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Dive into the research topics where Pauli Puukka is active.

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Featured researches published by Pauli Puukka.


Ophthalmology | 1998

Prospective randomized comparison of external dacryocystorhinostomy and endonasal laser dacryocystorhinostomy

Jouko Hartikainen; Reidar Grénman; Pauli Puukka; Heikki Seppä

OBJECTIVE AND DESIGN The introduction of endonasal laser dacryocystorhinostomy (ENL-DCR) in the early 1990s showed great promise of changing dacryocystorhinostomy into an elegant, minimally invasive procedure from the traditional external dacryocystorhinostomy (EXT-DCR). This prospective, randomized study compares these two operations, their success rates, surgical durations, and postoperative symptoms. PARTICIPANTS A total of 64 cases in 61 patients with primary acquired nasolacrimal sac or duct obstruction were divided into 2 subgroups by symptoms (simple epiphora and chronic dacryocystitis). These patients were randomized within both subgroups into 2 operation groups with 32 cases in each group. INTERVENTION Altogether, 32 EXT-DCRs and 32 ENL-DCRs were performed. The silicone tube was removed at 6 months after surgery. The final follow-up visit was at 1 year after surgery. The patency of the lacrimal passage was investigated by irrigation, and patients were questioned about their symptoms. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The patency of the lacrimal passage to irrigation and the duration of surgery were measured. RESULTS The success rate at 1 year after surgery was 91% for EXT-DCR and 63% for ENL-DCR after primary surgery. The difference was statistically significant (P = 0.016). The surgical duration for ENL-DCR was three times shorter than for EXT-DCR, the average duration being 23 minutes and 78 minutes, respectively (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS The EXT-DCR, when compared with ENL-DCR, seems to provide superior operation results in primary acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction.


Laryngoscope | 1998

Prospective randomized comparison of endonasal endoscopic dacryocystorhinostomy and external dacryocystorhinostomy

Jouko Hartikainen; Jukka Antila; Matti Varpula; Pauli Puukka; Heikki Seppä; Reidar Grénman

Objectives and Study Design: The advent of the rigid endonasal endoscope and the development of functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) technique have awakened interest in an endonasal endoscopic dacryocystorhinostomy (EESC‐DCR) in treating nasolacrimal obstruction. This prospective, randomized study compares EESC‐DCR with traditional external dacryocystorhinostomy (EXT‐DCR) for their success rates, surgical duration, and postoperative symptoms. Patients and Methods: Sixty‐four cases in 60 patients with primary acquired nasolacrimal sac or duct obstruction were divided into two subgroups by symptoms (simple epiphora/ chronic dacryocystitis). These patients were randomized within both subgroups into two operation groups. Altogether 32 EESC‐DCRs and 32 EXT‐DCRs were performed. The final follow‐up visit was at 1 year. The patency of the lacrimal passage was investigated by irrigation and patients were questioned about their symptoms. Results: The success rate at 1 year after surgery was 75% for EESC‐DCR and 91% for EXT‐DCR after primary surgery. The difference was not statistically significant (P = .18). The success rate after secondary surgery with a follow‐up time of 1 year was 97% in both study groups. The average duration for EESC‐DCR was 38 minutes, and 78 minutes for EXT‐DCR, (P < .001). Conclusions: EXT‐DCR, when compared with EESC‐DCR, appears to give a higher, although not statistically significant, primary success rate, but the secondary success rates are equal, indicating that these two different DCR techniques are acceptable alternatives.


Pain | 1999

Occlusal treatments in temporomandibular disorders: a qualitative systematic review of randomized controlled trials.

Heli Forssell; Eija Kalso; Pirkko Koskela; Raili Vehmanen; Pauli Puukka; Pentti Alanen

Occlusal treatments (occlusal splints and occlusal adjustment) are controversial but widely used treatment methods for temporomandibular disorders (TMD). To investigate whether studies are in agreement with current clinical practices, a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of occlusal treatment studies from the period 1966 to March 1999 was undertaken. Eighteen studies met the inclusion criteria, 14 on splint therapy, and 4 on occlusal adjustment. The trials were scored using the quality scale presented by Antczak et al., 1986a (A.A. Antczak, J. Tang, T.C. Chalmers, Quality assessment of randomized control trials in dental research. I. Methods, J. Periodontal Res. 1986a;21:305-314). The overall quality of the trials was fairly low, the mean quality score was 0.43/1.00 (range 0.12-0.78). The most obvious methodological shortcomings were inadequate blinding, small sample sizes, short follow-up times, great diversity of outcome measures and numerous control treatments, some of unknown effectiveness. Splint therapy was found superior to 3, and comparable to 12 control treatments, and superior or comparable to 4 passive controls, respectively. Occlusal adjustment was found comparable to 2 and inferior to one control treatment and comparable to passive control in one study. Because of the methodological problems, only suggestive conclusions can be drawn. The use of occlusal splints may be of some benefit in the treatment of TMD. Evidence for the use of occlusal adjustment is lacking. There is an obvious need for well designed controlled studies to analyse the current clinical practices.


