5 research outputs found

    Refining the Enrolment Process in Emergency Medicine Research

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    Research in the emergency setting involving patients with acute clinical conditions is needed if there are to be advances in diagnosis and treatment. But research in these areas poses ethical and practical challenges. One of these is the general inability to obtain informed consent due to the patient’s lack of mental capacity and insufficient time to contact legal representatives. Regulatory frameworks which allow this research to proceed with a consent ‘waiver’, provided patients lack mental capacity, miss important ethical subtleties. One of these is the varying nature of mental capacity among emergency medicine patients. Not only is their capacity variable and often unclear, but some patients are also likely to be able to engage with the researcher and the context to varying degrees. In this paper we describe the key elements of a novel enrolment process for emergency medicine research that refines the consent waiver and fully engages with the ethical rationale for consent and, in this context, its waiver. The process is verbal but independently documented during the ‘emergent’ stages of the research. It provides appropriate engagement with the patient, is context-sensitive and better addresses ethical subtleties. In line with regulation, full written consent for on-going participation in the research is obtained once the emergency is passed

    Simultaneous Endo-Epicardial Mapping of the Human Right Atrium: Unraveling Atrial Excitation

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    Background The significance of endo-epicardial asynchrony (EEA) and atrial conduction block (CB), which play an important role in the pathophysiology of atrial fibrillation (AF) during sinus rhythm is poorly understood. The aim of our study was therefore to examine 3-dimensional activation of the human right atrium (RA). Methods and Results Eighty patients (79% men

    First Evidence of Atrial Conduction Disorders in Pediatric Patients With Congenital Heart Disease

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    This study sought to investigate whether pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) already have atrial conduction disorders early in life. The authors conducted first-in-children epicardial mapping in 10 pediatric patients with CHD undergoing primary open heart surgery. Areas of conduction delay (CD) and block (CB) were present in all patients and were particularly observed at Bachmann's bundle (CD: 4.9%; CB: 2.3%), followed by the right atrium (CD: 3.7%; CB: 1.6%) and, to a lesser degree, the left atrium (CD: 1.8%; CB: 1.0%). Conduction abnormalities may by aggravated over time (e.g., aging, residual lesions, or valvular dysfunction), predisposing these patients to atrial arrhythmias early in life
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