123 research outputs found
A Gentleman with Anemia and Cholestasis
Primary sclerosing cholangitis is a rare cause of cholestasis caused by progressive inflammation and fibrosis of both intrahepatic and extrahepatic bile ducts leading to multifocal ductal strictures. Herein, we report a case of primary sclerosing cholangitis and inflammatory bowel disease. The concomitant diagnosis of these two diseases is not typical. The management includes the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease and potential complications of primary sclerosing cholangitis, including dominant strictures of bile duct, portal hypertension, gallbladder diseases, cholangiocarcinoma, and colonoscopic surveillance
Psycho-behavioural responses of the general population to COVID-19 after mass vaccination: a cross-sectional study
Abstract
Background
Previous studies have examined public psycho-behavioural responses in the early stages of the epidemic, little is known after mass vaccination has been implemented. This study aimed to investigate the public's behavioural (adoption of COVID-19 precautionary measures) and psychological (depression, anxiety and stress) responses to COVID-19 and their relationships after the launch of the territory-wide vaccination programme in Hong Kong.
Methods
A cross-sectional survey study using anonymous online or face-to-face questionnaires was conducted between June 2021 and September 2021. A convenience sample of Hong Kong Chinese residents aged ⩾18 years were recruited online by referrals and from a university-run community vaccination centre.
Results
A total of 1893 valid questionnaires were received. The results showed that Hong Kong residents have high levels of adoption of precautionary measures and low levels of depression, anxiety and stress after the mass vaccination. Hierarchical regression analysis identified that in the fully adjusted model, the adoption of precautionary measures was a consistent protective factor (β ranged −1.51 to −1.67, p < 0.001) for depression, anxiety and stress amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conclusions
This study offers new information on the public's psycho-behavioural responses to the pandemic, as well as insights into public health planning after introducing the mass vaccination
The impact of the ClearRT™ upgrade on target motion tracking accuracy in Radixact® Synchrony® lung treatments
Background: The objective was to investigate the change in segmentation error of Radixact® Synchrony® lung treatment after its kV imaging system was upgraded from Generation 1 to Generation 2 in the ClearRT™ installation.
Materials and methods: Radixact® Lung Synchrony® plans were created for the Model 18023 Xsight® Lung Tracking “XLT” Phantom combined with different lung target inserts with densities of 0.280, 0.500, 0.943 and 1.093 g/cc. After Radixact® Synchrony® treatment delivery using the Generation 1 and Generation 2 kV systems according to each plan, the tracking performance of the two kV systems on each density insert was compared by calculating the root mean square (RMS) error (δRMS) between the Synchrony-predicted motion in the log file and the known phantom motion and by calculating δ95%, the maximum error within a 95% probability threshold.
Results: The δRMS and δ95% of Radixact® Synchrony® treatment for Gen1 kV systems deteriorated as the density of the target insert decreased, from 1.673 ± 0.064 mm and 3.049 ± 0.089 mm, respectively, for the 1.093 g/cc insert to 8.355 ± 5.873 mm and 15.297 ± 10.470 mm, respectively, for the 0.280 g/cc insert. In contrast, no such trend was observed in the δRMS or δ95% of Synchrony® treatment using the Gen2 kV system. The δRMS and δ95%, respectively, fluctuated slightly from 1.586 to 1.687 mm and from 2.874 to 2.971 mm when different target inserts were tracked by the Gen2 kV system.
Conclusion: With improved image contrast in kV radiographs, the Gen2 kV imaging system can enhance the ability to track targets accurately in Radixact® Lung Synchrony® treatment and reduce the segmentation error. Our study showed that lung targets with density values as low as 0.280 cc/g could be tracked correctly in Synchrony treatment with the Gen2 kV imaging system
Hong Kong dentists' preparedness for medical emergency in dental clinics
Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate the Hong Kong dentists’ and dental clinics’ preparedness for medical emergency in the dental clinic.
Methods: Two custom designed questionnaires were developed, one for dentists and another for dental clinics, to collect the required information. The sampling frame for participants was the list of registered dentists published by the Hong Kong Dental Council on its website in January 2016. A total of 434 dentists and 143 dental clinics were selected from the list by systematic random sampling. The latter sample was supplemented by 10 randomly selected government dental clinics. The questionnaires were mailed the selected dentists together with a cover letter and a stamped return envelope. A reminder letter and another copy of the questionnaire were sent out two weeks after the first mailing.
Results: 167 (38%) completed dentist questionnaires and 53 (35%) clinic questionnaires were collected. Most of the respondent dentists had some deficient knowledge on basic life support (BLS), their mean score was 3.5 out of a maximum of 5. Most (>60%) of the respondents thought they were competent in performing medical emergency procedures except giving intravenous injection. Moreover, most (>60%) of them held positive attitude towards having immediate availability of essential medical emergency equipment and drugs in their clinic.
Dentists who were more recent graduates, those with postgraduate qualifications, and those who work with accompaniment generally had higher mean BLS knowledge scores. In the dental clinics, the most commonly kept medical emergency equipment/drug was instant glucose (70%) and followed by antihistamine (62%). Only a quarter of the clinics were equipped with AED, and 45% were equipped with oxygen cylinder. For 8 out of the 11 items, a higher proportion of the bigger clinics (>2 dental chairs) than the smaller clinics had the medical emergency equipment/drug available (Chi-square test, p<0.05).
