17 research outputs found

    La prévention secondaire de l'ostéoporose passe par un circuit multidisciplinaire

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    Enormous burden for our aging population and health care system, the hip fracture remains a major challenge to public health. Every year, there are over 15.000 hip fractures in Belgium. Nonetheless of the technical progress in surgery and the follow-up for postoperation, the morbidity linked to this affection remains important because the vast majority of the patients will not recovered their previous autonomy after the fracture. The mortality is also high. Although it represents 14 % of the total osteoporotic fractures, the hip fractures account for 92 % of the costs caused by the disease, corresponding to 150.000.000 euros per year in Belgium. The present demographic evolution suggests that this amount will increase by 7 fold in 2050. Different epidemiological studies show that a large proportion of these fractures should have been avoided if the reason of the bone fragility, osteoporosis, had been previously diagnosed and treated. In this context, since several years, an increasing number of clinical paths - the Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) - have emerged all over the world. Brugmann Hospital has decided to implement such a model - focusing, by a systematic approach, to better connection and communication between available healthcare resources.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Anemia and transfusions in geriatric patients: a time for evaluation.

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    Anemia is common in the elderly, especially in very old patients who are often frail and may be institutionalized. Senescence, the ageing process, puts the elderly at risk of developing anemia for multiple reasons, but anemia may not be attributed to senescence unless a thorough diagnostic workup has excluded other etiologies. Nutritional deficiencies are common and need to be identified and treated appropriately. Inflammatory diseases and renal failure are also frequent etiological factors and tend to be chronic. Myelodysplastic syndromes increase in frequency with age and may be difficult to diagnose and only a minority of cases respond to appropriate treatment. Anemia is associated with poor outcome and symptomatic treatment with transfusions frequently has to be considered. Red blood cell transfusion has a high therapeutic index and is likely to be effective only if anemia is symptomatic or particularly severe, as a consequence, its use has been restricted to this group. Much of the evidence on usage is limited to younger adults and specific clinical situations. Geriatricians have to deal with a large number of patients with significant anemia but with an absence of well constructed guidelines for the frail and the very old. The object of the present article is to raise awareness that anemia in the geriatric group is multi-factorial and that the patients are more than merely older than those included in most studies, that the results of ongoing trials should be appropriately interpreted and will be important in guiding future practice.Journal ArticleReviewSCOPUS: re.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Cardiovascular autonomic control during short-term thermoneutral and cool head-out immersion.

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    International audienceBACKGROUND: Moderately cold head-out water immersion stimulates both baro- and cold-receptors, and triggers complex and contradictory effects on the cardiovascular system and its autonomic nervous control. OBJECTIVES: To assess the effects of water immersion and cold on cardiovascular status and related autonomic nervous activity. METHODS: Hemodynamic variables and indexes of autonomic nervous activity (analysis of heart rate and blood pressure variability) were evaluated in 12 healthy subjects during 3 exposures of 20 min each in the upright position, i.e., in air (AIR, 24-25 degrees C), and during head-out water immersion at 35-36 degrees C (WIn) and 26-27 degrees C (WIc). RESULTS: Plasma noradrenaline, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and total peripheral resistances were reduced during WIn compared to AIR (263.9 +/- 39.4 vs. 492.5 +/- 35.7 pg x ml(-1), 116.5 +/- 3.7 and 65.4 +/- 1.7 mmHg vs. 140.8 +/- 4.7 and 89.8 +/- 2.8 mmHg, 14.1 +/- 1.0 vs. 16.3 +/- 0.9 mmHg x L(-1) x min, respectively) while they were increased during WIc (530.8 +/- 84.7 pg ml(-1), 148.0 +/- 7.0 mmHg, 80.8 +/- 3.0 mmHg, and 25.8 +/- 1.9 mmHg x L(-1) x min, respectively). The blood pressure variability was reduced to the same extent during WIc and Win compared to AIR. Heart rate decreased during WIn (67.8 +/- 2.7 vs. 81.2 +/- 2.7 bpm during AIR), in parallel with an increased cardiac parasympathetic activity. This pattern was strengthened during WIc (55.3 +/- 2.2 bpm). CONCLUSIONS: Thermoneutral WI lowered sympathetic activity and arterial tone, while moderate whole-body skin cooling triggered vascular sympathetic activation. Conversely, both WI and cold triggered cardiac parasympathetic activation, highlighting a complex autonomic control of the cardiovascular system

    Conditions of autonomic reciprocal interplay versus autonomic co-activation: effects on non-linear heart rate dynamics.

