The acute application of ganglion TENS attenuated arterial stiffness in younger adults as well as hemodynamic measures in the middle-aged group. This method could emerge as effective therapy for the management of arterial blood pressure.
BackgroundCirculatory power (CP) and ventilatory power (VP) are indices that have been used
for the clinical evaluation of patients with heart failure; however, no study has
evaluated these indices in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) without
heart failure.ObjectiveTo characterize both indices in patients with CAD compared with healthy
controls.MethodsEighty-seven men [CAD group = 42 subjects and healthy control group (CG) = 45
subjects] aged 40–65 years were included. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing was
performed on a treadmill and the following parameters were measured: 1) peak
oxygen consumption (VO2), 2) peak heart rate (HR), 3) peak blood
pressure (BP), 4) peak rate-pressure product (peak systolic HR x peak BP), 5) peak
oxygen pulse (peak VO2/peak HR), 6) oxygen uptake efficiency (OUES), 7)
carbon dioxide production efficiency (minute ventilation/carbon dioxide production
slope), 8) CP (peak VO2 x peak systolic BP) and 9) VP (peak systolic
BP/carbon dioxide production efficiency).ResultsThe CAD group had significantly lower values for peak VO2 (p <
0.001), peak HR (p < 0.001), peak systolic BP (p < 0.001), peak
rate-pressure product (p < 0.001), peak oxygen pulse (p = 0.008), OUES (p <
0.001), CP (p < 0.001), and VP (p < 0.001) and significantly higher values
for peak diastolic BP (p = 0.004) and carbon dioxide production efficiency (p <
0.001) compared with CG. Stepwise regression analysis showed that CP was
influenced by group (R2 = 0.44, p < 0.001) and VP was influenced by
both group and number of vessels with stenosis after treatment (interaction
effects: R2 = 0.46, p < 0.001).ConclusionThe indices CP and VP were lower in men with CAD than healthy controls.
Cervical cancer (CC) is the most common type of cancer in women and is the third leading cause of death in most developing countries, causing more than 288,000 deaths in women worldwide each year. The most favourable survival rate is in developed countries, since CC mortality has recently declined in those countries. The purpose of this study was to determine the survival rate and associated factors of CC patients at a reference hospital in the Amazon region. The patient sample included records of 339 patients with cervical cancer who had been hospitalized in Belém, Pará, Brazil from January 2005 to December 2010; the socioeconomic and clinical data were collected between June and September 2016. A survival rate of approximately 84% was observed, and it was found that disease stage (p <0.01), metastasis (p <0.01) and readmission (p <0.01) had significant influences on patient outcome. The impact of these factors on the general survival rate was higher in the Amazon region compared with other regions of Brazil, and the primary survival factors were associated with earlier stages of the disease. However, more national studies are needed on this subject. Our findings may contribute to the development of regional strategies for the prevention of cervical cancer, a reduction in its incidence and mortality rate, an increase in survival time and an improvement in the quality of life of these women.
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