57 research outputs found

    Trajectories of Early Adolescent Loneliness: Implications for Physical Health and Sleep

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    The current study examines the relationship between prolonged loneliness, physical health, and sleep among young adolescents (10–13 years; N = 1214; 53% girls). Loneliness was measured at 10, 12 and 13 years of age along with parent-reported health and sleep outcomes. Using growth mixture modelling, 6 distinct trajectories were identified: ‘low increasing to high loneliness’ (n = 23, 2%), ‘high reducing loneliness’ (n = 28, 3%), ‘medium stable loneliness’ (n = 60, 5%), ‘medium reducing loneliness’ (n = 185, 15%), ‘low increasing to medium loneliness’ (n = 165, 14%), and ‘low stable loneliness’ (n = 743, 61%). Further analyses found non-significant differences between the loneliness trajectories and parent-report health and sleep outcomes including visits to health professionals, perceived general health, and sleep quality. The current study offers an important contribution to the literature on loneliness and health. Results show that the relationship may not be evident in early adolescence when parent reports of children’s health are used. The current study highlights the importance of informant choice when reporting health. The implications of the findings for future empirical work are discussed

    Improving risk management for violence in mental health services: a multimethods approach

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    contractual_start_date: 07-2008 editorial_review_begun: 07-2014 accepted_for_publication: 06-2015contractual_start_date: 07-2008 editorial_review_begun: 07-2014 accepted_for_publication: 06-2015contractual_start_date: 07-2008 editorial_review_begun: 07-2014 accepted_for_publication: 06-2015contractual_start_date: 07-2008 editorial_review_begun: 07-2014 accepted_for_publication: 06-201

    Translation of Methdology used in Human Myocardial Imaging to a Sheep Model of Acute Myocardial Infarction

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    Background: Pre-clinical investigation of stem cells for repairing damaged myocardium predominantly used rodents, however large animals have cardiac circulation closely resembling the human heart. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether SPECT/CT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) could be used for assessing sheep myocardium following an acute myocardial infarction (MI) and response to intervention. Method: 18 sheep enrolled in a pilot study to evaluate [99mTc]-sestamibi MPI at baseline, post-MI and after therapy. Modifications to the standard MPI protocols were developed. All data was reconstructed with OSEM using CT-derived attenuation and scatter correction. Standard analyses were performed and inter-observer agreement were measured using Kappa (). Power determined the sample sizes needed to show statistically significant changes due to intervention. Results: Ten sheep completed the full protocol. Data processed were performed using pre-existing hardware and software used in human MPI scanning. No improvement in perfusion was seen in the control group, however improvements of 15% - 35% were seen after intra-myocardial stem cell administration. Inter-observer agreement was excellent (К=0.89). Using a target power of 0.9, 28 sheep were required to detect a 10-12% change in perfusion. Conclusions: Study demonstrates the suitability of large animal models for imaging with standard MPI protocols and it’s feasibility with a manageable number of animals. These protocols could be translated into humans to study the efficacy of stem cell therapy in heart regeneration and repair

    Integration of bovine leukaemia virus in the ovine genome

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    Circulating lymphocytes and tumour cells from 12 sheep experimentally infected with bovine leukaemia virus (BLV), for periods of time varying from 9 to 48 weeks, were analysed for evidence of integrated and unintegrated provirus. Hybridization analysis demonstrated that the provirus was integrated at one or two sites in all cases. Integration was observed at different sites in the animals studied and there was no evidence of unintegrated virus molecules in infected sheep lymphocytes or tumour cells. The data obtained support a monoclonal origin of different tumours in the same sheep

    Effects of imposed acid-base derangement on the cardiovascular effects and pharmacokinetics of bupivacaine and thiopental

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    By changing physicochemical properties such as effective lipophilicity, changes in blood pH could alter the distribution, elimination, and effects of weakly ionizing drugs. The authors examined the outcome of imposed acid–base derangement on cardiovascular effects and myocardial and whole body pharmacokinetics of bupivacaine, a weak base, and thiopental,a weak acid. Intravenous infusions of rac-bupivacaine HCl (37.5 mg) or rac-thiopental sodium (250 mg, subanesthetic dose) were administered over 3 min to previously instrumented conscious ewes with normal blood pH, acidemia imposed by lactic acid infusion, or alkalemia imposed by bicarbonate infusion. Hemodynamic and electrocardiographic effects were recorded; arterial and coronary sinus drug blood concentrations were analyzed by chiral high-performance liquid chromatography. Bupivacaine decreased myocardial contractility, coronary perfusion, heart rate, and cardiac output; however, cardiac output and stroke volume were not as affected by bupivacaine with acidemia. Thiopental decreased myocardial contractility and stroke volume and increased heart rate; acidemia enhanced the tachycardia and produced a greater decrease in stroke volume than with alkalemia. Taken as a whole, the cardiovascular changes were not systematically modified by acid–base derangement. Overall, the tissue distribution of bupivacaine was favored by alkalemia, but thiopental pharmacokinetics were essentially unaffected by acid–base derangement. Acid–base derangement did not influence the kinetics of either drug enantioselectively. At the doses used, the hemodynamic and electrocardiographic effects of bupivacaine and thiopental were not systematically modified by acid–base derangement, nor were there changes in regional or whole body pharmacokinetics of either drug that were clearly related to acid–base status