Diabetes Care | 1988

Atherosclerotic Vascular Disease and Its Risk Factors in Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetic and Nondiabetic Subjects in Finland

Markku Laakso; Tapani Rönnemaa; Kalevi Pyörälä; Veikko Kallio; Pauli Puukka; Ilkka Penttilä

A cross-sectional study on the prevalence of atherosclerotic vascular disease (ASVD) and its risk factors in non-insulin-dependent diabetic and nondiabetic subjects was carried out from 1982 to 1984 in East Finland (Kuopio)and West Finland (Turku), two areas known to differ markedly in prevalence ofASVD in the nondiabetic population. A total of 510 diabetic and 649 nondiabetic subjects aged 45–64 yr were examined in East Finland and 549 diabetic and 724 nondiabetic subjects of the same age in West Finland. In both areas and in both sexes the prevalence of coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, and intermittent claudication was higher in diabetic than in nondiabetic subjects. Both in diabetic and nondiabetic subjects the prevalence of ASVD was higher in East Finland than in West Finlandase (CHD), stroke, and intermittent claudication was higher in diabetic than in nondiabetic subjects. Both in diabetic and nondiabetic subjects the prevalence of ASVD was higher in East Finland than in West Finland. In men, the East-West difference in the prevalence of symptomatic CHD and claudication was greater in diabetic than in nondiabetic subjects. In both areas and in both sexes the serum lipid pattern was more atherogenic and hypertension was more frequent in diabetic than in nondiabetic subjects. In both diabetic and nondiabetic subjects, serum total-cholesterol level was somewhat higher and hypertension was more frequent in East Finland than in West Finland. The East-West difference in serum total-cholesterol was greater in diabetic than in nondiabetic subjects. In multiple logistic analyses including cardiovascular risk factors, diabetes status, and area of residence, residence in East Finland was found to be, in addition to diabetes, a strong independent factor associated with CHD, particularly in men.


Hypertension | 2012

Prognostic Value of the Variability in Home-Measured Blood Pressure and Heart Rate: The Finn-Home Study

Jouni K. Johansson; Teemu J. Niiranen; Pauli Puukka; Antti Jula

The objective of the study was to assess the prognostic value of variability in home-measured blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) in a general population. We studied a representative sample of the Finnish adult population with 1866 study subjects aged 45–74 years. BP and HR self-measurements were performed on 7 consecutive days. The variabilities of BP and HR were defined as the SDs of morning minus evening, day-by-day, and first minus second measurements. The primary end point was incidence of a cardiovascular event. The secondary end point was total mortality. During a follow-up of 7.8 years, 179 subjects had experienced a cardiovascular event, and 130 subjects had died. In Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for age, sex, BP/HR, and other cardiovascular risk factors, morning-evening home BP variability (systolic/diastolic relative hazard: 1.04/1.10 [95% CI: 1.01–1.07/1.05–1.15] per 1-mm Hg increase in BP variability) and morning day-by-day home BP variability (relative hazard: 1.04/1.10 [95% CI: 1.00–1.07/1.04–1.16] per 1-mm Hg increase in BP variability) were predictive of cardiovascular events. Morning-evening home HR variability (relative hazard: 1.07 [95% CI: 1.02–1.12] per 1-bpm increase in HR variability) and morning day-by-day home HR variability (relative hazard: 1.11 [95% CI: 1.05–1.17] per 1-bpm increase in HR variability) were also independent predictors of cardiovascular events. Greater variabilities of morning home BP and HR are independent predictors of cardiovascular events. Because the variabilities of home BP and HR are easily acquired in conjunction with home BP and HR level, they should be used as the additive information in the assessment of cardiovascular risk.


