8,106 results on '"Gupta, P."'
Search Results
2. Efficacy of hypertonic saline in treatment of corneal edema: A randomized crossover trial.
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Agrawal, Sahil, Gupta, Saloni, Gupta, Noopur, Vanathi, Murugesan, and Tandon, Radhika
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HYPERTONIC saline solutions ,EYE drops ,CROSSOVER trials ,CORNEA ,SALT - Abstract
To determine the efficacy of sodium chloride (NaCl) 5% drops in comparison to 6% ointment and study tear Osmolarity as an objective measure correlating with clinical findings in the treatment of corneal edema. This is a prospective, randomized, interventional, open-label, crossover study of 40 eyes of 40 patients with corneal edema due to Bullous keratopathy and Fuchs endothelial dystrophy. Subjects were divided into 2 groups by simple randomization: group A received NaCl 5% drops and group B received NaCl 6% ointment. Both treatments were administered four times daily for seven days. Subsequently, after a 1-week wash-out period, switch over of treatment was done. Central corneal thickness (CCT) and tear osmolarity were primarily efficacy variables. Baseline parameters were comparable. The median reduction in CCT from baseline (706.7 ± 58.41 μm), at 6 hours with NaCl 5% drops was 23 μm (-27, 74) and that with NaCl6% ointment was 37.5 μm (-7, 85). The reduction in CCT was more with 6% ointment (p = 0.013). The difference in reduction in CCT between two treatments at one week was not statistically significant, although there was a substantial reduction in thickness with each treatment individually. The change in tear osmolarity from the baseline at 2 Hours with both NaCl5% drops and 6% ointment was significant, and it remained so till 6 h. Side-effects such as stickiness, stinginess, blurring, and foreign body sensation were more with 6% eye ointment. Topical NaCl 6% eye ointment in QID dosage is more effective than NaCl 5% drops in the medical management of corneal edema. In patients symptomatically intolerant to ointment, NaCl 5% eye drops may be prescribed as an effective option. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Development of a risk prediction model for postpartum onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus, following gestational diabetes; the lifestyle InterVention in gestational diabetes (LIVING) study.
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Belsti, Yitayeh, Moran, Lisa J., Goldstein, Rebecca, Mousa, Aya, Cooray, Shamil D., Baker, Susanne, Gupta, Yashdeep, Patel, Anushka, Tandon, Nikhil, Ajanthan, Saumiyah, John, Renu, Naheed, Aliya, Chakma, Nantu, Lakshmi, Josyula K., Zoungas, Sophia, Billot, Laurent, Desai, Ankush, Bhatla, Neerja, Prabhakaran, Dorairaj, and Gupta, Ishita
- Abstract
This study aimed to develop a prediction model for identifying a woman with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) at high risk of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) post-birth. Utilising data from 1299 women in the Lifestyle Intervention IN Gestational Diabetes (LIVING) study, two models were developed: one for pregnancy and another for postpartum. Key predictors included glucose test results, medical history, and biometric indicators. Of the initial cohort, 124 women developed T2DM within three years. The study identified seven predictors for the antenatal T2DM risk prediction model and four for the postnatal one. The models demonstrated good to excellent predictive ability, with Area under the ROC Curve (AUC) values of 0.76 (95% CI: 0.72 to 0.80) and 0.85 (95% CI: 0.81 to 0.88) for the antenatal and postnatal models, respectively. Both models underwent rigorous validation, showing minimal optimism in predictive capability. Antenatal model, considering the Youden index optimal cut-off point of 0.096, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were measured as 70.97%, 70.81%, and 70.82%, respectively. For the postnatal model, considering the cut-off point 0.086, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were measured as 81.40%, 75.60%, and 76.10%, respectively. These models are effective for predicting T2DM risk in women with GDM, although external validation is recommended before widespread application. • Developed two models for predicting postpartum T2DM in women with GDM, applicable during and after pregnancy, using a comprehensive South Asian cohort dataset. • Upon internal validation, the models demonstrated high AUC values of 0.76 (antenatal model) and 0.85 (postnatal model). • This marks a significant advancement in clinical practice for identifying post-GDM T2DM risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Modeling of local electrode stresses and pressures in lithium-ion battery packs using three-dimensional homogenization
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Gupta, P. and Gudmundson, P.
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- 2023
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5. Study of oxidation behaviour of Ruthenium thin film after thermal annealing in oxygen environment
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Gupta, Shruti, Sinha, Mangalika, Dhawan, R., Jangir, R., Bose, A., Gupta, P., Swami, M.K., and Modi, Mohammed H
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- 2023
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6. Optimization of IoT-Fog Network Path and fault Tolerance in Fog Computing based Environment
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Sharma, Pankaj and Gupta, P K
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- 2023
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7. Chemical investigation and biological activities of Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin (Blanco) Benth) essential oil
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Srivastava, Shubham, Lal, R.K., Singh, V.R., Rout, P.K., Padalia, R.C., Yadav, Anju Kumari, Bawitlung, Laldingngheti, Bhatt, Divya, Maurya, Anil K., Pal, A., Bawankule, D.U., Mishra, Anand, Gupta, P., and Chanotiya, C.S.
