Archive for June, 2009
Caudal Epidural Steroids Injections Ease Low Back Pain And Sciatica
Written by admin on June 30, 2009 – 9:32 am
In a study conducted by Dr. Fares E. Sayegh of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Medical School in Greece, and his colleagues showed that caudal epidural injections (CEIs) with local anesthetic, with or without steroids are both helpful to patients with low back pain and sciatica. Based on their findings, all patients who participated in the study showed improvements in the symptoms of their illnesses.
The research team analyzed data from 183 patients with severe chronic low back pain and sciatica who were randomized to receive CEIs with xylocaine, betamethasone dipropionate and betamethasone phosphate, or injections with xylocaine and water for injection (WFI).
From Modern Medicine:
Caudal epidural injections (CEIs) with local anesthetic, with or without steroids, may help patients with low back pain, but the steroids may help provide faster relief,
The researchers found that both groups showed improvements in symptoms from the first week following injection, but the rate of decrease in Oswestry Disability Index score was more rapid in the steroid group. Although both groups showed improvements in the straight leg raising test, the improvement was faster in the steroid group.
“CEIs containing local anesthetic and steroid or WFI could be effective in relieving the symptoms of patients suffering from low back pain and sciatica. The injection of steroid with local anesthetic leads to greater and faster relief during the first week after the CEI and this improvement is maintained even one-year later. The clinical symptoms of the WFI-group patients are relieved in a more progressive way and not as much and as fast as of the steroid-group’s patients, even one year after the CEI,” the authors write.
In the end of the study, Dr. Sayegh and his colleagues emphasized that caudal epidural injections with local anesthetics and steroids offer faster and better relief on low back pain and sciatica.
Tags: Caudal epidural injections, CEI, low back pain, sciatica, steroid
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Steroid Eye Injection – Beneficial In Treating Intraocular Inflammation
Written by admin on June 28, 2009 – 9:25 am
Steroid eye drops have been the mainstay of anti-inflammatory treatment for decades indicated for most types of ocular surgery and inflammatory conditions of the eye. Newer developments in eye drops now give us different “strengths” of steroid eye drops. New drug delivery systems will be giving us sustained release of steroids.
Recently the FDA approved a biodegradable sustained release drug delivery system called Ozurdex. This drug is injected into the vitreous cavity and releases dexamethasone for a limited time. It is indicated for the treatment of macular edema caused by vein occlusions. It is believed that the off-label use for intraocular inflammation is sure to follow for treatment of refractory uveitis and possible post-operative inflammation of the anterior segment and posterior segment (retina).
From Gerson Lehrman Group:
The gold-standard of anti-inflammatory eyedrops has been prednisolone acetate 1%. Prednisolone acetate 1% has been effective in controlling intraocular inflammation as well as inflammation of the palpebral and bulbar conjunctiva.
Durezol was recently released as a topical synthetic steroid indicated for post-surgical inflammation. The drug reportedly has no rise in intraocular pressure, yet has the same anti-inflammatory “power” as prednisolone acetate 1.
Vexol is known as a “soft” steroid. It has less anti-inflammatory properties and is indicated for treatment of inflammatory conditions of the anterior segment and surgery.
Lotemax is also a “soft” steroid, has decreased anti-inflammatory properties, does have IOP spikes and is indicated for inflammatory conditions of the palpebral and bulbar conjunctiva, cornea and anterior segment.
LASIK surgery is commonly treated with prednisolone acetate 1% 4x/day for about one week. Intravitreal injections of triamcinolone acetonide have been popular over the past several years.
Because of recent developments in pharmaceuticals and technology, we now have more choices for treating intraocular inflammation. Treatments ranging from simple eye drops to injection and laser applications are now within reach.
