1,237 research outputs found

    レーザースペックルフローグラフィーを用いて測定した硝子体手術の術前、術中、術後の眼血流

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    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Vitrectomy markedly alters the intraocular milieu, which can then affect the physiology of the retina and choroid. This study investigates whether vitrectomy also alters ocular blood flow as determined by laser speckle flowgraphy (LSFG). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty eyes of 20 patients that underwent vitrectomy for idiopathic macular hole or epiretinal membrane were studied. Standard 23-gauge microincision vitreous surgery was performed. Ocular blood flow of the optic nerve head, retinal vessels, and choroid was determined by LSGF before, during, and 2 weeks and 1 month after vitrectomy. RESULTS: Postoperative blood flow of the optic nerve head, retinal vessels, and choroid did not differ significantly from preoperative values. Intraoperative blood flow of the optic nerve head and retinal vessels decreased significantly from baseline with increasing infusion pressure from 20 mm Hg to 40 mm Hg (P < .01), and choroidal blood flow decreased significantly when the infusion pressure increased from 8 mm Hg to 20 mm Hg and from 20 mm Hg to 40 mm Hg (both P < .01). CONCLUSION: Blood flow did not differ significantly postoperatively versus preoperatively, but it was significantly reduced during vitrectomy with increasing infusion pressure. Careful attention should be paid to infusion pressure during vitrectomy.博士(医学)・乙第1368号・平成27年11月27日Copyright ©2014, SLACK Incorporated. All Rights Reserved.The definitive version is available at " http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/23258160-20140306-04

    Teaching and learning reflection in MPA programs: towards a strategy

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    __Abstract__ Reflection is an essential ingredient of academic education in PublicAdministration, both for an academic and a professional career. Making a distinction between reflectivity and reflexivity we identify 30 foci of reflection. The main question of the article is how these forms of reflection can be taught and learned in PA programs, especially in post-experience PAprograms. To answer this question,westudied de programand interviewed the teaching staff op the post-experienceMPA program at Erasmus University in Rotterdamto describe what is actually done in the to teach students reflection competences and to identify success and limitations of these efforts. We present our findings and describe how we, in consultation with the teaching staff, developed a number of feasible options for improvement. We discuss these options and present a strategy to actually get these implemented

    How do validated measures of functional outcome compare with commonly used outcomes in administrative database research for lumbar spinal surgery?

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    Clinical interpretation of health services research based on administrative databases is limited by the lack of patient-reported functional outcome measures. Reoperation, as a surrogate measure for poor outcome, may be biased by preferences of patients and surgeons and may even be planned a priori. Other available administrative data outcomes, such as postoperative cross sectional imaging (PCSI), may better reflect changes in functional outcome. The purpose was to determine if postoperative events captured from administrative databases, namely reoperation and PCSI, reflect outcomes as derived by validated functional outcome measures (short form 36 scores, Oswestry disability index) for patients who underwent discretionary surgery for specific degenerative conditions of the lumbar spine such as disc herniation, spinal stenosis, degenerative spondylolisthesis, and isthmic spondylolisthesis. After reviewing the records of all patients surgically treated for disc herniation, spinal stenosis, degenerative spondylolisthesis, and isthmic spondylolisthesis at our institution, we recorded the occurrence of PCSI (MRI or CT-myelograms) and reoperations, as well as demographic, surgical, and functional outcome data. We determined how early (within 6 months) and intermediate (within 18 months) term events (PCSI and reoperations) were associated with changes in intermediate (minimum 1 year) and late (minimum 2 years) term functional outcome, respectively. We further evaluated how early (6–12 months) and intermediate (12–24 months) term changes in functional outcome were associated with the subsequent occurrence of intermediate (12–24 months) and late (beyond 24 months) term adverse events, respectively. From 148 surgically treated patients, we found no significant relationship between the occurrence of PCSI or reoperation and subsequent changes in functional outcome at intermediate or late term. Similarly, earlier changes in functional outcome did not have any significant relationship with subsequent occurrences of adverse events at intermediate or late term. Although it may be tempting to consider administrative database outcome measures as proxies for poor functional outcome, we cannot conclude that a significant relationship exists between the occurrence of PCSI or reoperation and changes in functional outcome

