22 research outputs found
Disease burden of herpes zoster in Sweden - predominance in the elderly and in women - a register based study
BACKGROUND: The herpes zoster burden of disease in Sweden is not well investigated. There is no Swedish immunization program to prevent varicella zoster virus infections. A vaccine against herpes zoster and its complications is now available. The aim of this study was to estimate the herpes zoster burden of disease and to establish a pre-vaccination baseline of the minimum incidence of herpes zoster. METHODS: Data were collected from the Swedish National Health Data Registers including the Patient Register, the Pharmacy Register, and the Cause of Death Register. The herpes zoster burden of disease in Sweden was estimated by analyzing the overall, and age and gender differences in the antiviral prescriptions, hospitalizations and complications during 2006-2010 and mortality during 2006-2009. RESULTS: Annually, 270 per 100,000 persons received antiviral treatment for herpes zoster, and the prescription rate increased with age. It was approximately 50% higher in females than in males in the age 50+ population (rate ratio 1.39; 95% CI, 1.22 to 1.58). The overall hospitalization rate for herpes zoster was 6.9/100,000 with an approximately three-fold increase for patients over 80 years of age compared to the age 70-79 group. A gender difference in hospitalization rates was observed: 8.1/100,000 in females and 5.6/100,000 in males. Herpes zoster, with a registered complication, was found in about one third of the hospitalized patients and the most common complications involved the peripheral and central nervous systems. Death due to herpes zoster was a rare event. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study demonstrate the significant burden of herpes zoster disease in the pre-zoster vaccination era. A strong correlation with age in the herpes zoster- related incidence, hospitalization, complications, and mortality rates was found. In addition, the study provides further evidence of the female predominance in herpes zoster disease
Subnormal vitamin B12 concentrations and anaemia in older people: a systematic review
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Pernicious anaemia is undeniably associated with vitamin B12 deficiency, but the association between subnormal vitamin B12 concentrations and anaemia in older people is unclear. The aim of this systematic review was to evaluate the association between subnormal vitamin B12 concentrations and anaemia in older people.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Clinical queries for aetiology and treatment in bibliographic databases (PubMed [01/1949-10/2009]; EMBASE [01/1980-10/2009]) were used. Reference lists were checked for additional relevant studies. Observational studies (≥50 participants) and randomized placebo-controlled intervention trials (RCTs) were considered.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>25 studies met the inclusion criteria. Twenty-one observational cross-sectional studies (total number of participants n = 16185) showed inconsistent results. In one longitudinal observational study, low vitamin B12 concentrations were not associated with an increased risk of anaemia (total n = 423). The 3 RCTs (total n = 210) were well-designed and showed no effect of vitamin B12 supplementation on haemoglobin concentrations during follow-up in subjects with subnormal vitamin B12 concentrations at the start of the study. Due to large clinical and methodological heterogeneity, statistical pooling of data was not performed.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Evidence of a positive association between a subnormal serum vitamin B12 concentration and anaemia in older people is limited and inconclusive. Further well-designed studies are needed to determine whether subnormal vitamin B12 is a risk factor for anaemia in older people.</p
Cathodic Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence of Luminol at Disposable Oxide-Covered Aluminum Electrodes
Sex and Gender Differences in Thromboprophylactic Treatment of Patients With Atrial Fibrillation After the Introduction of Non-Vitamin K Oral Anticoagulants
Sex differences in spontaneous reports on adverse drug events for common antihypertensive drugs
P3582Increased thromboprophylactic treatment of patients with atrial fibrillation after the introduction of NOACs - an analysis of sex and gender differences
Stora könsskillnader i användningen av läkemedel [Big gender differences in drug utilization. The underlying disease is an insufficient explanation according to a systematic analysis]
Cathodic Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence of Luminol at Disposable Oxide-Covered Aluminum Electrodes
Luminol exhibits strong electrogenerated chemiluminescence during cathodic pulse polarization of oxide-covered
aluminum electrodes in aqueous solution. This electrogenerated chemiluminescence can be enhanced by the
presence of dissolved oxygen or by the addition of other
coreactants such as hydrogen peroxide, peroxydisulfate,
or peroxydiphosphate ions. However, luminol detection
is most sensitive in the presence of azide ions, which not
only enhance the electrogenerated chemiluminescence
intensity but also decrease the intrinsic electroluminescence of the thin aluminum oxide film on the electrodes
mainly producing the blank emission. The present
method
is based on tunnel emission of hot electrons into an
aqueous electrolyte solution and allows the detection of
luminol, isoluminol, and its derivatives below nanomolar
concentration levels. The linear logarithmic
calibration
range covers several orders of magnitude of concentration
of luminol or N-(6-aminohexyl)-N-ethylisoluminol.
Therefore, the above-mentioned labeling substances can be
used as one of several available alternatives of simultaneous markers in multiparameter bioaffinity assays at
disposable oxide-covered aluminum electrodes. The
main
advantage of the present electrochemiluminescence generation method is that luminescent compounds having
very different photophysics and chemistry can be simultaneously excited, thus providing good possibilities for
internal standardization and multiparameter bioaffinity
assays
