217 research outputs found

    Can patients apply the Ottawa ankle rules to themselves?

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    ABSTRACT Objective: To determine whether patients with an ankle injury obtained the same results as clinicians when applying the Ottawa ankle rules (a validated clinical decision rule) to themselves. Methods: Patients aged .15 years presenting to an inner city emergency department within 48 h of an ankle injury were asked to assess their own injury using the Ottawa ankle rules. The results of their self-assessment were compared with those of a treating clinician. Results: Poor interobserver agreement was found between patients and clinicians. Conclusions: Making the Ottawa ankle rule more widely available to the general public is unlikely to reduce healthcare demand. Indeed, given the apparently low specificity of the rule, demand could actually increase as a result. The Ottawa ankle rules have been extensively validated as a clinical decision rule for use by healthcare professionals in detecting possible bony injury-and therefore the need for radiography-in patients with a recent ankle injury. 2 The Ottawa ankle rules can be reliably applied by a range of healthcare professionals, including emergency nurse practitioners. 3 If they could also be reliably applied by patients to their own ankle injuries, there is the potential to reduce healthcare consultations following ankle sprain with consequent resource savings, particularly if the rules were widely publicised. The aim of this pilot study was to determine the agreement between patients and clinicians when applying the Ottawa ankle rules, and therefore whether adult patients with a recent ankle injury are potentially able to accurately apply the Ottawa ankle rules to themselves. METHODS A convenience sample of 50 patients attending a single inner city emergency department with a recent (within 48 h) ankle injury were asked if they wished to participate in the study by a researcher triaging the patient. All patients were offered analgesia. Patients who elected not to enter the study were examined by a researcher and treated according to usual practice. If the patient entered the study, informed written consent was obtained and they were then given an information sheet and pictorial questionnaire describing the Ottawa ankle rules (see online Appendix 1). Participants were asked to examine their own ankle and to enter the results on the questionnaire before formal clinical assessment. The patient was then seen by an emergency department clinician (doctor, emergency nurse practitioner or extended scope physiotherapist) who was blind to the patient's assessment of his or her own injury. The clinician made an independent assessment of the injury and arranged radiographs as appropriate. The clinician then completed a study questionnaire giving details of his/her assessment and an interpretation of any radiographs. The formal radiology report was also reviewed and, where any disagreement occurred, the radiology report was taken as the reference standard. If radiography was not performed, the emergency and radiology department records were checked to see if the patient presented in the following month with a lower limb injury. The kappa statistic was used to determine the level of agreement between the patient and clinician, with x 2 testing to compare their overall opinion. RESULTS Fifty patients (25 men, 25 women) of mean age 32 years (range 16-63) were recruited to the study. The mean duration from injury to presentation was 17 h. All 50 patients rated themselves as positive on at least one of the five Ottawa criteria, and therefore all patients concluded that they required a radiograph. On examination by the clinician, 45 of the 50 patients were positive on at least one of the Ottawa criteria and therefore required a radiograph. Of the remaining five patients, one had a ruptured Achilles tendon and one underwent radiography for other reasons. None of the other three patients who did not undergo radiography returned to the emergency department or had lower limb radiographs at the same hospital during the following month. Of the patients who underwent radiography, seven (14%) had fractures identified by both the clinician and the reporting radiologist. Three (6%) had fractures suspected by the clinician but not confirmed by the radiologist. The remaining 36 patients (72%) who had radiographs did not have a fracture. No fractures were missed by an ED clinician. Agreement between the patient and clinician in relation to each of the five Ottawa criteria is shown in tables 1 and 2. There was very little agreement between patients and clinicians on whether they could walk initially or in the emergency department, but greater agreement regarding local tenderness. Overall, 90% of clinicians and 100% of patients rated the rule as positive, demonstrating a statistically significant difference between the final opinions of the two groups (p = 0.02, x 2 test). The kappa values show

    Effect of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy on Wound Complications Post-Pancreatectomy

