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Undernutrition and the consumption of poor diets are prevalent among elderly people in developing countries. Recognising the importance of the early identification of individuals at high nutritional risk, this study aimed to develop a simple tool for screening. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 11 randomly selected villages among the 62 in Mersing District, Malaysia. Undernutrition was assessed using body mass index, plasma albumin and haemoglobin on 285 subjects. Dietary inadequacy (a count of nutrients falling below two-thirds of the Recommended Dietary Allowances) was examined for 337 subjects. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify significant predictors of undernutrition and dietary inadequacy from social and health factors, and to derive appropriate indices based on these predictions. The multivariate predictors of undernutrition were 'no joint disease', 'smoker', 'no hypertension', 'depended on others for economic resource', 'respiratory disease', 'perceived weight loss' and 'chewing difficulty', with a joint sensitivity of 56% and specificity of 84%. The equivalent predictors of dietary inadequacy were 'unable to take public transport', 'loss of appetite', 'chewing difficulty', 'no regular fruit intake' and 'regularly taking less than three meals per day', with a joint sensitivity of 77% and specificity of 47%. These predictions, with minor modification to simplify operational use, led to the production of a simple screening tool. The tool can be used by public health professionals or community workers or leaders as a simple and rapid instrument to screen individual at high risk of undernutrition and/or dietary inadequacy.
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PMID:Development of a screening tool for detecting undernutrition and dietary inadequacy among rural elderly in Malaysia: simple indices to identify individuals at high risk. 1071 84

Declining death rates from communicable diseases, together with population aging, leads to a higher incidence and prevalence of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), such as atherosclerotic disorders, cancers, and chronic respiratory disease. These NCDs gradually become the population's predominant health problems. Evidence indicates that the prevalence of certain NCDs, such as diabetes and hypertension, is increasing rapidly in parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Others, such as asthma and epilepsy, are common, but poorly managed. This paper describes a project funded by the British Government's Department for International Development to provide costed and evaluated treatment packages for use at the primary health care level, methods and materials for evaluating the quality of noncommunicable disease care, and a protocol for assessing national opportunities to prevent hypertension, heart disease, and diabetes. Methods are now being developed and piloted in urban and rural Tanzania and Cameroon.
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PMID:Tackling the emerging pandemic of non-communicable diseases in sub-Saharan Africa: the essential NCD health intervention project. 1091 Apr 12

We investigated the use of measurements of serum concentrations of the cardiac proteins troponins I and T as biochemical markers of myocardial cell damage in 80 patients undergoing vascular or major orthopaedic surgery. Holter electrocardiographic monitoring was carried out before surgery and for 3 days after surgery. Blood samples for troponins I and T and creatine kinase-MB isoenzyme were taken on each of these 4 days. Outcome was assessed at 3 months using a patient questionnaire, general practitioner follow-up and case notes review. Silent postoperative myocardial ischaemia was detected in 21 patients; increases in troponins I and T and creatine kinase-MB occurred in four, six and 17 of these patients, respectively. Eight patients suffered major postoperative complications (cardiac death, myocardial ischaemia, congestive cardiac failure, unstable angina and cerebrovascular accident) and 21 minor complications (poorly controlled hypertension needing increased or new additional treatment, palpitations, increased tiredness or shortness of breath in the absence of known respiratory disease). There were no associations between postoperative ischaemia and cardiac protein concentrations. The relative odds for the associations of major adverse outcome at 3 months after surgery and postoperative ischaemia or increased serum concentrations of the three proteins were 5.39 [95% confidence intervals 1.16-27.67] for postoperative ischaemia; 5.64 [1.07-31.00] for creatine kinase-MB isoenzyme; 17.00 [2.20-116.54] for troponin T and 13.20 [1.12-135.00] for troponin I. We found troponin T to be the only prospective marker for both major and minor cardiovascular complications (relative odds 10.65 [1.26-252.88]).
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PMID:Increases in serum concentrations of cardiac proteins and the prediction of early postoperative cardiovascular complications in noncardiac surgery patients. 1155 Jun 85

