27 research outputs found

    Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome associated with COVID-19: An Emulated Target Trial Analysis.

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    RATIONALE: Whether COVID patients may benefit from extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) compared with conventional invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) remains unknown. OBJECTIVES: To estimate the effect of ECMO on 90-Day mortality vs IMV only Methods: Among 4,244 critically ill adult patients with COVID-19 included in a multicenter cohort study, we emulated a target trial comparing the treatment strategies of initiating ECMO vs. no ECMO within 7 days of IMV in patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (PaO2/FiO2 <80 or PaCO2 ≥60 mmHg). We controlled for confounding using a multivariable Cox model based on predefined variables. MAIN RESULTS: 1,235 patients met the full eligibility criteria for the emulated trial, among whom 164 patients initiated ECMO. The ECMO strategy had a higher survival probability at Day-7 from the onset of eligibility criteria (87% vs 83%, risk difference: 4%, 95% CI 0;9%) which decreased during follow-up (survival at Day-90: 63% vs 65%, risk difference: -2%, 95% CI -10;5%). However, ECMO was associated with higher survival when performed in high-volume ECMO centers or in regions where a specific ECMO network organization was set up to handle high demand, and when initiated within the first 4 days of MV and in profoundly hypoxemic patients. CONCLUSIONS: In an emulated trial based on a nationwide COVID-19 cohort, we found differential survival over time of an ECMO compared with a no-ECMO strategy. However, ECMO was consistently associated with better outcomes when performed in high-volume centers and in regions with ECMO capacities specifically organized to handle high demand. This article is open access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

    Is positron emission tomography useful in stroke?

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    Positron emission tomography (PET) has been widely used in the study of stroke and related cerebrovascular diseases. It has shown the various stages leading to cerebral infarction and defined the significance of the ischaemic penumbra. PET scan can predict the clinical outcome of patients with acute ischaemic stroke. Several types of diaschisis can also be demonstrated by PET They reflect different pathophysiological changes in supratentorial infarcts. Post-apoplectic seizures are shown to increase the ischaemic damage in the affected cerebral hemisphere. PET has contributed also to the concept of multi-infarct dementia, although the significance of chronic ischaemia in the pathogenesis of vascular dementia has not been fully investigated

    Acute enteritis due to related vibrio: First positive stool cultures

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    Strains of the related vibrio were isolated from two patients with acute enteritis.The vibrios were isolated from blood and stool of one patient and from the stool of the other. The isolation technique consists of diluting the stools in nutrient broth, letting them settle for 1 hr, centrifuging the supernatant, and passing the surface liquid through a 0.65-p Millipore filter. This filtrate (0.3 ml) is plated on a blood-thioglycolate-agar medium containing 25 international units of bacitracin, 10 international units of polymyxin B sulfate, 0.005 mg of novobiocin, and 0.05 mg of ac-tidione per ml. Colonies are well developed after incubation for three days at 37 C in an atmosphere from which two-thirds of the volume of air has been replaced by a mixture of 95% nitrogen and 5% carbon dioxide. The results suggest that in all cases of diarrhea where standard coprocultures remain negative, stools should be checked for the presence of vibrio. © 1972 by the University of Chicago.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Expression of insulin receptors and of 60-kDa receptor substrate in rat mature and immature enterocytes

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    The mechanism(s) by which rat immature enterocytes exhibit increased responsiveness to insulin before weaning is unknown. Therefore, we have analyzed the distribution, ontogeny, and molecular properties of insulin receptors (IR) and of related substrates in immature and mature enterocytes. IR were studied by radioligand binding assays, cross-linking labeling, immunohistochemistry, and in vitro phosphorylated substrates by immunoprecipitation. Regardless of age, 125I-insulin binding to IR was five times higher in crypt cells than in villus cells and two times higher in the ileum than in the jejunum. Binding capacity to villus cells from sucklings (day 14) exceeded three times that of older animals (day 30 and day 60). Scatchard analysis of equilibrium binding data confirmed an age-related decrease in low- and high-affinity receptor classes without change in affinity constants. In concordance, both alpha- and beta-IR subunits were more abundant in immature than in mature membranes. In vitro, insulin elicited the phosphorylation of three membrane proteins (96, 60 and 42 kDa), whose signals were virtually inhibited by preincubating membranes with antireceptor monoclonal antibodies. By immunoprecipitation, the 60-kDa signal was rapidly detected as a tyrosine-phosphorylated protein, expressed in mature and immature membranes, and identified as a receptor substrate phosphorylated in vitro by the IR tyrosine kinase. In conclusion, 1) increased responsiveness of rat immature enterocytes to insulin could be related to high membrane concentrations of IR and 2) normal rat enterocytes express a 60-kDa phosphotyrosine protein identified as a direct substrate of the IR tyrosine kinase
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