Tag: 19/6/23

Shining a New Light on Tranexamic Acid for Trauma Care

A new study from Australia, New Zealand and Germany published in the New England Journal of Medicine raises important questions about the success or otherwise of using tranexamic acid in trauma. 

Tranexamic acid is commonly used to limit bleeding during surgery. However, its usefulness in emergency settings as a pre-emptive strike in life-threatening bleeding has been controversial, and recent studies have provided contradictory results about whether or not it saves lives or causes dangerous blood clotting. 

The Pre-hospital Antifibrinolytics for Traumatic Coagulopathy and Haemorrhage (PATCH-Trauma) Study was designed to solve this dilemma. Led by Monash University and the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group, it is one of the largest clinical trials ever conducted where treatment was given at the roadside, in an ambulance or in a helicopter prior to reaching hospital. 

It involved 1310 severely injured patients treated by 15 ambulance services and 21 trauma centres in Australia, New Zealand and Germany, taking eight years to complete. 

In addition to all the usual care, patients were randomly assigned to receive pre-hospital tranexamic acid or an inactive placebo. The results showed that for every 100 patients allocated to receive tranexamic acid, there were approximately four extra survivors at six months, but all were severely-disabled and highly-dependent on carers. 

The lead investigator, Professor Russell Gruen, now Dean of the College of Health and Medicine at the Australian National University, described this as a landmark study in trauma care. “It shows it’s not enough to find out only whether treatments save lives or not – quality of life and the long-term outcomes of care also matter,” Professor Gruen said.

Monash University Professor Stephen Bernard, Medical Advisor to Ambulance Victoria and lead for the Australian arm of the study, praised the ambulance services involved. “The PATCH-Trauma Study is further proof that ambulance professionals can conduct rigorous clinical trials in very sick patients and in extremely challenging circumstances,” he said. 

As to whether tranexamic acid should be used for trauma patients, Professor Gruen is circumspect. “Because the drug needs to be given before severely injured patients can make an informed decision, further work is needed to see if we can identify patients who are more likely to survive with a favourable functional outcome if they are given tranexamic acid,” he said. “However, the PATCH-Trauma Study gives us confidence that critical care is possible well before patients get to hospital.” 

Source: EurekAlert!

Endocrine-disrupting Chemicals may Raise Risk of Cognitive Disorders in Future Generations

Adverse cognitive effects linked to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) exposure, a type of endocrine-disrupting chemical (EDC), have the potential to be passed down through generations, according to an animal study being presented Thursday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, USA.

PCBs can mimic the effect of oestrogen on the body, contributing to a variety of neuroendocrine, metabolic and reproductive problems.

“Endocrine-disrupting chemicals present in our food, air, water and personal products may cause cognitive-behavioural disorders like attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder or overeating in future generations,” said Emily N. Hilz, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas at Austin.

To explore this further, Hilz and colleagues administered a common PCB mixture called Aroclor 1221 to pregnant female rats. The adults (n=40), their offspring (n=80), and their future grandchildren (n=80) were all tested on behavioural tasks to assess pleasure-seeking, ability to pay attention, and cognitive flexibility.

“The grandchildren of rats exposed to EDCs while pregnant performed significantly worse on these tasks, showing impaired cognitive function and increased pleasure-seeking,” Hilz said. “This suggests EDCs program potential cognitive disorders or behavioural problems that only emerge in later generations.”

Grandchildren of rats that were exposed to the PCB mixture were more interested in eating for pleasure, according to the results of the sucrose preference test. While all of the tested animals preferred the sucrose solution to water, the grandchildren of mothers exposed to the PCB mixture consumed more of the sucrose solution.

The same rats had an impaired ability to switch between tasks or learn new rules. However, only the male grandchildren were more likely to become fixated with a visual cue, which is common in disorders such as ADHD.

The PCB mixture impaired different aspects of cognitive behavior between male and female rats, depending on the life stage when they were exposed. It’s not yet clear which biological systems might be driving this.

“Our findings suggest regulating EDCs in industrial and consumer products could reduce the prevalence of certain cognitive or behavioural disorders in the future,” Hilz said.

Source: The Endocrine Society

Sports Concussions Increase the Risk of Being Re-injured

Photo by John Torcasio on Unsplash

Concussions are commonplace in contact sports at junior and senior levels. Now, the investigators of a study published in the Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport are suggesting extended recovery times may be needed for youth athletes suffering from head trauma. The new research shows a concussion can increase future injury risk by 50%.

