19,086 research outputs found

    POSSUM scoring system in patients undergoing laparotomy in Mulago Hospital

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    Background: Prediction of complications is an essential part of risk management in surgery. Knowing which patient to operate and those at high risk of developing complications contributes significantly to the quality of surgical care and cost reduction in surgery. The physiological and operative severity score for the enumeration of mortality and morbidity (POSSUM) was used to score and predict the outcomes of Laparotomy in Mulago Hospital. The main objective of this study was to determine the morbidity and mortality POSSUM scores for patients who underwent Laparotomy in Mulago Hospital, between September 2003 and February 2004.Methodology: Consecutive patients, who underwent a Laparotomy in the three surgical wards in Mulago Hospital, were scored using POSSUM system. For each patient the predicted risk of mortality and morbidity was calculated from POSSUM equation. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to determine the relationships between the predicted and observed morbidity and mortality rates. Postoperative complications and mortality within 30days were described.Results: Seventy-six patients were studied. The observed and expected mortality and morbidity rates were 14.5%, 2.6% and 35.4%, 0% respectively. Physiological scores, operative scores, co morbid condition such as Diabetes Mellitus significantly determined the outcomes.Conclusion: POSSUM scoring system can be used to predict the risk of mortality but not morbidity for patients admitted to a surgical ward in Mulago Hospital.Recommendations: The POSSUM scoring system can be used in decision-making process before a Laparotomy is carried out

    Cost effective oesophageal intubation

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    Carcinoma of the oesophagus presents a multitude of challenges of patient care in  Africa The majority of patients present with very advanced manifestations of the disease. The treatment options are usually few and limited to palliation. Placement of an endoprosthetic tube is one method which is commonly undertaken and very often provides satisfactory palliation, with restoration of swallowing

    Characterising resuscitation promoting factor fluorescent-fusions in mycobacteria

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    Background Resuscitation promoting factor proteins (Rpfs) are peptidoglycan glycosidases capable of resuscitating dormant mycobacteria, and have been found to play a role in the pathogenesis of tuberculosis. However, the specific roles and localisation of each of the 5 Rpfs in Mycobacterium tuberculosis remain mostly unknown. In this work our aim was to construct fluorescent fusions of M. tuberculosis Rpf proteins as tools to investigate their function. Results We found that Rpf-fusions to the fluorescent protein mCherry are functional and able to promote cell growth under different conditions. However, fusions to Enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein (EGFP) were non-functional in the assays used and none were secreted into the extracellular medium, which suggests Rpfs may be secreted via the Sec pathway. No specific cellular localization was observed for either set of fusions using time-lapse video microscopy. Conclusions We present the validation and testing of five M. tuberculosis Rpfs fused to mCherry, which are functional in resuscitation assays, but do not show any specific cellular localisation under the conditions tested. Our results suggest that Rpfs are likely to be secreted via the Sec pathway. We propose that such mCherry fusions will be useful tools for the further study of Rpf localisation, individual expression, and function. Keywords Rpfs, mycobacteria, tuberculosis, fluorescent fusions, microscopy

    The Postoperative Complications Prediction in Mulago Hospital using POSSUM Scoring System

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    Introduction: Prediction of complications is an essential part of risk management in surgery. Knowing which patient to operate and those at high risk of developing complications contributes significantly to the quality of surgical care and cost reduction. The postoperative complications of patients who underwent Laparotomy in Mulago Hospital were studied using POSSUM scoring system. The main objective of this study was to determine the postoperative complications of Laparotomy in Mulago Hospital, between September 2003 and February 2004.Methods: Consecutive patients, who underwent Laparotomy in Mulago, were studied using POSSUM system for development of complications. For each patient operated, they were followed up in wards until discharge. When the postoperative complications were reported, they were reexamined by the surgeons, treated and followed up for 30 days postoperatively. Phone contacts were used for the follow up. Surgical reviews were conducted once a week in Mulago Hospital and the data obtained recorded in the data sheet for the patients.Results: Seventy-six patients were studied. The observed post operative complications were as follows: Respiratory tract infection (28.2%), wound haemmorrhage (18.2%), anaemia (15.5%), hypotension (14.1%), UTI (2.2%), Anastomotic leak (1.4%), Wound sepsis (9.9%), wound dehiscence (4.2%), Thromboembolism (1.4%). The postoperative nursing care significantly determined the outcomes.Conclusion: Postoperative complications can be predicted in the modern management of surgery especially while using a scoring system

    Safer, faster, better? Evaluating electronic prescribing

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    A Review on Treatment-Related Brain Changes in Aphasia

