BackgroundThe joint distribution of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has not been well described. This study aims at determining the prevalence of self-reported physician diagnoses of asthma, COPD and of the asthma-COPD overlap syndrome and to assess whether these conditions share a common set of risk factors.MethodsA screening questionnaire on respiratory symptoms, diagnoses and risk factors was administered by mail or phone to random samples of the general Italian population aged 20–44 (n = 5163) 45–64 (n = 2167) and 65–84 (n = 1030) in the frame of the multicentre Gene Environment Interactions in Respiratory Diseases (GEIRD) study.ResultsA physician diagnosis of asthma or COPD (emphysema/chronic bronchitis/COPD) was reported by 13% and 21% of subjects aged <65 and 65–84 years respectively. Aging was associated with a marked decrease in the prevalence of diagnosed asthma (from 8.2% to 1.6%) and with a marked increase in the prevalence of diagnosed COPD (from 3.3% to 13.3%). The prevalence of the overlap of asthma and COPD was 1.6% (1.3%–2.0%), 2.1% (1.5%–2.8%) and 4.5% (3.2%–5.9%) in the 20–44, 45–64 and 65–84 age groups. Subjects with both asthma and COPD diagnoses were more likely to have respiratory symptoms, physical impairment, and to report hospital admissions compared to asthma or COPD alone (p<0.01). Age, sex, education and smoking showed different and sometimes opposite associations with the three conditions.ConclusionAsthma and COPD are common in the general population, and they coexist in a substantial proportion of subjects. The asthma-COPD overlap syndrome represents an important clinical phenotype that deserves more medical attention and further research.
We have developed a new system for the production of autologous platelet-rich plasma and red blood cell concentrates to be used in autologous transfusion support of cardiac surgery patients. In 15 operations no homologous blood products were required. Costs were diminished since with the same harness it was possible to carry out the intraoperative blood salvage and concentrate the erythrocytes contained in the oxygenator and its lines. Indirect costs were also reduced since no infective complication was observed due to homologous blood products.
Background: Whether sleep apnoea syndrome (SAS) subsides after biochemical and clinical remission of acromegaly is controversial. Objective: To assess the presence of SAS in a cohort of acromegalic patients, which included a subgroup with active disease and a subgroup in remission, and to evaluate clinical and biochemical independent predictors of SAS. Design: Cross-sectional and longitudinal study. Setting: Italian university department of internal medicine. Patients: About 36 acromegalic patients: 18 active and 18 controlled. Measurements: Polysomnography was performed in all patients and repeated in six with active acromegaly and SAS after achieving disease control. Echocardiographic parameters were also measured. Results: The prevalence of SAS was 47% in the overall acromegalic population: 56% in the active group and 39% in the controlled one. In a multivariate analysis IGF1, male gender, age, body mass index, and disease duration were associated with SAS. Impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes was more prevalent in patients with SAS, particularly in the severe cases. Among the six patients of the longitudinal study, five showed improvement of SAS, but none recovered. No correlation was found between echocardiographic parameters and severity of SAS. Conclusion: SAS can persist after recovery of acromegaly in several patients. Given the negative prognostic significance of this respiratory disorder, polysomnography should be included as routine procedure in the work-up of the acromegaly, even if in remission, being mandatory in those patients considered at high risk (elderly males, overweight, diabetic). Appropriate intensive treatment should be implemented to minimize the clinical impact of SAS in acromegaly.
Asthma and AR coexist in a substantial percentage of patients; bronchial asthma and AR, when associated, seem to share the same risk factors as AR alone while asthma without AR seems to be a different condition, at least with respect to some relevant risk factors.
Our study showed that scleroderma microangiopathy correlates with disease subset and severity of peripheral vascular, skin, heart and lung involvement; patients with late pattern showed an increased risk to have an active disease and to show a moderate/severe skin or visceral involvement compared to patients with early and active patterns. Therefore nailfold videocapillaroscopy, a simple, non-invasive and non-expensive investigation, is useful in staging scleroderma patients and also provides prognostic information.
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