Epoetin zeta, administered subcutaneously, is equivalent to epoetin alfa in respect of its clinical efficacy. The safety profile of both products is similar: no unexpected AEs were observed, no patients developed anti-erythropoietin antibodies, and both epoetin preparations were well tolerated.
The evaluation of the primary endpoints provided data supporting the intravenous administration of epoetin zeta in patients with chronic renal failure. Neutralizing antibodies against erythropoietin were not detected, and there were no reports of patients with increasing erythropoietin resistance. Our results suggest that intravenous administration of epoetin zeta is effective regarding its ability to maintain stabilized hemoglobin levels within the target range of 10.5-12.5 g/dL.
In 1905, Dr. Nikolai Korotkoff (1874–1920), a Russian surgeon, discovered a simple and precise technique to measure arterial pressure. He was born on 26th February 1874 in the central Russian city of Kursk. Korotkoff graduated from the Medical Faculty of Moscow University in 1898, but he worked later in the Surgical Clinic at the Imperial Military Medical Academy in St. Petersburg (Russia). Korotkoff served as a military surgeon during the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905) and his major efforts were to find reliable clinical signs that could predict whether limb flow would be viable after vascular surgery of traumatic aneurysm. He found that after complete compression, the aneurysm of the arm (i.e. distal pulse on a. brachialis) disappeared with Riva-Rocci cuff and then gradually decreasing the pressure, a series of sounds could be heard by stethoscope under the artery distal to the compression. Korotkoff described four distinct phases of sounds: first sound, then compression murmurs, second tone, and disappearance of sounds. Korotkoff was also able to demonstrate the same auscultatory finding in healthy persons. He failed to notice only the muffled second sound, which was demonstrated a little later. These classical observations are now well known as the five different phases of Korotkoff sounds. In November 1905, during a conference of the Imperial Military Medical Academy, he reported his discovery in a short presentation entitled ‘On the issue of the methods for measuring blood pressure’. In 1939, the Joint Committee of the American Heart Association and the Cardiac Society of Great Britain and Ireland recognized officially and accepted worldwide Korotkoff’s method for blood pressure determining.
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