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2. Contribution of the scientific field of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine to improvements in health-related rehabilitation at all levels of the healthcare system: A discussion paper.
- Author
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Nugraha B and Gutenbrunner C
- Subjects
- Humans, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine organization & administration
- Abstract
Rehabilitation is an important health strategy that should be implemented at all levels of the healthcare system and at all levels of care. Scientific evidence is vital to strengthen rehabilitation; therefore, research in the scientific field of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (PRM) should be implemented and linked to all levels of the healthcare system. PRM research can be categorized into 5 areas: (i) biosciences in rehabilitation; (ii) biomedical rehabilitation sciences and engineering; (iii) clinical PRM sciences; (iv) integrative rehabilitation sciences; and (v) human function-ing sciences. At the level of the healthcare system, rehabilitation can be divided into micro-, meso- and macro-levels. This paper discusses the contribution of the five above research areas to health-related rehabilitation at the different levels of the healthcare system. The contribution of PRM research can have synergistic value and facilitate improvements and implementation of scientific evidence in rehabilitation at all levels of healthcare. From a broader perspective, improved understanding of the contribution of each area of the scientific field of PRM and the priorities for the healthcare system that are set by relevant stakeholders will contribute to the advancement and rapid attainment of overall goals.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. How registry data can improve outcomes from joint replacement - a seminal paper.
- Author
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Tucker K
- Subjects
- Registries, Arthroplasty, Replacement
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The challenges of describing rehabilitation services: A discussion paper.
- Author
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Røe C, Kirkevold M, Andelic N, Soberg HL, Sveen U, Bautz-Holter E, Jahnsen R, van Walsem MR, Kildal Bragstad L, Gabrielsen Hjelle E, Klevberg G, Oretorp P, Habberstad A, Hagfors J, Væhle R, Engen G, and Gutenbrunner C
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Brain Injuries rehabilitation, Health Services trends
- Abstract
To apply the Classification of Service Organization in Rehabilitation (ICSO-R) classification of services to different target groups, include the user perspective, identify missing categories, and propose standardized descriptors for the categories from a Norwegian perspective. Expert-based consensus conferences with user involvement. Health professionals, stakeholders and users. Participants were divided into 5 panels, which applied the ICSO-R to describe the habilitation and rehabilitation services provided to children with cerebral palsy and people with Huntington's disease, acquired brain injuries (traumatic brain injuries and stroke) and painful musculoskeletal conditions. Based on the Problem/Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome (PICO) framework, the services were described according to the ICSO-R. Missing categories were identified. The ICSO-R was found to be feasible and applicable for describing a variety of services provided to different target groups in Norway, but the user perspective was lacking, categories were missing, and a need for standardized description of the categories was identified. The present work supports the need to produce an updated version of the ICSO-R and to encourage national and international discussion of the framework. The ICSO-R has the potential to become a tool for the standardized assessment of rehabilitation services. For such purposes, more standardized descriptions of subcategories are necessary.
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
5. Self-Inflicted Lesions in Dermatology: A Management and Therapeutic Approach - A Position Paper From the European Society for Dermatology and Psychiatry.
- Author
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TOMAS-ARAGONES, Lucía, CONSOLI, Silla M., CONSOLI, Sylvie G., POOT, Françoise, TAUBE, Klaus-Michael, LINDER, Dennis, JEMEC, Gregor B. E., SZEPIETOWSKI, Jacek C., John DE KORTE, John, LVOV, Andrey, and GIELER, Uwe
- Subjects
- *
DERMATOLOGY , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *EMPATHY , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *COGNITIVE therapy - Abstract
The classification of self-inflicted skin lesions proposed by the European Society for Dermatology and Psychiatry (ESDaP) group generated questions with regard to specific treatments that could be recommended for such cases. The therapeutic guidelines in the current paper integrate new psychotherapies and psychotropic drugs without forgetting the most important relational characteristics required for dealing with people with these disorders. The management of self-inflicted skin lesions necessitates empathy and a doctor-patient relationship based on trust and confidence. Cognitive behavioural therapy and/or psychodynamic and psychoanalytic psychotherapy (alone, or combined with the careful use of psychotropic drugs) seem to achieve the best results in the most difficult cases. Relatively new therapeutic techniques, such as habit reversal and mentalization-based psychotherapy, may be beneficial in the treatment of skin picking syndromes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Comment to letter to the editor Re: ISPRM Discussion Paper: Proposing Dimensions for an International Classification System for Service Organisation in Health-related Rehabilitation (ICSO-R).
- Author
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Gutenbrunner C
- Subjects
- World Health Organization, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine standards
- Abstract
is missing.
- Published
- 2016
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7. Re: ISPRM discussion paper: Proposing dimensions for an international classification sytem for service organization in health-related rehabilitation.
- Author
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Van de Velde D and Vanderstraeten G
- Subjects
- Humans, Health Services classification, International Agencies classification, World Health Organization organization & administration
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The 100 top-cited classic papers in hand surgery.
- Author
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Joyce CW, Kelly JC, and Carroll SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Hand surgery, Journal Impact Factor, Orthopedics
- Abstract
The number of citations that a published article has received reflects the importance that paper has on that area of practice. In hand surgery, it is unknown which journal articles are cited most frequently. The purpose of this study was to identify and analyze the characteristics of the top 100 papers in the field of hand surgery. The 100 most cited papers were identified in the following journals; the Journal of Hand Surgery (American volume), the Journal of Hand Surgery (European volume), the Journal of Hand Surgery (British and European volume), The Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, Hand Clinics, and the Journal of Plastic Surgery and Hand Surgery. The articles were ranked in order of the number of citations received. These classic 100 papers were analyzed for article type, their journal distribution, as well as geographic and institutional origin.
- Published
- 2014
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9. ISPRM discussion paper: proposing dimensions for an International Classification System for Service Organization in Health-related Rehabilitation.
