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8 Cards in this Set

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BACKGROUND: Constantly changing practices in heart transplantation have improved posttransplant survival in patients with end-stage heart disease. The objective of this study was to evaluate long-term outcomes in different eras of immunosuppressive therapy after cardiac transplantation at a single center during a two-decade period. METHODS: Starting in January 2000, we reviewed 1,086 consecutive cardiac allograft recipients who underwent transplantation between 1977 to 1999. Patients were divided into four eras based on type of immunosuppressive therapy: era 1 = steroids, azathioprine (n = 26, February 1977 to March 1983), era II = steroids, cyclosporine (n = 43, April 1983 to April 1985), era III = cyclosporine, steroids, azathioprine (n = 752, April 1985 to December 1995), era IV = cyclosporine, steroids, mycophenolate mofetil (n = 315, January 1996 to October 1999). RESULTS: The actuarial survival of the entire group of 1,086 patients undergoing cardiac transplantation was 79%, 66%, and 49% at 1, 5, and 10 years, respectively. There were significant trends in recipient age and gender distribution among the four eras with increasing proportion of older age (> 60 years) and female recipients in eras III and IV (p = 0.001 and 0.02). Early mortality and long-term survival improved significantly over all eras (p < 0.001). Rejection as a cause of death decreased over time (era I, 24%; era II, 21%; era III, 15%; era IV, 9%; p = 0.02), whereas the contribution of transplant coronary artery disease as a cause of death remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac transplantation provides satisfactory long-term survival for patients with end-stage heart failure. The improving outcomes in survival correlate with improved immunosuppressive therapy in each era. Although the reasons for improvement in survival over time are multifactorial, we believe that changes in immunosuppressive therapy have had a major impact on survival as evidenced by the decreasing number of deaths due to rejection.

What kind of study is this?
Retrospective Cohort Study
OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to examine magnesium sulfate tocolysis and cerebral palsy in infants born prematurely to women without preeclampsia.Study Design: We conducted a study of infants with birth weights <1500 g and of infants with birth weights from 1500 to 1999 g who were born at <33 weeks' gestation. The study infants were born in level 2 or level 3 hospitals from 1988 through 1994 to women without preeclampsia, were delivered >3 hours after admission, and had survived to age 2 years. RESULTS: Among 170 children with cerebral palsy and 288 control subjects, similar proportions of case mothers (58%) and control mothers (62%) had received magnesium sulfate tocolysis. In women with some tocolytic treatment, these proportions were 78% and 76%, respectively. The duration of treatment with magnesium was comparable for case and control women, as were the intervals from beginning and termination of treatment to delivery. Adjustment for gestational age, birth weight, and other variables did not alter this result. CONCLUSION: Magnesium exposure was not associated with a lower risk of cerebral palsy in infants born prematurely to women without preeclampsia.

What kind of study is this?
Case Control Study
Exercise testing is widely used in the diagnosis of coronary arterry disease, but the long-term outcome for asymptomatic persons with exercise-induced premature ventricular depolarizations remains unclear. Methods. A total of 6101 asymptomatic French men (42 to 53 years of age) who were free of clinically detectable cardiovascular disease underwent a standardized graded exercise test between 1967 and 1972. Subjects were prospectively classified as having or not having frequent premature ventricular depolarizations (a run of two or more consecutive premature ventricular depolarizations or premature ventricular depolarizations constituting more than 10 percent of all ventricular depolarizations during any of the 30-second electrocardiographic recordings). Results. During exercise, 138 subjects had frequent premature ventricular depolarizations. After 23 years of follow-up, these subjects had a higher risk of death from cardiovascular causes than the men without frequent premature ventricular depolarizations during exercise (relative risk, 2.67; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.76 to 4.07). In a multivariate model, with adjustment for standard coronary risk factors and the presence or absence of premature ventricular depolarizations before exercise and during recovery from exercise, both exercise-induced ischemia and the occurrence of frequent premature ventricular depolarizations during exercise remained independently associated with an increased risk of death from cardiovascular causes, with similar relative risks (2.63 [95 percent confidence interval, 1.93 to 3.59] and 2.53 [95 percent confidence interval, 1.65 to 3.88], respectively). Conclusions. The occurrence of frequent premature ventricular depolarizations during exercise in asymptomatic middle-aged men is associated with a long-term increase in the risk of death from cardiovascular causes.

What kind of study is this?
Prospective Cohort Study
BACKGROUND: Alterations in circulating soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt1), an antiangiogenic protein, and placental growth factor (PlGF), a proangiogenic protein, appear to be involved in the pathogenesis of preeclampsia. Since soluble endoglin, another antiangiogenic protein, acts together with sFlt1 to induce a severe preeclampsia-like syndrome in pregnant rats, we examined whether it is associated with preeclampsia in women. METHODS: We performed a study of initially healthy nulliparous women within the Calcium for Preeclampsia Prevention trial [a multicenter study comparing placebo to calcium in 5000 women]. The study included all 72 women who had preterm preeclampsia (<37 weeks), as well as 480 randomly selected women--120 women with preeclampsia at term (at > or =37 weeks), 120 women with gestational hypertension, 120 normotensive women who delivered infants who were small for gestational age, and 120 normotensive controls who delivered infants who were not small for gestational age. RESULTS: Circulating soluble endoglin levels increased markedly beginning 2 to 3 months before the onset of preeclampsia. After the onset of clinical disease, the mean serum level in women with preterm preeclampsia was 46.4 ng per milliliter, as compared with 9.8 ng per milliliter in controls (P<0.001). The mean serum level in women with preeclampsia at term was 31.0 ng per milliliter, as compared with 13.3 ng per milliliter in controls (P<0.001). Beginning at 17 weeks through 20 weeks of gestation, soluble endoglin levels were significantly higher in women in whom preterm preeclampsia later developed than in controls (10.2 ng per milliliter vs. 5.8 ng per milliliter, P<0.001), and at 25 through 28 weeks of gestation, the levels were significantly higher in women in whom term preeclampsia developed than in controls (8.5 ng per milliliter vs. 5.9 ng per milliliter, P<0.001). An increased level of soluble endoglin was usually accompanied by an increased ratio of sFlt1:PlGF. The risk of preeclampsia was greatest among women in the highest quartile of the control distributions for both biomarkers but not for either biomarker alone. CONCLUSIONS: Rising circulating levels of soluble endoglin and ratios of sFlt1:PlGF herald the onset of preeclampsia.

