112 research outputs found

    Person to Person in Norway

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    While still in the midst of their study abroad experiences, students at Linfield College write reflective essays. Their essays address issues of cultural similarity and difference, compare lifestyles, mores, norms, and habits between their host countries and home, and examine changes in perceptions about their host countries and the United States. In this essay, Amber Hay describes her observations during her study abroad program at Telemark University College in Bø, Norway

    Treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia by transurethral ultrasound- guided laser-induced prostatectomy (TULIP): Effects on urodynamic parameters and symptoms

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    Objectives This prospective study was undertaken to evaluate the effects oftransurethral ultrasound-guided laser-induced prostatectomy (TULIP) on urodynamic, symptomatic, and prostate volume parameters as well as serum prostate-specific antigen. Methods The TULIP procedure was performed in 33 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia with a mean age of 66 years. Patients were evaluated by pressure—flow studies, prostate volume measurement by transrectal ultrasound, and the American Urological Association (AUA) symptom score. Results At 3-month follow-up, laser prostatectomy has resulted in an increased maximum flow rate from 6.6±0.5 to 11.2±0.6 mL/s and in an objectively proven relief of the urodynamic obstruction, as is evident by a decrease of the average value of the urethral resistance parameter URA and the detrusor pressure at maximum flow rate from 38.3 ± 2.7 to 21.3 ± 1.3 cm water and from 62.7 ±4 to 38.9 ± 2.1 cm water, respectively. Symptomatic improvement is evident from a decrease in the AUA symptom score from 20.4 at baseline to 8.8 at 6-month follow-up. Although the total symptom score did not change significantly between 6 months and 1 year follow-up, the score of the symptom “weak stream” was significantly higher again at 12 months follow-up. Conclusions The TULIP procedure is a urodynamically and symptomatically effectivetreatment. Conclusions about the durability of this treatment modality should be made with reser

    Natural history of benign prostatic hyperplasia: Appropriate case definition and estimation of its prevalence in the community

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    There is no consensus about a case definition of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). In the present study, BPH prevalence rates were determined using various case definitions based on a combination of clinical parameters used to describe the properties of BPH: symptoms of prostatism, prostate volume increase, and bladder outflow obstruction. The aim of this study—in a community-based population of 502 men (55–74 years of age) without prostate cancer—was to determine the relative impact on prevalence rates of the inclusion of these different parameters (and of different cutoff values for these parameters) in a case definition of BPH. There is agreement that age is the dominant determinant of BPH. However, of 28 different case definitions that were formulated only eight gave a statistically significant increase in the prevalence of BPH with age. The highest overall prevalence of 19% (95% confidence interval [CI], 15–23%) occurred using the definition that combines a prostate volume >30 cm3 and an International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) >7. The lowest prevalence rate of 4.3% (95% CI, 2-6%) occurred using the definition that combines a prostate volume >30 cm3, an IPSS >7, a maximum flow rate 50 mL Thus, prevalence rates depend very much on the parameters used in a case definition. Follow-up will establish which men will eventually request a workup and treatment for BPH and will help determine the best clinical definition of BPH

    Dependence of male voiding efficiency on age, bladder contractility and urethral resistance: development of a voiding efficiency nomogram

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    The influence of age, urethral resistance and bladder contractility on voiding efficiency was evaluated by pressure-flow studies in 138 men of a mean age of 60 years (range 18 to 86). From these studies the urethral resistance parameter was calculated and the maximum bladder contraction strength was determined. Premature fading of the bladder contraction was quantified by a bladder contraction strength decay factor. Voiding efficiency was expressed by the parameter of post-void residual urine volume as a percentage of the initial bladder volume. Multiple regression analysis showed that voiding efficiency depended significantly in descending order of importance on urethral resistance, maximum bladder contraction strength and bladder contraction strength decay factor. Patient age was not an independent factor. Maximum bladder contraction strength and bladder contraction strength decay factor were not correlated, suggesting that maximum bladder contraction strength and its decay constitute different properties of bladder contractile function. A voiding efficiency nomogram is proposed, making use of the values for maximum bladder contraction strength and urethral resistance in individual patients. Such a nomogram may have predictive value for the occurrence of acute retention but it must be tested prospectively

    Prostate specific antigen in a community-based sample of men without prostate cancer: Correlations with prostate volume, age, body mass index, and symptoms of prostatism

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    The correlation between both prostate specific antigen levels (PSA) and prostate specific antigen density (PSAD) and age, prostate volume parameters, body mass index, and the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) were studied in a community‐based population. A sample of 502 men aged 55 through 74 years was evaluated, excluding those with a serum PSA above 10 ng/ml, those with biopsy proven prostate cancer, and those who had previously undergone a prostate operation. PSA and PSAD did not correlate with the body mass index. Weak correlations were found betwe

