Cognitive functioning was assessed in diabetic patients during hypoglycemia (60 mg/dl), euglycemia/control (110 mg/dl), and hyperglycemia (300 mg/dl). Blood glucose levels were set and maintained to within 4% of targeted levels by an artificial insulin/glucose infusion system (Biostator). Attention and fine motor skills, assessed by visual reaction time, was slowed at altered glucose levels. Performance was less impaired during hyperglycemia than hypoglycemia when a longer interstimulus interval was used, although it was still slower than normal. The time required to solve simple addition problems was increased during hypoglycemia, although reading comprehension was not affected. The possibility that some automatic brain skills are disrupted at altered glucose concentrations is discussed, while associative or inferential skills may be less affected.
Background: Because of the paucity of effective evidence-based therapies for children with recurrent abdominal pain, we evaluated the therapeutic effect of guided imagery, a well-studied self-regulation technique.
ABSTRACT.Objective. To conduct a systematic review of evaluated treatments for recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) in children.Methods. Online bibliographic databases were searched for the terms "recurrent abdominal pain," "functional abdominal pain," "children," or "alternative therapies" in articles classified as randomized controlled trials. The abstracts or full text of 57 relevant articles were examined; 10 of these met inclusion criteria. Inclusion criteria required that the study involve children aged 5 to 18 years, subjects have a diagnosis of RAP, and that subjects were allocated randomly to treatment or control groups. The methodology and findings of these articles were evaluated critically, and data were extracted from each article regarding study methods, specific interventions, outcomes measured, and results.Results. Studies that evaluated famotidine, pizotifen, cognitive-behavioral therapy, biofeedback, and peppermint oil enteric-coated capsules showed a decrease in measured pain outcomes for those who received the interventions when compared with others in control groups. The studies that evaluated dietary interventions had conflicting results, in the case of fiber, or showed no efficacy, in the case of lactose avoidance.Conclusions. Evidence for efficacy of treatment of RAP in children was found for therapies that used famotidine, pizotifen, cognitive-behavioral therapy, biofeedback, and peppermint oil enteric-coated capsules. The effects of dietary fiber were less conclusive, and the use of a lactose-free diet showed no improvement. There seemed to be greater improvement when therapy (famotidine, pizotifen, peppermint oil) was targeted to the specific functional gastrointestinal disorder (dyspepsia, abdominal migraine, irritable bowel syndrome). The behavioral interventions seemed to have a general positive effect on children with nonspecific RAP. Many of these therapies have not been used widely as standard treatment for children with RAP. Although the mechanism of action for each effective therapy is not fully understood, each is believed to be safe for use in RAP. Pediatrics 2003;111:e1-e11. URL: http://www.pediatrics.org/cgi/ content/full/111/1/e1; recurrent abdominal pain, treatment, children, alternative therapies, systematic review.ABBREVIATIONS. RAP, recurrent abdominal pain; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SPC, standard pediatric care; CBFI, cognitive-behavioral family intervention; BF, biofeedback; CBI, cognitive-behavioral intervention.
The effect of serum glucose alterations on selected verbal skills was examined in a group of diabetic men between 18 and 35 yr of age. An artificial insulin infusion system was used to set and maintain glucose concentrations during testing at each of three levels: hypoglycemia (55 mg/dl), euglycemia (110 mg/dl), and hyperglycemia (300 mg/dl). Subjects were used as their own controls, with performance at euglycemia serving as the comparison standard. A double-blind crossover design was employed as described in Holmes et al. (see ref. 14). Results showed significantly disrupted naming or labeling skills at hypoglycemia, with a trend toward poorer performance at hyperglycemia. During hypoglycemia, rate of responding was slowed from 6% to 18%, compared with euglycemic performance, but accuracy was not impaired. In contrast, word recognition skills were not affected by deviations in glucose. These performance effects were not correlated with duration of disease except for one of the five tests administered. This one exception, on the most difficult task, was less notable than the general finding of no relation between disease duration (from 6 mo to 17.5 yr) and test performance. Thus, in addition to considering long-term consequences of blood glucose alterations, clinicians and diabetic patients may wish to consider acute neuropsychological consequences of disrupted euglycemia.
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