753 results on '"Martinez, Martin"'
Search Results
2. Returning Individual Research Results from Digital Phenotyping in Psychiatry
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Francis X. Shen, Matthew L. Baum, Nicole Martinez-Martin, Adam S. Miner, Melissa Abraham, Catherine A. Brownstein, Nathan Cortez, Barbara J. Evans, Laura T. Germine, David C. Glahn, Christine Grady, Ingrid A. Holm, Elisa A. Hurley, Sara Kimble, Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz, Kimberlyn Leary, Mason Marks, Patrick J. Monette, Jukka-Pekka Onnela, P. Pearl O’Rourke, Scott L. Rauch, Carmel Shachar, Srijan Sen, Ipsit Vahia, Jason L. Vassy, Justin T. Baker, Barbara E. Bierer, and Benjamin C. Silverman
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Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy - Published
- 2023
3. The impact of commercial health datasets on medical research and health-care algorithms
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Isabelle Rose I Alberto, Nicole Rose I Alberto, Arnab K Ghosh, Bhav Jain, Shruti Jayakumar, Nicole Martinez-Martin, Ned McCague, Dana Moukheiber, Lama Moukheiber, Mira Moukheiber, Sulaiman Moukheiber, Antonio Yaghy, Andrew Zhang, and Leo Anthony Celi
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Health Information Management ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Decision Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Health Informatics - Published
- 2023
4. Software tools for computing EW chiral amplitudes
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Martinez-Martin, Javier and Sanz-Cillero, Juan Jose
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present an implementation of the Electroweak Chiral Lagrangian (also denoted as Higgs Effective Theory) in several high energy physics Mathematica packages. In particular, we implement the bosonic part of the electoweak Lagrangian up to next-to-leading order for FeynRules, FeynArts and FeynCalc. These tools are publicly available and can be used to readily calculate the Feynman rules and amplitudes in the theory., Comment: 4 pages, 3 pdf figures, contribution to the proceedings of QCD22 - 25th International Conference in Quantum Chromodynamics (4-7/07/2022, Montpellier - FR)
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- 2023
5. Cross‐Cultural Differences in Patient Perceptions of Dyskinesia in Parkinson's Disease
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Valtteri Kaasinen, Sheng Luo, Pablo Martinez‐Martin, Christopher G. Goetz, and Glenn T. Stebbins
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
6. Clinical Impression of Severity Index for Parkinson's Disease and Its Association to <scp>Health‐Related</scp> Quality of Life
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Jenny M. Norlin, Klas Kellerborg, Ulf Persson, Daniel Oudin Åström, Peter Hagell, Pablo Martinez‐Martin, and Per Odin
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
7. Impact of advanced Parkinson’s disease on caregivers: an international real-world study
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Pablo Martinez-Martin, Matej Skorvanek, Tove Henriksen, Susanna Lindvall, Josefa Domingos, Ali Alobaidi, Prasanna L. Kandukuri, Vivek S. Chaudhari, Apeksha B. Patel, Juan Carlos Parra, James Pike, and Angelo Antonini
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background Caring for a partner or family member with Parkinson’s disease (PD) negatively affects the caregiver’s own physical and emotional well-being, especially those caring for people with advanced PD (APD). This study was designed to examine the impact of APD on caregiver perceived burden, quality of life (QoL), and health status. Methods Dyads of people with PD and their primary caregivers were identified from the Adelphi Parkinson’s Disease Specific Program (DSP™) using real-world data from the United States, Japan and five European countries. Questionnaires were used to capture measures of clinical burden (people with PD) and caregiver burden (caregivers). Results Data from 721 patient-caregiver dyads in seven countries were captured. Caregivers had a mean age 62.6 years, 71.6% were female, and 70.4% were a spouse. Caregivers for people with APD had a greater perceived burden, were more likely to take medication and had lower caregiver treatment satisfaction than those caring for people with early or intermediate PD; similar findings were observed for caregivers of people with intermediate versus early PD. Caregivers for people with intermediate PD were also less likely to be employed than those with early PD (25.3% vs 42.4%) and spent more time caring (6.6 vs 3.2 h/day). Conclusions This real-world study demonstrates that caregivers of people with APD experience a greater burden than those caring for people with early PD. This highlights the importance of including caregiver-centric measures in future studies, and emphasizes the need for implementing treatments that reduce caregiver burden in APD. Trial registration: N/A.
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- 2023
8. Epistemic Rights and Responsibilities of Digital Simulacra for Biomedicine
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Mildred Cho and Nicole Martinez-Martin
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Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy - Abstract
Big data and AI have enabled digital simulation for prediction of future health states or behaviors of specific individuals, populations or humans in general. "Digital simulacra" use multimodal datasets to develop computational models that are virtual representations of people or groups, generating predictions of how systems evolve and react to interventions over time. These include digital twins and virtual patients for
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- 2022
9. IMPACT-Global Hip Fracture Audit: Nosocomial infection, risk prediction and prognostication, minimum reporting standards and global collaborative audit
