Adaptation of coenzyme stimulation assays for the nutritional assessment of thiamine, riboflavin and pyridoxine on the Cobas Bio centrifugal analyser are described. Whole blood was collected into acid-citrate dextrose, which preserves the erythrocytes, prior to assay for several days. Washed erythrocytes stored at −70°C and subsequently thawed, showed altered enzyme activities. The methods offer improved precision over existing procedures and take advantage of the high throughput capabilities of the instrumentation.
Twenty patients, who underwent coronary revascularization without cardioplegic arrest, were given (during cardiopulmonary bypass) either magnesium chloride 16 mmol in 10 ml of water (magnesium group) or 10 ml of water alone (control group). Plasma and urinary magnesium concentrations were measured for 24 h after operation. ECG was recorded continuously during this period. QT intervals corrected for heart rate (QTcorr) were calculated from periodic full lead ECG. The mean plasma magnesium concentrations in the control group were less than normal throughout the study, while hypomagnesaemia did not occur in the magnesium group. Urinary magnesium excretion was higher in the magnesium group, with 58% of the administered magnesium excreted in the first 24 h. The observed incidence of frequent or ventricular arrhythmias was 22% in the magnesium group compared with 63% in the control group. No significant differences in QTcorr intervals were observed between the groups.
Chronic splenomegaly in 131 Kenyan patients was investigated at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi. Patients were allocated to diagnostic groups on the basis of clinical, haematological, parasitological, histological, radiological and endoscopic data. The major diagnostic groups were hyper-reactive malarial splenomegaly, our preferred name for tropical splenomegaly syndrome, (31%), hepatosplenic schistosomiasis (18%), visceral leishmaniasis (5%) and "indeterminate splenomegaly", where no diagnosis could be reached (12%). Another 20% of patients were suffering from various non-schistosomal forms of portal hypertension. A number of specific and rarer causes accounted for the rest of the cases. The tribal and geographical distribution of patients with chronic splenomegaly was compared with the pattern of general medical admissions. Splenomegaly was more frequent than expected in Kamba and Luo patients. Hyper-reactive malarial splenomegaly and hepatosplenic schistosomiasis were common in both groups, whereas visceral leishmaniasis was almost restricted to the Kamba and indeterminate splenomegaly was especially prevalent in the Luo. Malarial antibody and immunoglobulin levels differed significantly between the various diagnostic categories of patients and controls. Malarial serology can be diagnostically useful for chronic splenomegaly, provided results are interpreted in their geographical context.
Experimentally, creatine phosphate (CP) added to St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solution (STH) improved post-ischaemic recovery of cardiac function in the rat heart. We investigated the effect of adding CP (10.0 mmol/l) to STH. Fifty open-heart surgery patients were randomized into control (STH) and treated (STH + CP) groups (25 per group). Patients underwent (a) monitoring for peri- and postoperative arrhythmias (48-h Holter monitoring). (b) quantitative birefringence assessment of intraoperative myocardial protection in left and right ventricular biopsies sampled at start of bypass (pre-isch.), end of bypass (end-isch.) and after 10 min reperfusion (post-isch.), and (c) measurement of serum creatine kinase-MB isozyme (CK-MB) values for up to 4 days postoperatively; results were assessed with respect to (d) haemodynamics and postoperative clinical outcome. Inotropic support (adrenaline) was required in three patients (12%) from each group; no patient died. All patients required defibrillation, and the number of direct current shocks required for sinus rhythm was the same in each group. The occurrence and incidence of reperfusion-induced arrhythmias were the same in both groups. Serum CK and CK-MB values were similar throughout the sampling period in both groups of patients; one patient in the control group had raised CK-MB levels postoperatively, but perioperative infarction was not indicated by the electrocardiogram.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Eighty-five patients with chronic splenomegaly and proven oesophageal varices were studied at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi. The major defined groups were hepatosplenic schistosomiasis (24%), cirrhosis (20%) and portal vein occlusion (11%). Hyper-reactive malarial splenomegaly (tropical splenomegaly syndrome) was considered as the cause of oesophageal varices in only one patient. In 26% of cases liver biopsy was non-diagnostic and the extrahepatic portal vein was demonstrated radiologically to be patent. Such patients were thought to be suffering from idiopathic portal hypertension, not previously described elsewhere in Africa. Hepatitis B surface antigen was detected in 12% of controls and in 58% of patients with cirrhosis (p less than 0.001). Some serological marker of previous hepatitis B virus infection was present in 92% of patients with cirrhosis and in 79% of controls. Kamba patients from Machakos and Kitui Districts were significantly more prevalent than expected among these 85 cases of portal hypertension.
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