8 research outputs found

    Invasive aspergillosis in liver transplant recipients in the 1990s

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    Invasive aspergillosis occurred in 26 liver transplant recipients since 1990 at five liver transplant centers. The median time to onset was 17 days after transplantation. Twenty-seven percent of the patients had undergone retransplantation. Invasive aspergillosis occurred significantly earlier after transplantation in smokers than in nonsmokers (P=0.017). Patients with late-onset aspergillosis (occurring after posttransplant day 90) were more likely to have had prior cytomegalovirus infection than those with early- onset aspergillosis (occurring within 90 days of transplantation) (67% vs. 10%, respectively, P=0.013). Only 8% of the patients had received additional corticosteroids or OKT3, which suggests that augmented immunosuppression may not be a relevant risk factor for invasive aspergillosis in the 1990s due to less frequent use of these agents. The median serum bilirubin level of the patients was 21.8 mg/dl, 85% of the patients had renal insufficiency, and 54% were on dialysis before the onset of invasive aspergillosis, which suggest that overall severity of illness, including poorly functioning hepatic allograft and renal failure may be the major determinants of disease occurrence. Overall mortality was 92% (24/26). No difference in mortality could be shown for the patients who received amphotericin B versus liposomal amphotericin B preparations (100% vs. 89%); however, the mean time to death after the initiation of therapy was 20 days in patients who received amphotericin B and 43 days in those who received liposomal amphotericin B preparations

    Dispensing Rates of Four Common Hearing Aid Product Features: Associations With Variations in Practice Among Audiologists

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    The purpose of the study was to develop and examine a list of potential variables that may account for variability in the dispensing rates of four common hearing aid features. A total of 29 potential variables were identified and placed into the following categories: (1) characteristics of the audiologist, (2) characteristics of the hearing aids dispensed by the audiologist, (3) characteristics of the audiologist?s patient population, and (4) evidence-based practice grades of recommendation for each feature. The potentially associative variables then were examined using regression analyses from the responses of 257 audiologists to a dispensing practice survey. There was a direct relation between price and level of hearing aid technology with the frequency of dispensing product features. There was also a direct relation between the belief by the audiologist that a feature might benefit patients and the frequency of dispensing that feature. In general, the results suggested that personal differences among audiologists and the hearing aids audiologists choose to dispense are related more strongly to dispensing rates of product features than to differences in characteristics of the patient population served by audiologists. An additional finding indicated that evidence-based practice recommendations were inversely related to dispensing rates of product features. This finding, however, may not be the result of dispensing trends as much as hearing aid manufacturing trends
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