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Andrew J. Hall, Nicholas D. Clement, Cristina Ojeda-Thies, Alasdair MJ. MacLullich, Giuseppe Toro, Antony Johansen, Tim O. White, Andrew D. Duckworth, Hani Abdul-Jabar, Rashid Abu-Rajab, Ahmed Abugarja, Karen Adam, Héctor J. Aguado Hernández, Gedeón Améstica Lazcano, Sarah Anderson, Mahmood Ansar, Jonathan Antrobus, Esteban Javier Aragón Achig, Maheswaran Archunan, Mirentxu Arrieta Salinas, Sarah Ashford–Wilson, Cristina Assens Gibert, Katerina Athanasopoulou, Mohamed Awadelkarim, Stuart Baird, Stefan Bajada, Shobana Balakrishnan, Sathishkumar Balasubramanian, James A. Ballantyne, Leopoldo Bárcena Goitiandia, Benjamin Barkham, Christina Barmpagianni, Mariano Barres-Carsi, Sarah Barrett, Dinnish Baskaran, Jean Bell, Katrina Bell, Stuart Bell, Giuseppe Bellelli, Javier Alberto Benchimol, Bruno Rafael Boietti, Sally Boswell, Adriano Braile, Caitlin Brennan, Louise Brent, Ben Brooke, Gaetano Bruno, Abdus Burahee, Shirley Burns, Giampiero Calabrò, Lucy Campbell, Guido Sebastian Carabelli, Carol Carnegie, Guillermo Carretero Cristobal, Ethan Caruana, M.a Concepción Cassinello Ogea, Juan Castellanos Robles, Pablo Castillon, Anil Chakrabarti, Antonio Benedetto Cecere, Ping Chen, Jon V. Clarke, Grace Collins, Jorge E. Corrales Cardenal, Maurizio Corsi, Gara María Cózar Adelantado, Simon Craxford, Melissa Crooks, Javier Cuarental-García, Rory Cuthbert, Graham Dall, Ioannis Daskalakis, Annalisa De Cicco, Diana de la Fuente de Dios, Pablo Demaria, John Dereix, Julian Díaz Jiménez, José Luis Dinamarca Montecinos, Ha Phuong Do Le, Juan Pablo Donoso Coppa, Georgios Drosos, Andrew Duffy, Jamie East, Deborah Eastwood, Hassan Elbahari, Carmen Elias de Molins Peña, Mamoun Elmamoun, Ben Emmerson, Daniel Escobar Sánchez, Martina Faimali, Maria Victòria Farré-Mercadé, Luke Farrow, Almari Fayez, Adam Fell, Christopher Fenner, David Ferguson, Louise Finlayson, Aldo Flores Gómez, Nicholas Freeman, Jonathan French, Santiago Gabardo Calvo, Nicola Gagliardo, Joan Garcia Albiñana, Guillermo García Cruz, Unai García de Cortázar Antolín, Virginia García Virto, Sophie Gealy, Sandra Marcela Gil Caballero, Moneet Gill, María Soledad González González, Rajesh Gopireddy, Diane Guntley, Binay Gurung, Guadalupe Guzmán Rosales, Nedaa Haddad, Mahum Hafeez, Petra Haller, Emer Halligan, John Hardie, Imogen Hawker, Amr Helal, Mariana Herrera Cruz, Ruben Herreros Ruiz-Valdepeñas, James Horton, Sean Howells, Alan Howieson, Luke Hughes, Flavia Lorena Hünicken Torrez, Ana Hurtado Ortega, Peter Huxley, Hytham K.S. Hamid, Nida Ilahi, Alexis Iliadis, Dominic Inman, Piyush Jadhao, Rajan Jandoo, Lucy Jawad, Malwattage Lara Tania Jayatilaka, Paul J. Jenkins, Rathan Jeyapalan, David Johnson, Andrew Johnston, Sarah Joseph, Siddhant Kapoor, Georgios Karagiannidis, Krishna Saga Karanam, Freddy Kattakayam, Alastair Konarski, Georgios Kontakis, Gregorio Labrador Hernández, Victoria Lancaster, Giovanni Landi, Brian Le, Ignatius Liew, Kartik Logishetty, Andrew Carlomaria Daniel Lopez Marquez, Judit Lopez, Joann Lum, Gavin J. Macpherson, Suvira Madan, Sabreena Mahroof, Khalid Malik-Tabassum, Ravi Mallina, Afnan Maqsood, Ben Marson, M. José Martin Legorburo, Encarna Martin-Perez, Tania Martínez Jiménez, Javier Martinez Martin, Alistair Mayne, Amy Mayor, Gavan McAlinden, Lucille McLean, Lorna McDonald, Joshua McIntyre, Pamela McKay, Greg McKean, Heather McShane, Antonio Medici, Chelsea Meeke, Evonne Meldrum, Mijail Mendez, Scott Mercer, Josu Merino Perez, María-Pilar Mesa-Lampré, Shuna Mighton, Kirsty Milne, Muhammed Mohamed Yaseen, Iain Moppett, Jesus Mora, Sira Morales-Zumel, Irene Blanca Moreno Fenoll, Adham Mousa, Alastair W. Murray, Elspeth V. Murray, Radhika Nair, Fiona Neary, Giacomo Negri, Oliver Negus, Fiona Newham-Harvey, Nigel Ng, Jess Nightingale, Sumiya Noor Mohamed Anver, Perrico Nunag, Matthew O'Hare, Ben Ollivere, Raquel Ortés Gómez, AnneMarie Owens, Siobhan Page, Valentina Palloni, Andreas Panagiotopoulos, Elias Panagiotopoulos, Paul Panesar, Antonios Papadopoulos, Papagiannis Spyridon, Teresa Pareja Sierra, Chang Park, Hammad Parwaiz, Paul Paterson-Byrne, Sam Patton, Jack Pearce, Marina Porter, Achille Pellegrino, Arturo Pèrez Cuellar, Raffaele Pezzella, Ashish Phadnis, Charlotte Pinder, Danielle Piper, Matilda Powell-Bowns, Rocío Prieto Martín, Annabel Probert, Ashwanth Ramesh, Manuel Vicente Mejía Ramírez de Arellano, Duncan Renton, Stephen Rickman, Alastair Robertson, Adrian Roche Albero, José Alberto Rodrigo Verguizas, Myriam Rodríguez Couso, Joanna Rooney, Pilar Sáez-López, Andres Saldaña-Díaz, Adriano Santulli, Marta Isabel Sanz Pérez, Khaled M. Sarraf, Christine Scarsbrook, Chloe E.H. Scott, Jennifer Scott, Sachi Shah, Sharief Sharaf, Sidharth Sharma, Denise Shirley, Antonio Siano, James Simpson, Abhinav Singh, Amit Singh, Tim Sinnett, Gurudatt Sisodia, Philomena Smith, Eugenia Sophena Bert, Michael Steel, Avril Stewart, Claire Stewart, Kapil Sugand, Niall Sullivan, Lauren Sweeting, Michael Symes, Dylan Jun Hao Tan, Francesco Tancredi, Irini Tatani, Philip Thomas, Fraser Thomson, Niamh S. Toner, Anna Tong, Antonio Toro, Theodoros Tosounidis, Stylianos Tottas, Andrea Trinidad Leo, Damien Tucker, Krishna Vemulapalli, Diego Ventura Garces, Olivia Katherine Vernon, Juan Carlos Viveros Garcia, Alex Ward, Kirsty Ward, Kate Watson, Thisara Weerasuriya, Udara Wickramanayake, Hannah Wilkinson, Joseph Windley, Janet Wood, William Wynell-Mayow, Giovanni Zatti, Moez Zeiton, and Miriam Zurrón Lobato
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Surgery - Published
- 2022
10. Viewing CAI as a Tool Within the Mental Health Care System
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Nicole Martinez-Martin
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Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy - Published
- 2023
11. Validation of the <scp>OPTIMIPARK</scp> Questionnaire: A Tool to Optimize Treatment in Parkinson's Disease
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Jorge U. Máñez‐Miró, Francisco Vivancos‐Matellano, Fernando Alonso‐Frech, Lydia Vela‐Desojo, Nuria López‐Ariztegui, Lydia López‐Manzanares, Ernest Balaguer, Juan Carlos Martínez‐Castrillo, Yolanda Herrero‐Infante, Carmen Gasca‐Salas, María Isabel Morales‐Casado, Elena Casas, Antonio Hernández, Isabel Pareés, Iciar Tegel‐Ayuela, Raul Martínez‐Fernández, and Pablo Martinez‐Martin
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Dopamine replacement therapy reduces most motor and nonmotor features of Parkinson's disease. However, with disease progression, adjustments of dopaminergics and the application of advanced therapies must be considered.To validate the OPTIMIPARK questionnaire as a tool to help clinicians make therapeutic decisions on patients treated with levodopa.We tested a questionnaire including 9 items encompassing motor and nonmotor signs, complications, and disability in a multicenter, observational, cross-sectional study. A neurologist (neurologist 1 [N1]) assessed patients according to regular clinical practice and blinded to the OPTIMIPARK questionnaire score. Therapeutic decisions were classified as "no changes," "adjustment of conventional treatment," and "advanced therapy indicated." External neurologists (neurologist 3 [N3] and neurologist 4 [N4]), who only knew the patient age, years of disease, and current treatment, made their therapeutic decisions based on the OPTIMIPARK score. Concordance between the criterion of the N1 versus the OPTIMIPARK-based N3-N4 consensus was analyzed applying weighted κ. The area under Receiving Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves was calculated for OPTIMIPARK scores.A total of 113 patients with Parkinson's disease were included. The OPTIMIPARK-based decision led to a higher proportion of patients requiring therapeutic modification than N1 assessment (74% vs. 60%;OPTIMIPARK might be more sensitive than regular clinical practice in suggesting the need for a therapeutic change. Furthermore, the low and high scores identify with high accuracy well-adjusted patients and candidates for advanced therapy, respectively.