Conclusion: Hong Kong dentists have a moderate level of knowledge on BLS which should be enhanced through regular attendance at CE courses. Their knowledge level is affected by a number of their background and professional activities factors. Most dental clinics in Hong Kong have only few of the essential medical emergency equipment and drugs while the larger clinics are better equipped than the smaller clinics.published_or_final_versio
Unsupervised Domain Adaptation for Automated Knee Osteoarthritis Phenotype Classification
Purpose: The aim of this study was to demonstrate the utility of unsupervised
domain adaptation (UDA) in automated knee osteoarthritis (OA) phenotype
classification using a small dataset (n=50). Materials and Methods: For this
retrospective study, we collected 3,166 three-dimensional (3D) double-echo
steady-state magnetic resonance (MR) images from the Osteoarthritis Initiative
dataset and 50 3D turbo/fast spin-echo MR images from our institute (in 2020
and 2021) as the source and target datasets, respectively. For each patient,
the degree of knee OA was initially graded according to the MRI Osteoarthritis
Knee Score (MOAKS) before being converted to binary OA phenotype labels. The
proposed UDA pipeline included (a) pre-processing, which involved automatic
segmentation and region-of-interest cropping; (b) source classifier training,
which involved pre-training phenotype classifiers on the source dataset; (c)
target encoder adaptation, which involved unsupervised adaption of the source
encoder to the target encoder and (d) target classifier validation, which
involved statistical analysis of the target classification performance
evaluated by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve
(AUROC), sensitivity, specificity and accuracy. Additionally, a classifier was
trained without UDA for comparison. Results: The target classifier trained with
UDA achieved improved AUROC, sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for both
knee OA phenotypes compared with the classifier trained without UDA.
Conclusion: The proposed UDA approach improves the performance of automated
knee OA phenotype classification for small target datasets by utilising a
large, high-quality source dataset for training. The results successfully
demonstrated the advantages of the UDA approach in classification on small
datasets.Comment: Junru Zhong and Yongcheng Yao share the same contribution. 17 pages,
4 figures, 4 table
COULD FAMILY WELL-BEING MODERATE THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES AND SOMATOFORM DISSOCIATION? A PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
16 pagesThe impacts of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been
well documented. One possible consequence of ACEs is dissociation,
which is a major feature of post-traumatic psychopathology
and is also associated with considerable impairment
and health care costs. Although ACEs are known to be associated
with both psychoform and somatoform dissociation,
much less is known about the mechanisms behind this relationship.
Little is known about whether social and interpersonal
factors such as family environments would moderate the relationship
between ACEs and somatoform dissociation. This paper
discusses the importance of having a positive and healthy family
environment in trauma recovery. We then report the findings of
a preliminary study in which we examined whether the association
between ACEs and somatoform dissociation would be
moderated by family well-being in a convenience sample of
Hong Kong adults (N = 359). The number of ACEs was positively
associated with somatoform dissociative symptoms, but this
association was moderated by the level of family well-being.
The number of ACEs was associated with somatoform dissociation
only when the family well-being scores were low. These
moderating effects were medium. The findings point to the
potential importance of using family education and intervention
programs to prevent and treat trauma-related dissociative
symptoms, but further investigation is needed
2D materials for conducting holes from grain boundaries in perovskite solar cells
Grain boundaries in organic-inorganic halide perovskite solar cells (PSCs) have been found to be detrimental to the photovoltaic performance of devices. Here, we develop a unique approach to overcome this problem by modifying the edges of perovskite grain boundaries with flakes of high-mobility two-dimensional (2D) materials via a convenient solution process. A synergistic effect between the 2D flakes and perovskite grain boundaries is observed for the first time, which can significantly enhance the performance of PSCs. We find that the 2D flakes can conduct holes from the grain boundaries to the hole transport layers in PSCs, thereby making hole channels in the grain boundaries of the devices. Hence, 2D flakes with high carrier mobilities and short distances to grain boundaries can induce a more pronounced performance enhancement of the devices. This work presents a cost-effective strategy for improving the performance of PSCs by using high-mobility 2D materials
MicroRNA profiling study reveals MIR-150 in association with metastasis in nasopharyngeal carcinoma
© 2017 The Author(s). MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that play a crucial role in pathogenesis of human cancers. Several miRNAs have been shown to involve in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) pathogenesis through alteration of gene networks. A global view of the miRNA expression profile of clinical specimens would be the best way to screen out the possible miRNA candidates that may be involved in disease pathogenesis. In this study, we investigated the expression profiles of miRNA in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues from patients with undifferentiated NPC versus non-NPC controls using a miRNA real-time PCR platform, which covered a total of 95 cancer-related miRNAs. Hierarchical cluster analysis revealed that NPC and non-NPC controls were clearly segregated. Promisingly, 10 miRNA candidates were differentially expressed. Among them, 9 miRNAs were significantly up-regulated of which miR-205 and miR-196a showed the most up-regulated in NPC with the highest incidence percentage of 94.1% and 88.2%, respectively, while the unique down-regulated miR-150 was further validated in patient sera. Finally, the in vitro gain-of-function and loss-of-function assays revealed that miR-150 can modulate the epithelial-mesenchymal-transition property in NPC/HK-1 cells and led to the cell motility and invasion. miR-150 may be a potential biomarker for NPC and plays a critical role in NPC tumourigenesis.Link_to_subscribed_fulltex
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