Canadian Medical Association journal
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
A double-blind comparison of two analgesics with placebo control.
The value of adding a sedative to commonly used analgesic agents to promote further the relief of pain was studied by a double-blind procedure in 90 post-surgical patients during 188 pain episodes. In moderate pain episodes, no statistically significant difference between the analgesic-sedative combination (Fiorinal-C(1/4)) and the analgesic (APC-C) was observed, although both compounds were superior to placebo (p <0.001). In severe pain episodes, the analgesic-sedative combination was superior to the analgesic alone; the analgesic, in turn, was superior to placebo (p <0.001). It is concluded that analgesia is more effective if associated apprehension is relieved by sedation.
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Non-anemic women attending a public antenatal clinic were given, daily, a multivitamin tablet containing 78 mg. of elemental iron. The follow-up studies included an analysis of their diets. A total of 311 patients were included, of which one group received a supplement of 0.5 mg. folic acid and 0.005 mg. vitamin B(12). ⋯ Formiminoglutamic acid (FIGLU) excretion could not be correlated with other parameters of folate deficiency. Neutrophil lobe counts did not relate to megaloblastic changes or low folate levels unless there was more than 5% hypersegmentation. The dietary intake was suboptimal in total calories, iron and food folate.