33 research outputs found

    Reducing Onion Bulbs Flaking and Increasing Bulb Yield and Quality by Potassium and Calcium Application

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    Abstract: To investigate the onion bulb flaking during storage in order to increase exportation, a two field experiments were conducted during winte

    Use of complementary alternative medicine for low back pain consulting in general practice: a cohort study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although back pain is considered one of the most frequent reasons why patients seek complementary and alternative medical (CAM) therapies little is known on the extent patients are actually using CAM for back pain.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This is a post hoc analysis of a longitudinal prospective cohort study embedded in a RCT. General practitioners (GPs) recruited consecutively adult patients presenting with LBP. Data on physical function, on subjective mood, and on utilization of health services was collected at the first consultation and at follow-up telephone interviews for a period of twelve months</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 691 (51%) respectively 928 (69%) out of 1,342 patients received one form of CAM depending on the definition. Local heat, massage, and spinal manipulation were the forms of CAM most commonly offered. Using CAM was associated with specialist care, chronic LBP and treatment in a rehabilitation facility. Receiving spinal manipulation, acupuncture or TENS was associated with consulting a GP providing these services. Apart from chronicity disease related factors like functional capacity or pain only showed weak or no association with receiving CAM.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The frequent use of CAM for LBP demonstrates that CAM is popular in patients and doctors alike. The observed association with a treatment in a rehabilitation facility or with specialist consultations rather reflects professional preferences of the physicians than a clear medical indication. The observed dependence on providers and provider related services, as well as a significant proportion receiving CAM that did not meet the so far established selection criteria suggests some arbitrary use of CAM.</p

    A systematic review on the effectiveness of physical and rehabilitation interventions for chronic non-specific low back pain

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    Low back pain (LBP) is a common and disabling disorder in western society. The management of LBP comprises a range of different intervention strategies including surgery, drug therapy, and non-medical interventions. The objective of the present study is to determine the effectiveness of physical and rehabilitation interventions (i.e. exercise therapy, back school, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), low level laser therapy, education, massage, behavioural treatment, traction, multidisciplinary treatment, lumbar supports, and heat/cold therapy) for chronic LBP. The primary search was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, CENTRAL, and PEDro up to 22 December 2008. Existing Cochrane reviews for the individual interventions were screened for studies fulfilling the inclusion criteria. The search strategy outlined by the Cochrane Back Review Groups (CBRG) was followed. The following were included for selection criteria: (1) randomized controlled trials, (2) adult (≥18 years) population with chronic (≥12 weeks) non-specific LBP, and (3) evaluation of at least one of the main clinically relevant outcome measures (pain, functional status, perceived recovery, or return to work). Two reviewers independently selected studies and extracted data on study characteristics, risk of bias, and outcomes at short, intermediate, and long-term follow-up. The GRADE approach was used to determine the quality of evidence. In total 83 randomized controlled trials met the inclusion criteria: exercise therapy (n = 37), back school (n = 5), TENS (n = 6), low level laser therapy (n = 3), behavioural treatment (n = 21), patient education (n = 1), traction (n = 1), and multidisciplinary treatment (n = 6). Compared to usual care, exercise therapy improved post-treatment pain intensity and disability, and long-term function. Behavioural treatment was found to be effective in reducing pain intensity at short-term follow-up compared to no treatment/waiting list controls. Finally, multidisciplinary treatment was found to reduce pain intensity and disability at short-term follow-up compared to no treatment/waiting list controls. Overall, the level of evidence was low. Evidence from randomized controlled trials demonstrates that there is low quality evidence for the effectiveness of exercise therapy compared to usual care, there is low evidence for the effectiveness of behavioural therapy compared to no treatment and there is moderate evidence for the effectiveness of a multidisciplinary treatment compared to no treatment and other active treatments at reducing pain at short-term in the treatment of chronic low back pain. Based on the heterogeneity of the populations, interventions, and comparison groups, we conclude that there are insufficient data to draw firm conclusion on the clinical effect of back schools, low-level laser therapy, patient education, massage, traction, superficial heat/cold, and lumbar supports for chronic LBP

    Comparative clinical effectiveness of management strategies for sciatica: systematic review and network meta-analyses