    Using Human Disease Outbreaks as a Guide to Multilevel Ecosystem Interventions

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    Human health often depends on environmental variables and is generally subject to widespread and comprehensive surveillance. Compared with other available measures of ecosystem health, human disease incidence may be one of the most useful and practical bioindicators for the often elusive gauge of ecologic well-being. We argue that many subtle ecosystem disruptions are often identified only as a result of detailed epidemiologic investigations after an anomalous increase in human disease incidence detected by routine surveillance mechanisms. Incidence rates for vector-mediated diseases (e.g., arboviral illnesses) and direct zoonoses (e.g., hantaviruses) are particularly appropriate as bioindicators to identify underlying ecosystem disturbances. Outbreak data not only have the potential to act as a pivotal warning system for ecosystem disruption, but may also be used to identify interventions for the preservation of ecologic health. With this approach, appropriate ecologically based strategies for remediation can be introduced at an earlier stage than would be possible based solely on environmental monitoring, thereby reducing the level of “ecosystem distress” as well as resultant disease burden in humans. This concept is discussed using local, regional, and global examples, thereby introducing the concept of multilevel ecosystem interventions

    Vascular Cognitive Impairment and cognitive decline; a longitudinal study comparing different types of vascular brain injury - The TRACE-VCI study

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    Background: Little is known about the trajectories of cognitive decline in relation to different types of vascular brain injury in patients presenting at a memory clinic with Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI). / Methods: We included 472 memory clinic patients (age 68 (±8.2) years, 44% female, MMSE 25.9 (±2.8), 210 (44.5%) dementia) from the prospective TRACE-VCI cohort study with possible VCI, defined as cognitive complaints and vascular brain injury on MRI and at least 1 follow-up cognitive assessment (follow-up time 2.5 (±1.4) years, n = 1172 assessments). Types of vascular brain injury considered lacune(s) (≥1; n = 108 patients (23%)), non-lacunar infarct(s) (≥1; n = 54 (11%)), white matter hyperintensities (WMH) (none/mild versus moderate/severe (n = 211 patients (45%)) and microbleed(s) (≥1; n = 202 patients (43%)). We assessed cognitive functioning at baseline and follow-up, including the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), Trail Making Test (TMT) A and B, category naming task and MMSE. The association of different types of vascular brain injury with cognitive decline was evaluated with linear mixed models, including one type of vascular brain injury (dichotomized), time and vascular brain injury*time, adjusted for sex, age, dementia status (yes/no), education (Verhage scale) and medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA) score (dichotomized as ≥ 1.5). / Results: Across the population, performance declined over time on all tests. Linear mixed models showed that lacune(s) were associated with worse baseline TMTA (Beta(SE)) (8.3 (3.8), p = .03) and TMTB (25.6 (10.3), p = .01), albeit with a slower rate of decline on MMSE, RAVLT and category naming. By contrast, patients with non-lacunar infarct(s) showed a steeper rate of decline on TMTB (29.6 (7.7), p = .00), mainly attributable to patients with dementia (62.9 (15.5), p = .00). / Conclusion: Although different types of vascular brain injury have different etiologies and different patterns, they show little differences in cognitive trajectories depending on type of vascular brain injury

    Integrability on the Master Space

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    It has been recently shown that every SCFT living on D3 branes at a toric Calabi-Yau singularity surprisingly also describes a complete integrable system. In this paper we use the Master Space as a bridge between the integrable system and the underlying field theory and we reinterpret the Poisson manifold of the integrable system in term of the geometry of the field theory moduli space.Comment: 47 pages, 20 figures, using jheppub.st

    Self-reflection and academic performance: is there a relationship?

