16 research outputs found

    Case Report Managing Major Postpartum Haemorrhage following Acute Uterine Inversion with Rusch Balloon Catheter

    No full text
    Acute postpartum uterine inversion is a relatively rare complication. The uterus inverts and the uterine fundus prolapses to or through the dilated cervix. It is associated with major postpartum haemorrhage with or without shock. Shock is sometimes out of proportion to the haemorrhage. Minimal maternal morbidity and mortality can be achieved when uterine inversion is promptly and aggressively managed. We present this report of three cases of acute uterine inversion complicated with major postpartum haemorrhage and managed with Rusch balloon. The paper highlights the importance of early recognition and the safety of the use of intrauterine balloon to manage major postpartum haemorrhage in these cases

    Supporting patient self-management: a cross-sectional and prospective cohort study investigating Patient Activation Measure (PAM) and clinician support for PAM scores as part of a multi-centre haemodialysis breakthrough series collaborative

    Get PDF
    Background Patient self-management, measured by the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), is associated with reduced healthcare utilisation and better health-related quality of life. Self-management in haemodialysis (HD) is challenging and may require support from clinicians with positive attitudes towards self-management, measured by the Clinician Support for PAM (CSPAM). Objectives To assess whether kidney staff CSPAM scores are: 1) associated with their centre’s patient PAM scores and 2) modifiable through staff coaching. Methods Baseline PAM and CSPAM and six-month CSPAM were collected from HD patients and kidney staff respectively in seven UK kidney centres as part of a six-month breakthrough series collaborative (BTSC), which trained kidney staff in supporting patient independence with HD tasks. Firstly, multivariable linear regression analyses adjusted for patient characteristics were used to test the baseline association between centre-level staff CSPAM scores and patient PAM scores. Secondly, paired univariate and unpaired multivariable linear regression analyses were conducted to compare staff CSPAM scores at baseline and six months. Results 236 PAM questionnaires (mean score = 55.5) and 89 CSPAM questionnaires (median score = 72.6) were analysed at baseline. There was no significant association between centre-level mean CSPAM scores and PAM scores in univariate analyses (P = 0.321). After adjusting for patient-level characteristics, increasing centre-level mean CSPAM score by 1 point resulted in a non-significant 0.3-point increase in PAM score (0.328 (95% CI: -0.157 to 0.812; P = 0.184). Paired (n = 37) and unpaired (n = 174) staff analyses showed a non-significant change in CSPAM scores following the BTSC intervention (mean change in CSPAM score in unpaired analysis = 1.339 (95% CI: -1.945 to 4.623; P = 0.422). Conclusions Lack of a significant: 1) association between CSPAM and PAM scores and 2) change in CSPAM scores suggest that modifying staff beliefs alone is less likely to influence patient self-management, requiring co-production between patients and staff

    Relation Between Tumor SUVmax, TLR and TSR and Breast Carcinoma Molecular Subtypes in PET CT

    Full text link
    Breast cancer is known to be one of the most cancer affecting women around the globe and the second most common cancer in general. In third worlds countries, breast cancer is the most cause of cancer death. Early diagnosis and accurate follow-up of these patients affect the management. There are multiple prognostic factors most important one is the immunohistochemical molecular markers in the specimens including human epidermal growth factor, progesterone, and estrogen receptors (HER 2, PR, ER). In breast cancer, the HER2 positive molecular subtype is associated with bad prognosis and aggressive histological features, yet while following neoadjuvant chemotherapy, it achieves an increased pathological complete response rate. 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) has proved to be an effective and accurate imaging technique for lymph node and distant metastasis assessment, tumor staging, restaging of recurrence, treatment response, and follow-up. In breast cancer, tumor molecular subtype, tumor size, proliferation index, and histological grade correlated with 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (FDG) uptake. This study evaluates the possible correlation between tumor SUV max ,tumor to liver and tumor to spleen (standardized uptake value) SUV max ratio and the four different molecular subtypes in patients with pathologically proven breast cancer.&nbsp
    corecore