What kind of study is this?
Nested Case Control Study
We report a case of interstitial pulmonary disease that occurred together with lymphocytic colitis during treatment with ticlopidine. The drug was prescribed for transient ischemic cerebrovascular accidents. Ticlopidine treatment was stopped, and a prolonged course of prednisone was necessary to treat the pulmonary and intestinal symptoms. So far, few cases of pulmonary side effects caused by ticlopidine have been reported. This case is unique in that interstitial lung disease evolved in parallel with colitis and caused severe hypoxemia. Special care should be taken when pulmonary symptoms appear in association with ticlopidine treatment.
Case-report
Two young men working at a nylon flocking plant in Rhode Island developed interstitial lung disease of unknown cause. Symptomatic employees had chest radiography, pulmonary function tests, high-resolution computed tomography, and serologic testing. Those with unexplained radiographic or pulmonary function abnormalities underwent bronchoalveolar lavage, lung biopsy, or both. The definition of "flock worker's lung" required histologic evidence of interstitial lung disease (or lavage evidence of lung inflammation) not explained by another condition. Eight cases of flock worker's lung were identified at the Rhode Island plant. Three cases were characterized by a high proportion of eosinophils (25% to 40%) in lavage fluid. Six of the seven patients who had biopsy had histologic findings of nonspecific interstitial pneumonia, and the seventh had bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia. All seven of these patients had peribronchovascular interstitial lymphoid nodules, usually with germinal centers, and most had lymphocytic bronchiolitis and interstitial fibrosis. All improved after leaving work.
Case series
The 1978-1979 mortality rates for cancers of the breast, prostate, ovary, and colon in 26 to 30 countries were related to the average 1979-1981 food availability data published by the United Nations. The previously described relationship between breast cancer mortality rates and animal fat consumption continues to be evident, and applies also to the other three tumor types. The correlation with breast cancer was particularly strong in postmenopausal women. Since 1964, particularly notable increases in both breast cancer mortality rate and dietary fat intake have occurred in those countries with a relatively low breast cancer risk. The international comparisons support evidence from animal experiments that diets in which olive oil is a major source of fat are associated with reduced breast cancer risk. The excess in mortality rates for breast and ovarian cancer in Israel relative to the national animal fat consumption may be due to the mixed ethnic origin of the Israeli population. Positive correlations between foods and cancer mortality rates were particularly strong in the case of meats and milk for breast cancer, milk for prostate and ovarian cancer, and meats for colon cancer. All four tumor types showed a negative correlation with cereal intake, which was particularly strong in the case of prostate and ovarian cancer.Although, in general, there was a good positive correlation between prostate and breast cancer mortality rates and between prostate cancer and animal fat, discrepancies in national ranking indicate the operation of other etiologic factors that modify risk. The observed positive correlations between the four cancer mortality rates and caloric intake from animal sources, but negative correlations for vegetable-derived calories, suggest that, of the two, animal fat and not energy is the major dietary influence on cancer risk.
Correlational Study
Objectives: To assess the prevalence of cocaine use, and its impact on severity of presentation, among adults presenting to the emergency department (ED) with asthma.
Methods: All adults aged 18 to 55 years who presented to the ED of this institution with an asthma attack, were approached about participating in the study, which required giving informed consent, answering a facilitated questionnaire, and giving a urine sample for drug screening.
Results: Patients were enrolled during a 7-month period. A total of 163 patients were approached to enter the study; 116 patients consented to participate in the study, with 103 submitting complete urine samples. Thirty-seven patients refused to participate, and 10 were excluded. Sixty-eight percent of the patients were women, with a mean age of 33 years. African-Americans made up 89% of the total group. Thirty-five percent were cigarette smokers. Urine cocaine tests were positive in 13 of 103 (13%); 6 of 103 (5.8%) were positive for opiates. In the cocaine-positive group, 5 of 13 patients (38%) were admitted to the hospital, including two patients requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation. Of the total group, 23 of 103 patients (22%) were admitted, and 5 of those 23 admitted patients (22%) were cocaine-positive.
Length of stay was significantly longer (5 vs 2.5 days, p < 0.05) in the cocaine-positive admitted patients.
Conclusions: The prevalence of cocaine use may be much higher than the 13% shown in this study, because of patients’ refusal to participate in the study. Second, the severity of exacerbation appears to be worse in the cocaine-positive group
Cross-sectional