13 research outputs found
Informing low back pain care from the ground up: survey of national musculoskeletal triage physiotherapists in Ireland
Background: Healthcare is changing to meet the challenge of a rising musculoskeletal burden associated with the expanding, aging population. Clinicians, important stakeholders in healthcare provision, have crucial insights into service improvement, but clinician consultation is a shortcoming in healthcare development. In Ireland, specialist physiotherapist-led musculoskeletal (MSK) triage services operate at the primary-secondary care interface to expedite patient care.
Objectives: To inform future development of low back pain (LBP) care in Ireland through profiling the operationalisation of the national MSK triage service for LBP, including access, referral management, clinical investigations, onward referral options, access to multidisciplinary team (MDT) services and integration with primary healthcare services.
Design: Cross-sectional observational study using a bespoke, anonymous electronic survey.
Participants: Thirty-eight clinical specialist physiotherapists working in national programme Irish MSK triage services.
Results: Thirty-eight MSK Triage physiotherapists submitted responses (response rate 72%). There was considerable site-dependent variation in LBP service provision, with discrepancies in access to triage services, wait times, referral processing and prioritisation, access to clinical investigations and onward referral options. Most respondents (81%) reported wait times exceeding the three-month target; 75% reported that the level of clinical autonomy associated with their role limited service efficiency; 75% were dissatisfied with primary-secondary care service integration. Respondents identified insufficient availability of primary care multidisciplinary services.
Conclusion: Lack of standardisation of LBP services exists in Ireland. Services would benefit from improved standardisation, reduced wait times, national accreditation and a defined scope of advanced physiotherapy practice and the development of nationwide community multidisciplinary infrastructure with enhanced interservice communication.</p
Clinical pathways for the management of low back pain from primary to specialised care: a systematic review
Purpose: Clinical pathways for low back pain (LBP) have potential to improve clinical outcomes and health service efficiency. This systematic review aimed to synthesise the evidence for clinical pathways for LBP and/or radicular leg pain from primary to specialised care and to describe key pathway components.
Methods: Electronic database searches (CINAHL, MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, EMBASE) from 2006 onwards were conducted with further manual and citation searching. Two independent reviewers conducted eligibility assessment, data extraction and quality appraisal. A narrative synthesis of findings is presented.
Results: From 18,443 identified studies, 28 papers met inclusion criteria. Pathways were developed primarily to address over-burdened secondary care services in high-income countries and almost universally used interface services with a triage remit at the primary-secondary care boundary. Accordingly, evaluation of healthcare resource use and patient flow predominated, with interface services associated with enhanced service efficiency through decreased wait times and appropriate use of consultant appointments. Low quality study designs, heterogeneous outcomes and insufficient comparative data precluded definitive conclusions regarding clinical- and cost-effectiveness. Pathways demonstrated basic levels of care integration across the primary-secondary care boundary.
Conclusions: The limited volume of research evaluating clinical pathways for LBP/radicular leg pain and spanning primary and specialised care predominantly used interface services to ensure appropriate specialised care referrals with associated increased efficiency of care delivery. Pathways demonstrated basic levels of care integration across healthcare boundaries. Well-designed randomised controlled trials to explore the potential of clinical pathways to improve clinical outcomes, deliver cost-effective, guideline-concordant care and enhance care integration are required.</p
The association of serum levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor with the occurrence of and recovery from delirium in older medical inpatients
Limited studies of the association between BDNF levels and delirium have given inconclusive results. This prospective, longitudinal
study examined the relationship between BDNF levels and the occurrence of and recovery from delirium. Participants were assessed
twice weekly using MoCA, DRS-R98, and APACHE II scales. BDNF levels were estimated using an ELISA method. Delirium was
defined with DRS-R98 (score > 16) and recovery from delirium as ≥2 consecutive assessments without delirium prior to discharge.
