Skin temperature of one finger was measured before and after immersion of the gloved fingers of both hands in 16 degrees C water for 5 min [room temperature (Ta) 24 or 20 degrees C]. At Ta 24 degrees C, 23 of 25 normal nonsmokers (92%) had finger rewarming to above 24 degrees C in 12 min after cold immersion, at Ta 20 degrees C, only 1 of 12 (8%) had similar rewarming. Among 12 habitual smokers only 4 (33%) rewarmed above 24 degrees C (Ta 24 degrees C) following a 1-h abstinence from smoking, but 8 (67%) did so after a 24-h abstinence. Only 2 of these 8, however, did so in a retest 10 min after smoking a cigarette. The smokers were not tested at Ta 20 degrees C. We conclude that air temperature and cigarette smoking are important determinants of finger rewarming following a finger-cooling test.
Background. In patients with hypertension noncompliance with drug treatment is between 15 to 54%, and has been recognised as a relevant contributor to the burden of cardiovascular morbidity. Up to 92% of patients experience unpleasant symptoms with their condition and, particularly in these patients, the symptoms experienced may enhance compliance. Objective. To simultaneously assess the effects of physical, social and psychological factors on noncompliance. Methods. Patients with mild hypertension despite drug treatment, from the departments of cardiology and internal medicine, were requested to answer a self-administered questionnaire addressing the presence of physical symptoms as well as psychosocial factors. The questionnaire was based on previously used test batteries and consisted of two lists of physical complaints and four lists addressing the four domains of planned behaviour regarding medical non-adherence according to Baron and Byrne. These domains mainly assess psychosocial factors. Each list consisted of three or more items and each item was scored on fiveto seven-point scales. Mean scores were used for assessment. The lists were also separately assessed for internal consistency and reliability using Cronbach's alphas. One-way analysis of variance and multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) with compliance as outcome variable and the physical, social and psychological variables as indicator variables were used for data analysis. MANOVA was adjusted for multiple testing.
Results. Many patients experienced physical symptoms due to hypertension, such as tiredness (31%), hot flushes (28%), headache (24%), reduced daily life energy (23%), palpitations (22%), with 95%confidence intervals between 16 to 38%. Scores for physical symptoms and social factors did not differ between self-reported adherers (n=165) and nonadherers (n=11). However, the score for psychological factors was significantly larger in the adherers than in the non-adherers, 5.05 versus 3.06, p<0.018. The MANOVA showed a significant overall difference between the adherers and non-adherers in the data at p<0.012, which was mainly due to the score for psychological factors. Conclusion. The effect of physical symptoms on non-compliance in mildly hypertensive patients is negligible. So is the effect of social factors. Psychological factors such as lacking a sense of guilt, regret and shame are major determinants of non-compliance. Physicians may play an educational role in improving their patients' compliance by addressing these determinants. We should add that the conclusions should be made with reservations, given the small number of non-adherers in our sample. (Neth Heart J 2008;16:197-200.)
(1) Starting on a low dosage was associated with a reduced frequency and severity of headache and did not notably influence the beneficial effect on angina pectoris. (2) One in 3 patients never experienced headache from the given dosages. (3) The overall number of headache attacks in the first period of active treatment was significantly higher than in the second period irrespective of the dosages given.
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.