Hypertension | 1999

Multiple Clinic and Home Blood Pressure Measurements Versus Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring

Antti Jula; Pauli Puukka; Hannu Karanko

To compare multiple clinic and home blood pressure (BP) measurements and ambulatory BP monitoring in the clinical evaluation of hypertension, we studied 239 middle-aged pharmacologically untreated hypertensive men and women who were referred to the study from the primary healthcare provider. Ambulatory BP monitoring was successfully completed for 233 patients. Clinic BP was measured by a trained nurse with a mercury sphygmomanometer and averaged over 4 duplicate measures. Self-recorded home BP was measured with a semiautomatic oscillometric device twice every morning and twice every evening on 7 consecutive days. Ambulatory BP was recorded with an auscultatory device. Two-dimensionally controlled M-mode echocardiography was successfully performed on 232 patients. Twenty-four-hour urinary albumin was determined by nephelometry. Clinic BP was 144.5+/-12.6/94.5+/-7.4 mm Hg, home BP (the mean of 14 self-recorded measures) was 138.9+/-13.1/92.9+/-8.6 mm Hg, home morning BP (the mean of the first 4 duplicate morning measures) was 137.1+/-13.7/92.4+/-9.2 mm Hg, daytime ambulatory BP was 148.3+/-13. 9/91.9+/-7.8 mm Hg, nighttime ambulatory BP was 125.5+/-16.4/75. 6+/-8.9 mm Hg, and 24-hour ambulatory BP was 141.7+/-14.0/87.2+/-7.6 mm Hg. Pearson correlation coefficients of clinic, home, home morning, and daytime ambulatory BPs to albuminuria and to the characteristics of the left ventricle were nearly equal. In multivariate regression analyses, 36% (P<0.0001) of the cross-sectional variation in left ventricular mass index was attributed to gender and home morning systolic BP in models that originally included age, gender, and clinic, self-measured home morning, and ambulatory daytime, nighttime, and 24-hour systolic and diastolic BPs. We concluded that carefully controlled nonphysician-measured clinic and self-measured home BPs, when averaged over 4 duplicate measurements, are as reliable as ambulatory BP monitoring in the clinical evaluation of untreated hypertension.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1991

High fasting plasma insulin is an indicator of coronary heart disease in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients and nondiabetic subjects.

Tapani Rönnemaa; Markku Laakso; K. Pyörälä; Veikko Kallio; Pauli Puukka

The association between fasting plasma insulin level and coronary heart disease (CHD) was studied in 909 non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients, aged 45-64 years, and in 1,373 nondiabetic control subjects. Both diabetic and nondiabetic subjects with various manifestations of CHD had higher plasma insulin levels than did subjects free of CHD. By plasma insulin quintiles formed according to values in nondiabetic subjects, the age-adjusted prevalence of CHD defined by symptoms and/or electrocardiographic changes in diabetic men was 48.2% in quintiles I + II (lowest), 54.8% in quintiles III + IV, and 65.7% in quintile V (highest) (p = 0.006). The respective prevalences in diabetic women were 53.5%, 59.1%, and 73.3% (p = 0.004); in nondiabetic men, 28.1%, 33.7%, and 43.3%, respectively (p = 0.016); and in nondiabetic women, 28.1%, 34.9%, and 44.3%, respectively (p = 0.007). An essentially similar association was observed between plasma insulin level and definite or possible myocardial infarction (MI). In diabetic subjects, a positive association between plasma insulin level and CHD manifestations was also found when insulin strata were formed using quintile cutoff points determined separately from diabetic subjects. The association between plasma insulin level and the prevalence of CHD or MI disappeared or was weaker, especially in men, when adjustment was made for body mass index, hypertension, and triglyceride or high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol level. The association between high plasma insulin level and CHD was significant in diabetic subjects with a body mass index greater than 27 kg/m2 but not in those diabetics with a body mass index less than or equal to 27 kg/m2. A significant clustering of hypertension, high triglyceride values, and low HDL cholesterol levels was observed in diabetic subjects in the highest insulin quintiles. The results suggest that hyperinsulinemia is an indicator of CHD in both NIDDM patients and nondiabetic subjects. Hyperinsulinemia may be directly atherogenic, but it is more probable that hyperinsulinemia reflects insulin resistance, which may be a factor enhancing atherogenesis by causing adverse changes in many CHD risk factors.


