0.05) from that achieved in the other groups. It was demonstrated that haemodilution with HES in combination with exercise brings about a clinical effect three times that achieved by exercise alone. Venesection with subsequent administration of Ringer lactate and exercise is superior to exercise alone but markedly inferior to the combination therapy with HES.
Isovolemic hemodilution is a simple method of treating patients with peripheral arterial occlusion disease and hematocrit values of 43% or more. Dextran, a plasma substitute, has been used for that purpose since the early 1950s. However, the use of dextran in some diseases, e.g., hemorrhagic diathesis, kidney insufficiency, and microangiopathy is not without risk. Anaphylactic reaction, too, has occurred in some cases. Since the end of the 1970s hydroxyethyl starch, a plasma substitute, is available for the therapy of microcirculatory disorders and hemorrhagic diathesis. The side effects of hydroxyethyl starch are less serious and anaphylactic reactions are less frequent and moderate in extent. The clinical efficacy of both substances was compared in this survey. It could be stated that middle molecular hydroxyethyl starch is even clinically superior to low molecular dextran because the distance that the patients could walk increased significantly.
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