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    The role of CD24 as a potential biomarker for malignant pleural mesothelioma

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    Objectives Pleural mesothelioma is a rapidly progressing pleural neoplasm caused by asbestos exposure of a long latency around 30-40 years. Patients with mesothelioma are usually diagnosed at a late stage with poor outcomes in terms of morbidity and mortality with 6–12 months’ median survival. Despite the prohibited use of asbestos, malignant pleural mesothelioma is still increasingly being occurred in young age and female patients. Different un-standardized biomarkers have been used to diagnose MPM as mesothelin and febulin with controversial results, so we used CD 24 as a biomarker to diagnose and differentiate between different subtypes of malignant pleural mesothelioma. Materials and methods Our cohort study included total of fifty-nine patients with exudative pleural effusion. All patients underwent full history taking, clinical examination, blood tests (CBC, coagulation profile, liver and kidney functions), tapping of pleural effusion and to send pleural fluid investigations for LDH, albumin, total protein and albumin, then confirmed exudative pleural effusion patients were subjected to thoracic ultrasonography and medical thoracoscopy for the majority of cases or ultrasound guided biopsy in selected cases to obtain pleural biopsies for histopathology and then the examination of pleural biopsies for CD24 expression. Results Our study demonstrated the possibility of using CD24 as a biomarker in the immunostaining of pleural biopsies to differentiate between malignant pleural mesothelioma and pleural malignancy other than mesothelioma (18 mesothelioma cases versus 2 nonmesothelioma malignant cases) with high statistical significance P value < 0.001 and also it can discriminate between subtypes of mesothelioma as it showed marked significance in epithelioid subtype (12 epithelioid versus 1 sarcomatoid versus 5 biphasic subtypes) with more uptake by score +2 in epithelioid mesothelioma. Conclusions CD24 can be supposed to be a routine biomarker for immunohistochemistry of pleural tissue samples in diagnosis of mesothelioma and it can be used to differentiate between subtypes of malignant mesothelioma subtypes

    Comparative Clinical Effectiveness of Management Strategies for Sciatica: Systematic Review and Network Meta-Analyses

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    Background There are numerous treatment approaches for sciatica. Previous systematic reviews have not compared all these strategies together. Purpose To compare the clinical effectiveness of different treatment strategies for sciatica simultaneously. Study design Systematic review and network meta-analysis. Methods: We searched 28 electronic databases and online trial registries, along with bibliographies of previous reviews, for comparative studies evaluating any intervention to treat sciatica in adults, with outcome data on global effect or pain intensity. Network meta-analysis methods were used to simultaneously compare all treatment strategies and allow indirect comparisons of treatments between studies. The study was funded by the UK National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) HTA programme; there are no potential conflict of interests. Results Of 122 relevant studies, 90 were randomised controlled trials (RCTs) or quasi-RCTs. Interventions were grouped into 21 treatment strategies. Internal and external validity of included studies was very low. For overall recovery as the outcome, compared with inactive control or conventional care, there was a statistically significant improvement following disc surgery, epidural injections, non-opioid analgesia, manipulation, and acupuncture. Traction, percutaneous discectomy and exercise therapy were significantly inferior to epidural injections or surgery. For pain reduction as the outcome, epidural injections and biological agents were significantly better than inactive control, but similar findings for disc surgery were not statistically significant. Biological agents were significantly better for pain reduction than bed rest, non-opioids, and opioids, or radiofrequency treatment. Opioids, education/advice alone, bed rest, and percutaneous discectomy and radiofrequency treatment were inferior to most other treatment strategies; although these findings represented large effects, they were statistically equivocal. Conclusions For the first time many different treatment strategies for sciatica have been compared in the same systematic review and meta-analysis. This approach has provided new data to assist shared decision-making. The findings support the effectiveness of non-opioid medication, epidural injections and disc surgery. They also suggest that spinal manipulation, acupuncture, and experimental treatments such as anti-inflammatory biological agents, may be considered. The findings do not support the effectiveness of opioid analgesia, bed rest, exercise therapy, education/advice (when used alone), percutaneous discectomy or traction. The issue of how best to estimate the effectiveness of treatment approaches according to their order within a sequential treatment pathway remains an important challenge
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