291 research outputs found

    Long-term MRA follow-up after coiling of intracranial aneurysms: impact on mood and anxiety

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    Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) screening for recurrence of a coiled intracranial aneurysm and formation of new aneurysms long-term after coiling may induce anxiety and depression. In coiled patients, we evaluated effects on mood and level of anxiety from long-term follow-up MRA in comparison to general population norms. Of 162 patients participating in a long-term (> 4.5 years) MRA follow-up after coiling, 120 completed the EQ-5D questionnaire, a visual analog health scale and a self-developed screening related questionnaire at the time of MRA. Three months later, the same questionnaires were completed by 100 of these 120 patients. Results were compared to general population norms adjusted for gender and age. Any problem with anxiety or depression was reported in 56 of 120 patients (47%; 95%CI38a dagger"56%) at baseline and 42 of 100 patients (42%; 95%CI32a dagger"52%) at 3 months, equally for screen-positives and -negatives. Compared to the reference population, participants scored 38% (95%CI9a dagger"67%) and 27% (95%CI4a dagger"50%) more often any problem with anxiety or depression. Three months after screening, 21% (20 of 92) of screen-negatives and 13% (one of eight) of screen-positives reported to be less afraid of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) compared to before screening. One of eight screen-positives reported increased fear of SAH. Patients with coiled intracranial aneurysms participating in long-term MRA screening reported significantly more often to be anxious or depressed than a reference group. Screening did not significantly increase anxiety or depression temporarily. However, subjectively, patients did report an increase in anxiety caused by screening, which decreased after 3 months

    Comparison between EQ-5D-5L and PROMIS-10 to evaluate health-related quality of life 3 months after stroke:a cross-sectional multicenter study

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    BACKGROUND: Although the use of patient-reported outcome measures to assess Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) has been advocated, it is still open to debate which patient-reported outcome measure should be preferred to evaluate HRQoL after stroke.AIM: To compare the measurement properties (including concurrent validity and discriminant ability) between the 5-dimensional 5-level Euro-Qol (EQ-5D-5L) and the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System 10-Question Global Health Short Form (PROMIS-10) to evaluate HRQoL 3 months after stroke.DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.SETTING: Neurology outpatient clinics in 6 Dutch hospitals.POPULATION: The participants 360 consecutive individuals with stroke. Their median age was 71 years, 143 (39.7%) were female and 335 (93.0%) had suffered an ischemic stroke.METHODS: The EQ-5D-5L, PROMIS-10, modified Rankin Scale and two items on experienced decrease in health and activities post-stroke were administered by a stroke nurse or nurse practitioner through a telephone interview 3 months after stroke. The internal consistency, distribution, floor/ceiling effects, inter-correlations and discriminant ability (using the modified Rankin Scale and experienced decrease in health and in activities post-stroke as external anchors) were calculated for both the EQ-5D-5L and PROMIS-10.RESULTS: Ninety-six percent of the participants were living at home and 50.9% experienced minimal or no disabilities (modified Rankin Scale 0-1) 3 months after stroke. A ceiling effect and a non-normal left skewed distribution were observed in the EQ-5D-5L. The PROMIS-10 showed higher internal consistency (alpha=0.90) compared to the EQ-5D-5L (alpha=0.75). Both the EQ-5D-5L and the PROMIS-10 were strongly correlated with the modified Rankin Scale (r=0.62 and 0.60 respectively). The PROMIS-10 showed better discriminant ability in less affected individuals with stroke, whereas the EQ-5D-5L showed slightly better discriminant ability in more affected individuals with stroke.CONCLUSIONS: Both EQ-5D-5L and PROMIS-10 prove to be useful instruments to evaluate HRQoL in patients who are living at home 3 months after stroke.CLINICAL REHABILITATION IMPACT: The clinical rehabilitation impact depended on the setting and underlying goal which patient-reported outcome measure is preferred to evaluate HRQoL 3 months after stroke. The PROMIS-10 should be preferred to detect differences in less affected stroke patients, whereas the EQ-5D-5L provides slightly more information in more affected stroke patients.Paroxysmal Cerebral Disorder

    Management decisions on unruptured intracranial aneurysms before and after implementation of the PHASES score

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    Background: In management decisions on saccular unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) the risk of rupture is an important factor. The PHASES score, introduced in 2014, provides absolute 5-year risks of rupture based on six easily retrievable patient and aneurysm characteristics. We assessed whether management decisions on UIAs changed after implementation of the PHASES score. Patient and methods: We included all patients with UIAs who were referred to two Dutch tertiary referral centers for aneurysm care in the Netherlands (University Medical Center Utrecht (UMCU) and Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC)) between 2011 and 2017. Analyses were done on an aneurysm level. We calculated the overall proportion of UIAs with a decision to treat before and after PHASES implementation and studied the influence of age and center on post-implementation management changes. Results: We included 623 patients with 803 UIAs. The proportion of UIAs with a decision to treat was 123/360 (34.2%) before and 117/443 (26.4%) after PHASES implementation (absolute risk difference: −7.8%; 95% CI: −14.1 to −1.4). The decision to treat was made at a higher median PHASES score after implementation (7 points (IQR 5;10) pre- versus 8 points (IQR 5;10) post-implementation; p = 0.14). The reduced proportion with a treatment decision after implementation was most pronounced in patients <50 years (−22.3%; 95% CI: −39.2 to −3.4) and was restricted to treatment decisions made at the UMCU (−10.6%; 95% CI: −18.5 to −2.5). Discussion and conclusions: Management of UIAs changed following implementation of the PHASES score, but the impact of PHASES implementation on treatment decisions differed across age subgroups and centers

