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Treatment of Postmenopausal Osteoporosis With Calcitriol or Calcium
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1992Osteoporosis is a common problem whose management is controversial. To evaluate the efficacy and safety of calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis, we conducted a three-year prospective, multicenter, single-blind study in 622 women who had one or more vertebral compression fractures. The women were randomly
M W, Tilyard +3 more
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Calcium Salts for the Treatment of Chills
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1980To the Editor. —While reading the study of Burks et al1showing that meperidine could stop the chills and fever caused by amphotericin B, I was reminded of a report by Beeson and Hoagland2published 40 years ago on the use of calcium chloride to stop chills. They slowly administered 10 mL of a 10% calcium chloride solution intravenously during 35 chills,
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Calcium in the treatment of dysmenorrhea
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1934Abstract Of 49 cases of essential dysmenorrhea treated with calcium, or calcium and viosterol, 33 or 67.3 per cent were greatly benefited; 16 or 32.7 per cent seemed to have no relief. The symptom of bruising easily seems to indicate, in cases of essential dysmenorrhea, that a more favorable response to calcium therapy may be expected than in cases ...
Ruth E. Boynton, E.C. Hartley
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Pharmacologic Treatment of Calcium Calculi
Urologic Clinics of North America, 1987Selective pharmacologic therapy of calcium nephrolithiasis is highly effective in preventing new stone formation. A remission rate of greater than 80 per cent and overall reduction in individual stone formation rate of greater than 90 per cent can be obtained in patients with calcium nephrolithiasis.
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Calcium antagonists in the treatment of sudden deafness
Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, 1986In the treatment of patients with sudden deafness, we found no significant difference between an oral calcium antagonist (nifedipine) and intravenous naftidrofuryl given concomitantly with vitamin A, vitamin E, and zinc. This prospective randomized study in 50 patients again shows that recovery to useful hearing levels tends to be spontaneous and ...
W, Mann, C, Beck, C, Beck
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Calcium in the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis
Journal of Internal Medicine, 1992Osteoporotic fractures have many sources. Low bone mass is one such, and inadequate calcium intake, in turn, is one of the causes of low bone mass. Calcium intake may be inadequate because it is low in its own right or, even if ‘normal’, it may not be sufficient to compensate for exaggerated obligatory losses.
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Calcium-channel blockers in the treatment of migraine
The American Journal of Cardiology, 1985According to classic theory, a migraine attack is initiated by cerebrovascular spasm followed by extracranial vasodilatation. Results of recent studies support this theory and suggest that cerebral blood flow during the initial phase of migraine symptoms is, in fact, decreased and this decrease probably leads to ischemia and hypoxia.
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Calcium antagonists in the treatment of arterial hypertension
American Heart Journal, 1993Calcium antagonists are widely used antihypertensive agents whose hemodynamic effects consist of a reduction in blood pressure and peripheral vascular resistance that is associated, in case of short-term administration, with a reflex increase in heart rate and cardiac output.
G, Parati, G, Mancia
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Calcium Carbimide in the Treatment of Primary Hyperoxaluria
New England Journal of Medicine, 1967A DEFECT in the transamination of glyoxalate has been suggested as the metabolic abnormality responsible for the increased rate of oxalate synthesis in patients with primary hyperoxaluria (Fig. 1).1 Some of this excess oxalate combines with calcium to form insoluble deposits in a variety of tissues, resulting, in the kidney, in extensive scarring and ...
C C, Solomons, S I, Goodman, C M, Riley
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Archives of Internal Medicine, 1924
Meyer and Cohn,1in 1911, studied the effect of various salts on the weight and mineral balance in normal infants. They found that by giving calcium salts they could cause a decrease in weight due to water loss. In the case of calcium chlorid, they found that the calcium ion seemed to be largely excreted in the stool, while the chlorin ion was excreted ...
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Meyer and Cohn,1in 1911, studied the effect of various salts on the weight and mineral balance in normal infants. They found that by giving calcium salts they could cause a decrease in weight due to water loss. In the case of calcium chlorid, they found that the calcium ion seemed to be largely excreted in the stool, while the chlorin ion was excreted ...
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