Medication reconciliation procedures are required to minimise medication discrepancies and enhance patient safety. Integration of patient health records across care levels is necessary but not sufficient to prevent errors.
Patients with AS were previously found to have increased intestinal permeability using the 51Cr-EDTA resorption test. In order to discover whether this alteration has taken place prior to, or as a consequence of the disease, we studied the intestinal permeability to 51Cr-EDTA in 20 patients with AS, 65 of their healthy relatives, and 25 normal volunteers. We also considered the HLA B27 antigen, the serum immunoglobulin A levels, the disease activity, the existence of peripheral arthritis, the ESR, the CRP values and the intake of drugs at the time of study. Gut permeability was found to have increased in the patients and their healthy relatives compared to the control group. No difference in gut permeability was found between patients and relatives regardless of whether they had the HLA B27 antigen or not. The increased intestinal permeability in the patients had no relation to the disease activity, to the presence of peripheral arthritis or to the intake of NSAIDs. Gut permeability was shown to bear no relation to IgA levels, ESR or CRP. Our findings suggest that the increase in gut permeability in AS patients and their relatives is a primary defect and may be an aetiologic factor in this disease.
We studied trace elements (zinc, copper, magnesium, iron, and lithium) by atomic absorption spectrophotometry in the plasma and erythrocytes of 120 subjects: 20 healthy controls and 100 parenteral drug addicts (69 heroin and 31 heroin + other drugs). Plasma Zn and intraerythrocytic Zn and Fe were decreased, whereas plasma and intraerythrocytic Cu were significantly increased in the group of drug addicts with respect to the healthy controls. Moreover, a period of abstinence longer than 10 days was associated with lower plasma levels of Zn and Li in subjects who had taken drugs shortly before they were examined. The presence of serological markers against HBV and HIV did not seem to influence the behavior of the trace elements in blood.
Our results support the hypothesis that circulating 25(OH)D levels are related to improved glucose homeostasis in women with PMO. However, this relationship was apparent only in the presence of high circulating levels of 25(OH)D.
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