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  1. Article ; Online: Possible synergistic effects of hydroxychloroquine and steroids in COVID-19, time for a nuanced approach. Comment on Arshad et al.

    Wiseman, David M

    International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases

    2020  Volume 99, Page(s) 344–345

    MeSH term(s) Azithromycin ; Betacoronavirus ; COVID-19 ; Coronavirus Infections/drug therapy ; Humans ; Hydroxychloroquine ; Pandemics ; Pneumonia, Viral ; SARS-CoV-2 ; COVID-19 Drug Treatment
    Chemical Substances Hydroxychloroquine (4QWG6N8QKH) ; Azithromycin (83905-01-5)
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-08-05
    Publishing country Canada
    Document type Letter ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 1331197-9
    ISSN 1878-3511 ; 1201-9712
    ISSN (online) 1878-3511
    ISSN 1201-9712
    DOI 10.1016/j.ijid.2020.07.064
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Possible synergistic effects of hydroxychloroquine and steroids in COVID-19, time for a nuanced approach. Comment on Arshad et al.

    Wiseman, David M.

    International Journal of Infectious Diseases

    2020  Volume 99, Page(s) 344–345

    Keywords Microbiology (medical) ; Infectious Diseases ; General Medicine ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher Elsevier BV
    Publishing country us
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 1331197-9
    ISSN 1878-3511 ; 1201-9712
    ISSN (online) 1878-3511
    ISSN 1201-9712
    DOI 10.1016/j.ijid.2020.07.064
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: Disorders of adhesions or adhesion-related disorder: monolithic entities or part of something bigger--CAPPS?

    Wiseman, David M

    Seminars in reproductive medicine

    2008  Volume 26, Issue 4, Page(s) 356–368

    Abstract: The purpose of this article is to review progress in the field of abdominopelvic adhesions and the validity of its two underlying assumptions: (1) The formation of adhesions results in infertility, bowel obstruction, or other complications. Reducing or ... ...

    Abstract The purpose of this article is to review progress in the field of abdominopelvic adhesions and the validity of its two underlying assumptions: (1) The formation of adhesions results in infertility, bowel obstruction, or other complications. Reducing or avoiding adhesions will curb these sequelae. (2) "Adhesions" is a monolithic entity to be tackled without regard to any other condition. Evidence is discussed to validate the first assumption. We reviewed progress in the field by examining hospital data. We found a growing trend in the number and cost of discharges for just two adhesion-related diagnoses, and the low usage of adhesion barriers appears in at most 5% of appropriate procedures. Data from an Internet-based survey suggested that the problem may be partly due to ignorance among patients and physicians about adhesions and their prevention. Two other surveys of patients visiting the adhesions.org Web site defined more fully adhesion-related disorder (ARD). The first survey ( N = 466) described a patient with chronic pain, gastrointestinal disturbances, an average of nine bowel obstructions, and an inability to work or maintain family or social relationships. The second survey (687 U.S. women) found a high (co-) prevalence of abdominal or pelvic adhesions (85%), chronic abdominal or pelvic pain (69%), irritable bowel syndrome (55%), recurrent bowel obstruction (44%), endometriosis (40%), and interstitial cystitis (29%). This pattern suggests that although "adhesions" may start out as a monolithic entity, an adhesions patient may develop related conditions (ARD) until they merge into an independent entity where they are practically indistinguishable from patients with multiple symptoms originating from other abdominopelvic conditions such as pelvic or bladder pain. Rather than use terms that constrain the required multidisciplinary, biopsychosocial approach to these patients by the paradigms of the specialty related to the patient's initial symptom set, the term complex abdominopelvic and pain syndrome (CAPPS) is proposed. It is essential to understand not only the pathogenesis of the "initiating" conditions but also how they progress to CAPPS. In our ARD sample, not only was the frequency of women with hysterectomies (56%) higher than expected (21 to 33%), but also the rates of the "initiating" conditions was 40 to 400% higher in patients with hysterectomies than in those without. This may represent increased surgical trauma or the loss of protection against oxidative stress. Related was the higher frequency of ARD patients reporting hemochromatosis (HC; 5%) than expected (~0.5%) and the higher rates (20 to 700%) of initiating conditions in patients with HC than in those without HC. Together with findings related to the toxicity of Intergel, these findings raise the possibility that heterozygotes for genes regulating oxidative stress are at greater risk of developing surgical complications as well as more severe and progressive conditions such as CAPPS.
    MeSH term(s) Awareness/physiology ; Disease Progression ; Female ; Gynecologic Surgical Procedures/adverse effects ; Humans ; Patient Education as Topic ; Pelvic Pain/complications ; Pelvic Pain/etiology ; Pelvic Pain/therapy ; Peritoneal Diseases/complications ; Peritoneal Diseases/etiology ; Peritoneal Diseases/prevention & control ; Peritoneal Diseases/therapy ; Postoperative Complications/etiology ; Postoperative Complications/therapy ; Risk Factors ; Syndrome ; Tissue Adhesions/complications ; Tissue Adhesions/etiology ; Tissue Adhesions/prevention & control ; Tissue Adhesions/therapy ; Treatment Outcome ; Uterine Diseases/complications ; Uterine Diseases/etiology ; Uterine Diseases/prevention & control ; Uterine Diseases/therapy
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2008-07
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2042479-6
    ISSN 1526-4564 ; 1526-8004
    ISSN (online) 1526-4564
    ISSN 1526-8004
    DOI 10.1055/s-0028-1082394
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Effective post-exposure prophylaxis of Covid-19 is associated with use of hydroxychloroquine: Prospective re-analysis of a public dataset incorporating novel data.

