Cochrane Db Syst Rev
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2005
Review Meta AnalysisStructured treatment interruptions (STI) in chronic suppressed HIV infection in adults.
Although antiretroviral treatment (ART) has led to a decline in morbidity and mortality of HIV-infected patients in developed countries, it has also presented challenges. These challenges include increases in pill burden; adherence to treatment; development of resistance and treatment failure; development of drug toxicities; and increase in cost of HIV treatment and care. These issues stimulated interest in investigating the short-term and long-term consequences of discontinuing ART, thus providing support for research in structured treatment interruptions (STI). Structured treatment interruptions of antiretroviral treatment involve taking supervised breaks from ART. STI are defined as one or more planned, timing pre-specified, cyclical interruptions in ART. STI are attempted in monitored clinical settings in eligible participants. STI have generated hopes of reducing drug toxicities, decreasing costs and total time on treatment in HIV-positive patients. The first STI was attempted in the case of a patient in Germany, who later permanently discontinued treatment. This successful anecdotal case report led to several trials on STI worldwide. ⋯ Timed-cycle STI have not been proven to be safe in the short term. Although CD4-guided STI strategy has reported favorable outcomes in the short term, the long-term safety, efficacy and tolerability of this strategy has not been fully investigated. Based on the studies we reviewed, the evidence to support the use of timed-cycle STI and CD4-guided STI cycles as a standard of care in the management of chronic suppressed HIV infection is inconclusive.
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Because of concern that feedings may increase the risk of necrotizing enterocolitis, some high-risk infants have received prolonged periods of parenteral nutrition without enteral feedings. Providing trophic feedings (small volume feedings given at the same rate for at least 5 days) during this period of parenteral nutrition was developed as a strategy to enhance feeding tolerance and decrease time to reach full feedings. Whether trophic feedings result in better outcomes than initially withholding feedings or providing progressively increasing feedings can be established only in proper clinical trials. ⋯ In both comparisons, the group with the greater enteral intake (trophic feedings in the first comparison and advancing feedings in the second comparison) required significantly less time to reach full feedings and had a significant or near significant reduction in hospital stay. In both comparisons, the group with the greater intake also had a higher incidence of necrotizing enterocolitis although the difference was not statistically significant. The concern is greatest for the advancing feeding regimen. Even when trophic feedings were compared to no feedings, the relative risk for necrotizing enterocolitis was 1.16 (0.75 - 1.79), a finding consistent with a 16% increase in necrotizing enterocolitis and a number needed to harm of 50. A true increase of this magnitude might outweigh any short- or long-term benefits of trophic feedings. Moreover, the 95% confidence interval does not exclude the possibility that trophic feedings increase necrotizing enterocolitis by as much as 79% with a number needed to harm of 17. Whether no feedings, trophic feedings, or advancing feedings should initially be used is difficult to discern for a variety of reasons--the inherent difficulty of assessing enteral feedings in high-risk infants, the limited sample size and methodologic limitations of most studies to date, unexplained heterogeneity with respect to a number of outcomes, the potential for bias to affect the findings in unblinded studies, and the large number of infants who must be studied to assess the effect on necrotizing enterocolitis. One or more large, well designed, multi-center trials are needed to compare these approaches to early feeding with respect to important clinical outcomes. A conclusive evaluation would assess effects on not only the survival rate without necrotizing enterocolitis prior to discharge from the neonatal unit but also on the survival rate without severe gastrointestinal or neurodevelopmental disability at >= 18 months age.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2005
Review Meta AnalysisAir versus oxygen for resuscitation of infants at birth.
100% oxygen is the commonly recommended gas for the resuscitation of infants at birth. There is growing evidence from both animal and human studies that room air is as effective as 100% oxygen and that 100% oxygen may have adverse effects on breathing physiology and cerebral circulation. There is also the theoretical risk of tissue damage due to free oxygen radicals when 100% oxygen is given. The use of room air has, therefore, been suggested as a safer and possibly more effective alternative. ⋯ There is insufficient evidence at present on which to recommend a policy of using room air over 100% oxygen, or vice versa, for newborn resuscitation. A reduction in mortality has been seen in infants resuscitated with room air, and no evidence of harm has been demonstrated. However, the small number of identified studies and their methodologic limitations dictate caution in interpreting and applying these results. We note the use of back-up 100% oxygen in more than a quarter of infants randomised to room air. Therefore, on the basis of currently available evidence, if one chooses room air as the initial gas for resuscitation, supplementary oxygen should continue to be made available.
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Neck disorders are common, limit function, and are costly to individuals and society. Exercise therapy is a commonly used treatment for neck pain. The effectiveness of exercise therapy remains unclear. ⋯ The evidence summarised in this systematic review indicates that specific exercises may be effective for the treatment of acute and chronic MND, with or without headache. To be of benefit, a stretching and strengthening exercise program should concentrate on the musculature of the cervical, shoulder-thoracic area, or both. A multimodal care approach of exercise, combined with mobilisation or manipulation for subacute and chronic MND with or without headache, reduced pain, improved function, and global perceived effect in the short and long term. The relative benefit of other treatments (such as physical modalities) compared with exercise or between different exercise programs needs to be explored. The quality of future trials should improve through more effective 'blinding' procedures and better control of compliance and co-intervention. Phase II trials would help identify the most effective treatment characteristics and dosages.
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Corticosteroids continue to play a central role in induction of remission in active Crohn's disease. However, their use comes at a price of significant adverse effects when used repeatedly or for extended periods. Newer corticosteroid agents with limited systemic bioavailability offer a tantalizing option, if they can be shown to be efficacious and safer than conventional corticosteroids. Budesonide is the main alternative corticosteroid currently available in an enteric formulation. ⋯ With disease in the ileum or ascending colon, budesonide offers an effective therapy which is somewhat less efficacious but with fewer adverse effects than conventional corticosteroids (e.g. prednisone, prednisolone, or 6-methylprednisolone).