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Featured researches published by Uri Gabbay.


Nephron | 1993

Compliance in Hemodialysis Patients: A Multivariate Regression Analysis

Gabriel Morduchowicz; Jaqueline Sulkes; Silvia Aizic; Uri Gabbay; Janos Winkler; Geoffrey Boner

Successful treatment of patients with end-stage renal failure requires, in addition to dialysis, strict control of dietary, fluid and medication intake. In the present study we measured, in 50 chronic hemodialysis patients, serum potassium (K), serum phosphate (PO4) and interdialytic weight gain as indices of diet, medication and fluid compliance, respectively. Dietary compliance did not correlate with fluid or medication compliance, whereas fluid intake and medication compliance were related (p = 0.01). Age, time on dialysis, place of birth and whether the patient came accompanied or not to the dialysis unit were the main variables affecting serum K levels. Sex, ethnic origin and education significantly affected serum PO4. Sex, place of birth, marital status, number of children and years of education affected fluid intake. The compliance of the hemodialysis patient with different aspects of his regimen is thus multifactorial. Attempts to improve compliance and thus reduce morbidity and mortality should be aimed at identifying the population with low compliance and exposing them to educational programs.


International Journal of Biometeorology | 1995

Relationship between suicide and myocardial infarction with regard to changing physical environmental conditions

Eliahu Stoupel; Eugeny Abramson; Jaqueline Sulkes; Joseph Martfel; Nechama Stein; Meir Handelman; Michael Shimshoni; Pnina Zadka; Uri Gabbay

In recent years, the possible association of changes in mortality from cardiovascular disease and myocardial infarction (MI) and deaths related to violence and the suicide rate has been repeatedly discussed. This study examined the relationship between cosmic physical changes (solar, geomagnetic and other space activity parameters) and changes in the total number of in-hospital and MI-related deaths and deaths from suicide to determine if a relationship exists between the distribution of total and MI-related deaths with suicide over time; some differences in the serotonergic mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of MI and suicide were also taken into account. All suicides (n=2359) registered in the State of Israel from 1981 to 1989 (108 months) were analysed and compared with the total number of deaths (n=15601) and deaths from MI (n=1573) in a large university hospital over 180 months (1974–1989). The following were the main features of the Results. (1) Monthly suicide rate was correlated with space proton flux (r=0.42,P=0.0001) and with geomagnetic activity (r=−0.22,P=0.03). (2) Total hospital and MI-related deaths were correlated with solar activity parameters (r=0.35,P<0.001) and radiowave propagation (r=0.52-0.44,P<0.001), an with proton flux (r=−0.3 to −0.26,P<0.01). (3) Monthly suicide distribution over 108 months was correlated with MI (r=−0.33,P=0.0005) and total hospital mortality (r=−0.22,P=0.024). (4) Gender differences were prominent. We conclude that the monthly distributions of suicides and deaths from MI are adversely related to many environmental physical parameters and negatively correlated with each other.


Journal of basic and clinical physiology and pharmacology | 2002

Cosmic rays activity and monthly number of deaths: a correlative study.

E. Stoupel; Peter Israelevich; Jadvyga Petrauskiene; Ramune Kalediene; Evgeny Abramson; Uri Gabbay; Jaqueline Sulkes

We studied the relation between the intensity of cosmic rays, the level of solar/geomagnetic activity, and the monthly numbers of deaths in a large hospital in Israel and in all Lithuania. The Israeli data include 30526 hospital deaths, two groups of fatal suicides (2359, 2763), and 15435 suicidal attempts for two periods of 108 and 236 consecutive months. The national data for the entire Republic of Lithuania include 424925 deaths for the period of 120 consecutive months. Cosmic rays intensity was measured by an Apatity neutron monitor. We obtained the data on solar, geomagnetic radiovawe propagation, ionosphere ionization hours, proton flux of two energy levels (>90 and 60 MeV) from the National Geophysical Data Center at Goddard Space Flight Center, National Space Environment Center at Boulder, Colorado, USA, and from the Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere and Radio Wave Propagation (IZMIRAN), Russia. We calculated Pearson coefficients and their probabilities for correlation between monthly space activity level and monthly number of male and female deaths from different causes. Cosmic rays activity revealed significant negative correlation with solar/geomagnetic activity indices and related physical phenomena levels. This activity strongly correlated with flux of protons with the energies >90 MeV proton flux and did not exhibit significant correlation with 60 MeV proton fluxes. Cosmic rays intensity correlation with monthly numbers of deaths was strong for noncardiovascular deaths, suicides, and traffic accidents. The correlation was much weaker for deaths caused by ishemic heart disease and strokes.