- Author
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Gutenbrunner C, Bickenbach J, Kiekens C, Meyer T, Skempes D, Nugraha B, Bethge M, and Stucki G
- Subjects
- Humans, Health Services classification, International Agencies classification, World Health Organization organization & administration
- Abstract
Objective: Rehabilitation is 1 of 4 main health strategies. The World Report on Disability identifies deficits in rehabilitation care for people with disabilities as an important barrier to full inclusion in society or to achieve optimal functioning. In order to overcome such deficits, to close gaps in national and/or regional rehabilitation systems, and to develop appropriate rehabilitation services, it is crucial to define uniform criteria and a widely accepted language to describe and classify rehabilitation services. The aim of this paper was therefore to develop a list of dimensions and categories to describe the organization of health-related rehabilitation services., Methods: The classification is based on a series of expert workshops including members of the International and European Society of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation., Results: The proposed classification has 2 levels (dimensions and categories). The upper level distinguishes 3 dimensions: the service provider (with 9 categories), the funding of the service (with 3 categories), and the service delivery (8 subcategories). A further specification of the categories in a 3-level classification (including value sets) is needed., Conclusion: This paper is an intermediate step towards development of a classification system with distinct categories and dimensions.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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10. A bibliometric analysis of the 50 most cited papers in cleft lip and palate.
- Author
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Mahon NA and Joyce CW
- Subjects
- Humans, Journalism, Medical, Publishing, Bibliometrics, Cleft Lip, Cleft Palate
- Abstract
Citation analysis is an established bibliometric method which catalogues papers according to the number of times they have been referenced. It is believed that the total number of citations an article receives reflects its importance among its peers. Never before has a bibliometric analysis been performed in the area of Cleft Lip and Palate. Our citation analysis creates a comprehensive list of the 50 most influential papers in this field. Journals specializing in Cleft Palate, Craniofacial, Plastic Surgery, Maxillofacial Surgery, Aesthetics and Radiology were searched to establish which articles most enriched the specialty over the past 70 years. The results show an interesting collection of papers which reveal developing trends in surgical techniques. These landmark papers mould and influence management and decision-making today.
- Published
- 2015
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11. A Critical Review of Papers from Clinical Cancer Research.
- Author
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Skovlund, Eva
- Subjects
CANCER research ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
A review of 75 original articles from clinical cancer research in Norway is presented. Articles published in 1993 and with at least one Norwegian author were included in the review. Sixty papers were observational, whereas 15 were experimental. Of the observational studies 44 were retrospective. Most of the papers concerned prognostic factors. Prior hypotheses were explicitly defined in 16 papers only, and less than half of the articles described inclusion and exclusion criteria. Sample size calculations were performed in four papers only. The choice of statistical method was considered to be suitable in 22 of the 58 articles presenting statistical inferences. Problems related to multiple significance testing were rarely addressed, although the median number of p-values reported was as high as 8. Confidence intervals for main findings were presented in 14 papers. For proper planning of studies, as well as for analysis and interpretation of study results, statistical advice is indeed required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Definition of Sensitive Skin: An Expert Position Paper from the Special Interest Group on Sensitive Skin of the International Forum for the Study of Itch.
- Author
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MISERY, Laurent, STÄNDER, Sonja, SZEPIETOWSKI, Jacek C., REICH, Adam, WALLENGREN, Joanna, EVERS, Andrea W. M., TAKAMORI, Kenji, BRENAUT, Emilie, LE GAL-IANOTTO, Christelle, FLUHR, Joachim, BERARDESCA, Enzo, and WEISSHAAR, Elke
- Subjects
- *
SKIN diseases , *ITCHING , *SYNDROMES , *ERYTHEMA , *PAIN - Abstract
Sensitive skin is a frequent complaint in the general population, in patients, and among subjects suffering from itch. The International Forum for the Study of Itch (IFSI) decided to initiate a special interest group (SIG) on sensitive skin. Using the Delphi method, sensitive skin was defined as "A syndrome defined by the occurrence of unpleasant sensations (stinging, burning, pain, pruritus, and tingling sensations) in response to stimuli that normally should not provoke such sensations. These unpleasant sensations cannot be explained by lesions attributable to any skin disease. The skin can appear normal or be accompanied by erythema. Sensitive skin can affect all body locations, especially the face". This paper summarizes the background, unresolved aspects of sensitive skin and the process of developing this definition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The efficiency of artificial intelligence methods for finding radiographic features in different endodontic treatments - a systematic review.
- Author
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Ramezanzade, Shaqayeq, Laurentiu, Tudor, Bakhshandah, Azam, Ibragimov, Bulat, Kvist, Thomas, EndoReCo, and Bjørndal, Lars
- Subjects
PERIAPICAL diseases ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,TOOTH roots ,ENDODONTICS ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
To assess the efficiency of AI methods in finding radiographic features in Endodontic treatment considerations. This review was based on the PRISMA guidelines and QUADAS 2 tool. A systematic search was performed of the literature on cases with endodontic treatments, comparing AI algorithms (test) versus conventional image assessments (control) for finding radiographic features. The search was conducted in PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar and the Cochrane library. Inclusion criteria were studies on the use of AI and machine learning in endodontic treatments using dental X-rays. The initial search retrieved 1131 papers, from which 24 were included. High heterogeneity of the materials left out a meta-analysis. The reported subcategories were periapical lesion, vertical root fractures, predicting root/canal morphology, locating minor apical foramen, tooth segmentation and endodontic retreatment prediction. Radiographic features assessed were mostly periapical lesions. The studies mostly considered the decision of 1–3 experts as the reference for training their models. Almost half of the included materials campared their trained neural network model with other methods. More than 58% of studies had some level of bias. AI-based models have shown effectiveness in finding radiographic features in different endodontic treatments. While the reported accuracy measurements seem promising, the papers mostly were biased methodologically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. ISPRM discussion paper: Proposing a conceptual description of health-related rehabilitation services.
