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Dive into the research topics where Mogens Hørder is active.

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Featured researches published by Mogens Hørder.


BMJ | 2001

Randomised controlled trial of structured personal care of type 2 diabetes mellitus

Niels de Fine Olivarius; Henning Beck-Nielsen; Anne Helms Andreasen; Mogens Hørder; Poul A. Pedersen

Abstract Objective: To assess the effect of a multifaceted intervention directed at general practitioners on six year mortality, morbidity, and risk factors of patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes. Design: Pragmatic, open, controlled trial with randomisation of practices to structured personal care or routine care; analysis after 6 years. Setting: 311 Danish practices with 474 general practitioners (243 in intervention group and 231 in comparison group). Participants: 874 (90.1%) of 970 patients aged ≥40 years who had diabetes diagnosed in 1989-91 and survived until six year follow up. Intervention: Regular follow up and individualised goal setting supported by prompting of doctors, clinical guidelines, feedback, and continuing medical education. Main outcome measures: Predefined clinical non-fatal outcomes, overall mortality, risk factors, and weight. Results: Predefined non-fatal outcomes and mortality were the same in both groups. The following risk factor levels were lower for intervention patients than for comparison patients (median values): fasting plasma glucose concentration (7.9 v 8.7 mmol/l, P=0.0007), glycated haemoglobin (8.5% v 9.0%, P<0.0001; reference range 5.4-7.4%), systolic blood pressure (145 v 150 mm Hg, P=0.0004), and cholesterol concentration (6.0 v 6.1 mmol/l, P=0.029, adjusted for baseline concentration). Both groups had lost weight since diagnosis (2.6 v 2.0 kg). Metformin was the only drug used more frequently in the intervention group (24% (110/459) v 15% (61/415)).Intervention doctors arranged more follow up consultations, referred fewer patients to diabetes clinics, and set more optimistic goals. Conclusions: In primary care, individualised goals with educational and surveillance support may for at least six years bring risk factors of patients with type 2 diabetes to a level that has been shown to reduce diabetic complications but without weight gain. What is already known on this topic Evidence is increasing that control of hyperglycaemia, hypertension, and dyslipidaemia may postpone the development of diabetic complications in patients with type 2 diabetes Maintaining good control over a long period can be difficult What this study adds Structured individualised personal care with educational and surveillance support for general practitioners reduced levels of risk factors in type 2 diabetic patients after six years Risk factors were reduced to a level that has been shown to have a beneficial effect on diabetic complications Participants also showed modest weight loss


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Independent prognostic value of serum creatine kinase isoenzyme MB mass, cardiac troponin T and myosin light chain levels in suspected acute myocardial infarction: Analysis of 28 months of follow-up in 196 patients

Jan Ravkilde; Henrik Nissen; Mogens Hørder; Kristian Thygesen

OBJECTIVES We sought to determine the incidence and independent prognostic value of increased serum levels of sensitive serologic markers in patients in whom a conventionally diagnosed acute myocardial infarction had been ruled out. BACKGROUND Increased serum levels of creatine kinase (CK) isoenzyme MB mass and cardiac troponin T in patients with unstable angina pectoris are associated with a poor prognosis. METHODS We analyzed data from 196 consecutive patients with suspected acute myocardial infarction, which was later ruled out in 124. Increased serum levels of CK-MB mass, troponin T and myosin light chains were compared with clinical findings, ST-T wave abnormalities and presence of arrhythmias. RESULTS Of the patients in the noninfarction group, 28% had serum CK-MB mass > or = 6 micrograms/liter, 20% had troponin T > or = 0.20 micrograms/liter, and 26% had myosin light chains > or = 0.4 micrograms/liter (discrimination limits). The cardiac event rate (cardiac death, nonfatal acute myocardial infarction) within 28 months was significantly higher in patients in the noninfarction group with elevated marker levels (range 22% to 24%) than in patients with values below these discriminators (range 3% to 5%) but was not significantly different from that in patients with a definite diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (29%). Further, significant predictors of cardiac events were previous myocardial infarction; myocardial infarction or angina pectoris, or both; previous congestive heart failure; ST-T wave abnormalities on admission; a transient ST-T wave shift on serial electrocardiograms (ECGs); recurrent chest pain; and occurrence of supraventricular or ventricular tachycardia, or both, during the 1st 48 h after admission. It was found that all three biochemical markers, in the main, convey independent prognostic information with respect to clinical findings and presence of arrhythmias but not ST-T wave abnormalities on admission or a transient ST-T wave shift on serial ECGs. CONCLUSIONS Increased serum levels of CK-MB mass, troponin T and myosin light chains all detect a subgroup of 25% of patients without acute myocardial infarction who have as poor a prognosis as that of patients with a definite diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction. All three biochemical markers provide similar important independent prognostic information with regard to clinical findings and arrhythmias but add no additional prognostic information once ECG ST-T wave changes are considered.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Effect of Long-Term Monitoring of Glycosylated Hemoglobin Levels in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus