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- 2022
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8. Engineered myovascular tissues for studies of endothelial/satellite cell interactions.
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Broer, Torie, Tsintolas, Nick, Purkey, Karly, Hammond, Stewart, DeLuca, Sophia, Wu, Tianyu, Gupta, Ishika, Khodabukus, Alastair, and Bursac, Nenad
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SATELLITE cells ,SKELETAL muscle ,STEM cells ,MUSCLE cells ,VASCULAR smooth muscle - Abstract
In native skeletal muscle, capillaries reside in close proximity to muscle stem cells (satellite cells, SCs) and regulate SC numbers and quiescence through partially understood mechanisms that are difficult to study in vivo. This challenge could be addressed by the development of a 3-dimensional (3D) in vitro model of vascularized skeletal muscle harboring both a pool of quiescent SCs and a robust network of capillaries. Still, studying interactions between SCs and endothelial cells (ECs) within a tissue-engineered muscle environment has been hampered by the incompatibility of commercially available EC media with skeletal muscle differentiation. In this study, we first optimized co-culture media and cellular ratios to generate highly functional vascularized human skeletal muscle tissues ("myovascular bundles") with contractile properties (∼10 mN/mm
2 ) equaling those of avascular, muscle-only tissues ("myobundles"). Within one week of muscle differentiation, ECs in these tissues formed a dense network of capillaries that co-aligned with muscle fibers and underwent initial lumenization. Incorporating vasculature within myobundles increased the total SC number by 82%, with SC density and quiescent signature being increased proximal (≤20μm) to EC networks. In vivo , at two weeks post-implantation into dorsal window chambers in nude mice, vascularized myobundles exhibited improved calcium handling compared to avascular implants. In summary, we engineered highly functional myovascular tissues that enable studies of the roles of EC-SC crosstalk in human muscle development, physiology, and disease. In native skeletal muscle, intricate relationships between vascular cells and muscle stem cells ("satellite cells") play critical roles in muscle growth and regeneration. Current methods for in vitro engineering of contractile skeletal muscle do not recreate capillary networks present in vivo. Our study for the first time generates in vitro robustly vascularized, highly functional engineered human skeletal muscle tissues. Within these tissues, satellite cells are more abundant and, similar to in vivo , they are more dense and less proliferative proximal to endothelial cells. Upon implantation in mice, vascularized engineered muscles show improved calcium handling compared to muscle-only implants. We expect that this versatile in vitro system will enable studies of muscle-vasculature crosstalk in human development and disease. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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9. Deep learning hybrid models with multivariate variational mode decomposition for estimating daily solar radiation.
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Band, Shahab S., Qasem, Sultan Noman, Ameri, Rasoul, Pai, Hao-Ting, Gupta, Brij B., Mehdizadeh, Saeid, and Mosavi, Amir
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STANDARD deviations ,SOLAR radiation ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,MACHINE learning ,SOLAR energy - Abstract
Solar energy is one of the renewable and clean energy sources. Accurate solar radiation (SR) estimates are therefore needed in solar energy applications. Firstly, two deep learning models, including gated recurrent unit (GRU) and long short-term memory (LSTM), were developed in this study. Next, a data pre-processing technique named multivariate variational mode decomposition (MVMD) was used to construct the MVMD-GRU and MVMD-LSTM hybrid models. To better test the performance of proposed simple and hybrid models, four stations located in the Illinois State of the USA (i.e., Dixon Springs, Fairfield, Rend Lake, and Carbondale) were considered as the study sites. Whole the simple and hybrid models were established under two different strategies, i.e., local and external. In the local strategy, SR of each location was estimated using the minimum and maximum air temperatures from the same station. While, minimum and maximum air temperatures as well as SR data from the nearby station were utilized in external strategy to estimate SR time series of any target site. Root mean square error (RMSE), mean absolute error (MAE), and coefficient of determination (R
2 ) metrics were used when evaluating the models performances. The overall results revealed that the proposed MVMD-GRU and MVMD-LSTM hybrid models illustrated better SR estimates compared to the simple GRU and LSTM in both the local and external strategies. The values of error metrics obtained for the superior hybrid models (i.e., MVMD-LSTM) during the testing period were as: RMSE = 2.532 MJ/m2 .day, MAE = 1.921 MJ/m2 .day, R2 = 0.916 at Dixon Springs; RMSE = 2.476 MJ/m2 .day, MAE = 1.878 MJ/m2 .day, R2 = 0.921 at Fairfield; RMSE = 2.359 MJ/m2 .day, MAE = 1.780 MJ/m2 .day, R2 = 0.924 at Rend Lake; RMSE = 2.576 MJ/m2 .day, MAE = 1.941 MJ/m2 .day, R2 = 0.914 at Carbondale. Therefore, the coupled models proposed in this study can be possibly recommended as suitable alternatives to the simple deep learning models with a reliable precision in estimating SR time series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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10. Long-term outcomes after endoscopic submucosal dissection for relative indication early gastric cancer in nonsurgical candidates.