- Author
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Meyer T, Gutenbrunner C, Kiekens C, Skempes D, Melvin JL, Schedler K, Imamura M, and Stucki G
- Subjects
- Humans, World Health Organization, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Health Services classification, Rehabilitation classification
- Abstract
There is a need for a comprehensive classification system of health-related rehabilitation services. For conceptual clarity our aim is to provide a health-related conceptual description of the term "rehabilitation service". First, we introduce a common understanding of the term "rehabilitation", based on the current definition in the World Health Organization's World Report on Disability, and a conceptual description of rehabilitation agreed upon by international Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine organizations. From a health perspective, rehabilitation can be regarded as a general health strategy with the aim of enabling persons with health conditions experiencing or likely to experience disability to achieve and maintain optimal functioning. Secondly, we distinguish different meanings of the term "service", that have originated in management literature. It is important to distinguish between micro, meso and macro level uses of the term "service". On a meso level, which is central for the classification of rehabilitation services, 2 aspects of a service, i.e. an offer of an intangible product and an organizational setting in which the offer is upheld, are both essential. The results of this conceptual analysis are used to develop a conceptual description of health-related rehabilitation, which is set out at the end of this paper. This conceptual description may provide the basis of a classification of health-related rehabilitation services, and is open for comments and discussion.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Is conservative management of partial zone II flexor tendon laceration possible? A systematic literature review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Mo, Young Woong, Ryu, Da Hye, Cho, Gyo-Young, and Hong, Jong Won
- Subjects
FLEXOR tendons ,TENDON injuries ,RANDOM effects model ,SCIENCE databases ,WEB databases - Abstract
Background: There is still no consensus on managing zone II level partial flexor tendon lacerations, and the management of zone II partial flexor tendon injuries is controversial. No reliable large cohort studies or metaanalysis papers on partial flexor tendon laceration management are available in PubMed or Embase. Methods: We searched PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Insight, Scopus, and Web of Science databases for primary research articles investigating outcomes of patients with partial flexor tendon injuries. The initial search was limited to human studies that were published from 1970–2021 and indexed as randomized controlled or clinical trials or observational, cross-sectional, or cohort studies. We used statistical package R version 4.1.2 for this meta-analysis. Results: The Standardised mean difference (SMD) of the common effects model was 2.020 (95% CI; 1.583–2.457; P < 0.0001), indicating that the results of conservative treatment without surgical intervention are similar to surgical intervention or better in some articles. The SMD of the random effect model was 7.093 (95% CI; 1.090–13.096; P < 0.0206), indicating the same result. Higgins' I2 value was 97.6%, indicating serious heterogeneity. Conclusions: In this first meta-analysis on flexor zone II conservative treatment, five papers with publication bias were analyzed. It is meaningful to verify the result of conservative treatment statistically. Even though this is a heterogeneous paper, conservative treatment seems to have a lot of benefits for the patient, including offering a fairly solid longterm prognosis with very few complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Questionnaires to Assess Chronic Itch: A Consensus Paper of the Special Interest Group of the International Forum on the Study of Itch.
- Author
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Weisshaar, Elke, Gieler, Uwe, Kupfer, Jörg, Furue, Masutaka, Saeki, Hidehisa, and Yosipovitch, Gil
- Subjects
- *
QUESTIONNAIRES , *ITCHING , *QUALITY of life , *EVALUATION , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *DATA analysis , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Chronic itch affects millions of patients worldwide and has a significant impact on quality of life. The assessment of itch and its associated effects is a significant compo-nent of clinical practice in itch management. Despite itch being a common complaint, there are few studies descri-bing the use of structured questionnaires for evaluation and measurement of itch and its sensory and affective dimensions. The International Society of the Study of Itch (IFSI) has recently provided invaluable data on the use of visual analogue scales as an assessment tool for itch. However, it is clear that additional tools are needed to better assess the different dimensions of chronic itch and better tailor management. With this goal in mind, a Special Interest Group was initiated by members of IFSI to determine which of the various psychometric properties of itch questionnaires offer the greatest uti-lity in the evaluation of chronic itch. This first consen-sus paper addresses what domains and structure of itch questionnaires need to be implemented to better assess chronic itch and guide therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Position paper: Breast cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment in Denmark.
- Author
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Christiansen, Peer, Vejborg, Ilse, Kroman, Niels, Holten, Iben, Garne, Jens Peter, Vedsted, Peter, Møller, Susanne, and Lynge, Elsebeth
- Subjects
- *
BREAST tumor diagnosis , *BREAST tumor treatment , *OPERATIVE surgery , *EARLY detection of cancer , *MAMMOGRAMS , *BREAST tumors , *QUALITY assurance , *SURVIVAL , *TUMOR classification - Abstract
Background. During the last decades the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of breast cancer have changed and improved in Denmark. The first mammography screening programme started in 1991. However, for many years only about 20% of Danish women aged 50-69 were offered screening. The national roll-out of screening took place in 2008-2010. Material and methods. Based on published Danish data, this overview describes the status of diagnosis and treatment, and the screening programme. For further evaluating the potential overdiagnosis and overtreatment, additional Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group (DBCG) data are included. Results and conclusion. Using incidence-based mortality method, reduction in breast cancer mortality was estimated to be 25% in the target group of women after 10 years of screening in Copenhagen; an outcome comparable to that of randomised controlled trials. A recent Danish study has indicated overdiagnosis to be around 4%. Others have estimated overdiagnosis to be 33%. National DBCG data showed that the rude breast cancer incidence increased during the period 1990-2011 from 126 to 206 per 100 000. The incidence was almost constant for women younger than 50 years. In regions not offering screening, the incidence increased with 3% per year for women aged 50-69 years with similar trends for small and large tumours. After introduction of screening the increase in the age group 50-69 years was confined to small tumours ≤ 20 mm, and most pronounced for node negative patients. From the 1990s, the use of breast conserving surgery has increased from around 25% to 69% in 2010. Screening has not increased the number of mastectomies. Breast cancer treatment in Denmark is evidence based and in agreement with international recommendations. After the introduction of mammography screening the absolute number of patients with a more advanced stage at diagnosis and the absolute number of patients undergoing mastectomy have decreased. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A position paper on Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine programmes in post-acute settings. Union of European Medical Specialists Section of Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine (in conjunction with the European Society of Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine).
- Author
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Ward A, Gutenbrunner C, Giustini A, Delarque A, Fialka-Moser V, Kiekens C, Berteanu M, and Christodoulou N
- Subjects
- Delivery of Health Care economics, Europe, Hospitalization, Humans, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Societies, Medical, Specialization, Activities of Daily Living, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Health Services economics, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine economics, Standard of Care economics
- Abstract
Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine (PRM) programmes in post-acute settings cover interventions for the rehabilitation of people with a variety of disabling health conditions. The setting of the intervention is more important than the timing and these programmes can be carried out in a variety of facilities. This paper describes the role of PRM services and of PRM specialists in delivering rehabilitation programmes to people, who have initially been admitted to hospital. The emphasis is on improving patients' activities and addressing participation issues. PRM programmes in post-acute settings provide a range of treatments and have a major influence in the long-term on the pace and extent of return of function and recovery from ill-health. This paper will define the meaning of post-acute settings and will describe the patient's journey through the post-acute setting. In particular, it addresses the standards of care across Europe that patients should expect. This paper also examines the general principles of funding such programmes within the context of different health care systems across Europe. Coordinated care improves outcomes and economic profiles for both payers and providers of services. This paper describes the value of PRM interventions and PRM specialist-led teams in promoting better outcomes for people with disabilities with complex needs.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS) section of Physical & Rehabilitation Medicine: a position paper on physical and rehabilitation medicine in acute settings.
