88 research outputs found

    Atrial fibrillation and psychological factors : a systematic review

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    BACKGROUND: Psychological factors have been suggested to have an influence in Atrial Fibrillation (AF) onset, progression, severity and outcomes, but their role is unclear and mainly focused on anxiety and depression. METHODS: A systematic electronic search had been conducted to identify studies exploring different psychological factors in AF. The search retrieved 832 articles that were reviewed according to inclusion criteria: observational study with a control/comparison group; use of standardized and validated instruments for psychological assessment. Results were summarized qualitatively and quantitatively by effect size measure (Cohen's d and its 95% confidence interval). Cochrane Collaboration guidelines and the PRISMA Statement were adopted. RESULTS: Eight studies were included in the systematic review. Depression was the most studied construct/ but only one study showed a clear link with AF. The remaining studies showed small and non-significant (95% CI [-0.25-1.00]) differences between AF and controls, no differences in frequency of depression history (95% CI [-0.14-0.22]) or in case frequency (95% CI [-0.50-0.04]). Miscellaneous results were found as far as anxiety: AF patients showed higher levels when compared to healthy subjects (95% CI [2.05-2.95]), but findings were inconsistent when compared to other heart diseases. Considering personality and life-events preceding AF, we respectively found a large (95% CI [1.87-2.49]) and a moderate to large effect (95% CI [0.48-0.98]). DISCUSSION: The small number of studies does not allow to draw clear-cut conclusions on the involvement of psychological factors in AF. Promising lines of research are related to personality and adverse life-events, and to the increase of longitudinal design studies. Some methodological problems could be overcome by including clinical psychologists in the implementation of research protocols

    Controlled trial of desmopressin in liver cirrhosis and other conditions associated with a prolonged bleeding time

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    The synthetic vasopressin derivative desmopressin (DDAVP) shortens a prolonged bleeding time (BT) in patients with uremia, congenital platelet dysfunction, and von Willebrand disease. To establish the limits of the clinical usefulness of DDAVP, a controlled randomized study was carried out in 53 patients and ten volunteers with different conditions that have in common a prolonged BT. DDAVP significantly shortened the BT in 21 cirrhotics (P less than .01), in eight patients with unclassified prolonged BT (P less than .05) and in ten volunteers taking the antiplatelet drugs aspirin (P less than .05) and ticlopidine. The BT changes were not statistically significant in 15 patients with severe thrombocytopenia nor in nine with congenital platelet dysfunction, even though a few patients with storage pool deficiency responded with a marked BT shortening. Our findings indicate that DDAVP might be given when biopsies or other surgical procedures must be carried out in patients with prolonged BT. However, the compound is often ineffective in patients with thrombocytopenia or congenital platelet dysfunction

    Revised diagnosis and severity criteria for sinusoidal obstruction syndrome/veno-occlusive disease in adult patients : a new classification from the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation

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    Sinusoidal obstruction syndrome, also known as veno-occlusive disease (SOS/VOD), is a potentially life threatening complication that can develop after hematopoietic cell transplantation. Although SOS/VOD progressively resolves within a few weeks in most patients, the most severe forms result in multi-organ dysfunction and are associated with a high mortality rate (480%). Therefore, careful attention must be paid to allow an early detection of SOS/VOD, particularly as drugs have now proven to be effective and licensed for its treatment. Unfortunately, current criteria lack sensitivity and specificity, making early identification and severity assessment of SOS/VOD difficult. The aim of this work is to propose a new definition for diagnosis, and a severity-grading system for SOS/VOD in adult patients, on behalf of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.Peer reviewe

    Newer fibrinolytic agents in patients with acute myocardial infarction

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    Fibrinolytic agents with higher specificity for fibrin in the thrombi and little systemic activation of the fibrinolytic system have been developed and tested in preliminary clinical trials of patients with acute myocardial infarction. The largest published experience available has been with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator, which seems to be more effective than streptokinase in lysing coronary thrombi. The acylated streptokinase-plasminogen complex BRL 26921 and pro-urokinase also gave promising preliminary results. All these agents, however, were accompanied by unexpectedly high incidence of systemic activation of the fibrinolytic system and by hemorrhagic complications with frequencies similar to those accompanying streptokinase. Hence, their superior clinical efficacy must be clearly proven before they are substituted for a more widely available and less expensive drug, such as streptokinase

    Sex, gender and venous thromboembolism: do we care enough?

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    The role of sex and gender in determining clinical presentation, diagnostic approach and outcomes of venous thromboembolism is not fully and systematically addressed, except for hormone-related events in women. A lack of knowledge is also apparent regarding drug prescription patterns, physician bias, enrolment in clinical studies and analysis of sex-related confounders in preclinical and clinical studies. As was shown for cardiovascular disease, ignoring sex and gender in medicine can have important impact on outcomes, including mortality. In this review, we seek to address some aspects of venous thromboembolism such as epidemiology and clinical presentation, recurrence, risk factors, animal studies, safety and efficacy of antithrombotic drugs, highlighting what is known and what is not regarding the role of sex and gender, and hoping to focus some interest and to promote the inclusion of these variables in all future studies on venous thromboembolism

    Poor relationship between phenotypes of protein S deficiency and mutations in the protein S alpha gene

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    By single strand conformational polymorphism, nucleotide sequencing and enzyme restriction, we analyzed the protein S \u3b1 gene in 17 protein S-deficient probands and in their available family members. The relationship between genotype and phenotype was also evaluated. Twelve different sequence variations were identified in 17 probands. Ten were putative causal mutations distributed in 16 probands: 4 were nonsense, 5 missense and one a splice site mutation. In most families in which a mutation was identified, more than one phenotype of PS deficiency was present. The same splice site mutation (intron j G-A, exon 10 + 5) was associated with type I deficiency in one family and with type I/III in another unrelated family. A phenotypic discrepancy was also observed for the Arg474Pro, Gly597Asp and Arg410stop mutations. Glu26Ala, previously reported in kindreds with type I deficiencies, was found in association with I, II and III phenotypes in four unrelated kindreds. Phenotypic analysis of protein S deficiency is poorly related to the underlying genetic defect
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