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- 2022
12. Rating Scales for Medication Adherence in Parkinson's Disease: A Systematic Review for Critique and Recommendations
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Victor McConvey, Beatriz Guitton Renaud Baptista de Oliveira, Matej Skorvanek, Michelle Hyczy de Siqueira Tosin, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Christopher Goetz, and Anette Schrag
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2022
13. Incidence of hypertension in young transgender people after a 5-year follow-up: association with gender-affirming hormonal therapy
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Francisco Javier, Martinez-Martin, Agnieszka, Kuzior, Alba, Hernandez-Lazaro, Ricardo Jose, de Leon-Durango, Carlos, Rios-Gomez, Borja, Santana-Ojeda, Jennifer Maria, Perez-Rivero, Paula Maria, Fernandez-Trujillo-Comenge, Paula, Gonzalez-Diaz, Claudia, Arnas-Leon, Carmen, Acosta-Calero, Esperanza, Perdomo-Herrera, Alba Lucia, Tocino-Hernandez, Maria, Del Sol Sanchez-Bacaicoa, and Maria, Del Pino Perez-Garcia
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Male ,Physiology ,Incidence ,Gender Identity ,Androgen Antagonists ,Transgender Persons ,Hypertension ,Androgens ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Cyproterone Acetate ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
In order to assess the risk of hypertension development, we performed a retrospective analysis of the clinical records of consecutive transgender patients who began gender-affirming hormonal therapy in our Outpatient Gender Identity Clinic with30 years of age and had a follow-up5 years. 149 transgender women treated with estradiol and 153 transgender men treated with testosterone were included; 129 of the transgender women received also androgen blockers (54 spironolactone, 49 cyproterone acetate and 26 LHRH agonists). The annual incidence of hypertension in young transgender men (1.18%) seemed comparable to that of the general population. In young transgender women, it seemed higher (2.14%); we found that the choice of androgen blocker had a remarkable effect, with a highly significant increase in patients treated with cyproterone acetate (4.90%) vs. the rest (0.80%); the adjusted hazard-ratio was 0.227 (p = 0.001). Correlation, logistic regression and mediation analyses were performed for the associations of the available clinical variables with the increase in systolic blood pressure and the onset of hypertension, but besides the use of cyproterone acetate, only the ponderal gain was found significant (Spearman's r: 0.361, p 0.001); with a 36.7% mediation effect (31.2-42.3%). Cyproterone acetate has additional known risks, such as meningioma; although we cannot conclusively prove that it has a role in the development of hypertension, we conclude that the use of cyproterone acetate for this indication should be reconsidered.
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- 2022
14. Effects of treatment with monacolin K, berberine and coenzyme Q10 on lipid metabolism in patients with moderate cardiovascular risk
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F, Martinez-Martin, E, Corbella, I, Sarasa, F, Trias, D, Petitbò, M, Licerán, R M, Sánchez-Hernández, D, Martin, A, Sánchez, C, Arnás, S, de Dios, M, Florido, and X, Pintó
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Berberine ,Ubiquinone ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Lipid Metabolism ,Treatment Outcome ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Heart Disease Risk Factors ,Risk Factors ,Dietary Supplements ,Humans ,Lovastatin ,Family Practice - Abstract
The use of nutritional supplements to treat hypercholesterolemia is gradually increasing, however further studies on their efficacy and safety are required.The present clinical trial included patients with moderate hypercholesterolemia and cardiovascular risk who were treated either with a nutraceutical preparation containing 3.75mg of monacolin K, 515mg of berberine and 50mg of coenzyme Q10 per tablet (Lipok®) or with a placebo. The clinical and laboratory variables were analyzed at baseline and at three and six months. None of the patients was diabetic, and none was being treated with lipid-lowering drugs or with any other nutritional supplements affecting lipid metabolism.In patients of the intervention group and of the placebo group, baseline LDL-C was 134.7mg/dL (14.4) and 138.7mg/dL (15.2), respectively. At three months after treatment start, LDL-C had decreased by 26.1mg/dL (-32.4 to 19.7) and increased by 4.5mg/dL (-1.5 to 10.5) in the respective groups. In the intervention group, a similar decrease in non-HDL-C and total cholesterol was observed, while no significant changes were observed in either group for HDL-C, triglycerides and lipoprotein(a). A good tolerance and safety profile was observed.In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the combination of monacolin K, berberine and coenzyme Q10 is effective and safe for treating hypercholesterolemia in patients with a moderate degree of excess LDL-C and cardiovascular risk.
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- 2022
15. Rechallenge with a single-pill combination of sitagliptin plus extended-release metformin in patients labelled as metformin-intolerant: Mostly successful
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Martinez Martin Francisco Javier, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Borja Santana-Ojeda, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, and Fernandez-Trujillo-Comenge Paula Maria
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
16. Acceptability of the switch from parenteral to oral semaglutide in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and obesity: Patient satisfaction, and changes in HbA1c, body weight, systolic blood pressure and tryglicerides
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Martinez Martin Francisco Javier, Ojeda Borja Santana, Carlos Rios-Gomez, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Marta Martin-Perez, and Debora Garcia-Alamo
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
17. Synovial sarcoma in a patient with long-standing acromegalia: Causal vs. coincidental
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de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Borja Santana-Ojeda, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Esperanza Perdomo-Herrera, Tocino-Hernandez Alba Lucia, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
18. Effects of oral semaglutide on the lipid profile of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and obesity: Are they mediated by body weight loss?
