The prevalence of QT prolongation in a large random sample of Type 1 diabetic patients in Piemonte, Italy and its association with autonomic neuropathy were assessed. Three hundred and seventy-nine Type 1 diabetic patients (age 15-59) with (94, DAN+) and without (280, DAN-) autonomic neuropathy and 118 non-diabetic control subjects participated in the study. QT interval was measured on an ECG recorded at rest and QTc calculated according to Bazett's formula. QTc was greater than 0.440 s in 7.6% (95% CI 2.9-12.3) of control subjects, 25.6% (21.0-30.0) of diabetic patients, 30.8% (21.5-40.1) of DAN+, 23.9% (18.9-28.9) of DAN-. QTc was greater than 0.460 s (mean + 2SD of QTc in control subjects) in 11.7% (8.5-14.9) of diabetic patients, 18.1% (10.3-25.9) of DAN+, 9.6% (6.2-13.0) of DAN-. QT was above the 95% upper limit for the control subjects in the plot of measured QT against RR interval in 21.4% (17.3-25.5) of diabetic patients, 26.6% (17.7-35.5) of DAN+, 19.3% (14.7-23.9) of DAN-. No correlation was found between QT interval and age or disease duration. The prevalence of QT prolongation was higher in diabetic patients than in control subjects and in DAN+ than in DAN-.
BackgroundAbdomino-pelvic injuries often present a challenge for the emergency department. Although literature reports several protocols on the treatment of abdomino-pelvic injuries aiming at defining the most advisable treatment line, optimal treatment is still controversial. This paper describes a protocol that has been used to treat abdomino-pelvic injuries in our hospital since 2002. Materials and methodsIn literature different protocol of abdomino-pelvic injuries are described and comparing them most of the difference are the timing of CT scan, the angiography and the laparotomy when treating a lesion of pelvic ring. If patient is haemodynamically instable and presents a lesion of pelvic ring our protocol suggest the simplest and fastest stabilization (pelvic external fixator) in emergency room and delay exam such as CT scan as second level exam. In the presence of an abdominal injury, with a positive focused assessment with sonography for trauma test, the first step should be a pelvic ring stabilization, as laparotomy decreases the abdominal pressure and reduces the tamponade effect on the retroperitoneum. According to presented protocol the angiography is not be a first choice treatment. This protocol was applied to 58 cases of abdomino-pevic injury with unstable pelvic lesions from October 2002 to December 2005. Mean injury severity score was 27.2 (CI 24.1–30.3).ResultsFive patients (8%) died, three due to haemorrhagic shock and two due to pulmonary embolization. Four patients (6.9%) had a partial or complete cauda equina syndrome, four patients (6.9%) complained of mild incontinence, whilst 1 (1.7%) complained of urinary retention with multiple cystitis. Two patients (3.4%) with retention and multiple cystitis, had a malunion and a painful non-union of the fracture. Seven patients (12.3%) had neurological impairment: 5 (8.6%) sciatic nerve palsy, 1 (1.7%) lumbosacral root lesions in a C2-type fracture and there was one case (1.7%) of inconstant lumbago with sciatic pain. Twelve patients reported different levels of sexual dysfunction (20.7%).ConclusionsAlthough validation with a larger cohort is required, our preliminary clinical data are similar to, or better than, those reported in the most recent publications on this question, suggesting that this protocol could well reduce both the mortality rate and the long term complications of abdominopelvic injuries.
Familial clustering of diabetic nephropathy points to genetic susceptibility. The observation that in non-diabetic subjects microalbuminuria occurs more frequently in the presence of a parental history of diabetes supports this hypothesis. However, the role of inherited factors in poorly understood in non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). This study investigated the albumin excretion rate in non-diabetic offspring of NIDDM patients with increased albumin excretion rate (> 20 micrograms/min) or normal albumin excretion rate (< 20 micrograms/min). We recruited 20 offspring of NIDDM patients with increased albumin excretion rate (A-off) and 20 offspring rate (N-off), matched for age, sex, body mass index, blood pressure and estimated protein intake. All offspring were normotensive, had normal creatinine clearance, normal glucose tolerance and sterile urine collection. Albumin excretion rate was measured on three sterile overnight urine collections and median values were used for calculations. Albumin excretion rate was significantly higher in A-off than in N-off (7.7 +/- 1.2 vs 3.4 +/- 0.6 micrograms/min p<0.01) and significantly related to parents' albumin excretion rate (p<0.01, r=0.53). These results suggest that an increased glomerular permeability is present in non-diabetic offspring of NIDDM patients with increased albumin excretion rate.
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.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.