Objective: To study the possibility and characteristics of long-term standard dose statin-induced stenosis regression in middle-aged and elderly patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). Methods: The study patients were those with CHD admitted to our hospital from 2010 to 2019. All patients underwent computed tomography angiography (CTA) scanning and were diagnosed with a regression of stenosis. Results: Thirty-one patients (24 males and 7 females) with an average age of 64.7±1.8 years were reexamined by CTA at a mean of 18.6±1.9 months after the initial examination. The left anterior descending (LAD) coronal artery stenoses were significant regressed. Conclusion: In middle-aged to elderly patients with CHD, a long-term and standard dose statin treatment may lead to the regression of coronary artery stenosis. Key Words: Coronary atherosclerosis, statin, coronary CT angiography, middle-aged and elderly.
This study was designed to evaluate the tolerability and pharmacokinetics of biapenem after single and multiple intravenous administrations in healthy Chinese subjects. Subjects were randomly allocated to receive a single 0.15, 0.3, or 0.6 g dose of biapenem. Subjects assigned to the 0.3 g single dose group continued into the multiple-dose phase. Blood samples were collected over 6 h and plasma biapenem concentrations were determined by a validated HPLC method. Tolerability was assessed by monitoring vital signs, laboratory parameters, physical examinations, electrocardiogram, and adverse events collected by non-directive questioning/spontaneous reporting. Pharmacokinetic parameters for biapenem after intravenous administration of a single dose of 0.15, 0.3, or 0.6 g were as follows: Cmax=7.06 (1.30), 15.59 (1.33), and 29.12 (1.22) mg/L; AUC0–6h=8.95 (1.33), 22.62 (1.25), and 42.05 (1.19) mg · h/L; t1/2=0.97 (0.13), 1.04 (0.08), and 1.12 (0.08) h; CL=15.78 (1.32), 12.91 (1.24), and 13.95 (1.19) L/h; Vd=21.87 (1.25), 19.31 (1.25), and 22.41 (1.23) L, respectively. Pharmacokinetic parameters for biapenem after intravenous administration of multiple 0.3 g doses were as follows: Cmax=18.50 (1.16) mg/L; AUC0–6h=26.45 (1.15) mg · h/L; t1/2=1.06 (0.15) h; CL=11.06 (1.16) L/h; Vd=16.78 (1.19) L. The incidence of reported AEs was as follows: phlebitis (2/10), nausea (1/10), and diarrhea (1/10). All of the AEs were mild in intensity. The pharmacokinetic properties of biapenem were linear at dose of 0.15–0.6 g. All biapenem doses appeared to be well tolerated.
Both asthma and abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) involve inflammation. It remains unknown whether these diseases interact.Databases analyzed included Danish National Registry of Patients, a population-based nationwide case-control study included all patients with ruptured AAA and age- and sex-matched AAA controls without rupture in Denmark from 1996 to 2012; Viborg vascular trial, subgroup study of participants from the population-based randomized Viborg vascular screening trial. Patients with asthma were categorized by hospital diagnosis, bronchodilator use, and the recorded use of other anti-asthma prescription medications. Logistic regression models were fitted to determine whether asthma associated with the risk of ruptured AAA in Danish National Registry of Patients and an independent risk of having an AAA at screening in the Viborg vascular trial. From the Danish National Registry of Patients study, asthma diagnosed <1 year or 6 months before the index date increased the risk of AAA rupture before (odds ratio [OR]=1.60-2.12) and after (OR=1.51-2.06) adjusting for AAA comorbidities. Use of bronchodilators elevated the risk of AAA rupture from ever use to within 90 days from the index date, before (OR=1.10-1.37) and after (OR=1.10-1.31) adjustment. Patients prescribed anti-asthma drugs also showed an increased risk of rupture before (OR=1.12-1.79) and after (OR=1.09-1.48) the same adjustment. In Viborg vascular trial, anti-asthmatic medication use associated with increased risk of AAA before (OR=1.45) or after adjustment for smoking (OR=1.45) or other risk factors (OR=1.46).Recent active asthma increased risk of AAA and ruptured AAA. These findings document and furnish novel links between airway disease and AAA, 2 common diseases that share inflammatory aspects.
Objective The ApaI polymorphism (G > T, rs7975232) of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene in the risk of postmenopausal osteoporosis has been widely researched, and the results have yielded conflicts. Therefore, we performed an updated pooled analysis to comprehensively assess the association between VDR ApaI polymorphism and postmenopausal osteoporosis risk.Methods We searched eligible studies about ApaI polymorphism and osteoporosis through the PubMed, Embase, CNKI and Wanfang databases; case–control studies containing available genotype frequencies of A/a were chosen. We used the odds ratio with 95% confidence interval to assess the strength of this association. Sensitivity analysis and publication bias assessment were performed. Trial sequential analysis (TSA) was performed to evaluate a sufficient sample.Results Twenty-two studies assessed the relationship between ApaI polymorphism and the risk of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. The comprehensive analyses showed no significant association for ApaI polymorphism with postmenopausal osteoporosis in the overall population, equally valid for Asian and Caucasian subgroups with any genetic model. TSA still indicated the results were robust.Conclusion The present meta-analysis suggests that the VDR ApaI genotype may not affect the risk of postmenopausal osteoporosis in Asians and Caucasians.