66 research outputs found

    Permeability of muscle capillaries to microperoxidase

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    In this study we attempted to identify a morphologic counterpart of the small pore of muscle capillaries. The existence of such a pore has been postulated by physiologists to explain the permeability of muscle capillaries to small macromolecules. We injected mice intravenously with microperoxidase (MP) and fixed specimens of diaphragm at intervals of 0-250 s after the injection to localize the tracer by electron microscopy. The small size of MP (1,900 mol wt and 20 A molecular diameter [MD]) ensures its ready passage through the small pore since the latter is thought to be either a cylindrical channel 90 A in diameter or a slit 55 A wide. MP appears in the pericapillary interstitium within 30 s of initiation of its intravenous injection. The patterns of localization of MP observed within clefts between adjacent capillary endothelial cells indicate that some endothelial junctions are permeable to this tracer. Although small vesicles transfer MP across the endothelium, we do not believe that the vesicles transfer substantial amounts of MP into the pericapillary interstitium. We did not obtain evidence that MP crosses the endothelium of capillaries through channels formed either by a single vesicle or by a series of linked vesicles opening simultaneously at both surfaces of the endothelial cell. From our observations we conclude that some endothelial junctions of capillaries are permeable to MP, and that these permeable junctions are a plausible morphologic counterpart of the small pore

    Defining an International Standard Set of Outcome Measures for Patients With Hip or Knee Osteoarthritis: Consensus of the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis Working Group

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    Objective: To define a minimum Standard Set of outcome measures and case-mix factors for monitoring, comparing, and improving health care for patients with clinically diagnosed hip or knee osteoarthritis (OA), with a focus on defining the outcomes that matter most to patients. Methods: An international working group of patients, arthroplasty register experts, orthopedic surgeons, primary care physicians, rheumatologists, and physiotherapists representing 10 countries was assembled to review existing literature and practices for assessing outcomes of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic OA therapies, including surgery. A series of 8 teleconferences, incorporating a modified Delphi process, were held to reach consensus. Results: The working group reached consensus on a concise set of outcome measures to evaluate patients’ joint pain, physical functioning, health-related quality of life, work status, mortality, reoperations, readmissions, and overall satisfaction with treatment result. To support analysis of these outcome measures, pertinent baseline characteristics and risk factor metrics were defined. Annual outcome measurement is recommended for all patients. Conclusion: We have defined a Standard Set of outcome measures for monitoring the care of people with clinically diagnosed hip or knee OA that is appropriate for use across all treatment and care settings. We believe this Standard Set provides meaningful, comparable, and easy to interpret measures ready to implement in clinics and/or registries globally. We view this set as an initial step that, when combined with cost data, will facilitate value-based health care improvements in the treatment of hip and knee OA

    Development of a core set of outcome measures for OAB treatment

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    © 2017, The Author(s). Introduction and hypothesis: Standardized measures enable the comparison of outcomes across providers and treatments giving valuable information for improving care quality and efficacy. The aim of this project was to define a minimum standard set of outcome measures and case-mix factors for evaluating the care of patients with overactive bladder (OAB). Methods: The International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) convened an international working group (WG) of leading clinicians and patients to engage in a structured method for developing a core outcome set. Consensus was determined by a modified Delphi process, and discussions were supported by both literature review and patient input. Results: The standard set measures outcomes of care for adults seeking treatment for OAB, excluding residents of long-term care facilities. The WG focused on treatment outcomes identified as most important key outcome domains to patients: symptom burden and bother, physical functioning, emotional health, impact of symptoms and treatment on quality of life, and success of treatment. Demographic information and case-mix factors that may affect these outcomes were also included. Conclusions: The standardized outcome set for evaluating clinical care is appropriate for use by all health providers caring for patients with OAB, regardless of specialty or geographic location, and provides key data for quality improvement activities and research

    Standardized outcome measures for pregnancy and childbirth, an ICHOM proposal

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    Background: Value-based health care aims to optimize the balance of patient outcomes and health care costs. To improve value in perinatal care using this strategy, standard outcomes must first be defined. The objective of this work was to define a minimum, internationally appropriate set of outcome measures for evaluating and improving perinatal care with a focus on outcomes that matter to women and their families. Methods: An interdisciplinary and international Working Group was assembled. Existing literature and current measurement initiatives were reviewed. Serial guided discussions and validation surveys provided consumer input. A series of nine teleconferences, incorporating a modified Delphi process, were held to reach consensus on the proposed Standard Set. Results: The Working Group selected 24 outcome measures to evaluate care during pregnancy and up to 6 months postpartum. These include clinical outcomes such as maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity, stillbirth, preterm birth, birth injury and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) that assess health-related quality of life (HRQoL), mental health, mother-infant bonding, confidence and success with breastfeeding, incontinence, and satisfaction with care and birth experience. To support analysis of these outcome measures, pertinent baseline characteristics and risk factor metrics were also defined. Conclusions: We propose a set of outcome measures for evaluating the care that women and infants receive during pregnancy and the postpartum period. While validation and refinement via pilot implementation projects are needed, we view this as an important initial step towards value-based improvements in care

    Adaptation and visual search in mammographic images

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    Abstract Radiologists face the visually challenging task of detecting suspicious features within the complex and noisy backgrounds characteristic of medical images. We used a search task to examine whether the salience of target features in x-ray mammograms could be enhanced by prior adaptation to the spatial structure of the images. The observers were not radiologists, and thus had no diagnostic training with the im-ages. The stimuli were randomly selected sections from nor-mal mammograms previously classified with BIRADS Den-sity scores of Bfatty ^ versus Bdense, ^ corresponding to differ-ences in the relative quantities of fat versus fibroglandular tissue. These categories reflect conspicuous differences in vi-sual texture, with dense tissue being more likely to obscure lesion detection. The targets were simulated masses corre-sponding to bright Gaussian spots, superimposed by adding the luminance to the background. A single target was random-ly added to each image, with contrast varied over five levels so that they varied from difficult to easy to detect. Reaction times were measured for detecting the target location, before or after adapting to a gray field or to random sequences of a different set of dense or fatty images. Observers were faster at detecting the targets in either dense or fatty images after adapting to the specific background type (dense or fatty) that they were searching within. Thus, the adaptation led to a facilitation of search performance that was selective for the background tex-ture. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that adap-tation allows observers to more effectively suppress the spe-cific structure of the background, thereby heightening visual salience and search efficiency

    Fine structure of the surface of mouse hepatic cells.

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    Permeability of muscle capillaries to microperoxidase.

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