Twenty-six patients with painful, bony metastases were recruited into a randomized, double-blind, single dose, two-treatment, three-part crossover study of choline magnesium trisalicylate (CMT) and placebo. Assessments were made prior to and at one, two, three and four hours after dosing. Bone pain caused by metastatic cancer was significantly relieved one hour after the administration of 1500 mg CMT (p = 0.04). At all four time points the pain was less than baseline with CMT and at three time points greater than baseline with placebo but these results did not reach statistical significance. The summed pain intensity difference for patients was greater with CMT than with placebo, but this also did not reach significance. The incidence of volunteered side-effects was similar for both treatments. The results suggest that a nonacetylating, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug may have a role complementary to that of an opioid in the management of metastatic bone pain.
Severe essential hypertension in a subset of American black subjects is associated with marked stenosis of interlobular arteries and arterioles of the kidneys, observed by renal biopsy and binephrectomy specimens. The interlobular arterial stenosis is caused by marked thickening of the intima due mainly to the presence of smooth muscle cells, basement membrane material, and acid mucopolysaccharide. Because of this makeup, we propose the term "musculo-mucoid intimal hyperplasia" for this lesion. The media of these arteries appears maximally dilated, and by electron microscope displays degenerative changes of the smooth muscle cells. The arterioles are thickened, due mainly to hyalinization, but also due to the musculo-mucoid change (onionskin effect). The smooth muscle cells are degenerated and atrophic. These patients do not exhibit fibrinoid necrosis of the arteries, arterioles, and glomeruli, presumably because of the rapidity of the development of the arterial stenotic lesion. Accordingly, the glomeruli are destroyed by ischemia, and there is no evidence of glomerulitis (no "Kombinations" form of Fahr). A unifying hypothesis concerning renal hypertensive arterial disease is suggested by these studies. This hypothesis places the main emphasis for all the morphological expressions of the intrinsic visceral vasculature on changes involving the main functional unit of the vessel wall, the medical smooth muscle.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.