8 research outputs found

    Graft diameter does not influence primary stability of ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction of the elbow

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    Ulnar collateral ligament insufficiency may result in medial elbow pain, instability, and reduced athletic performance in throwing athletes. Several reconstruction methods have been described, but biomechanical studies suggest that in general, stability of the graft construct is inferior to the native ulnar collateral ligament. This study investigates whether a stronger graft would yield greater resistance to valgus load over the range of motion. Ten cadaveric elbows were mounted to a testing fixture and incremental valgus moments of 2.5, 5, and 7.5 Nm were applied with the elbow in 120A degrees, 90A degrees, 60A degrees, 30A degrees and 0A degrees of flexion and in varying rotational forearm positions. The intact and the ulnar collateral ligament released elbow joint were compared with the docking ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction technique, using different graft sources with increasing cross-sectional areas: palmaris longus, tricpes brachii, extensor carpi radialis longus, and semitendinosus. The resulting angular displacement was evaluated and compared between graft sources and different elbow positions. Compared with the intact situation, ulnar collateral ligament release resulted in a significant increase in valgus deformation over the entire range of flexion-extension motion. Ligament reconstruction using any graft source significantly restored valgus stability at 60A degrees, 90A degrees, and 120A degrees, while at 0A degrees and 30A degrees, angular valgus deformation did not significantly differ from the ulnar collateral ligament deficient situation. There were no significant differences in angular valgus deformation between the graft sources over the range of flexion motion or forearm rotation. This study did not prove that a thicker graft yielded more resistance to valgus moments when using the docking technique. Thicker grafts require larger bone tunnels, cannot be adequately tensioned, and are non-anatomic. Therefore, the palmaris longus or a triceps tendon strip are considered more appropriate for ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction

    An innovative telemedical network to improve infectious disease management in critically ill patients and outpatients: a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized controlled trial (TELnet@NRW)

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    Marx G, Greiner W, Juhra C, et al. An innovative telemedical network to improve infectious disease management in critically ill patients and outpatients: a stepped-wedge, cluster randomized controlled trial (TELnet@NRW). Journal of Medical Internet Research . 2022.BACKGROUND: Evidence-based infectious disease and intensive care management is more relevant than ever. Medical expertise in the two disciplines is often geographically limited to university institutions. In addition, the interconnection between inpatient and outpatient care is often insufficient (e.g., no shared electronic health record, no digital transfer of patient findings).; OBJECTIVE: To establish and evaluate a telemedical inpatient-outpatient network based on expert teleconsultations to increase treatment quality in intensive care medicine and infectious diseases.; METHODS: We performed a multicentre, stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial (Feb 2017 - Jan 2020) to establish a telemedicine inpatient-outpatient network among university hospitals, hospitals, and outpatient physicians in North Rhine Westphalia, Germany. Patients ≥ 18 years of age in the intensive care unit (ICU) or consulting with a physician in the outpatient setting were eligible. We provided expert knowledge from intensivists and infectious disease specialists through advanced training courses and expert teleconsultations with 24/7/365 availability on demand resp. once per week to enhance treatment quality. The primary outcome was adherence to the ten Choosing Wisely recommendations for infectious disease management. Guideline adherence was analysed using binary logistic regression models.; RESULTS: Overall, 159,424 patients (10,585 inpatients, 148,839 outpatients) from 17 hospitals and 103 outpatient physicians were included. There was a significant increase in guideline adherence in the management of Staphylococcus aureus infections (OR 4.00 [95% CI 1.83, 9.20], P<.01) and in sepsis management in critically ill patients (OR 6.82 [95% CI 1.27, 56.61], P=.04). There was a statistically non-significant decrease in sepsis related mortality from 28.8% (19/66) in the control group to 23.8% (50/210) in the intervention group. Furthermore, the extension of treatment with prophylactic antibiotics after surgery was significantly less likely (OR 9.37 [95% CI 1.52, 111.47], P=.04). Patients treated by outpatient physicians, who were regularly taking part in expert teleconsultations, were also more likely to be treated according to guideline recommendations regarding antibiotic therapy for uncomplicated upper respiratory tract infections (OR 1.34 [95% CI 1.16, 1.56], P<.01) and asymptomatic bacteriuria (OR 9.31 [95% CI 3.79, 25.94], P<.01). For the other recommendations, we found no significant effects, or we had too few observations to generate models. Key limitations of our study include selection effects due to the applied on-site triage of patients as well as the limited possibilities to control for secular effects.; CONCLUSIONS: Telemedicine facilitates a direct round-the-clock interaction over broad distances between intensivists or infectious disease experts and physicians who care for patients in hospitals without ready access to these experts. Expert teleconsultations increase guideline adherence and treatment quality in infectious disease and intensive care management creating added value for critically ill patients.; CLINICALTRIAL: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03137589, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03137589

    A convenient protein library for spectroscopic calibrations

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    While several Raman, CD or FTIR spectral libraries are available for well-characterized proteins of known structure, proteins themselves are usually very difficult to acquire, preventing a convenient calibration of new instruments and new recording methods. The problem is particularly critical in the field of FTIR spectroscopy where numerous new methods are becoming available on the market. The present papers reports the construction of a protein library (cSP92) including commercially available products, that are well characterized experimentally for their purity and solubility in conditions compatible with the recording of FTIR spectra and whose high-resolution structure is available. Overall, 92 proteins were selected. These proteins cover well the CATH space at the level of classes and architectures. In terms of secondary structure content, an analysis of their high-resolution structure by DSSP shows that the mean content in the different secondary structures present in cSP92 is very similar to the mean content found in the PDB. The 92-protein set is analyzed in details for the distribution of helix length, number of strands in β- sheets, length of β-strands and amino acid content, all features that may be important for the interpretation of FTIR spectra.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Incidence of infections due to third generation cephalosporin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae - a prospective multicentre cohort study in six German university hospitals

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    BackgroundInfections caused by third generation cephalosporin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (3GCREB) are an increasing healthcare problem. We aim to describe the 3GCREB infection incidence and compare it to prevalence upon admission. In addition, we aim to describe infections caused by 3GCREB, which are also carbapenem resistant (CRE).MethodsIn 2014-2015, we performed prospective 3GCREB surveillance in clinically relevant patient specimens (screening specimens excluded). Infections counted as hospital-acquired (HAI) when the 3GCREB was detected after the third day following admission, otherwise as community-acquired infection (CAI).ResultsOf 578,420 hospitalized patients under surveillance, 3367 had a 3GCREB infection (0.58%). We observed a similar 3GCREB CAI and HAI incidence (0.28 and 0.31 per 100 patients, respectively). The most frequent pathogen was 3GCR E. coli, in CAI and HAI (0.15 and 0.12 per 100 patients). We observed a CRE CAI incidence of 0.006 and a HAI incidence of 0.008 per 100 patients (0.014 per 1000 patient days).ConclusionsComparing the known 3GCREB admission prevalence of the participating hospitals (9.5%) with the percentage of patients with a 3GCREB infection (0.58%), we conclude the prevalence of 3GCREB in university hospitals to be about 16 times higher than suggested when only patients with 3GCREB infections are considered. Moreover, we find the HAI and CAI incidence caused by CRE in Germany to be relatively low

    Infrared spectrometry

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