41 research outputs found

    Association of extraintestinal manifestations of inflammatory bowel disease in a province of western Hungary with disease phenotype: Results of a 25-year follow-up study

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    AIM: IBD is a systemic disease associated with a large number of extraintestinal manifestations (EIMs). Our aim was to determine the prevalence of EIMs in a large IBD cohort in Veszprem Province in a 25-year follow-up study. METHODS: Eight hundred and seventy-three IBD patients were enrolled (ulcerative colitis/UC/: 619, m/f: 317/302, mean age at presentation: 38.3 years, average disease duration: 11.2 years; Crohn's disease/CD/: 254, m/f: 125/129, mean age at presentation: 32.5 years, average disease duration: 9.2 years). Intestinal, extraintestinal signs and laboratory tests were monitored regularly. Any alteration suggesting an EIMs was investigated by a specialist. RESULTS: A total of 21.3 % of patients with IBD had EIM (UC: 15.0 %, CD: 36.6 %). Age at presentation did not affect the likelihood of EIM. Prevalence of EIMs was higher in women and in CD, ocular complications and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) were more frequent in UC. In UC there was an increased tendency of EIM in patients with a more extensive disease. Joint complications were more frequent in CD (22.4 % vs UC 10.2 %, P<0.01). In UC positive family history increased the risk of joint complications (OR:3.63). In CD the frequency of type-1 peripheral arthritis was increased in patients with penetrating disease (P=0.028). PSC was present in 1.6 % in UC and 0.8 % in CD. Dermatological complications were present in 3.8 % in UC and 10.2 % in CD, the rate of ocular complications was around 3 % in both diseases. Rare complications were glomerulonephritis, autoimmune hemolytic anaemia and celiac disease. CONCLUSION: Prevalence of EIM in Hungarian IBD patients is in concordance with data from Western countries. The high number of EIM supports a role for complex follow-up in these patients

    Form giving through gestural interaction to shape changing objects

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references.Shape-shifting materials have been part of sci-fi literature for decades. But if tomorrow we invent them, how are we going to communicate to them what shape we want them to morph into? If we look at our history, for thousands of years humans have been using the dexterity of their hands as primary means to alter the topology of their surroundings. While direct manipulation, as a primary method for form giving, allows for high precision deformation, the scope of interaction is limited to the scale of the hand. In order to extend the scope of manipulation beyond the hand scale, tools were invented to reach further and to augment the capabilities of our hands. In this thesis, I propose "Amphorm", a perceptually equivalent example of Radical Atoms, our vision on the interaction techniques for future, highly malleable, shape-shifting materials. "Amphorm" is a cylindrical kinetic sculpture that resembles a vase. Since "Amphorm" is a dual citizen between the digital and the physical world, its shape can be altered in both worlds. I describe novel interaction techniques for rapid shape deformation both in the physical world through free hand gestures and in the digital world through a Graphical User Interface. Additionally I explore how the physical world could be synchronized with the digital world and how tools from both worlds can jointly alter dual-citizens.by Dávid Lakatos.S.M

    Osman ve Orhan’dan II. Bayezid’e (Avrupa’da hazırlanan ilk Osmanlı silsilenamesi ve Feliks Petancius)

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    I. Oszmántól II. Bajezidig. (Felix Petancius és a török szultánokról készített első európai családfa

    Association of adherence to therapy and complementary and alternative medicine use with demographic factors and disease phenotype in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.

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    Background and aims: Previous studies have suggested an increasing use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Furthermore, a significant number of IBD patients fail to comply with treatment. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prevalence of non-adherence and the use of CAM in Hungarian patients with IBD. Methods: A total of 655 consecutive IBD patients (CD: 344, age: 38.2 [SD 12.9] years; UC: 311, age: 44.9 [15.3] years) were interviewed during the specialist visit by self-administered questionnaire including demographic and disease-related data as well as items analyzing the extent of non-adherence and CAM use. Patients taking more than 80% of each prescribed medication were classified as adherent

    CairnFORM: a Shape-Changing Ring Chart Notifying Renewable Energy Availability in Peripheral Locations

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    We present CairnFORM, a shape-changing cylindrical display that physicalizes forecasts of renewable energy availability. CairnFORM aims at creating and encouraging new socially-shared practices by displaying energy data in collective and public spaces, such as public places and workplaces. It is 360˚-readable, and as a dynamic physical ring chart, it can change its cylindrical symmetry with quiet motion. We conducted two user studies. The first study clearly revealed the attractiveness of CairnFORM in a public place and its usability for a range task and for a compare task. Consequently, this makes CairnFORM useful to analyze renewable energy availability. The second study revealed that a non-constant motion speed is the better visualization stimulus at a workplace