- Author
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Ward AB, Gutenbrunner C, Damjan H, Giustini A, and Delarque A
- Subjects
- Acute Disease rehabilitation, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Emergency Service, Hospital, European Union, Humans, Occupational Therapy organization & administration, Occupational Therapy standards, Patient Admission, Patient Transfer, Physical Therapy Specialty organization & administration, Physical Therapy Specialty standards, Rehabilitation Centers organization & administration, Rehabilitation Centers standards, Workforce, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine organization & administration, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine standards, Rehabilitation organization & administration, Rehabilitation standards
- Abstract
Physical and rehabilitation medicine (PRM) specialists have an important role in the clinical care of patients during the acute phase of a disabling health condition. This phase is defined as once definitive care or resuscitation has taken place and a patient's need to stay in hospital as an inpatient is primarily for PRM services for rehabilitation. This paper describes 4 options for the delivery of services for people, who continue to require to be inpatients and who will benefit from PRM interventions. These are described, along with their clear benefits during the acute phase of a health condition. The first 2 models are the most effective in making best use of the acute facilities and PRM services. The benefits of dedicated PRM beds appear to outweigh those of the other options and may be cheaper, although no cost-effectiveness studies comparing the first 2 options have yet been undertaken. Prospective trials are required to show this benefit, and a number of examples need to be set up to pilot this in order to provide realistic cost-effectiveness data.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The practice of physical and rehabilitation medicine in sub-Saharan Africa and Antarctica: a white paper or a black mark?
- Author
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Haig AJ, Im J, Adewole D, Nelson V, and Krabak B
- Subjects
- Adult, Africa South of the Sahara, Child, Developing Countries, Disabled Children rehabilitation, Disabled Persons rehabilitation, Health Policy, Humans, World Health Organization, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine education, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine organization & administration, Rehabilitation education, Rehabilitation organization & administration
- Abstract
Introduction: The medical specialty of physical and rehabilitation medicine has had a proven impact on people with disabilities and on healthcare systems. Documents such as the White Book on Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine in Europe have been important in defining the scope of practice within various regions. However, in some regions the practice has not been well defined, Objective: To explore the practice of physical and rehabilitation medicine in Sub-Saharan Africa and Antarctica., Methods: Medline searches, membership data searches, fax survey of medical schools, internet searches, and interviews with experts., Results: The continents are dissimilar in terms of climate and government. However, both Antarctica and Sub-Saharan Africa have no physical and rehabilitation medicine training programs, no professional organizations, no specialty board requirements, and no practising physicians in the field. Since there are no known disabled children on Antarctica and adults are air-lifted to world-class healthcare, the consequences of this deficit are minimal there. However, the 788,000,000 permanent residents of Sub-Saharan Africa, including approximately 78 million people with disabilities, are left unserved., Conclusion: Antarctica is doing fine, but Africa is in a crisis. Local medical schools, hospitals doctors, and people with disabilities, along with foreign volunteers, aid groups, and policymakers can have an impact on the crisis. However, governments, specifically national ministries of health, are ultimately responsible for the health and well-being of their citizens.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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21. Self-Inflicted Lesions in Dermatology: Terminology and Classification -- A Position Paper from the European Society for Dermatology and Psychiatry (ESDaP).
- Author
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GIELER, Uwe, CONSOLI, Sylvie G., TOMAS-ARAGONES, Lucía, LINDER, Dennis M., JEMEC, Gregor B. E., POOT, Françoise, SZEPIETOWSKI, Jacek C., DE KORTE, John, TAUBE, Klaus-Michael, LVOV, Andrey, and CONSOLI, Silla M.
- Subjects
- *
SELF-mutilation , *SKIN injuries , *SKIN inflammation , *COMPULSIVE skin picking , *IMPULSE control disorders , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder - Abstract
The terminology, classification, diagnosis and treatment of self-inflicted dermatological lesions are subjects of open debate. The present study is the result of various meetings of a task force of dermatologists, psychiatrists and psychologists, all active in the field of psychodermatology, aimed at clarifying the terminology related to these disorders. A flow chart and glossary of terms and definitions are presented to facilitate the classification and management of self-inflicted skin lesions. Several terms are critically discussed, including: malingering; factitious disorders; Miinchausen's syndrome; simulation; pathomimicry; skin picking syndrome and related skin damaging disorders; compulsive and impulsive skin picking; impulse control disorders; obsessive compulsive spectrum disorders; trichotillomania; dermatitis artefacta; factitial dermatitis; acne excoriée; and neurotic and psychogenic excoriations. Self-inflicted skin lesions are often correlated with mental disorders and/or pathological behaviours, thus it is important for dermatologists to become as familiar as possible with the psychiatric and psychological aspects underlying these lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Histamine and Cytokine Therapy: Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Swedish Oncology Society, Stockholm, 1997.
- Author
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Hellstrand, Kristoffer, Hermodsson, Svante, Naredi, Peter, Mellqvist, Ulf-Henrik, and Brune, Mats
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *PHYSICIANS , *ONCOLOGY conferences - Abstract
Information about several papers discussed at the annual meeting of the Swedish Oncology Society in Stockholm, Sweden is presented. Topics include studies of histamine and natural killer cells-activating cytokines, histamine and cytokines in experimental neoplasia and immunotherapy with histamine in human cancer.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Bacteriological studies on endodontic paper points.
- Author
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Ørstavik, Dag and Möller, Bengt
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Clinical Classification of Itch: a Position Paper of the International Forum for the Study of Itch.
- Author
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Ständer, Sonja, Weisshaar, Elke, Mettang, Thomas, Szepietowski, Jacek C., Carstens, Earl, Ikoma, Akihiko, Bergasa, Nora V., Gieler, Uwe, Misery, Laurent, Wallengren, Joanna, Darsow, Ulf, Streit, Markus, Metze, Dieter, Luger, Thomas A., Greaves, Malcolm W., Schmelz, Martin, Yosipovitch, Gil, and Bernhard, Jeffrey D.
