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Forty-two patients with proven intra-abdominal sepsis were studied in a prospective clinical trial. The following parameters were evaluated: (1) Nine parameters on admission: age, sex, obesity, malnutrition, history of cardiac, respiratory or renal disease, diabetes mellitus and malignant neoplasia. Four of these parameters had a prognostic value (p less than 0.05): age 65 years, diabetes mellitus and cardiac disease. (2) Thirty parameters representing the functional status of six organic systems during sepsis: respiratory, cardiovascular, nervous, kidneys, blood coagulation, liver. Six of these parameters had a prognostic values: PEEP 0-10 cm H2O to keep PaO2 greater than 60 mmHg (p less than 0.001), serum creatinine greater than 3.6 mg/dl (p less than 0.01), prothrombin time greater than 15'' or platelet count less than 100,000/mm3 (p less than 0.001), need of vasoconstrictive drug to keep arterial pressure greater than 100 mmHg (p less than 0.001), bilirubin greater than 3 mg/dl (p less than 0.01) and mental confusion. The combination of these ten statistically significant prognostic criteria for each patient showed that the mortality was 0 with 0-2 criteria, 36% with 3-5 criteria, 94% with 6-8 criteria and 100% with 8-10 criteria. Patients with more than five of these criteria had a significant higher mortality risk (p less than 0.001).
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PMID:Prognostic criteria in intra-abdominal sepsis. 367 39

A succinct overview of the nutritional management of hypertension, past, present, and future is presented. Prior to 1945, the low sodium diet and the rice-fruit diet were shown to be effective in reducing the blood pressure to normal levels in 35-40% of hypertensive patients. Between 1945 and the present, many studies were made on the effects of alcohol, water hardness, obesity, moderate restriction of sodium with increased potassium intake, increased dietary calcium, low animal and high unsaturated fat intake, and increased amounts of fiber in the diet. Criticisms are made of the very small magnitude, even if statistically significant, of blood pressure decreases and the too-short control periods in many instances, and also concerning the assumption of use of 24-h urinary sodium as an accurate index of the sodium intake, and of urinary creatinine as a physiological reference standard against the excretion of sodium. The author mentions, for possible future research, long-term studies of the effects of diets moderately restricted in sodium and high in potassium, of reducing weight and increasing physical activity in obese hypertensives, and of low animal and high polyunsaturated fat diets in patients with mild essential hypertension.
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PMID:Nutritional management of hypertension: past, present, and future. 375 39

The hyperphagic, genetically obese Zucker rat (fa/fa) exhibits both a greater kidney size and a progressive, premature glomerular sclerosis. In the present study, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) and renal tubular function were evaluated during study 1 in lean Zucker (FA/-), fa/fa, and lean Sprague-Dawley (S-D) rats. The GFR as measured by renal inulin clearance (ClIN) was not significantly different (P greater than 0.05) between S-D (1.36 +/- 0.18 ml/min) vs FA/- (1.36 +/- 0.33 ml/min) and FA/- vs fa/fa (1.25 +/- 0.42 ml/min). The ERPF as measured by renal p-aminohippurate (PAH) clearance (ClPAH) also was not significantly different between S-D (3.98 +/- 0.80 ml/min) vs Fa/- (3.71 +/- 0.81 ml/min) and Fa/- vs fa/fa (3.34 +/- 1.60 ml/min). There was a significant difference (P less than 0.05) in the renal tubular transport maximum (Tm) of PAH between S-D (2.23 +/- 0.40 mg/min) and Fa/- (1.64 +/- 0.63 mg/min) groups but not between Fa/- and fa/fa (1.29 +/- 0.61 mg/min) groups, indicating a strain effect in organic anionic renal transport. The Fa/- vs fa/fa comparisons were significant when GFR, ERPF and Tm were corrected for total body or kidney weight. In a second group of animals (study 2), GFR (as reflected by creatinine clearance [Clcr]) and histologic studies were performed in Fa/- and fa/fa rats. Clcr values were significantly higher in the fa/fa (2.10 +/- 0.44 ml/min) vs Fa/- (1.68 +/- 0.17 ml/min). Histologic studies in group 2 demonstrated no remarkable differences between Fa/- and fa/fa rats. These results suggest wide interanimal variation in obesity associated changes in renal function and possibly pathology in the fa/fa rat.
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PMID:Renal function in the obese Zucker rat. 375 27