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    Numerous studies have investigated brain changes associated with interventions targeting a range of language problems in patients with aphasia. We strive to integrate the results of these studies to examine (1) whether the focus of the intervention (i.e., phonology, semantics, orthography, syntax, or rhythmic-melodic) determines in which brain regions changes occur; and (2a) whether the most consistent changes occur within the language network or outside, and (2b) whether these are related to individual differences in language outcomes. The results of 32 studies with 204 unique patients were considered. Concerning (1), the location of treatment-related changes does not clearly depend on the type of language processing targeted. However, there is some support that rhythmic-melodic training has more impact on the right hemisphere than linguistic training. Concerning (2), we observed that language recovery is not only associated with changes in traditional language-related structures in the left hemisphere and homolog regions in the right hemisphere, but also with more medial and subcortical changes (e.g., precuneus and basal ganglia). Although it is difficult to draw strong conclusions, because there is a lack of systematic large-scale studies on this topic, this review highlights the need for an integrated approach to investigate how language interventions impact on the brain. Future studies need to focus on larger samples preserving subject-specific information (e.g., lesion effects) to cope with the inherent heterogeneity of stroke-induced aphasia. In addition, recovery-related changes in whole-brain connectivity patterns need more investigation to provide a comprehensive neural account of treatment-related brain plasticity and language recovery

    Exhaustive generation of kk-critical H\mathcal H-free graphs

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    We describe an algorithm for generating all kk-critical H\mathcal H-free graphs, based on a method of Ho\`{a}ng et al. Using this algorithm, we prove that there are only finitely many 44-critical (P7,Ck)(P_7,C_k)-free graphs, for both k=4k=4 and k=5k=5. We also show that there are only finitely many 44-critical graphs (P8,C4)(P_8,C_4)-free graphs. For each case of these cases we also give the complete lists of critical graphs and vertex-critical graphs. These results generalize previous work by Hell and Huang, and yield certifying algorithms for the 33-colorability problem in the respective classes. Moreover, we prove that for every tt, the class of 4-critical planar PtP_t-free graphs is finite. We also determine all 27 4-critical planar (P7,C6)(P_7,C_6)-free graphs. We also prove that every P10P_{10}-free graph of girth at least five is 3-colorable, and determine the smallest 4-chromatic P12P_{12}-free graph of girth five. Moreover, we show that every P13P_{13}-free graph of girth at least six and every P16P_{16}-free graph of girth at least seven is 3-colorable. This strengthens results of Golovach et al.Comment: 17 pages, improved girth results. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1504.0697

    Families of strictly pseudoconvex domains and peak functions

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    We prove that given a family (Gt)(G_t) of strictly pseudoconvex domains varying in C2\mathcal{C}^2 topology on domains, there exists a continuously varying family of peak functions ht,ζh_{t,\zeta} for all GtG_t at every $\zeta\in\partial G_t.

    Redesigning the 'choice architecture' of hospital prescription charts: a mixed methods study incorporating in situ simulation testing.

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    Objectives: To incorporate behavioural insights into the user-centred design of an inpatient prescription chart (Imperial Drug Chart Evaluation and Adoption Study, IDEAS chart) and to determine whether changes in the content and design of prescription charts could influence prescribing behaviour and reduce prescribing errors. Design: A mixed-methods approach was taken in the development phase of the project; in situ simulation was used to evaluate the effectiveness of the newly developed IDEAS prescription chart. Setting: A London teaching hospital. Interventions/methods: A multimodal approach comprising (1) an exploratory phase consisting of chart reviews, focus groups and user insight gathering (2) the iterative design of the IDEAS prescription chart and finally (3) testing of final chart with prescribers using in situ simulation. Results: Substantial variation was seen between existing inpatient prescription charts used across 15 different UK hospitals. Review of 40 completed prescription charts from one hospital demonstrated a number of frequent prescribing errors including illegibility, and difficulty in identifying prescribers. Insights from focus groups and direct observations were translated into the design of IDEAS chart. In situ simulation testing revealed significant improvements in prescribing on the IDEAS chart compared with the prescription chart currently in use in the study hospital. Medication orders on the IDEAS chart were significantly more likely to include correct dose entries (164/164 vs 166/174; p=0.0046) as well as prescriber's printed name (163/164 vs 0/174; p<0.0001) and contact number (137/164 vs 55/174; p<0.0001). Antiinfective indication (28/28 vs 17/29; p<0.0001) and duration (26/28 vs 15/29; p<0.0001) were more likely to be completed using the IDEAS chart. Conclusions: In a simulated context, the IDEAS prescription chart significantly reduced a number of common prescribing errors including dosing errors and illegibility. Positive behavioural change was seen without prior education or support, suggesting that some common prescription writing errors are potentially rectifiable simply through changes in the content and design of prescription charts
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