Objective: Circadian dysregulation plays an important role in the etiology of mood disorders. Evening chronotype is frequent in these patients. However, prospective studies about the influence of chronotype on mood symptoms have reached unclear conclusions in patients with bipolar disorder (BD). The objective of this study was to investigate relationship between chronotype and prognostic factors for BD. Methods: At the baseline, 80 euthymic BD patients answered a demographic questionnaire and clinical scales to evaluate anxiety, functioning and chronotype. Circadian preference was measured using the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire, in which lower scores indicate eveningness. Mood episodes and hospitalizations were evaluated monthly for 18 months. Results: Among the BD patients, 14 (17.5%) were definitely morning type, 35 (43.8%), moderately morning, 27 (33.7%) intermediate (neither) and 4 (5%) moderately evening. Eveningness was associated with obesity or overweight (p = 0.03), greater anxiety (p = 0.002) and better functioning (p = 0.01), as well as with mood episodes (p = 0.04), but not with psychiatric hospitalizations (p = 0.82). This group tended toward depressive episodes (p = 0.06), but not (hypo)mania (p = 0.56). Conclusion: This study indicated that evening chronotype predicts a poor prognostic for BD. It reinforces the relevance of treating rhythm disruptions even during euthymia to improve patient quality of life and prevent mood episodes.
BackgroundCombined liver-kidney transplant is a routine procedure in many transplant
centers. The increase in its number coincided with the introduction in 2002 of the
MELD (Model for End-stage Liver Disease) score for allocation of livers,
prioritizing patients with renal dysfunction.AimTo analyze the experience with combined liver-kidney transplantation in a liver
transplant center in Brazil.MethodA retrospective review was conducted. All transplants were performed using grafts
from deceased donors.ResultsSixteen combined liver-kidney transplantations were performed in the same period,
which corresponds to 2.7% and 2.5% of the kidney and liver transplants,
respectively. Fourteen patients were male (87.5 %) and two were female (12.5%).
The average patients and donors age was 57.3±9.1 and 32.7±13.1,
respectively. The MELD score mean was 23.6±3.67. The main cause of liver
dysfunction were chronic hepatitis C virus (n=9). As for renal dysfunction,
diabetic nephropathy (n=4) was the most frequent. There were six deaths, two of
them by severe dysfunction of the liver graft and four by infectious causes. The
1, 3 and 5 years survival rate in patients undergoing liver-kidney
transplantations was 68.8%, 57.3% and 57.3%, respectively.ConclusionThe survival rates achieved in this series are considered satisfactory and show
that this procedure has an acceptable morbidity and survival.
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