International Journal of Biometeorology | 1995

Relationship between immunoglobulin levels and extremes of solar activity

Elijahu G. Stoupel; Eugene Abramson; Uri Gabbay; Albert I. Pick

The possible relationship between epidemics and extremes of solar activity has been discussed previously. The purpose of the present study was to verify whether differences in the levels of immunoglobulins (IgA, IgG, IgM) could be noted at the highest (July 1989) and lowest (September 1986) points of the last (21st) and present (22nd) 11-year solar cycle. The work was divided into a 1-month study (covering the month of minimal or maximal solar activity), a 3-month study (1 month before and after the month of minimal or maximal solar activity) and a 5-month study (2 months before and after the month of minimal or maximal solar activity). A trend of a drop-off for all three immunoglobulins was seen on the far side of the maximal point of the solar cycle. Statistical significance was achieved in the 5-month study for IgM (P=0.04), and a strong trend was shown for IgG (P=0.07). Differences between the sexes were also noted.


Sleep Medicine | 2012

Obesity plays an independent worsening modifying effect on nocturnal hypoxia in obstructive sleep apnea

Itay E. Gabbay; Uri Gabbay; Peretz Lavie

OBJECTIVE Obesitys association with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is well established. The aim of this study was to examine the impact of obesity on nocturnal hypoxia. METHODS Twenty two thousand seven hundred and ninety three patients aged 21-80 years who underwent whole night polysomnography during 2000-2009 were included in the study. For each patient, percent sleep time spent with oxyhemoglobin desaturation lower than 90% was calculated (%NODP). Nocturnal hypoxia was analyzed by gender, age, OSAS severity, and body mass index (BMI) categories. RESULTS Nocturnal hypoxia was positively correlated with BMI, OSAS severity, and age, but not with gender. The differences in %NODP between the two obese groups and non-obese varied from 0.55% to more than a 20% increase and were correlated with age and OSAS severity. The %NODP ratio between the two obese groups and the non-obese was independent of age and OSAS severity. There was a nearly twofold increase in %NODP in obese patients and a threefold increase in the morbidly obese relative to the non-obese. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that obesity plays an independent worsening modifying effect on nocturnal hypoxia in OSAS.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1994

Israeli ED experience during the Gulf War

Zvi Rotenberg; Shlomo Noy; Uri Gabbay

The experience in an emergency department (ED) during the Gulf War in treating casualties referred to the ED soon after each missile attack is reported. Data were gathered within an 8-hour period of each nationwide alert on all patients who presented to the ED with injuries or complaints directly related to the missile attacks of the Tel Aviv area. One hundred three patients presented with symptoms directly related to the missile attacks. Of 103, 70 suffered from acute psychological reaction, 19 from false autoinjection of atropine, and nine from physical injuries from the explosion. Of the remainder, four had mild symptoms of smoke inhalation, and one had intercurrent myocardial infarction. The missile attacks resulted in a relatively small number of serious injuries. Most of the patients who presented to the ED soon after the missile attacks suffered from either anxiety reaction or false atropin injection.


Medical Hypotheses | 2014

Diabetic foot cellular hypoxia may be due to capillary shunting--a novel hypothesis.

Itay E. Gabbay; Merav Gabbay; Uri Gabbay

Diabetic foot is traditionally attributed to a triad of neuropathy, ischemia and infection. Cellular hypoxia in diabetic foot can neither be attributed to an occlusive large artery disease (which are mostly patent) nor to the so called diabetic small vessel disease (where such occlusion was never proved). The physiological findings that accompany cellular hypoxia are confusing: elevated local blood flow and high oxygen saturation in both the tissue and its collecting veins. It is well known that some tissues (e.g. skin) are wired with two types of capillaries: True capillaries - also known as exchange capillaries, where nutrients and gases exchange takes place, and metarteriole thoroughfare channels - also known as shunting capillaries. We hypothesize that in the diabetic foot tissue blood flow is rerouted through the metarteriole thoroughfare channel, bypassing the exchange capillaries. Hence, nutrient and gas exchange is disabled and tissue cells became hypoxic regardless of the tissue blood flow. As a result of the shunt, arterial oxygen is not consumed and the oxygen saturation in the collecting veins remains high. The hereby hypothesis suggests that mal-perfusion rather than hypo-perfusion is the underlying cause of cellular hypoxia in diabetic foot. This hypothesis complies with the findings of patent arteries proximal to the affected site, normal to elevated tissue blood flow and high oxygen saturation in the affected tissue and its collecting veins.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

A novel heart rate control model provides insights linking LF-HRV behavior to the open-loop gain