Increased prevalence of sleep-related breathing disorders has been reported in patients with essential hypertension and we have described disordered breathing in spontaneously hypertensive rats, an animal model of genetic hypertension. The mechanisms coupling hypertension to respiratory dysfunction during sleep remain, however, largely unknown. To determine if sleep-related respiratory disorder reflects cardiovascular derangement or, alternatively, represents an independent phenotype in hypertensive rats, we polygraphically recorded groups (n = 10) of genetically hypertensive, genetically normotensive, and phenotypically normotensive rats carrying a genetic background for hypertension. Apnea index was elevated more than 15-fold during NREM sleep in both animal groups carrying hypertension-related genes (p < 0.0001 for each) versus normotensive Wistar Kyoto rats. During REM sleep, a genetic background for hypertension was associated with an increased apnea index of at least 500% versus normotensive Wistar Kyoto rats (p < 0.0001 for each comparison). Still, overall mean respiratory rate, minute ventilation, and sleep architecture were equivalent among all animal groups. As expected, blood pressure and heart period were similar in both normotensive groups but elevated in the hypertensive animals. Persistent sleep-related breathing disorder despite effective cardiovascular normalization in the phenotypically normotensive but genetically hypertensive rats suggests that disordered breathing represents a genetically determined phenotype in these animals that is not secondary to the cardiovascular derangements. The model system described here may provide a powerful tool for investigation of the determinants of sleep-related breathing disorder.
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PMID:Sleep-disordered respiration in phenotypically normotensive, genetically hypertensive rats. 1102 64

Between September 1996 and January 1999 we used polysomnography (PSG) to examine 473 patients (involving a total of 662 records). The diagnosis was a sleep-related breathing disorder in 256 patients, including sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) in 194 patients, sleep hypoxicemia in 18 and insomnia in the other four. The SAS consisted of three subtypes: central apnea (CA) in 56 patients, obstructive apnea (OA) in 124 and mixed apnea (MA) in eight. The ratio of central apnea was relatively higher than the national average. Among the 473 patients, the most common complication was heart disease (133 patients) while other complications included hypertension, and respiratory and cerebrovascular diseases. Concerning the therapy for these patients, continuous positive airway pressure therapy was the most commonly applied and was effective in each type of SAS (CA, OA, MA). Other therapies included prosthetic mandibular advancement, bilevel positive airway pressure, medication and ENT operations. In Koga Hospital, there are many patients with heart disease and/or respiratory disease. We examined those patients who presented with snoring and/or apnea using PSG. Among these patients, SAS was the most common sleep disorder. The relative ratio of CA was high and the average age was higher than those with OA.
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PMID:The Koga Hospital Center for studies on sleep: status report. 1118 86

The purpose of this study was to evaluate which factors might influence health care attitudes such as anxiety about dental care by older adults in Israel. The study population consisted of 103 non-institutionalized patients (46 men and 57 women) over the age of 65 who attended a dental clinic that provided services for older adults during a one-year period. Socio-demographic information and information about the subjects' general health and their level of concern about health problems were obtained from self-reported questionnaires, while the dental anxiety level was found by means of a dental anxiety scale (DAS). Ninety-nine percent of the patients suffered from a major systemic disease such as diabetes, hypertension, atherosclerosis, respiratory disease, and rheumatic disease. Both unmarried and first-time patients expressed high anxiety scores. Patients with 12 or fewer years of formal schooling demonstrated significantly higher dental anxiety. Among patients who regularly attended a synagogue or a social club, concern about oral health was significantly higher than for the rest (p < 0.02). No association was found between having dentures and gender, or between having dentures and level of education. The reason for visiting the clinic (inability to eat, pain, or esthetics) was not associated with any other health concern or with dental anxiety levels. This study determined that patients who were unmarried, less educated, or attending the facility for the first time were more likely to experience dental anxiety. These patients merit special consideration.
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PMID:Non-institutionalized elderly dental patients in Israel: socio-demographics, health concerns, and dental anxiety. 1120 80