Tags: intraocular inflammation, prednisolone, steroid, steroid eye drops
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Surgical Implant That Emits Low Dose Of Steroid Stabilizes Vision
Written by admin on June 25, 2009 – 9:03 am
A surgical implant, which is sutured to the sclera, is a useful second-line therapy for patients with sympathetic ophthalmia who have recurrent inflammation or can’t tolerate systemic anti-inflammatory medications. Researchers said that the implant, an approved noninfectious uveitis treatment, releases low doses of steroid helps prevent inflammation and stabilize vision in patients with sympathetic ophthalmia.
In a retrospective study, three of the patients regained vision because of resolution of inflammation and macular edema. Vision was stabilized in the remainder of the patients, and none of them lost vision because of the device or ongoing sympathetic ophthalmia.
From Medpage today:
“Until recently, the primary treatment option for sympathetic ophthalmia was nonsurgical and involved high doses of oral steroids followed by oral immunosuppressive medication to preserve vision in a patient’s remaining eye,” said lead author Vinit Mahajan, M.D., Ph.D., also of the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.
But such systemic treatment, he said in a statement, “subjects patients to life-long use of immunosuppressive drugs that have serious side effects such as osteoporosis, weight gain, potentially life-threatening infection, and liver or kidney damage.”
To evaluate the effects of the implant in cases of sympathetic ophthalmia, the researchers looked at records of eight patients who underwent surgical implantation of the device with post-operative follow-up from three months to two years.
The results support the use of the implant in sympathetic ophthalmia, the researchers said, although the “conclusions have to be tempered” because of the small number of patients and the retrospective nature of the study.
Sympathetic ophthalmia is a rare condition in which, after surgery on or trauma to one eye, the other becomes inflamed in an autoimmune response. Although the implant has found to be effective, it still needs to be replaced after two and a half years since sympathetic ophthalmia is a chronic disease.
Tags: Retisert, steroid, surgical implant, sympathetic ophthalmia
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Appetite-stimulating Hormone to protect Muscle against Atrophy
Written by admin on June 24, 2009 – 9:33 am
As per a recently concluded research, an appetite-stimulating hormone has been identified that can offer the ability to treat common ailments of muscle atrophy.
Muscular Atrophy is referred to as a debilitating process, which results in an extensive loss of muscle function and mass. This condition results in worsening of the quality of life and can occur with aging, inadequate food intake, and nerve injury.
As per Andrea Graziani, PhD., study’s co-author, molecular biologist with the Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine and the Biotechnology Center for Applied Medical Research, University of Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy, Des-acyl ghrelin, which is a form of ghrelin and an appetite-stimulating hormone in the body, can be used to treat patients with muscular atrophy.
From News-Medical.Net:
Currently, there are few options to treat the problem. Some of the treatments, such as anabolic steroids (testosterone) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IFG-1), raise concerns about safety and effectiveness, said study co-author Andrea Graziani, PhD. He is a molecular biologist with the Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine and the Biotechnology Center for Applied Medical Research, University of Piemonte Orientale, Novara, Italy.
“Because of the wide impact of muscular atrophy on public health, it is of pivotal importance to find new and better drug strategies to treat it,” Graziani said.
Graziani and his co-workers are studying des-acyl ghrelin, a form of ghrelin, the appetite-stimulating hormone found in the body. Until recently, researchers thought that des-acyl ghrelin was inactive because it does not share the main activities of ghrelin-stimulating appetite, fat and the release of growth hormone.
However, Graziani’s group recently found that des-acyl ghrelin shares some biological activities with ghrelin, such as stimulating differentiation of other cells, including-important to this study-cells that are precursors to skeletal muscle cells.
In this new study, the researchers discovered that des-acyl ghrelin has a direct anti-atrophic activity on the skeletal muscle of mice with muscular atrophy caused by either denervation (nerve injury) or fasting. Mice that were genetically altered to have increased levels of des-acyl ghrelin had less skeletal muscle loss than the untreated control mice. This held true for both causes of muscular atrophy.
