12 research outputs found
Severe acute renal failure in malaria.
BACKGROUND: We have noticed a recent rise in the incidence and severity of acute renal failure (ARF) in malaria. AIM: To study the incidence, severity and outcome of ARF in malaria. SETTING and DESIGN: It is a retrospective analysis of data of one year from a tertiary medical centre in a metropolitan city. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with ARF and smear positive malaria were evaluated. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Results were expressed as mean, range and standard deviation. RESULTS: Out of 402 detected smear positive malaria, 24 had ARF. Eighteen were of the age group 21-40 years. Plasmodium falciparum (PF) was detected in 16, Plasmodium vivax in three, and mixed infection in five. Non-oliguric ARF was seen in 14. Eighteen showed severe ARF (Serum creatinine >5 mg%). Twenty-two patients needed dialysis. Prolonged ARF lasting for 2-6 weeks was seen in eight. Seventeen patients recovered completely, while seven showed fatal combination of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), severe ARF and PF malaria. No response was seen to chloroquine and artesunate given alone and twenty patients required quinine. CONCLUSION: ARF necessitating dialysis was seen in 92% of patients with ARF in malaria. PF infection, severe ARF, DIC and ARDS were poor prognostic factors. Resistance was noted to both chloroquine and artesunate
Optimization of lithium content in LiFePO4 for superior electrochemical performance: the role of impurities
Carbon coated LixFePO4 samples with systematically varying Li-content (x = 1, 1.02, 1.05, 1.10) have been synthesized via a sol-gel route. The Li : Fe ratios for the as-synthesized samples is found to vary from similar to 0.96 : 1 to 1.16 : 1 as determined by the proton induced gamma emission (PIGE) technique (for Li) and ICP-OES (for Fe). According to Mossbauer spectroscopy, sample Li1.05FePO4 has the highest content (i.e., similar to 91.5%) of the actual electroactive phase (viz., crystalline LiFePO4), followed by samples Li1.02FePO4, Li1.1FePO4 and LiFePO4; with the remaining content being primarily Fe-containing impurities, including a conducting FeP phase in samples Li1.02FePO4 and Li1.05FePO4. Electrodes based on sample Li1.05FePO4 show the best electrochemical performance in all aspects, retaining similar to 150 mA h g(-1) after 100 charge/discharge cycles at C/2, followed by sample Li1.02FePO4 (similar to 140 mA h g(-1)), LiFePO4 (similar to 120 mA h g(-1)) and Li1.10FePO4 (similar to 115 mA h g(-1)). Furthermore, the electrodes based on sample Li1.05FePO4 retain similar to 107 mA h g(-1) even at a high current density of 5C. Impedance spectra indicate that electrodes based on sample Li1.05FePO4 possess the least charge transfer resistance, plausibly having influence from the compositional aspects. This low charge transfer resistance is partially responsible for the superior electrochemical behavior of that specific composition
Anthropometry, lipid profile and dietary pattern of patients with chronic ischaemic heart disease.
The anthropometry, lipid profile and dietary characteristics of 114 patients with chronic ischaemic heart disease (IHD) were evaluated. There were 91 (80%) men and the mean age was 56 +/- 9 years. The body mass index was near normal (24.4 +/- 3.4), but the waist: hip ratio was high (0.94 +/- 0.06) suggesting central obesity. This was well in accordance of the step II recommendations of the NCEP guidelines as regards their caloric intake and its break-up in terms of carbohydrate, protein and fat (including saturated, mono-unsaturated and poly-unsaturated fatty acids) content. Their daily cholesterol intake (31 +/- 32 mg/day, range 4-180) was very low. The total cholesterol (212 +/- 37 mg%) was marginally elevated, HDL cholesterol (33 +/- 7.5 mg%) was low, LDL cholesterol (148 +/- 39 mg%) was high and the total: HDL ratio (6.8 +/- 2.0) was significantly abnormal. The serum triglyceride level (154 +/- 68 mg%) was on the higher side of normal. These observations give further credence to the recently evolving view that there are different and hitherto unrecognised risk factors of IHD in Indians, who seem to have the highest incidence of IHD amongst all ethnic groups of the world despite consuming a diet low in fat and cholesterol content
Severe acute renal failure in malaria
BACKGROUND: We have noticed a recent rise in the incidence and severity
of acute renal failure (ARF) in malaria. AIM: To study the incidence,
severity and outcome of ARF in malaria. SETTING and DESIGN: It is a
retrospective analysis of data of one year from a tertiary medical
centre in a metropolitan city. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with ARF
and smear positive malaria were evaluated. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:
Results were expressed as mean, range and standard deviation. RESULTS:
Out of 402 detected smear positive malaria, 24 had ARF. Eighteen were
of the age group 21-40 years. Plasmodium falciparum (PF) was detected
in 16, Plasmodium vivax in three, and mixed infection in five.
Non-oliguric ARF was seen in 14. Eighteen showed severe ARF (Serum
creatinine >5 mg%). Twenty-two patients needed dialysis. Prolonged
ARF lasting for 2-6 weeks was seen in eight. Seventeen patients
recovered completely, while seven showed fatal combination of
disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), acute respiratory
distress syndrome (ARDS), severe ARF and PF malaria. No response was
seen to chloroquine and artesunate given alone and twenty patients
required quinine. CONCLUSION: ARF necessitating dialysis was seen in
92% of patients with ARF in malaria. PF infection, severe ARF, DIC and
ARDS were poor prognostic factors. Resistance was noted to both
chloroquine and artesunate
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Effect of a calcium deblooming algorithm on accuracy of coronary computed tomography angiography.
BACKGROUND: Coronary artery calcification is a significant contributor to reduced accuracy of coronary computed tomographic angiography (CTA) in the assessment of coronary artery disease severity. The aim of the current study is to assess the impact of a prototype calcium deblooming algorithm on the diagnostic accuracy of CTA. METHODS: 40 patients referred for invasive catheter angiography underwent CTA and invasive catheter angiography. The CTA were reconstructed using a standard soft tissue kernel (CTASTAND) and a deblooming algorithm (CTADEBLOOM). CTA studies were read with and without the deblooming algorithm blinded to the invasive coronary angiogram findings. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value and negative predictive value for the detection of stenosis ≥50% or ≥70% were evaluated using quantitative coronary angiography as the reference standard. Image quality was assessed using a 5-point scale, and the presence of image artifact recorded. RESULTS: All studies were diagnostic with 548 segments available for evaluation. Image score was 3.64 ± 0.72 with CTADEBLOOM, versus 3.56 ± 0.72 with CTASTAND (p = 0.38). CTADEBLOOM had significantly less calcium blooming artifact than CTASTAND (12.5% vs. 47.5%, p = 0.001). Based on a 50% stenosis threshold for defining significant disease, the Sensitivity/Specificity/PPV/NPV/Accuracy were 65.9/84.9/27.6/96.6/83.4 for CTADEBLOOM and 75.0/81.9/26.6/97.4/81.4 for CTASTAND using a ≥50% threshold. CTADEBLOOM specificity was significantly higher than CTASTAND (84.9% vs. 81.5%, p = 0.03), with no difference between the algorithms in sensitivity (p = 0.22), or accuracy (p = 0.15). These results remained unchanged when a stenosis threshold of ≥70% was used. Interobserver agreement was fair with both techniques (CTADEBLOOM k = 0.38, CTASTAND k = 0.37). CONCLUSION: In this proof of concept study, coronary calcification deblooming using a prototype post-processing algorithm is feasible and reduces calcium blooming with an improvement of the specificity of the CTA exam