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Vertebroplasty
And Kyphoplasty: Are These Procedures Safe?
These two orthopedic
spinal reconstruction pocedures have become popular in the past
few years. "Vertebroplasty"
means doing a repair job on a damaged vertebral bone (spinal column
bone). Originally this was developed for end stage cancer patients
who had a single bone metastasis that led to a collapse of this
vertebral bone. The difference in a good outcome of this procedure
can mean the difference between being bedridden until death or walking
and being active.
In a recent
review of THE BACK LETTER (Vol.12, 12, Dec. 2002, Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins), which critically reviews the literature regarding
back pain and treatments, this procedure, even if successful, has
not been researched long enough to be considered "standard
therapy". Many investigators report a success rate of 95% for
compression fractures in patients with osteoporosis. But the FDA
has warned that the bone cement that it used in this
type of spinal surgery has never been properly investigaed for this
application in non-cancer patients.
Nevertheless
the technique of vertebroplasty has been clinically so impressive
that those with severe kyphosis in the spine also wanted surgery.
Kyphosis is a roundback in the mid spine area (thoracic spine) that
can significantly interfere with normal posture, breathing action
and cardiovascular functioning. Kyphoplasty
is the procedure of repairing the curvature of the kyphosis, which
consists usually of a series of several vertebral bodies with wedge
shaped compression fractures in the thoracic spine. Often these
patients are older and have osteoporosis.
THE BACK LETTER
warns that the verdict on longterm follow-ups is not out. It may
take a long time, even 10 to 15 years before this will become available
as proper controlled studies have never been done. As the FDA link
show, there can be serious life threatening complications from the
procedure itself (spinal cord compression, respiratory arrest and
death etc.). However, the longterm complications have not been reported
properly as there is no longterm trial going on where the investigators
would specifically concentrate on finding complications and untoward
side-effects.
A well-designed
multicenter trial regarding vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty is badly
needed to answer these safety questions. Apparently efforts are
on their way to attempt to do this.
Here is a link
to my nethealthbook.com chapter on osteoporosis:
http://www.nethealthbook.com/rheumatologicaldisease_osteoporosis.html
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Deliveries
Of Male Infants Mean More Complications
A recent
article in the British Journal of Medicine on Jan. 18, 2003
(BMJ 2003;326:137) is about a retrospective risk analysis
of two groups of full-term delivered newborns that were delivered
at a Dublin (Ireland) University hospital. The delivery records
of 4070 male and 4005 female newborns between 1997 and 2000
were analyzed. Dr. Maeve A. Eogan said that the team noted
significantly more Cesarean section rates due to more frequent
fetal distress in males. There were more forceps deliveries
with males and drugs to induce labor had to be used more in
males as well.
One known
factor is the higher birth weight as well as larger heads
in males compared to their female counterparts. But the investigators
are looking for further explanations of why males seem to
be more prone to distress during deliveries than females.
There may be a genetic component that may also play a role,
but more investigations are needed to find out why this would
be so.
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Framingham
Study: Obesity And Smoking Lead To Loss Of Life
The Netherlands
Epidemiology and Demography Compression of Morbidity Research Group
has published an important medical research paper in the Jan. 7,
2003 edition of the Annals of Internal Medicine (Ann Intern Med
2003;138:24-32).
The lead researcher,
Dr. Anna Peeters, explained that the group has revisited the Framingham
Heart Study 40 years later and analyzed survival
statistics of the group of men and women who enrolled in this longterm
study between 1948 and 1951. The population at the beginning of
the study was aged between 30 and 49. The snap shot, after 40 years
had elapsed, is the subject of this analysis. In order to make it
easier to understand, I have tabulated the data in this manner:
| Years
of life lost 40 years after |
| Framingham
Heart Study was started: |
| Non-
smokers |
| |
Male
|
Female |
| overweight* |
3.1 |
3.3 |
| obese** |
5.8 |
7.1 |
| Smokers |
| |
Male
|
Female |
| overweight |
6.7 |
7.2 |
| obese |
13.7 |
13.3 |
|
| *
overweight: BMI
= 25 to 29.9 |
**obese:
BMI = 30 and higher |
This study
shows life style choices do matter: being
overweight shortens your life by 3 years on average, being obese
shortens it by 6 to 7 years.
Add the risk
of smoking, and you end up shortening your life by 7 years in the
case of being overweight (4 years more than without smoking) or
more than 13 years, if you are obese. This study was based on 3,457
participants who 40 years ago had a life expectancy of 85 years,
if they were in the normal weight category and did not smoke. The
death rates were much higher than the researchers expected. The
researchers from the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam stated
as a conclusion: " just think about two things: Don't get fat
and don't smoke".
Here are some
links to my Internet based Healthbook regarding risks for heart
attacks and strokes:
Heart disease:
http://www.nethealthbook.com/cardiovasculardisease_heartdisease.html
Two things will
lead to a normal weight (as you likely have heard before):
Proper nutrition...
http://www.nethealthbook.com/healthnutritionandfitness.html#nutrition
...and proper
exercise (fitness):
http://www.nethealthbook.com/healthnutritionandfitness.html#fitness
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February
Readers' Digest Edition: Poisons Used For Healing
In this February's
Readers' Digest edition there is an article about the use of poisons
of nature for healing purposes (article entitled "Healing Power
of Poison"). For instance arsenic trioxide has been used recently
in a trial with leukemia patients to get a remission of leukemia
in 70% of cases. Arsenic, which normally is a powerful poison, has
in the right dilution this healing effect in leukemia with less
toxic side-effects than chemotherapy.
Dr. J. Michael
McIntosh, a psychiatrist at the University of Utah, is researching
the poisonous effect of a marine snail that attaches to and kills
fish with a toxin. This poison is a powerful painkiller. It is several
hundred times stronger than morphine, but is useful as it does not
have any effect on the strength or functioning of muscles. This
substance used in the right diluted dose, may one day be used for
the treatment of chronic pain syndromes.
The bacterium
Clostridium botulinum produced a powerful toxin, which causes botulism.
Neurologists and plastic surgeons are using this poison in a diluted
form as "Botox" to inject into wrinkles
of skin to make your
face look younger. It is also used for chronic
spastic muscle conditions like cerebral palsy or
tardive dyskinesia.
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