The study was Graziani and his team is expected to provide new treatment avenues for treating muscular atrophy. This study was supported by Telethon, Regione Piemonte, and the Italian Ministry for University and Research.
Tags: anabolic steroids, appetite-stimulating hormone, des-acyl ghrelin, ghrelin, muscle atrophy, Testosterone
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Black Teenagers with Asthma more likely to be Resistant to Steroids
Written by admin on June 22, 2009 – 9:59 am
According to a research conducted at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center, black teens are three times more likely to have steroid-resistant asthma than their white counterparts.
The research revealed that the African-American Children were more likely to develop steroid-resistant asthma than the white teens, as per Joseph Spahn, M.D., a pediatric allergist and director of the Immunopharmacology Lab at National Jewish.
Other recent epidemiological studies found that black teenagers with asthma are found to be sicker and tend to have a high mortality rate than white teenagers with asthma. It was also revealed that inhaled steroids can be one of the most effective ways in controlling asthma.
From News.Bio-Medicine.Org:
“Our results suggest that children with steroid-resistant asthma are more likely to be African-American, to have required treatment with oral steroids at an earlier age and to require larger amounts of oral steroids for only marginal control of their asthma,” said Joseph Spahn, M.D., a pediatric allergist and director of the Immunopharmacology Lab at National Jewish.
Other recent epidemiological studies have shown that blacks with asthma are sicker and have a higher mortality rate than whites with asthma. Doctors at National Jewish now are trying to determine whether blacks have a more vigorous immune response to airway inflammation–which means that higher doses of steroids must be used to control inflammation–or a poor response to steroids secondary to a genetic resistance to the drugs.
“The theory is that with ongoing airway inflammation you get worsening asthma and diminished steroid sensitivity,” Dr. Spahn said.
This study of 164 teen-agers treated at National Jewish also showed that 25 percent of the group was steroid resistant. Children with less than a 15 percent improvement in lung function following a “burst” of inhaled steroids–high doses over seven days–were considered steroid resistant.
“Twenty-five percent of the kids admitted to National Jewish have steroid-resistant asthma, which is much greater than anyone thought,” Dr. Spahn said.
Further Studies are undergoing to ascertain whether or not the black teens have a more vigorous immune response to airway inflammation.
It is believed that only 1/10 of a percent of the fifteen million asthma patients in the United States alone are resistant to steroid therapy while they are approximately five million children with asthma in the United States.
The study is the first one to examine steroid-resistant asthma in children and was published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
Tags: airway inflammation, steroid resistant, steroid resistant asthma, steroid therapy
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Anabolic Steroids Cause Enlargement Of The Gingival Tissues
Written by admin on June 19, 2009 – 9:27 am
The research team of Dr. Onur Ozcelik of the Cukurova University reported that anabolic steroids can cause gingival enlargement. This is because the gingiva is affected by sex hormones, and clinical changes in periodontal tissue have been observed during puberty, pregnancy, menopause, and with the use of oral contraceptives. This engorgement of the gums makes it easier for bacteria in plaque to accumulate, placing steroid users at risk for severe gum infection.
However, in the study, steroid users who were found to have significantly enlarged gums did not have more plaque beneath their gums compared to non steroid users. The study compared the gums of 24 body builders who had been using anabolic steroids for less than one year with 20 body builders who had never used steroids.
From medpage today:
The overgrown gums make it easier for bacteria in plaque to accumulate, placing steroid users at risk for severe gum infection, said Onur Ozcelik, D.D.S., Ph.D., and colleagues of Cukurova University here in the July issue of the Journal of Periodontology.
The current study compared the gums of 24 body builders who had been using anabolic steroids for less than one year with 20 body builders who had never used steroids. All participants were between the ages of 17 and 29.
Compared with their steroid-free counterparts, the steroid users were found to have:
• significantly thicker gums (an average score of 1 versus 0.3; P<.001).