    A terápiás adherencia, valamint a komplementer és alternatív gyógymódok használata gyulladásos bélbetegek kezelésében = Treatment adherence and use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients with inflammatory bowel disease

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    Az utóbbi évek tanulmányai a komplementer és alternatív gyógymódok (CAM) egyre gyakoribb alkalmazásáról tudósítanak gyulladásos bélbetegségben (IBD). Ugyanakkor az is egyre nyilvánvalóbb, hogy a betegek jelentős hányada nem tartja be az orvos előírásait. A tanulmány célja a terápiás nonadherencia és a CAM-alkalmazás gyakoriságának felmérése volt hazai IBD-betegekben. Módszer: multicentrikus vizsgálatban 655 IBD-beteg [Crohn-beteg (CD): 344, átlagos életkor: 38,2 (SD 12,9) év; colitis ulcerosa (UC): 311, átlagos életkor: 44,9 (SD 15,3) év] töltött ki a szokásos szakorvosi vizit során a demográfiai adatokra, gyógyszer-adherenciára és CAM-ra vonatkozó kérdőívet. A klinikai adatokat a kezelőorvos egészítette ki a betegdokumentáció alapján. Amennyiben a beteg az előírt gyógyszerek több mint 80%-át bevette, adherensnek tekintettük. Eredmények: a betegek által önként jelzett nonadherencia (CD: 20,9%, UC: 20,6%) és CAM (CD: 31,7%, UC: 30,9%) használata CD-ben és UC-ben nem tért el. A nonadherencia leggyakoribb okai: feledékenység (47,8%), túl sok/feleslegesnek gondolt gyógyszer (39,7%), mellékhatásoktól való félelem (27,9%), túl gyakori adagolás. A CAM leggyakoribb formája a gyógytea (47,3%), a homeopátia (14,6%), a speciális diéta (12,2%) és az akupunktúra (5,8%) volt. CD-ben a betegségtartam, az utolsó vizittől eltelt idő, az alacsonyabb iskolázottsági szint és a megelőző műtétek voltak a nonadherenciára hajlamosító tényezők. Az alternatív módszerek használata fiatalabb életkorban, magasabb iskolázottsági szint és immunszuppresszív szer szedése esetén volt jellemző. UC-ben ezenfelül a CAM igénybevétele gyakoribb volt nők és pszichiátriai/pszichológiai kezelés alatt állók körében. Következtetés: a nonadherencia és az alternatív gyógymódok igénybevétele gyakori IBD-ben. Az ellenőrző vizitek során különös figyelmet kell fordítani a hajlamosító tényezők feltárására, a betegek együttműködésének és az orvos–beteg kapcsolatnak a javítására. | Previous studies have suggested an increasing use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Furthermore, a significant number of IBD patients fail to comply with treatment. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prevalence of non-adherence the use of CAM in Hungarian patients with IBD. Methods: A total of 655 consecutive IBD patients (Crohn’s disease [CD]: 344, age: 38.2±12.9 years; ulcerative colitis [UC]: 311, age: 44.9±15.3 years) were interviewed during the visit at specialists by self-administered questionnaire including demographic and disease-related data, as well as items analyzing the extent of non-adherence and CAM use. Patients taking more then 80% of each prescribed medicine were classified as adherent. Results: The overall rate of self reported non-adherence (CD: 20.9%, UC: 20.6%) and CAM (CD: 31.7%, UC: 30.9%) use was not different between CD and UC. The most common causes of non-adherence were: forgetfulness (47.8%), too many/unnecessary pills (39.7%), being afraid of side effects (27.9%) and too frequent dosing. Most common forms of CAM were herbal tee (47.3%), homeopathy (14.6%), special diet (12.2%), and acupuncture (5.8%). In CD, disease duration, date of last follow-up visit, educational level and previous surgeries were predicting factors for non-adherence. Alternative medicine use was associated in both diseases with younger age, higher educational level and immunosuppressant use. In addition, CAM use in UC was more common in females and in patients with supportive psychiatric/psychological therapy. Conclusions: Non-adherence and CAM use is common in patients with IBD. Special attention should be paid to explore the identified predictive factors during follow-up visits to improve adherence to therapy and improving patient-doctor relationship
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