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Wang, Hunter, Nguyen, Melinda, Gupta, Sunil, Sidhu, Mayenaaz, Cronin, Oliver, O'Sullivan, Timothy, Whitfield, Anthony, Lee, Eric Y.T., Burgess, Nicholas G., and Bourke, Michael J.
- Abstract
Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) is effective in treating early gastric cancer (EGC). Its role in patients with comorbidities along with more advanced disease is unknown. We sought to evaluate this in a large Western cohort. Consecutive patients who underwent ESD for EGC in a single tertiary Western endoscopy center over 10 years were prospectively analyzed. The primary outcomes were long-term overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) up to 5 years. Secondary outcomes were efficacy and serious adverse events (SAEs). ESD for 157 cases of EGC in 149 patients was performed in an elderly and comorbid cohort with a mean age of 73.7 years and age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity Index of 4.2. Over a median follow-up of 51.6 months, no significant differences were found in 5-year OS (88.9% vs 77.9%, P =.290) and DFS (83.2% vs 75.1%, P =.593) between absolute indication EGC and relative indication (RI) EGC. The absolute indication EGC cohort achieved higher en bloc (96.3% vs 87.5%, P =.069) and R0 resection rates (93.6% vs 62.5%, P <.001) when compared with RI EGC. No significant differences were found in SAEs (7.3% vs 12.5%, P =.363). No mortality or surgical resection ensued from adverse events from ESD. ESD safely confers DFS in poor surgical candidates with RI EGC in a large Western cohort. Patients who are elderly and/or with comorbidities or who decline surgical resection may benefit from ESD and avoid the risks of surgery and its long-term sequelae. (Clinical trial registration number: NCT02306707.) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Impact of Right Ventricular Dysfunction on Outcomes in Acute Myocardial Infarction and Cardiogenic Shock: Insights from the National Cardiogenic Shock Initiative.
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GORGIS, SARAH, GUPTA, KARTIK, LEMOR, ALEJANDRO, BENTLEY, DANA, MOYER, CHRISTIAN, McRAE, THOMAS, KHUDDUS, MATHEEN, SHARMA, RAHUL, LIM, MICHAEL, NSAIR, ALI, WOHNS, DAVID, MEHRA, ADITYA, LIN, LANG, BHARADWAJ, ADITYA, TEDFORD, RYAN, KAPUR, NAVIN, COWGER, JENNIFER, O'NEILL, WILLIAM, and BASIR, MIR B.
- Abstract
Right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) complicates 30%–40% of cases in acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and cardiogenic shock (CS). There are sparse data on the effects of RVD on outcomes and the impact of providing early left ventricular (LV) mechanical circulatory support (MCS) on RV function and hemodynamics. Between July 2016 and December 2020, 80 sites participated in the study. All centers agreed to treat patients with AMI-CS using a standard protocol emphasizing invasive hemodynamic monitoring and rapid initiation of LV-MCS. RVD was defined as a right atrial (RA) pressure of >12 mm Hg and a pulmonary artery pulsatility index (PAPI) of <1 within 24 hours of the index procedure. The primary outcome was survival to discharge. In a subgroup analysis, data available from the Automated Impella Controller console was used to analyze diastolic suction alarms from LV placement signal and its relation to RVD. A total of 361 patients were included in the analysis, of whom 28% had RVD. The median age was 64 years (interquartile range 55–72 years), 22.7% were female and 75.7% were White. There was no difference in age, sex, or comorbidities between those with or without RVD. Patients with RVD had a higher probability of active CPR during LV-MCS implant (14.7% vs 6.3%), Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions stage E shock (39.2% vs 23.2%), and higher admission lactate levels (5.1 mg/dL vs 3.0 mg/dL). Survival to discharge was significantly lower among those with RVD (61.8% vs 73.4%, odds ratio 0.89, 95% confidence interval 0.36–0.95, P =.031). This association remained significant in the multivariate analysis. There was no significant difference in hemodynamic variables within 24 hours of LV-MCS support among those with or without RVD. At 24 hours, patients with a CPO of >0.6 W and a PAPi of >1 had a trend toward better survival to discharge compared with those with a CPO of ≤0.6 W and a PAPi of ≤1 (77.1% vs 54.6%, P =.092). Patients with RVD were significantly more likely to have diastolic suction alarms within 24 hours of LV-MCS initiation. RVD in AMI-CS is common and associated with worse survival to discharge. Early LV-MCS decreases filling pressures rapidly within the first 24 hours and decreases the rate of RVD. Achieving a CPO of >0.6 W and a PAPi of >1 within 24 hours is associated with high survival. Diastolic suction alarms may have usefulness as an early marker of RVD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Minimally Invasive Surgery for Congenital Heart Disease.
