Diaphragm Disuse and Mechanical Ventilation
Weaning patients from mechanical ventilation after modest periods of diaphragmatic inactivity can be difficult. In this study, changes in the cross-sectional area and biochemical composition of biopsy specimens from brain-dead patients with inactive diaphragms at the time of organ donation were compared with similar measurements from patients undergoing thoracic surgery. The data were consistent with atrophy of the diaphragm after periods of inactivity on the order of a day.
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Coronary Calcium as a Predictor of Coronary Events across Ethnic Groups
In an analysis from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, 6722 men and women without cardiovascular disease from four ethnic groups underwent coronary calcium scanning and were followed for a median of 3.8 years. For each ethnic group, there was an increase in the risk of subsequent coronary events with an increase in the baseline coronary calcium score.
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Cervical Length at Mid-Pregnancy and Risk of Cesarean Delivery
In this large observational study of primiparous women, the cervical length at mid-pregnancy was an independent predictor of the risk of cesarean section during labor at term and specifically of cesarean section performed for poor progress during labor. These findings suggest that the failure of labor to progress at term may be related to dysfunctional development of the uterus much earlier in pregnancy.
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Drug-Review Deadlines and Safety Problems
The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) imposes deadlines for the completion of drug reviews by the Food and Drug Administration. This study showed that PDUFA regulations resulted in a concentration of approval decisions in the weeks immediately preceding deadlines. Drugs that were approved just before the deadlines, as compared with drugs approved at other times, had higher rates of subsequent safety problems.
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Hydroxyurea for the Treatment of Sickle Cell Anemia
An 18-year-old woman with sickle cell anemia presents with recurrent painful crises, and treatment with hydroxyurea is recommended. Hydroxyurea causes a shift toward the production of red cells containing fetal hemoglobin. A possible increase in the risk of acute leukemia due to hydroxyurea therapy remains the subject of debate.
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Mechanisms of Disease: Cardiac Plasticity
This review explains how the heart responds to physiologic or pathologic conditions. Exercise, pregnancy, and postnatal growth cause physiologic growth; neurohumoral activation, hypertension, and myocardial injury cause hypertrophic growth, which increases the risk of heart failure and malignant arrhythmia. Atrophy of the heart can arise from protracted bed rest, prolonged weightlessness, or mechanical unloading with a ventricular assist device.
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A 10-Year-Old Girl with Dyspnea on Exertion
A 10-year-old girl was seen because of dyspnea and noisy respirations. Three weeks earlier, sharp pain in the chest and shortness of breath had developed abruptly, followed by dyspnea and noisy respirations with exertion. Symptoms did not improve with the use of bronchodilators. A diagnostic procedure was performed.
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Making Connections, Preventing Arrhythmia
Inducing skeletal myoblasts to express a gap-junction protein prevents arrhythmias when these myoblasts are used to treat myocardial infarction.
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