141 research outputs found

    The effect of propofol on effective brain networks

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    Objective: We compared the effective networks derived from Single Pulse Electrical Stimulation (SPES) in intracranial electrocorticography (ECoG) of awake epilepsy patients and while under general propofol-anesthesia to investigate the effect of propofol on these brain networks. Methods: We included nine patients who underwent ECoG for epilepsy surgery evaluation. We performed SPES when the patient was awake (SPES-clinical) and repeated this under propofol-anesthesia during the surgery in which the ECoG grids were removed (SPES-propofol). We detected the cortico-cortical evoked potentials (CCEPs) with an automatic detector. We constructed two effective networks derived from SPES-clinical and SPES-propofol. We compared three network measures (indegree, outdegree and betweenness centrality), the N1-peak-latency and amplitude of CCEPs between the two effective networks. Results: Fewer CCEPs were observed during SPES-propofol (median: 6.0, range: 0–29) compared to SPES-clinical (median: 10.0, range: 0–36). We found a significant correlation for the indegree, outdegree and betweenness centrality between SPES-clinical and SPES-propofol (respectively r s = 0.77, r s = 0.70, r s = 0.55, p &lt; 0.001). The median N1-peak-latency increased from 22.0 ms during SPES-clinical to 26.4 ms during SPES-propofol. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the number of effective network connections decreases, but network measures are only marginally affected. Significance: The primary network topology is preserved under propofol.</p

    Congenital anomalies in Amsterdam:results of the 'Amsterdam-Born Children and their Development' study

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    OBJECTIVE: To describe the prevalence of congenital anomalies in children born in Amsterdam and to analyse potential differences between groups based on risk factors such as ethnicity and maternal age.DESIGN: Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study.METHODS: Between 2003 and 2004, mothers filled in questionnaires on their newborn children on behalf of the Amsterdam-Born Children and their Development study (ABCD study). Data from 5,276 liveborn children in this cohort were used to calculate the prevalence rates of congenital anomalies in Amsterdam. These were compared with expected prevalence rates based on Eurocat data for the Northern region of the Netherlands during the years 2000-2005. Prevalence rates were compared between subgroups which had been divided according to risk factors: maternal ethnic origin, maternal age, parity, gender of child, inter-pregnancy interval, years of maternal education, smoking, alcohol use, and periconceptional folate use.RESULTS: The total prevalence of major congenital anomalies among liveborn children in the ABCD cohort was as expected based on the figures from the Eurocat registration. Digestive anomalies were reported significantly less frequently (n = 1) than expected (n = 10). Mothers of Surinam descent more frequently reported a child with a musculoskeletal anomaly. Older mothers were more likely to report congenital anomalies. No significant trends regarding other risk factors were observed.CONCLUSIONS: No significant trends regarding ethnicity and congenital anomalies were detected. The interpretation of the other results was hampered by methodological differences between the ABCD study and Eurocat. Nationwide registration with active case detection of congenital anomalies is therefore recommended.</p

    Sharon Macdonald – Memorylands: Heritage and Identity in Europe Today

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    Memorylands: Heritage and Identity in Europe Today é um livro de síntese que assinala o culminar de anos de trabalho da antropóloga britânica Sharon Macdonald sobre os temas relacionados do património, da memória e da identidade em contextos europeus. Em Reimagining Culture: Histories, Identities and the Gaelic Renaissance, de 1997, situava o eixo analítico entre o local e o global, focando o seu olhar na questão dos muitos “renascimentos identitários” de escala local e regional que à época –..

    Loss of Productivity Due to Neck/Shoulder Symptoms and Hand/Arm Symptoms: Results from the PROMO-Study

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    Introduction: The objective of the present study is to describe the extent of productivity loss among computer workers with neck/shoulder symptoms and hand/arm symptoms, and to examine associations between pain intensity, various physical and psychosocial factors and productivity loss in computer workers with neck/shoulder and hand/arm symptoms. Methods: A cross-sectional design was used. The study population consisted of 654 computer workers with neck/shoulder or hand/arm symptoms from five different companies. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the occurrence of self-reported productivity loss. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine the associations. Results: In 26% of all the cases reporting symptoms, productivity loss was involved, the most often in cases reporting both symptoms (36%). Productivity loss involved sickness absence in 11% of the arm/hand cases, 32% of the neck/shoulder cases and 43% of the cases reporting both symptoms. The multivariate analyses showed statistically significant odds ratios for pain intensity (OR: 1.26; CI: 1.12-1.41), for high effort/no low reward (OR: 2.26; CI: 1.24-4.12), for high effort/low reward (OR: 1.95; CI: 1.09-3.50), and for low job satisfaction (OR: 3.10; CI: 1.44-6.67). Physical activity in leisure time, full-time work and overcommitment were not associated with productivity loss. Conclusion: In most computer workers with neck/shoulder symptoms or hand/arm symptoms productivity loss derives from a decreased performance at work and not from sickness absence. Favorable psychosocial work characteristics might prevent productivity loss in symptomatic workers. © 2007 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
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