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Dive into the research topics where Bengt Y. Nilsson is active.

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Featured researches published by Bengt Y. Nilsson.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1995

Results of rectocele repair. A prospective study.

Anders Mellgren; Bo Anzén; Bengt Y. Nilsson; Claes Johansson; Anders Dolk; Peter Gillgren; Staffan Bremmer; Bo Holmström

PURPOSE: This study was designed to evaluate the results of rectocele repair and parameters that might be useful in selecting patients for this operation. METHODS: Twentyfive patients with symptom-giving rectoceles were prospectively evaluated with a standardized questionnaire, physical examination, defecography, colon transit studies, anorectal manometry, and electrophysiology. Patients underwent posterior colporrhaphy and perineorrhaphy. They were followed postoperatively (mean, 1.0 year) with the same questionnaire, physical examination, defecography, anorectal manometry, and electrophysiology. RESULTS: Constipation had improved postoperatively in 21 of 24 constipated patients (88 percent). At postoperative follow-up 13 patients (52 percent) had no constipation symptoms, 8 (32 percent) had occasional symptoms, and 4 (16 percent) had symptoms more than once per week. Four patients with rectocele at preoperative defecography, but not at physical examination, had favorable outcomes following surgery. The majority of patients not using vaginal digitalization preoperatively had improved with respect to constipation. All patients with pathologic transit studies had various degrees of constipation postoperatively. Constipation was not improved in two of five patients with preoperative paradoxic sphincter reaction. CONCLUSIONS: Rectocele is one cause of constipation that can be treated with good results. Preoperative use of vaginal digitalization is not mandatory for a good postoperative result. Defecography is an important complement to physical examination. Patients with pathologic transit study might have a less favorable outcome of rectocele repair with respect to constipation. More studies about the significance of paradoxic sphincter reaction in these patients are indicated.


Epilepsia | 1992

Nonconvulsive Status Epilepticus in Adults: Thirty‐Two Consecutive Patients from a General Hospital Population

Torbjörn Tomson; Ulla Lindbom; Bengt Y. Nilsson

Summary: We studied all adult patients who between 1984 and 1989 were initially diagnosed at our hospital as having nonconvulsive status epilepticus. Thirty‐two patients fulfilled the criteria, which included ictal EEG recordings. The annual incidence was 1.5 in 100,000 inhabitants. The median age at onset of status was 51 years. Ten patients had status as their first epileptic manifestation, but most patients had a previous history of epilepsy. Median duration of epilepsy at onset of status was 4 years. Fourteen patients had focal ictal seizure activity on EEG and thus met the criteria for complex partial status. Eighteen patients had generalized seizure activity on EEG, but only 6 of these had a history of absence epilepsy or juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. None had Lennox‐Gastaut syndrome. The clinical features of status in the remaining 12 patients were in some respects similar to those of the patients with complex partial status. We hypothesize that the EEG seizure activity in these patients may have been generalized from an initial focus.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1992

Association between rectocele and paradoxical sphincter response

Claes Johansson; Bengt Y. Nilsson; Bo Holmström; Anders Dolk; Anders Mellgren

Rectocele as well as paradoxical sphincter reaction may lead to rectal emptying difficulties and outlet obstruction. Forty-one patients with emptying disturbances and rectocele were investigated with defecography, anorectal manometry, colon transit time, and electromyography. Twenty-nine patients (71 percent) had concomitant paradoxical sphincter reaction, and 13 of these also had increased colon transit time. The functional results after surgical treatment of rectocele are not always satisfactory, probably because patients often have several causes for their emptying disturbances. It is emphasized that careful preoperative investigations are important before surgical treatment of rectocele in patients with emptying difficulties.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1990

Interactions in the renal and biliary elimination of digoxin : stereoselective difference between quinine and quinidine

Ann Hedman; Bo Angelin; Annie Arvidsson; R. Dahlqvist; Bengt Y. Nilsson

The interactions between digoxin and quinine and quinidine that affect the renal and biliary clearances of digoxin were investigated in eight healthy subjects. Digoxin (0.5 to 0.75 mg/day) was given alone and with concomitant administration of quinine (750 mg/day) to reach a steady‐state level. In four of the subjects, the study was repeated by administration of equimolar doses of the diastereoisomer quinidine together with digoxin, enabling a within‐subject comparison of the effects of the two isomers on digoxin clearance. The biliary excretion of digoxin was studied by use of a modified duodenal marker perfusion technique. A marked reduction was found in the steady‐state biliary clearance of digoxin from control value 134 ± 57 ml/min (mean ± SD) to 87 ± 39 ml/min during treatment with quinine (p < 0.05) and from 95 ± 24 to 55 ± 27 ml/min during treatment with quinidine (p < 0.01; n = 4). Quinidine reduced the renal clearance of digoxin (155 ± 26 versus 110 ± 21 ml/min) (p < 0.05; n = 4), whereas quinine had no such effect (177 ± 40 versus 185 ± 53 ml/min; not significant). These findings explain the difference in magnitude between quinidine and quinine in regard to the interaction with digoxin and imply a different degree of stereoselectivity for these isomers in the renal and biliary secretory systems of digoxin.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1991

Digoxin-verapamil interaction: Reduction of biliary but not renal digoxin clearance in humans

Ann Hedman; Bo Angelin; Annie Arvidsson; Olof Beck; R. Dahlqvist; Bengt Y. Nilsson; Margareta Olsson; Karin Schenck-Gustafsson

The interaction between digoxin and verapamil was studied in six patients (mean age ± SD, 61 ± 5 years) with chronic atrial fibrillation. The effects of adding verapamil (240 mg/day) on steady‐state plasma concentrations and renal and biliary clearances of digoxin were studied in a crossover manner. The biliary clearance of digoxin was determined by a duodenal perfusion technique. Verapamil induced a 44% increase in steady‐state plasma concentrations of digoxin, from 0.80 ± 0.24 to 1.15 ± 0.40 nmol/L (p < 0.01). The biliary clearance of digoxin decreased by 43%, from 187 ± 89 to 101 ± 55 ml/min (p < 0.05), in the presence of verapamil, whereas the renal clearance was unaffected (153 ±31 versus 173 ± 51 ml/min; difference not significant). Our results indicate that the main inhibitory effect of verapamil on digoxin elimination is on the biliary route.


