8 research outputs found

    Державне регулювання системи факторів оцінки та мінімізації ризиків легалізації коштів, одержаних злочинним шляхом в процесі фінансового моніторингу комерційних банків України

    Get PDF
    Основною ціллю данної статті є формулювання важливості впливу чітко визначених факторів, які впливають на процеси фінансового моніторингу в комерційних банків України. Виходячи з поставлених цілей, завданнями даної статті є розроблення моделі оцінки ризиків банківської установи щодо протидії легалізації коштів одержаних злочинним шляхом в системі внутрішньобанківського фінансового моніторингу, та використання в подальшому запропонованих стратегій управління наслідками даних ризиків

    Factors affecting outcome after primary intracerebral hemorrhage

    No full text
    Abstract Primary intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) accounts for 10–15% of all strokes. ICH is the most devastating subtype of stroke with high mortality and morbidity; 35–52% of patients die during the first month after the bleeding. The most important risk factor for onset of ICH is hypertension, especially untreated hypertension, and the well-known predictors for early death after ICH are a low GCS (i.e low level of consciousness) score on admission, the size of the hematoma, and the precence of intraventricular blood. Preceeding use of anticoagulants and advanced age further impair the outcome. Thromboembolic complications after the bleed are common and difficult to prevent. The present cohort study included all patients (n = 453) with verified primary ICH admitted to the stroke unit of Oulu University Hospital within a period of 11 years (from January 1993 to January 2004). The impacts of previous diseases, including ischemic heart disease, atrial fibrillation on admission, hypertension, and diabetes as well as of high admission blood pressure and plasma glucose levels on outcome were evaluated. The safety and efficacy of prevention of venous thromboembolism with enoxaparin, a low molecular weight heparin (LMWH), was investigated. In a population-based study covering a 3-year period, the risk factors and seasonal distribution of ICH were investigated. Independent of the severity of bleeding and patients’ age, ischemic heart disease, diabetes, and atrial fibrillation were found to be significant predictors for early death after ICH. High blood pressure on admission predicted early death, whereas elevated admission plasma glucose level was associated with the severity of bleeding but was not an independent predictor for early death. Treatment with enoxaparin (20 mg per day subcutaneously) for prevention of venous thromboembolism was not associated with increased mortality but did not seem to prevent venous thromboembolic complications. The incidence of ICH was higher during the winter among patients with untreated hypertension but not in normotensive and treated hypertensive patients

    Cerebrovascular disease at young age is related to mother’s health during the pregnancy:the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 study

    No full text
    Abstract Background and purpose: For prevention of cerebrovascular diseases at younger age, it is important to understand the risk factors occurring early in life. We investigated the relationship between mothers’ general health during pregnancy and the offspring’s risk of cerebrovascular disease in age of 15 to 52 years. Methods: Within the population-based prospective Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966, 11,926 persons were followed from antenatal period to 52 years of age. Information on their mother’s ill health conditions, i.e., hospitalizations, chronic diseases, medications, vitamin or iron supplement, fever, anemia, mood, and smoking was collected from 24th gestational week onwards. Ischemic and hemorrhagic cerebrovascular diseases of the offspring were identified from national registers in Finland. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the association of mother’s health conditions with incidence of cerebrovascular disease in the offspring, with adjustments for potential confounders. Results: During 565,585 person-years of follow-up, 449 (2.8%) of the offspring had a cerebrovascular disease. Hospitalization during pregnancy was associated with an increased risk of cerebrovascular disease in the offspring (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.49; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.06–2.08) after adjustment for confounders, as was having more than three ill health conditions (HR = 1.89; CI 1.14–3.11). Not using vitamin or iron supplement was associated with increased risk for cerebrovascular disease in the offspring (HR = 1.39; CI 1.01–1.89). Conclusions: The results suggest that the risk of cerebrovascular disease may start as early as during the antenatal period, and the health characteristics of mothers during pregnancy may play a role in cerebrovascular disease risk of the offspring

    Two-center validation of the Oulu resorption score for bone flap resorption after autologous cranioplasty

