Cochrane Db Syst Rev
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2000
ReviewCranial irradiation for preventing brain metastases of small cell lung cancer in patients in complete remission.
Prophylactic cranial irradiation halves the rate of brain metastases in patients with small cell lung cancer. Individual randomized trials conducted on patients in complete remission were unable to clarify whether this treatment improves survival. ⋯ Prophylactic cranial irradiation significantly improves survival and disease-free survival for patients with small cell lung cancer in complete remission. Further clinical trials are needed to confirm the potential greater benefit on brain metastasis rate suggested when cranial irradiation is given earlier or at higher doses.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2000
ReviewThrombolysis (different doses, routes of administration and agents) for acute ischaemic stroke.
Thrombolytic therapy is effective for acute myocardial infarction, a vascular disease with some similarities to acute ischaemic stroke. ⋯ There is not enough evidence to conclude whether lower doses of thrombolytic agents might be safer or more effective than higher doses in acute ischaemic stroke. It is not possible to conclude whether one agent might be better than another, or which route of administration might be best. No comparative data for streptokinase have been found.
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Most people with epilepsy have a good prognosis and their seizures can be well controlled with the use of a single antiepileptic drug, but up to 30 % develop refractory epilepsy, especially those with partial seizures. In this review we summarise the current evidence regarding oxcarbazepine when used as an add-on treatment for drug-resistant partial epilepsy. ⋯ Oxcarbazepine has efficacy as an add-on treatment in patients with drug-resistant partial epilepsy, both in adults and children. However, trials reviewed were of relatively short duration, and provide no evidence about the long term effects of oxcarbazepine. Results cannot be extrapolated to monotherapy or to patients with other epilepsy types.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2000
ReviewNon-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for preventing heterotopic bone formation after hip arthroplasty.
Heterotopic bone formation (HBF) in the soft tissues surrounding the hip joint is a frequent complication of hip surgery. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) administered in the immediate perioperative period reduce the risk of HBF. However, the magnitude of the effect on HBF, and the effects on other associated outcomes are uncertain. ⋯ Perioperative NSAIDs appear to produce between a one half and two thirds reduction in the risk of HBF. With routine use, such agents may be able to prevent 15-20 cases of HBF (3-4 severe) among every 100 total hip replacements performed. However, while medium to high doses of perioperative NSAIDs clearly produce a substantial reduction in the incidence of radiographic HBF, there remains some uncertainty about short-term side effects of treatment and substantial uncertainty about effects on long-term clinical outcomes such as chronic pain and impaired physical function. The net effect of routine HBF prophylaxis with NSAIDs requires formal assessment in a randomised trial designed to determine the balance of benefits and risks for all outcomes.
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Currently hydergine is used almost exclusively for treating patients with either dementia, or 'age-related' cognitive symptoms. Since the early eighties there have been over a dozen more clinical trials, yet hydergine's efficacy remains uncertain. Although previous reviews offer generally favorable support for hydergine's efficacy, they were, however, limited by a bias with respect to the particular clinical studies chosen (eg, the inclusion of case reports, and uncontrolled trials), and by authors' impressionistic assessments of results. Not surprisingly, there has been a lack of consensus among reviewers with regard to the efficacy of hydergine. In 1994, a meta-analysis was published by the present reviewers who reported that overall, hydergine was more effective than placebo. However they also observed that the statistical evidence for efficacy in 'possible or probable Alzheimer's disease' patients was so modest that one additional statistically non-significant trial would have reduced the results to non significance. ⋯ As in an earlier systematic review, we found hydergine to show significant treatment effects when assessed by either global ratings or comprehensive rating scales (based here on a smaller set of trials than in the earlier published systematic review because trials were required to have data that could conform with MetaView, the Cochrane Collaboration statistics software). The small number of trials available for analysis, however, limited the ability of subgroup analyses to identify statistically significant modera