R. Segal
Tel Aviv University
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Featured researches published by R. Segal.
Gerontology | 2007
Arthur Leibovitz; Yehuda Baumoehl; Emily Lubart; A. Yaina; N. Platinovitz; R. Segal
Introduction: Long-term care (LTC) residents, especially the orally fed with dysphagia, are prone to dehydration. The clinical consequences of dehydration are critical. The validity of the common laboratory parameters of hydration status is far from being absolute, especially so in the elderly. However, combinations of these indices are more reliable. Objective: Assessment of hydration status among elderly LTC residents with oropharyngeal dysphagia. Methods: A total of 28 orally fed patients with grade-2 feeding difficulties on the functional outcome swallowing scale (FOSS) and 67 naso-gastric tube (NGT)-fed LTC residents entered the study. The common laboratory, serum and urinary tests were used as indices of hydration status. The results were considered as indicative of dehydration and used as ‘markers of dehydration’, if they were above the accepted normal values. Results: The mean number of dehydration markers was significantly higher in the FOSS-2 group (3.8 ± 1.3 vs. 2 ± 1.4, p = 0.000). About 75% of these FOSS-2 patients had ≧4 dehydration markers versus 18% of the NGT-fed group (p = 0.000). A low urine output (<800 ml/day) was significantly more common in the FOSS-2 group (39 vs. 12%, p = 0.002). Above normal values of blood urea nitrogen (BUN), BUN/serum creatinine ratio (BUN/SCr), urine/serum osmolality ratio (U/SOsm), and urine osmolality UOsm, were significantly more frequent in the dehydration-prone FOSS-2 group. This combination of 4 indices was present in 65% of low urine output patients. In contrast, it was present in only 36% of the higher urine output patients (p = 0.01). Patients with a ‘normal’ daily urine output (>800 ml/day) also had a significant number (2 ± 1.5) of positive indices of dehydration. Conclusions: Dehydration was found to be common among orally fed FOSS-2 LTC patients. Surprisingly, probable dehydration, although of a mild degree, was not a rarity among NGT-fed patients either. The combination of 4 parameters, BUN, BUN/SCr , U/SOsm and UOsm, offers reasonable reliability to be used as an indication of dehydration status in daily clinical practice.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003
Arthur Leibovitz; Michael Dan; Jonathan Zinger; Yehuda Carmeli; Beni Habot; R. Segal
We evaluated whether elderly patients fed with nasogastric tubes (NGT) are predisposed to Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonization in the oropharynx. Fifty-three patients on NGT feeding and 50 orally fed controls with similar clinical characteristics were studied. The tongue dorsum was swabbed and cultured. P. aeruginosa was isolated in 18 (34%) of the NGT-fed group but in no controls (p<0.001). Other gram-negative bacteria were cultured from 34 (64%) of NGT-fed patients as compared with 4 (8%) of controls (p<0.001). Antibiotic susceptibility of the oropharyngeal P. aeruginosa isolates was compared with that of isolates from sputum cultures obtained from our hospital’s bacteriologic laboratory. The oropharyngeal isolates showed a higher rate of resistance; differences were significant for amikacin (p<0.03). Scanning electron microscope studies showed a biofilm containing P. aeruginosa organisms. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis profile of these organisms was similar to that of P. aeruginosa isolates from the oropharynx. NGT-fed patients may serve as vectors of resistant P. aeruginosa strains.
Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 2001
Arthur Leibovitz; O. Blumenfeld; Yehuda Baumoehl; R. Segal; Beno Habot
The rate of postmortem examinations (PME) especially in elderly patients is continuously declining, mostly due to the low interest of the medical staff and the reluctance of relatives. We surveyed PME performed over a 20-year period in patients of a geriatric hospital in Israel. The 93 autopsies represent a rate of 2.8% in the first five years which went down to 0.25% in the later years. In 58% of the cases, clinical cause of death was confirmed by the PME. Pulmonary embolism had the lowest confirmation rate, and was more frequently found in females (28%) than in males (10%) (p<0.03). Undiagnosed conditions in the elderly present a clinical challenge that increases with the patient’s age. However, despite progress in diagnostic technology, confirmation rates of death causes have not changed much. Therefore, as the age of death rises, it is important to preserve and foster PMEs, the most reliable source of medical evidence.
Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition | 2002
Arthur Leibovitz; Ben-Ami Sela; Beni Habot; Slava Gavendo; Raisa Lansky; Yael Avni; R. Segal
BACKGROUND Levels of homocysteine, methylmalonic acid, and relevant vitamins were measured and evaluated in patients with oral dysphagia (OD) receiving long-term care (LTC). METHODS Group A was composed of 26 orally fed patients, and group B was composed of 25 patients who were fed by nasogastric tube. All patients were hospitalized in the LTC departments of the Geriatric Medical Center, Shmuel Harofe. General and nutritional status were assessed, and levels of vitamins including B12, folate, and B6 were measured along with serum homocysteine and urine methylmalonic acid levels. RESULTS Homocysteine levels were significantly higher in the orally fed patients (p < .001); 92% had higher-than-normal homocysteine levels. The levels of vitamins B12, folate, and B6 were significantly lower in the orally fed patients (p < .001), although in most patients levels were in the normal range. Notably, the levels of homocysteine were significantly correlated with the levels of all vitamins but not with the albumin or hemoglobin values. Levels of methylmalonic acid were also higher in the orally fed patients, but the difference was not statistically significant, and there was no correlation between vitamin level and methylmalonic acid level. CONCLUSIONS Orally fed patients with OD have substantially higher homocysteine levels and appreciably lower levels of the relevant vitamins than patients with OD who receive tube feeding. Therefore, homocysteine measurement may be the preferred indicator of vitamin intake in orally fed patients with OD.