- Subjects
- *
ITCHING , *SKIN diseases , *SYMPTOMS , *MEDICAL care , *CUTANEOUS manifestations of general diseases - Abstract
Chronic itch is a common and distressing symptom that arises from a variety of skin conditions and systemic diseases. Despite this, there is no clinically based classification of pruritic diseases to assist in the diagnosis and cost-effective medical care of patients with pruritus. The proposed classification focuses on clinical signs and distinguishes between diseases with and without primary or secondary skin lesions. Three groups of conditions are proposed: pruritus on diseased (inflamed) skin (group I), pruritus on non-diseased (non-inflamed) skin (group II), and pruritus presenting with severe chronic secondary scratch lesions, such as prurigo nodularis (group lII). The next part classifies the underlying diseases according to different categories: dermatological diseases, systemic diseases including diseases of pregnancy and drug-induced pruritus, neurological and psychiatric diseases. In some patients more than one cause may account for pruritus (category "mixed") while in others no underlying disease can be identified (category "others"). This is the first version of a clinical classification worked out by the members of the international Forum for the Study of itch. it is intended to serve as a diagnostic route for better evaluation of patients with chronic pruritus and aims to improve patients' care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Uncemented science at its best!: What makes a paper successful, meaning in this case much cited?
- Author
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Lübbeke, Anne
- Subjects
- *
FRACTURE fixation , *SERIAL publications , *SURVIVAL , *TOTAL hip replacement , *CITATION analysis - Abstract
The article offers information on the influence of implant fixation on prosthesis longevity evaluated in the interplay with the individual prosthesis brands. It mentions the risk of stem revision for periprosthetic fracture after surgery. It mentions that periprosthetic fracture as more common cause of revision after uncemented than after cemented fixation.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Original Papers.
- Author
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Guez, Michel
- Subjects
- *
CHRONIC pain , *NECK pain , *WHIPLASH injuries , *INFLAMMATION , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Chronic neck pain, a common cause of disability, seems to be the result of several interacting mechanisms. In addition to degenerative and inflammatory changes and trauma, psychological and psychosocial factors are also involved. One common type of trauma associated with chronic neck pain is whiplash injury; this sometimes results in whip-lash-associated disorder (WAD), a controversial condition with largely unknown pathogenetic mechanisms. We studied the prevalence of chronic neck pain of traumatic and non-traumatic origin and compared the prevalence of, sociodemographic data, self-perceived health, workload and chronic lowback pain in these groups. In a ready-made questionnaire (MONICA study), we added questions about cervical spine and low-back complaints. 6,000 (72%) completed a self-administered questionnaire. 43% reported neck pain: 48% of women and 38% of men. Women of working age had more neck pain than retired women, a phenomenon not seen in men. 19% of the studied population suffered from chronic neck pain and it was more frequent in women. A history of neck trauma was common in those with chronic neck pain. Those with a history of neck trauma perceived their health worse and were more often on sick-leave. About 50% of those with traumatic and non-traumatic chronic neck pain also had chronic low-back pain. We assessed the subjective and objective neuropsychological functioning in 42 patients with chronic neck pain, 21 with a whiplash trauma, and 21 without previous neck trauma. Despite cognitive complaints, the WAD patients had normal neuropsychological functioning, but the WAD group especially had deviant MMPI results—indicating impaired coping ability and somatization.WAD patients had no alterations in cerebral blood-flow pattern, as measured by rCBF-SPECT and SPM analysis, compared to healthy controls. This contrasts with the non-traumatic group with chronic neck pain, which showed marked blood-flow changes. The blood-flow changes in the non-trau-matic group were similar to those described earlier in pain patients but— remarkably enough—were different from those in the WAD group. Chronic neck pain of whiplash and non-traumatic origin appears to be unique in some respects. A better understanding of the underlying pathological mechanisms is a prerequisite for prevention of the development of such chronic pain syndromes and for improvement of the treatment of patients with severe symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Do investments in cancer registry databases and tools bring added value? NORDCAN as an example.
- Author
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Storm, Hans Henrik, Larønningen, Siri, and Bray, Freddie
- Subjects
REPORTING of diseases ,INVESTMENTS ,DATABASES ,HEALTH ,TUMORS - Abstract
In the 1990s, the large-scale collaboration Kreftbildet i Norden (KIN) drew attention to the need for timely cancer statistics for cancer control planning in the Nordic countries. Supported by the Nordic Cancer Union (NCU), a web-based version of NORDCAN was continually developed by the Association of Nordic Cancer Registries (ANCR) from 2003, with website support and hosting by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Despite empirical evidence of its global reach, the question of whether recurrent investment in NORDCAN brings added value was raised; we sought to formally assess this. Scientific value was determined by extracting publications citing NORDCAN from PubMed. We compared the funds allocated to the KIN project and later Nordic studies on cancer predictions and survival, with those allocated to NORDCAN. 96 publications in 43 journals were retrieved. Two publication peaks, in 2010 and in 2016 relate to Nordic cancer survival and Danish age care projects, respectively. Papers citing NORDCAN increased substantially from 4 published in 2017 to the 24 papers in 2022. The integration of survival and prediction projects into NORDCAN reduced the costs of investment to one-quarter of the those required in earlier years, in real terms. User statistics and scientific output clearly points to NORDCAN bringing added value given resources expended, even with the additional costs imposed to ensure GDPR compliance. Research funding indicates that the databases and interactive tools are critical as both research and education resources. Nonetheless, a sustainable funding model is needed if NORDCAN is to continue to fulfill its utility in cancer control, health care planning and cancer research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Comments to the paper: Influence of mammography screening on use of mastectomies in Denmark.