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Gupta, Saurabh, McEwen, Charlotte, Eqbal, Adam, and Haller, Christoph
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Minimally invasive cardiac surgery for congenital heart disease has gained increasing acceptance within the specialty. However, most suitable candidates are still treated with a conventional median sternotomy. Adoption of minimally invasive techniques has proven essential in the surgical repair of acquired heart disease to increase patient satisfaction and to remain competitive in an ever-changing medical field. We herein summarize the currently available literature on minimally invasive congenital heart surgery. We describe available techniques and routes of access as well as the lesions amenable for minimally invasive repairs. Mainly derived from case series and smaller retrospective studies, we report available evidence on outcome, especially compared with conventional repairs through a median sternotomy. We highlight the unique challenges that arise from the wide range of lesions as well as from the spectrum of patients, ranging from infant to adulthood, and describe ways to mitigate those. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Correlation of Ablation Volume with Renal Function Loss after Cryoablation in Solitary Functioning Kidneys.
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Gupta, Vikram F., Ronald, James, Mastria, Eric M., Benvenuti, Teresa, Cline, Brendan C., Johnson, David Y., Martin, Jonathan G., Befera, Nicholas T., and Kim, Charles Y.
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To determine the degree of renal function deterioration after renal cryoablation in patients with a solitary functioning kidney on the basis of ablation volume. Over a 15-year period, 81 percutaneous cryoablations were performed in solitary functioning kidneys. After exclusion of patients with baseline end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and insufficient follow-up, analysis was performed on 65 procedures in 52 patients (40 men; mean age, 63.5 years). The postcryoablation renal function was based on the lowest serum creatinine within 6 months after procedure. Renal function change was defined as percentage glomerular filtration rate (GFR) change. Volumetric analysis was performed on the target lesion, renal parenchyma, and ablation zone. The median tumor diameter was 2.0 cm (range, 0.8–4.7 cm). The median baseline GFR decreased from 56.4 mL/min/1.73 m
2 (range, 17.5–89.7 mL/min/1.73 m2 ) to 46.9 mL/min/1.73 m2 (range, 16.5–89.7 mL/min/1.73 m2 ) at median of 95 days (P <.001), equating to a −7.9% median renal function change (range, −45.0% to +30.7%). All patients had Stage 2 or worse chronic kidney disease, and baseline function did not correlate with renal function change. The median volume of ablated parenchyma was 19.7 mL (range, 2.4–87.3 mL), equating to 8.1% (range, 0.7%–37.2%) of total parenchyma. The volume of parenchymal volume ablated correlated significantly with renal function loss, whereas age, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus did not. No patient developed ESRD within 1 year after cryoablation. Cryoablation in solitary functioning kidneys resulted in a modest reduction in renal function, even in patients with chronic kidney disease and ablations of up to 20% of renal parenchymal volume. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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14. Best practices for hepatitis C linkage to care in pregnant and postpartum women: perspectives from the Treatment In Pregnancy for Hepatitis C Community of Practice.
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Gupta, Neil, Hiebert, Lindsey, Saseetharran, Ankeeta, Chappell, Catherine, El-Sayed, Manal H., Hamid, Saeed, Jhaveri, Ravi, Judd, Ali, Kushner, Tatyana, Badell, Martina, Biondi, Mia, Buresh, Megan, Prasad, Mona, Price, Jennifer C., and Ward, John W.
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HEPATITIS C virus ,OBSTETRICS ,VIRTUAL communities ,OPERATIONS research ,COMMUNITIES of practice - Abstract
There is an increasing burden of hepatitis C virus among persons of reproductive age, including pregnant and breastfeeding women, in many regions worldwide. Routine health services during pregnancy present a critical window of opportunity to diagnose and link women with hepatitis C virus infection for care and treatment to decrease hepatitis C virus-related morbidity and early mortality. Effective treatment of hepatitis C virus infection in women diagnosed during pregnancy also prevents hepatitis C virus-related adverse events in pregnancy and hepatitis C virus vertical transmission in future pregnancies. However, linkage to care and treatment for women diagnosed in pregnancy remains insufficient. Currently, there are no best practice recommendations from professional societies to ensure appropriate peripartum linkage to hepatitis C virus care and treatment. We convened a virtual Community of Practice to understand key challenges to the hepatitis C virus care cascade for women diagnosed with hepatitis C virus in pregnancy, highlight published models of integrated hepatitis C virus services for pregnant and postpartum women, and preview upcoming research and programmatic initiatives to improve linkage to hepatitis C virus care for this population. Four-hundred seventy-three participants from 43 countries participated in the Community of Practice, including a diverse range of practitioners from public health, primary care, and clinical specialties. The Community of Practice included panel sessions with representatives from major professional societies in obstetrics/gynecology, maternal fetal medicine, addiction medicine, hepatology, and infectious diseases. From this Community of Practice, we provide a series of best practices to improve linkage to hepatitis C virus treatment for pregnant and postpartum women, including specific interventions to enhance colocation of services, treatment by nonspecialist providers, active engagement and patient navigation, and decreasing time to hepatitis C virus treatment initiation. The Community of Practice aims to further support antenatal providers in improving linkage to care by producing and disseminating detailed operational guidance and recommendations and supporting operational research on models for linkage and treatment. Additionally, the Community of Practice may be leveraged to build training materials and toolkits for antenatal providers, convene experts to formalize operational recommendations, and conduct surveys to understand needs of antenatal providers. Such actions are required to ensure equitable access to hepatitis C virus treatment for women diagnosed with hepatitis C virus in pregnancy and urgently needed to achieve the ambitious targets for hepatitis C virus elimination by 2030. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. High ankle-brachial index participants experienced similar long-term mortality as peripheral artery disease in a national sample of community-dwelling adults.