Mogens Lytken Larsen; Mogens Hørder; Erik F. Mogensen

BACKGROUND The value of routine measurements of glycosylated hemoglobin (hemoglobin A1c) in the care of patients with diabetes mellitus is uncertain. We undertook this study to determine whether knowledge of hemoglobin A1c values would result in improved metabolic control in a group of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). METHODS We randomly assigned 240 patients with IDDM to one of two groups that were comparable in age, sex, duration of diabetes, and initial hemoglobin A1c levels. The patients were followed for a year, and the hemoglobin A1c concentration was measured at three-month intervals. The hemoglobin A1c values were used in assessing glycemic control and modifying therapy in one of the two groups. In the other, care givers were not aware of the hemoglobin A1c levels and relied on blood or urine glucose measurements to monitor treatment. RESULTS Among the 222 patients still being followed after one year, the mean hemoglobin A1c value decreased significantly--from 10.1 to 9.5 percent (P less than 0.005)--in the group whose hemoglobin A1c level was monitored (n = 115), whereas the initial and one-year values in the control group (n = 107) were 10.0 and 10.1 percent, respectively. The proportion of patients with poor control, defined as those having a hemoglobin A1c value above 10.0 percent, decreased from 46 to 30 percent (P less than 0.01) in the group whose hemoglobin A1c level was monitored but did not change significantly (45 to 50 percent) in the control group. The patients in the group whose hemoglobin A1c level was monitored were seen and their insulin regimens changed more often, but they were hospitalized for acute care of their diabetes less often than those in the control group. A similar decrease in hemoglobin A1c values occurred in the control group in the following year, when their care givers knew their hemoglobin A1c values. CONCLUSIONS Regular measurements of hemoglobin A1c lead to changes in diabetes treatment and improvement of metabolic control, indicated by a lowering of hemoglobin A1c values.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 1988

Analytical goals for the acceptance of common reference intervals for laboratories throughout a geographical area

E. M. S. Gowans; P. Hyltoft Petersen; Ole Blaabjerg; Mogens Hørder

Analytical goals required for the successful transfer of reference intervals between laboratories within a specified limited geographical area, with a population homogeneous for the quantities, are presented. Diagrams are shown which allow the investigation of the influence of analytical imprecision and bias, both separately and in combination, on the percentage of the population outside each reference limit. Figures to evaluate the effect of population sample size on the size of confidence interval around each reference limit are combined with the diagrams for analytical imprecision and bias. The maximum acceptable percentage of the population outside the limit for the 0.90 confidence interval of each of the means +/- 1.96 s reference limits is 4.6% for a population sample size of 120. Based on this, the maximum acceptable imprecision, with no bias, is 0.6 of the total biological standard deviation (sB) and the maximum acceptable bias, with no imprecision, is 0.25 sB.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 1992

Reference intervals for trace elements in blood: significance of risk factors.