- Author
-
Christiansen, Peer, Vejborg, Ilse, Kroman, Niels, Holten, Iben, Garne, Jens Peter, Vedsted, Peter, Møller, Susanne, and Lynge, Elsebeth
- Subjects
- *
EARLY detection of cancer , *MAMMOGRAMS , *BREAST tumors , *MASTECTOMY , *RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
A letter to the editor in response to the article "Influence of mammography screening on use of mastectomies in Denmark" by K. Jørgensen and others in a 2015 issue is presented.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The rise of registry-based research: a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
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Romanini, Emilio, Schettini, Irene, Torre, Marina, Venosa, Michele, Tarantino, Alessio, Calvisi, Vittorio, and Zanoli, Gustavo
- Subjects
REPORTING of diseases ,RESEARCH methodology ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,ARTHROPLASTY ,QUANTITATIVE research ,MEDICAL care research ,ORTHOPEDICS ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background and purpose — The main purpose of arthroplasty registries is to collect information on patients, techniques, and devices to monitor and improve the outcome of the specific procedure. This study analyses the role played by registries in the orthopedic research community and describes publication trends, characteristics, and patterns of this field of research. Patients and methods — A descriptive-bibliometric review was conducted. Scopus was the database used for the research. All articles published from 1991 to December 2020 containing keywords related to registries and arthroplasty were considered. In particular, the following dimensions were analyzed in detail: (i) papers/year; (ii) journals; (iii) countries; (iv) research growth rate; (v) collaboration among countries. VOSviewer software was used to perform the bibliometric analysis. Finally, the 50 most cited papers of the last 10 years were briefly analyzed. Results — 3,933 articles were identified. There has been growing interest in the topic since 2010. Acta Orthopaedica ranked first for the number of articles published. The country with the largest number of articles citing registries was the United States, followed by the United Kingdom and Sweden. The relative number of articles per 100,000 inhabitants is 0.60 for Europe and 0.38 for the United States. The literature in this research area has an average yearly growth rate of 28%. Interpretation — The publication rate in the field of arthroplasty registries is constantly growing with a noteworthy impact in the evolution of this research and clinical area. The growth rate is significantly higher than that of arthroplasty literature (28% vs. 10%) and the collaboration among countries is strong and increasing with time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Paper III. Visual analog scales for interpretation of back and leg pain intensity in patients operated for degenerative lumbar spine disorders.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH outcome assessment , *LUMBAR vertebrae surgery - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the research paper "Visual analog scales for interpretation of back and leg pain intensity in patients operated for degenerative lumbar spine disorders," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
31. Fluoride exchange by glass-ionomer dental cements and its clinical effects: a review.
- Author
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Nicholson, John W., Sidhu, Sharanbir K., and Czarnecka, Beata
- Subjects
DENTAL cements ,TOOTHPASTE ,FLUORIDE varnishes ,REMINERALIZATION (Teeth) ,FLUORIDES ,ANTI-infective agents - Abstract
The topic of fluoride release and uptake by glass-ionomer (glass polyalkenoate) dental cements is reviewed. The study was based on a literature search carried out using PubMed. The main key words used were glass-ionomer and fluoride, and further refinements were made by adding the keywords anti-microbial, anti-caries and remineralization. Papers were selected from the initial search, which concentrated on fundamental aspects of fluoride release, including kinetics and the influence of the cement composition, and resulting clinical performance against caries. Other relevant papers were cited where they added useful and relevant data. From these published papers, it was possible to explain the detailed mechanism of fluoride release by glass-ionomer cements and also its uptake. Fluoride release has been shown to be a two-step process. In neutral solutions, the steps can be divided into early wash-out and long-term diffusion. In acid conditions, the early wash-out remains, though with greater amounts of fluoride released, and the long-term release becomes one of slow dissolution. The effect of fluoride on the viability of oral micro-organisms has been described, and glass-ionomers have been shown to release sufficient fluoride to reduce the size and viability of adjacent populations of oral bacteria. The effect of low levels of fluoride on the remineralization of tooth tissue has been considered. Levels needed to increase remineralization are much lower than those needed to adversely affect oral bacteria, from which we conclude that glass-ionomers release sufficient fluoride to promote remineralization. Despite this, there remains uncertainty about their overall contribution to sound oral health, given the widespread use of other sources of fluoride, such as toothpastes. Glass-ionomer cements of both types (conventional and resin-modified) release fluoride for considerable periods of time after setting. They release sufficient fluoride to inhibit the growth of oral bacteria, and this level is more than sufficient to promote remineralization of tooth mineral. This shows that these materials provide sufficient fluoride to inhibit caries though, with the widespread use of fluoridated products such as toothpaste, this may have only limited benefit on the oral health of patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Paper vs On-line Publication -- Taking Advantage of Both!
- Author
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Vahlquist, Anders
- Subjects
- *
PUBLISHING , *ELECTRONIC publications - Abstract
The author reflects on the publishing success of the journal "Acta Dermato-Venereologica" due to its paper and online publications.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. EVIDENCE-BASED REHABILITATION THERAPY FOLLOWING SURGERY FOR (PERI-)ARTICULAR FRACTURES: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW.
- Author
-
SCHNACKERS, Marlous L. A. P., VAN HORN, Yvette Y., MEYS, Guido H. H., BRINK, Peter R. G., SMEETS, Rob J. E. M., and SEELEN, Henk A. M.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Colophonium-related Allergic Contact Dermatitis Caused by Medical Adhesive Tape Used to Prevent Skin Lesions in Soldiers.
- Author
-
HAMNERIUS, Nils, DAHLIN, Jakob, BRUZE, Magnus, NILSSON, Kristina, SUKAKUL, Thanisorn, and SVEDMAN, Cecilia
- Subjects
ADHESIVE tape ,CONTACT dermatitis ,MEDICAL equipment ,ANALYTICAL chemistry ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Medical adhesive tapes are commonly recommended for the prevention of friction blisters during hiking and military marches. The aim of this paper is to report on the results of investigations into an outbreak of taperelated foot dermatitis in 26 military conscripts following continuous use of medical adhesive tapes for several days during a field exercise. Patch tests were performed using baseline series and aimed testing was performed with colophonium-related substances and different medical adhesive tapes. Contact allergy to the adhesive tapes used was found in 20 (77%) subjects, and contact allergy to colophonium in 16 (61%). Chemical analysis detected colophonium-related substances in the culprit tapes. Compared with consecutive dermatitis patients investigated at our Department of Occupational and Environmental Dermatology in the previous 10 years, conscripts with colophonium allergy had increased odds ratios for concomitant contact allergy to phenol formaldehyde resins and fragrance substances including hydroperoxides of limonene and linalool. The results show that prolonged use of medical adhesive tapes on intact skin carries a high risk for allergic contact dermatitis. Prior to their introduction on the market, medical devices should be assessed for possible side-effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Paper VI. SF-36 profiles before and one year after spinal stenosis surgery -- a prospective comparison of two techniques in two nations.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH outcome assessment , *SPINAL surgery - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the research "SF-36 profiles before and one year after spinal stenosis surgery — a prospective comparison of two techniques in two nations," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
36. Paper V. SF-36 for outcomes assessment of spine surgery.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH outcome assessment , *SPINAL surgery - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the research "SF-36 for outcomes assessment of spine surgery," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
37. Paper IV. SF-36 scores in degenerative lumbar spine disorders: analysis of prospective data from 451 patients.
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH outcome assessment , *LUMBAR vertebrae surgery - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the research "SF-36 scores in degenerative lumbar spine disorders: analysis of prospective data from 451 patients," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
38. Paper II. Reliability of the prospective data collection protocol of the Swedish Spine Register: test-retest analysis of 119 patients.
