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Previous studies comparing cardiac output (Q) and stroke volume (SV) between cystic fibrosis (CF) patients and control subjects have shown conflicting results: some found lower SV in CF patients with severe airflow limitation, and others showed no difference between CF and control subjects. Methodologic problems could explain these discrepant findings. The aim of this study was to better characterize Q and SV with exercise in CF patients with mild as well as severe airflow obstruction. Subjects included 18 CF patients with FEV1 ranging from 28 to 80% of predicted without pulmonary hypertension, and 16 matched control subjects. Cardiac output was measured at three levels of upright cycle exercise using the indirect Fick (CO2) method with blood gas sampling. Q on exercise was similar among control and CF subjects. SV was lower in CF patients, particularly those with FEV1 < or = 55% predicted, than in control subjects. Stepwise regression of SV on height, percent ideal body weight, and FEV1 showed a significant effect of relative underweight on SV. Despite this, well-nourished patients with FEV1 56 to 80% of predicted also had lower SV. As these findings were consistent across the range of severity of lung disease and age, even in the absence of malnutrition, they imply that another mechanism accounts for SV limitation during exercise in CF.
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PMID:Stroke volume during exercise in cystic fibrosis. 863 May 52

Secondary hyperlipoproteinemias are found in connection with other primary organic diseases. Typical examples are those seen with diabetes mellitus, liver and kidney diseases. In addition there are changes induced by hormonal dysfunctions such as hypothyroidism, by the use of oral contraceptives or in postmenopausal women. During pregnancy there is a physiological transient increase in lipoproteins. In addition to primary organic diseases there are a number of exogenous factors such as obesity, malnutrition and alcohol abuse causing hyperlipidemia. The relation between hypertension and hyperlipidemia described as familial dyslipidemic hypertension is less well known. Obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, hyperuricemia and impaired glucose tolerance are the basic conditions of the metabolic syndrome. Familial combined hyperlipidemia is a genetically determined, dyslipidemic syndrome with a high prevalence among patients with coronary artery disease and stroke. As there are some links between familial combined hyperlipidemia and secondary hyperlipoproteinemias, this disease entity is discussed together in this paper. Familial combined hyperlipidemia is metabolically, genetically and by this on a molecular level closely linked to familial dyslipidemic hypertension as well as the metabolic syndrome. The exact mechanism of this disease is currently unknown.
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PMID:[Secondary disorders of lipid metabolism, metabolic syndrome and familial combined hyperlipidemia]. 865 Sep 33

Malnutrition in hospital is often unrecognized. A nutrition team aims to teach simple methods of detecting malnutrition. On a single day all medical in-patients underwent a nutritional assessment. Eighty-four patients (43 men), median age 71 years (range 28-97), were assessed. The most common diagnoses were cardiac disease (26), stroke/dementia (12), non-malignant lung disease (9) and malignancy (6). A weight loss of more than 10% (%WL) was found in 17/65 (26%) and a body mass index (BMI) of less than 19 kg/m2 in 13/69 (19%). A mid-arm muscle circumference (MAMC) less than the fifth percentile occurred in 16/83 (19%) patients. Percentage weight loss alone detected seven patients of whom four were overweight (BMI > 25 kg/m2), BMI alone detected three patients, and MAMC alone eight patients of whom three could not be weighed and three had fluid retention. There was fluid retention in 35/84 (42%) patients of whom nine were malnourished (six detected by BMI and/or %WL, and three by MAMC alone). All three measurements were made in 64 patients, six (9%) of whom were detected as malnourished by all three methods. Combining the three measurements 29/84 (35%) of patients were malnourished and only 28% of these patients had been assessed by a dietitian. BMI and %WL detect most patients but fluid retention may limit their accuracy. MAMC is useful in those who cannot be weighed or who have fluid retention.
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PMID:Three simple methods of detecting malnutrition on medical wards. 868 18

Alcoholism may lead to a great many physical and mental problems in individuals of any age. Elderly alcoholics often have additional problems resulting from the interaction of age related changes in physiology and "heavy" alcohol intake. Some of the more important problems are: Impairment of the immune system with decreased ability to deal with infection or cancer. Increased incidence of hypertension, cardiac arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, and cardiomyopathy. Increased incidence of stroke. Alcohol dementia. Increased incidence of esophageal and other cancers. Cirrhosis and other liver disease. Malnutrition. There seems to be no area in which even moderate alcohol intake is of definite benefit, and some areas in which even small amounts are detrimental.
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PMID:Medical manifestations of alcoholism in the elderly. 875 18

Stroke (Ischemic) initiates numerous pathophysiological processes and each of them can be dangerous. When evaluating patient's state and choosing therapeutical strategy, a complexity of the followed-up parameters should be taken into account as well as a complexity of a given therapeutical approach. On the basis of literary data and acquired clinical experience, we developed our own algorithm for diagnosis of the nutritional state and it was implemented into a semi-expert computing system SOFT. Using SOFT program, the group of 23 patients with ischemic CMP was examined within 40 hrs after its origin. These patients were found to show a slight protein catabolism and nutritional stress (aminograms, stress index, nutritional percentage of complications, nitrogen balance, CRP, prealbumin). necessity of an early diagnosis of nutritional deficiency and disorders of protein metabolism in STROKE patients is discussed. The paper reports on means of enteral nutrition prepared in the Hospital in Sternberk which appeared to be highly favorable. The aspects of administration of parenteral nutrition are discussed.
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PMID:[Nutritional status in patients with stroke. Diagnosis, therapy and its monitoring]. 897 56