Hila Dvir; Ben Zion Bobrovsky; Uri Gabbay

BACKGROUND Low-frequency heart rate variability (LF-HRV) at rest has already been successfully modeled as self-sustained oscillations in a nonlinear control loop, but these models fail to simulate LF-HRV decreases either during aerobic exercise or in heart failure patients. Following control engineering practices, we assume the existence of a biological excitation (dither) within the heart rate control loop that softens the nonlinearity and studied LF-HRV behavior in a dither-embedded model. METHODS We adopted the Ottesen model with some revisions and induced a dither of high-frequency stochastic perturbations. We simulated scenarios of a healthy subject at rest and during aerobic exercise (by decreasing peripheral vascular resistance) and a heart failure patient (by decreasing stroke volume). RESULTS The simulations resembled physiological LF-HRV behavior, i.e., LF-HRV decreased during aerobic exercise and in the heart failure patient. The simulations exhibited LF-HRV dependency on the open-loop gain, which is related to the product of the feedback gain and the feed forward gain. CONCLUSIONS We are the first to demonstrate that LF-HRV may be dependent on the open-loop gain. Accordingly, reduced open-loop gain results in decreased LF-HRV, and vice versa. Our findings explain a well-known but unexplained observed phenomenon of reduced LF-HRV both in heart failure patients and in healthy subjects performing aerobic exercise. These findings have implications on how changes in LF-HRV can be interpreted physiologically, a necessary step towards the clinical utilization of LF-HRV.


Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 2011

Does haptoglobin genotype affect early onset of diabetic retinopathy in patients with type 2 diabetes

Nitza Goldenberg-Cohen; Merav Gabbay; Olga Dratviman-Storobinsky; Ehud Reich; Ruth Axer-Siegel; Dov Weinberger; Uri Gabbay

Purpose: There are 2 common alleles for Hp (Hp-1 and Hp-2) and 3 common Hp genotypes: Hp1-1, Hp2-1, and Hp2-2. The haptoglobin genotype may play a dual role in morbidities of diabetes: Hp1-1, protective and Hp2-2, provocative. This study investigated the possible association of haptoglobin genotypes with onset of retinopathy in Type 2 diabetes (DM2). Methods: The sample included 98 consecutive adults with DM2 under routine outpatient follow-up from 2007 to 2009 who met the criteria for either no retinopathy at ≥10 years after diagnosis (Group 1) or proliferative retinopathy at ≤10 years after diagnosis (Group 2). Blood samples were collected for haptoglobin genotyping by polymerase chain reaction. Findings were compared between and within groups. Results: Eighty-four patients had no retinopathy and 14 had early proliferative retinopathy. The distributions of the Hp genotypes were as follows: no-retinopathy group: 28.6% Hp1-1, 35.7% Hp2-1, and 35.7% Hp2-2 and proliferative retinopathy group: 22.6% Hp1-1, 27.4% Hp2-1, and 50% Hp2-2 (NS). On statistical analysis (limited to the larger no-retinopathy group), a predominance of Hp1-1 was noted in older patients; Hp2-2 was associated with an increased rate of stroke. Conclusion: The Hp genotype apparently plays no role in the development or worsening of proliferative retinopathy in DM2. Hp1-1 may be involved in delaying the onset of diabetes. Hp2-2 may pose a microvascular risk.


International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance | 2012

Therapeutic equivalent substitute that is new or unfamiliar to the chronic patient may result in medication error

Uri Gabbay; Noga Yosef; Neta Feder‐Krengel; Joseph Meyerovitch

PURPOSE The developing generic market has huge advantages of availability and affordability of therapy. The question of whether a therapeutic equivalent substitute under an unfamiliar name may cause confusion that leads to medical errors has not been sufficiently studied. This paper seeks to answer this question. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH The study was triggered following sporadic reports according to which patients mistakenly consider therapeutic equivalents as unrelated medications rather than substitutes. Family physicians and pharmacists in one of eight districts of Clalit, Israels largest healthcare provider were surveyed. The surveys questions recall episodes of medication uncertainty, confusion, misidentification, and medication mistakes associated with switching from one therapeutic equivalent to another. A total of 66 physicians and 63 pharmacists responded to the surveys (61 percent and 45 percent, respectively). FINDINGS The results recall uncertainty, confusion, misidentification, and mainly cases of medication mistakes in which patients consumed both therapeutic equivalents simultaneously as was reported by 81 percent of physicians and 70 percent of pharmacists. RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS There are two limitations in this work, the first is the study type, which is recall survey; the second is the response rate which is not unusual among health care professionals. However, the high face-validity and the consistency of the findings in both physicians and pharmacists surveyed indicates high validity of the study conclusions. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS A practical implication is unique medication error of consuming both therapeutic equivalents simultaneously. The authors wish to raise awareness of the potential of such error, which may be difficult to disclose as each of the therapeutic equivalents is apparently the intended medication but consuming them simultaneously results practically in doubling the intended dose. Given the forecast for generic market growth, awareness is not enough and worldwide regulatory cooperation should be made otherwise these types of medication errors will inevitably emerge. ORIGINALITY/VALUE The study is original as a literature search revealed no studies evaluating potential medication mistakes attributed to a switch between therapeutic equivalents.

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