The world-first study from the University of South Australia tracked and evaluated the long-term impact of concussion and subsequent injury risk of 1455 sub-elite junior Australian rules football players.

This builds on previous UniSA research that found an approximate 1.5-fold increased risk of injury of sub-elite Australian rules football players returning from an injury, compared to those with no injury.

Tracking injuries over a seven-season period, researchers found that football players who suffered a concussion were also about 1.5 times more likely to be reinjured in the future when compared to players who had never been injured. This increased risk was the same as players returning from upper and lower limb injuries.

The finding comes ahead of the Australian Senate’s report into concussion injuries, and follows the AFL’s announcement for a $25 million study into the long-term effects of concussions and head knocks.

In the AFL, concussions are one of the most common injuries, with an average of six concussions every 1000 hours played, which involve around 70 to 80 male players every year.

In junior elite football as well as AFL and AFLW, the guidelines for concussion say that the earliest a player can return to play post-concussion is 12 days after the injury, after following the graded progression through a return-to-play program.

Lead researcher, UniSA’s Dr Hunter Bennett, says the significant and elevated risk of injury after a concussion may suggest a longer recovery time is required for some players to better recover before returning to play.

“The current recommendation of 12 days post-concussion may not be sufficient to allow full recovery in elite under-18 footballers,” Dr Bennett says.

It may also indicate that the physical qualities impacted by concussion should be assessed more thoroughly before an athlete is cleared to return to the sport.

“Concussion is a common injury in Australian rules football that can lead to impairments in balance, coordination, reaction time, and decision making – and these impairments can increase the risk of other injuries if an athlete returns to play before being fully recovered.”

A recent consensus statement on concussion in sport also indicates that children and teenagers may take up to four-weeks to recover from a sport related concussion.

“Concussions are a unique injury that occur without muscle tissue damage, instead impacting aspects of motor control,” Dr Bennett says.

“Recurrent injuries can significantly impact team success, player health, and career longevity.

“In elite sports, there is the potential for young athletes to overplay their readiness to return to sport after an injury, as they worry that missing games can exclude them from senior drafting or competition.

“When we know that athletes have a greater risk of another injury post a concussion, it suggests we need unique and careful rehabilitation strategies to monitor when an athlete is fully recovered and ready to return to play.”

Researchers say that future research should seek to identify optimal rehabilitation and injury prevention strategies for athletes who suffer from concussions.

Source: University of South Australia

Oestriol Shown to Reverse Cortex Damage from MS in Mouse Model

Source: Pixabay CC0

Treating a mouse model of multiple sclerosis with the pregnancy hormone oestriol reversed the breakdown of myelin in the brain’s cortex, a key region affected in multiple sclerosis, according to a new UCLA Health study.

In multiple sclerosis, inflammation spurs the immune system to strip away the protective myelin coating around nerve fibres in the brain’s cortex, hampering electrical signals sent and received by the brain. Atrophy of the cortex in MS patients is associated with permanent worsening of disability, such as cognitive decline, visual impairment, weakness and sensory loss.

No currently available treatments for MS can repair damage to myelin. Instead, these treatments target inflammation to reduce symptom flare-ups and new nerve tissue scarring. Previous UCLA-led research found that oestriol, a type of oestrogen hormone produced in pregnancy, reduced brain atrophy and improved cognitive function in MS patients.

In the new study, researchers treated a mouse model of MS with oestriol and found that it prevented brain atrophy and induced remyelination in the cortex, indicating that the treatment can repair damage caused by MS, rather than just slow the destruction of myelin.

This is the first study to identify a treatment that could repair myelin in the cortex, undoing some of the damage caused by MS.

