In order to characterize the neuropsychologic profile of patients with hypoxic-hypercapnic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the performance of 36 patients with COPD 69 +/- 10 yr of age (mean +/- SD) on 19 tests exploring eight cognitive domains was compared with those of 29 normal adults (69 +/- 7 yr of age), 20 normal elderly adults (78 +/- 2 yr of age), 26 patients with Alzheimer-type dementia (72 +/- 6 yr of age), and 28 with multi-infarct dementia (MID) (70 +/- 8 yr of age). The discriminant analysis of cognitive test scores showed that 48.5% of patients with COPD had a specific pattern of cognitive deterioration characterized by a dramatic impairment in verbal and verbal memory tasks, well-preserved visual attention, and diffuse worsening of the other functions. The remaining patients with COPD were functionally classified as normal adults (12.1%), normal elderly adults (15.2%), those with MID (12.1%), and those with Alzheimer-type dementia (12.1%) according to discriminant analysis. Cognitive impairment was significantly and positively correlated with age (p < 0.05) and duration of hypoxic-hypercapnic chronic respiratory failure (p < 0.05). Because patients with COPD were receiving oxygen therapy from the beginning of oxyhemoglobin desaturation, results suggest that continuous oxygen therapy does not prevent or only partly prevents cognitive decline in COPD. Although some analogies between age-related and COPD-related cognitive decline are evident, a distinct cognitive profile was found in a large fraction of patients with COPD and it differs in several aspects from those of both normal and demented subjects.
Thrombosis has been occasionally described in congenital FVII deficiency. This report deals with patients with FVII deficiency who presented thrombotic events after substitution therapy. At least 12 patients are reported in the literature. In all but two cases thrombosis occurred after prothrombin complex concentrates or plasma derived FVII concentrates. In two instances pulmonary embolism occurred after the administration of large amounts of whole blood. Concomitant prothrombotic risk factors were present in most of these cases (surgery, immobilization, old age, etc.). Personal files allowed us to add another patient who developed bilateral pulmonary embolism after two vials of an aFVII concentrate. In this case also, concomitant risk factors were present, namely surgery for hysterectomy, immobilization. The pulmonary embolism occurred in spite of the congenital FVII deficiency indicating that no sure antithrombotic protection is assured by this defect. The actual needs of substitution therapy in patients with some variants of FVII deficiency is discussed, together with comments on the therapeutic management of the thrombotic events in these patients.
The effects of hospitalization on affective status were assessed by an original protocol in 214 consecutive elderly patients (mean age=78.3+/−5.0 years, range=70–92 years). Psychological decompensation was significantly related to length of stay (p<0.01) and drug use (p<0.05) and unaffected by sex, marital status, prior living place, diagnostic category. Affective status and functional status were directly correlated (p<0.0001), although in 51% of medical patients the affective status worsened or remained unchanged despite improved physical function. Improvement in affective status occurred more frequently in surgical patients (p<0.001) due to psychological improvement following surgery. Physicians providing medical and surgical care for geriatric patients must remain aware of the patients' emotional response to hospitalization and illness, given the accompanying risk for psychological decompensation.
The relation of postural changes to the diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide (DLCO) was investigated in 12 normal nonsmokers in order to evaluate the influence of body position on several components of lung resistance to gas diffusion. The well-known increase in CO diffusing capacity in the supine position was obtained only for data corrected for alveolar volume (KCO: 6.18 ± 0.75 vs. 5.45 ± 0.67 ml/min/ mm Hg/l; p < 0.005). Moreover, only the membrane component (Dm) increased significantly in supine subjects (KDm = 2.81 ± 1.32 vs. 1.82 ± 0.54 ml/min/mm Hg/l; p < 0.05), the increase in capillary blood volume (Vc) being not significant (KVc = 12.54 ± 4.22 vs. 11.17 ± 3.79 ml/l; NS). These data could be interpreted as a demonstration of a more homogeneously distributed ventilation with respect to diffusion surface in healthy young people in a supine position. The amount of surface available for diffusion seems therefore to be a limiting factor to gas flow across the lungs in these subjects. Thus a straightforward attribution of posturally influenced changes in CO diffusing capacity exclusively to factors affecting Vc is not recommended, particularly in pathological conditions, if information about variation in distribution of ventilation is unavailable
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