Internal medicine journal
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Internal medicine journal · Jul 2016
Factors associated with insulin-induced weight gain in an Australian type 2 diabetes outpatient clinic.
Insulin-induced weight gain is a key concern for people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and their treatment team. This study aimed to document the prevalence of insulin-induced weight gain and its impact on cardiovascular risk factors in patients attending the Royal Melbourne Hospital diabetes clinic. ⋯ In this Australian tertiary hospital population with T2D, insulin-induced weight gain was common but was not associated with deleterious changes in blood pressure or lipids. Treatment regimens that avoid short-acting insulin but include oral agents other than thiazolidinediones might prevent insulin-induced weight gain in T2D.
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Internal medicine journal · Jun 2016
The impact of intensive care in a private hospital on patients aged 80 and over: health-related quality of life, functional status and burden versus benefit.
Greater numbers of persons aged over 80 years are admitted to intensive care units (ICU) compared with 15 years ago. Outcomes other than death such as physical dependence and cognitive impairment and treatment burden are important to older people. ⋯ We demonstrated that HRQoL and previous lifestyle is preserved in the majority following ICU admission, associated with a high level of patient valuation of the episode of care.
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Internal medicine journal · Jun 2016
Case ReportsNephrotic syndrome as a complication of chronic graft-versus-host disease after allogeneic haemopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Nephrotic syndrome (NS) is a rare complication following allogeneic haemopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT), with limited current understanding of its pathogenesis. Here, we describe four cases of NS following allo-HSCT diagnosed at our institutions to identify key clinical and pathological features. In addition, a PubMed search was performed to identify existing reports that were pooled together with our cases for analysis. ⋯ There is a high incidence of prior extra-renal graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), with all four of our cases and 82% of published cases having prior GvHD. Glucocorticosteroids are the most common treatment, with variable degrees of response. Responses to immunosuppression with calcineurin inhibitors and rituximab have been described in steroid-refractory cases.
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Internal medicine journal · Jun 2016
Pleural infection in a New Zealand centre: high incidence in Pacific people and RAPID score as a prognostic tool.
Whilst there is an increase in incidence of pleural infection worldwide, there is a paucity of New Zealand data. ⋯ The over-representation of Pacific people with pleural infection is not fully explained by socioeconomic deprivation, highlighting other factors at play, such as genetic susceptibility. The RAPID score was of clinical utility in predicting mortality in our population.
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Internal medicine journal · Jun 2016
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyMulti-site placebo-controlled randomised clinical trial to assess protection following oral immunisation with inactivated non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Previous studies identified factors that modify response to an oral non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) vaccine in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): severe COPD, moderate-severe exacerbations as end-point and a threshold prevalence of NTHi in the study population. More data are needed to confirm parameters that influence clinical outcomes. ⋯ Patients aged 40-88 years with moderate to severe COPD and low rates of H. influenzae-positive sputum were not protected against exacerbations by HI-1640V. Further studies are needed to confirm protection in subjects aged <65 years. Older age and low colonisation rates appear to affect adversely response to this vaccine.