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Nutrition: Iron

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Total 33463 results found since Jan 2013.

Iron Metabolism: An Emerging Therapeutic Target in Critical Illness
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2019. Other selected articles can be found online at
Source: Critical Care - March 9, 2019 Category: Intensive Care Authors: Edward Litton and Jolene Lim Tags: Review Source Type: research

Wearable Iron Lung Helps COPD Patients Breathe Easier
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has few treatment options, with patients frequently experiencing shortness of breath. To address this most unwelcome symptom of COPD, Dr. Jake Brenner, a critical care physician specializing in pulmonology...
Source: Medgadget - December 12, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Cardiology Critical Care Source Type: blogs

Within-city Variation in Reactive Oxygen Species from Fine Particle Air Pollution and COVID-19
CONCLUSIONS: Examination of neighbourhood characteristics associated with COVID-19 incidence can identify inequalities and generate hypotheses for future studies. This article is open access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).PMID:33798018 | DOI:10.1164/rccm.202011-4142OC
Source: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine - April 2, 2021 Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: David M Stieb Greg J Evans Teresa M To Pascale S J Lakey Manabu Shiraiwa Marianne Hatzopoulou Laura Minet Jeffrey R Brook Richard T Burnett Scott A Weichenthal Source Type: research

Obstructive Sleep Apnea-induced Endothelial Dysfunction is Mediated by miR-210
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2022 Oct 3. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202202-0394OC. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTRATIONALE: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)-induced endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction contributes to OSA-related cardiovascular sequelae. The mechanistic basis of endothelial impairment by OSA is unclear.OBJECTIVES: The goals of this study were to identify the mechanism of OSA-induced EC dysfunction and explore the potential therapies for OSA-accelerated cardiovascular disease.METHODS: The experimental methods include data mining, bioinformatics, EC functional analyses, OSA mouse models, and assessment of OSA human subjects.M...
Source: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine - October 3, 2022 Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Fenqing Shang Shen-Chih Wang Brendan Gongol So Yun Han Yoshitake Cho Cara R Schiavon Lili Chen Yuanming Xing Yingshuai Zhao Ming'an Ning Xuan Guo Fangzhou He Yuyang Lei Liuyi Wang Uri Manor Traci Marin Kun-Ta Chou Ming He Po-Hsun Huang John Y-J Shyy Atul Source Type: research

Jehovah's Witnesses
Publication date: Available online 21 February 2019Source: Anaesthesia & Intensive Care MedicineAuthor(s): Catherine BrydonAbstractThe Jehovah's Witness Society is a Christian movement established in the 1870s. It has around 8 million members worldwide who believe that the Bible prohibits the transfusion of blood and its primary components. Some minor components of plasma and clotting factors may be acceptable to some members of the faith. Similarly, some will accept intraoperative cell salvage where their own blood from the surgical site can be aspirated and returned to them provided the blood remains within a closed circ...
Source: Anaesthesia and intensive care medicine - February 22, 2019 Category: Anesthesiology Source Type: research

Therapeutic Opportunities for Hepcidin in Acute Care Medicine
This article highlights the potential therapeutic benefit of exogenous hepcidin to prevent and treat iron-induced injury, specifically in the management of infection from enteric gram-negative bacilli or fungi, malaria, sepsis, acute kidney injury, trauma, transfusion, cardiopulmonary bypass surgery, and liver disease.
Source: Critical Care Clinics - January 29, 2019 Category: Intensive Care Authors: Lakhmir S. Chawla, Blaire Beers-Mulroy, George F. Tidmarsh Source Type: research

Pediatric Poisonings in a Rural Ugandan Emergency Department
Conclusions Pediatric poisoning affects patients in rural sub-Saharan Africa. The mortality rate at one rural Ugandan hospital was greater than 2%.
Source: Pediatric Emergency Care - March 1, 2020 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research

Comparison of Arterial Ischemic and Hemorrhagic Pediatric Stroke in Etiology, Risk Factors, Clinical Manifestations, and Prognosis
Conclusions Moyamoya disease/syndrome and arteriovenous malformation rapture are the most common cause of AIS and HS, respectively. Iron deficiency anemia was commonly found in childhood AIS. The time to diagnosis in both AIS and HS was delayed. The mortality rate in HS was higher than in AIS. Neurological deficits are seen in 70% of childhood AIS during the follow-up. One-third of the children in our study developed epilepsy, which generally responds to a single antiseizure medication. The recurrence rate of childhood stroke was low compared with adult stroke.
Source: Pediatric Emergency Care - September 1, 2022 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research

Utilization trends and safety of intravenous iron replacement in pediatric specialty care: A large retrospective cohort study
Pediatric Blood&Cancer, EarlyView.
Source: Pediatric Blood and Cancer - January 25, 2018 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: research

Safety and efficacy of iron therapy on reducing red blood cell transfusion requirements and treating anaemia in critically ill adults: A systematic review with meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis
ConclusionIron therapy results in a modest increase in Hb. The current evidence is inadequate to exclude an important effect on transfusion requirements or infection.
Source: Journal of Critical Care - November 16, 2018 Category: Gastroenterology Source Type: research

Invasive Yersiniosis in a Pediatric Patient With β-Thalassemia Major: Acute Decompensation After Rapid Blood Transfusion
Yersinia enterocolitica infection, or yersiniosis, is a common cause of gastroenteritis in developing nations, but the disease is less common in the developed world. Yersiniosis typically presents as a self-limited gastroenteritis in an immunocompetent patient and rarely progresses to the more fulminant disseminated form. Certain patient populations are at greater risk of disseminated disease, and providers caring for these patients should have heightened suspicion for invasive disease. Patients dependent on serial transfusion therapy, such as those with inherited hemoglobinopathies, often have chronically elevated serum i...
Source: Pediatric Emergency Care - July 1, 2019 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Illustrative Cases Source Type: research

Intravenous iron therapy in the pediatric sleep clinic: a single institution experience
Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Source: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine : JCSM - August 1, 2022 Category: Sleep Medicine Authors: David G. Ingram Baha Al-Shawwa Lourdes M. DelRosso Mukta Sharma 1Division of Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine, Children ’s Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, MO 2Division of Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine, Seattle Children’s Hospital, Seattle, WA 3Division of Hem Source Type: research