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Parmar, Gaurav M., Tanikella, Rajasekhar, Gupta, Kamal, Dicks, Andrew B., Sakhuja, Rahul, Schainfeld, Robert, Dua, Anahita, and Weinberg, Ido
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Only a few small studies have shown the association between high ankle-brachial pressure index (ABI >1.4) and adverse cardiovascular (CV) events and mortality. Although there is abundant literature depicting the association between ABI and overall systemic atherosclerosis, it typically focuses on low ABI. Furthermore, historically, many studies focusing on peripheral artery disease have excluded high ABI participants. We aimed to study the mortality outcomes of persons with high ABI in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). We obtained ABI from participants aged ≥40 years for survey years 1999 to 2004. We defined low a ABI as ≤0.9, normal ABI as 0.9 to 1.4, and high ABI as >1.4 or if the ankle pressures were >245 mm Hg. Demographics, various comorbidities, and laboratory test results were obtained at the time of the survey interview. Multivariable adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) along with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated for CV and all-cause mortality via Cox proportional hazards regression. Mortality was linked to all NHANES participants for follow-up through December 31, 2019, by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We identified 7639 NHANES participants with available ABI. Of these, 6787 (89%) had a normal ABI, 646 (8%) had a low ABI, and 206 (3%) had elevated ABI. Of participants with high ABI, 50% were men, 15% were African Americans, 10% were current smokers, 56% had hypertension, 33% had diabetes, 15% had chronic kidney disease (CKD), and 18% had concomitant coronary artery disease (CAD). Diabetes (odds ratio [OR], 2.4; 95% CI, 1.7-3.2), CAD (OR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.0-2.4), and CKD (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.0-2.3) at baseline were associated with having a high ABI, respectively. A high ABI was associated independently with elevated CV (HR, 2.6; 95% CI, 2.1-3.1; P <.0001) and all-cause mortality (HR, 2.5; 95% CI, 2.2-2.8; P <.0001) after adjusting for covariates, including diabetes, CKD, CAD, current smoking, cancer, and hypertension. A high ABI is associated with an elevated CV and all-cause mortality, similar to patients with PAD. High ABI participants should receive the same attention and aggressive medical therapies as patients with PAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Neoproterozoic crustal evolution of Indo-Australo-Antarctic Suture domain and Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains, East Antarctica: Insights from offshore sediments.
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Gupta, Rashmi, Pandey, Mayuri, Arora, Devsamridhi, Pandey, Akash K., Pant, Naresh C., Batuk Joshi, K., Kumar, Pankaj, Satyanarayanan, M., and Singh, Atul
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[Display omitted] • Rift signatures in distal sediments indicate sourcing through Lambert Rift system. • Collisional signatures confirm presence of Indo-Australo-Antarctic Suture. • Tonian-Cryogenian event identified in the Gamburtsev terrain. Princess Elizabeth Land (PEL) preserves an intricate amalgamation of complexly intersecting orogenic belts of the Gondwanian age cross cut by the ramified East Antarctic Rift system. Indo-Australo-Antarctic Suture (IAAS) is an extensive orogenic zone connecting the Africo-Antarctic domain of Dronning Maud Land to the Australo-Antarctic domain of Wilkes Land region through the Indo-Antarctic domain of Princess Elizabeth Land, touching the northern boundary of the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains (GSMs). The GSMs and IAAS, located in the interior of PEL, are completely hidden within the ice sheet. The connection between the IAAS and concealed GSMs remains ambiguous due to insufficient geological evidence. Marine sediments from Prydz Bay offer clues to explore this segment of PEL. In this work, sediments from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) sites: 740, 742, and 739, representing proximal to relatively distal sites, respectively, were subjected to geochemical and zircon isotopic analyses to understand the crustal evolution of PEL, IAAS, and GSM. The sediment geochemistry indicates that sediments from site 740, being proximal, are immature, less recycled, and more chemically weathered as compared to sites 742 and 739. Discriminant plots of major and trace elements provide active and passive continental margin signatures. Site 739 and 742 sediments display the rift setting signatures while sediments of site 740 depict signatures of collisional setting supporting the presence of an orogenic belt in the interior of PEL. Zircons from the proximal sites display age ranges from Paleoproterozoic to Pan-African. Zircons from the distal site predominantly show ages ∼650 Ma, hinting at the possibility of a Tonian-Cryogenian event in the hinterland of the PEL sector, possibly in the GSMs. Our results provide a better understanding of the Neoproterozoic crustal evolution of the IAAS domain of the PEL sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Rationale, Design and Baseline Characteristics of a Randomized Controlled Trial of a Cardiovascular Quality Improvement Strategy in India: The C-QIP Trial.