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Agnieszka Kuzior, Borja Santana-Ojeda, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, Fernandez-Trujillo-Comenge Paula Maria, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
19. Dose-related risk of hypertension development in young female transgender patients treated with cyproterone acetate
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Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Ojeda Borja Santana, Carlos Rios-Gomez, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Pino Perez-Garcia Maria del, Sol Sanchez-Bacaicoa Maria del, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
20. St. John's wort as an example of the naturalistic fallacy: natural things are not necessarily good things
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Carlos Rios-Gomez, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Borja Santana-Ojeda, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Agnieszka Kuzior, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Pino Ortiz-Hernandez Catherine del, Perez-Rivero Jennifer Maria, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
21. A case of functional hypercortisolism associated to alcohol abuse in a 43-year-old male
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Borja Santana-Ojeda, Carlos Rios-Gomez, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Agnieszka Kuzior, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, Pino Ortiz-Hernandez Catherine del, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
22. A 7.5 cm hyperdense heterogeneous incidental right adrenal mass: Is it cancer?
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Borja Santana-Ojeda, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, Perez-Rivero Jennifer Maria, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
23. Reduction of urinary albumin excretion with empagliflozin in patients with type 2 diabetes and uncontrolled hypertension
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Claudia Arnas-Leon, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Borja Santana-Ojeda, Carlos Rios-Gomez, de Leon-Durango Ricardo Jose, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Perez-Rivero Jennifer Maria, Sara Quintana-Arroyo, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
24. Validation of the Thai Version of the Movement Disorder Society-Sponsored Revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale
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Priya Jagota, Prachaya Srivanitchapoom, Sitthi Petchrutchatachart, Surat Singmaneesakulchai, Apichart Pisarnpong, Praween Lolekha, Suwanna Setthawatcharawanich, Parnsiri Chairangsaris, Natlada Limotai, Pawut Mekawichai, Pattamon Panyakaew, Onanong Phokaewvarangkul, Jirada Sringean, Yuvadee Pitakpatapee, Nancy LaPelle, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Xuehan Ren, Sheng Luo, Glenn T. Stebbins, Christopher G. Goetz, and Roongroj Bhidayasiri
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Objective This study aims to validate the Thai translation of the Movement Disorder Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS).Methods The English version was translated into Thai and then back-translated into English. The translated version underwent 2 rounds of cognitive pretesting to assess the ease of comprehension, ease of use and comfort with the scale. Then, it underwent large clinimetric testing.Results The Thai version was validated in 354 PD patients. The comparative fit index (CFI) for all four parts of the Thai version of the MDS-UPDRS was 0.93 or greater. Exploratory factor analysis identified isolated item differences in factor structure between the Thai and English versions.Conclusion The overall factor structure of the Thai version was consistent with that of the English version based on the high CFIs (all CFI ≥ 0.90). Hence, it can be designated the official Thai version of the MDS-UPDRS.
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- 2022
25. The New Satisfaction with Life and Treatment Scale (SLTS-7) in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease
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Lars Timmermann, Michael T. Barbe, Keyoumars Ashkan, Leire Ambrosio, Pia Bachon, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Christopher Nimsky, Anna Sauerbier, Alexandra Rizos, Haidar S. Dafsari, K. Ray Chaudhuri, Gereon R. Fink, Europar, Philipp Alexander Loehrer, Stefanie T Jost, Veerle Visser-Vandewalle, Alexandra Gronostay, and Agni Konitsioti
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Psychometrics ,business.industry ,Visual analogue scale ,Reproducibility of Results ,Life satisfaction ,Parkinson Disease ,Personal Satisfaction ,Disease ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Convergent validity ,Quality of life ,Cronbach's alpha ,Patient Satisfaction ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Scale (social sciences) ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: The satisfaction with life and, in particular, with treatment in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is understudied. Objective: To explore a new 7-item rating tool assessing satisfaction with life and treatment (SLTS-7) in PD. Methods: In this cross-sectional, multi-center study, including patients screened for advanced therapies, psychometric characteristics of the SLTS-7 were analyzed. An exploratory factor analysis identified the underlying factorial structure of the SLTS-7. Results: 117 patients were included, and the data quality of the SLTS-7 was excellent (computable data 100%), and acceptability measures satisfied standard criteria. Besides the global assessment (item 1), the exploratory factor analysis produced item 2 (physical satisfaction) as an independent item and two factors among the remaining items: items 3–5 (psycho-social satisfaction), and items 6 and 7 (treatment satisfaction). Cronbach’s alpha was 0.89, indicative of high internal consistency. The SLTS-7 total score correlated moderately with motor symptoms and weakly with non-motor symptoms total scores. SLTS-7 showed the highest correlations with the European Quality of Life with 5 items (EQ-5D) visual analog scale (0.43–0.58, p
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- 2022
26. Perspectives and Experiences of Self-monitoring of Blood Pressure Among Patients With Hypertension: A Systematic Review of Qualitative Studies
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Patrizia Natale, Jia Yi Ni, David Martinez-Martin, Ayano Kelly, Clara K Chow, Aravinda Thiagalingam, Corinne Caillaud, Benjamin Eggleton, Nicole Scholes-Robertson, Jonathan C Craig, Giovanni F M Strippoli, and Allison Jaure
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Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundSelf-monitoring of blood pressure is a key strategy in managing hypertension but may be challenging and burdensome for patients. The aim of the study was to describe the perspectives and experiences of self-monitoring of blood pressure in patients with hypertension.MethodsMEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, and CINAHL were searched from database inception to March 2022. We used thematic synthesis to analyze the data.ResultsThirty-five studies involving 872 patients aged 18–95 years were included. Four themes were identified: enabling autonomy and empowerment of own health (allowing access to comprehensive and accurate data, bolstering motivation for lifestyle changes, encouraging diligence in medication taking, gaining interest in self-management, and increasing awareness of health status); providing reassurance and convenience (instilling a sense of security, readiness for troubleshooting, and reducing the frequency of clinical appointments); triggering confusion and stress (anxiety and panic over “bad” numbers, constant reminder of illness identity, disregarded by clinicians, lack of confidence in interpreting and responding to results, redundancy of continuous monitoring, and uncertainties around targets and frequency of measures, concerns of unreliability); financial and operational burden of device (vulnerability preventing use, or unsustainable cost).ConclusionsInadequate knowledge about the benefits of lowering blood pressure, home blood pressure monitoring, blood pressure goals, and interpretation of blood pressure values, limited access to home blood pressure monitoring devices, and psychological burden with home blood pressure monitoring limit home blood pressure monitoring.
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- 2023
27. Supplemental Material, sj-doc-1-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 - Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease
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Santos-García, Diego, Castro, E. Suárez, de Deus Fonticoba, T., Panceiras, M. J. Feal, Enriquez, J. G. Muñoz, González, J. M. Paz, Bartolomé, C. Cores, Planellas, L. L., Caldentey, J. García, Caballol, N., Legarda, I., López, I. Cabo, Manzanares, L. López, Rivera, M. A. Ávila, Catalán, M. J., Nogueira, V., Borrué, C., Sauco, M. Álvarez, Vela, L., Cubo, E., Castrillo, J. C. Martínez, Alonso, P. Sánchez, Losada, M. G. Alonso, Ariztegui, N. López, Gastón, M. I., Kulisevsky, J., Pagonabarraga, J., Seijo, M., Martínez, J. Ruíz, Valero, C., Kurtis, M., Ardura, J. González, Prieto, C., Mir, P., and Martinez-Martin, P.
