PURPOSE: To investigate the treatment of severe bacterial endophthalmitis. METHODS:The curative effects of vitrectomy after intravitreal antibiotics and steroids (IVAS)for the treatment of 23 patients with bacterial endophthalmitis (group I)and vitrectomy and IVA at the same time for the treatment of 28 patients with bacterial endopbthalmitis (group I)were analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: The rate of curative effects of two groups were similar,while the marked curative effects in group I (47.8% )was significantly higher than that of the group I (17.9%). The average period of eliminating infiamation of group I was longer than that of group I , and the incidence of postoperative retinal detachment of group Ⅱ was 3 times more than that of group I . CONCLUSION :It was indicated that vitrectomy after IVAS may increase the security of vitrectomy and the curative effects of severe bacterial ndophthalmitis.
Objective To identify the best therapy regimen for a patient with rare hypoglycemia due to insulin autoantibody (IAA). Methods We searched The Cochrane Library (Issue 3, 2008), PubMed (1966-July 2009), EMbase (1974-July 2009) and CBM (1978-July 2009) to identify relevant evidence. The quality of the retrieved studies was critically assessed. Results A total of 291 records were retrieved. No clinical guidelines, systematic reviews or clinical randomized studies were identified. Thirty treatment-related studies involving 6 interventions showed that insulin combined with Prednisone was relatively more effective and safer than conventional therapies. Conclusion The steroid treatment might be useful for the improvement of glycamic control in patients with high IAA levels and severe hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia due to insulin antibodies raised against subcutaneously-injected human insulin.
Objective To investigate drug usage and costs of inpatients with asthma in Karamay Central Hospital in 2014 and to provide baseline for evidence-based pharmacy study of single disease in respiratory system. Methods The information of drug use and expenditure of asthma inpatients were collected from the hospital information system (HIS). We analyzed the data including frequency, proportion and cumulative proportion by Excel 2007 software. Results A total of 150 asthma inpatients were included, the average age was 56.25±18.83 years old. Three kinds of the most commonly used drugs were corticosteroids, antibiotics and antiasthmatic drugs. Budesonide suspension for inhalation, moxifloxacin needle, doxofylline needle accounted for 32.84%, 31.11% and 45.31% in these three categories of drugs, respectively. Conclusion The mainly drugs for treatment of asthma inpatients in Karamay Central Hospital in 2014 are corticosteroids, antibiotics and antiasthmatic drugs. The frequency of systemic corticosteroids is too high, and the frequency of antimicrobial use is irrational, which needs further specification.
ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical, laboratory and imaging evaluation, treatment and prognosis of patients with idiopathic hypertrophic pachymeningitis (IHP) with ophthalmic manifestations as the first symptom.MethodsA retrospective case analysis. Eight patients displaying symptoms of IHP were recruited from the Neuro-ophthalmology Department in the First Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital from January 2016 to April 2019 were inculed in this study. There were 6 males and 2 females, aged from 11 to 65 years, with an average age of 48.00±19.08 years. The course of disease ranged from 30 days to 7.5 years, with an average course of 17.00±30.08 months. The age, symptoms and signs of all patients were recorded. All patients underwent ophthalmic examination, orbit or brain MRI or CT examinations, blood routine examination, biochemistry, tumor markers, immunity, hepatitis B, syphilis, HIV, thyroid function and other laboratory tests, and lumbar puncture was performed to measure the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure and indicators. The clinical manifestations, orbital or brain MRI imaging and laboratory examination characteristics were summarized. Treatment and prognosis were also observed.ResultsIn total of 8 patients, visual loss was presented in 6 patients, visual loss and diplopia were presented in 1 patient, and diplopia was presented in 1 patient. Binocular involvement in 7 patients and monocular involvement in 1 patient. Other symptoms including headache and hear loss and so on. Optic disc edema in 1 eye and optic disc pallor in 6 eyes were reviewed by fundus examination. The laboratory examination showed that the angiotensin converting enzyme abnormal in 