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Singh, Kavita, Nikhare, Kalyani, Gandral, Mareesha, Aithal, Kiran, Patil, Satish G., MP, Girish, Gupta, Mohit, Madan, Kushal, Sawhney, J.P.S., Ali, Kamar, Kondal, Dimple, Jindal, Devraj, Mendenhall, Emily, Patel, Shivani A., Narayan, K.M. Venkat, Tandon, Nikhil, Roy, Ambuj, Huffman, Mark D., and Prabhakaran, Dorairaj
- Abstract
Quality of chronic care for cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains suboptimal worldwide. The Collaborative Quality ImProvement (C-QIP) trial aims to develop and test the feasibility and clinical effect of a multicomponent strategy among patients with prevalent CVD in India. The C-QIP is a clinic-based, open randomized trial of a multicomponent intervention vs usual care that was locally developed and adapted for use in Indian settings through rigorous formative research guided by Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The C-QIP intervention consisted of 5 components: 1) electronic health records and decision support system for clinicians, 2) trained nonphysician health workers (NPHW), 3) text-message based lifestyle reminders, 4) patient education materials, 5) quarterly audit and feedback reports. Patients with CVD (ischemic heart disease, ischemic stroke, or heart failure) attending outpatient CVD clinics were recruited from September 2022 to September 2023 and were randomized to the intervention or usual care arm for at least 12 months follow-up. The co-primary outcomes are implementation feasibility, fidelity (ie, dose delivered and dose received), acceptability, adoption and appropriateness, measured at multiple levels: patient, provider and clinic site-level, The secondary outcomes include prescription of guideline directed medical therapy (GDMT) (provider-level), and adherence to prescribed therapy, change in mean blood pressure (BP) and LDL-cholesterol between the intervention and control groups (patient-level). In addition, a trial-based process and economic evaluations will be performed using standard guidelines. We recruited 410 socio-demographically diverse patients with CVD from 4 hospitals in India. Mean (SD) age was 57.5 (11.7) years, and 73.0% were males. Self-reported history of hypertension (48.5%) and diabetes (41.5%) was common. At baseline, mean (SD) BP was 127.9 (18.2) /76.2 (11.6) mm Hg, mean (SD) LDLc: 80.3 (37.3) mg/dl and mean (SD) HbA1c: 6.8% (1.6%). At baseline, the GDMT varied from 62.4% for patients with ischemic heart disease, 48.6% for ischemic stroke and 36.1% for heart failure. This study will establish the feasibility of delivering contextually relevant, and evidence-based C-QIP strategy and assess whether it is acceptable to the target populations. The study results will inform a larger scale confirmatory trial of a comprehensive CVD care model in low-resource settings. Clinical Trials Registry India: CTRI/2022/04/041847; Clinicaltrials.gov number: NCT05196659. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. A novel approach of botnet detection using hybrid deep learning for enhancing security in IoT networks.
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Ali, Shamshair, Ghazal, Rubina, Qadeer, Nauman, Saidani, Oumaima, Alhayan, Fatimah, Masood, Anum, Saleem, Rabia, Khan, Muhammad Attique, and Gupta, Deepak
- Subjects
PATTERN recognition systems ,COMPUTER network security ,MULTILAYER perceptrons ,CYBER physical systems ,DEEP learning ,BOTNETS - Abstract
In an era dominated by the Internet of Things (IoT), protecting interconnected devices from botnets has become essential. This study introduces an innovative hybrid deep learning model that synergizes LSTM Auto Encoders and Multilayer Perceptrons in detecting botnets in IoTs. The fusion of these technologies facilitates the analysis of sequential data and pattern recognition, enabling the model to detect intricate botnet activities within IoT networks. The proposed model's performance was carefully evaluated on two large IoT traffic datasets, N-BAIoT2018 and UNSW-NB15, where it demonstrated exceptional accuracy of 99.77 % and 99.67 % respectively for botnet detection. These results not only demonstrate the model's superior performance over existing botnet detection systems but also highlight its potential as a robust solution for IoT network security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Patient Demographic Factors Affect Response Rates to Patient-Reported Outcome Measures for Total Hip Arthroplasty Patients.
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Tong, Yixuan, Rajahraman, Vinaya, Gupta, Rajan, Davidovitch, Roy I., Schwarzkopf, Ran, and Rozell, Joshua C.
