205 research outputs found

    Rounding methods for protecting EU-aggregates

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    In the European Statistical System the statistical information is collected by the National Statistical Institutes (NSIs). The NSIs produce aggregate tables at the national level. They are also responsible for proper protection of these tables and hence they have to keep certain cells confidential, suppressing them from publications. Eurostat produces statistical information at the EU-level. However, the national suppressions hamper very much the publication of EU-aggregates although it is often only a few smaller countries having to keep their contribution to the EU-total confidential. This paper reports on a research-project that aims for making more EU aggregates available whilst at the same time guaranteeing the national suppressed figures to remain confidential.Postprint (published version

    The Road to Optimized Nerve Reconstruction

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    Traumatic injuries to the peripheral nerves cause considerable disability and economic burden. It is estimated that 5% of patients admitted to Level I trauma centers have peripheral nerve injury. The reconstruction of peripheral nerve defects remains a clinical challenge. The gold standard for nerve injuries that cannot be directly reconstructed is the use of a bridging autologous nerve graft. The use of autograft nerve is limited by supply, diameter, and length, and has associated donor site morbidity. This has constrained the ability to optimally reconstruct injured nerves of patients with multiple segmental defects and resulted in the prioritization of which nerves to reconstruct. This thesis focuses on reconstruction of peripheral nerve defects and highlights the clinical problem and focuses on the optimization of a decellularized nerve allografts

    Feasibility of Ultrasound Measurements of Peripheral Sensory Nerves in Head and Neck Area in Healthy Subjects

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    Background: Current diagnostic methods for nerve compression headaches consist of diagnostic nerve blocks. A less-invasive method that can possibly aid in the diagnosis is ultrasound, by measuring the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the affected nerve. However, this technique has not been validated, and articles evaluating CSA measurements in the asymptomatic population are missing in the current literature. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the feasibility of ultrasound measurements of peripheral extracranial nerves in the head and neck area in asymptomatic individuals.Methods: The sensory nerves of the head and neck in healthy individuals were imaged by ultrasound. The CSA was measured at anatomical determined measurement sites for each nerve. To determine the feasibility of ultrasound measurements, the interrater reliability and the intrarater reliability were determined.Results: In total, 60 healthy volunteers were included. We were able to image the nerves at nine of 11 measurement sites. The mean CSA of the frontal nerves ranged between 0.80 ± 0.42 mm2 and 1.20 ± 0.43 mm2, the mean CSA of the occipital nerves ranged between 2.90 ± 2.73 mm2 and 3.40 ± 1.91 mm2, and the mean CSA of the temporal nerves ranged between 0.92 ± 0.26 mm2 and 1.40 ± 1.11 mm2. The intrarater and interrater reliability of the CSA measurements was good (ICC: 0.75–0.78).Conclusions: Ultrasound is a feasible method to evaluate CSA measurements of peripheral extracranial nerves in the head and neck area. Further research should be done to evaluate the use of ultrasound as a diagnostic tool for nerve compression headache

    Nonsurgical Treatment of Neuralgia and Cervicogenic Headache:A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

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    BACKGROUND: Extracranial compression of peripheral sensory nerves is one of many origins of chronic headaches. Identifying these patients can be difficult, and they are often diagnosed with neuralgia or cervicogenic headache. The recent literature provides the outcomes of surgical decompression in patients with these headaches. This study aimed to give an overview of the current literature on the nonsurgical treatment options and to evaluate the effectiveness of these treatments in patients with neuralgia and cervicogenic headache. METHODS: Databases were searched to identify all published clinical studies investigating nonsurgical treatment outcomes in patients with neuralgia or cervicogenic headaches. Studies that reported numerical pain scores, nonnumerical pain scores, headache-free days, or the number of adverse events after nonsurgical treatment were included. RESULTS: A total of 22 articles were included in qualitative analysis. The majority of studies included patients who received injection therapy. Treatment with oral analgesics achieved good results in only 2.5% of the patients. Better outcomes were reported in patients who received local anesthetics injection (79%) and corticosteroid injection (87%). Treatment with botulinum toxin injection yielded the highest percentage of good results (97%; 95% CI, 0.81–1.00). The duration of headache relief after injection therapy varied from 30 minutes to 5 months. CONCLUSIONS: The nonsurgical treatment of patients with neuralgia or cervicogenic headache is challenging. Injection therapy in patients with these types of headaches achieved good pain relief but only for a limited time. Surgical decompression may result in long-lasting pain relief and might be a more sustainable treatment option