We identified no difference in BDNF levels between those with and without delirium. Excluding those who never developed
delirium ( = 140), we examined the association of BDNF levels and other variables with delirium recovery. Of 58 who experienced
delirium, 39 remained delirious while 19 recovered. Using Generalized Estimating Equations models we found that BDNF levels
(Wald 2 = 7.155; df: 1, = 0.007) and MoCA (Wald 2 = 4.933; df: 1, = 0.026) were associated with recovery. No significant
association was found for APACHE II, dementia, age, or gender. BDNF levels do not appear to be directly linked to the occurrence
of delirium but recovery was less likely in those with continuously lower levels. No previous study has investigated the role of BDNF
in delirium recovery and these findings warrant replication in other populations
Comparison of verbal and computerised months backwards tests  in a hospitalized older population
Background
Delirium is extremely prevalent, yet underdiagnosed, in older patients and is associated with prolonged length of hospital stay and higher mortality rates. Impaired attention is the cardinal defcit in delirium and is a required feature in diagnostic criteria. The verbal months backwards test (MBT) is the most sensitive bedside test of attention, however, hospital staf occasionally have difculty with its administration and interpretation. We hypothesise that the MBT on an electronic tablet may be easier and more consistent to use for both experienced and unexperienced medical professionals and, if the diagnostic efcacy was similar, aid delirium diagnosis.
Aim
We aim to investigate the correlation of the verbal MBT with a computerised MBT application.
Methods
Participants recruited (age>65, n=75) were allocated to diferent cohorts (Dementia and Delirium (DMDL), Dementia (DM), Delirium (DL), No Neurocognitive Disorder (NNCD)) and were administered both the verbal and electronic versions.
Results
Correlation between measurements were: overall Spearman’s rho= 0.772 (p
Discussion
Overall, and for the delirious subset, statistically signifcant agreement was present. Poor inter-test correlation existed in the groups without delirium (DM, NNCD).
Conclusions
The MBTc correlates well with the MBTv in patients who are clinically suspected to have delirium but has poor correlation in patients without delirium. Visuospatial cognition and psychomotor defcits in a dementia cohort and mechanical factors (such as tremor, poor fngernail hygiene and visual impairment) in a group with no neurocognitive disorder may limit the utility of the MBTc in a hospitalised older population.</p
Agreement and conversion formula between mini-mental state examination and montreal cognitive assessment in an outpatient sample
AIM
To explore the agreement between the mini-mental state
examination (MMSE) and montreal cognitive assessment
(MoCA) within community dwelling older patients attending
an old age psychiatry service and to derive and
test a conversion formula between the two scales.
METHODS
Prospective study of consecutive patients attending
outpatient services. Both tests were administered by the
same researcher on the same day in random order.
RESULTS
The total sample (n = 135) was randomly divided into
two groups. One to derive a conversion rule (n = 70),
and a second (n = 65) in which this rule was tested. The
agreement (Pearson’s r) of MMSE and MoCA was 0.86 (P
< 0.001), and Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient
(CCC) was 0.57 (95%CI: 0.45-0.66). In the second
sample MoCA scores were converted to MMSE scores
according to a conversion rule from the first sample
which achieved agreement with the original MMSE scores of 0.89 (Pearson’s r, P < 0.001) and CCC of 0.88 (95%CI:
0.82-0.92).
CONCLUSION
Although the two scales overlap considerably, the agreement
is modest. The conversion rule derived herein
demonstrated promising accuracy and warrants further
testing in other populations
Subsyndromal delirium compared to delirium, dementia, and subjects without delirium or dementia in elderly general hospital admissions and nursing home residents
Introduction: Subsyndromal delirium (SSD) complicates diagnosis of delirium and dementia,
although there is little research comparing their symptom profiles.
Methods: Cross-sectional study of 400 elderly patients’ admission to a general hospital or nursing
home diagnosed with delirium, SSD, dementia, or no-delirium/no-dementia (NDND). Symptom profiles
were assessed using the Delirium Rating Scale-Revised-98 (DRS-R98).