4 patients, the anti-thyroid peroxidase antibody abnormal in 3 patients and immunoantibodies positive in 3 patients. CSF measurements showed that the protein level elevated in all patients. Orbit and/or brain MRI and CT examination showed that optic nerve involvement in 6 patients, oculomotor nerve involvement in 1 patient, and cavernous sinus region involvement in 2 patients. Glucocorticoid was effective in all patients, and the visual acuity significantly improved in 4 patients, the diplopia was completely resolved in 2 patients, and the disease modifying therapy (DMT) was combined to prevent recurrence in 7 patients. No recurrence was observed in an average follow-up time of 26.63±16.55 months.ConclusionsIHP patients may be first visit an ophthalmologist due to vision loss in bilateral eyes simultaneous or sequentially. IHP patients are often associated with headache and other cranial nerve paralysis symptoms. Definitive diagnosis of IHP depends on imaging examination. Glucocorticoid treatment is effective in early phase, but it is tendency to progress and relapse, suggesting combined with DMT as early as possible.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effectiveness and safety of glucocorticoids in the treatment of non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NAION).MethodsGlucocorticoids published in the National Library of Medicine PubMed; Netherlands Medical Abstracts Database Embase; Cochrane Library, an evidence-based medical library; China Cnkipedia; China Biomedical Literature Service; Chongqing Vipul Chinese Science and Technology Journal Database, and Wanfang Science and Technology Journal Full Text Database were searched about computer. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and non-randomized controlled trials (NRCTs) for the treatments of NAION were subjected to meta-analysis. The search period was from the establishment of each database to March 2020. The literature was screened and data were extracted according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The methodological quality of the RCT and NRCT studies was evaluated using the Risk of Bias Assessment Tool and the MINORS evaluation scale, respectively. The data were analyzed using RevMan version 5.3 software which was provided by the Cochrane Collaboration Network.ResultsAn initial search of 395 papers was conducted, and 10 papers were finally included for this meta-analysis, including 3 RCT studies and 7 NRCT studies. A total of 1057 patients with NAION were included. The 3 RCT studies were analyzed descriptively as the outcome indicators were described in different ways. A meta-analysis of 7 NRCT studies showed that patients in the treatment group showed significantly better visual prognosis (relative risk=1.28, 95% confidence interval 1.09 to 1.51, P=0.003) and retinal nerve fibre layer thickness were obviously improved (mean difference=7.76, 95% confidence interval 1.58 to 13.94, P=0.01) than the control group. Four studies reported the occurrence of adverse reactions in the treatment versus control groups. None of the above studies provided a detailed analysis of the prognosis of patients with adverse reactions.ConclusionThe efficacy and safety of glucocorticoids in the treatment of NAION is unclear and needs to be validated in a larger sample of RCTs.
ObjectiveTo investigate the clinical efficacy, side effects, influence on viral nucleic acid conversion and prognosis of glucocorticoid used in patients with coronavirus disease 2019.MethodsEighty-seven patients with severe and critical coronavirus disease 2019 were included to observe respiratory symptoms, blood oxygen saturation, pulmonary imaging absorption, weaning status, complicated bacterial infection and double infection, and prognosis after glucocorticoid use. Whether glucocorticoid use affects the patient's viral nucleic acid was analyzed.ResultsOf the 87 patients included, 55 were severe, 32 were critical, and 38 died, which included 30 critical patients. Seventy-seven patients accepted short-term glucocorticoid, and 10 patients accepted long-term glucocorticoid due to diffuse lung lesions and poor absorption. Eleven patients had bacterial infection and 4 cases had double infection. In 10 patients with long-term use of glucocorticoids, the lung lesions relieved, no double infection was found, but 1 patient maintained nucleic acid positive even after 5 weeks’ treatment.ConclusionsThe use of appropriate glucocorticoids is beneficial to the improvement of disease status and disease absorption in patients with coronavirus disease 2019. Long-term oral administration of glucocorticoids in patients with diffuse lung lesions may be beneficial to disease absorption.