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    Surgical site infection (SSI) and incisional hernia are common complications after major pancreatectomy. We investigated the effects of negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) on short- and long-term wound outcomes in patients undergoing pancreatectomy. A randomized controlled trial comparing the effect of NPWT with standard surgical dressing (SSD) on wounds was performed in 265 patients undergoing open gastrointestinal resections from 2012 to 2016. We performed a subset analysis of 73 patients who underwent pancreatectomy. Wound complications in the first 30 days and incisional hernia rates were assessed. There were 33 (45%) female patients in the study and the average BMI was 27.6. The pancreaticoduodectomy rate was 68 per cent, whereas 27 per cent of patients underwent distal or subtotal pancreatectomy, and 4 per cent total pancreatectomy. Incisional hernia rates were 32 per cent and 14 per cent between the SSD and NPWT groups, respectively

    Saturated and trans-fatty acids in UK takeaway food

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    The aim of the study was to analyze the saturated fatty acid (SFA) and trans-fatty acid (TFA) contents of popular takeaway foods in the UK (including English, pizza, Chinese, Indian and kebab cuisine). Samples of meals were analyzed by an accredited public analyst laboratory for SFA and TFA. The meals were highly variable for SFA and TFA. English and Pizza meals had the highest median amount of SFA with 35.7 g/meal; Kebab meals were high in TFA with up to 5.2 g/meal. When compared to UK dietary reference values, some meals exceeded SFA and TFA recommendations from just one meal. Takeaway food would be an obvious target to reduce SFA and TFA contents and increase the potential of meeting UK recommendations. Strategies such as reformulation and smaller takeaway portion sizes warrant investigation

    Case report: response to the ERK1/2 inhibitor ulixertinib in BRAF D594G cutaneous melanoma.

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    Melanoma is characterized by oncogenic mutations in pathways regulating cell growth, proliferation, and metabolism. Greater than 80% of primary melanoma cases harbor aberrant activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase/extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (MEK/ERK) pathway, with oncogenic mutations in BRAF, most notably BRAF V600E, being the most common. Significant progress has been made in BRAF-mutant melanoma using BRAF and MEK inhibitors; however, non-V600 BRAF mutations remain a challenge with limited treatment options. We report the case of an individual diagnosed with stage III BRAF D594G-mutant melanoma who experienced an extraordinary response to the ERK1/2 inhibitor ulixertinib as fourth-line therapy. Ulixertinib was obtained via an intermediate expanded access protocol with unique flexibility to permit both single-agent and combination treatments, dose adjustments, breaks in treatment to undergo surgery, and long-term preventive treatment following surgical resection offering this patient the potential for curative treatment

    An Integrated Transcriptomic and Meta-Analysis of Hepatoma Cells Reveals Factors That Influence Susceptibility to HCV Infection

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    Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a global problem. To better understand HCV infection researchers employ in vitro HCV cell-culture (HCVcc) systems that use Huh-7 derived hepatoma cells that are particularly permissive to HCV infection. A variety of hyper-permissive cells have been subcloned for this purpose. In addition, subclones of Huh-7 which have evolved resistance to HCV are available. However, the mechanisms of susceptibility or resistance to infection among these cells have not been fully determined. In order to elucidate mechanisms by which hepatoma cells are susceptible or resistant to HCV infection we performed genome-wide expression analyses of six Huh-7 derived cell cultures that have different levels of permissiveness to infection. A great number of genes, representing a wide spectrum of functions are differentially expressed between cells. To focus our investigation, we identify host proteins from HCV replicase complexes, perform gene expression analysis of three HCV infected cells and conduct a detailed analysis of differentially expressed host factors by integrating a variety of data sources. Our results demonstrate that changes relating to susceptibility to HCV infection in hepatoma cells are linked to the innate immune response, secreted signal peptides and host factors that have a role in virus entry and replication. This work identifies both known and novel host factors that may influence HCV infection. Our findings build upon current knowledge of the complex interplay between HCV and the host cell, which could aid development of new antiviral strategies

    Denial of long-term issues with agriculture on tropical peatlands will have devastating consequences

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