Gerontology | 2002
Yishai Ron; Arthur Leibovitz; Nechama Monastirski; Beni Habot; R. Segal
Background: Constipation is a frequent health concern for elderly people. The increased incidence of constipation with age is mainly based on self-reported data. Only a few studies have examined this problem objectively and even fewer have carried this out in the special subpopulation of frail elderly patients. Objective: The aim of this study was to examine colonic transit time (CTT) in frail elderly patients. We also attempted to compare CTT in diabetics and nondiabetics within this population. Methods: 45 frail elderly patients, all immobile with and without diabetes mellitus, residing permanently in long-term geriatric departments were recruited for the study. All patients underwent segmental and total CTT studies using radiopaque markers. The segmental CTT was calculated separately for the four segments of the colon (ascending, transverse, descending, and rectosigmoid) and for the total transit time which was the sum of all four segments. Results: The average CTT was extremely prolonged in all patients included in this study. In the diabetics the CTT was even longer with a mean total transit time of 200 ± 144 h as compared with 143 ± 95 h in the controls. The difference was not statistically significant. For each segment tested, the CTT was shorter in the control group, but these differences did not reach statistical significance. Conclusions: The CTT is prolonged in immobile frail elderly patients. No significant differences were noted between diabetic and nondiabetic patients.
Amino Acids | 2005
Arthur Leibovitz; Ben-Ami Sela; J. Zlotnik; Y. Baumohel; R. Segal
Summary.Background: Dysphagia and eating difficulties are highly prevalent in long term care patients. Evaluation of their nutritional status is complicated by comorbidity, frailty and individual patterns of feeding. In previous studies we found vitamin deficiencies (folic acid B6 and B12) in orally fed elderly in early stages of oropharyngeal dysphagia despite satisfactory nutritional parameters (BMI, albumin and hemoglobin). The aim of this study is to evaluate the plasma amino acids levels in these hand-oral fed elderly patients with dysphagia.Methods: Plasma amino acids were measured in 15 orally fed elderly patients in early functional outcome swallowing scale (FOSS), stage 2, and compared with those of 15 matched nasogastric-tube-fed counterparts.Results: The plasma levels of all measured amino acids, ratio of essential to nonessential, levels of conditionally essential and the immune-enhancing amino acids were similar in both groups and within the normal range of our laboratory. The traditional nutritional parameters were also similar in both groups and within the normal range.Conclusions: Plasma levels of amino acids in elderly patients in early stage of FOSS are satisfactory, supporting the view that their protein intake is adequate. Further studies should concentrate on patients in advanced stages of FOSS.
Journal of Aging Research | 2014
Emily Lubart; R. Segal; N. Tryhub; E. Sigler; Arthur Leibovitz
Background/Objectives. Blood transfusion is a critical issue for patients with chronic diseases such as heart failure, chronic kidney disease, and malignancy. However, side effects are not rare. The purpose of the study is to evaluate the frequency of adverse blood transfusion reactions in hospitalized elderly patients during a one-year period. Design/Setting/Participants. Blood transfusion reactions such as fever, chills, dyspnea, and others following blood transfusions in hospitalized geriatric patients during one-year period were examined. Results. 382 blood units (242 patients) were administered during the study period. In 40 (11%) cases, blood transfusion reactions occurred. Fever was the most common reaction in 29 cases (72%), four (10%) had shortness of breath, and 3 (8%) had vomiting and chills each. There were no lethal cases in the 24-hour period following blood transfusions. Conclusion. A relatively low rate of adverse blood transfusion reactions occurred in our geriatric patients. We may speculate that this is related to underreporting of minor symptoms due to the high percentage of demented patients in this population.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2009
R. Segal; Michael Dan; G. Eger; Emily Lubart; Arthur Leibovitz
The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether the presence of a nasogastric tube (NGT) for feeding has an impact on the nasal colonization by Staphylococcus aureus. Three groups of frail elderly were examined: 76 patients fed by NGTs and 52 orally fed patients in skilled nursing wards, and 33 orally fed patients in regular nursing wards. Samples from the nasal and oral cavities were cultured for S. aureus and susceptibility testing for oxacillin was performed. The prevalence of S. aureus (either oxacillin-susceptible or oxacillin-resistant) in the NGT-fed group was not significantly different to that in the two orally fed groups nor the nostril in which the NGT was placed. A significant correlation in colonization was found between the two nares and between the nares and oral cavity in the same patient (r > 0.45, P < 0.005) for both oxacillin-susceptible and oxacillin-resistant S. aureus. The presence of NGTs for feeding in elderly frail patients is not associated with higher rates of S. aureus colonization in the nares or oral cavity.
Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2003
Arthur Leibovitz; Galina Plotnikov; Beni Habot; Mel Rosenberg; R. Segal
Journal of Hospital Infection | 2006
R. Segal; I. Pogoreliuk; Michael Dan; Yehuda Baumoehl; Arthur Leibovitz