    Super selective radio embolization of the Porcine Kidney with \u3csup\u3e90\u3c/sup\u3eYttrium Resin Microspheres: A feasibility, safety and dose ranging study

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    Purpose: We determined whether super selective radio embolization of the porcine kidney was technically feasible and evaluated histopathological changes in the treatment target zone (upper or lower renal pole), adjacent nontargeted kidney, and adjacent and distant organs after administering 90Y labeled vs bland resin microspheres. Materials and Methods: We performed super selective radio embolization with 90Y resin microspheres in 1 kidney and with an equivalent number of bland microspheres in the corresponding pole of the contralateral kidney as a control. The aim was to achieve radio embolization of a target zone equivalent to approximately a third of the kidney volume. A pathologist independently graded macroscopic and microscopic changes in the kidney, and adjacent and distant tissue resulting from incremental increases (0.15 to 0.35 GBq) in implanted activity in 6 pigs. Results: We recorded grade 4 histological changes in the treatment target zone (upper or lower renal pole) in 5 of 6 pigs after injecting 90Y resin microspheres with evidence of nephron sparing effects in the adjacent renal tissue at the lowest activity. At activity greater than 0.3 GBq increasing damage was noted to adjacent renal tissue beyond the treatment target zone. No toxicity was evident in adjacent or distant organs. Conclusions: Delivery of highly targeted intra-arterial radiotherapy to the kidney is feasible and safe in the pig model. Further evaluation is warranted as a potential treatment for advanced renal cell carcinoma or for localized disease in patients who are not candidates for surgery

    Effects of CNS site-directed carotid arterial infusions of bupivacaine, levobupivacaine, and ropivacaine in sheep

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    Background: Previous preclinical safety studies in ewes have found intravenous levobupivacaine and ropivacaine to be less potent toward causing central nervous system (CNS) and cardiac toxicity than bupivacaine. Analogous cardiotoxicity has been demonstrated directly in various cardiac preparations ex vivo. Moreover, drug-related arrhythmogenicity has been demonstrated from direct CNS injection of local anesthetic agents in vivo, suggesting CNS-related cardiotoxicity. This study investigated whether CNS site-directed blood-borne drug administration (with minimal systemic recirculation) would demonstrate drug-related cardiotoxicity.Methods: Direct CNS effects and indirect cardiotoxic sequelae were determined after bilateral carotid arterial infusions of levobupivacaine, bupivacaine, or ropivacaine in ewes. After pilot studies to validate the procedures, equimolar doses (24-96 [mu]mol, [almost equal to]7.5-30 mg) were infused over 3 min using a crossover design. Behavioral CNS signs, quantitative electroencephalographic (EEG), cardiovascular, and electrocardiographic effects were recorded. Drug blood concentrations in superior sagittal sinus and aorta were measured serially.Results: Blood drug concentrations in the superior sagittal sinus were 5-10 times those concurrently in the aorta, confirming highly selective CNS delivery with minimal systemic recirculation. Dose-dependent CNS excitatory behavior and EEG changes, with increased mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac output, and myocardial contractility, were found, consistent with sympathetic nervous system stimulation. The overall rank order of potency for these effects was ropivacaine < levobupivacaine < bupivacaine. Nonfatal cardiac arrhythmias were observed, but the type or frequency did not differ between drugs. Conclusions: Although CNS site-selective drug delivery produced quantitative differences between bupivacaine, levobupivacaine, and ropivacaine in some CNS effects and cardiac sequelae, no differences were found in their arrhythmogenic potential

    Direct cardiac effects of coronary site-directed thiopental and its enantiomers

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    Previous evidence from laboratory animal studies indicates that R-thiopental has a greater margin of safety than either the more potent S-thiopental or the clinically used rac-thiopental. Although thiopental can cause cardiovascular depression from direct myocardial effects as well as indirect central nervous system and peripheral effects, no studies have yet determined whether its myocardial effects are enantioselective. A lesser direct effect would provide further evidence supporting R-thiopental as a preferred single enantiomer replacement for rac-thiopental. The direct myocardial effects of the thiopental enantiomers were compared to those of rac-thiopental and propofol, using a crossover design with small incremental doses infused over 3 min, on separate days, into the left coronary arteries of conscious sheep. Hemodynamic and electrocardiographic measurements were acquired, and serial blood samples were collected during the studies for drug analyses. All three forms of thiopental and propofol produced significant hemodynamic effects consisting of doserelated and rapid-onset decreases in left ventricular dP/dtmax and stroke volume, and increases in left coronary blood flow and heart rate. Cardiac output, mean arterial blood pressure, and central venous pressure remained unaltered. The effects did not differ significantly among rac-thiopental, enantiopure R- or S-thiopental, or propofol. Arterial blood drug concentrations were consistently less than those associated with systemic effects. Although previous evidence indicates that Rthiopental could make a suitable single-enantiomer replacement for rac-thiopental, the current study did not find a significant difference in direct cardiac effects among the thiopental enantiomers, racemate, or propofol
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