- Abstract
The Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS JR) is a widely used patient-reported outcome measures questionnaire for total hip arthroplasty (THA). However, not all patients choose to complete HOOS JR, and thus, a subset of the THA population may be underrepresented. This study aims to investigate the association between patient demographic factors and HOOS JR response rates. This was a retrospective cohort study of adult, English-speaking patients who underwent primary THA by a fellowship-trained arthroplasty surgeon between 2017 and 2023 at a single, high-volume academic institution. The HOOS JR completion status—complete or incomplete—was recorded for each patient within 90 days of surgery. Standard statistical analyses were performed to assess completion against multiple patient demographic factors. Of the 2,908 total patients, 2,112 (72.6%) had complete and 796 (27.4%) had incomplete HOOS JR questionnaires. Multivariate analysis yielded statistical significance (P <.05) for the distribution of patient age, race, insurance, marital status, and income quartile with respect to questionnaire completion. Patient sex or religion did not affect response rates. Failure to complete HOOS JR (all P <.001) was associated with patients aged 18 to 39 (59.8%), who identified as Black (36.4%) or "other" race (39.6%), were never married (38%), and were in the lower half income quartiles (43.9%, 35.9%) when compared to the overall incomplete rate. Multiple patient demographic factors may affect the HOOS JR response rate. Overall, our analyses suggest that older patients who identify as White and are of higher socioeconomic status are more likely to participate in the questionnaire. Efforts should focus on capturing patient groups less likely to participate to elucidate more generalizable trends in arthroplasty outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Reproductive Health in Kidney Transplant Recipients.
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Gupta, Maitreyee and Yadav, Anju
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- 2024
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21. Biomarkers in Kidney Transplantation.
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Kataria, Ashish, Athreya, Akshay, and Gupta, Gaurav
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- 2024
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22. Pulse oximetry in patients with pigmented skin: What I should know.
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Brookman, Sarah, Mukadam, Tanzila, Owasil, Salwa, Thachettu, Anandluke, Urquhart, Don S., Dhawan, Anil, and Gupta, Atul
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PULSE oximetry ,PULSE oximeters ,OXYGEN saturation ,COVID-19 pandemic ,OXYGEN therapy - Abstract
The aims of this article are to: • Recognise the role of accurate oxygen saturation readings in guiding oxygen therapy. • Identify the limitations of the use of pulse oximetry in measuring oxygen saturation. • Understand the basic principles of the mechanism by which pulse oximeters obtain saturation readings. • Have an understanding of the studies investigating the degree of bias of skin colour on pulse oximetry readings. • Interpret pulse oximetry readings in the clinical setting with the knowledge that readings may be less reliable in patients with pigmented skin. Pulse oximetry is widely used to non-invasively estimate the oxygen saturation of haemoglobin in arterial blood (SpO 2). It is used widely throughout healthcare and was used extensively during the Covid-19 pandemic to detect and treat hypoxic patients. Research has suggested that pulse oximetry is less accurate in patients with darker skin. This led the US Food and Drug Administration agency (FDA) to issue a safety statement warning that pulse oximeters may be inaccurate when patients have pigmented skin. Evidence suggests that the oxygen saturation of arterial blood (SaO 2) may be being overestimated by measuring SpO 2 in those with pigmented skin. The degree of overestimation increases as SaO 2 decreases especially when SpO 2 reads below 80%. We review how pulse oximetry works and consider the implications for a patient's health when interpreting SpO 2 in individuals with pigmented skin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. A randomized control study on post-operative iris distortion following small-pupil cataract surgery using B-HEX pupil expander versus Malyugin ring.
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Gupta, Simple, Shyamsundar, K., Pushkar, Kumar, Agrawal, Mohini, Mishra, Avinash, Tripathi, Abhishek, and Singh, Manish
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CATARACT surgery ,POSTOPERATIVE period ,IRIS (Eye) ,TAMSULOSIN ,SURGERY - Abstract
The aim of the study was to evaluate postoperative pupil distortion following small pupil cataract surgeries performed using B-HEX and Malyugin rings (MR). A randomized control trial was conducted from June 2020 to June 2023 at a tertiary eye-care hospital. The study consisted of 64 participants for cataract surgery with small pupil. There were two groups, one undergoing surgery with the use of B-HEX pupil expander and other with MR intraoperatively and the rest of the surgery was proceeded as per the convention. Areas of preoperative and postoperative images was calculated, put into an online software and pupil distortion was calculated in percentage. Two-tailed t-test was used to see the difference between the two groups. Mean age at presentation was 70.5 ± 10.12 years. Most common cause for small pupil was tamsulosin therapy. Mean size of small-pupil was 3.0 ± 1.1 mm. With the application of two rings, mean pupillary area preoperatively was 4178.23 ± 1589.46 and postoperatively was 6100.44 ± 2658.28 following the use of MR, respectively and 30,002.93 ± 13,193.40 preoperatively and 37,648.26 ± 15,207.01 postoperatively following the use of B-Hex ring respectively. Comparing baseline area from pupillary area at 1-month follow-up, a significant increase was noted for both the rings. Also, MR caused significantly more pupillary distortion compared to B-HEX ring (p < 0.05). MR causes significantly more pupillary distortion in the postoperative period compared to B-HEX ring. Though, both the rings cause pupillary distortion, these devices expand the surgical area adequately, ease the procedure, decrease risk of complications achieving good functional visual outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Role of narrow band imaging in detecting recurrence in patients of squamous cell carcinoma larynx and hypopharynx who underwent radiotherapy/chemo-radiotherapy.
