53 research outputs found

    An international survey of patients with thalassemia major and their views about sustaining life-long desferrioxamine use

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    BACKGROUND: Management of thalassemia major requires patients to have life-long access to a treatment regimen of regular blood transfusions coupled with iron chelation therapy. The objective of this study was to investigate patients' reasons for missing iron chelation therapy with desferrioxamine, and the support to sustain life-long adherence to treatment. METHODS: From October 1999 to May 2000 a survey of patients with thalassemia major was conducted in ten countries: Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Italy, Jordan, Taiwan, and the United States. RESULTS: 1,888 questionnaires (65%) were returned. Most patients (1,573) used desferrioxamine, and 79% administered a dose at least 4 days a week. Inaccessibility of the drug was a common reason for missing a dose in India (51%), and in Iran (25%), whereas, in any other country, it was a reason for less than 17% of patients. Overall, 58% reported reasons for missing a dose related to their beliefs or feelings about the medication, and 42% drug-related side effects. CONCLUSION: Many patients miss doses of desferrioxamine and an opportunity remains to develop interventions that provide more support to sustain use of desferrioxamine

    Effects of Locus of Control Instructional Set and Sex on EMG (Fontalis) Biofeedback Training

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    There has been an inadequate number of investigations on the part of clinicians and experimenters to explore the relationship between the locus of control dimension, instructional set, and sex during EMG (frontalis) biofeedback training. In order to examine these variables, subjects were categorized as internals or externals and then randomly assigned to one of four instruction (relaxation) groups: biofeedback only, self-control, biofeedback-awareness, and control. The results of the investigation showed no relationship between the locus of control concept and reduction of muscle activity. Analysis of the sex factor showed women to have higher muscle activity levels than men. Analysis of the respiration data indicated that paced breathing can partially control respiratory artifact. The effect of the instructional set factor indicated that the biofeedback-awareness group reduced muscle activity levels significantly greater than the other instruction conditions. This finding suggested that auditory reinforcement and a clear description of the meaning of the feedback itself jointly operated to facilitate low levels of muscle activity. Therefore, a field theory of learning was favored to explain this finding. Future work both in the laboratory and in the clinic was suggested

    Urinary hyperglycosylated hCG in first trimester screening for chromosomal abnormalities.

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    Hyperglycosylated human chorionic gonadotrophin (H-hCG), also known as Invasive Trophoblast Antigen or ITA, is a unique metabolic variant of hCG with more complex oligosaccharide side chains. Concentrations are independent of regular hCG. Urine H-hCG has recently proved to be a highly sensitive marker for Down syndrome screening in the second trimester of pregnancy. We evaluated H-hCG as a potential marker in the first trimester of pregnancy. Maternal urine samples were collected from 10+0 to 11+6 weeks of gestation prior to genetic analysis and stored in frozen form. Samples from eight cases of Down syndrome, two cases of trisomy 13, one case of trisomy 18, and 55 control pregnancies were hand-carried frozen to the USA and tested blindly. Samples were tested in a specific H-hCG immunoassay and values were normalized to creatinine concentration. Values were plotted against gestational age, and multiples of control pregnancy median (MoM) calculated. The median level of the MoMs of the eight Down syndrome cases was 3.6 MoM. Five of the eight Down syndrome cases exceeded the 90th centile of the 55 unaffected cases. The MoMs of the trisomy 13 and 18 pregnancies were 0.2, 0.2 and 0.3. All three cases were under the 10th centile of unaffected pregnancies. The results of this study indicate that H-hCG testing may be useful in screening for Down syndrome in the first trimester of pregnancy. Further studies are needed to assess the potential screening values of urine H-hCG and the combination of this test with free β-subunit, PAPP-A and other markers for Down syndrome in the first trimester of pregnancy
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