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FOS: Psychology ,FOS: Clinical medicine ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,110319 Psychiatry (incl. Psychotherapy) ,110308 Geriatrics and Gerontology ,110904 Neurology and Neuromuscular Diseases ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Supplemental Material, sj-doc-1-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 for Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease by Diego Santos-García, E. Suárez Castro, T. de Deus Fonticoba, M. J. Feal Panceiras, J. G. Muñoz Enriquez, J. M. Paz González, C. Cores Bartolomé, L. L. Planellas, J. García Caldentey, N. Caballol, I. Legarda, I. Cabo López, L. López Manzanares, M. A. Ávila Rivera, M. J. Catalán, V. Nogueira, C. Borrué, M. Álvarez Sauco, L. Vela, E. Cubo, J. C. Martínez Castrillo, P. Sánchez Alonso, M. G. Alonso Losada, N. López Ariztegui, M. I. Gastón, J. Kulisevsky, J. Pagonabarraga, M. Seijo, J. Ruíz Martínez, C. Valero, M. Kurtis, J. González Ardura, C. Prieto, P. Mir, P. Martinez-Martin and on behalf of the COPPADIS Study Group in Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-2-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 - Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease
- Author
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Santos-García, Diego, Castro, E. Suárez, de Deus Fonticoba, T., Panceiras, M. J. Feal, Enriquez, J. G. Muñoz, González, J. M. Paz, Bartolomé, C. Cores, Planellas, L. L., Caldentey, J. García, Caballol, N., Legarda, I., López, I. Cabo, Manzanares, L. López, Rivera, M. A. Ávila, Catalán, M. J., Nogueira, V., Borrué, C., Sauco, M. Álvarez, Vela, L., Cubo, E., Castrillo, J. C. Martínez, Alonso, P. Sánchez, Losada, M. G. Alonso, Ariztegui, N. López, Gastón, M. I., Kulisevsky, J., Pagonabarraga, J., Seijo, M., Martínez, J. Ruíz, Valero, C., Kurtis, M., Ardura, J. González, Prieto, C., Mir, P., and Martinez-Martin, P.
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FOS: Psychology ,FOS: Clinical medicine ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,110319 Psychiatry (incl. Psychotherapy) ,110308 Geriatrics and Gerontology ,110904 Neurology and Neuromuscular Diseases ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-2-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 for Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease by Diego Santos-García, E. Suárez Castro, T. de Deus Fonticoba, M. J. Feal Panceiras, J. G. Muñoz Enriquez, J. M. Paz González, C. Cores Bartolomé, L. L. Planellas, J. García Caldentey, N. Caballol, I. Legarda, I. Cabo López, L. López Manzanares, M. A. Ávila Rivera, M. J. Catalán, V. Nogueira, C. Borrué, M. Álvarez Sauco, L. Vela, E. Cubo, J. C. Martínez Castrillo, P. Sánchez Alonso, M. G. Alonso Losada, N. López Ariztegui, M. I. Gastón, J. Kulisevsky, J. Pagonabarraga, M. Seijo, J. Ruíz Martínez, C. Valero, M. Kurtis, J. González Ardura, C. Prieto, P. Mir, P. Martinez-Martin and on behalf of the COPPADIS Study Group in Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Biomedical Advances: Neuroinnovation and Technology
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Nicole Martinez-Martin
- Published
- 2023
30. sj-docx-1-opp-10.1177_10781552231185855 - Supplemental material for Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus following ribociclib therapy for metastatic breast cancer
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Collada Sánchez, Victoria Lucia, Álvarez Criado, Javier, Martinez Martin, Virginia, Zamora Auñon, Pilar, Espinosa Arranz, Enrique, Mayor Ibarguren, Ander, Nacher Jimenez, Inmaculada, and Herrero Ambrosio, Alicia
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Oncology and Carcinogenesis not elsewhere classified ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences not elsewhere classified - Abstract
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-opp-10.1177_10781552231185855 for Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus following ribociclib therapy for metastatic breast cancer by Victoria Lucia Collada Sánchez, Javier Álvarez Criado, Virginia Martinez Martin, Pilar Zamora Auñon, Enrique Espinosa Arranz, Ander Mayor Ibarguren, Inmaculada Nacher Jimenez and Alicia Herrero Ambrosio in Journal of Oncology Pharmacy Practice
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 - Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease
- Author
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Santos-García, Diego, Castro, E. Suárez, de Deus Fonticoba, T., Panceiras, M. J. Feal, Enriquez, J. G. Muñoz, González, J. M. Paz, Bartolomé, C. Cores, Planellas, L. L., Caldentey, J. García, Caballol, N., Legarda, I., López, I. Cabo, Manzanares, L. López, Rivera, M. A. Ávila, Catalán, M. J., Nogueira, V., Borrué, C., Sauco, M. Álvarez, Vela, L., Cubo, E., Castrillo, J. C. Martínez, Alonso, P. Sánchez, Losada, M. G. Alonso, Ariztegui, N. López, Gastón, M. I., Kulisevsky, J., Pagonabarraga, J., Seijo, M., Martínez, J. Ruíz, Valero, C., Kurtis, M., Ardura, J. González, Prieto, C., Mir, P., and Martinez-Martin, P.
- Subjects
FOS: Psychology ,FOS: Clinical medicine ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,110319 Psychiatry (incl. Psychotherapy) ,110308 Geriatrics and Gerontology ,110904 Neurology and Neuromuscular Diseases ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-jgp-10.1177_0891988720964250 for Sleep Problems Are Related to a Worse Quality of Life and a Greater Non-Motor Symptoms Burden in Parkinson’s Disease by Diego Santos-García, E. Suárez Castro, T. de Deus Fonticoba, M. J. Feal Panceiras, J. G. Muñoz Enriquez, J. M. Paz González, C. Cores Bartolomé, L. L. Planellas, J. García Caldentey, N. Caballol, I. Legarda, I. Cabo López, L. López Manzanares, M. A. Ávila Rivera, M. J. Catalán, V. Nogueira, C. Borrué, M. Álvarez Sauco, L. Vela, E. Cubo, J. C. Martínez Castrillo, P. Sánchez Alonso, M. G. Alonso Losada, N. López Ariztegui, M. I. Gastón, J. Kulisevsky, J. Pagonabarraga, M. Seijo, J. Ruíz Martínez, C. Valero, M. Kurtis, J. González Ardura, C. Prieto, P. Mir, P. Martinez-Martin and on behalf of the COPPADIS Study Group in Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A low-cost AR application to control arm prosthesis
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Alvaro Sanchez-Rocamora, Ester Martinez-Martin, Angelo Costa, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencia de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial, and Robótica y Visión Tridimensional (RoViT)
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Human-Computer Interaction ,Virtual rehabilitation ,Deep learning ,Augmented reality ,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Electromyography signal processing ,Software - Abstract
This paper presents an augmented reality application to assist with myoelectric prostheses control for people with limb amputations. For that, we use the low-cost Myo armband coupled with low-level signal processing methods specifically built to control filters’ levels and processing chain. In particular, we use deep learning techniques to process the signals and to accurately identify seven different hand gestures. From that, we have built an augmented reality projection of a hand based on AprilTag markers that displays the gesture identified by the deep learning techniques. With the aim to properly train the gesture recognition system, we have built our own dataset with nine subjects. This dataset was combined with one publicly available to work with the data of 24 subjects in total. Finally, three different deep learning architectures have been comparatively studied, achieving high accuracy values (being 95.56% the best one). This validates our hypothesis that it is possible to have an adaptive platform able to fast learn personalized hand/arm gestures while projecting a virtual hand in real-time. This can reduce the adaptation time to myoelectric prostheses and improve the acceptance levels. Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. This work has been partly supported by Grant PID2019-104818RB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by “ERDF A way of making Europe”; and by Generalitat Valenciana (CIGE/2021/136).