P. Grandjean; G. D. Nielsen; P. J. Jørgensen; Mogens Hørder

A random sample of 100 men and 100 women was examined for whole-blood concentrations of mercury, lead, cadmium and selenium, and the serum concentrations of selenium, nickel, fluoride, aluminium, zinc and copper. Major predictors were sex, hormonal factors (pregnancy, menopause, use of oral contraceptives), age, tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking. Among notable associations, increased blood-mercury was related to the presence of more than four amalgam fillings in the teeth. Blood-mercury correlated with blood-selenium, but a relation to fish intake could only be demonstrated for the former parameter. In women, blood-lead appeared to increase with age, with the highest levels seen after the menopause. Serum-nickel was slightly lower in patients with nickel-related contact eczema. Only the selenium concentrations showed a slight increase in individuals taking mineral supplements. Serum-zinc concentrations decreased considerably during the day. Thus, due to the substantial influence of physiological and environmental factors, individual results must be interpreted in the light of the known predictors for the trace element concentration. However, population-based reference intervals for trace elements in blood are useful to explore geographic and temporal variations.


American Heart Journal | 1994

Cardiac troponin T and CK-MB mass release after visually successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty in stable angina pectoris

Jan Ravkilde; Henrik Nissen; Hans Mickley; Poul Erik Andersen; Per Thayssen; Mogens Hørder

The incidence of cardiac troponin T (Tn-T) and creatine kinase (CK) isoenzyme MB mass release was studied in 23 patients with stable angina pectoris undergoing visually successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Serial blood samples were drawn for measurement of serum Tn-T, CK-MB mass, total CK activity, CK-MB activity, and lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme (LD-1). ST segment monitoring was carried out during PTCA and for the following 24 hours. None of the patients showed electrocardiographic (ECG) evidence of myocardial infarction. However, Tn-T was elevated in three patients (0.23 to 1.32 micrograms/L), and in these three and an additional three patients CK-MB mass was also elevated (7.0 to 27.5 micrograms/L). Total CK activity and LD-1 were only elevated in one of these six patients. None had elevated CK-MB activity. ST segment depression on ECG recording was not predictive of Tn-T or CK-MB mass release. Patients with elevated Tn-T or CK-MB mass did not differ with respect to demographic data, stenosis characteristics, or in the PTCA procedure. We conclude that CK-MB mass uncovers clinically and ambulatory electrocardiographically inapparent severe myocardial ischemia/minor myocardial damage (microembolization) in 26% (6 of 23) of patients after visually successful PTCA; 13% (3 of 23) had elevated Tn-T, indicating minor myocardial damage. The application of these markers in the future could be of considerable value for determining the efficacy of coronary angioplasty and atherectomy, as well as for drug therapy in connection with such procedures.


International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care | 2005

International comparison of the definition and the practical application of health technology assessment.

Eva Ulriksen Draborg; Dorte Gyrd-Hansen; Peter Bo Poulsen; Mogens Hørder

OBJECTIVES Health Technology Assessment (HTA) is defined as a policy research approach that examines the short- and long-term social consequences of the application or use of technology. Internationally different institutions have translated this definition to local contexts. In Denmark, HTA is comprehensive with focus on four aspects of the problem in question (technology [clinical evidence], economy, patient, and organization). The objective of this study is to study how the application of HTA differs across leading countries and to study the extent to which Danish HTA reports differ from foreign HTAs. METHODS A sample of 433 HTA reports published in the period 1989--2002 by eleven leading institutions or agencies in Denmark and eight other countries were reviewed. We looked at the characteristics of the HTA with respect to focus on the four main aspects and the manner in which each aspect has been approached. RESULTS The study shows health technology procedures to be the most common type of health technology assessed in HTAs and literature review to be the most often used method of analysis. Policy recommendations are only present in approximately half of the HTA reports. CONCLUSIONS In the HTAs one generally sees a great focus on the clinical aspect of health technologies, leaving the economic, the patient-related, and the organizational aspect much more unanalyzed. The Danish HTAs generally have a wider scope than HTAs produced in other countries and tend to focus more frequently on patient-related and organizational dimensions.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2009

Supplementation with orange and blackcurrant juice, but not vitamin E, improves inflammatory markers in patients with peripheral arterial disease

Christine Dalgård; Flemming Nielsen; Jason D. Morrow; Henrik Enghusen-Poulsen; T. Jonung; Mogens Hørder; Moniek P.M. de Maat

