Younes Roohani; Mohammad Reza Hosseinzadeh; Mahmoodreza Khalatbari; Alireza Sadeghipoor; Farid Zaeri; Azimi-Khatibani , Esmail
Volume 5, Issue 2 , March 2010, , Pages 77-82
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Gliomas are the most prevalent primary brain tumors. The purpose of this retrospective cohort study was evaluation of clinical trend and prognosis of patients with brain glioma and effective factors in prognosis. Materials and Methods: Hundred and forty-five patients ...
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Background and Objectives: Gliomas are the most prevalent primary brain tumors. The purpose of this retrospective cohort study was evaluation of clinical trend and prognosis of patients with brain glioma and effective factors in prognosis. Materials and Methods: Hundred and forty-five patients with supratentorial brain glioma, treated in Shahid Mostafa Khomeini & Hazrat-e-Rasool hospitals in Tehran , Iran from March 1999 to August 2005, were studied. Clinical, therapeutic and malignancy grade data were collected. The WHO classification was used for reporting malignancy grade. All patients were pursued until August 2005. Mann-Whitney, Kaplan-Meier, Cox Regression, and Chi-Square test were used for analysis. Results: Median survival was 39.7 weeks for malignancy grade IV. One-year survival rates in malignancy grades of II, III, IV and all patients were 86%, 83%, 40% and 47%, respectively. In multivariate analysis, effective factors in prognosis of all patients above 60 were radiotherapy and malignancy grade IV; and in patients with malignant glioma were age of above 60 and radiotherapy; and in patients with low-grade glioma were motor deficits. Conclusions: Survival rate decreases from malignancy grade II to IV and this reduction is evident in malignancy grade IV. Role of radiotherapy as an effective factor in prognosis in all patients and in malignant glioma is important.
Horieh Saderi; Parviz Owlia; Mohammad Reza Jalali Nadoushan; Farid Zaeri; Elaheh Zandieh
Volume 1, Issue 3 , June 2006, , Pages 99-104
Abstract
Background and Objectives: This study was designed as a retrospective study on urine samples during three years in Shaheed Mostafa Khomeini Hospital to determine demographic characteristics of patients with urinary tract infection (UTI), microbial etiology, and susceptibility of isolated bacteria to ...
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Background and Objectives: This study was designed as a retrospective study on urine samples during three years in Shaheed Mostafa Khomeini Hospital to determine demographic characteristics of patients with urinary tract infection (UTI), microbial etiology, and susceptibility of isolated bacteria to antibiotics. Materials and Methods: All urines fulfilling the criteria for significant bacteriuria (>104 colonyforming units/ml of urine) were included in the study. Isolation and identification of bacteria was performed by standard method and susceptibility testing was determined by disk diffusion method according to NCCLS guideline. A total of 909 patients with urinary tract infection were enrolled in this study. Results: Mean age of the patients was 53.2 years. In addition, females were affected more often than males (female/male sex ratio was 2.22). Meanwhile, considering all strains, 79.5% were Gram-negative bacilli and 67.7% were Enterobacteriaceae. Furthermore, E.coli and Klebsiella spp represented the most common Gram-negative and Enterococci and S. aureus represented the most frequent Gram-positive isolates. The four most frequently isolated bacteria were E. coli (52.1%), Enterococci (10.5%), klebsiella spp. (10.3%), and pseudomonas spp. (9.4%). In addition, E. coli was significantly more common in females (56.6%) than in males (42.2%) and in outpatients (57.4%) than in inpatients (47.4%). The proportion of pseudomonas spp. was significantly higher in males (17.7%) than in females (5.6%). Enterococci were significantly more common in inpatients (12.5%) than in outpatients (8.4%). Altogether, the rate of susceptibility of all UTI pathogens was very low to ampicillin (6.9%) and high to cefotaxime (83.6%) and ciprofloxacin (78.2%). Urinary pathogens isolated from female patients and outpatients were more susceptible to most of examined antibiotics than those isolated from males and inpatients. Conclusion: It was found out that degrees for antibiotic resistance of urinary pathogens are alarming and show the necessity of keeping up the monitoring of antibiotics susceptibility in UTI isolates and restricting antibiotic consumption in our population.