    No full text
    Abstract Objective: Autologous bone has been the gold standard of cranioplasty materials for decades. Unique to autologous cranioplasty, bone flap resorption is a poorly understood and unclearly defined complication. Even further, it has been unclear, whether the resorption process eventually stabilizes over time. Thus, the sufficient follow-up period after autologous cranioplasty is unknown. The Oulu Resorption Score (ORS) is a straight-forward classification system for the radiological interpretation of bone flap resorption. The aims of the present study were to evaluate the reliability of the ORS using intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and to assess the temporal progression of the resorption process. Methods: We identified 108 consecutive autologous cranioplasty patients treated between 2005 and 2018 in two tertiary referral centers. All 365 head CT scans the patients had undergone were evaluated using the ORS in a blinded, independent two-center setting. Intra- and inter-observer reliabilities were calculated. The ORS was applied to study the temporal progression of the resorption process. Results: The intra-observer reliability of the ORS was excellent (ICC 0.94, 95%CI 0.93–0.95). Inter-observer reliability was good-to-excellent (ICCs 0.87 and 0.89, 95%CIs 0.84–0.89 and 0.87–0.91, respectively). In scatterplot smoothing analyses, the progression of bone flap resorption appeared to stabilize 12–24 months after cranioplasty. Conclusions: ORS is the only validated radiological tool for the standardized analysis of bone flap resorption after autologous cranioplasty. Evaluated using the ORS, the resorption process seemed to stabilize during the first two postoperative years after cranioplasty, suggesting that the sufficient follow-up time after autologous cranioplasty is two years

    Favourable long-term recovery after decompressive craniectomy:the Northern Finland experience with a predominantly adolescent patient cohort

    No full text
    Abstract Purpose: Decompressive craniectomy (DC) is an effective treatment of intracranial hypertension. Correspondingly, the procedure is increasingly utilised worldwide. The number of patients rendered vegetative following surgery has been a concern—a matter especially important in children, due to long anticipated lifetime. Here, we report the long-term outcomes of all paediatric DC patients from an 11-year period in a tertiary-level centre that geographically serves half of Finland. Methods: We identified all patients younger than 18 years who underwent DC in the Oulu University Hospital between the years 2009 and 2019. Outcomes and clinicoradiological variables were extracted from the patient records. Results: Mean yearly prevalence of brain injury requiring DC was 1.34/100 000 children—twenty-four patients underwent DC during the study period and 21 (88%) survived. The median age of the patients was 16.0 years, and the median preoperative GCS was 5.0 (IQR 5.0). Fifteen patients (63%) had made a good recovery (Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale ≥ 7). Of the surviving patients, two (9.5%) had not returned to school. After traumatic brain injury (n = 20), the Rotterdam CT score (mean 3.0, range 1 to 5) was not associated with mortality, poor recovery or inability to continue school (p = 0.13, p = 0.41, p = 0.43, respectively). Absent basal cisterns were associated with mortality (p = 0.005), but not with poor recovery if the patient survived DC (p = 0.81). Hydrocephalus was associated with poor recovery and inability to continue school (p = 0.01 and p = 0.03, respectively). Conclusion: Most of our patients made a favourable recovery and were able to continue school. No late mortality was observed. Thus, even in clinically and radiologically severely brain-injured children, decompressive craniectomy appears to yield favourable outcomes

    Classification of bone flap resorption after cranioplasty:a proposal for a computed tomography-based scoring system