- Subjects
- *
LUMBAR vertebrae surgery , *ORTHOPEDICS - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the study "Reliability of the prospective data collection protocol of the Swedish Spine Register: test-retest analysis of 119 patients," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
39. Psychosocial determinants of adherence with oral anticancer treatment: 'we don't need no education'.
- Author
-
Kaptein, Adrian A., Schoones, Jan W., van der Meer, Pim B., Matsuda, Ayako, Murray, Michael, Heimans, Lotte, and Kroep, Judith R.
- Subjects
ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,HEALTH attitudes ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,ORAL drug administration ,PATIENT compliance ,PSYCHOLOGY of the sick ,TUMORS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,ATTITUDES toward illness - Abstract
Given the potentially fatal consequences of inadequate adherence with oral anticancer treatment in persons with cancer, understanding the determinants of adherence is vital. This paper aims at identifying psychosocial determinants of adherence to oral anticancer treatment. We reviewed the literature on psychosocial determinants of adherence with oral anticancer treatment, based on published literature in English, from 2015 to present. Literature searches were performed in PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane library, Emcare, and PsychINFO, with 'cancer', 'medication adherence', 'psychology', and 'oral anticancer treatment' as search terms. The obtained 608 papers were screened by two independent reviewers. In the 25 studies identified, illness perceptions, medication beliefs, health beliefs, and depression were found to be the major psychosocial determinants of adherence to oral anticancer treatment; sociodemographic and clinical characteristics were found to be of no major importance. The quality of the identified studies as assessed by two independent reviewers was found to be acceptable overall. The majority of papers were from North America and focused on patients with breast cancer; sample size varied from 13 to 1371; adherence was assessed with questionnaires derived from various theoretical models, pill counts and electronic pharmacy records; illness perceptions reflecting adaptive coping, and medication beliefs reflecting high necessity and low concerns were found to be associated with adherence. Psychosocial concepts are major determinants of adherence with oral anticancer treatment. 'Beliefs about medicines' and 'illness perceptions' in particular determine adherence with this treatment. Studies aiming at impacting adherence would benefit from interventions with a solid basis in behavioral theory in order to help health care providers explore and address illness perceptions and medication beliefs. Pre-consultation screening of adherence behavior may be a helpful supportive approach to improve adherence. Blaming the victim ('patients should be educated about the importance of adherence') is better replaced by encouraging health professionals to identify and address maladaptive psychosocial determinants of adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Shear bond strength of resin bonded zirconia and lithium disilicate – effect of surface treatment of ceramics and dentin.
- Author
-
Aker Sagen, Mina, Vos, Linda, Dahl, Jon E., and Rønold, Hans J.
- Subjects
BOND strengths ,SURFACE preparation ,SHEAR strength ,DENTIN ,LITHIUM - Abstract
Objectives:The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of ceramic surface pretreatment, effect of resin cement and dentin surface roughness on shear bond strength. Methodology: Zirconia rods (n = 140) were randomly assigned to air born particle abrasion with aluminum oxide (Al
2 O3 ) or hot etching with potassium hydrogen difluoride (KHF2 ). Lithium disilicate rods (LDS; n = 50) etched with hydrofluoric acid served as reference material. In Part 1 of the study, ceramic rods were cemented to bovine dentin using 5 dual-polymerizing resin cements (Variolink Esthetic, Multilink Automix (Ivoclar Vivadent), Duo-Link (BISCO Dental), Panavia F2.0 (Kuraray Dental), RelyX Unicem (3 M)). Shear bond strength was tested and fracture morphology determined. In Part 2 of the study, test groups with the highest frequency of adhesive fractures between cement and dentin were selected for further bond strength testing with different surface roughness of dentin; ground with P1200 or P80 silicon carbide paper. Dentin samples were fractured vertically to the cemented surface and the adherence between cement and dentin was studied. Results: The results of Part 1 showed that hot etching of zirconia significantly improved bond strength to Duo-Link cement. In Part 2, RelyX Unicem showed significantly higher bond strength to P1200 compared to P80 ground dentin. For Variolink Esthetic, bond strengths to P1200 and P80 ground dentin were similar. Adhesive fracture between cement and dentin dominated. Conclusions: A smooth dentin surface (P1200) improved bond strength to RelyX Unicem. Surface roughness was not important for Variolink Esthetic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Smartphone Teledermoscopy Referrals: A Novel Process for Improved Triage of Skin Cancer Patients.
- Author
-
BÖRVE, Alexander, DAHLÉN GYLLENCREUTZ, Johan, TERSTAPPEN, Karin, JOHANSSON BACKMAN, Eva, ALDEN-BRATT, Anette, DANIELSSON, Markus, GILLSTEDT, Martin, SANDBERG, Carin, and PAOLI, John
- Subjects
TELEMEDICINE ,DERMATOLOGY ,MOBILE apps ,SMARTPHONES ,ONCOLOGIC surgery ,MELANOMA ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,BASAL cell carcinoma - Abstract
In this open, controlled, multicentre and prospective observational study, smartphone teledermoscopy referrals were sent from 20 primary healthcare centres to 2 dermatology departments for triage of skin lesions of concern using a smartphone application and a compatible digital dermoscope. The outcome for 816 patients referred via smartphone teledermoscopy was compared with 746 patients referred via the traditional paper-based system. When surgical treatment was required, the waiting time was significantly shorter using teledermoscopy for patients with melanoma, melanoma in situ, squamous cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma in situ and basal cell carcinoma. Triage decisions were also more reliable with teledermoscopy and over 40% of the teledermoscopy patients could potentially have avoided face-to-face visits. Only 4 teledermoscopy referrals (0.4%) had to be excluded due to poor image quality. Smartphone teledermoscopy referrals allow for faster and more efficient management of patients with skin cancer as compared to traditional paper referrals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The statistical reporting quality of articles published in 2010 in five dental journals.
