3,608 research outputs found

    Changes In angulation and phalangeal length of fingers and thumbs following surgical treatment for congenital clinodactyly

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    INTRODUCTION: Congenital clinodactyly is a condition characterized by the deviation of a digit or digits in the coronal plane. Angulation is often due to the presence of a delta phalanx. There is a scarcity of long-term data regarding the results of surgical treatment for clinodactyly, particularly with respect to postoperative phalangeal growth and risk factors for recurrent deformity. METHODS: Our retrospective study involved the analysis of data from medical records of patients who had corrective surgery for congenital clinodactyly. We also measured radiographs to quantify the angle of deviation and the longitudinal lengths of the surgically corrected phalanx and corresponding metacarpal. Clinodactyly was defined as radiographic angulation of 10° or greater in the coronal plane. Recurrence was defined as a final angulation of 10° or greater as well as an increase of at least 10° compared with the immediate postoperative measurement. The primary ratio was defined as the ratio of the length of the primary ossification center of the surgically corrected phalanx to the length of the primary ossification center of the corresponding metacarpal. The secondary ratio was the ratio of the length of the primary and secondary ossification centers together of the corrected phalanx to those of the metacarpal. Comparisons were made between preoperative, postoperative, and most-recent follow-up values. Postoperative data was restricted to radiographs taken within three months after surgery. Final follow-up data was initially permitted if radiographs were taken at least one year after surgery. Additional analysis was performed of patients with a minimum of two years clinical and radiographic follow-up. RESULTS: There was a significant decrease in angulation with surgery and a significant increase in angulation postoperatively (p<0.001; p<0.01). Overall, the mean preoperative and final digital angulation was 40.4° and 17.4°, respectively, when a two-year minimum between the time of surgery and final follow-up measurements was implemented. This resulted in a significant average correction of 23.3° (p<0.001). The postoperative change in angulation was found to be significantly different depending on the surgical technique used. Digits corrected with reverse wedge osteotomies showed little to no change in angulation during the postoperative period. However, digits corrected with closing wedge osteotomies showed a significant increase in angulation between the immediate postoperative and final follow-up measurements (p=0.007). The rate of recurrence was 43.2% (95% CI: 28.7-58.9% with a one year minimum for follow-up; 95% CI: 27.5-60.4% with a two year minimum for follow-up). Postoperative changes in angulation or recurrence were not significantly associated with gender, patient age at the time of surgery, the type of digit corrected, coexisting congenital syndromes, or the presence of additional hand abnormalities. The primary ratio decreased significantly with surgery, from 0.35 preoperatively to 0.27 postoperatively (p=0.03). The primary ratio then increased significantly over time to 0.40 when there was a two-year minimum between the time of surgery and final follow-up. There was an insignificant change in primary ratio from immediately after surgery to final follow-up when data as early as one year postoperatively was included. The secondary ratio did not change significantly with surgery or during the postoperative period regardless of whether one or two-year time restrictions were in place. The mean secondary ratio was 0.29 before surgery, 0.25 immediately after surgery, and 0.33 at the time of final follow-up at least two years after surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Surgery to correct clinodactyly effectively decreases angulation of the digit, despite the risk of recurrent deformity over time. Our study did not identify any factors associated with recurrence. However, there was a significant difference in the change in angulation between the immediate postoperative and final follow-up measurements depending on the surgical technique used. Surgery to correct clinodactyly does not hinder postoperative growth of the corrected phalanx

    Measuring and decomposing inequity in self-reported morbidity and self-assessed health in Thailand

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    BACKGROUND In recent years, interest in the study of inequalities in health has not stopped at quantifying their magnitude; explaining the sources of inequalities has also become of great importance. This paper measures socioeconomic inequalities in self-reported morbidity and self-assessed health in Thailand, and the contributions of different population subgroups to those inequalities. METHODS The Health and Welfare Survey 2003 conducted by the Thai National Statistical Office with 37,202 adult respondents is used for the analysis. The health outcomes of interest derive from three self-reported morbidity and two self-assessed health questions. Socioeconomic status is measured by adult-equivalent monthly income per household member. The concentration index (CI) of ill health is used as a measure of socioeconomic health inequalities, and is subsequently decomposed into contributing factors. RESULTS The CIs reveal inequality gradients disadvantageous to the poor for both self-reported morbidity and self-assessed health in Thailand. The magnitudes of these inequalities were higher for the self-assessed health outcomes than for the self-reported morbidity outcomes. Age and sex played significant roles in accounting for the inequality in reported chronic illness (33.7 percent of the total inequality observed), hospital admission (27.8 percent), and self-assessed deterioration of health compared to a year ago (31.9 percent). The effect of being female and aged 60 years or older was by far the strongest demographic determinant of inequality across all five types of health outcome. Having a low socioeconomic status as measured by income quintile, education and work status were the main contributors disadvantaging the poor in self-rated health compared to a year ago (47.1 percent) and self-assessed health compared to peers (47.4 percent). Residence in the rural Northeast and rural North were the main regional contributors to inequality in self-reported recent and chronic illness, while residence in the rural Northeast was the major contributor to the tendency of the poor to report lower levels of self-assessed health compared to peers. CONCLUSION The findings confirm that substantial socioeconomic inequalities in health as measured by self-reported morbidity and self-assessed health exist in Thailand. Decomposition analysis shows that inequalities in health status are associated with particular demographic, socioeconomic and geographic population subgroups. Vulnerable subgroups which are prone to both ill health and relative poverty warrant targeted policy attention

