70 research outputs found

    Texture analysis of MR images of patients with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Our objective was to study the effect of trauma on texture features in cerebral tissue in mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI). Our hypothesis was that a mild trauma may cause microstructural changes, which are not necessarily perceptible by visual inspection but could be detected with texture analysis (TA).</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We imaged 42 MTBI patients by using 1.5 T MRI within three weeks of onset of trauma. TA was performed on the area of mesencephalon, cerebral white matter at the levels of mesencephalon, corona radiata and centrum semiovale and in different segments of corpus callosum (CC) which have been found to be sensitive to damage. The same procedure was carried out on a control group of ten healthy volunteers. Patients' TA data was compared with the TA results of the control group comparing the amount of statistically significantly differing TA parameters between the left and right sides of the cerebral tissue and comparing the most discriminative parameters.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There were statistically significant differences especially in several co-occurrence and run-length matrix based parameters between left and right side in the area of mesencephalon, in cerebral white matter at the level of corona radiata and in the segments of CC in patients. Considerably less difference was observed in the healthy controls.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>TA revealed significant changes in texture parameters of cerebral tissue between hemispheres and CC segments in TBI patients. TA may serve as a novel additional tool for detecting the conventionally invisible changes in cerebral tissue in MTBI and help the clinicians to make an early diagnosis.</p

    Alcohol marketing and drunkenness among students in the Philippines: findings from the nationally representative Global School-based Student Health Survey

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: A largely unaddressed issue in lower income countries and the Philippines, in particular, is the role of alcohol marketing and its potential link to early alcohol use among youth. This study examines the associations between exposures to alcohol marketing and Filipino youths’ drinking prevalence and drunkenness. METHODS: Cross-sectional analyses were used to examine the Global School-based Student Health Survey (GSHS) conducted in Philippines (2011). The self-administered questionnaires were completed by students primarily 13 to 16 years of age (N = 5290). Three statistical models were computed to test the associations between alcohol marketing and alcohol use, while controlling for possible confounding factors. RESULTS: Alcohol marketing, specifically through providing free alcohol through a company representative, was associated with drunkenness (AOR: 1.84; 95% CI = 1.06–3.21) among youths after controlling for demographic and psychosocial characteristics, peer environment, and risky behaviors. In addition, seeing alcohol ads in newspapers and magazines (AOR: 1.65, 95% CI = 1.05–2.58) and seeing ads at sports events, concerts or fairs (AOR: 1.50, 95% CI = 1.06–2.12) were significantly associated with increased reports of drunkenness. CONCLUSIONS: There are significant associations between alcohol marketing exposure and increased alcohol use and drunkenness among youth in the Philippines. These findings highlight the need to put policies into effect that restrict alcohol marketing practices as an important prevention strategy for reducing alcohol use and its dire consequences among vulnerable youth

    Legalization of prostitution: The Philippine perspective

    No full text
    Prostitution in the Philippines is illegal with its specific outlaw specifically stated by the Revised Penal Code. Sex for money is also frowned upon by society. The conditions are no different from that of the Netherlands, a country infamous for its Red Light Districts and sex trade. Similarly too, the Philippines has been the haven of “sex tours” which allowed foreigners to cohabit with women for a fixed price including airfare. The difference between the two however is that in the Philippines the incidence of child trafficking and sexual abuse has remained a big problem and so are STDs4, there is a steadily increasing number of prostitutes driven to come to the trade because of poverty5, and the sex trade has remained unregulated. In the Netherlands, the number of prostitutes is diminishing and so are sex violations. The incidence of STD remains no different from the community not involved in the trade, and the rest of Europe, and prostitution is regulated. A question now raised, is how a country like the Netherlands, who openly permit the exchange of the sexual act for money achieve the necessary benefits countries who outlaw prostitution seek to attain? Is there value in seeking to adopt similar policies here in t he Philippines? Should t he Philippines legalize prostitution

    Let us not become institutionalized

    No full text

    Session Topic 1

    No full text
    corecore