Summary Cancer of the oesophagus was a rare disease in the South African black population until the last few decades. Increases in incidence have occurred and at present it is the commonest cancer in black men in many parts of South Africa. A case-control study of 200 oesophageal cancer patients and 391 hospital controls has been carried out in order to determine the risk factors in the urban black population of Soweto. The results indicate that the cancer patients were long-term urban residents from a very low socio-economic group. The association between smoking pipe tobacco and oesophageal cancer previously noted in South Africa is confirmed. In addition, consumption of traditional beer was found to be a major risk factor.
In a retrospective study of 73 patients with community-acquired lobar pneumonia of diverse aetiology admitted to an intensive care unit, an attempt was made to identify those factors among the demographic and clinical features and results of initial laboratory investigations that were predictive of the ultimate outcome. A lower mean white cell count (p = 0.03), platelet count (p = 0.02), total serum protein (p = 0.005) and albumin (p = 0.02) and a higher mean serum creatinine (p = 0.03) and phosphate level (p = 0.02) appeared to be predictive of a poor prognosis. The most significant variable predictive of mortality, was the presence of bacteraemia (p = 0.0005). Severity of illness scoring systems by omitting microbiological data appear to underestimate predicted patient mortality. The mortality rate of critically ill patients with community-acquired lobar pneumonia remains high, despite advances in antimicrobial chemotherapy and intensive care unit facilities, particularly in the presence of certain negative prognostic factors of which the presence of bacteraemia is the most important.
In this study, 417 patients undergoing "clean" elective neurosurgical operative procedures were randomized to receive a broad-spectrum antibiotic (piperacillin) or placebo given as three perioperative doses, each 6 hours apart. Randomization was carried out by hospital pharmacists, and the investigators remained blinded until the end of the study. Twenty cases were excluded from analysis because either an unforeseen second operation was performed or antibiotic therapy was initiated within 30 days after surgery to treat infection or the risk of infection. Twelve of the 205 patients treated with placebo developed postoperative wound sepsis, and four of the 192 piperacillin-treated patients developed wound sepsis--a statistically significant difference (p less than 0.05, Fisher's exact test). Piperacillin thus appeared to reduce the incidence of neurosurgical wound infection in this study.
Pulmonary function tests were performed in 15 thalassemic patients (age 5 years 8 months to 18 years 6 months), receiving both regular transfusions and desferrioxamine, to determine the presence and nature of any abnormalities in lung function. Reactive oxidant production from neutrophils was measured simultaneously to ascertain if a causal relationship existed between free radical production and tissue damage in the lungs. Mean total lung capacity, mean residual volume, and mean forced vital capacity were significantly reduced, indicating a restrictive pattern of lung function abnormality. In addition, the carbon monoxide diffusion was low, and hypoxemia was present in 6 of 13 patients tested. These pulmonary function abnormalities did not correlate with age, cumulative volume of transfusion, or serum ferritin levels. In addition, neutrophil reactive oxidant status did not correlate with these or with pulmonary function parameters. These results indicate that neutrophil-derived oxygen free radicals do not appear to be a major cause of lung function abnormalities in thalassemics.
SUMMARY The correlation of handedness with deformities, radiographic changes, and function of the hand was studied in a large group of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and a dominant right hand. There was no significant difference in the proportion of patients who had swan neck deformity, boutonniere deformity, uncorrectable ulnar deviation, and flexor tenosynovitis in the dominant and non-dominant hands. There were significantly greater radiological changes in the dominant hand, however, and the middle and index fingers were most severely affected. The severe involvement of these fingers may be related to their greater use in daily activities. There was also more severe functional impairment in the dominant hand.
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