- Author
-
Vähänikkilä, Hannu, Tjäderhane, Leo, and Nieminen, Pentti
- Subjects
DENTAL research ,RESEARCH methodology ,DENTAL periodicals ,STATISTICS ,MEDICAL research ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Objectives. Statistical methods play an important role in medical and dental research. In earlier studies it has been observed that current use of methods and reporting of statistics are responsible for some of the errors in the interpretation of results. The aim of this study was to investigate the quality of statistical reporting in dental research articles. Methods. A total of 200 articles published in 2010 were analysed covering five dental journals: Journal of Dental Research, Caries Research, Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, Journal of Dentistry and Acta Odontologica Scandinavica. Each paper underwent careful scrutiny for the use of statistical methods and reporting. A paper with at least one poor reporting item has been classified as 'problems with reporting statistics' and a paper without any poor reporting item as 'acceptable'. Results. The investigation showed that 18 (9%) papers were acceptable and 182 (91%) papers contained at least one poor reporting item. Conclusions. The proportion of at least one poor reporting item in this survey was high (91%). The authors of dental journals should be encouraged to improve the statistical section of their research articles and to present the results in such a way that it is in line with the policy and presentation of the leading dental journals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Smartphone Teledermoscopy Referrals: Comment on the paper by Börve et al.
- Author
-
Leitch, Claire, Jones, Ruth, and Holme, Stephen A.
- Subjects
MEDICAL referrals ,TELEMEDICINE ,SKIN cancer ,CANCER treatment - Abstract
A letter to the editor in response to the article "Smartphone teledermoscopy referrals: a novel process for improved triage of skin cancer patients," by A. Börve and colleagues in the 2015 issue is presented.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Histamine and Cytokine Therapy: Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Swedish Oncology Society, Stockholm, 1997.
- Author
-
Kristoffer Hellstrand, Svante Hermodsson, Peter Naredi, Ulf-Henrik Mellqvist, Mats Brune
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Paper I. Lessons learned searching for a HRQoL instrument to assess the results of treatment in persons with lumbar disorders.
- Subjects
- *
LUMBAR vertebrae surgery , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Presents the abstract of the research "Lessons learned searching for a HRQoL instrument to assess the results of treatment in persons with lumbar disorders," which was published in the June 3, 2005 issue of the periodical "Acta Orthopaedica."
- Published
- 2005
46. Top 100 cited systematic reviews and meta-analyses in dentistry.
- Author
-
Gogos, Christos, Kodonas, Konstantinos, Fardi, Anastasia, and Economides, Nikolaos
- Subjects
DENTAL implants ,META-analysis ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,DENTISTRY ,NEWSLETTERS ,PERIODICAL articles ,PERIODONTICS ,IMPACT factor (Citation analysis) - Abstract
Objective: The purpose of the present study was to identify the 100 top cited systematic reviews and meta-analyses on dental journals so as to gain insight into the influential publications in dentistry.Material and methods: The Web of Science was used to comprehensively identify the 100 most cited papers without year and language restriction. Specific parameters regarding the title, journal, publication year, authors, country of origin, institution and university, collaborations, keyword analysis and field of study of each manuscript were retrieved.Results: The citations ranged from 642 to 140. The most productive years were 2008 and 2009. The majority of top cited papers were published in Clinical Oral Implants Research and Journal of Clinical Periodontology. The leading countries were United States, followed by Switzerland. The University of Zurich was the most productive institution with 8 articles. Major topics of interest in the top 100 most-cited papers were dental implants and periodontology. The most frequently occurring keywords were systematic review, dental implants and meta-analyses.Conclusions: Systematic reviews published in high impact factor Dental journals focused on implantology and periodontology had the highest citation rates. Obviously, the top cited list is dynamic, as scientific interests and research tendencies evolve over the years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress.
- Author
-
Ahlholm, Pekka, Staxrud, Frode, Sipilä, Kirsi, and Vallittu, Pekka
- Subjects
BOND strengths ,DEBONDING ,THERMOCYCLING ,SHEAR strength ,WATER storage - Abstract
The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate the effect of different adhesion primers on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composite and short-term hydrolytic stability of the repair interface before and after accelerated aging. In addition, direction of debonding stress was examined. Bulk-fill substrates were aged in water for 14 days at 37 °C. Smooth resin composite surfaces were prepared for the substrates with a superfine grinding paper (FEPA #500, #1200, #2000). Test specimens were produced by attaching bulk-fill composite to the substrate surfaces, using three different primer/bonding systems. Specimens were aged 24 h at 37 °C in water, or thermal cycled (5–55 °C/5,000 cycles). Subsequently, shear bond strength and micro-tensile bond strength were evaluated. In total there were 60 specimens for the shear bond strength and 60 specimens for the micro-tensile bond strength measurements (30 stored in water 24 h, 30 thermal cycled, n = 10 in each primer/bonding mode). The mean shear bond strength was 9.1–13.1 MPa after 24 h water storage and 6.9–10.7 MPa after thermal cycling. The mean micro-tensile bond strength was 28.7–45.8 MPa after 24 h water storage and 22.7–37.9 MPa after thermal cycling. The Ceramic primer (silane containing) seems to perform better than the three-step etch and rinse adhesive or the Composite primer. Shear-type stress had an adverse effect on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. COMMENT ON LETTER TO THE EDITOR "RE: ISPRM DISCUSSION PAPER: PROPOSING DIMENSIONS FOR AN INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM FOR SERVICE ORGANISATION IN HEALTH-RELATED REHABILITATION (ICSO-R).
- Author
-
Gutenbrunner, Christoph
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. WHAT IS COVERED BY “CANCER REHABILITATION” IN PUBMED? A REVIEW OF RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS 1990-2011.
- Author
-
Gudbergsson, Sævar B., Dahl, Alv A., Loge, Jon Håvard, Thorsen, Lene, Oldervoll, Line, and Grov, Ellen K.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Summary of Papers l-lll.
- Author
-
Young, Sven
- Subjects
HIV infection complications ,POVERTY areas ,DATABASES ,FEMUR injuries ,BONE fractures ,INFECTION ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SURGICAL complications - Abstract
The article presents three abstracts of articles about intramedullary nail operations, including one by S. Young, S. A. Lie, G. Hallan et al. on low infection rates in intramedullary nail operations in 55 low and middle income countries (LMIC), one by S. Young, S. A. Lie, G. Hallan et al. on risk factors for infection after intramedullary nail operations in LMIC and one by S. Young, L. Banza, G. Hallan et al. on complications after intramedullary nailing of femoral fractures in LIMC.
- Published
- 2014
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