• more gingival encroachment onto teeth (an average score of 0.9 versus 0.2; P<.001).
• more overall gingival enlargement (average score 0.9 versus 0.3; P<.001).
There are no known facts if the engorgement of the gums will regress when the use anabolic steroids is stopped. So, the researchers urge dentists and periodontists to be familiar with the potential side effects of anabolic steroids to the gingival tissues.
Tags: anabolic steroids, Dr. Ozcelik, gingival tissues
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Steroid Injection Ineffective For Tennis Elbow
Written by admin on June 17, 2009 – 9:25 am
A group of Australian researchers proved that steroid injections are apparently of no use in tennis elbow and a wait and watch approach may be the best. The researchers tested this approach on a group of volunteers, while a second group was given a local corticosteroid injection and advised to gradually return to normal activities. The final group received eight treatments of physiotherapy of 30 minutes over six weeks and was taught home exercises and self-manipulation. Each group’s progress was measured at six weeks, and again after a year.
From Bio-Medicine:
Steroid injections are apparently of no use in tennis elbow and a wait and watch approach may be the best, a new study in the BMJ says. Australian researchers tested this approach in one group of volunteers, who were assured that their problem would be sorted out.
Initially, corticosteroid injections were the most successful treatment, with 78% of those in the group reporting improvements, followed closely by physiotherapy with a 65% success rate when compared to just 27% in the ‘wait and see’ group.
However, after 52 weeks the injection group rates of improvement were significantly worse than those of the physiotherapy group. The injection group also had the most reported recurrences, with 72% of participants’ condition deteriorating after three or six weeks – which could be due, in part, to a quicker initial recovery leading to greater use and over-taxing of the elbow.
The study findings also support the idea that tennis elbow is, in most cases, a self-limiting condition.
The study showed that the injection group also had the most reported recurrences, with 72% of participants’ condition deteriorating after three or six weeks. At the end of the study participants in both the physiotherapy and wait and see group had either much improvement or completely recovered from their condition.
Tags: corticosteroids injection, steroid, tennis elbow
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Teriparatide Better than Alendronate for Steroid-Induced Osteoporosis
Written by admin on June 16, 2009 – 9:18 am
Researchers have found that injectable teriparatide (Forteo) increase bone-mineral density (BMD) as much as twice when compared to oral alendronate (Fosamax) in a head-to-head comparison.
During the study, it was remarked by Kenneth Saag, M.D., of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and his colleagues that teriparatide was considered to be associated with greater increases in BMD at the hip and spine areas.
From Medpagetoday.com:
“In our study, teriparatide was associated with greater increases in [BMD] at the spine and hip and with significantly fewer new vertebral fractures,” Dr. Saag’s group wrote. But the dropout rate for adverse effects was twice as high for those taking teriparatide.
Only one out of 171 evaluable patients receiving teriparatide had radiographic evidence of a vertebral fracture, while 10 of 165 evaluable patients on alendronate had such fractures (P=0.004).
Nonvertebral fractures occurred at similar rates with the two treatments (5.6% versus 3.7%, P=0.36). BMD in the total hip increased with both drugs, though less dramatically than in the lumbar spine. Teriparatide increased hip BMD by 3.8% while it rose 2.4% in the alendronate group. The advantage for teriparatide was significant (P<0.01). Significantly more patients in the teriparatide group had at least one elevated serum calcium measurement > 10.5 mg/dL (18% versus 5.7%, P<0.001) and there was a tendency toward more patients with at least one measurement > 11 mg/dL (3.8% versus 1%, P=0.06).
Teriparatide is a recombinant peptide drug, based on a portion of the parathyroid hormone protein. Earlier studies had indicated that it leads to increased BMD.
Teriparatide is regarded to a potential first-line therapy for steroid-induced osteoporosis as per the findings of Saag and his colleagues, as per Philip N. Sambrook, M.D., of the University of Sydney.