    Significant Phonon Drag Enables High Power Factor in the AlGaN/GaN Two-Dimensional Electron Gas

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    In typical thermoelectric energy harvesters and sensors, the Seebeck effect is caused by diffusion of electrons or holes in a temperature gradient. However, the Seebeck effect can also have a phonon drag component, due to momentum exchange between charge carriers and lattice phonons, which is more difficult to quantify. Here, we present the first study of phonon drag in the AlGaN/GaN two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG). We find that phonon drag does not contribute significantly to the thermoelectric behavior of devices with ~100 nm GaN thickness, which suppress the phonon mean free path. However, when the thickness is increased to ~1.2 μ\mum, up to 32% (88%) of the Seebeck coefficient at 300 K (50 K) can be attributed to the drag component. In turn, the phonon drag enables state-of-the-art thermoelectric power factor in the thicker GaN film, up to ~40 mW m1^{-1} K2^{-2} at 50 K. By measuring the thermal conductivity of these AlGaN/GaN films, we show that the magnitude of the phonon drag can increase even when the thermal conductivity decreases. Decoupling of thermal conductivity and Seebeck coefficient could enable important advancements in thermoelectric power conversion with devices based on 2DEGs

    Prevalence of liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) in wild Red Deer (Cervus elaphus): coproantigen ELISA is a practicable alternative to faecal egg counting for surveillance in remote populations

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    Red deer (Cervus elaphus) are hosts of liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica); yet, prevalence is rarely quantified in wild populations. Testing fresh samples from remote regions by faecal examination (FE) can be logistically challenging; hence, we appraise frozen storage and the use of a coproantigen ELISA (cELISA) for F. hepatica surveillance. We also present cELISA surveillance data for red deer from the Highlands of Scotland. Diagnoses in faecal samples (207 frozen, 146 fresh) were compared using a cELISA and by FE. For each storage method (frozen or fresh), agreement between the two diagnostics was estimated at individual and population levels, where population prevalence was stratified into cohorts (e.g., by sampling location). To approximate sensitivity and specificity, 65 post-slaughter whole liver examinations were used as a reference. At the individual level, FE and cELISA diagnoses agreed moderately (κfrozen = 0.46; κfresh = 0.51), a likely reflection of their underlying principles. At the population level, FE and cELISA cohort prevalence correlated strongly (Pearson’s R = 0.89, p &lt; 0.0001), reflecting good agreement on relative differences between cohort prevalence. In frozen samples, prevalence by cELISA exceeded FE overall (42.8% vs. 25.8%) and in 9/12 cohorts, alluding to differences in sensitivity; though, in fresh samples, no significant difference was found. In 959 deer tested by cELISA across the Scottish Highlands, infection prevalence ranged from 9.6% to 53% by sampling location. We highlight two key advantages of cELISA over FE: i) the ability to store samples long term (frozen) without apparent loss in diagnostic power; and ii) reduced labour and the ability to process large batches. Further evaluation of cELISA sensitivity in red deer, where a range of fluke burdens can be obtained, is desirable. In the interim, the cELISA is a practicable diagnostic for F. hepatica surveillance in red deer, and its application here has revealed considerable geographic, temporal, sex and age related differences in F. hepatica prevalence in wild Scottish Highland red deer

    Prevalence of incidental breast cancer and precursor lesions in autopsy studies: A systematic review and meta-analysis

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    Abstract Background Autopsy studies demonstrate the prevalence pool of incidental breast cancer in the population, but estimates are uncertain due to small numbers in any primary study. We aimed to conduct a systematic review of autopsy studies to estimate the prevalence of incidental breast cancer and precursors. Methods Relevant articles were identified through searching PubMed and Embase from inception up to April 2016, and backward and forward citations. We included autopsy studies of women with no history of breast pathology, which included systematic histological examination of at least one breast, and which allowed calculation of the prevalence of incidental breast cancer or precursor lesions. Data were pooled using logistic regression models with random intercepts (non-linear mixed models). Results We included 13 studies from 1948 to 2010, contributing 2363 autopsies with 99 cases of incidental cancer or precursor lesions. More thorough histological examination (≥20 histological sections) was a strong predictor of incidental in-situ cancer and atypical hyperplasia (OR = 126·8 and 21·3 respectively, p < 0·001), but not invasive cancer (OR = 1·1, p = 0·75). The estimated mean prevalence of incidental cancer or precursor lesion was 19·5% (0·85% invasive cancer + 8·9% in-situ cancer + 9·8% atypical hyperplasia). Conclusion Our systematic review in ten countries over six decades found that incidental detection of cancer in situ and breast cancer precursors is common in women not known to have breast disease during life. The large prevalence pool of undetected cancer in-situ and atypical hyperplasia in these autopsy studies suggests screening programs should be cautious about introducing more sensitive tests that may increase detection of these lesions