In this epidemiological study we have studied during 1997 in Emilia-Romagna (population about four million) Italy, mortality from ischaemic heart disease, hypertension, cerebrovascular and respiratory disease in 50-89 year-olds. The data were collected from "Ufficio Risorse Informative" and "servizio Meteorologico" of the Emilia-Romagna region. The results show high indices of deaths in the elderly, the highest being those of the 80-89 year-olds, during the winter with a maximum in January. There were some differences between males and females with regard to cold-related mortality of the different diseases. Comparing mortality rates of persons living in the North (Piacenza) and in the South (Rimini) of Emilia-Romagna, a consistent lower mortality was found in the people of Rimini. These results confirm the close relationship between advanced age, cold and excess mortality in Emilia-Romagna. The results suggest that at least two factors may be involved in explaining excess winter mortality: the sympathetic system changes in the elderly and the effects of cold on some haemostatic factors.
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PMID:Winter mortality in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. 1120 62

We studied exposures to higher daily maximum temperatures and concentrations of air pollutants in Tokyo during the summer months of July and August from 1980 to 1995 and their effects on hospital emergency transports for cardiovascular and respiratory diseases for males and females > 65 years of age. Cardiovascular diseases were angina, cardiac insufficiency, hypertension, and myocardial infarction. Respiratory diseases were asthma, acute and chronic bronchitis, and pneumonia. Except for pneumonia, daily maximum temperatures were not associated with hospital emergency transports. Increasing daily maximum temperatures, however, were associated with decreased hospital emergency transports for hypertension. Concentrations of nitrogen dioxide or particulate matter < or = 10 microm, however, were associated with daily hospital emergency transports for angina, cardiac insufficiency, myocardial infarction, asthma, acute and chronic bronchitis, and pneumonia. For cardiac insufficiency, hypertension, myocardial infarction, asthma, chronic bronchitis, and pneumonia, the expected daily number of emergency transports per million were greater for males than for females. For angina and acute bronchitis, there were no differences for the expected daily numbers of emergency transports per million between males and females.
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PMID:Effects of temperature and air pollutants on cardiovascular and respiratory diseases for males and females older than 65 years of age in Tokyo, July and August 1980-1995. 1133 83

A 58-year-old man experienced an asthma exacerbation after administration of nicotine nasal spray for smoking cessation. His medical history was significant for asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hypertension, and tobacco use when he was prescribed nicotine nasal spray for smoking cessation in an outpatient setting. Within the first 3 days of administering the spray, he developed wheezing, coughing, and significant shortness of breath, which required hospitalization. The patient was hospitalized for 48 hours and discharged with a diagnosis of asthma exacerbation probably related to administration of nicotine nasal spray. Prudent administration of nicotine nasal spray is recommended in patients with underlying respiratory disease. Patients should be counseled on the potential adverse effects of treatment and proper administration techniques in order to minimize these effects.
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PMID:Asthma exacerbation after administration of nicotine nasal spray for smoking cessation. 1206 70

The obesity-hypoventilation syndrome (or alveolar hypoventilation in the obese) is a new name for an old syndrome, Pickwickian syndrome. It is defined as chronic alveolar hypoventilation (PaO(2)<70 mmHg, PaCO(2) > 45 mmHg) in obese patient with a body mass index > 30 kg/m(2) who have no other respiratory disease explaining the gas anomalies. The large majority of obese subjects are not hypercapnic, even in case of severe obesity. There are three principal causes explaining alveolar hypoventilation in obese subjects: high cost of the work of respiration, dysfunction of the respiratory centers, repeated episodes of nocturnal obstructive apnea. The obesity-hypoventilation syndrome is generally found in males aged over 50 years. Exercise-induced breathlessness is a constant finding. Diagnosis is often made after an episode of severe respiratory failure. Associated diseases favored by obesity are frequent: diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease. By definition, there is a hypoxemia-hypercapnia syndrome persisting after an acute episode. Spirography usually demonstrates moderate volume restriction. Pulmonary hypertension is frequent but not constant. Obesity-hypoventilation syndrome must be distinguished from obstructive sleep apnea, although the two conditions are often associated. Obstructive sleep apnea may be absent in certain patients with obesity-hypoventilation syndrome (we have had several cases) and inversely, obesity is not observed in certain patients with obstructive apnea. It should be recalled that the term Pickwickian syndrome designates obesity-hypoventilation syndrome (with or without obstructive apnea) and not obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.
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PMID:[Alveolar hypoventilation in the obese: the obesity-hypoventilation syndrome]. 1208 46


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