412 research outputs found

    Local effect of transdermal isosorbide dinitrate ointment on hand vein diameter

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    Abstract.: Objective: To assess the effect of topically applied isosorbide dinitrate (ISDN) ointment on superficial hand veins preconstricted with phenylephrine. Methods: Using the hand vein compliance technique, venous diameter changes were measured in a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled cross-over trial in 12 healthy volunteers. During preconstriction with phenylephrine, placebo or ISDN ointment was administered to assess the dilator effect of transdermal ISDN. Finally a single i.v. dose of nitroglycerine was administered into the hand vein to assess the maximal venous response to organic nitrovasodilators. Results: ISDN ointment (equivalent to 13.4±3.61mg ISDN) caused a significant dilator effect of 39.1±21.7% (mean±SEM, P=0.02) which reached its maximum after 42.5±16.6min. Maximum ISDN effects were inversely correlated with venous baseline diameter (r2=0.38, P=0.03) and independent of the amount of ointment applied or the extent of preconstriction (P>0.3). Conclusion: Similar to nitroglycerine, topical ISDN may relax superficial hand veins within 60min after application, suggesting that it might ease venepuncture particularly of small vessels. The large variability of the effect and the time to reach the effect, however, restrict its practical usefulnes

    How to improve drug dosing for patients with renal impairment in primary care - a cluster-randomized controlled trial

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    Background: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at increased risk for inappropriate or potentially harmful prescribing. The aim of this study was to examine whether a multifaceted intervention including the use of a software programme for the estimation of creatinine clearance and recommendation of individual dosage requirements may improve correct dosage adjustment of relevant medications for patients with CKD in primary care. Methods: A cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted between January and December 2007 in small primary care practices in Germany. Practices were randomly allocated to intervention or control groups. In each practice, we included patients with known CKD and elderly patients (>=70 years) suffering from hypertension. The practices in the intervention group received interactive training and were provided a software programme to assist with individual dose adjustment. The control group performed usual care. Data were collected at baseline and at 6 months. The outcome measures, analyzed across individual patients, included prescriptions exceeding recommended maximum daily doses, with the primary outcome being prescriptions exceeding recommended standard daily doses by 30% or more. Results: Data from 44 general practitioners and 404 patients are included. The intervention was effective in reducing prescriptions exceeding the maximum daily dose per patients, with a trend in reducing prescriptions exceeding the standard daily dose by more than 30%. Conclusions: A multifaceted intervention including the use of a software program effectively reduced inappropriately high doses of renally excreted medications in patients with CKD in the setting of small primary care practices

    Indirect evidence for stimulation of nitric oxide release by tumour necrosis factor-α in human veins in vivo

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    Objectives: The detrimental haemodynamic changes observed in septicaemia are generalised vasodilation, arterial hypotension, and hyporesponsiveness to vasopressor compounds, all of which could be explained by the release of an endogenous vasodilator. Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF) induces the expression of vascular nitric oxide (NO) synthase within hours and that NO released from smooth muscle cells could be involved in the pathogenesis of septic shock. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of NO in the vascular effects of TNF. Methods: Using the dorsal hand vein compliance technique, the effect of the NO synthase inhibitor L-NG-monomethyl-arginine (L-NMMA) on α1-adrenergic responsiveness (phenylephrine 1.25-8000 ng/min) was studied after prolonged local venous infusion of TNF (8.7 μg in 5 h) in 9 volunteers and in 6 volunteers without previous cytokine exposure. Results: Mean (±s.e.) maximum phenylephrine constriction (Emax) was 73 ± 6% and log dose-rates exerting 50% of Emax (log ED50) were 3.2 ± 0.09 (geometric mean: 1535 ng/min). Local co-administration of L-NMMA at a dose sufficiently high to block NO formation (3.4 μmol/min) increased venous sensitivity to phenylephrine threefold (log ED50 2.8 ± 0.1, P < 0.015; geometric mean: 574 ng/min) whereas Emax was similar (73 ± 5%). In the controls the phenylephrine dose-response relationship remained unaffected by simultaneous administration of L-NMMA. Conclusions: As no basal release of NO occurs in hand veins without previous exposure to TNF these results provide direct evidence for induction of NO formation in the human vasculature and consecutive resistance to α-adrenergic venoconstriction. NO might, therefore, be a key mediator of haemodynamic impairment in humans under conditions with known elevations of circulating TNF, such as a septic shoc

    Inverse correlation between endothelin-1-induced peripheral microvascular vasoconstriction and blood pressure in glaucoma patients