    Wiseman, David M / Kory, Pierre / Saidi, Samir A / Mazzucco, Dan

    medRxiv

    Abstract: BACKGROUND: A recent trial (NCT04308668) found that post-exposure prophylaxis with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was associated with a reduced incidence of Covid-19 by 17% overall; 36% in younger subjects, 31% in household contacts and 49% given within one ... ...

    Abstract BACKGROUND: A recent trial (NCT04308668) found that post-exposure prophylaxis with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was associated with a reduced incidence of Covid-19 by 17% overall; 36% in younger subjects, 31% in household contacts and 49% given within one day. To understand these trends, we prospectively re-analyzed the released dataset. METHODS: Our protocol conformed to the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT). We compared the incidence of Covid-19 after HCQ or placebo, stratifying primarily by time to drug receipt, age and gender. RESULTS: Requesting additional data, we found that 52% of subjects received medication 1-2 days after the intended overnight delivery; 19% of them outside the intended four-day window from exposure. After re-analysis, there was a reduced incidence of Covid-19 associated with HCQ compared with placebo (9.6% vs. 16.5%) when received up to 3 days (Early) after exposure (RR 0.58, 95%CI 0.35 - 0.97; p=0.044; NNT 14.5) but not later (Late) (RR 1.22, 95%CI 0.72 - 2.04). We found a significant HCQ-associated reduction in subjects 18 to 45 years old associated with Early (RR 0.53, 95%CI 0.29-0.97; p=0.0448, NNT 11.5) but not Late (RR 1.02, 95%CI 0.55-1.89) prophylaxis, attenuated in older subjects (RR 0.75, 95%CI 0-27-2.05) and by co-morbidities. There were reductions associated with Early prophylaxis in household contacts (RR 0.35, 95%CI 0.13-0.89; p=0.025, NNT 5.7) and Health Care Workers (RR 0.74, 95%CI 0.4-1.38). We did not detect effects of gender, folate, zinc, or ascorbic acid. CONCLUSIONS: Using novel data with a prospective post hoc re-analysis, hydroxychloroquine, in an age-dependent manner, was associated with reduced illness compatible with Covid-19 or confirmed infection when supplied for post-exposure prophylaxis between 1 and 3 days after high-risk or moderate-risk exposure. This finding warrants prospective confirmation. Registered with the Open Science Framework (last revised September 27, 2020, osf.io/fqtnw).
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-02
    Publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
    Document type Article ; Online
    DOI 10.1101/2020.11.29.20235218
    Database COVID19

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  5. Article ; Online: Preventing disease after exposure to COVID-19 using hydroxychloroquine: A summary of a protocol for exploratory re-analysis of age and time-nuanced effects.

    Wiseman, David M / Kory, Pierre / Mazzucco, Dan / Ramesh, Mayur S

    medRxiv

    Abstract: BACKGROUND: A recently published randomized trial (Boulware et al., 2020, NCT04308668) of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for post-exposure prophylaxis found a reduction in Covid-19 of 17%. In the context of ambitious powering to detect a 50% reduction, this ... ...