Inflammation and endothelial activation are associated with an increased risk of CVD and epidemiological evidence suggests an association between levels of markers of inflammation or endothelial activation and the intake of fruit. Also, vitamin E, a fat-soluble antioxidant, has anti-inflammatory properties. We performed a randomised 2 x 2 factorial, crossover trial to determine the effect of orange and blackcurrant juice (500 ml/d) and vitamin E (15 mg RRR-alpha-tocopherol/d) supplementation on markers of inflammation and endothelial activation in forty-eight patients with peripheral arterial disease. Patients were randomly allocated to two dietary supplements from the four possible combinations of juice and vitamin E: juice+vitamin E; juice+placebo; reference beverage (sugar drink)+vitamin E; and reference beverage+placebo. The supplementations were given for 28 d, separated by a 4-week wash-out period. Analysis of main effects showed that juice decreased C-reactive protein (CRP) by 11% and fibrinogen by 3% while the reference drink increased CRP by 13% and fibrinogen by 2% (P<0.008 and P<0.002, respectively). No significant differences were measured for IL-6 and the endothelial activation markers von Willebrand factor, tissue-plasminogen activator and plasmin activator inhibitor-1. Vitamin E supplementation had no significant effects on the various markers. We observed no significant interaction between juice and vitamin E. In this study, orange and blackcurrant juice reduced markers of inflammation, but not markers of endothelial activation, in patients with peripheral arterial disease, relative to sugar drinks.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 1980

Effects of posture on concentrations of blood constituents in healthy adults: practical application of blood specimen collection procedures recommended by the Scandinavian Committee on Reference Values

P. Felding; N. Tryding; P. Hyltoft Petersen; Mogens Hørder

Different procedures for the collection of blood for the determination of reference values in healthy adults have been subjected to practical testing. The Scandinavian Committee on Reference Values suggested that subjects lying in bed after an overnight sleep and ambulatory individuals, after 15 min of sitting in a chair, were two suitable and different reference populations. In forty subjects we found an increase from lying to sitting position of about 6.5% in the serum concentrations of proteins, enzymes and lipids. The corresponding increases for S-calcium and B-haemoglobin were approximately 3% whereas S-thyroxine, unexpectedly, changed by 11%. There were no significant changes of potassium and sodium values. For some constituents the changes were age and sex-dependent being greater in a group of elderly women as compared to a group of younger men. After 1 h of recumbency the concentrations of the constituents generally returned to those in the initial, lying position.


Bone | 1998

Vitamin D receptor alleles do not predict bone mineral density or bone loss in Danish perimenopausal women

T.S Hansen; Bo Abrahamsen; F.L Henriksen; Anne Pernille Hermann; Lars Bjørn Jensen; Mogens Hørder; Jeppe Gram

A BsmI restriction enzyme polymorphism in the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene has been reported to be associated with bone mineral density (BMD) and bone turnover. However, findings in other studies suggest the presence of considerable interaction by race, body size, and environmental factors. Therefore, we VDR BsmI genotyped 200 healthy perimenopausal Danish white women (mean age 50.8 years, mean calcium intake 900 mg/day) in a comprehensive, longitudinal, community-based population study. Bone loss was assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) using cross-calibrated Hologic QDR-1000W and QDR-2000 densitometers, with a mean follow-up period of 4 years (range 1-5 years). Despite a distribution of genotypes similar to that of other white populations (28% bb, 49% Bb, 23% BB), VDR genotypes were not associated with lumbar or femoral baseline BMD, subsequent bone loss rates, or biochemical markers of bone metabolism (bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, urinary hydroxyproline, and serum osteocalcin). Controlling for body size, calcium intake, and serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 [25(OH)D3] did not alter this finding. The possible existence of a threshold effect was subsequently investigated by restricting analysis to women with low serum 25(OH)D3 levels or low calcium intake. VDR BsmI genotypes showed no significant impact on bone density or bone loss in healthy Danish early postmenopausal women, even when allowance was made for calcium intake, serum 25(OH)D3, and body size.

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Henrik Nissen

Odense University Hospital

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K. Thygesen

Odense University Hospital

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Ole Blaabjerg

Odense University Hospital

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Torben Haghfelt

Odense University Hospital

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Lene Christiansen

University of Southern Denmark

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B. Lyager Nielsen

Odense University Hospital

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