    Early EEG contributes to multimodal outcome prediction of postanoxic coma

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    Objectives:\ud Early identification of potential recovery of postanoxic coma is a major challenge. We studied the additional predictive value of EEG. \ud \ud Methods:\ud Two hundred seventy-seven consecutive comatose patients after cardiac arrest were included in a prospective cohort study on 2 intensive care units. Continuous EEG was measured during the first 3 days. EEGs were classified as unfavorable (isoelectric, low-voltage, burst-suppression with identical bursts), intermediate, or favorable (continuous patterns), at 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours. Outcome was dichotomized as good or poor. Resuscitation, demographic, clinical, somatosensory evoked potential, and EEG measures were related to outcome at 6 months using logistic regression analysis. Analyses of diagnostic accuracy included receiver operating characteristics and calculation of predictive values. \ud \ud Results:\ud Poor outcome occurred in 149 patients (54%). Single measures unequivocally predicting poor outcome were an unfavorable EEG pattern at 24 hours, absent pupillary light responses at 48 hours, and absent somatosensory evoked potentials at 72 hours. Together, these had a specificity of 100% and a sensitivity of 50%. For the remaining 203 patients, who were still in the “gray zone” at 72 hours, a predictive model including unfavorable EEG patterns at 12 hours, absent or extensor motor response to pain at 72 hours, and higher age had an area under the curve of 0.90 (95% confidence interval 0.84–0.96). Favorable EEG patterns at 12 hours were strongly associated with good outcome. EEG beyond 24 hours had no additional predictive value. \ud \ud Conclusions:\ud EEG within 24 hours is a robust contributor to prediction of poor or good outcome of comatose patients after cardiac arrest

    Reasons for the weak correlation between prostate volume and urethral resistance parameters in patients with prostatism

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    In an attempt to increase our understanding of the clinical syndrome of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) an analysis was made of the association between prostate volume as measured by transrectal ultrasound and several reported urodynamically determined urethral resistance parameters. Two types of obstruction can be recognized on the basis of urodynamic data: a compressive type characterized by a high urethral opening pressure and a prolonged isovolumetric contraction phase before urine flow can start, and a constrictive type characterized by a normal opening pressure and an increased slope of the urethral resistance relation. A combination of both types is often seen in BPH. In our study, parameters that selectively quantify compression correlate weakly to moderately with prostate volume, whereas parameters that mainly quantify constriction do not correlate at all with prostate volume. Parameters that combine a measure for compression and constriction correlate less well with prostate volume than parameters that mainly quantify compression. The variation in prostate volume was found to determine the variation in urethral resistance by 15% or less depending on the parameter used, which implies that the different pathophysiological mechanisms that can increase urethral resistance in the complex process of clinical BPH are mainly determined by factors other than the volume of the prostate. Thus, despite the lack of correlation between prostate volume and urethral resistance, pressure-flow studies and the determination of urethral resistance parameters provide a valuable contribution to the understanding of the pathophysiology of voiding dysfunction in men with symptoms of prostatism

    Amplitude measurements of Faraday waves

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    A light reflection technique is used to measure quantitatively the surface elevation of Faraday waves. The performed measurements cover a wide parameter range of driving frequencies and sample viscosities. In the capillary wave regime the bifurcation diagrams exhibit a frequency independent scaling proportional to the wavelength. We also provide numerical simulations of the full Navier-Stokes equations, which are in quantitative agreement up to supercritical drive amplitudes of 20%. The validity of an existing perturbation analysis is found to be limited to 2.5% overcriticaly.Comment: 7 figure

    Citrate anticoagulation versus systemic heparinisation in continuous venovenous hemofiltration in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury: A multi-center randomized clinical trial

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    Introduction: Because of ongoing controversy, renal and vital outcomes are compared between systemically administered unfractionated heparin and regional anticoagulation with citrate-buffered replacement solution in predilution mode, during continuous venovenous hemofiltration (CVVH) in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury (AKI).Methods: In this multi-center randomized controlled trial, patients admitted to the intensive care unit requiring CVVH and meeting inclusion criteria, were randomly assigned to citrate or heparin. Primary endpoints were mortality and renal outcome in intention-to-treat analysis. Secondary endpoints were safety and efficacy. Safety was defined as absence of any adverse event necessitating discontinuation of the assigned anticoagulant. For efficacy, among other parameters, survival times of the first hemofilter were studied.Results: Of the 139 patients enrolled, 66 were randomized to citrate and 73 to heparin. Mortality rates at 28 and 90 days did not differ between groups: 22/66 (33%) of citrate-treated patients died versus 25/72 (35%) of heparin-treated patients at 28 days, and 27/65 (42%) of citrate-treated patients died versus 29/69 (42%) of heparin-treated patients at 90 days (P = 1.00 for both). Renal outcome, i.e. independency of renal replacement therapy 28 days after initiation of CVVH in surviving patients, did not differ between groups: 29/43 (67%) in the citrate-treated patients versus 33/47 (70%) in heparin-treated patients (P = 0.82). Heparin was discontinued in 24/73 (33%) of patients whereas citrate was discontinued in 5/66 (8%) of patients (P < 0.001). Filter survival times were superior for citrate (median 46 versus 32 hour
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