Protein metabolism was studied in patients with alimentary obesity. It was found that the reduction of excessive body weight under the action of a complex of measures, including dietetics, exercise therapy and physiotherapy, induced positive shifts in the amino acid spectrum of blood. The blood serum creatinine content and urinary excretion of creatinine and creatine remained unchanged. The nitrogenous balance was maintained even in cases of highly restricted diets.
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PMID:[Protein metabolism in obesity patients]. 376 32

Uric acid metabolism was investigated in 27 overweight subjects, 11 men (176 +/- 30 percent of ideal body weight) and 16 women (169 +/- 20 percent of ideal body weight). They were all hospitalized and treated with low-calorie diets (1,500-800 kcal/day) with gradual reduction of total calorie intake; exercise therapy (walking, and riding a bicycle ergometer) was added to this regimen afterwards. On admission, serum levels of uric acid were significantly elevated to 9.2 +/- 1.9 mg/dl in males (control 5.1 +/- 0.8 mg/dl) (P less than 0.001) and 6.8 +/- 1.9 mg/dl in females (control 4.4 +/- 1.0 mg/dl) (P less than 0.001), while the ratios (percentages) of uric acid clearance (CuA) to creatinine clearance (Ccr) were significantly reduced to 4.0 +/- 2.1 percent in males (control 10.8 +/- 2.2 percent) (P less than 0.001) and 5.2 +/- 3.1 percent in females (control 11.8 +/- 2.9 percent) (P less than 0.001). Urinary urate excretions were also lower in obese subjects than in controls. These data suggest that hyperuricemia in obese people is mainly attributed to an impaired renal clearance of uric acid rather than overproduction. In the course of weight reduction by a low-calorie diet, CuA/Ccr ratios gradually rose up to almost normal levels and serum levels of uric acid fell without significant changes in creatinine clearance. This increase of CuA/Ccr ratio was also preserved after starting exercise therapy. The normalization of urate excretion was observed even at the phase when their body weight was not fully reduced. Although the underlying mechanism of the impaired urate excretion in obese patients and its improvement during weight reduction is as yet unclear, hyperuricemia associated with obesity can be treated very well only with appropriate diet therapy and in most cases there is no need for drug therapy.
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PMID:Studies on the impaired metabolism of uric acid in obese subjects: marked reduction of renal urate excretion and its improvement by a low-calorie diet. 377 Oct 90

Sudden death victims share most of the major risk factors for coronary disease in general; and the key to prevention is to reduce the risk of coronary attacks, especially by avoidance of cigarettes, correction of obesity, and reduction of blood pressure. The incidence increases with age, with sudden death incidence in women only a third that in men. By incorporating CHD risk factors into a multivariate logistic formulation, a composite estimate of risk is obtained over a wide range. A severely compromised coronary circulation manifested only by ECG abnormalities carries a high risk of sudden death. VPBs associated with sudden death often occur concurrently with ECG signs of LVH, intraventricular block, and nonspecific ST-T abnormalities. Convalescent MI patients with a low risk of sudden death are usually asymptomatic; have a normal creatinine, normal post-MI ECG, no tachycardia, a normal exercise ECG, few VPBs on monitoring, and normotension; and show no signs of cardiac failure.
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PMID:Epidemiology of sudden death: insights from the Framingham Study. 383 69

A nutrition curriculum for 48 students age eight-18 years with high blood pressure was implemented in Franklinton, La., as part of A Dietary/Exercise Alteration Program Trial (ADAPT), a model promoting reduced sodium (Na+) and energy intake and increased potassium (K+) intake. A teacher guide listed basic concepts, teacher and student activities, materials, behavioral outcomes, and evaluation for 12 lessons at three age levels. Games were used to present new information and increase student involvement. Taste-tests promoted attitude change regarding acceptable snacks. Decision-making and assertiveness topics facilitated independent food choices and coping with peers. Self-monitoring of intakes encouraged personal responsibility for eating behavior. Results of paired t-tests showed knowledge increased 8.7% in the spring (p less than 0.01), 4.9% in the summer (N.S.), and 7.3% in the fall (p less than 0.0001). No significant differences in increase in posttest scores by age were found. Comparisons of curriculum compliance with medication use and blood pressure change showed no relationship. A multiple regression analysis of sodium-creatinine (Na+/Cr) ratios on class attendance and posttest scores showed that children with the highest test scores had lower Na+/Cr ratios. This program increased information and skills for those motivated to change lifestyle to control obesity and blood pressure.
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PMID:A nutrition curriculum for families with high blood pressure. 384 57

