76 research outputs found
Towards an integrated clinical framework for patient with shoulder pain
Background: Shoulder pain (SP) represents a common musculoskeletal condition that requires physical therapy
care. Along the years, the usual evaluation strategies based on clinical tests and diagnostic imaging has been
challenged. Clinical tests appear unable to clearly identify the structures that generated pain and interpretation of
diagnostic imaging is still controversial. The current patho-anatomical diagnostic categories have demonstrated
poor reliability and seem inadequate for the SP treatment.
Objectives: The present paper aims to (1) describe the different proposals of clinical approach to SP currently available
in the literature; to (2) integrate these proposals in a single framework in order to help the management of SP.
Conclusion: The proposed clinical framework, based on a bio-psychosocial vision of health, integrates symptoms
characteristics, pain mechanisms and expectations, preferences and psychosocial factors of patients that may guide
physiotherapist to make a diagnostic triage and to choose the right treatment for the individual patient
Case Report: A Novel Activating FLT3 Mutation in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) is among the most common driver genes recurrently mutated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), accounting for approximately 30% of cases. Activating mutations of the FLT3 receptor include internal tandem duplications (ITD) that map to the auto-inhibitory juxtamembrane (JM) domain or point mutations within the tyrosine kinase domain (TKD). Several FLT3 tyrosine kinase inhibitors have been developed in the last few years, but midostaurin is currently the only one approved for the treatment of newly diagnosed patients harboring FLT3 mutations. Here we describe for the first time a novel in-frame deletion in exon 14 (JM domain) of the FLT3 gene, that we identified in a young woman with CBFb-MYH11-positive AML. We demonstrated that this novel FLT3 variant is pathogenic, since it is responsible for constitutive activation of FLT3 receptor. Finally, ex-vivo studies demonstrated that this novel mutation is sensitive to midostaurin
The Institutional Determinants of Political Transactions
Public policies are the outcome of the interaction among a variety of key political actors, each with its own preferences and incentives, who meet in different arenas and interact within the constraints of the institutions that frame their engagement. Therefore, to recognize the reasons behind the success or failure of any public policy it is necessary to understand the country's political institutions and the policymaking process they in turn help shape. This document looks at a number of those key actors, institutions, and arenas, with the aim of examining the roles, incentives, and capabilities of each of the actors in the policymaking process, by drawing from an extensive literature in political science and political economy. Each of the actors is looked at individually but connected to the other actors by linking the impact of political institutions on their incentives to the features of the policymaking game. Hopefully, this document will provide researchers with the tools necessary to embark in the fascinating analysis of policymaking processes not only for Latin American countries but also for other parts of the world
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