Highlights
Close relationship is found between low serum zinc and severe states of COVID-19.
Hypozincemia critically contributes to aggravation of COVID-19.
Serum zinc level can be predictive factor for critical illness of COVID-19.
We would recommend oral medication of zinc salts to patients with COVID-19.
Abstract
Objectives
Because most severely ill patients with COVID-19 in our hospital showed zinc deficiency, we aimed to examine the relationship between the patient’s serum zinc level and severe cases of COVID-19.
Methods
Serum zinc <70 µg/dL was defined as the criterion for hypozincemia, and patients continuously with serum zinc <70 µg/dL were classified in the hypozincemia cohort. To evaluate whether hypozincemia could be a predictive factor for critical illness of COVID-19, we performed the multivariate analysis by employing logistic regression analysis.
Results
Prolonged hypozincemia was found to be a risk factor for a severe case of COVID-19. In evaluating the relationship between the serum zinc level and severity of patients with COVID-19 by multivariate logistic regression analysis, critical illness can be predicted through the sensitivity and false specificity of an ROC curve with an error rate of 10.3% and AUC of 94.2% by only two factors: serum zinc value (
P
= 0.020) and LDH value (
P
= 0.026).
Conclusions
Proper management of the prediction results in this study can contribute to the establishment and maintenance of a safe medical system, taking the arrival of the second wave and spread of COVID-19 in the future into consideration.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the minimum effective dose of recombinant canine interferon-gamma (rCaIFN-gamma) for the treatment of dogs with atopic dermatitis (AD). Thirty-four dogs with AD from 17 animal hospitals in Japan were administered half or one-fifth of the approved rCaIFN-gamma dose of 10 000 units/kg, three times a week for 4 weeks, followed by once weekly for an additional 4 weeks. Pruritus, excoriation, erythema and alopecia were evaluated and scored by the investigators on weeks 2, 4, 6, 8 and 12. The efficacy rate (number of excellent cases + number of good cases/total number of cases) at week 8 in the 2000 units/kg group was 36.4% for pruritus, 36.4% for excoriation, 45.5% for erythema and 36.4% for alopecia. In contrast, in the 5000 units/kg group, the efficacy rate was 64.3% for pruritus, 57.1% for excoriation, 78.6% for erythema and 78.6% for alopecia. The efficacy rate of the 5000 units/kg group was high for all signs evaluated and comparable to that of the 10 000 units/kg group reported in a previous study. The results of this study showed that 2000 units/kg of rCaIFN-gamma is less effective than 5000 units/kg to treat dogs with AD, and the efficacy of the 5000 units/kg dose is comparable to that of 10 000 units/kg at week 8.
ABSTRACT. Thrombosis is a potential complication of hyperadrenocorticism (HAC) in dogs. An 8-year-old male Beagle diagnosed with pituitary-dependent HAC had complicated with thrombosis in the caudal vena cava and abdominal aorta, which was treated by hypophysectomy and antithrombotic therapy. After hypophysectomy, hypercortisolemia disappeared and the general condition was also significantly improved. Ultrasonography after hypophysectomy revealed that the thrombus remained in the abdominal aorta, but the thrombus in the caudal vena cava had disappeared. However 692 days after the hypophysectomy, the dog had an acute onset of dyspnea and died. Postmortem examination revealed the presence of thrombi in the abdominal aorta and the pulmonary artery. Observations from this case show that HAC dogs must be attention to thrombosis. KEY WORDS: canine, hyperadrenocorticism, thrombosis.
It is considered that immunohistochemical analysis of DPD expression in gastric carcinoma using biopsied tissue is a technically feasible method to assess the expression of DPD in the tumor prior to surgical resection.
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