Lancet
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Effects of oxygen on dyspnoea in hypoxaemic terminal-cancer patients.
Dyspnoea is a frequent and devastating symptom of advanced cancer. The purpose of this prospective, double-blind, crossover trial was to assess the effects of supplemental oxygen on the intensity of dyspnoea. 14 patients with hypoxaemic dyspnoea due to advanced cancer were randomised to receive either oxygen or air; the gases were delivered at 5 L/min by mask. After 5 min of stable oxygen saturation (pulse oximetry), patients were crossed over to receive the other treatment. ⋯ Mean difference in dyspnoea visual analogue scale between air and oxygen treatment was 20.5 (95% confidence interval 13.5 to 27.6). 12 patients consistently preferred oxygen to air; similarly, the investigator consistently chose oxygen for the same 12 patients. In a global rating questionnaire, patients reported little or no benefit during the air phase compared with moderate to much benefit during the oxygen phase. We conclude that oxygen is beneficial to patients with hypoxia and dyspnoea at rest.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Vitamin A supplementation in northern Ghana: effects on clinic attendances, hospital admissions, and child mortality. Ghana VAST Study Team.
Although most studies on the effect of vitamin A supplementation have reported reductions in childhood mortality, the effects on morbidity are less clear. We have carried out two double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trials of vitamin A supplementation in adjacent populations in northern Ghana to assess the impact on childhood morbidity and mortality. The Survival Study included 21,906 children aged 6-90 months in 185 geographical clusters, who were followed for up to 26 months. ⋯ The extent of the effect on morbidity and mortality did not vary significantly with age or sex. However, the mortality rate due to acute gastroenteritis was lower in vitamin-A-supplemented than in placebo clusters (0.66 [0.47-0.92], p = 0.02); mortality rates for all other causes except acute lower respiratory infections and malaria were also lower in vitamin A clusters, but not significantly so. Improving the vitamin A intake of young children in populations where xerophthalmia exists, even at relatively low prevalence, should be a high priority for health and agricultural services in Africa and elsewhere.