We studied the oral glucose tolerance test (O-GTT) of 13 kidney transplant recipients and compared the results with the insulin binding characteristics of their own erythrocytes. They had mild renal insufficiency with significant increase of serum creatinine concentrations. Body weights were slightly but significantly elevated compared to the controls. All were receiving small doses of prednisone (0.2-0.3 mg/kg/day). Ten of the 13 patients had normal O-GTT and normal binding of 125I-insulin, while the remaining 3 patients showed abnormal O-GTT and significantly reduced maximum binding of 125I-insulin to erythrocytes. Basal insulin concentration and response to O-GTT were significantly elevated in the patients, regardless of O-GTT being normal or abnormal. It is concluded that transplant recipients have an impaired insulin action due to a post-receptor stage abnormality in glucose metabolism which is due perhaps to mild renal insufficiency, mild obesity and prolonged administration of the small dosage of prednisone.
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PMID:Glucose metabolism in pediatric renal transplant recipients: relation to insulin receptors of erythrocytes. 390 93

The posttransplantation courses of 28 consecutive patients (age range, 0.8 to 16 years) who received cadaveric renal allografts and combined cyclosporine-low-dose prednisone immunosuppression were analyzed. The mean follow-up time was 16.5 months (range, four to 42 months). There was one death and the actuarial one-year graft survival was 59%. At follow-up, the group mean (+/- SD) serum creatinine concentration in 14 patients with functioning grafts was nearly double the expected mean value for normal children of similar age and sex (1.13 +/- 0.38 vs 0.61 +/- 0.07 mg/dL), and the mean +/- SD glomerular filtration rate was 76.5 +/- 20.0 mL/min/1.73 sq m (range, 40 to 115.5 mL/min/1.73 sq m). Although rejection accounted for 11 (79%) of 14 graft losses, failure of immunosuppression could be implicated in only four of these patients. Among eight preadolescent patients with good renal function for one year posttransplantation, somatic growth was poor in four and suboptimal in three patients; catch-up growth occurred in one patient. In such patients, the weight-for-height index increased, reflecting the development of obesity after transplantation. We conclude that cyclosporin-low-dose prednisone offers little or no advantage in terms of cadaveric renal allograft survival or stimulation of somatic growth when compared with conventional therapy.
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PMID:Renal function and somatic growth in pediatric cadaveric renal transplantation with cyclosporine-prednisone immunosuppression. 390 7

This report summarizes the major design features, methods, and baseline characteristics of patients enrolled in a Veterans Administration Cooperative Study. In eleven V.A. centers, 231 male diabetic patients who had either a recent amputation for gangrene (N = 207) or active gangrene (N = 24) were randomly assigned to a group which received aspirin (325 mg t.i.d.) plus dipyridamole (75 mg t.i.d.) (N = 110) or two placeboes t.i.d. (N = 121). Major end point were vascular death and amputation of the opposite extremity for gangrene. Forty-one percent of the 563 patients screened were enrolled during a 39 month period. Enrollment errors were found in 8.7%. Historically, the two groups were well matched regarding the following variables: age, duration of diabetes, insulin therapy, previous oral agent therapy, hypertension, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, renal disease, sensory neuropathy, and smoking. The drug therapy group had an increased frequency of a history of cerebrovascular disease (19% vs 7%, p = 0.01). The groups were well matched regarding amputation site, obesity, extent of lower extremity vascular disease, retinopathy, and neuropathy upon examination. Their baseline fasting values of glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, and creatinine were also comparable. We conclude that this study should provide definitive data on the efficacy of these antiplatelet agents in preventing further vascular disease in this patient group. It should also provide new prospective data on the natural history of vascular disease, and the association of vascular risk factors with subsequent vascular events in this patient population.
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PMID:V.A. Cooperative Study on antiplatelet agents in diabetic patients after amputation for gangrene: III. Definitions and review of design and baseline characteristics. 390 83


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