40 research outputs found
Is Massage Effective As A Non-Pharmacologic Treatment For Individuals Suffering From Migraines?
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this selective EBM review is to determine whether or not massage therapy is effective as a non-pharmacologic treatment for individuals suffering from migraines.
STUDY DESIGN: Review of all English language primary randomized controlled trials from 1996-2011.
DATA SOURCES: Three randomized controlled trials were found using Pubmed, CINAHL, and Cochrane databases. These compared massage therapy trials in patients suffering from migraine headaches.
OUTCOMES MEASURED: Each trial measured the outcomes in slightly different ways. The Hernandez et al study used the VITAS pain scale, symptom checklist, headache log, and a sleep log to record outcomes. The Lawler et al study used patient daily diaries of headache frequency, intensity, medication use, and sleep behavior. The Lemstra et al study used a headache diary to record pain intensity, duration, frequency, quality of life, functional status, depressive symptoms, medication use, work status, and health status.
RESULTS: There were statistically significant differences between control and intervention groups that received massage therapy in all three studies. Though each study measured different outcomes, all three showed a statistically significant decrease in migraine frequency for those who received that treatment. Hernandez et al study showed a statistically significant decrease in somatic symptomatology and the pain scale. Lawler et al showed an increase in sleep quality. Lemstra et al showed a decrease in pain intensity, pain duration, and depressive symptomatology as well as an increase in functional status for these patients.
CONCLUSIONS: The results show that massage therapy is an effective non-pharmacologic treatment for those who have migraine headaches. It shows a decrease in migraine frequency, duration, somatic symptomatology, and sleep quality. Additional research is needed on the longterm effects of patients to quantify the impact it has on functional status
Pleistocene Brawley and Ocotillo Formations: Evidence for Initial Strike-Slip Deformation Along the San Felipe and San Jacinto Fault Zones, Southern California
We examine the Pleistocene tectonic reorganization of the PacificâNorth American plate boundary in the Salton Trough of southern California with an integrated approach that includes basin analysis, magnetostratigraphy, and geologic mapping of upper Pliocene to Pleistocene sedimentary rocks in the San Felipe Hills. These deposits preserve the earliest sedimentary record of movement on the San Felipe and San Jacinto fault zones that replaced and deactivated the late Cenozoic West Salton detachment fault. Sandstone and mudstone of the Brawley Formation accumulated between âŒ1.1 and âŒ0.6â0.5 Ma in a delta on the margin of an arid Pleistocene lake, which received sediment from alluvial fans of the Ocotillo Formation to the west-southwest. Our analysis indicates that the Ocotillo and Brawley formations prograded abruptly to the east-northeast across a former mud-dominated perennial lake (Borrego Formation) at âŒ1.1 Ma in response to initiation of the dextral-oblique San Felipe fault zone. The âŒ25-km-long San Felipe anticline initiated at about the same time and produced an intrabasinal basement-cored high within the San FelipeâBorrego basin that is recorded by progressive unconformities on its north and south limbs. A disconformity at the base of the Brawley Formation in the eastern San Felipe Hills probably records initiation and early blind slip at the southeast tip of the Clark strand of the San Jacinto fault zone. Our data are consistent with abrupt and nearly synchronous inception of the San Jacinto and San Felipe fault zones southwest of the southern San Andreas fault in the early Pleistocene during a pronounced southwestward broadening of the San Andreas fault zone. The current contractional geometry of the San Jacinto fault zone developed after âŒ0.5â0.6 Ma during a second, less significant change in structural style
Exotic Spaces in Quantum Gravity I: Euclidean Quantum Gravity in Seven Dimensions
It is well known that in four or more dimensions, there exist exotic
manifolds; manifolds that are homeomorphic but not diffeomorphic to each other.
