Minerva medica
-
So-called "directed" transfusion results in better utilisation and hence a saving of blood, along with less risk to the patient. An examination is made of the few diseases in which the transfusion of whole blood is indicated, and the very many cases in which blood derivatives can be usefully employed.
-
An account is given of recent clinical and radiological findings with respect to Albers-Schönberg disease. Reference is made to its hereditary transmission modality and clinical picture (skeletal lesions and haematological distress), and to its radiological aspects. ⋯ Stress is laid on the as yet undefined mechanism of "genotypical condensing dysplasia". The relation between osteopetrosis and thyrocalcitonin is discussed, though no definite conclusions could be drawn from the hormone levels determined in a personal series.
-
Mass screening for diabetes in a factory employing 464 subjects by means of a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test and measurement of blood sugar with Dextrosix reagent strips read on a reflectance meter is reported. Values of 120 mg% or over were noted in 10.34% and values in the range 110 to 120 mg% in 7.76%.
-
Two cases of severe chronic respiratory insufficiency in severely acute phase with disturbances in acid base balance characterized by serious gaseous acidosis are reported. Therapy was based essentially on controlled ventilotherapy using an iron lung and considerable improvements were achieved clinically with practically total normalization of the acid base imbalance after only a few hours of treatment. In the following days, however, a picture of metabolic alkalosis established itself and this is discussed and interpreted as an expression of post-hypercapnic hypochloraemia.