Depression is a mood disorder characterized by complex alterations of neurotransmitters such as serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine. In particular, there is substantial evidence of abnormalities ...in serotonin neurotransmission. Peripheral parameters of serotoninergic transmission, such as the 5-hydroxytryptamine content of plasma and platelets, have been used to identify biochemical alterations related to depression. In recent years, these parameters have also been used to examine the mechanism of action of antidepressive drugs such as the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. This study investigated the interaction between the plasma and platelet levels of fluoxetine and serotonin after fluoxetine administration to depressed patients. Twelve patients affected by major depression (according to the DSM-IV criteria) received a single oral dose of fluoxetine in the morning: 5 mg in the first 5 days, 10 mg from day 6 to day 10, and 20 mg from day 11 to day 40. Blood samples were collected at 0, 7, 10, and 24 hours after drug administration on the day 1 of fluoxetine 5 mg and on the 1st and the 30th day of fluoxetine 20 mg (days 11 and 40 of treatment, respectively). Plasma fluoxetine and serotonin levels increased after drug administration, reaching the highest levels on the 30th day of fluoxetine 20 mg. Fluoxetine levels were also detectable in platelets, with a time variation similar to plasma values. Platelet serotonin levels decreased after drug administration, and the lowest values were observed on the 30th day of fluoxetine 20 mg.
Neurosensory abnormalities have been implicated in the first stages of diabetic retinopathy. The activity of retinal ganglion cells in 24 Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients with short ...disease duration without retinopathy on fluorescein angiography was investigated by using a pattern electroretinogram in response to sinusoidal gratings of different spatial frequencies (0.6, 1.0, 1.4, 2.2 4.8 cycles/deg), counterphase modulated at 8 Hz. The pattern electroretinogram reflects, at least in part, the activity of subsets of generators (i.e. ganglion cells) which show spatial selectivity. Mean pattern electroretinogram amplitude was significantly reduced in patients at lower and intermediate, but not at higher spatial frequencies compared with 40 age-matched control subjects. At 1.4 cycles/deg the pattern electroretinogram amplitude was significantly correlated (r = 0.59) with age at onset (p = 0.002) and duration of disease (p = 0.002). Our results suggest that in Type 1 diabetic patients without retinopathy, there is an early sensory deficit of specific inner retina neurons which respond preferentially to gratings of medium and large size.
LaryngoPharyngeal Reflux (LPR) is characterized by symptoms, signs, and/or tissue damage
resulting from the aggression of the gastrointestinal contents in the upper airways. The Reflux Finding
Score ...(RFS) assesses the laryngeal signs through laryngoscopy. The Reflux Symptom Index (RSI) scores
the LPR symptoms. The objective of this real-world study was to compare RFS with RSI in a cohort of
Italian LPR patients. Globally, 3932 patients with LPR were evaluated and RFS and RSI were assessed in
all subjects. A moderate correlation was found between RSI and RFS (r=0.484, p<0.0001). In conclusion,
the RSI and RFS can easily be included in the LPR work-up as objective and consistent parameters,
with low cost and high practicality. Based on these clinical outcomes, the specialist can easily use these
tests in clinical practice.
Objective. Data in the literature suggest the possibility of using ultrasonography to diagnose sliding gastric hiatal hernia. The aim of this study was to confirm the diagnostic accuracy of ...transabdominal ultrasonography for the diagnosis of sliding gastric hiatal hernia, using endoscopy as the reference test. The latter procedure was used since it also recognizes the presence of esophagitis and/or varices, two pathological conditions that could per se influence ultrasonographic evaluation, based on measurement of the esophageal diameter. Material and methods. A total of 180 consecutive patients, admitted to our hospital for endoscopy, were examined. Of these, 12 patients were not included in the final study. After fasting, the remaining 168 patients were first evaluated by ultrasonography and later by endoscopy. Esophageal diameter was measured by ultrasonography at the level of the diaphragmatic hiatus. Results. Using a diameter ≥ 18 mm as the sensitivity threshold, 29 patients potentially affected by hiatal hernia were identified by ultrasonography. Upper endoscopy examination confirmed the presence of hiatal hernia in 24 of these patients and documented 4 additional hernias in the group of patients with a transdiaphragmatic esophageal diameter <18 mm (positive and negative predictive values were 82.7% and 97%, respectively). Analysis of the distribution of esophageal varices and esophagitis in all 168 excluded the possibility that these pathological conditions could influence the esophageal diameter. Conclusions. Ultrasonography represents a simple and well-tolerated diagnostic approach in sliding gastric hiatal hernia. The good diagnostic accuracy suggests its potential use in clinical and epidemiological settings.
Liver cirrhosis is the main risk factor for the development of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In this condition, the liver and plasma suffer a drastic depletion of retinoids. This study was ...conducted to investigate whether any relation exists between serum retinol levels and HCC development in cirrhotics. Seventy child-Pugh class A cirrhotic patients, 16 child-Pugh class A cirrhotic patients with HCC, and 140 age- and sex-matched subjects were included in this study. At the time of enrollment, fasting blood samples were taken to determine serum retinol levels. For the following 7 years, the 70 cirrhotic patients were also followed up for the occurrence of HCC by periodic screening with ultrasonography and serum alpha-fetoprotein assays. The serum retinol levels in both cirrhotic patients and HCC patients were significantly lower than those in healthy subjects. Among the 70 cirrhotic patients, 14 HCC were detected during follow-up. The prediagnostic retinol levels were significantly lower in cirrhotic patients who developed HCC compared with patients who did not. The odds ratio of cirrhotic patients who developed HCC in the lowest tertile to highest tertile of retinol status was 6.75 (95% CI=1.26–36.0;
P=0.015). Our results suggest that a state of retinoid deficiency may promote hepatocarcinogenesis in patients at high risk such as cirrhotics.