5 research outputs found
The long-term prognostic value of serum 25(OH)D, albumin, and LL-37 levels in acute respiratory diseases among older adults
Abstract
Background: Older adults are more susceptible to respiratory tract infection than healthy working age adults. The increased susceptibility of older adults is thought to be interlinked with vitamin D status, nourishment, and immunological state in general. Data are scarce whether these parameters could serve as prognostic markers.
Aim: To study whether serum 25(OH)D, albumin, and LL-37 level could give prognostic value of long-term survival in the older adults with multimorbidity and acute respiratory infection.
Methods: Consecutive episodes of hospital care of patients 65 years and older with respiratory symptoms were prospectively studied as a cohort. Standard clinical questionnaire was filled by the study physician. Laboratory markers included serum levels of 25(OH)D, albumin and LL-37, C-reactive protein (CRP), white blood cell count (WBC) and polymerase chain reaction diagnostics for 14 respiratory viruses. Pneumonia was confirmed by chest radiographs. Respiratory illness severity, death at ward, length of hospital stays, and 5-year survival were used as outcomes.
Results: In total, 289 older adult patients with mean age of 83 years were included in the study. Serum 25(OH)D deficiency (<â50 nmol/liter) was present in 59% and hypoalbuminemia (<â3.5 g/dL) in 55% of the study patients. Low serum albumin level was associated to one, two- and five-year mortality after hospital stay (all Pâ<.05). In addition, it was associated with pneumonia, dyspnea, over 13-night long stay at ward and death at ward (all Pâ<â.05). No associations were seen between serum 25(OH)D and LL-37 levels and disease severity, short-term clinical outcome, or long-term survival. Associations between serum 25(OH)D, albumin, and LL-37 levels and respiratory virus presence were not seen.
Conclusions: Serum albumin level on admission seems to give valuable information about the patientsâ general health and recovery potential in treating older adults with respiratory symptoms. Serum 25(OH)D and LL-37 had no associations with disease severity or long- and short-term prognosis among older adults hospitalized with respiratory symptoms
ContribuiçÔes da Sociologia na AmĂ©rica Latina Ă imaginação sociolĂłgica: anĂĄlise, crĂtica e compromisso social Sociology's contribution in Latin America to sociological imagination: analysis, critique, and social commitment
O artigo aborda o papel desempenhado pela Sociologia na anĂĄlise dos processos de transformação das sociedades latino-americanas, no acompanhamento do processo de construção do Estado e da Nação, na problematização das questĂ”es sociais na AmĂ©rica Latina. SĂŁo analisados seis perĂodos na Sociologia na AmĂ©rica Latina e no Caribe: I) a herança intelectual da Sociologia ; II) a sociologia da cĂĄtedra; III) O perĂodo da "Sociologia CientĂfica" e a configuração da "Sociologia CrĂtica"; IV) a crise institucional, a consolidação da "Sociologia CrĂtica" e a diversificação da sociologia; V) a sociologia do autoritarismo, da democracia e da exclusĂŁo; VI) a consolidação institucional e a mundialização da sociologia da AmĂ©rica Latina (desde o ano de 2000), podendo-se afirmar que os traços distintivos do saber sociolĂłgico no continente foram: o internacionalismo, o hibridismo, a abordagem crĂtica dos processos e conflitos das sociedades latino-americanas e o compromisso social do sociĂłlogo.<br>The article focuses on the role played by Sociology in the analysis of processes of change in Latin American societies, in the process of construction of Nation and State, in the debate of social issues in Latin America and the Caribbean. Six periods in Sociology in Latin America and the Caribbean are examined: I) sociology's intellectual legacy; II) sociology as a cathedra; III) the period of "Scientific Sociology"; IV) the institutional crisis, the consolidation of "Critical Sociology", and the diversifying of sociology; V) sociology of authoritarianism, democracy and exclusion; VI) institutional consolidation and globalization of Latin American sociology (since 2000). It may be said that the distinctive features of sociological knowledge in the continent were: internationalism, hybridism, the critical approach to processes and conflicts of Latin American societies, and the sociologist social commitment