Source: University of California – Los Angeles Health Sciences

Regular Probiotic Use Could go a Long Way in Preventing Diarrhoea and Illness

Gut Microbiome. Credit Darryl Leja National Human Genome Research Institute National Institutes Of Health

Diarrhoeal disease outbreaks are on the increase in South Africa owing to unsafe or unhygienic water sources, which is being compounded by the effects of loadshedding.Equally, the deadly floods that affected particularly the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal in April last year damaged an already ailing sewerage and water system, with millions of litres of untreated sewage spilling onto beaches, rivers, harbours and the ocean in and around Durban.2

This has resulted in an increased incidence of gastroenteritis, which is caused by intestinal infection owing to the contamination of food, water or hands.3 Acute-onset vomiting and diarrhoea is second only to respiratory illnesses as a cause of childhood deaths worldwide.3

Diarrhoea accounts for 19% of deaths of under-fives in South Africa and for 46% on the African continent.4 Acute diarrhoea has several risks and complications, and may lead to life-threatening dehydration and electrolyte disturbances.When diarrhoea is not halted, there is a risk of disturbed digestion and absorption of nutrients with nutritional deterioration.3

Guidelines published in the South African Medical Journal (SAMJ) state that acute diarrhoea is predominantly a problem of fluids and feeding – both being heavily dependent on the caregiver’s understanding and reactions.3

It is vital that healthcare practitioners and caregivers understand the ‘what’ and the ‘how’ of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) and re-feeding, and that they are given guidance on the need to seek further help in the event of the following:3

• Ongoing vomiting despite small fluid sips, especially if associated with abdominal distension or pain

• Persisting fever after 24 hours of ORT

• Increasing lethargy and failure to feed

• Deteriorating hydration and failure to pass urine

• Presence of blood in the stools

• Diarrhoea persisting for more than 1 week.

Momeena Omarjee, Consumer Healthcare Country Head: Scientific Affairs, at Sanofi South Africa, outlines an ambitious campaign by Sanofi in partnership with non-profit organisation (NPO), Save the Children, to impact over 2 000 000 lives by 2025, through education on hygiene and nutrition and improved access to water.

“Sanofi is committed to ensuring that no child dies of a preventable disease. Since October 2022, Sanofi has donated 15 water tanks and 14 hand-washing stations to Early Childhood Development centres in KwaZulu-Natal communities in need, to ensure access to clean, drinkable water. This will help to curb the prevalence of diarrhoea and diarrhoea-associated deaths in children under five, which are entirely avoidable,” says Omarjee.

“Children living in poverty-stricken environments are approximately 10 times more likely to die from diarrhoea than their more privileged counterparts.Providing adequate access to clean, drinkable water and quality early childcare and development will impact the lives and health of so many vulnerable children,” says Omarjee.

Several studies have shown that probiotics shorten the duration of diarrhoea and prevent recurrence of other episodes.6 Furthermore, probiotics can prevent diarrhoea from infection in infants with malnutrition.6

The World Gastroenterology Organisation states that oral administration of probiotics shortens the duration of acute diarrheal illness in children by approximately 1 day.7 There is also evidence of efficacy in adults or children who are receiving antibiotic therapy, for prevention of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea.7

“Healthcare professionals should encourage parents to give children a daily, regular probiotic, which could go a long way in preventing diarrhoea and illness,” concludes Omarjee.

References

  1. Ebrahim, N. Western Cape Municipality asks residents to boil water as load shedding hits treatment plants. News24, 16 January 2023, available from: https://www.news24.com/fin24/economy/municipality-voices-concerns-over-water-quality-and-sewage-spills-amid-load-shedding-20230116, accessed 29 May 2023.
  2. Khan, AJ. Water worries hang over Durban months after heavy flooding. The Guardian, 9 January 2023, available from: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/09/water-quality-worries-hang-over-durban-months-after-deadly-flooding, accessed 29 May 2023
  3. Wittenberg, DF. 2012. Management guidelines for acute infective diarrhoea/gastroenteritis in infants. SAMJ, vol. 102, No. 2.
  4. Awotione, O.F., et al. 2016. Systematic review: Diarrhoea in children under five years of age in South Africa (1997-2014). Tropical Medicine and International Health, 21(9), 1060-1070.
  5. Chola, L., et al. 2015. Reducing diarrhoea deaths in South Africa: costs and effects of scaling up essential interventions to prevent and treat diarrhoea in under five children. BMC Public Health, 15, 394.
  6. Solis, B. et al. 2002. Probiotics as a help in children suffering from malnutrition and diarrhoea. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 56, S57-59.
  7. World Gastroenterology Organisation. 2017. Global Guidelines: Probiotics and prebiotics, available from: https://www.worldgastroenterology.org/UserFiles/file/guidelines/probiotics-and-prebiotics-english-2017.pdf, accessed 29 May 2023.