It is noteworthy to note that teriparatide is currently approved by the FDA only for men and postmenopausal women with osteoporosis who are suffering from high risks of fractures.
Tags: bone-mineral density, injectable teriparatide, oral alendronate, osteoporosis, steroid-Induced osteoporosis, teriparatide
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Man Who Imported Steroids From China - Busted
Written by admin on June 13, 2009 – 9:21 am
In Stamford, a man was arrested for allegedly importing steroids and other prescription drugs from China. Peter Trulli from Summer St., was busted by the police when a package containing more than 1,000 pills of anabolic steroids, along with 60 Viagra pills and 300 white pills of an indeterminate substance, was mistakenly delivered to an Adams Avenue apartment.
According to Lt. Jon Fontneau, head of the narcotics and organized crime unit, the resident in Adams Avenue notified the police when they received the package, and found out about the drugs. They issued an arrest warrant to Trulli after the police had seen him under a surveillance video talking to the resident in the hallway last month trying to retrieve the package. However, the resident already forwarded the package to the police.
From The Advocate:
A city man was arrested Tuesday after an investigation determined he was allegedly importing steroids and other prescription drugs from China, police said.
The investigation of Peter Trulli, 38, of Summer St., was launched in March after a package containing more than 1,000 pills of anabolic steroids, along with 60 Viagra pills and 300 white pills of an indeterminate substance were mistakenly delivered to an Adams Avenue apartment, said Lt. Jon Fontneau, head of the narcotics and organized crime unit.
Trulli was seen on video surveillance speaking with the resident in a hallway and last month, police obtained an arrest warrant for him, Fontneau said.
Trulli was charged with possession of a controlled substance and sale of a controlled substance based on the steroids - Viagra is not a controlled substance.
Trulli told police he thought the package contained computer parts, not steroids.
Peter Trulli is charged with possession of a controlled substance and sale of a controlled substance based on the steroids. He is held on $25,000 bail.
Tags: Adams Avenue, Peter Trulli, prescription drugs, Steroids
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Steroids On Nephrotic Syndrome Patients Do Not Cause Bone Loss
Written by admin on June 11, 2009 – 9:54 am
In a study conducted by Dr. Mary B. Leonard and Dr. Babette Zemel, it was found out that steroid medications for nephrotic syndrome among children do not cause bone loss. Steroids cause weight gain which protects children against bone loss. According to Dr. Zemel, although steroids tend to make children shorter and heavier than healthy children, the increased weight also increases bone mass to these young patients.
The increased weight or obesity caused by steroids among nephritic syndrome patients may also induce hormones to increase bone mass. More so, the extra physical load imposed by higher weight may stimulate the bones to grow stronger.
From Medical news today:
The team led by Dr. Leonard compared 60 children and adolescents with steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome to 195 healthy children. Specialized X-ray measurements showed no signs of osteoporosis, a loss in bone mass, among the nephrotic syndrome patients.
The researchers made adjustments for body mass index, an important consideration, since 38 percent of the children in the nephrotic syndrome sample were obese (in contrast, only 16 percent of the control subjects were obese, a proportion consistent with the general pediatric population). The disproportionate obesity among children with nephrotic syndrome disappears after the patients discontinue steroid treatments.
“While steroids tend to make children shorter and heavier than healthy children, increased weight is associated with an increase in bone mass,” said co-author Babette Zemel, Ph.D., of the Nutrition Center at Children’s Hospital. Specifically, whole-body measurements of bone mineral content were higher in children with nephrotic syndrome than in healthy children.
Researchers stated that nephrotic syndrome is resolved quickly when treated, and this condition does not result to permanent kidney damage on children when they reach their teens. They also reported that steroid used to treat nephrotic syndrome do not increase their risk of their risk of osteoporosis and fracture.
Tags: bone loss, Dr. Babette, Dr. Leonard, nephrotic syndrome, Steroids
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