8 research outputs found

    Quercetin and Vitamin C: An Experimental, Synergistic Therapy for the Prevention and Treatment of SARS-CoV-2 Related Disease (COVID-19)

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    Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) represents an emergent global threat which is straining worldwide healthcare capacity. As of May 27th, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) has resulted in more than 340,000 deaths worldwide, with 100,000 deaths in the US alone. It is imperative to study and develop pharmacological treatments suitable for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19. Ascorbic acid is a crucial vitamin necessary for the correct functioning of the immune system. It plays a role in stress response and has shown promising results when administered to the critically ill. Quercetin is a well-known flavonoid whose antiviral properties have been investigated in numerous studies. There is evidence that vitamin C and quercetin co-administration exerts a synergistic antiviral action due to overlapping antiviral and immunomodulatory properties and the capacity of ascorbate to recycle quercetin, increasing its efficacy. Safe, cheap interventions which have a sound biological rationale should be prioritized for experimental use in the current context of a global health pandemic. We present the current evidence for the use of vitamin C and quercetin both for prophylaxis in high-risk populations and for the treatment of COVID-19 patients as an adjunct to promising pharmacological agents such as Remdesivir or convalescent plasma

    Handbook of evidence-based critical care

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    Paul Ellis Marik.535 p. : ill. ; 19 cm

    A prospective randomized study comparing once- versos twice-daily amikadn dosing in critically ill adult and paediatric patients

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    Three hundred and forty eight critically-ill patients with a documented Gram-negative infection were randomized to receive amikacin once- (od) or twice-daily (bd). The amikacin was given by slow intravenous injection in a daily dose of 20 mg/kg in patients under the age of one year (paediatric group) and 15 mg/kg in patients over the age of one year (adult group). Paediatric and adult patients on the od regimen received a loading dose of 25 and 20 mg/kg respectively. The dosages were subsequently adjusted to achieve desirable blood levels. Patients received other antibiotics as clinically indicated. Forty-eight patients were withdrawn from the study due to death or azotaemia occurring in the first 72 h. One hundred and fifty five patients (76 paediatric) received an od dose and 145 (65 paediatric) received a bd dose. The clinical cure rate was 83% in the od group compared to 66% in the bd group (P = 0路001). The bacteriological cure rate was 81% in the od group compared to 58% in the bd group (P = 0路005). In the paediatric sub-group the cure rate was higher with the od regimen (P = 0路002) but this difference was not statistically significant in the adult patients (P = 0路1). The serum creatinine rose in 35% of patients in the bd group compared to 21% in the od group (P = 0路05). Although audiometry was not performed there was no clinical evidence of ototoxkaty in any of the patients. In conclusion od amikacin dosing resulted in a higher cure and less nephrotoxicity than conventional bd dosing

    Melatonin, coronavirus, cardiovascular disease, and the geriatric emergency: let鈥檚 use everything we have!

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    Sin financiaci贸n4.753 JCR (2020) Q2, 45/142 Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems0.455 SJR (2020) Q3, 202/349 Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineNo data IDR 2020UE

    Therapeutic Algorithm for Use of Melatonin in Patients With COVID-19

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    The coronavirus, COVID-19, has infected hundreds of thousands and killed tens of thousands of individuals worldwide. This highly infectious condition continues to ravage the world population and has yet to reach it peak infective rate in some countries. Many conventional drugs including hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine, lopinavir, remdesivir, etc., have been repurposed as treatments for this often deadly disease, but there is no specifically-designed effective drug available; also, the drugs mentioned have significant side effects and their efficacy is unknown. New drugs and vaccines are being designed as COVID-19 treatment, but their development and testing will require months to years. Time is not a luxury that this crisis has. Thus, there is a serious unmet need for the identification of currently-available and safe molecules which can be used to slow or treat COVID-19 disease. Here, we suggest melatonin be given consideration for prophylactic use or treatment alone or in combination with other drugs. Melatonin's multiple actions as an anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, and anti-viral (against other viruses) make it a reasonable choice for use. Melatonin is readily available, can be easily synthesized in large quantities, is inexpensive, has a very high safety profile and can be easily self-administered. Melatonin is endogenously-produced molecule in small amounts with its production diminishing with increased age. Under the current critical conditions, large doses of melatonin alone or in combination with currently-recommended drugs, e.g., hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine, to resist COVID-19 infection would seem judicious.Sin financiaci贸n5.093 JCR (2020) Q1, 28/167 Medicine, General & Internal1.388 SJR (2020) Q1, 304/2447 Medicine (miscellaneous)No data IDR 2020UE

    Emergency Neurological Life Support: Airway, Ventilation, and Sedation

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    Anaphylaxis鈥攁 practice parameter update 2015

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