4,389 research outputs found
Assessment of chronic postsurgical pain after knee replacement : a systematic review
Objective: Approximately 20% of patients experience chronic pain after total knee replacement (TKR), yet there is no consensus about how best to assess such pain. This systematic review aimed to identify measures used to characterise chronic pain after TKR.
Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Cochrane Library and CINAHL databases were searched for research articles published in all languages from January 2002- November 2011. Articles were eligible for inclusion if they assessed knee pain at a minimum of 3-months after TKR, yielding a total of 1,164 articles. Data extracted included study design, country, timings of assessments, and outcome measures containing pain items. Outcome measures were compared with domains recommended by IMMPACT for inclusion in assessment of chronic pain related outcomes within clinical trials. Temporal trends were also explored.
Results: The review found use of a wide variety of composite and single-item measures, with the American Knee Society Score most common. Many measures used in published studies do not capture the multi-dimensional nature of pain recommended by IMMPACT; of those commonly used, the WOMAC and Oxford Knee Score are most comprehensive. Geographical trends were evident, with nation-specific preferences for particular measures. A recent reduction in use of some clinically-administered tools was accompanied by increased use of patient-reported outcome measures.
Conclusion: There was wide variation in methods of pain assessment alongside nation-specific preferences and changing temporal trends in pain assessment after TKR. Standardisation and improvements in assessment is needed to enhance the quality of research and facilitate the establishment of a core outcome set
Towards a conceptual framework demonstrating the effectiveness of audiovisual patient descriptions (patient video cases): a review of the current literature
Background: Technological advances have enabled the widespread use of video cases via web-streaming and online download as an educational medium. The use of real subjects to demonstrate acute pathology should aid the education of health care professionals. However, the methodology by which this effect may be tested is not clear.
Methods: We undertook a literature review of major databases, found relevant articles relevant to using patient video cases as educational interventions, extracted the methodologies used and assessed these methods for internal and construct validity.
Results: A review of 2532 abstracts revealed 23 studies meeting the inclusion criteria and a final review of 18 of relevance. Medical students were the most commonly studied group (10 articles) with a spread of learner satisfaction, knowledge and behaviour tested. Only two of the studies fulfilled defined criteria on achieving internal and construct validity. The heterogeneity of articles meant it was not possible to perform any meta-analysis.
Conclusions: Previous studies have not well classified which facet of training or educational outcome the study is aiming to explore and had poor internal and construct validity. Future research should aim to validate a particular outcome measure, preferably by reproducing previous work rather than adopting new methods. In particular cognitive processing enhancement, demonstrated in a number of the medical student studies, should be tested at a postgraduate level
Some combinatorial identities related to commuting varieties and Hilbert schemes
In this article we explore some of the combinatorial consequences of recent results relating the isospectral commuting variety and the Hilbert scheme of points in the plane
Counselling in primary care : a systematic review of the evidence
Primary objective: To undertake a systematic review which aimed to locate, appraise and synthesise evidence to obtain a reliable overview of the clinical effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and user perspectives regarding counselling in primary care.
Main results: Evidence from 26 studies was presented as a narrative synthesis and demonstrated that counselling is effective in the short term, is as effective as CBT with typical heterogeneous primary care populations and more effective than routine primary care for the treatment of non-specific generic psychological problems, anxiety and depression. Counselling may reduce levels of referrals to psychiatric services, but does not appear to reduce medication, the number of GP consultations or overall
costs. Patients are highly satisfied with the counselling they have received in primary care and prefer counselling to medication for depression.
Conclusions and implications for future research: This review demonstrates the value of counselling as a valid
choice for primary care patients and as a broadly effective therapeutic intervention for a wide range of generic psychological conditions presenting in the primary care setting. More rigorous clinical and cost-effectiveness trials are needed together with surveys of more typical users of primary care services
MOBILE and the provision of total joint replacement
Modern joint replacements have been available for 45 years, but we still do not have clear indications for these interventions, and we do not know how to optimize the outcome for patients who agree to have them done. The MOBILE programme has been investigating these issues in relation to primary total hip and knee joint replacements, using mixed methods research
Design and construction of new central and forward muon counters for CDF II
New scintillation counters have been designed and constructed for the CDF
upgrade in order to complete the muon coverage of the central CDF detector, and
to extend this coverage to larger pseudorapidity. A novel light collection
technique using wavelength shifting fibers, together with high quality
polystyrene-based scintillator resulted in compact counters with good and
stable light collection efficiency over lengths extending up to 320 cm. Their
design and construction is described and results of their initial performance
are reported.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figure
Pulsed electromagnetic energy treatment offers no clinical benefit in reducing the pain of knee osteoarthritis: a systematic review
Background
The rehabilitation of knee osteoarthritis often includes electrotherapeutic modalities as well as advice and exercise. One commonly used modality is pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF). PEMF uses electro magnetically generated fields to promote tissue repair and healing rates. Its equivocal benefit over placebo treatment has been previously suggested however recently a number of randomised controlled trials have been published that have allowed a systematic review to be conducted.
Methods
A systematic review of the literature from 1966 to 2005 was undertaken. Relevant computerised bibliographic databases were searched and papers reviewed independently by two reviewers for quality using validated criteria for assessment. The key outcomes of pain and functional disability were analysed with weighted and standardised mean differences being calculated.
Results
Five randomised controlled trials comparing PEMF with placebo were identified. The weighted mean differences of the five papers for improvement in pain and function, were small and their 95% confidence intervals included the null.
Conclusion
This systematic review provides further evidence that PEMF has little value in the management of knee osteoarthritis. There appears to be clear evidence for the recommendation that PEMF does not significantly reduce the pain of knee osteoarthritis
Near-IR spectroscopy of PKS1549-79: a proto-quasar revealed?
We present a near-IR spectrum of the nearby radio galaxy PKS1549-79 (z=0153).
These data were taken with the aim of testing the idea that this object
contains a quasar nucleus that is moderately extinguished, despite evidence
that its radio jet points close to our line-of-sight. We detect broad Paschen
Alpha emission (FWHM ~1745 km/s), relatively bright continuum emission, and a
continuum slope consistent with a reddened quasar spectrum (3.1 < Av < 7.3),
all emitted by an unresolved point source. Therefore we conclude that we have,
indeed, detected a hidden quasar nucleus in PKS1549-79. Combined with previous
results, these observations are consistent with the idea that PKS1549-79 is a
young radio source in which the cocoon of debric left over from the triggering
events has not yet been swept aside by circumnuclear outflows.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
National Environment Programme: Monitoring the Denver Licence. The 2005-2006 surveys of inter-tidal sediments, invertebrates and birds of the SE Wash
Triad3a induces the degradation of early necrosome to limit RipK1-dependent cytokine production and necroptosis.
Understanding the molecular signaling in programmed cell death is vital to a practical understanding of inflammation and immune cell function. Here we identify a previously unrecognized mechanism that functions to downregulate the necrosome, a central signaling complex involved in inflammation and necroptosis. We show that RipK1 associates with RipK3 in an early necrosome, independent of RipK3 phosphorylation and MLKL-induced necroptotic death. We find that formation of the early necrosome activates K48-ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal degradation of RipK1, Caspase-8, and other necrosomal proteins. Our results reveal that the E3-ubiquitin ligase Triad3a promotes this negative feedback loop independently of typical RipK1 ubiquitin editing enzymes, cIAPs, A20, or CYLD. Finally, we show that Triad3a-dependent necrosomal degradation limits necroptosis and production of inflammatory cytokines. These results reveal a new mechanism of shutting off necrosome signaling and may pave the way to new strategies for therapeutic manipulation of inflammatory responses
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