More precisely, exotic manifolds are the same topological manifold but have
inequivalent differentiable structures. This situation is in contrast to the
uniqueness of the differentiable structure on topological manifolds in one, two
and three dimensions. As exotic manifolds are not diffeomorphic, one can argue
that quantum amplitudes for gravity formulated as functional integrals should
include a sum over not only physically distinct geometries and topologies but
also inequivalent differentiable structures. But can the inclusion of exotic
manifolds in such sums make a significant contribution to these quantum
amplitudes? This paper will demonstrate that it will. Simply connected exotic
Einstein manifolds with positive curvature exist in seven dimensions. Their
metrics are found numerically; they are shown to have volumes of the same order
of magnitude. Their contribution to the semiclassical evaluation of the
partition function for Euclidean quantum gravity in seven dimensions is
evaluated and found to be nontrivial. Consequently, inequivalent differentiable
structures should be included in the formulation of sums over histories for
quantum gravity.Comment: AmsTex, 23 pages 5 eps figures; replaced figures with ones which are
hopefully viewable in pdf forma
Consequences of sexual harassment in sport for female athletes
Sexual harassment research was first undertaken in the workplace and educational settings. Research on sexual harassment in sport is scarce but has grown steadily since the mid-1980s. Even so, very little is known about the causes and/or characteristics and/or consequences of sexual harassment in sport settings. This article reports on the findings from interviews with 25 elite female athletes in Norway who indicated in a prior survey (N =572) that they had experienced sexual harassment from someone in sport. The consequences of the incidents of sexual harassment that were reported were mostly negative, but some also reported that their experiences of sexual harassment had had no consequences for them. âThinking about the incidentsâ, a âdestroyed relationship to the coachâ, and âmore negative view of men in generalâ were the most often negative consequences mentioned. In addition, a surprising number had chosen to move to a different sport or to drop out of elite sport altogether because of the harassment
Bodyweight Perceptions among Texas Women: The Effects of Religion, Race/Ethnicity, and Citizenship Status
Despite previous work exploring linkages between religious participation and health, little research has looked at the role of religion in affecting bodyweight perceptions. Using the theoretical model developed by Levin et al. (Sociol Q 36(1):157â173, 1995) on the multidimensionality of religious participation, we develop several hypotheses and test them by using data from the 2004 Survey of Texas Adults. We estimate multinomial logistic regression models to determine the relative risk of women perceiving themselves as overweight. Results indicate that religious attendance lowers risk of women perceiving themselves as very overweight. Citizenship status was an important factor for Latinas, with noncitizens being less likely to see themselves as overweight. We also test interaction effects between religion and race. Religious attendance and prayer have a moderating effect among Latina non-citizens so that among these women, attendance and prayer intensify perceptions of feeling less overweight when compared to their white counterparts. Among African American women, the effect of increased church attendance leads to perceptions of being overweight. Prayer is also a correlate of overweight perceptions but only among African American women. We close with a discussion that highlights key implications from our findings, note study limitations, and several promising avenues for future research
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Serum Ferritin in Children with Sickle Cell Disease on Chronic Transfusion: Measure of Iron Overload or End Organ Injury? STOP/STOP II Liver Iron Ancillary Study
Abstract
Between 1995 and 2004, two NIH-sponsored studies (STOP/STOP II) showed that children with sickle cell disease (SCD) and abnormal transcranial Doppler blood flow measurements (high stroke risk) are protected from stroke with regular blood transfusions. Iron overload, which may lead to complications and requires iron removal therapy, was monitored by serum ferritin (SF). Liver iron concentration (LIC) measurement was not mandated by protocol and was performed at investigator discretion. Biopsy dates and lab values were captured during STOP/STOP II, providing an opportunity to validate SF against LIC. 75 LICs on 36 patients (19 female, 17 male) at 8 centers were obtained. No liver biopsy complications were reported. LICs were correlated with STOP/STOP II core laboratory SF and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) obtained within 180 days of LICs. Median age at first biopsy was 11.1 years (range, 4.5â17.8), median time from start of transfusion was 36 months (range, 2â100). Iron removal treatment was initiated a median 23 months (range, 4â108) from start of transfusion, with deferoxamine (n=27), and/or exchange transfusion (n=9). 21 pts (58%) had multiple LIC measures: 2 (n=9), 3 (n=8), 4 (n=2), 5 (n=2). Last LICs on iron removal therapy were obtained a median 72 months (range, 35â124) from start of transfusion. Correlation between SFs and LICs were r=-0.06 (n=18) for first LICs obtained prior to iron removal therapy, r=0.50 (n=17) for last LICs obtained on iron removal therapy, and r=0.51 for all LICs (n=60). Pts with single/last LIC >=15 mg/gram dry liver were significantly more likely to have ALTs >=45 IU/L compared to those with LICs =15 mg/gram and ALT >=45 IU/L tended to have higher SFs then those with normal ALT (mean SF 4927 ng/ml, 95% CI 1739â8115 vs. mean SF 2255 ng/ml, 95% CI 1599â2912). 37% (7/19) of pts with LIC >=15 mg/gram had SFs <2000 ng/ml. 55% (11/20) of pts with repeated LICs, had last LICs <15 mg/gram after initiation of iron removal therapy. SF did not correlate with LICs after initiation of blood transfusion therapy and correlated weakly after initiation of iron removal therapy. Over 1/3 of children with evidence of significant iron overload, as measured by LICs, had low serum SFs (<2000 ng/ml), leading to a potentially erroneous interpretation of low iron stores. A significant portion of pts with elevated LICs had evidence of liver injury (ALT elevation). SF elevation observed in some pts may be due in part to end organ injury. Sustained iron overload control was achieved in over 1/2 of pts examined with repeated LICs