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    International audienceThe present study was aimed at investigating the autonomic nervous system influences on the fractal organization of human heart rate during sympathovagal interactions, with special emphasize on the short-term fractal organization in heart rate variability (HRV), as assessed by the scaling exponent (alpha(1)) of the detrended fluctuation analysis. Linear and non-linear HRV analyses were used to study the sympathetic and vagal modulation of heart rate in ten healthy men (mean +/- SEM; age 26 +/- 1 years) during conditions of 1) increased sympathetic activity and vagal withdrawal (head-up tilt), 2) decreased sympathetic activity and increased vagal outflow (thermoneutral upright head-out water immersion, WIn), and 3) simultaneous activation of the two arms of the autonomic nervous activity (upright head-out immersion in cold water, WIc). Hemodynamic and linear HRV results were consistent with previous reports during similar physiological conditions. alpha(1) increased significantly during head-up tilt (from 0.71 +/- 0.13 supine to 0.90 +/- 0.15 upright) and WIn (0.86 +/- 0.10) and was significantly decreased during WIc (0.61 +/- 0.15). Thus, alpha(1) increased when the cardiac autonomic interplay was altered in a reciprocal fashion, whatever the direction of the balance change. Conversely, alpha(1) decreased during the concomitant activation of both vagal and sympathetic activities. The results of linear analysis were necessary to precisely define the direction of change in autonomic control revealed by an increase in alpha(1), while the direction of change in alpha(1) indicated whether an increased vagal activity is coupled with a decreased or increased sympathetic activation. Using both linear and non-linear analysis of HRV may increase the understanding of changes in cardiac autonomic status

    Side-effects of L-dopa on venous tone in Parkinson's disease: a leg-weighing assessment.

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    International audienceIn the present study, the effects of L-dopa treatment on cardiovascular variables and peripheral venous tone were assessed in 13 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) with Hoehn and Yahr stages 1-4. Patients were investigated once with their regular treatment and once after 12 h of interruption of L-dopa treatment. L-Dopa intake significantly reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate and plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline in both the supine and upright (60 degrees ) positions. A significant reduction in stroke volume and cardiac output was also seen with L-dopa. The vascular status of the legs was assessed through thigh compression during leg weighing, a new technique developed in our laboratory. Healthy subjects were used to demonstrate that this technique provided reproducible results, consistent with those provided by strain gauge plethysmography of the calf. When using this technique in patients with PD, L-dopa caused a significant lowering of vascular tone in the lower limbs as shown, in particular, by an increase in venous distensibility. Combined with the results of the orthostatic tilting, these findings support that the treatment-linked lowering of plasma noradrenaline in patients with PD was concomitant with a significant reduction in blood pressure, heart rate and vascular tone in the lower limbs. These pharmacological side-effects contributed to reduce venous return and arterial blood pressure which, together with a lowered heart rate, worsened the haemodynamic status

    Side-effects of L-dopa on venous tone in Parkinson's disease: a leg-weighing assessment

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    A B S T R A C T In the present study, the effects of L-dopa treatment on cardiovascular variables and peripheral venous tone were assessed in 13 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) with Hoehn and Yahr stages 1-4. Patients were investigated once with their regular treatment and once after 12 h of interruption of L-dopa treatment. L-Dopa intake significantly reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate and plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline in both the supine and upright (60 • ) positions. A significant reduction in stroke volume and cardiac output was also seen with L-dopa. The vascular status of the legs was assessed through thigh compression during leg weighing, a new technique developed in our laboratory. Healthy subjects were used to demonstrate that this technique provided reproducible results, consistent with those provided by strain gauge plethysmography of the calf. When using this technique in patients with PD, L-dopa caused a significant lowering of vascular tone in the lower limbs as shown, in particular, by an increase in venous distensibility. Combined with the results of the orthostatic tilting, these findings support that the treatment-linked lowering of plasma noradrenaline in patients with PD was concomitant with a significant reduction in blood pressure, heart rate and vascular tone in the lower limbs. These pharmacological side-effects contributed to reduce venous return and arterial blood pressure which, together with a lowered heart rate, worsened the haemodynamic status

    Distribution of clinical risk factors for fracture in a Brussels cohort of postmenopausal women: The FRISBEE study and comparison with other major cohort studies