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    The purposes of the present study were two-fold: first, to evaluate whether reflection journal writing was effective in promoting self-reflection and learning, and whether students become better at self-reflection if they engage continuously in reflection journal writing. To that end, the reflection journals of 690 first-year applied science students at a local polytechnic were studied by means of an automated coding procedures using software. Data was collected twice, once at the beginning and again towards the end of an academic year. Outcomes of the textual content analyses revealed that students reflected on both the process and contents of their learning: critical review of past learning experiences, learning strategies and summaries of what was learned. Correlational analyses showed weak to moderate inter-relationship

    Children's tooth decay in a public health program to encourage low-income pregnant women to utilize dental care

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A community-based public health program to provide a dental home for women covered by the Oregon Health Plan (Medicaid) in Klamath County, Oregon USA was instituted with the long-term goal to promote preventive oral care for both mothers and their new infants provided by dental managed care companies.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>As part of the evaluation of the program, children in Klamath and comparable non-program counties were examined in their 2<sup>nd </sup>year of life to begin to determine if benefits accrued to the offspring of the mothers in Klamath County.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Eighty-five and 58.9% of the children were caries free in the Klamath and comparison county samples, respectively (RR = 1.48, 95% CI 1.13, 1.93). The mean (SD) number of teeth with any decay was .75 (2.5) in the test population and 1.6 (2.5) in the comparison population (t = 2.08, p = .04).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The assessment showed that children of mothers in the Klamath County program were about one and a half times more likely to be caries free than children in the comparison counties. Additional controlled studies are being undertaken.</p

    Prediction of poor clinical outcome in vascular cognitive impairment: TRACE-VCI study

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    INTRODUCTION: Prognostication in memory clinic patients with vascular brain injury (eg possible vascular cognitive impairment [VCI]) is often uncertain. We created a risk score to predict poor clinical outcome. METHODS: Using data from two longitudinal cohorts of memory clinic patients with vascular brain injury without advanced dementia, we created (n = 707) and validated (n = 235) the risk score. Poor clinical outcome was defined as substantial cognitive decline (change of Clinical Dementia Rating ≥1 or institutionalization) or major vascular events or death. Twenty‐four candidate predictors were evaluated using Cox proportional hazard models. RESULTS: Age, clinical syndrome diagnosis, Disability Assessment for Dementia, Neuropsychiatric Inventory, and medial temporal lobe atrophy most strongly predicted poor outcome and constituted the risk score (C‐statistic 0.71; validation cohort 0.78). Of note, none of the vascular predictors were retained in this model. The 2‐year risk of poor outcome was 6.5% for the lowest (0‐5) and 55.4% for the highest sum scores (10‐13). DISCUSSION: This is the first, validated, prediction score for 2‐year clinical outcome of patients with possible VCI

    Social acceptability of treatments for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: a cross-sectional study

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    BACKGROUND: There are no data on social acceptability of scoliosis. Aim. To elicit evidence-based opinions on therapeutic strategies for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in a sample of families with not affected children, so to understand the social perception of this issue. METHODS: Design. Cross-sectional study. Setting. Secondary schools in 4 northern Italian regions. Participants. Parents of children in the age group at risk of and not affected by scoliosis (Pre-test group = 100, Study group = 3,162). Interventions. Questionnaire: five specific and evidence-based questions regarding scoliosis treatment options and a socio-demographic section. Methodology. "Role-playing" in which it was required to normal people to answer what they would have chosen if they had been in the situation proposed. Main outcome measures. Perception of acceptability of treatments for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in the general population (social acceptability) RESULTS: The families support the use of screening (94.8%) at school, immediate bracing (76.4%) for scoliosis with a 60% risk of progression, but also therapeutic exercises (86.9%) in cases with a 25% risk of progression. CONCLUSION: There is a growing tendency to consider not only the efficacy, effectiveness and efficiency of treatments, but also their acceptability. This patient-centred aspect is especially more important in areas (like adolescent idiopathic scoliosis) in which there is some evidence on the efficacy of treatments, but not strong and definitive (RCTs). Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis treatments should thus be carefully considered also in the light of their social acceptability
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