Treatment with systemic glucocorticoids results in moderate improvement in clinical outcomes among patients hospitalized for exacerbations of COPD. The maximal benefit is obtained during the first two weeks of therapy. Hyperglycemia of sufficient severity to warrant treatment is the most frequent complication.
We conducted a multicenter, randomized, prospective study comparing medical therapy alone with coronary-artery bypass surgery plus medical therapy in 468 men with unstable angina pectoris. Patients were entered in the study from June 1, 1976, to June 30, 1982. Among those assigned to surgery who received bypass grafts, operative mortality was 4.1 percent. Arteriography performed after one year of follow-up revealed that 74.8 percent of the grafts studied were patent. The cumulative rate of crossover from medical to surgical therapy after two years was 34 percent; the operative mortality among patients crossed over was 10.3 percent. Nonfatal myocardial infarction occurred in 11.7 percent of the patients treated surgically and 12.2 percent of those treated medically (no significant difference). Most of the nonfatal myocardial infarctions in the surgical group occurred in the perioperative period. Overall, the two-year survival rate computed by life-table analysis did not differ between the two groups. However, the curves reflecting mortality as a function of left ventricular ejection fraction were significantly different (P = 0.03); surgery was associated with a significantly reduced mortality among patients with lower ejection fractions. We conclude that patients with unstable angina pectoris have a similar outcome after two years whether they receive medical therapy alone or coronary bypass surgery plus medical therapy. However, patients with reduced left ventricular ejection fractions may have a better two-year survival rate after coronary bypass surgery.
In reviewing late morbidity of a multicenter clinical trial comparing balloon angioplasty (percutaneous transluminal angioplasty) with bypass surgery for lower-extremity ischemia, an unexpectedly high incidence of adverse systemic events in surgical patients was uncovered. The study was prospective and randomized, and included a total of 263 patients, with follow-up from 2 to 6 years. When end points of related deaths, amputations, and intervention failures were summed, surgery was favored over percutaneous transluminal angioplasty at 4 years. Progression of cardiac and renal dysfunction and mortality differed between groups. A total of 42 deaths were in the group who underwent surgery and 27 in those who underwent percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. The percentage difference in death rate between the two groups increased each year to reach 10% at 5 years. A significant difference in renal function was noted in nine patients who underwent surgery and zero who underwent percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. Myocardial infarctions were greater on follow-up of surgical patients. After 6 years, congestive heart failure had occurred in 19 patients who underwent surgery and eight who underwent percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. The trends in this study of patients with only moderately severe peripheral arterial disease suggest an increased rate of deterioration of cardiac and renal function in patients who have arterial operations. In surgical patients, mortality was 13.1% per year, whereas it was 8.4% for patients treated with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. Future intervention studies should include long-term follow-up of such cardiovascular events.
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