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    • Background: The potent vasoconstrictor peptide endothelin-I has been shown to participate in the control of peripheral vascular tone and in the regulation of ocular perfusion. In glaucoma patients vasospasms and arterial hypotension have been identified as risk factors for the progression of glaucomatous damage, and the regulation of endothelin-1 release is disturbed in some of these patients. The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between resting blood pressure and cutaneous vascular responsiveness to endothelin-1 and phenylephrine in patients with glaucoma and in matched controls. • Methods: In 9 patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), 7 patient with normal tension glaucoma (NTG), and 16 age- and sex-matched controls, endothelin-1 and phenylephrine responses were assessed in the human forearm microcirculation using laser Doppler flowmetry during intra-arterial drug administration. Blood pressure was measured intra-arterially. • Results: In contrast to α1-adrenergic effects, endothelin-1 responses were inversely correlated to both systolic (r 2 = 0.27,P = 0.05) and diastolic (r 2 = 0.54,P = 0.001) blood pressure in glaucoma patients, whereas there was no such correlation in controls. Patients with lower blood pressure values were more sensitive to the vasoconstrictor effects of endothelin-1. Cutaneous responsiveness to endothelin-1 and phenylephrine was similar in glaucoma patients and in controls. • Conclusion: These results reveal that glaucoma patients appear to have peripheral microvascular abnormalities which are exhibited as altered responsiveness to endothelin-1. Thus, this study supports the hypothesis that endothelin-l-related microvascular dysfunction may be involved in the pathogenesis of glaucomatous damag

    Management of potential drug interactions in community pharmacies: a questionnaire-based survey in Switzerland

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    Objective: To analyze the current drug-interaction management in Swiss community pharmacies, with a particular focus on electronic systems, and to compare the results with those expressed by German general practitioners in a recent survey. Methods: Data were collected with a postal questionnaire which was randomly sent to 500 out of 833 community pharmacies in the German part of Switzerland. Results: The response rate was 57.4%, and only 24.7% pharmacists reported that they were confronted less than daily with potential drug interactions. Use of computer software to identify potential drug interactions was widespread in community pharmacies (90.2%), and the software was the primary source of information (81.2 ± 29.6%). The quality of the interaction software was judged sensitive (identifying all dangerous interactions) by 80.5 ± 21.5%, but specific (identifying only relevant interactions) by only 38.3 ± 32%. Pharmacists declared a low override rate (14%) of drug interaction alerts, although unjustified alerts were reported by 60.6 ± 33.1%. In contrast to general practitioners, pharmacists opted less often for information on the mechanism of the interaction, and more frequently for details for dose adjustment. Both groups complained about deficient information on non-interacting alternatives. Conclusion: The information needs of community pharmacists differed considerably from general practitioners, and pharmacists were overwhelmed by inappropriate alerts because of a lack of specificity of their drug-interaction systems. Substantial improvement of drug-interaction software systems is thus required at least in two important aspects, the suppression of inappropriate alerts and the tailoring to the needs of the use

    Does the circulating ketoconazole metabolite N-deacetyl ketoconazole contribute to the drug-drug interaction potential of the parent compound?

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    Ketoconazole is a strong inhibitor of cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) and of P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and is often used as an index inhibitor especially for CYP3A4-mediated drug metabolism. A preliminary physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model for drug-drug interactions indicated possible involvement of a metabolite to the perpetrator potential of ketoconazole. Still unknown for humans, in rodents, N-deacetyl ketoconazole (DAK) has been identified as the major ketoconazole metabolite. We therefore investigated in vitro, whether DAK also inhibits the human CYPs and drug transporters targeted by ketoconazole and quantified DAK in human plasma from healthy volunteers after receiving a single oral dose of 400 mg ketoconazole. Our data demonstrated that DAK also inhibits CYP3A4 (2.4-fold less potent than ketoconazole), CYP2D6 (13-fold more potent than ketoconazole), CYP2C19 (equally potent), P-gp (3.4-fold less potent than ketoconazole), breast cancer resistance protein (more potent than ketoconazole) and organic anion transporting polypeptide 1B1 and 1B3 (7.8-fold and 2.6-fold less potent than ketoconazole). After a single oral dose of 400 mg ketoconazole, maximum concentrations of DAK in human plasma were only 3.1 ‰ of the parent compound. However, assuming that DAK also highly accumulates in the human liver as demonstrated for rodents, inhibition of the proteins investigated could also be conceivable in vivo. In conclusion, DAK inhibits several CYPs and drug transporters, which might contribute to the perpetrator potential of ketoconazole

    The Role of Adherence Thresholds for Development and Performance Aspects of a Prediction Model for Direct Oral Anticoagulation Adherence

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    Patients who do not sufficiently adhere to their dosing regimens will, ultimately, do not get the full benefit of their medication. For example, if direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC) are not taken continuously, an intervention to improve adherence or maintain persistence will show direct effects on clinical outcomes. Usually, adherent patients are defined by taking ≥80% of their medication. The resulting binary adherence status from this threshold can as well be used for predictive classification. Thus, the threshold can determine the prediction model’s performance to identify patients at risk for poor adherence by this binary adherence status. In this perspective, we propose a plan for model development and performance considering the threshold’s role. Concerning development demands, we extracted predictors from a systematic literature search on DOAC adherence to be used as a core set of candidate predictors. Independently, we investigated how well a future model would technically have to perform by modeling drug intake and thromboembolic events based on a rivaroxaban pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model. Using this simulation framework for different thresholds, we projected the impact of an imperfectly predicted adherence status on the event risk, and how imperfect sensitivity and specificity affect the cost balance if a supporting intervention was offered to patients classified as non-adherent. Our simulation results suggest applying a rather high threshold (90%) for discrimination between patients at low or high risk for non-adherence by a prediction model in order to assure cost-efficient implementation
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