Swiss medical weekly
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Swiss medical weekly · Oct 1977
[Allogenic bone marrow transplantation in severe aplastic anemia and refractory acute leukemia. 35 cases].
23 patients with severe aplastic anemia have been treated. 10 marrow grafts between HLA matched siblings were performed after conditioning with cyclophosphamide. 5 are still alive at over 7 months to over 2 1/2 years after grafting. 3 are hemopoietic chimeras and 2 show autologous marrow reconstitution. 13 patients were treated by ALG with or without transfusion of allogeneic marrow. 9 are still alive with partial to complete autologous hemopoietic reconstitution at over 1 month to over 4 years. It is concluded that in many instances aplastic anemia is an autoimmune disease rather than a primary failure of the hemopoietic stem cells. In acute leukemia allogeneic marrow grafts still pose enormous problems and only one of our 12 grafts has become a longterm survivor.
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Swiss medical weekly · Sep 1977
[Serum lipids in diminished kidney function, during hemodialysis and after kidney transplantation].
Lipids have been investigated in three groups of patients with chronic renal insufficiency. 19 patients were on conservative treatment (no dialysis), 52 patients were on regular hemodialysis, and 27 patients had been transplanted. The results were compared with those obtained from control subjects of the same age and sex. ⋯ The predominant lipid abnormalities were hyperlipoproteinemia of Type IV in both uremic (5 out of 19) and hemodialysis patients (17 ou of 52). Hyperlipoproteinemia of Type II was mainly observed after transplantation (IIb: 13, IIa: 5 out of 27).
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Swiss medical weekly · Jun 1977
Case Reports[Cheyne-Stokes respiration in chronic heart insufficiency].
1.26 of 340 patients with chronic heart failure (aortic-valve or mitral-valve disease, congestive cardiomyopathy) showed Cheyne-Stokes respiration in supine position. 2. The incidence of Cheyne-Stokes respiration in males is more than twice as high as in females with similar hemodynamic conditions. 3. ⋯ Delay of the feedback between changes in the alveolar gas tensions and respiratory center caused by a prolonged circulation time (decreased cardiac index and increased central blood volume) is the predominant cause of Cheyne-Stokes breathing in patients with chronic heart failure. 5. Metabolic alkalosis (e.g. after diuretics) favors Cheyne-Stokes respiration in patients with congestive heart failure and low cardiac output, by lessening respiratory changes in pH of blood and cerebrospinal fluid.
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Swiss medical weekly · Jun 1977
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[Result of an antifibrinolytic treatment using tranexamic acid for the reduction of blood-loss during and after tonsillectomy].
Blood loss during and after tonsillectomy was assessed in 80 patients, 40 of whom were treated with tranexamic acid. A statistically significant reduction of blood loss (28%) was observed in this group during operation. ⋯ Bleedings in the tranexamic acid group were mild and scarcely required other hemostyptic treatment, while in the control group some patients had to be treated with etamsylate or fibrogen for a longer period to stop bleeding. Tranexamic acid appears to be an effective and well-tolerated agent for reduction of blood loss caused by local hyperfibrinolysis.
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The non-transfusion policy for potential recipients of kidney allografts that has been followed in recent years has not proven successful. There is now ample clinical evidence of improved transplant function in the transfused recipients category. ⋯ If the conditions valid for human kidney transplantation are matched as closely as possible in animal experiments, prolongation of graft function rather than accelerated rejection is usually observed after blood transfusions. Potential kidney graft recipients should be more liberally transfused and experimental evidence ought to be accumulated in order to establish a rationale for optimal host conditioning, while avoiding the hazards of blood transfusions to the greatest extent possible.