    No full text
    Abstract Background: Bone flap resorption (BFR) is the most prevalent complication resulting in autologous cranioplasty failure, but no consensus on the definition of BFR or between the radiological signs and relevance of BFR has been established. We set out to develop an easy-to-use scoring system intended to standardize the interpretation of radiological BFR findings. Methods: All 45 autologous cranioplasty patients operated on at Oulu University Hospital from 2004 to 2014 were identified, and the bone flap status of all the available patients was evaluated using the new scoring system. Derived from previous literature, a three-variable score for the detection of BFR changes is proposed. The variables “Extent” (estimated remaining bone volume), “Severity” (possible perforations and their measured diameter), and “Focus” (the number of BFR foci within the flap) are scored from 0 to 3 individually. Using the sum of these scores, a score of 0–9 is assigned to describe the degree of BFR. Additionally, independent neurosurgeons assessed the presence and relevance of BFR from the same data set. These assessments were compared to the BFR scores in order to find a score limit for relevant BFR. Results: BFR was considered relevant by the neurosurgeons in 11 (26.8%) cases. The agreement on the relevance of BFR demonstrated substantial strength (κ 0.64, 95%CI 0.36 to 0.91). The minimum resorption score in cases of relevant BFR was 5. Thus, BFR with a resorption score ≥ 5 was defined relevant (grades II and III). With this definition, grade II or III BFR was found in 15 (36.6%) of our patients. No risk factors were found to predict relevant BFR. Conclusions: The score was proven to be easy to use and we recommend that only cases with grades II and III BFR undergo neurosurgical consultation. However, general applicability can only be claimed after validation in independent cohorts

    Physiological instability is linked to mortality in primary central nervous system lymphoma:a case–control fMRI study

    No full text
    Abstract Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is an aggressive brain disease where lymphocytes invade along perivascular spaces of arteries and veins. The invasion markedly changes (peri)vascular structures but its effect on physiological brain pulsations has not been previously studied. Using physiological magnetic resonance encephalography (MREGBOLD) scanning, this study aims to quantify the extent to which (peri)vascular PCNSL involvement alters the stability of physiological brain pulsations mediated by cerebral vasculature. Clinical implications and relevance were explored. In this study, 21 PCNSL patients (median 67y; 38% females) and 30 healthy age-matched controls (median 63y; 73% females) were scanned for MREGBOLD signal during 2018–2021. Motion effects were removed. Voxel-by-voxel Coefficient of Variation (CV) maps of MREGBOLD signal was calculated to examine the stability of physiological brain pulsations. Group-level differences in CV were examined using nonparametric covariate-adjusted tests. Subject-level CV alterations were examined against control population Z-score maps wherein clusters of increased CV values were detected. Spatial distributions of clusters and findings from routine clinical neuroimaging were compared [contrast-enhanced, diffusion-weighted, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) data]. Whole-brain mean CV was linked to short-term mortality with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity, as all deceased patients revealed higher values (n = 5, median 0.055) than surviving patients (n = 16, median 0.028) (p < .0001). After adjusting for medication, head motion, and age, patients revealed higher CV values (group median 0.035) than healthy controls (group median 0.024) around arterial territories (p ≤ .001). Abnormal clusters (median 1.10 × 10₅mm₃) extended spatially beyond FLAIR lesions (median 0.62 × 10₅mm₃) with differences in volumes (p = .0055)

    Endoscopic third ventriculostomy for adults with hydrocephalus:creating a prognostic model for success: protocol for a retrospective multicentre study (Nordic ETV)

    No full text
    Abstract Introduction: Endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) is becoming an increasingly widespread treatment for hydrocephalus, but research is primarily based on paediatric populations. In 2009, Kulkarni et al created the ETV Success score to predict the outcome of ETV in children. The purpose of this study is to create a prognostic model to predict the success of ETV for adult patients with hydrocephalus. The ability to predict who will benefit from an ETV will allow better primary patient selection both for ETV and shunting. This would reduce additional second procedures due to primary treatment failure. A success score specific for adults could also be used as a communication tool to provide better information and guidance to patients. Methods and analysis: The study will adhere to the Transparent Reporting of a multivariable prediction model for Individual Prognosis Or Diagnosis reporting guidelines and conducted as a retrospective chart review of all patients≥18 years of age treated with ETV at the participating centres between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2018. Data collection is conducted locally in a standardised database. Univariate analysis will be used to identify several strong predictors to be included in a multivariate logistic regression model. The model will be validated using K-fold cross validation. Discrimination will be assessed using area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) and calibration with calibration belt plots. Ethics and dissemination: The study is approved by appropriate ethics or patient safety boards in all participating countries
    corecore