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 2003

Obstetric sphincter tears and anal incontinence: an observational follow-up study

Jan Zetterström; Annika López; Bo Holmström; Bengt Y. Nilsson; Åke Tisell; Bo Anzén; Anders Mellgren

Background.  Persistent defects after primary sphincter repair and occult sphincter tears are common after vaginal deliveries. Anal incontinence may be associated with these morphological defects.


International Urogynecology Journal | 2001

Durability of Success after Rectocele Repair

Annika López; B. Anzén; S. Bremmer; A. Mellgren; Bengt Y. Nilsson; J. Zetterström; Bo Holmström

Abstract: The purpose of the study was to determine the durability of success after rectocele repair and to evaluate parameters that might influence long-term results. Twenty-five patients with rectocele were prospectively evaluated both clinically and physiologically. Follow-up was performed twice, at 1 and 5.1 years postoperatively. Twenty-four patients had a long-term follow-up; 21/23 patients (91%) with preoperative symptoms of rectal emptying difficulty reported improvement of their symptoms and 9 of 12 (75%) with preoperative symptoms of pelvic heaviness reported relief at long-term follow-up. All 5 patients with preoperative pathologic transit study had various degrees of rectal emptying difficulty at long-term follow-up. Three of 5 patients with preoperative paradoxical sphincter reaction (PSR) at electromyography (EMG) reported improvement of the symptoms of rectal emptying difficulty at long-term follow-up. Surgery for rectocele is associated with improved symptoms in a majority of patients which are sustained long term. Patients with pathologic transit study may have a less favorable symptomatic outcome. The clinical significance of PSR needs further study.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1989

Serum prolactin during status epilepticus.

Torbjörn Tomson; Ulla Lindbom; Bengt Y. Nilsson; E. Svanborg; Dan E.H. Andersson

The serum concentration of prolactin is frequently increased after single epileptic seizures and has therefore been used as a method to differentiate between hysterical attacks and epileptic seizures. We determined plasma prolactin concentrations in fifteen patients with status epilepticus. Seven patients had absence status, five complex partial and three generalised tonic-clonic status epilepticus. Prolactin levels were normal in all patients which indicates that, in contrast to single seizures, status epilepticus is not associated with an increase in serum prolactin.


Acta Orthopaedica | 2013

Tourniquet cuff pressure and nerve injury in knee arthroplasty in a bloodless field: a neurophysiological study.

Charlotta Olivecrona; Richard Blomfeldt; Sari Ponzer; Benjamin Ribalta Stanford; Bengt Y. Nilsson

Background and purpose Tourniquet-related nerve injuries remain a concern in orthopedic surgery. The cuff pressures used today are generally lower, and therefore a decreasing incidence of peripheral nerve injuries might also be expected. However, there have been few neurophysiological studies describing the outcome after bloodless field surgery. We describe the results of neurophysiological examinations and report the incidence of nerve injuries after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in a bloodless field. Patients and methods This study was part of a prospective, randomized controlled clinical trial in patients scheduled for TKA in a bloodless field. 20 consecutive patients were enrolled. Electroneurography (ENeG) and quantitative sensory testing (QST) of thermal thresholds were performed on day 3. These tests were repeated 2 months after surgery when electromyography (EMG) with a concentric-needle electrode was also performed. Results The mean tourniquet cuff pressure was 237 (SD 33) mmHg. Electromyographic signs of denervation were found in 1 patient, who also had the highest cuff pressure in the study population (294 mmHg). The sensory nerve response amplitudes were lower in the operated leg on day 3; otherwise, the neurophysiological examinations showed no differences between the legs. Interpretation When low tourniquet cuff pressures are used the risk of nerve injury is minor.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 1999

Valproate monotherapy in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: dose-related effects on electroencephalographic and other neurophysiologic tests.

Anders Sundqvist; Bengt Y. Nilsson; Torbjörn Tomson

A neurophysiologic test battery (consisting of a 24-hour, seven-channel electroencephalogram [EEG], EEG spectral analysis, multiple sleep latency test, visual evoked potentials, critical flicker fusion, and visual contrast sensitivity) was administered twice to 16 patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) in a double-blind, randomized, crossover study comparing two daily doses of sodium valproate (VPA), 1000 mg and 2000 mg. Clinical observation time was 6 months for each dose. Mean total VPA concentration during low-dose treatment was 470.4 mmol/L and during high-dose treatment was 700.0 mmol/L. Ten patients had seizures during low-dose treatment, but only three of these showed spike-wave activity on EEGs. During high-dose treatment, nine patients had seizures; five of these had spike-wave activity. EEG power spectrum did not change between doses. The other tests also showed no change between doses. Our results suggested that EEG and our selection of other neurophysiologic tests were of limited value for monitoring seizure frequency and clinical effects of VPA.

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Anders Mellgren

University of Illinois at Chicago

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