Results: Twenty percent patients had delirium, 19.3% had SSD, 29.8% had dementia-only, and 31%
had NDND. Eighty-one percent of subsyndromal and 76% of delirium groups had comorbid dementia.
DRS-R98 scores showed ascending severity from NDND , dementia-only , SSD , delirium.
DRS-R98 scores for items evaluating the three core symptom domains (cognitive, higher-order
thinking, and circadian) distinguished SSD from delirium and both from nondelirium groups.
DRS-R98 profiles were essentially the same in delirium and SSD subgroups with or without dementia,
although total scale scores were generally higher when in comorbid subgroups.
Discussion: SSD shared characteristic core domain symptoms with delirium, which distinguished
each from nondelirium groups, although severity was intermediate in the subsyndromal group.
Delirium core symptoms overshadowed the dementia phenotype when comorbid. Milder disturbances
of delirium core domain symptoms are highly suggestive of SSD
Nurses knowledge of advance directives and perceived confidence in end-of a life care in Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Italy and the U.S.
Nurses’ knowledge regarding advance directives may affect their administration and completion in end-of-life care. Confidence
among nurses is a barrier to the provision of quality end-of-life care. This study investigated nurses’ knowledge of
advance directives and perceived confidence in end-of-life care, in Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Italy and the USA using a
cross-sectional descriptive design (n=1089). In all countries, older nurses and those who had more professional experience
felt more confidentmanaging patients’ symptoms at end-of-life and more comfortable stopping preventivemedications at endof-
life. Nurses in the USA reported that they have more knowledge and experience of advance directives compared with other
countries. In addition, they reported the highest levels of confidence and comfort in dealing with end-of-life care. Although
legislation for advance directives does not yet exist in Ireland, nurses reported high levels of confidence in end-of-life care
OCP crystals induce macrophage expression of genes involved in inflammation and cartilage degradation.
<p>Bone marrow derived macrophages were stimulated <i>in vitro</i> with 500 µg/ml of OCP crystals for 4 hours. RNA was extracted, reverse transcribed and qRT-PCR performed using gene specific primers with Tbp, and Gapdh as reference genes. Results are expressed as the fold induction of OCP treated over unstimulated macrophages, using the mean ± S.E.M of triplicate samples.</p
OCP crystal-induced inflammation and cartilage degradation is NLRP3 inflammasome- and IL-1 independent.
<p>WT (n = 6), ASC-/- (n = 4), NLRP3-/- (n = 6), IL-1α-/- (n = 5) and IL-1β-/- (n = 6) mice were injected i.a. with OCP crystals (200 µg in 20 µl) or PBS. In a second set of experiment, anakinra, the recombinant form of IL-1Ra, or PBS were injected for 4 days (7 mice per group), the first injection being 30 min prior to OCP injection into the knee of WT (F). Ratio of isotope uptake into OCP injected knee versus PBS-injected ones was calculated at different time points (A). Synovial inflammation (B, E, F), cartilage PG loss (C, E, F) and VDIPEN immunohistochemistries (D, F) were assessed. Results are expressed as % of scores against WT (B,C,D) or in arbitrary units (E, F), and represent mean ± S.E.M. of at least n = 4 mice per group. For p values, *  =  p<0.05, **  =  p<0.01, ***  =  p<0.001.</p
OCP crystals induce cartilage degradation.
<p>C57BL/6 mice were injected with OCP crystals (OCP+) or PBS (OCP-). Knees harvested at different times (day 4, 17 and 30 n = 8 mice per group) were assessed for cartilage PGs with Safranin-O (A), aggrecan degradation via VDIPEN immunohistochemistry (B) and apoptosis (C). Since at all time points, data from PBS-injected control knees were similar, only data from PBS-injected knees at day 4 were shown in D, E, and F. Scoring of PG loss and VDIPEN staining was performed on sections, using a scale of 0 to 6 and 0 to 3, respectively (D and E). Apoptotic chondrocytes were counted per field of view (F). Results are expressed as mean ± S.E.M with significance being at * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001</p