52 research outputs found

    Healthy ageing and home: The perspectives of very old people in five European countries

    Get PDF
    This paper reports on in-depth research, using a grounded theory approach, to examine the ways in which very old people perceive healthy ageing in the context of living alone at home within urban settings in five European countries. This qualitative study was part of a cross-national project entitled ENABLE-AGE which examined the relationship between home and healthy ageing. Interviews explored the notion of healthy ageing, the meaning and importance of home, conceptualisations of independence and autonomy and links between healthy ageing and home. Data analysis identified five ways in which older people constructed healthy ageing: home and keeping active; managing lifestyles, health and illness; balancing social life; and balancing material and financial circumstances. Older people reflected on their everyday lives at home in terms of being engaged in purposeful, meaningful action and evaluated healthy ageing in relation to the symbolic and practical affordances of the home, contextualised within constructions of their national context. The research suggests that older people perceive healthy ageing as an active achievement, created through individual, personal effort and supported through social ties despite the health, financial and social decline associated with growing older. The physicality and spatiality of home provided the context for establishing and evaluating the notion of healthy ageing, whilst the experienced relationship between home, life history and identity created a meaningful space within which healthy ageing was negotiated

    Clinical factors involved in the recurrence of pituitary adenomas after surgical remission: a structured review and meta-analysis

    Full text link

    Persistent elevated serum levels of intact parathyroid hormone after operation for sporadic parathyroid adenoma : evidence of detrimental effects of severe parathyroid disease

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: A significant number of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) who are surgically treated have increased serum levels of intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) during long-term follow-up despite normocalcemia. The cause and significance of this finding remain to be established.METHODS: A total of 82 patients operated on for sporadic parathyroid adenoma were investigated before and at 8 weeks and 1 year after operation with serum levels of intact PTH, bone mineral content, and biochemical variables known to reflect PTH activity.RESULTS: All patients had low or normal serum levels of calcium during follow-up. At 8 weeks after operation 20 (24%) patients had increased serum levels of PTH. These patients had severe parathyroid disease and low levels of 25(OH) vitamin D before operation. In contrast to patients with normal levels of PTH after operation, they did not have an elevated bone mineral content but had elevated levels of serum creatinin. At 1 year after operation 13 patients had elevated serum levels of PTH. Compared with patients with normal serum levels of PTH, they were older and had an increased frequency of cardiovascular disease and biochemical indications of compromised renal function. They did not have an elevated bone mineral content.CONCLUSIONS: Persistently increased serum levels of PTH indicate harmful effects of pHPT even after surgical cure, especially in elderly patients with severe disease before operation. The results in this investigation therefore favor early treatment of pHPT

    Hyperthyroidism after surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: The coexistence of hyperthyroidism and primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) has been reported. We have questioned whether hypercalcemia or surgical trauma contribute to transient hyperthyroidism following parathyroid surgery.METHODS: Twenty-six pHPT and eleven breast cancer patients were compared regarding pre-, peri- and postoperative thyrotropin (TSH), free thyroxine (T4) and free triiodothyronine (T3) concentrations. Thyroglobulin concentration, occurrence of autonomous thyroid nodules, and variables reflecting surgical trauma were compared in pHPT patients with and without postoperative hyperthyroidism.RESULTS: Postoperatively, eleven pHPT patients demonstrated T4 and T3 concentrations above normal, and nine developed symptoms of mild thyrotoxicosis. A parallel rise in TSH and T4 concentrations was seen during both parathyroid and breast cancer surgery. Compared with patients with no postoperative hyperthyroidism, patients with postoperative hyperthyroidism showed a parallel rise in mean thyroglobulin and T4/T3 concentrations as well as higher thyroglobulin concentrations. However, there was no difference in variables assessing surgical trauma nor in occurrence of autonomous thyroid nodules. The peri-operative rise in TSH was preceded by a decrease in calcium.CONCLUSION: Transient hyperthyroidism after parathyroid surgery is not infrequent. The condition seems to be self-limiting, since symptoms invariably subsided without treatment. Manipulation of the thyroid gland is most likely the major contributing factor to postoperative hyperthyroidism. However, it may not be the sole explanation, since our data suggest a more multifactorial scenario

    Risk factors for postoperative hypocalcemia after surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism

    No full text
    HYPOTHESIS: A variety of clinical and biochemical variables may be associated with hypocalcemia after surgery for parathyroid adenoma.DESIGN: A prospective study of patients who underwent surgery for solitary parathyroid adenoma.SETTING: A university hospital department of surgery.PATIENTS: Eighty-six consecutive patients who underwent surgery for solitary parathyroid adenoma.INTERVENTION: Parathyroidectomy according to the principles of unilateral neck exploration.MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical and biochemical risk factors for early (< or =4 days after surgery) and late (1 year after surgery) postoperative symptomatic and biochemical hypocalcemia.RESULTS: Twenty-two patients developed early symptomatic hypocalcemia. The difference in total serum calcium levels between patients, with and without early symptomatic hypocalcemia, was evident on the third and fourth postoperative days. Serum level of osteocalcin greater than 6.0 microg/L, bilateral neck exploration, and history of cardiovascular disease were risk factors for symptomatic hypocalcemia (odds ratios [95% confidence intervals]: 4.4 [1.4-14.1], 3.8 [1.3-11.6], and 0.1 [0.02-0.60], respectively). Patients with up to 1 risk factor had a possibility of only 7% to develop early symptomatic hypocalcemia. One year after surgery, 16 patients had low levels of total serum calcium (late biochemical hypocalcemia) and were asymptomatic. Preoperative intermittent hypercalcemia was associated with an increased risk for late biochemical hypocalcemia (odds ratio, 3.9; 95% confidence interval, 1.0-16.3).CONCLUSIONS: Clinical and biochemical risk factors for early and late postoperative hypocalcemia in patients who underwent surgery for solitary parathyroid adenoma were found. A clinically useful prognostic index for early symptomatic hypocalcemia was constructed using these risk factors

    Platelet and adipocyte thermogenesis in hypothyroid patients: a microcalorimetric study

    No full text
    Direct microcalorimetry was used for measurements of heat production in cell suspensions of platelets and adipocytes, obtained from hypothyroid patients before and after 3 months on full L-thyroxine substitution. Platelet heat production was significantly lower than normal before treatment and increased in all 10 patients studied; the mean value increased from 51.3 +/- 1.6 fW/cell before to 57.1 +/- 1.8 fW/cell after therapy (P less than 0.001). Similarily, adipocyte heat production was initially significantly lower than normal and increased during treatment in all 6 patients investigated. The mean value for heat production per adipocyte was 18.8 +/- 1.7 pW/cell before and 32.4 +/- 2.5 pW/cell after therapy (P less than 0.025), which is still below the level recorded in lean healthy subjects. The adipocyte size did not change significantly. The increase in adipocyte heat production was correlated to the increase in S-triiodothyronine levels (r = 0.84, P less than 0.05). In hypothyroidism, the total metabolic activity seems to be comparatively more reduced in adipocytes than in platelets. A difference may exist between these cells with regard to recovery of normal metabolic activity during treatment for hypothyroidism. Direct microcalorimetry appears to be an adequate method for monitoring net metabolic effects of thyroid hormones in these cells

    Lipoprotein Metabolism: Hormonal Regulation

    No full text
    • 

    corecore