580 research outputs found
The development of precipitation-hardened chromium-base alloys Final report
Precipitation with refractory metal carbides for creep resistant chromium-base alloy
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Does strabismus surgery improve quality and mood, and what factors influence this?
Aims
To establish the impact of adult strabismus surgery on clinical and psychosocial well-being and determine who experiences the greatest benefit from surgery and how one could intervene to improve quality of life post-surgery.
Methods
A longitudinal study, with measurements taken pre-surgery and at 3 and 6 months post-surgery. All participants completed the AS-20 a disease specific quality of life scale, along with measures of mood, strabismus and appearance-related beliefs and cognitions and perceived social support. Participants also underwent a full orthoptic assessment at their preoperative visit and again 3 months postoperatively. Clinical outcomes of surgery were classified as success, partial success or failure, using the largest angle of deviation, diplopia and requirement for further therapy.
Results
210 participants took part in the study. Strabismus surgery led to statistically significant improvements in psychosocial and functional quality of life. Those whose surgery was deemed a partial success did however experience a deterioration in quality of life. A combination of clinical variables, high expectations, and negative beliefs about the illness and appearance pre-surgery were significant predictors of change in quality of life from pre- to post-surgery.
Conclusions
Strabismus surgery leads to significant improvements in quality of life up to 6 months postoperatively. There are however a group of patients who do not experience these benefits. A series of clinical and psychosocial factors have now been identified, which will enable clinicians to identify patients who may be vulnerable to poorer outcomes post-surgery and allow for the development of interventions to improve quality of life after surgery
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The impact of strabismus on quality of life in adults with and without diplopia: a systematic review
Strabismus affects approximately 4% of the adult population and can cause substantial physical disturbance and changes to appearance. This article aims to examine the impact of strabismus in adults both with and without diplopia, focusing primarily on quality of life (QoL). We highlight the value of measuring QoL, assess the ways in which it can be measured, and the impact the disease, diplopia, and surgery have on the patient. QoL differs for strabismus patients based on their diplopia status. Patients with diplopia tend to have more concerns relating to functional QoL, whereas patients without diplopia have primarily psychosocial concerns. Two diplopia-specific questionnaires have been designed to assess QoL and the perceived severity of symptoms. Further research is needed to identify the variables which influence QoL so that appropriate support can be given to all patients with strabismus to improve their QoL
Interâ and intraâsoftware reproducibility of computed tomography lung density measurements
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156221/2/mp14130.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156221/1/mp14130_am.pd
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Factors associated with quality of life and mood in adults with strabismus
Background/Aims To explore the factors associated with the mood and quality of life (QoL) of patients with strabismus due to undergo realignment surgery. Methods A cross-sectional study was undertaken with adult patients. Along with demographic, clinical and psychosocial process variables, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and AS-20 QoL measures were administered. Regression models were used to identify the factors associated with QoL and mood. Results Of the 220 participants, 11% were experiencing clinical levels of depression, and 24% clinical anxiety. This is in line with other forms of facial disfigurement but higher than other chronic diseases. Although mood and QoL were associated with age and diplopia, it was beliefs and cognitions which were more consistently associated with well-being. This included feelings of social anxiety and avoidance, a belief that strabismus has negative consequences, poor understanding of strabismus, social support, fear of negative evaluation and the perceived visibility of their condition. Conclusions Psychosocial rather than clinical characteristics were identified as determinants of wellbeing in this population. It is important for clinicians planning surgery to be aware of these factors which could influence outcomes. Longitudinal studies need to be conducted to explore the direction of causality before interventions to improve well-being are developed and evaluated
Simplifying asteroseismic analysis of solar-like oscillators: An application of principal component analysis for dimensionality reduction
The asteroseismic analysis of stellar power density spectra is often
computationally expensive. The models used in the analysis may use several
dozen parameters to accurately describe features in the spectra caused by
oscillation modes and surface granulation. Many parameters are often highly
correlated, making the parameter space difficult to quickly and accurately
sample. They are, however, all dependent on a smaller set of parameters, namely
the fundamental stellar properties. We aim to leverage this to simplify the
process of sampling the model parameter space for the asteroseismic analysis of
solar-like oscillators, with an emphasis on mode identification. Using a large
set of previous observations, we applied principal component analysis to the
sample covariance matrix to select a new basis on which to sample the model
parameters. Selecting the subset of basis vectors that explains the majority of
the sample variance, we redefine the model parameter prior probability density
distributions in terms of a smaller set of latent parameters. We are able to
reduce the dimensionality of the sampled parameter space by a factor of two to
three. The number of latent parameters needed to accurately model the stellar
oscillation spectra cannot be determined exactly but is likely only between
four and six. Using two latent parameters, the method is able to describe the
bulk features of the oscillation spectrum, while including more latent
parameters allows for a frequency precision better than of the
small frequency separation for a given target. We find that sampling a
lower-rank latent parameter space still allows for accurate mode identification
and parameter estimation on solar-like oscillators over a wide range of
evolutionary stages. This allows for the potential to increase the complexity
of spectrum models without a corresponding increase in computational expense.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 11 pages. 10
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