    Abstract BACKGROUND: A recently published randomized trial (Boulware et al., 2020, NCT04308668) of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for post-exposure prophylaxis found a reduction in Covid-19 of 17%. In the context of ambitious powering to detect a 50% reduction, this non-statistically significant finding could translate to a reduction of 22,000/130,828 cases (CDC 8/12/20) among US health care workers (HCW), impacting trajectory and resource utilization models that drive decisions on lockdowns and social distancing. Data found only in the appendix of Boulware et al. suggested greater differences in the effect of HCQ among sub-groups. There were reductions (36%) in younger (<35 years) and increases (110%) in older (>50 years) subjects. Our preliminary analysis revealed a significant negative correlation (slope -0.211, CI -0.328-0.094, p=0.016) between treatment lag and disease reduction, reaching 49% when initiated within one day (RR 0.51, CI 0.176-1.46, p=0.249). There were also differences in disease reduction by HCQ by type of exposure (HCW - 8% vs. household contacts - 31%; RR 0.691, CI 0.398-1.2). The definitions of exposure severity did not discriminate between the numbers or duration (> 10 minutes) of exposures. Differences between exposure types may result from younger HCW and higher risks in less trained household contacts with little access to advanced PPE. The ex-protocol use of zinc and ascorbic acid were likely confounders, as was the possibly active folate placebo. Exploratory reanalysis of the raw dataset may inform an age- and stage- nuanced approach to COVID-19 using HCQ testable by prospective studies and may provide insight into the various proposed mechanisms of HCQ. OBJECTIVES: To conduct an exploratory re-analysis of the de-identified raw dataset from a randomized study of the use of HCQ for post-exposure prophylaxis of COVID-19 with view to further defining: a) The time dependent effect of HCQ, b) The age dependent effect of HCQ; c) The sub-stratification of time- and age-dependent effects by exposure type and risk level, as well as by the use of zinc and ascorbic acid. d) The design of future clinical trials to test the hypotheses generated by this study. METHODS: Should granularity of data (by age, time-lag, level and type of exposure) be greater than that originally reported, Fisher Exact test will be used to compare the incidence of COVID-19 in HCQ- and control groups, for each sub-group stratification. Since the degree of loss of data granularity due to de-identification is yet unknown, exploratory analyses involving other demographic characteristics cannot be planned. Where sufficient data granularity exists, univariate regression analyses will be conducted to examine the effect of age- and time lag on any effect of HCQ. The possibility will be explored of conducting multivariate Cox regression analyses with propensity score matching to examine observational data relating to the use of zinc and ascorbic acid. This analysis will be expanded should a dataset from a similarly designed study (Mitja et al., 2020, NCT04304053), with directionally similar results, become available. This protocol was devised using the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) incorporating the WHO Trial Registration Data Set. Study Status: Protocol version 1.1, (August 19 2020) Protocol registered at: OSF Registries August 19 2020 Registration doi: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/9RPYT
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-08-26
    Publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
    Document type Article ; Online
    DOI 10.1101/2020.08.19.20178376
    Database COVID19

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  6. Article ; Online: Registries for anti-adhesion products?

    Wiseman, David M

    Fertility and sterility

    2006  Volume 85, Issue 4, Page(s) e7; author reply e8

    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Humans ; Hyaluronic Acid/adverse effects ; Hyaluronic Acid/therapeutic use ; Rats ; Registries ; Tissue Adhesions/drug therapy ; Tissue Adhesions/pathology
    Chemical Substances Hyaluronic Acid (9004-61-9)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2006-04
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Comment ; Letter
    ZDB-ID 80133-1
    ISSN 1556-5653 ; 0015-0282
    ISSN (online) 1556-5653
    ISSN 0015-0282
    DOI 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2006.01.005
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Registries for anti-adhesion products?

    Wiseman, David M

    Fertility and sterility

    2006  Volume 86, Issue 3, Page(s) 771; author reply 771–2

    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Disease Models, Animal ; Electrocoagulation/adverse effects ; Female ; Ferric Compounds/pharmacology ; Gels ; Glucans/pharmacology ; Glucose/pharmacology ; Hyaluronic Acid/pharmacology ; Isotonic Solutions/pharmacology ; Laparoscopy/adverse effects ; Peritoneum/surgery ; Postoperative Complications/drug therapy ; Postoperative Complications/prevention & control ; Rats ; Rats, Sprague-Dawley ; Registries ; Tissue Adhesions/drug therapy ; Tissue Adhesions/prevention & control
    Chemical Substances Ferric Compounds ; Gels ; Glucans ; Isotonic Solutions ; icodextrin (2NX48Z0A9G) ; Hyaluronic Acid (9004-61-9) ; Glucose (IY9XDZ35W2)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2006-09
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Comparative Study ; Letter ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 80133-1
    ISSN 1556-5653 ; 0015-0282
    ISSN (online) 1556-5653
    ISSN 0015-0282
    DOI 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2006.07.1462
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article: Possible Intergel Reaction Syndrome (pIRS).

