17 research outputs found
Orlistat (Xénical)
Orlistat, a potent inhibitor of the pancreatic and intestinal lipases, is the first member of a new therapeutic class approved for the treatment of obesity. Its administration with fat-containing foods results in a partial inhibition of triglyceride hydrolysis in the digestive lumen and subsequent reduction of the free fatty acids and monoglycerides absorption. At the usual dosage of 120 mg tid, about 30% of ingested fat are excreted non digested in feces. When administered with a mildly hypocaloric diet, orlistat contributes to loss of weight by a additional caloric deficit and promotes further compliance of the obese patient to the dietary recommendations. Several double-blinded, placebo-controlled studies have shown a statistically significant loss of weight of about 10% when orlistat was prescribed with a well balanced, mildly hypocaloric diet to obese patients during one year. Moreover, small but significant beneficial changes in the serum lipid levels occurred in these patients. Because the orlistat molecule is not reabsorbed, its side effects are mostly due to the gastrointestinal effects and consist in steatorhea after fatty meals. However, the treatment is generally well tolerated. Since the recent withdrawal from the worldwide market of the anorectic agents, phentermine and fenfluramine, orlistat is at this time the only drug approved by the European Community for the treatment of obesity. However, its long-term value are not currently known.English AbstractJournal ArticleReviewinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
La surconsommation des antibiotiques en pratique extrahospitaliere.
Overprescription of antibiotics is evident in the community as well as in hospital, in veterinary practice or in agriculture. This leads to bacterial multiresistance and treatment failures. The limitation of this overprescription will not be obtained unless diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive guidelines are followed particularly in the management of the upper respiratory tract infections
Raloxifène (Celvista, Evista).
The prevention of osteoporotic fractures in post-menopausal women must be viewed in the framework of the treatment of menopause. SERMs ("Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators") derivative from steroid hormones have estrogenic and antiestrogenic properties according to the substance and the target tissue. Raloxifene is a second generation SERM. It increases bone mass by 1 to 3% according to the measured site and, after 3 years of therapy at the dose of 60 mg per day, it reduces the incidence of vertebral fractures by 30 to 50% if patients have or do not have vertebral fractures before therapy. This drug is approved for the prevention of vertebral fractures in post-menopausal women at increased risk of fractures. A significant reduction in the incidence of hip fractures has not been demonstrated. Raloxifene exerts favorable effects on cardiovascular risk factors but one has to wait for the results of controlled prospective trials before concluding that raloxifene reduces the risk of atherogeniec disease. Preliminary results indicate a substantial reduction of the risk of invasive breast cancer, still to be confirmed. The incidence of vaginal bleeding does not differ from placebo as raloxifene does not stimulate endometrial proliferation. The most serious adverse event, although infrequent, consists in an increase of the relative risk of thromboembolic disease by 3.1 as compared to placebo. Longer term studies are necessary to compare raloxifene with the estrogen replacement therapy and to determine the extra-bone effects.English AbstractJournal Articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe