Lancet
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We used positron emission tomography (PET) to assess the relation between combined imaging of cerebral blood flow and oxygen consumption 5-18 h after first middle cerebral artery (MCA) stroke and neurological outcome at 2 months. All 18 patients could be classified into three visually defined PET patterns of perfusion and oxygen consumption changes. Pattern I (7 patients) suggested extensive irreversible damage and was consistently associated with poor outcome. ⋯ The results suggest that within 5-18 h of stroke onset, PET is a good predictor of outcome in patterns I and III, for which therapy seems limited. The absence of predictive value for pattern II suggests that it is due to a reversible ischaemic state that is possibly amenable to therapy. These findings may have important implications for acute MCA stroke management and for patients' selection for therapeutic trials.
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Prediction of individual outcome after cardiopulmonary resuscitation is of major medical, ethical, and socioeconomic interest but uncertain. We studied the early predictive potency of evoked potential recording after cardiac arrest in 66 resuscitated patients who returned to spontaneous circulation but were unconscious and mechanically ventilated. Detailed long-latency and short-latency sensory evoked potentials were recorded and neurological evaluations were done 4-48 h after admission to intensive care. ⋯ Thus the predictive ability was 100% with cutoff of 118 ms. To confirm reproducibility and validity, repeated tracings, and linked-earlobe referenced techniques were done and gave similar results. Early recording of long-latency evoked potentials after cardiopulmonary resuscitation is highly predictive of outcome.
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After the downfall of the Ceausescu regime in December, 1989, the new Government of Romania abolished the law that prohibited abortions on request. Subsequently, the rate of legally induced abortions increased significantly while the rate of maternal mortality declined dramatically. ⋯ In this paper we examine factors that contribute to the disparity between women's desire to use modern contraception to prevent unwanted pregnancies and their practice of having induced abortions to prevent unwanted births. The results show that women (and suggest that men) need a wide choice of dependably available high-quality contraceptives; they need to be able to obtain information, counselling, and methods from a wide range of sources/health-care providers; both women's and men's perceptions about, and use of, modern contraception could be positively affected through sexual education started in secondary school; and, to reduce repeat abortions, women's post-abortion family-planning needs must not be neglected.