    Gene expression and growth factor analysis in early nerve regeneration following segmental nerve defect reconstruction with a mesenchymal stromal cell-enhanced decellularized nerve allograft

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    Abstract Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the molecular mechanisms underlying nerve repair by a decellularized nerve allograft seeded with adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and compare it to the unseeded allograft and autograft nerve. Methods: Undifferentiated MSCs were seeded onto decellularized nerve allografts and used to reconstruct a 10 mm gap in a rat sciatic nerve model. Gene expression profiles of genes essential for nerve regeneration and immunohistochemical staining (IHC) for PGP9.5, NGF, RECA-1, and S100 were obtained 2 weeks postoperatively. Results: Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis showed that the angiogenic molecule VEGFA was significantly increased in seeded allografts, and transcription factor SOX2 was downregulated in seeded allografts. Seeded grafts showed a significant increase in immunohistochemical markers NGF and RECA-1, when compared with unseeded allografts. Conclusions: MSCs contributed to the secretion of trophic factors. A beneficial effect of the MSCs on angiogenesis was found when compared with the unseeded nerve allograft, but implanted MSCs did not show evidence of differentiation into Schwann cell-like cells

    A second order cone formulation of continuous CTA model

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    The final publication is available at link.springer.comIn this paper we consider a minimum distance Controlled Tabular Adjustment (CTA) model for statistical disclosure limitation (control) of tabular data. The goal of the CTA model is to find the closest safe table to some original tabular data set that contains sensitive information. The measure of closeness is usually measured using l1 or l2 norm; with each measure having its advantages and disadvantages. Recently, in [4] a regularization of the l1 -CTA using Pseudo-Huber func- tion was introduced in an attempt to combine positive characteristics of both l1 -CTA and l2 -CTA. All three models can be solved using appro- priate versions of Interior-Point Methods (IPM). It is known that IPM in general works better on well structured problems such as conic op- timization problems, thus, reformulation of these CTA models as conic optimization problem may be advantageous. We present reformulation of Pseudo-Huber-CTA, and l1 -CTA as Second-Order Cone (SOC) op- timization problems and test the validity of the approach on the small example of two-dimensional tabular data set.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    High Median Nerve Paralysis:Is the Hand of Benediction or Preacher's Hand A Correct Sign?

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    High median nerve injuries are commonly presented in textbooks as adopting the typical posture of hand of benediction or preacher’s hand. This study aimed to show that the hand of benediction or preacher’s hand is incorrectly associated with a high median nerve paralysis. METHODS: A retrospective review of four cases with a high median nerve injury is presented. Diagnosis of a high median nerve injury was performed by means of intraoperative findings, electrodiagnostic studies, or ultrasound imaging. None of the patients presented in this study had a hand of benediction on physical examination despite the presence of a high median nerve lesion. RESULTS: All four patients with high median nerve injuries showed a similar hand posture when attempting to make a fist. Firstly, the index finger still flexed at the metacarpophalangeal joint because of the ulnar innervated interossei muscles. Secondly the thumb is completely abducted at the carpometocarpal joint and extended at the interphalangeal joint. Lastly, middle finger flexion is possible due to dual innervation of its flexor digitorum profundus by the ulnar nerve as well as due to the quadriga phenomenon. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical appearance of a high median nerve palsy is different from the classical hand of benediction or preacher’s hand posture pointing finger. We have shown that this incorrect association can result in delayed referral of patients with high median nerve injuries

    Using BCD-CTA for difficult tables: a practical experiment with a real Eurostat table

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    CTA is a post-tabular perturbative approach for statistical disclosure control. Its purpose is to compute the closest safe table to the original data, using some distance. Sensitive cells are adjusted either upwards or downwards (binary decision), and the resulting cells have to be accordingly (and minimally) modi_ed to preserve marginals. For real and large tables, CTA may result in a dicult mixed integer linear problem for some weights in the objective function. In those situations the Block Coordinate Descent (BCD) heuristic for CTA|which is included in the Tau-Argus CTA distribution|may be used to quickly obtain a feasible, hopefully close to optimality, solution. We present a practical experiment using a large and di_cult real-world table from Eurostat. We will show that, for unitary weights, while the standard CTA can not obtain a solution in about half an hour, the BCD-CTA approach provides a solution in few seconds.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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