- Faster
insulin process stabilisation in children with diabetes: 64% of a group
of diabetic children experienced a 2-3-day faster process stabilisation
than the children in the control group
- Shorter
stays in hospital for dysfunctional juvenile uterine haemorrhage: the girls
could be released from hospital an average of 2 days earlier than the girls
in the control group; in 75% of the girls healing actually occurred twice
as fast as in the control group, and they could already go home 3 days earlier
- Healing-inducing
effects in blood formation following gynaecological surgery: at the end
of the treatment only 26% of the results indicated anaemia, compared to
39% in the control group
- Faster
normalisation of the kidney function:
breakdown of the protein content in the urine of pregnant women treated
for OPH syndrome.
The protein content of the urine was broken down within 4-5 days, significantly
faster than in the control group
- Faster
normalisation of high blood pressure in pregnant women than in a control
group receiving hypotensive and sedative medicine
- Dispersion
of the clinical risk characteristics in pregnant women with health disorders
which threatened to lead to miscarriage: already after a 2-3 days
treatment there were no longer any clinical risk characteristics in 60%
of the women patients.
In the time from the fifth to the seventh day, these also disappeared in
the remaining 40% of patients.
In the control group the clinical risk characteristics in 70% of the women
had disappeared after 7-10 days treatment. However, in 30% they remained
- Shorter
stays in hospital: a 35% faster recovery in pregnant women with health disorders
which threatened to lead to miscarriage than those in the control group
- Faster
recovery in high-risk pregnancies with a OPH syndrome: in this group treatment
could be completed 14% faster than in the control group
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