    The Three Faces of Omega_m: Testing Gravity with Low and High Redshift SN Ia Surveys

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    Peculiar velocities of galaxies hosting Type Ia supernovae generate a significant systematic effect in deriving the dark energy equation of state w, at level of a few percent. Here we illustrate how the peculiar velocity effect in SN Ia data can be turned from a 'systematic' into a probe of cosmological parameters. We assume a flat Lambda-Cold Dark Matter model (w=-1) and use low and high redshift SN Ia data to derive simultaneously three distinct estimates of the matter density Omega_m which appear in the problem: from the geometry, from the dynamics and from the shape of the matter power spectrum. We find that each of the three Omega_m's agree with the canonical value Omega_m=0.25 to within 1 sigma, for reasonably assumed fluctuation amplitude and Hubble parameter. This is consistent with the standard cosmological scenario for both the geometry and the growth of structure. For fixed Omega_m = 0.25 for all three Omega_m's, we constrain gamma = 0.72 +/- 0.21 in the growth factor Omega_m(z)^gamma, so we cannot currently distinguish between standard Einstein gravity and predictions from some modified gravity models. Future surveys of thousands of SN Ia, or inclusion of peculiar velocity data, could significantly improve the above tests.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS (Letters), 5 pages, 4 figures. Small changes to improve the text and the figures. Some further discussion, 1 equation and 1 reference adde

    GRADE equity guidelines 4: guidance on how to assess and address health equity within the evidence to decision process

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    Objective: The aim of this paper is to provide detailed guidance on how to incorporate health equity within the GRADE (Grading Recommendations Assessment and Development Evidence) evidence to decision process. Study design and setting: We developed this guidance based on the GRADE evidence to decision (EtD) framework, iteratively reviewing and modifying draft documents, in person discussion of project group members and input from other GRADE members. Results: Considering the impact on health equity may be required, both in general guidelines, and guidelines that focus on disadvantaged populations. We suggest two approaches to incorporate equity considerations: 1) assessing the potential impact of interventions on equity and; 2) incorporating equity considerations when judging or weighing each of the evidence to decision criteria. We provide guidance and include illustrative examples. Conclusion: Guideline panels should consider the impact of recommendations on health equity with attention to remote and underserviced settings and disadvantaged populations. Guideline panels may wish to incorporate equity judgments across the evidence to decision framework

    An immunodominant La/SSB autoantibody proteome derives from public clonotypes

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    This item is under embargo for a period of 12 months from the date of publication, in accordance with the publisher's policy.The La/SSB autoantigen is a major target of long-term humoral autoimmunity in primary Sjögren’s Syndrome (SS) and systemic lupus erythematosus. A majority of patients with linked anti-Ro60/Ro52/La responses target an NH2-terminal epitope designated LaA that is expressed on Ro/La ribonucleoprotein complexes and the surface membrane of apoptotic cells. In this study, we used high-resolution Orbitrap mass spectrometry to determine the clonality, isotype and V-region sequences of LaA-specific autoantibodies in seven patients with primary SS. Anti-LaA immunoglobulin (Ig)Gs purified from polyclonal sera by epitope-specific affinity chromatography were analysed by combined database and de-novo mass spectrometric sequencing. Autoantibody responses comprised two heavily mutated IgG1 kappa-restricted monoclonal species that were shared (public) across unrelated patients; one clonotype was specified by an IGHV3-30 heavy chain paired with IGKV3-15 light chain and the second by an IGHV3- 43/IGKV3-20 pairing. Shared amino acid replacement mutations were also seen within heavy and light chain complementarity-determining regions, consistent with a common breach of B cell tolerance followed by antigendriven clonal selection. The discovery of public clonotypic autoantibodies directed against an immunodominant epitope on La, taken together with recent findings for the linked Ro52 and Ro60 autoantigens, supports a model of systemic autoimmunity in which humoral responses against protein–RNA complexes are mediated by public sets of autoreactive B cell clonotypes.This work was supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council grant 1041900 to T. P. Gordon and T. K. Chataway

    Cellular Respiration: A Stars Science Suitcase for High School Biology Students

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    The goal of this thesis project was to create a portable Science Suitcase on cellular respiration intended to supplement the current high school biology curriculum in the Dallas Independent School District. The Science Suitcase includes a narrated animation, a magnetic board game and printable student handouts. The Science Suitcase will help high school students understand the broad concepts of cellular respiration and help them improve performance on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) exam
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