ObjectiveTo observe the clinical efficacy of oral glucocorticoids in the treatment of acute non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION).MethodsA prospective clinical study. From December 2017 to June 2020, 40 eyes of 40 patients with acute NAION who were diagnosed in Department of Ophthalmology of Tengzhou Central People's Hospital were included in the study. All the affected eyes underwent best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) examination of optic disc; 35 eyes (BCVA≥0.1) underwent visual field examination at the same time. The BCVA examination was carried out using the international standard decimal visual acuity chart, which was converted into the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) visual acuity during statistics. The static visual field inspection was performed with Humphrey automatic perimeter to obtain the average mean deviation (MD) value. The thickness of peripapillary retinal nerve fire layer (pRNFL) around the optic disc of the affected eye was measured with an OCT instrument. According to the wishes of patients, they were divided into hormone treatment group and control group. All were given vitamin B1 and methylcobalamin orally; the hormone treatment group was given oral prednisone acetate treatment, 60 mg/d (regardless of body weight); after 2 weeks, the dose was reduced by 5 mg every 5 days, and the dose was reduced to 40 mg and maintained until optic disc edema subsides; thereafter, the dose was quickly reduced until the drug was stopped. Three and 6 months after treatment, the same equipment and methods were used for related examinations before treatment to observe the thickness changes of BCVA, MD, and pRNFL. The thickness of BCVA, MD, and pRNFL between the two groups was compared by Mann-Whitney U test. The thickness of BCVA, MD, and pRNFL before and after treatment within the group was compared by rank analysis of variance. ResultsAmong 40 eyes of 40 cases, 21 eyes were in the hormone treatment group, and 19 eyes were in the control group. There were differences in age, sex composition, course of disease, associated systemic risk factors, BCVA, MD, and pRNFL thickness between the two groups. There was no statistical significance (P>0.05). At 3 and 6 months after treatment, the average logMAR BCVA of the eyes of the hormone treatment group and the control group were 0.26±0.32, 0.26±0.34, 0.28±0.30, 0.25±0.32, respectively. The visual field MD were -15.52±6.87, -15.55±6.04 dB and -14.82±7.48, -15.18±6.40 dB; pRNFL thickness was 70.38±10.22, 73.79±11.82 μm and 65.67±10.07, 69.26±10.85 μm. LogMAR BCVA (Z=-0.014, -0.315; P=1.000, 0.768), visual field MD (Z=-0.041, -0.068; P=0.979, 0.957), pRNFL thickness (Z= -0.965, -1.112; P=0.347, 0.270), the difference was not statistically significant. ConclusionCompared with the control group, oral glucocorticoid treatment of acute NAION fail to improve the visual function and morphological prognosis during the 6-month follow-up period.
Objective To systematically review the efficacy and safety of glucocorticoids for severe COVID-19 and to provide references for the treatment strategy of severe COVID-19 patients. Methods PubMed, EMbase, The Cochrane Library, Web of Science, ClinicalTrials.gov, WanFang Data and CNKI databases were electronically searched to collect randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that reported glucocorticoid therapy for severe COVID-19 patients from inception to August 26th, 2021. Two reviewers independently screened the literature, extracted data, and assessed the risk of bias of the included studies. Meta-analysis was then performed using RevMan 5.3 software. Results A total of 7 RCTs involving 6 236 patients were included. The meta-analysis results showed that compared with usual care, glucocorticoids significantly reduced the all-cause mortality of severe COVID-19 (RR=0.84, 95%CI 0.77 to 0.91, P<0.000 1), whereas no significant difference was found in the progression of complex diseases between the two groups (RR=0.84, 95%CI 0.69 to 1.01, P=0.06). Glucocorticoids did not increase adverse effects in severe COVID-19 compared with usual care (general adverse events: RR=1.15, 95%CI 0.66 to 2.03, P=0.62; serious adverse events: RR=1.13, 95%CI 0.54 to 2.38, P=0.75). Conclusion Current evidence suggests that glucocorticoids are effective in treating severe COVID-19 without significantly increasing adverse events. However, due to the limited quantity and quality of the included studies, more high-quality studies are needed to verify the conclusion.