Journal of Hypertension | 2011

Determinants of masked hypertension in the general population: the Finn-Home study

Marjo-Riitta A. Hänninen; Teemu J. Niiranen; Pauli Puukka; Aino K. Mattila; Antti Jula

Introduction Home blood pressure (BP) measurement has allowed the identification of individuals with normal office and elevated out-of-office BP (masked hypertension). It is, however, not feasible to measure home BP on all office normotensive individuals. The objective of the present study was to identify demographic, lifestyle, clinical and psychological characteristics suggestive of masked hypertension. Methods Study population was drawn from the participants of a multidisciplinary epidemiological survey, the Health 2000 Study. The untreated nationwide population sample (n = 1459, age 45–74 years) underwent office (duplicate measurements on one visit) and home (duplicate measurements on 7 days) BP measurements and risk factor evaluation. Psychometric tests assessed psychological distress, hypochondriasis, depression and alexithymia. Masked hypertension was defined as normal office BP (<140/90 mmHg) with elevated home BP (≥135/85 mmHg). Results The prevalence of masked hypertension was 8.1% in the untreated Finnish adult population. The cardiovascular risk profile of masked hypertensive patients resembled that of sustained hypertensive patients. High-normal systolic and diastolic office BP, older age, greater BMI, current smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, diabetes and electrocardiographic left-ventricular hypertrophy were independent determinants of masked hypertension in multivariate logistic regression analysis. Masked hypertension was also independently associated with hypochondria. Conclusion Masked hypertension is a common phenomenon in an untreated adult population. Physicians should consider home BP measurement if a patient has high-normal office BP, diabetes, left-ventricular hypertrophy, or several other conventional cardiovascular risk factors.


Diabetologia | 1995

Does NIDDM increase the risk for coronary heart disease similarly in both low- and high-risk populations?

Markku Laakso; Tapani Rönnemaa; Seppo Lehto; Pauli Puukka; Veikko Kallio; Kalevi Pyörälä

SummaryFinland has marked regional differences in the occurrence of coronary heart disease (CHD). Although the causes for these differences in CHD mortality and morbidity in the Finnish population are unknown, it offers an excellent opportunity to investigate the effects of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) on CHD risk in two populations differing significantly with respect to the occurrence of CHD. Therefore, we carried out a 7-year prospective population-based study including a large number of patients with NIDDM (East Finland: 253 men and 257 women; West Finland: 328 men, 221 women) and corresponding non-diabetic subjects (East Finland: 313 men, 336 women; West Finland: 325 men, 399 women). In both study populations the presence of NIDDM increased significantly the risk for CHD events (CHD mortality or all CHD events including CHD mortality or non-fatal myocardial infarction). Diabetic men had 3–4 fold higher and diabetic women 8–11-fold higher risk for CHD than corresponding non-diabetic subjects. Both non-diabetic and diabetic subjects had odds ratios (East vs West) for CHD events of about 2 indicating a similar East-West difference in the CHD risk. Regional difference was quite similar in men and women. These results imply that factors related to NIDDM, independently of conventional risk factors and the occurrence of atherothrombosis in the background population, must play a major role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerotic vascular disease in NIDDM diabetes.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2009

The association of social support at work and in private life with mental health and antidepressant use: the Health 2000 Study

Marjo Sinokki; Katariina Hinkka; Kirsi Ahola; Seppo Koskinen; Mika Kivimäki; Teija Honkonen; Pauli Puukka; Timo Klaukka; Jouko Lönnqvist; Marianna Virtanen

BACKGROUND Social support is assumed to protect mental health, but it is not known whether low social support at work increases the risk of common mental disorders or antidepressant medication. This study, carried out in Finland 2000-2003, examined the associations of low social support at work and in private life with DSM-IV depressive and anxiety disorders and subsequent antidepressant medication. METHODS Social support was measured with self-assessment scales in a cohort of 3429 employees from a population-based health survey. A 12-month prevalence of depressive or anxiety disorders was examined with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), which encompasses operationalized criteria for DSM-IV diagnoses and allows the estimation of DSM-IV diagnoses for major mental disorders. Purchases of antidepressants in a 3-year follow-up were collected from the nationwide pharmaceutical register of the Social Insurance Institution. RESULTS Low social support at work and in private life was associated with a 12-month prevalence of depressive or anxiety disorders (adjusted odds ratio 2.02, 95% CI 1.48-2.82 for supervisory support, 1.65, 95% CI 1.05-2.59 for colleague support, and 1.62, 95% CI 1.12-2.36 for private life support). Work-related social support was also associated with subsequent antidepressant use. LIMITATIONS This study used a cross-sectional analysis of DSM-IV mental disorders. The use of purchases of antidepressant as an indicator of depressive and anxiety disorders can result in an underestimation of the actual mental disorders. CONCLUSIONS Low social support, both at work and in private life, is associated with DSM-IV mental disorders, and low social support at work is also a risk factor for mental disorders treated with antidepressant medication.

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Antti Jula

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Teemu J. Niiranen

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Jouni K. Johansson

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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Ilkka Kantola

Turku University Hospital

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Riitta Suhonen

Turku University Hospital

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