The prevalence of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) increases with age, yet the risk factors for OSA in older people remain poorly understood.This study aimed to define the age-related changes in upper airway morphology in carefully matched groups of healthy older (.60 years, n511) and younger (,40 years, n514) males, using direct (magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) and indirect (acoustic reflection) imaging.The median (interquartile range) combined retropalatal and retroglossal pharyngeal length was greater in older than in younger males (older 8.8 (7.8-9.0) cm, younger 7.8 (7.0-8.3) cm; p50.03), as was the soft palate cross-sectional area (older 43.1 (36.0-48.8) cm 2 , younger 35.3 (30.5-40.5) cm 2 ; p50.03), parapharyngeal fat pad diameter (older 1.7 (1.4-2.2) cm, younger 1.2 (1.0-1.8) cm; p50.03) and crosssectional area of the fat pads (older 13.8 (9.1-17.1) cm 2 ; younger 7.4 (5.9-13.0) cm 2 ; p50.02) as measured by MRI. Using acoustic reflection, pharyngeal calibre (older 4.8 (3.8-6.6) cm 2 , younger 3.4 (2.8-4.6) cm 2 ; p50.03), pharyngeal volume (older 35.1 (30.9-55.4) cm 3 , younger 27.2 (22.7-44.2) cm 3 ; p50.04) and glottis area (older 2.7 (2.1-3.9) cm 2 , younger 1.3 (1.1-1.9) cm 2 ; p50.003) were also larger in older participants compared with younger participants. There was no difference in craniofacial measures between groups, including volumetric data and hyoid bone position.The larger pharyngeal calibre observed in older males may be compensating for an age-related enlargement in pharyngeal soft tissue that predisposes to OSA. @ERSpublications Pharyngeal factors predisposing to sleep apnoea increase with age; a larger calibre protected against airway collapse
Y-90-DOTA-Phe1-Tyr3-Octreotide (90Y-SMT 487, OctreoTher) has shown potential for effectively treating patients with neuroendocrine tumors. The dose-limiting organ for this agent is the kidney. The purpose of this work is to assess the effectiveness of a commercially available amino acid solution on reducing renal uptake of 90Y-SMT 487 and determine the safety profile of this solution. Subjects with In-111 pentetreotide positive tumors and normal creatinine levels were treated with 3 cycles of 90Y-SMT 487, 120 mCi/cycle, at 6-9 week intervals. During each treatment two liters of an amino acid solution containing arginine and lysine (Aminosyn II 7%, Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL) were infused IV over 4 hours. Adverse events were recorded. To assess the effect of Aminosyn II on renal uptake of 90Y-SMT 487, a subgroup of subjects underwent bremsstrahlung imaging 24 hours following infusion. Kidney to liver (K/L) count density ratios were generated from the baseline In-111 pentetreotide images (performed without amino acid infusion) and the 90Y bremsstrahlung images. Follow-up creatinine levels were obtained. Thirty-seven subjects received a total of 89 90Y-SMT 487 treatments. The number of amino-acid infusions associated with one or more episodes of emesis was 53 (62%). During 13 (15%) of these infusions, the Aminosyn II rate had to be reduced because of severe nausea and vomiting. Symptomatic flushing occurred during 16 (18%) of the infusions. One subject experienced a near syncopal event shortly after completing the infusion. Creatinine levels remained normal in 34 of 36 subjects during a mean follow-up period of 9.8 months. Fourteen subjects underwent bremsstrahlung imaging following infusion of 90Y-SMT 487. Kidney uptake appeared to decrease with administration of the amino acid solution in 13 of 14 subjects. For the 28 individual kidneys, the mean percent decrease in the Kidney/Liver uptake ratio with the amino acid solution was found to be 32%. We conclude that 2 L of Aminosyn II 7% infused over 4 hours appears to notably reduce renal uptake of 90Y-SMT 487. Aminosyn is generally well tolerated, particularly at lower infusion rates with occasional moderate to severe nausea and vomiting at higher rates.
Increasing severity of upper airway obstruction during sleep in children with PWS is accompanied by disproportionately longer periods of hypoventilation when compared with non-syndromic children with similar frequency of obstructive events.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether there is evidence for hepatocellular radiation injury following treatment with (90)Y-SMT487 ((90)Y-DOTA-tyr3-octreotide, OctreoTher(TM)) in patients with extensive liver metastases from neuroendocrine tumors. Patients reported in this study participated in a Phase II trial of efficacy and safety of (90)Y-SMT487. The trial design called for three treatment cycles of 120 mCi each (4400 MBq) of (90)Y-SMT487. (111)In-pentetreotide SPECT images were used to determine the extent of liver metastases. Serum AST, ALT, and alkaline phosphatase levels were obtained at baseline and following each cycle of therapy. Least squares fit was applied to the serial liver enzyme measurements in patients with extensive liver metastases. Post-therapy liver enzyme measurements were also evaluated using WHO common toxicity criteria. Repeated-measures ANOVA and paired t-test were applied to the serial enzyme measures. There were 21 subjects. Fifteen of these had hepatic metastases with 12 demonstrating extensive (defined as 25% or more) liver involvement. In only 4 of these 15 did any of the three enzyme levels increase in WHO toxicity grade from baseline to final follow-up. We conclude that patients with diffuse SSTR positive hepatic metastases can be treated with a cumulative administered activity of 360 mCi (90)Y-SMT487 with only a small chance of developing mild acute or subacute hepatic radiation injury.
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