Objective To observe the clinical characteristics of steroid-induced ocular hypertension (SIOH) in patients with uveitis, and explore the relationship between its clinical phenotype and gene polymorphism. Methods A retrospective case-control study. From July 2019 to December 2020, 576 patients with uveitis who were treated with glucocorticoid eye drops in Tianjin Medical University Eye Hospital were included in the study. Among them, there were 175 confirmed glucocorticoid responders (SRs) and 401 glucocorticoid non-responders (NRs). Seventy cases of SRs (age ≥18 years) using 1% prednisone acetate eye drops were selected as the experiment group and 64 cases of NRs were selected as the control group. The polymorphism of rs2523864 and rs3873352 of human leukocyte antigen complex group (HCG) 22 gene were detected by Sanger sequencing. To observe the clinical characteristics of SIOH after the use of glucocorticoid eye drops, and the correlation between rs2523864 and rs3873352 and the occurrence of SIOH. Differences among groups were compared with the Chi-square test or Fisher's exact test. The correlation between the occurrence of SIOH and the range of intraocular pressure increases after glucocorticoid use and the rs2523864 and rs3873352 loci were compared using the odds ratio (OR) and its 95% confidence interval (CI). Results SIOH occurred in 175 (30.4%, 175/576) of 576 patients. Among them, there were 96 males (54.9%, 96/175) and 79 females (45.1%, 79/175); the average age was 33.64±17.40 years. Steroid high responders (HRs) and steroid moderate responders (MRs) were 58 (33.1%, 58/175) and 117 (66.9%, 117/175) cases. The medication time for the increase in intraocular pressure in MRs that was 33 (19, 56) days, and in HRs that was 28 (14, 36) days, the difference of which was significant (Z=-1.999, P=0.046). No differences were found in daily doses of ocular hypertension induced by 1% prednisone acetate eye drops between MRs which was 4.24 (3.46, 4.66) drops/day and HRs that was 4.32 (3.84, 5.36) drops/day (Z=-1.676, P=0.094). The genotype and allele frequency distribution of the rs3873352 locus in the case group and HRs group were significantly different from those in the control group (P<0.05). The intraocular pressure with rs3873352 GG genotype after the medication was higher than that with GC and CC genotype (Z=2.855, 2.628; P=0.013, 0.026), whereas there was no significant difference between different genotypes of rs2523864 (Z=3.580, P>0.05). Genetic model analysis revealed the risk of SIOH in rs3873352 G allele carriers (GG+GC) was 2.048 times that of non-G allele carriers (OR=2.048, 95%CI: 1.027-4.081, P=0.041). The genotype and allele frequency of rs2523864 locus showed no significant difference between different group (P>0.05). Conclusions After the use of glucocorticoid eye drops, HRs have an earlier increase in intraocular pressure than MRs. HCG22-rs3873352 gene polymorphism is related to the occurrence of SIOH, GG genotype increases the risk of SIOH, and G allele is a risk gene for SIOH.
Glucocorticoids are the first-line therapy of many neurological disorders, with the treatment regimen varying across types and characteristics of neurological disorders. This article reviews the national and international guidelines and expert consensuses in the past decade on glucocorticoids treatment for neurological disorders, and summarizes recommendations from the latest Chinese guidelines and consensuses. In summary, the most frequently used pulse therapy of glucocorticoids in China is intravenous infusion of high-dose (usually 1000 mg/d) methylprednisolone in a short period (often <5 d), followed by gradual tapering, bridging with oral prednisone or direct discontinuation. The treatment regimen for children and juveniles is similar to that for adults but the dose is adjusted by body weight. Pharmacodynamics of glucocorticoids should be considered for the treatment of perinatal women. To provide appropriate glucocorticoids treatment for patients with neurological disorders, clinicians should fully understand features of each neurological disorder and clinical characteristics of individual patient.