Lancet
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Nitrous oxide and risk of surgical wound infection: a randomised trial.
Nitrous oxide inactivates vitamin B12 and methionine synthase, thereby impairing DNA formation and, consequently, new cell formation. The gas also inhibits methionine production, which can reduce scar formation and depresses chemotactic migration by monocytes. Therefore, we assessed whether nitrous oxide increases the incidence of surgical wound infection. ⋯ Nitrous oxide does not increase the incidence of surgical wound infection.
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The inevitable deterioration in hearing ability that occurs with age--presbycusis--is a multifactorial process that can vary in severity from mild to substantial. Left untreated, presbycusis of a moderate or greater degree affects communication and can contribute to isolation, depression, and, possibly, dementia. These psychological effects are largely reversible with rehabilitative treatment. ⋯ Remediation of presbycusis is an important contributor to quality of life in geriatric medicine and can include education about communication effectiveness, hearing aids, assistive listening devices, and cochlear implants for severe hearing loss. Primary care physicians should screen and refer their elderly patients for assessment and remediation. Where hearing aids no longer provide benefit, cochlear implantation is the treatment of choice with excellent results even in octogenarians.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Long-term efficacy of early versus delayed radiotherapy for low-grade astrocytoma and oligodendroglioma in adults: the EORTC 22845 randomised trial.
Postoperative policies of "wait-and-see" and radiotherapy for low-grade glioma are poorly defined. A trial in the mid 1980s established the radiation dose. In 1986 the EORTC Radiotherapy and Brain Tumor Groups initiated a prospective trial to compare early radiotherapy with delayed radiotherapy. An interim analysis has been reported. We now present the long-term results. ⋯ Early radiotherapy after surgery lengthens the period without progression but does not affect overall survival. Because quality of life was not studied, it is not known whether time to progression reflects clinical deterioration. Radiotherapy could be deferred for patients with low-grade glioma who are in a good condition, provided they are carefully monitored.
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This article is the first in a series of seven that will provide an overview of central concepts and topical issues in modern genetic epidemiology. In this article, we provide an overall framework for investigating the role of familial factors, especially genetic determinants, in the causation of complex diseases such as diabetes. ⋯ In keeping with the broad readership of The Lancet and the diverse background of today's genetic epidemiologists, we provide introductory sections to equip readers with basic concepts and vocabulary. We anticipate that, depending on their professional background and specialist knowledge, some readers will wish to skip some of this article.