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- 2022
33. L-Form Switching in Escherichia coli as a Common β-Lactam Resistance Mechanism
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Aleksandra Petrovic Fabijan, David Martinez-Martin, Carola Venturini, Katarzyna Mickiewicz, Neftali Flores-Rodriguez, Jeff Errington, and Jonathan Iredell
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Microbiology (medical) ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Ecology ,Physiology ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Meropenem ,Cell Biology ,beta-Lactams ,beta-Lactam Resistance ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Escherichia coli ,Genetics ,Penicillin-Binding Proteins ,Muramidase - Abstract
Cell wall deficient bacterial L-forms are induced by exposure to cell wall-targeting antibiotics and immune effectors such as lysozyme. L-forms of different bacteria (including Escherichia coli) have been reported in human infections, but whether this is a normal adaptive strategy or simply an artifact of antibiotic treatment in certain bacterial species remains unclear. Here we show that members of a representative, diverse set of pathogenic E. coli readily proliferate as L-forms in supratherapeutic concentrations of the broad-spectrum antibiotic meropenem. We report that they are completely resistant to antibiotics targeting any penicillin-binding proteins in this state, including PBP1A/1B, PBP2, PBP3, PBP4, and PBP5/6. Importantly, we observed that reversion to the cell-walled state occurs efficiently, less than 20 h after antibiotic cessation, with few or no changes in DNA sequence. We defined for the first time a logarithmic L-form growth phase with a doubling time of 80 to 190 min, followed by a stationary phase in late cultures. We further demonstrated that L-forms are metabolically active and remain normally susceptible to antibiotics that affect DNA torsion and ribosomal function. Our findings provide insights into the biology of L-forms and help us understand the risk of β-lactam failure in persistent infections in which L-forms may be common.
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- 2022
34. High risk of developing dementia in Parkinson’s disease: a Swedish registry-based study
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Daniel Oudin Åström, Jacob Simonsen, Lars Lau Raket, Simona Sgarbi, Johan Hellsten, Peter Hagell, Jenny M. Norlin, Klas Kellerborg, Pablo Martinez-Martin, and Per Odin
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Sweden ,Multidisciplinary ,Humans ,Dementia ,Parkinson Disease ,Prospective Studies ,Registries - Abstract
Dementia have substantial negative impact on the affected individual, their care partners and society. Persons living with Parkinson’s disease (PwP) are also to a large extent living with dementia. The aim of this study is to estimate time to dementia in PD using data from a large quality register with access to baseline clinical and patient reported data merged with Swedish national health registries. Persons with Parkinson’s disease in the Swedish Neuro Registries/Parkinson’s Disease Swedish PD Registry (PARKreg) in Sweden were included and linked to national health registries and matched by sex and age to controls without PD. Time to dementia was analysed with Cox regression models assuming proportional hazards, with time since diagnosis as the underlying time variable. In this large prospective cohort study, PwP had approximately four times higher risk of developing dementia as compared to age and sex-matched controls, a finding which remained after adjusting for potential confounders. The present results underline the high risk of dementia in PD and further emphasize the importance of developing symptomatic and ultimately disease modifying strategies to counteract this part of the non-motor symptomatology in PD.
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- 2022
35. Psychiatric genomics, mental health equity, and intersectionality: A framework for research and practice
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Julia E. H. Brown, Jennifer L. Young, and Nicole Martinez-Martin
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Psychiatry and Mental health - Abstract
The causal mechanisms and manifestations of psychiatric illness cannot be neatly narrowed down or quantified for diagnosis and treatment. Large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS) might renew hope for locating genetic predictors and producing precision medicines, however such hopes can also distract from appreciating social factors and structural injustices that demand more socially inclusive and equitable approaches to mental healthcare. A more comprehensive approach begins with recognizing that there is no one type of contributor to mental illness and its duration that should be prioritized over another. We argue that, if the search for biological specificity is to complement the need to alleviate the social distress that produces mental health inequities, psychiatric genomics must incorporate an intersectional dimension to models of mental illness across research priorities, scientific frameworks, and clinical applications. We outline an intersectional framework that will guide all professionals working in the expanding field of psychiatric genomics to better incorporate issues of social context, racial and cultural diversity, and downstream ethical considerations into their work.
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- 2022
36. Prospective Characterization of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy in a Multi-Ethnic Asian Cohort
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Shen-Yang Lim, Alfand Marl F. Dy Closas, Ai Huey Tan, Jia Lun Lim, Yi Jayne Tan, Yuganthini Vijayanathan, Yi Wen Tay, Raihanah binti Abdul Khalid, Wai Keong Ng, Ruban Kanesalingam, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Jia Nee Foo, Weng Khong Lim, Adeline Su Lyn Ng, and Eng-King Tan
- Abstract
BackgroundProgressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a rare, disabling, neurodegenerative disease. There are limited studies on the spectrum of PSP predominance-types and their clinico-demographic features among Asian patients. We prospectively characterized the clinical features, disease severity, and caregiver burden in a multi-ethnic Asian PSP cohort.MethodsConsecutively-recruited patients with PSP (n=104, 64.4% male; 67.3% Chinese, 21.2% Indians, 9.6% Malays) were extensively phenotyped by a movement disorders neurologist using the MDS-PSP clinical diagnostic criteria and PSP-Clinical Deficits Scale (PSP-CDS). Caregiver burden was measured using the modified Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI). Investigations were reviewed to help rule out potential PSP mimics.ResultsThere were 104 patients, consisting of 48.1% Richardson syndrome (PSP-RS), 37.5% parkinsonian phenotype (PSP-P), and 10.6% progressive gait freezing phenotype (PSP-PGF). Mean age at motor onset was 66.3±7.7 years, with no significant differences between the PSP phenotypes. Interestingly, REM-sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) symptoms and visual hallucinations (considered rare in PSP) were reported in 23.5% and 22.8% of patients, respectively, and a family history of possible neurodegenerative or movement disorder in 20.4%. PSP-CDS scores were highest (worst) in PSP-RS; and correlated moderately with disease duration (rs=0.45, Ps=0.22, P=0.029) in the overall cohort. Three of 48 (6.3%) patients who had whole-exome sequencing harboured pathogenic/likely pathogenic GBA variants.ConclusionsThis prospective characterization of a relatively large cohort of Asian PSP patients depicts significant heterogeneity in clinical features and disease burden. Unexpectedly high rates of RBD symptoms, visual hallucinations, and familial involvement warrant further study.
