The therapeutic success of antibiotics used at the beginning of treatment and the effect of exchange transfusion in cases of septicaemia were tested in 22 newborn infants. The clinical course of these patients was compared with the outcome of 11 newborn infants who received antibiotic treatment without exchange transfusion. The following results were obtained: 1) All 6 patients initially receiving antibiotics, which were ineffective in vitro, died. In this group of patients the incidence of septic organ involvements (meningitis, ventriculitis, peritonitis) was significantly increased. 2) Following exchange transfusion, an impressive clinical improvement was consistently observed. 3) In patients who had initially received effective antibiotics and exchange transfusion, the lethality was significantly lower than in patients without exchange transfusion. 4) Our bacteriological findings show that continuous monitoring of cultures from blood, CSF and stool is necessary to choose the most effective antibiotic in the prevailing nosocomical circumstances.
8 children with precocious puberty were treated with cyproterone acetate (CPA). During treatment there were no definite clinical signs of depressed adrenocortical function. The plasma cortisol concentrations were grossly depressed and the diurnal cortisol rhythm was abolished. Two months after discontinuation of CPA treatment the adrenocortical function had greatly improved. The lysin-vasopressin stimulation test revealed in one child a normal, in another child an exaggerated ACTH response during CPA therapy. Fasting plasma ACTH concentrations were elevated compared with normal controls, but they were very low compared with patients with Addison's disease. The results suggest that CPA has a twofold effect leading to adrenocortical insufficiency: i.e., inhibition of cortisol secretion by the adrenals themselves and inhibition of ACTH secretion at the hypothalamopitiuitary level.
Twenty-one girls with familial tall stature were reevaluated at 18 years of age. Fourteen of them had been treated with high-dose oestrogens (I), while seven girls had not been treated (II). The untreated group is comparable but not a strict control group. Recordings on initiation of the study were: Chronologic age: 12.0 +/- 1.4 (I) versus 13.5 +/- 1.5 years (II; means +/- SD), Bone age: (1) Greulich-Pyle: 11.8 +/- 1.4 (I) versus 13.1 +/- 1.1 years (II), (2) Tanner-Whitehouse II: 12.7 +/- 1.0 (I) versus 13.6 +/- 1.1 years (II). Mean height predictions according to (1) Bayley-Pinneau, (2) Roche-Wainer-Thissen and Tanner (3) with, and (4) without allowance for mid-parent height ranged from 179.4-184 (I) to 175.7-179.5 cm (II). In the treated group there was an average reduction of predicted height of between 2.3 and 6.5 cm, depending on which of the four methods was used. In the untreated group the average differences between calculated and observed mature height varied from 0.2-3.4 cm. The difference in the reduction of predicted height between the treated and untreated groups was significant (P less than 0.05) only with the Bayley-Pinneau method and not with the others. In the treated group highly significant correlations were found between height reduction and the initial chronologic age, bone age and duration of therapy.
The fast generation of digitally reconstructed radiographs is a prerequisite for intensity-based registration approaches. For our approach, extensive pre-calculations are necessary that are saved in what we call a direction dependent projection field. The projection field approach reduces the complexity of the DRR calculation from O(n(3)) to O(n(2)). This paper develops the theoretical background and gives first examples of the application of projection fields for the 2D/3D registration of X-rays to CT data.
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