There are few reports on operations in patients with nonalcoholic pancreatitis. Between 1985 and 1995 we operated on 58 such patients, 38 of whom were male and 20 female with a mean age of 35 years (range 5-72 years). The indications for operation were pain (n = 49), biliary obstruction (n = 12), duodenal obstruction (n = 10), portal hypertension (n = 11), cysts (n = 14), and pancreatic ascites (n = 3). Thirty-four patients with a dilated pancreatic duct underwent pancreaticojejunostomy; cysts were drained internally in eight, and biliary and duodenal obstruction was bypassed. Ten patients also underwent surgery for portal hypertension. Four (7%) patients died during the postoperative period. Of the remaining 54 patients, 48 (89%) were followed up for a median period of 63 months (range 6 months to 10 years). Six died: four of pancreatic cancer, one of cerebrovascular accident, and one of malnutrition. Of the 34 surviving patients operated for pain, 30 (88%) felt better, of whom 24 (71%) had complete relief of pain; 14 (41%) recorded a weight gain. Pancreatic decompression results in immediate and lasting pain relief in most patients with nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Surgery for nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis. 1050 49

Swallowing problems can affect as many as one in three patients in the period immediately after a stroke. In some cases this can lead to serious morbidity, in particular malnutrition and pulmonary aspiration. Despite this, swallowing usually recovers completely in the vast majority of patients within weeks. This impressive propensity for recovery is likely to relate to how the area of the motor cortex concerned with swallowing is organized and then reorganized after cerebral injury. Recent studies have indicated that swallowing has a bilateral but asymmetric inter-hemisphere representation within motor and premotor cortex. Damage to the hemisphere that has the greater swallowing output appears to predispose that individual to swallowing problems. However, because there is additional substrate for swallowing in the undamaged hemisphere, the capacity for compensatory reorganization in the contralateral motor cortex might be increased, leading to a greater likelihood of recovery. Swallowing might be an excellent system for studying cortical plasticity, and might prove useful in the development of new therapies aimed at accelerating reorganization in the undamaged hemisphere after unilateral cerebral injury.
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PMID:Gut feelings about recovery after stroke: the organization and reorganization of human swallowing motor cortex. 968 16

Pineal gland hypoplasia secondary to intrauterine malnutrition is suggested as a fetal contribution to sudden infant death syndrome, coronary artery disease and ischemic stroke. The loss of melatonin's antioxidant activity is proposed as an additional factor to consider in atherosclerotic vascular disease.
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PMID:Short note: The fetal origins hypothesis: linking pineal gland hypoplasia with coronary heart disease and stroke. 969 Jul 75

A cause-and-effect relation between protein-energy malnutrition and poor outcome in acute stroke patients has not been definitively established. To measure the effect of the nutritional status of hospitalized stroke patients on clinical outcome, a prospective, observational study was performed. Acute stroke patients admitted to Leicester General Hospital from June 1994 to October 1995 had their nutritional status assessed with anthropometric, hematologic, and biochemical methods within 48 h of admission and after 2 and 4 wk. Outcome measures including disability, handicap, length of stay, morbidity (infective complications), discharge destination, and mortality were recorded during the hospital stay and at 3 mo. Nutritional status deteriorated significantly during the study period, but only serum albumin concentrations showed a significant association with various outcome measures. Stroke patients with hypoalbuminemia had a greater risk of infective complications (P<0.0001) and poor functional outcome during hospitalization than those with normal or higher serum albumin concentrations. Serum albumin concentrations were good predictors of the degree of disability and handicap during the hospital stay. After prognostic indicators of poor outcome were adjusted for, serum albumin concentration in the hospital was a strong and independent predictor of mortality at 3 mo after acute stroke [hazard ratio 0.91 (95% CI: 0.84, 0.99) for a 1-g/L higher serum albumin concentration]. Whether nutritional supplementation removes or mitigates the hazard of poor outcome associated with undernutrition after acute stroke needs to be determined.
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PMID:Influence of nutritional status on clinical outcome after acute stroke. 970 Nov 83

Dysphagia (difficulty in swallowing) is a common clinical symptom associated with many diseases, such as stroke, multiple sclerosis, neuromuscular diseases, and cancer. Its complications include choking, aspiration, malnutrition, cachexia, and dehydration. The goal in dysphagia management is to provide adequate nutrition and hydration while minimizing the risk of choking and aspiration. It is important to advance the individual toward oral feeding in a timely manner to enhance the recovery of swallowing function and preserve the quality of life. Current clinical assessments of dysphagia are limited in providing adequate guidelines for oral feeding. Mathematical modeling of the fluid dynamics of pharyngeal bolus transport provides a unique opportunity for studying the physiology and pathophysiology of swallowing. Finite element analysis (FEA) is a special case of computational fluid dynamics (CFD). In CFD, the flow of a fluid in a space is modeled by covering the space with a grid and predicting how the fluid moves from grid point to grid point. FEA is capable of solving problems with complex geometries and free surfaces. A preliminary pharyngeal model has been constructed using FEA. This model incorporates literature-reported, normal, anatomical data with time-dependent pharyngeal/upper esophageal sphincter (UES) wall motion obtained from videofluorography (VFG). This time-dependent wall motion can be implemented as a moving boundary condition in the model. Clinical kinematic data can be digitized from VFG studies to construct and test the mathematical model. The preliminary model demonstrates the feasibility of modeling pharyngeal bolus transport, which, to our knowledge, has not been attempted before. This model also addresses the need and the potential for CFD in understanding the physiology and pathophysiology of the pharyngeal phase of swallowing. Improvements of the model are underway. Combining the model with individualized clinical data should potentially improve the management of dysphagia.
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PMID:Mathematical modeling of normal pharyngeal bolus transport: a preliminary study. 970 16


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