    Corruption in the Middle East and the Limits of Conventional Approaches

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    Die Unzufriedenheit mit der verbreiteten Korruption war 2011/2012 eine wesentliche Ursache fĂŒr die arabischen Unruhen und weitere AufstĂ€nde weltweit. Der Fall Jordanien zeigt allerdings, dass konventionelle AnsĂ€tze zur BekĂ€mpfung von Korruption nicht ausreichen. Eine angemessene Strategie gegen Korruption muss diese als ein Problem der Verteilungsgerechtigkeit und nicht des Strafrechts verstehen. Wie in allen anderen arabischen Staaten ist die Unzufriedenheit in der Bevölkerung ĂŒber die offensichtliche Korruption auch in Jordanien betrĂ€chtlich. Allerdings wird im Allgemeinen nicht ĂŒber FĂ€lle von Bestechung und Erpressung geklagt, die weniger hĂ€ufig vorkommen, sondern ĂŒber lokale Praktiken politischer Patronage und BegĂŒnstigung, die unter dem Begriff "Wasta" zusammengefasst werden. "Wasta" wurde bislang als Form der Korruption und strafrechtliches Problem angesehen, weshalb Versuche zur EindĂ€mmung ĂŒberwiegend ineffizient blieben: "Wasta"-Praktiken werden in der Regel nicht mit RechtsverstĂ¶ĂŸen verbunden, sondern bewegen sich innerhalb formal legaler Verfahren. Konventionelle AnsĂ€tze zur BekĂ€mpfung von Korruption, die sich an rechtsstaatlichen GrundsĂ€tzen und Transparenz orientieren, sind deshalb nicht zielfĂŒhrend. Demokratisierung allein ist ebenfalls ungeeignet, das Problem „Wasta” zu lösen. In der parlamentarischen Praxis macht "Wasta" den Großteil der AktivitĂ€ten aller Parlamentsmitglieder aus. Diese werden deshalb als persönliche Dienstleister fĂŒr ihre Wahlbezirke und nicht als Mitglieder einer gesetzgebenden Körperschaft wahrgenommen. Gleichzeitig hĂ€lt die Bevölkerung das Parlament fĂŒr eine zutiefst korrupte Institution. "Wasta" wird problematisch, wenn diese Praxis zu einem ungleichen Zugang der BĂŒrger zu öffentlichen Ressourcen fĂŒhrt. Statt sich nur auf politische und administrative Reformen zu konzentrieren, muss der Fokus der BekĂ€mpfung auf den (Wieder-)Aufbau wohlfahrtsstaatlicher Strukturen gelegt werden, zu denen alle BĂŒrger gleichermaßen Zugang haben

    Prediction of aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage in comparison with other stroke types using routine care data

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    Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) can be prevented by early detection and treatment of intracranial aneurysms in high-risk individuals. We investigated whether individuals at high risk of aSAH in the general population can be identified by developing an aSAH prediction model with electronic health records (EHR) data. To assess the aSAH model's relative performance, we additionally developed prediction models for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and compared the discriminative performance of the models. We included individuals aged ≄35 years without history of stroke from a Dutch routine care database (years 2007-2020) and defined outcomes aSAH, AIS and ICH using International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes. Potential predictors included sociodemographic data, diagnoses, medications, and blood measurements. We cross-validated a Cox proportional hazards model with an elastic net penalty on derivation cohorts and reported the c-statistic and 10-year calibration on validation cohorts. We examined 1,040,855 individuals (mean age 54.6 years, 50.9% women) for a total of 10,173,170 person-years (median 11 years). 17,465 stroke events occurred during follow-up: 723 aSAH, 14,659 AIS, and 2,083 ICH. The aSAH model's c-statistic was 0.61 (95%CI 0.57-0.65), which was lower than the c-statistic of the AIS (0.77, 95%CI 0.77-0.78) and ICH models (0.77, 95%CI 0.75-0.78). All models were well-calibrated. The aSAH model identified 19 predictors, of which the 10 strongest included age, female sex, population density, socioeconomic status, oral contraceptive use, gastroenterological complaints, obstructive airway medication, epilepsy, childbirth complications, and smoking. Discriminative performance of the aSAH prediction model was moderate, while it was good for the AIS and ICH models. We conclude that it is currently not feasible to accurately identify individuals at increased risk for aSAH using EHR data

    Evaluation of a Desktop 3D Printed Rigid Refractive-Indexed-Matched Flow Phantom for PIV Measurements on Cerebral Aneurysms

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    Purpose Fabrication of a suitable flow model or phantom is critical to the study of biomedical fluid dynamics using optical flow visualization and measurement methods. The main difficulties arise from the optical properties of the model material, accuracy of the geometry and ease of fabrication. Methods Conventionally an investment casting method has been used, but recently advancements in additive manufacturing techniques such as 3D printing have allowed the flow model to be printed directly with minimal post-processing steps. This study presents results of an investigation into the feasibility of fabrication of such models suitable for particle image velocimetry (PIV) using a common 3D printing Stereolithography process and photopolymer resin. Results An idealised geometry of a cerebral aneurysm was printed to demonstrate its applicability for PIV experimentation. The material was shown to have a refractive index of 1.51, which can be refractive matched with a mixture of de-ionised water with ammonium thiocyanate (NH4SCN). The images were of a quality that after applying common PIV pre-processing techniques and a PIV cross-correlation algorithm, the results produced were consistent within the aneurysm when compared to previous studies. Conclusions This study presents an alternative low-cost option for 3D printing of a flow phantom suitable for flow visualization simulations. The use of 3D printed flow phantoms reduces the complexity, time and effort required compared to conventional investment casting methods by removing the necessity of a multi-part process required with investment casting techniques
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