5 research outputs found
Prevención y tratamiento de los problemas visuales en el niño
La ceguera infantil es menos frecuente que la adulta, pero el costo emocional y económico es comparativamente mayor en niños. Existen 1,4 millones de niños ciegos en el mundo, de causas diferentes, especialmente si se comparan países de ingresos económicos altos, medios y bajos. Detectar cada realidad permite hacer estrategias preventivas adecuadas. La ambliopía asociada a las patologías oftalmológicas y su período crítico de tratamiento hacen que su detección deba ser precoz. Se han establecido sugerencias de screening tanto en pacientes de riesgo como los prematuros, así como para la población general infantil
Retinoblastoma in children, experience at a pediatric hospital
Retrospective analysis of clinical charts of 41 children (59 eyes) diagnosed with retinoblastoma
and treated by a multidisciplinary team at Hospital Luis Calvo Mackenna in Santiago-Chile, between 1999
and 2007. The information included gender, laterality, diagnosis age, presenting signs, tumor spread,
treatment modality and survival rate. Results: A total of 23 cases (56%) were unilateral and 18 cases (44%)
were bilateral. The mean age at diagnosis was 21.6 months (range 2 - 84) and 27 children (65.9%) were male.
The most common presenting signs were leucokoria (51.2%), strabismus (24.4%) and proptosis (4.9%).
Enucleation was performed in 48 eyes (81.3%), being the only required treatment in 17 children (41.5%).
The remaining 24 patients received systemic and/or local therapy with chemotherapy, focal therapy and
external beam radiation. 5 children died during the follow - up study period, due to extraocular extension to
the orbit, central nervous system and bone marrow. Conclusion: In spite of high enucleation rate as initial
therapy for retinoblastoma, the survival rate with this current treatment protocol is similar to those from
developed countries
RECOMENDACIONES DE TRATAMIENTO EN LA MENOPAUSIA
El objetivo de este documento es entregar una guía práctica de tratamiento del climaterio, debido a la confusión producida por el estudio WHI en 2002. La TH debe ser solo utilizada cuando exista una indicación clara para su uso. La paciente sintomática es la principal beneficiada del tratamiento. No existe un tratamiento alternativo a los estrógenos o estrógeno/progestina tan eficaz en el alivio de la sintomatología y en reducción de fracturas. La indicación de un tratamiento prolongado debe ser revisada anualment
MELD 3.0 adequately predicts mortality and renal replacement therapy requirements in patients with alcohol-associated hepatitis
Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score better predicts mortality in alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) but could underestimate severity in women and malnourished patients. Using a global cohort, we assessed the ability of the MELD 3.0 score to predict short-term mortality in AH. This was a retrospective cohort study of patients admitted to hospital with AH from 2009 to 2019. The main outcome was all-cause 30-day mortality. We compared the AUC using DeLong's method and also performed a time-dependent AUC with competing risks analysis. A total of 2,124 patients were included from 28 centres from 10 countries on three continents (median age 47.2 ± 11.2 years, 29.9% women, 71.3% with underlying cirrhosis). The median MELD 3.0 score at admission was 25 (20-33), with an estimated survival of 73.7% at 30 days. The MELD 3.0 score had a better performance in predicting 30-day mortality (AUC:0.761, 95%CI:0.732-0.791) compared with MELD sodium (MELD-Na; AUC: 0.744, 95% CI: 0.713-0.775; p = 0.042) and Maddrey's discriminant function (mDF) (AUC: 0.724, 95% CI: 0.691-0.757; p = 0.013). However, MELD 3.0 did not perform better than traditional MELD (AUC: 0.753, 95% CI: 0.723-0.783; p = 0.300) and Age-Bilirubin-International Normalised Ratio-Creatinine (ABIC) (AUC:0.757, 95% CI: 0.727-0.788; p = 0.765). These results were consistent in competing-risk analysis, where MELD 3.0 (AUC: 0.757, 95% CI: 0.724-0.790) predicted better 30-day mortality compared with MELD-Na (AUC: 0.739, 95% CI: 0.708-0.770; p = 0.028) and mDF (AUC:0.717, 95% CI: 0.687-0.748; p = 0.042). The MELD 3.0 score was significantly better in predicting renal replacement therapy requirements during admission compared with the other scores (AUC: 0.844, 95% CI: 0.805-0.883). MELD 3.0 demonstrated better performance compared with MELD-Na and mDF in predicting 30-day and 90-day mortality, and was the best predictor of renal replacement therapy requirements during admission for AH. However, further prospective studies are needed to validate its extensive use in AH. Severe AH has high short-term mortality. The establishment of treatments and liver transplantation depends on mortality prediction. We evaluated the performance of the new MELD 3.0 score to predict short-term mortality in AH in a large global cohort. MELD 3.0 performed better in predicting 30- and 90-day mortality compared with MELD-Na and mDF, but was similar to MELD and ABIC scores. MELD 3.0 was the best predictor of renal replacement therapy requirements. Thus, further prospective studies are needed to support the wide use of MELD 3.0 in AH