67 research outputs found
Attitudes Toward Assisted Suicide and Life-Prolonging Measures in Swiss ALS Patients and Their Caregivers
Objectives: In Switzerland, assisted suicide (AS) is legal, provided that the person seeking assistance has decisional capacity and the person assisting is not motivated by reasons of self-interest. However, in this particular setting nothing is known about patients' and their caregivers' attitudes toward AS and life-prolonging measures. Methods: Data was retrieved through validated questionnaires and personal interviews in 33 patients and their caregivers covering the following domains: physical function according to the revised Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale (ALSFRS-R), demographic data, quality of life, anxiety, depression, social situation, spirituality, burden of disease, life-prolonging, and life-shortening acts. Results: In patients the median time after diagnosis was 9 months (2-90) and the median Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) FRS-R score was 37 (22-48). The majority of patients (94%; n = 31) had no desire to hasten death. Patients' and caregivers' attitudes toward Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy (PEG) and Non-Invasive Ventilation (NIV) differed. Significantly more patients than caregivers (21.2 versus 3.1%) stated that they were against NIV (p = 0.049) and against PEG (27.3 versus 3.1%; p = 0.031). Answers regarding tracheotomy were not significantly different (p = 0.139). Caregivers scored significantly higher levels of "suffering" (p = 0.007), "loneliness" (p = 0.006), and "emotional distress" answering the questionnaires (p > 0.001). Suffering (p > 0.026) and loneliness (p > 0.016) were related to the score of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) in patients. Conclusion: A liberal legal setting does not necessarily promote the wish for AS. However, the desire to discuss AS is prevalent in ALS patients. There is a higher level of suffering and loneliness on the caregivers' side. A longitudinal study is warranted
a cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
Background The hypertensive deoxy-corticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt-treated
pig (hereafter, DOCA pig) was recently introduced as large animal model for
early-stage heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The aim of
the present study was to evaluate cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) of
DOCA pigs and weight-matched control pigs to characterize ventricular, atrial
and myocardial structure and function of this phenotype model. Methods Five
anesthetized DOCA and seven control pigs underwent 3 T CMR at rest and during
dobutamine stress. Left ventricular/atrial (LV/LA) function and myocardial
mass (LVMM), strains and torsion were evaluated from (tagged) cine imaging. 4D
phase-contrast measurements were used to assess blood flow and peak
velocities, including transmitral early-diastolic (E) and myocardial tissue
(E’) velocities and coronary sinus blood flow. Myocardial perfusion reserve
was estimated from stress-to-rest time-averaged coronary sinus flow. Global
native myocardial T1 times were derived from prototype modified Look-Locker
inversion-recovery (MOLLI) short-axis T1 maps. After in-vivo measurements,
transmural biopsies were collected for stereological evaluation including the
volume fractions of interstitium (VV(int/LV)) and collagen (VV(coll/LV)).
Rest, stress, and stress-to-rest differences of cardiac and myocardial
parameters in DOCA and control animals were compared by t-test. Results In
DOCA pigs LVMM (p < 0.001) and LV wall-thickness (end-systole/end-diastole, p
= 0.003/p = 0.007) were elevated. During stress, increase of LV ejection-
fraction and decrease of end-systolic volume accounted for normal
contractility reserves in DOCA and control pigs. Rest-to-stress differences of
cardiac index (p = 0.040) and end-diastolic volume (p = 0.042) were
documented. Maximal (p = 0.042) and minimal (p = 0.012) LA volumes in DOCA
pigs were elevated at rest; total LA ejection-fraction decreased during stress
(p = 0.006). E’ was lower in DOCA pigs, corresponding to higher E/E’ at rest
(p = 0.013) and stress (p = 0.026). Myocardial perfusion reserve was reduced
in DOCA pigs (p = 0.031). T1-times and VV(int/LV) did not differ between
groups, whereas VV(coll/LV) levels were higher in DOCA pigs (p = 0.044).
Conclusions LA enlargement, E’ and E/E’ were the markers that showed the most
pronounced differences between DOCA and control pigs at rest. Inadequate
increase of myocardial perfusion reserve during stress might represent a
metrics for early-stage HFpEF. Myocardial T1 mapping could not detect elevated
levels of myocardial collagen in this model. Trial registration The study was
approved by the local Bioethics Committee of Vienna, Austria
(BMWF-66.010/0091-II/3b/2013)
Two-photon excitation with finite pulses unlocks pure dephasing-induced degradation of entangled photons emitted by quantum dots
Semiconductor quantum dots have emerged as an especially promising platform
for the generation of polarization-entangled photon pairs. However, it was
demonstrated recently that the two-photon excitation scheme employed in
state-of-the-art experiments limits the achievable degree of entanglement by
introducing which-path information. In this work, the combined impact of
two-photon excitation and longitudinal acoustic phonons on photon pairs emitted
by strongly-confining quantum dots is investigated. It is found that phonons
further reduce the achievable degree of entanglement even in the limit of
vanishing temperature due to phonon-induced pure dephasing and phonon-assisted
one-photon processes, which increase the reexcitation probability. In addition,
the degree of entanglement, as measured by the concurrence, decreases with
rising temperature and/or pulse duration, even if the excitonic fine-structure
splitting is absent and when higher electronic states are out of reach.
Furthermore, in the case of finite fine-structure splittings, phonons enlarge
the discrepancy in concurrence for different laser polarizations.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Cataract in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes. Insights from the German/Austrian DPV registry
Objective To study diabetic cataract in type 1 diabetes in a large pediatric cohort. Methods The 92,633 patients aged 0.5-21 years from German/Austrian multicenter diabetes registry (DPV) were analyzed. The 235 patients (0.25%) with diabetic cataract were found, 200 could be categorized: 67 with early cataract (3 months before diabetes onset - 12 months afterwards), 133 with late cataract (>12 months after diabetes onset). Regression models adjusted for age and gender were used to compare clinical parameters at diabetes onset. Regression models for patients with late cataract were implemented for the total documentation period and additionally adjusted for diabetes duration. Results Rate of cataract development shows a peak at diabetes onset and declines with longer diabetes duration. Patients with cataract showed strong female preponderance. Patients developing early cataract were older at diabetes onset (12.8 years [11.8/13.9] vs. 8.9 [8.9/9.0]; p < 0.001) and showed higher HbA1c than patients without cataract (9.0% [8.55/9.38] vs. 7.6% [7.60/7.61]; p < 0.001). They had lower height-SDS, (-0.22 [-0.48/0.04] vs. 0.25 [0.24/0.26]; p < 0.001), lower weight-SDS (-0.31 [-0.55/-0.08] vs. 0.21 [0.20/0.21]; p < 0.001) and lower BMI-SDS (-0.25 [-0.49/-0.02] vs. 0.12 [0.12/0.13); p = 0.002). Patients with late cataract showed higher HbA1c at diabetes onset (8.35% [8.08/8.62] vs. 8.04% [8.03/8.05]; p = 0.023) and higher mean HbA1c during total documentation period (8.00% [7.62/8.34] vs. 7.62% [7.61/7.63]; p = 0.048). Conclusions Our data confirm known demographic and clinical characteristics of patients developing early cataract. Hyperglycemia-induced osmotic damage to lens fibers at diabetes onset might be the main pathomechanism. Long term glycemic control is associated with cataract development
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