    Wiseman, David M

    Annals of surgery

    2006  Volume 244, Issue 4, Page(s) 630–632

    MeSH term(s) Abdominal Abscess/chemically induced ; Animals ; Digestive System Surgical Procedures ; Humans ; Hyaluronic Acid/adverse effects ; Postoperative Complications/chemically induced ; Syndrome
    Chemical Substances Hyaluronic Acid (9004-61-9)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2006-10
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Comment ; Letter
    ZDB-ID 340-2
    ISSN 1528-1140 ; 0003-4932
    ISSN (online) 1528-1140
    ISSN 0003-4932
    DOI 10.1097/01.sla.0000239619.93579.ca
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article: Disorders of Adhesions or Adhesion-Related Disorder: Monolithic Entities or Part of Something Bigger—CAPPS?

    Wiseman, David M

    Seminars in Reproductive Medicine

    2008  Volume 26, Issue 04, Page(s) 356–368

    Abstract: The purpose of this article is to review progress in the field of abdominopelvic adhesions and the validity of its two underlying assumptions: (1) The formation of adhesions results in infertility, bowel obstruction, or other complications. Reducing or ... ...

    Abstract The purpose of this article is to review progress in the field of abdominopelvic adhesions and the validity of its two underlying assumptions: (1) The formation of adhesions results in infertility, bowel obstruction, or other complications. Reducing or avoiding adhesions will curb these sequelae. (2) “Adhesions” is a monolithic entity to be tackled without regard to any other condition. Evidence is discussed to validate the first assumption. We reviewed progress in the field by examining hospital data. We found a growing trend in the number and cost of discharges for just two adhesion-related diagnoses, and the low usage of adhesion barriers appears in at most 5% of appropriate procedures. Data from an Internet-based survey suggested that the problem may be partly due to ignorance among patients and physicians about adhesions and their prevention. Two other surveys of patients visiting the adhesions.org Web site defined more fully ADHESION-RELATED DISORDER (ARD). The first survey (N = 466) described a patient with chronic pain, gastrointestinal disturbances, an average of nine bowel obstructions, and an inability to work or maintain family or social relationships. The second survey (687 U.S. women) found a high (co-) prevalence of abdominal or pelvic adhesions (85%), chronic abdominal or pelvic pain (69%), irritable bowel syndrome (55%), recurrent bowel obstruction (44%), endometriosis (40%), and interstitial cystitis (29%). This pattern suggests that although “adhesions” may start out as a monolithic entity, an adhesions patient may develop related conditions (ARD) until they merge into an independent entity where they are practically indistinguishable from patients with multiple symptoms originating from other abdominopelvic conditions such as pelvic or bladder pain. Rather than use terms that constrain the required multidisciplinary, biopsychosocial approach to these patients by the paradigms of the specialty related to the patient's initial symptom set, the term COMPLEX ABDOMINOPELVIC AND PAIN SYNDROME (CAPPS) is proposed. It is essential to understand not only the pathogenesis of the “initiating” conditions but also how they progress to CAPPS. In our ARD sample, not only was the frequency of women with hysterectomies (56%) higher than expected (21 to 33%), but also the rates of the “initiating” conditions was 40 to 400% higher in patients with hysterectomies than in those without. This may represent increased surgical trauma or the loss of protection against oxidative stress. Related was the higher frequency of ARD patients reporting hemochromatosis (HC; 5%) than expected (~0.5%) and the higher rates (20 to 700%) of initiating conditions in patients with HC than in those without HC. Together with findings related to the toxicity of Intergel, these findings raise the possibility that heterozygotes for genes regulating oxidative stress are at greater risk of developing surgical complications as well as more severe and progressive conditions such as CAPPS.
    Keywords Adhesions ; adhesion-related disorder ; complex abdominopelvic and pain syndrome ; chronic pelvic pain ; hysterectomy ; iron overload ; hemochromatosis ; covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2008-07-01
    Publishing place Stuttgart ; New York
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2042479-6
    ISSN 1526-4564 ; 1526-8004
    ISSN (online) 1526-4564
    ISSN 1526-8004
    DOI 10.1055/s-0028-1082394
    Database Thieme publisher's database

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