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- 2022
37. Bridging the AI Chasm: Can EBM Address Representation and Fairness in Clinical Machine Learning?
- Author
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Mildred Cho and Nicole Martinez-Martin
- Subjects
Machine Learning ,Social Responsibility ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy ,Humans ,Delivery of Health Care ,Article ,Peer Group ,Ethics, Research - Published
- 2022
38. Local economic development in the mmicroenterprises blacksmiths with technological applications
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Marisol Maldonado-Sanchez, Gloria Martinez-Martin, Mónica Flores-Lopez, and Cuitlahuac Alamilla-Cintora
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology - Abstract
The forger microenterprises located in Ixmiquilpan have grown up considerably because of housing, stores, educational institutions or any other kind of construction requiring doors and windows to be installed, with the increase of work forgers need to speed up the process on the customer assistance. A software that can help to design the drafts and to register the request will be of great help to the forger microenterprises. To develop the system the scientific method will be used, through observation, introduction, hypothesis, experimentation and conclusions. As a result they will get a software which will help to design the customers' request and it will allow to register them automatically in a database. The system has a catalog that will store the produced designs
- Published
- 2021
39. Patient and caregiver perspectives on blood pressure in children with chronic kidney disease
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Chandana Guha, Jaap W. Groothoff, Stephen I. Alexander, Susan L. Furth, Detlef Bockenhauer, Noa Amir, Talia Gutman, Nicole Evangelidis, Amanda Walker, Susan Samuel, Jonathan C. Craig, Allison A. Eddy, Amanda Baumgart, Allison Dart, Simon A. Carter, David Martinez-Martin, Justin Guang-Ao Wu, Camilla S. Hanson, Karine E. Manera, Hui-Kim Yap, Aditi Sinha, Debbie S. Gipson, Allison Tong, Joshua Kausman, Michael Zappitelli, Paediatric Nephrology, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, and Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Blood Pressure ,Disease ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Renal Dialysis ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Child ,Intensive care medicine ,Dialysis ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Distress ,Blood pressure ,Caregivers ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Nephrology ,Child, Preschool ,Hypertension ,Anxiety ,Thematic analysis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background More than 50% of children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have uncontrolled hypertension, increasing their long-term risk of cardiovascular disease and progression to kidney failure. Children receiving medications or dialysis may also experience acute blood pressure fluctuations accompanied by debilitating symptoms. We aimed to describe the perspectives of children with CKD and their parental caregivers on blood pressure to inform patient-centered care. Methods Secondary thematic analysis was conducted on qualitative data from the Standardized Outcomes in Nephrology—Children and Adolescents initiative, encompassing 16 focus groups, an international Delphi survey and two consensus workshops. We analyzed responses from children with CKD (ages 8–21 years) and caregivers (of children ages 0–21 years) pertaining to blood pressure. Results Overall, 120 patients and 250 caregivers from 22 countries participated. We identified five themes: invisibility and normalization (reassured by apparent normotension, absence of symptoms and expected links with CKD), confused by ambiguity (hypertension indistinguishable from cardiovascular disease, questioning the need for prophylactic intervention, frustrated by inconsistent messages and struggling with technical skills in measurement), enabling monitoring and maintaining health (gaging well-being and preventing vascular complications), debilitating and constraining daily living (provoking anxiety and agitation, helpless and powerless and limiting life activities) and burden of medications (overwhelmed by the quantity of tablets and distress from unexpected side effects). Conclusions For children with CKD and their caregivers, blood pressure was an important heath indicator, but uncertainty around its implications and treatment hampered management. Providing educational resources to track blood pressure and minimizing symptoms and treatment burden may improve outcomes in children with CKD.
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- 2021
40. PS-C17-9: RELEVANT BLOOD PRESSURE REDUCTION WITH ORAL SEMAGLUTIDE IN PATIENTS WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES AND OBESITY, INDEPENDENT OF PREVIOUS ANTIHYPERTENSIVE TREATMENT
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Francisco Javier Martinez-Martin, Agnieszka Kuzior, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Ricardo de Leon-Durango, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Borja Santana-Ojeda, Jennifer Maria Perez-Rivero, Paula Maria Fernandez-Trujillo-Comenge, Ana Delia Santana-Suarez, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, Claudia Arnas-Leon, and Carmen Acosta-Calero
- Subjects
Physiology ,Internal Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
41. PS-BPR01-10: PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA MASQUERADING AS A LONG-TERM SEVERE ANXIETY DISORDER WITH PANIC ATTACKS REFRACTORY TO PSYCHIATRIC TREATMENT
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Borja Santana-Ojeda, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Ricardo de Leon-Durango, Carlos Rios-Gomez, Jennifer Maria Perez-Rivero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Paula Gonzalez-Diaz, Claudia Arnas-Leon, Carmen Acosta-Calero, and Francisco Javier Martinez-Martin
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Physiology ,Internal Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
42. Web pages dataset
- Author
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Mejía-Escobar, Christian, Cazorla, Miguel, and Martinez-Martin, Ester
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Machine Learning ,Deep Learning ,Web site classification ,Web site design ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Convolutional Neural Network ,Dataset - Abstract
Set of data (cualitative and cuantitative parameters) and screenshots of Web pages from all countries in the world
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Web categorization
- Author
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Mejía-Escobar, Christian, Cazorla, Miguel, and Martinez-Martin, Ester
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ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,ComputerApplications_MISCELLANEOUS ,InformationSystems_INFORMATIONSTORAGEANDRETRIEVAL ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION - Abstract
A study case of classification under 6 categories using only webpages screenshots.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Receptor Interactome Discovery with RDIMIS, a Membrane Protein Interaction Screen Using Recombinant Extracellular Vesicles
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Ariana D. Sanchez, Sean M. Peterson, Mike Reichelt, Christian M. Amador, Nadia Martinez‐Martin, and Shengya Cao
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Medical Laboratory Technology ,Extracellular Vesicles ,Membranes ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,General Neuroscience ,Membrane Proteins ,Health Informatics ,Cell Communication ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Membrane protein interactions are challenging to identify because of the unique biophysical characteristics of both transmembrane proteins and membrane environments. The Receptor Display in Membranes Interaction Screen (RDIMIS) platform overcomes these challenges by screening transmembrane and membrane-proximal proteins in a membrane environment using recombinant extracellular vesicles (rEVs). The screen has been used to successfully identify interactions for difficult-to-study receptors in an unbiased manner. In this report, we detail how we generate rEVs, characterize the rEVs to ensure screen-readiness, and perform the full interaction screening, with emphasis on the criteria necessary to obtain clear, interpretable results. We also include support protocols for generating a screening library and validating screening results, as well as an alternate protocol for RDIMIS enabling the profiling of naturally occurring extracellular vesicles. © 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Generating and isolating extracellular vesicles from cells Basic Protocol 2: Characterizing recombinant extracellular vesicles Support Protocol 1: Preparing the receptor screening library Basic Protocol 3: Performing the Receptor Display in Membranes Interaction Screen (RDIMIS) Support Protocol 2: Validating RDIMIS results using microscopy Alternate Protocol: Detecting unlabeled endogenous vesicles.