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    Objectives The estimation of fracture risk using clinical risk factors (CRFs) is of primary concern in osteoporosis management, but only some risk factors have been thoroughly evaluated and incorporated in predictive models. We have launched a large prospective study, the ‘Fracture Risk Brussels Epidemiological Enquiry’ (FRISBEE), to develop a new predictive model for osteoporotic fractures. The aims of this report are to describe the methodology of the FRISBEE study and to compare the distribution of CRFs in our cohort with those reported in other large studies. Study design FRISBEE is a new study that prospectively evaluates a cohort of 3560 post-menopausal women (aged 60–85 years) followed yearly for the occurrence of fragility fractures. Multiple validated CRFs, densitometry (DXA) values and intake of medication were systematically registered at baseline. The distribution of the FRISBEE CRFs has been compared with the distributions of CRFs in the cohorts used to develop the FRAX® model as well as in more recent cohorts. For these recent cohorts, we focused on CRFs not included in FRAX®. Results The most frequently encountered CRFs used in FRAX® were a prior fragility fracture (27.1%) and a parental history of hip fracture (13.4%). The prevalence of some CRFs not integrated in FRAX® was relatively high, such as the use of proton pump inhibitors (20.8%) and a history of fall(s) (19.7%). The prevalence of many CRFs was quite variable between cohorts; for example, the prevalence of ‘personal prior fragility fracture’ ranged from 9% to 51%. Conclusion We found considerable heterogeneity in the prevalence of CRFs between cohort studies. The impact of these differences on the predictive value of a particular CRF is unknown. We will construct a predictive model calibrated to the Belgian population. More importantly, the FRISBEE study should allow us to determine the predictive value of newly recognized CRFs in addition to the FRAX® algorithm to reliably estimate fracture risk.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/inPres

    Discriminating value of HR-pQCT for fractures in women with similar FRAX scores: A substudy of the FRISBEE cohort

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    International audienceAreal bone mineral density (aBMD) has a low sensitivity to identify women at high fracture risk. The FRAX algorithm, by combining several clinical risk factors, might improve fracture prediction compared to aBMD alone. Several micro-architectural and biomechanical parameters which can be measured by high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) are associated with fracture risk. HR-pQCT in combination or not with finite element analysis (FEA) may be used to improve bone strength prediction.Our aim was to assess whether HR-pQCT measurements (densities, cortical and trabecular microarchitecture, biomechanical proprieties assessed by FEA) had an added value in predicting fractures in a subgroup of women belonging to the Belgian FRISBEE cohort. One hundred nineteen women who sustained a fracture (aged 60 to 85 years) during the initial follow-up of our cohort had a radius and tibia examination by HR-pQCT and were compared with controls matched for their FRAX score at baseline. We found that low distal radius total (OR = 1.41 [1.07–1.86] per SD, p < 0.05) and trabecular densities (OR = 1.45 [1.10–1.90], p < 0.01), trabecular number (OR = 1.32 [1.01–1.72], p < 0.05), intra individual distribution of separation (OR = 0.73 [0.54–0.99], p < 0.05) as several FEA parameters were significantly associated with fractures. At the distal tibia, impaired cortical density (OR = 1.32 [1.03–1.70] per SD, p < 0.05) and thickness (OR = 1.29 [1.01–1.63], p < 0.05) and apparent modulus (OR = 1.30 [1.01–1.66], p < 0.05) were significantly correlated with fractures. A low ultra distal radial aBMD (UDR) measured at the time of HR-pQCT was significantly associated with fractures (OR = 1.67 [1.22–2.28], p < 0.01). Women from both groups were followed further after the realization of the HR-pQCT and 46 new fractures were registered. In this second part of the study, low UDR aBMD (OR = 1.66 [1.18–2.35], p < 0.01), total (OR = 1.48 [1.08–2.03], p < 0.05), cortical (OR = 1.40 [1.04–1.87], p < 0.05) and trabecular (OR = 1.37 [1.01–1.85], p < 0.05) densities or apparent modulus (OR = 1.49 [1.07–2.05], p < 0.05) at the radius were associated with a significant increase of fracture risk. At the tibia, only the cortical density was significantly associated with the fracture risk (OR = 1.34 [1.02–2.76], p < 0.05). These results confirm the interest of HR-pQCT measurements for the evaluation of fracture risk, also in women matched for their baseline FRAX score. They also highlight that UDR aBMD contains pertinent informati
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