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- 2022
45. MATHS FOR ENGINEERING: PARTING FROM CLASSICAL METHODS
- Author
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Ester Martinez-Martin and Angelo Costa
- Published
- 2022
46. Physical fitness and throwing speed in U13 versus U15 male handball players
- Author
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Fernandez-Fernandez, Jaime, Granacher, Urs, Martinez-Martin, Isidoro, Garcia-Tormo, José Vicente, Herrero-Molleda, Alba, Barbado, David, and García López, Juan
- Subjects
Rehabilitation ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,ddc:610 ,610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,Extern ,Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften - Abstract
Background The aim of this study was to analyze the shoulder functional profile (rotation range of motion [ROM] and strength), upper and lower body performance, and throwing speed of U13 versus U15 male handball players, and to establish the relationship between these measures of physical fitness and throwing speed. Methods One-hundred and nineteen young male handball players (under (U)-13 (U13) [n = 85]) and U15 [n = 34]) volunteered to participate in this study. The participating athletes had a mean background of sytematic handball training of 5.5 ± 2.8 years and they exercised on average 540 ± 10.1 min per week including sport-specific team handball training and strength and conditioning programs. Players were tested for passive shoulder range-of-motion (ROM) for both internal (IR) and external rotation (ER) and isometric strength (i.e., IR and ER) of the dominant/non-dominant shoulders, overhead medicine ball throw (OMB), hip isometric abductor (ABD) and adductor (ADD) strength, hip ROM, jumps (countermovement jump [CMJ] and triple leg-hop [3H] for distance), linear sprint test, modified 505 change-of-direction (COD) test and handball throwing speed (7 m [HT7] and 9 m [HT9]). Results U15 players outperformed U13 in upper (i.e., HT7 and HT9 speed, OMB, absolute IR and ER strength of the dominant and non-dominant sides; Cohen’s d: 0.76–2.13) and lower body (i.e., CMJ, 3H, 20-m sprint and COD, hip ABD and ADD; d: 0.70–2.33) performance measures. Regarding shoulder ROM outcomes, a lower IR ROM was found of the dominant side in the U15 group compared to the U13 and a higher ER ROM on both sides in U15 (d: 0.76–1.04). It seems that primarily anthropometric characteristics (i.e., body height, body mass) and upper body strength/power (OMB distance) are the most important factors that explain the throw speed variance in male handball players, particularly in U13. Conclusions Findings from this study imply that regular performance monitoring is important for performance development and for minimizing injury risk of the shoulder in both age categories of young male handball players. Besides measures of physical fitness, anthropometric data should be recorded because handball throwing performance is related to these measures., Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe; 803
- Published
- 2022
47. Validation of the Polish version of the Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale (UDysRS)
- Author
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Jarosław Sławek, Magdalena Boczarska-Jedynak, Urszula Fiszer, Joanna Siuda, Piotr Janik, Marek Śmiłowski, Marta Leńska-Mieciek, Dariusz Koziorowski, Jarosław Dulski, Glenn T. Stebbins, Monika Figura, Agata Gajos, Ewa Koziorowska-Gawron, Sławomir Budrewicz, Mateusz Toś, Jeffrey Lin, Magdalena Wójcik-Pędziwiatr, Andrzej Bogucki, Anna Krygowska-Wajs, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Magdalena Koszewicz, Małgorzata Michałowska, Agnieszka Gorzkowska, Grzegorz Opala, Monika Rudzińska-Bar, Sheng Luo, Christopher G. Goetz, Marta Piaścik-Gromada, Katarzyna Potasz-Kulikowska, and Anna Wasilewska
- Subjects
Dyskinesias ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Parkinson Disease ,Spanish version ,Factor structure ,Severity of Illness Index ,eye diseases ,humanities ,Executive committee ,Index score ,Dyskinesia ,Rating scale ,medicine ,Humans ,Translations ,Surgery ,In patient ,Poland ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Reference standards ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background. In 2008, the Movement Disorders Society published the Unified Dyskinesia Rating Scale (UDysRS). This has become the established tool for assessing the severity and disability associated with dyskinesia in patients with Parkinson’s Disease (PD). We translated and validated the Polish version of the UDysRS, explored its dimensionality, and compared it to the Spanish version, which is the Reference Standard for UDysRS translations. Material and methods. The UDysRS was translated into Polish by a team led by JS and GO. The back-translation, completed by colleagues fluent in both Polish and English who were not involved in the original translation, was reviewed and approved by the Executive Committee of the MDS Rating Scales Programme. Then the translated version of the UDysRS underwent cognitive pretesting, and the translation was modified based on the results. The approved version was considered to be the Official Working Document of the Polish UDysRS and was tested on 250 Polish PD patients recruited at movement disorder centres. Data was compared to the Reference Standard used for validating UDysRS translations. Results. The overall factor structure of the Polish version was consistent with that of the Reference Standard version, as evidenced by the high Confirmatory Fit Index score (CFI = 0.98). The Polish UDysRS was thus confirmed to share a common factor structure with the Reference Standard. Conclusions. The Official Polish UDysRS translation is recommended for use in clinical and research settings. Worldwide use of uniform rating measures offers a common ground to study similarities and differences in disease manifestations and progression across cultures.
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- 2021
48. New insights from a multi-ethnic Asian progressive supranuclear palsy cohort
- Author
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Shen-Yang Lim, Alfand Marl F. Dy Closas, Ai Huey Tan, Jia Lun Lim, Yi Jayne Tan, Yuganthini Vijayanathan, Yi Wen Tay, Raihanah binti Abdul Khalid, Wai Keong Ng, Ruban Kanesalingam, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Azlina Ahmad Annuar, Lei Cheng Lit, Jia Nee Foo, Weng Khong Lim, Adeline Su Lyn Ng, and Eng-King Tan
- Subjects
Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Published
- 2023
49. Assistive Technology for Elderly Care: An Overview
- Author
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Ester Martinez-Martin, Angelo Costa, Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Ciencia de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial, and Robótica y Visión Tridimensional (RoViT)
- Subjects
Cognitive assistants ,Population ageing ,General Computer Science ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Elderly care ,Assistive technology ,Health care ,medicine ,General Materials Science ,Cognitive rehabilitation therapy ,robotics ,Rehabilitation ,cognitive assistants ,business.industry ,Healthcare ,General Engineering ,healthcare ,Ciencia de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial ,Cognition ,Robotics ,Popularity ,TK1-9971 ,Engineering management ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,business - Abstract
Global demographic changes have resulted in a growing technological demand to meet the arisen social needs. In particular, the increasingly ageing population requires assistive technologies to stay at home for longer independently while receiving continuous healthcare. In this sense, a wide academic and industrial research is taking place, introducing these technologies in hospitals and rehabilitation centres. This paper aims at providing an overview of research projects for elderly care and assistance, focusing on cognitive and robot assistants due to their popularity in the area. More precisely, physical and/or cognitive rehabilitation are presented. This paper also discusses their limitations and the open challenges to be tackled in order to be successfully integrated in our society.
- Published
- 2021
50. Failure of rhTSH-stimulated FDG PET-CT scan to identify metastases of a papillary thyroid carcinoma
- Author
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Leon-Durango Ricardo de, Alba Hernandez-Lazaro, Carmen Acosta-Calero, Agnieszka Kuzior, Claudia Arnas-Leon, and Martinez Martin Francisco Javier
- Published
- 2022
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