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Sahu, Pankaj Kumar, Paramasivam, Praveen Kumar, Dutta, Angshuman, Gupta, Devendra Kumar, and Marlapudi, Sudheer Kumar
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SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,GREEN light ,HYPOPHARYNGEAL cancer ,HYPOPHARYNX - Abstract
Narrow band imaging (NBI) is an emerging modality that enhances the accuracy of detection of head and neck malignancies by visualisation of aberrant neoangiogenesis in malignant tissue using narrow bandwidth light in blue and green spectrum. The purpose of this study was to assess the role of NBI in detecting recurrence in patients with Squamous cell carcinoma larynx and hypopharynx who have undergone Radiotherapy/Chemoradiotherapy (RT/CTRT). The aim of the study was to (a) determine the role of NBI in follow-up of patients with carcinoma of larynx and hypopharynx previously treated with radiotherapy or chemotherapy, (b) determine the role of NBI as the initial investigatory tool of choice in detecting local recurrence and compare with other modalities like fibreoptic laryngoscopy (FOL), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Positron Emission Tomography- Computed Tomography (PETCT). Prospective multicentric study at ENT departments of tertiary care centres in Delhi, Bangalore and Pune in India was conducted from Jan 2019 to Sep 2022. Thirty-four consecutive patients diagnosed as squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) larynx/hypopharynx who underwent chemo/radiotherapy were scheduled for NBI 12 weeks after completion of therapy with FOL and PETCT/MRI and followed up 03 monthly for 02 years. NBI/FOL/PETCT or MRI and Histopathological Examination (HPE) were compared. NBI was found to be 100% sensitive and 96% specific with a positive predictive value of 85% and negative predictive value of 100% respectively with a diagnostic accuracy of 97%. NBI along with FOL increases the sensitivity of detection of recurrence in patients of laryngeal/hypopharyngeal cancer post-chemo/radiotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Unveiling the green guardians: Mapping and identification of Azadirachta indica trees with semantic segmentation deep learning neural network technique.
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Lavania, Pankaj, Kumar Singh, Ram, Kumar, Pavan, K., Savad, Gupta, Garima, Dobriyal, Manmohan, Pandey, A.K., Kumar, Manoj, and Singh, Sanjay
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The high spatial resolution data presents a problem when it comes to mapping and identifying distinct tree species based on the characteristics of their canopies. The deep learning Semantic Segmentation approach based on U-Network (U-Net.) artificial intelligence model that we provide here can recognize, and map Azadirachta indica trees canopy cover. This method trains its model by making use of image chips and labels of the item being segmented. The new testing images processed for multiple stages of pixel level of convolution and pooling operations. The sampling methods allow increase to make complete to make the recognized object on the image. The model's ability to identify items based on canopy shape, structure, and pixel data makes it very useful for mapping and recognizing a single tree species as well as several tree species. The model validation results indicated an accuracy of 84–89 percent, which is regarded to be rather good. Based on ground census data, the overall accuracy of identification is 89 percent, F1 score 0.91–0.94, while the complete tree canopy validation (Intersection to Union) for canopy matching area is 0.79–0.89. The method has the potential to be utilised for identification, mapping of tree canopy. The approach has the potential to be used for important research initiatives i.e tree censuses and the identification and mapping of crop plant identification. The deep learning model used as inferences for automatization of the identification of the tree species helps to resolve identification and mapping based complex problems in agro-forestry allied fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Comparison of range of motion between 2-year clinical outcomes and predictions of a static scapula preoperative planning software for reverse shoulder arthroplasty.
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Branni, Marco, Ingoe, Helen, Salhi, Asma, Italia, Kristine, Gilliland, Luke, Launay, Marine, Pareyon, Roberto, Maharaj, Jashint, Lane, Angus, Pivonka, Peter, Cutbush, Kenneth, and Gupta, Ashish
- Subjects
PROSTHETICS ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,COMPUTER software ,PREDICTION models ,SURGERY ,PATIENTS ,T-test (Statistics) ,COMPUTED tomography ,PREOPERATIVE care ,SHOULDER joint ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ORTHOPEDIC apparatus ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SCAPULA ,ROTATIONAL motion ,SIMULATION methods in education ,ABDUCTION (Kinesiology) ,REVERSE total shoulder replacement ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RANGE of motion of joints ,ALGORITHMS ,REGRESSION analysis ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Preoperative planning has gained popularity in the management of reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA). Commercially available software provides 3-dimensional segmentation of scapula and humerus, as well as providing arc of motion for the implanted articulation and identifying potential areas of bony impingement. However, these software algorithms use a fixed scapula model, disregarding the preoperative clinical range of motion (C-ROM) of the patient, be it glenohumeral or scapulothoracic, as well as any soft tissue parameters. This study aims to compare the ROM based on preoperative planning software by using the implant position from postoperative computed tomography (CT) images (predicted ROM using preoperative planning software [P-ROM]), with the C-ROM assessed at minimum of 2 years of follow-up. Preoperative and postoperative CT scans of 46 patients who underwent primary RSA between 2017 and 2021 were analyzed. At the postoperative 2-year review, each patient was assessed for active ROM. Implant size and position based on operative notes and postoperative CT scans were used to replicate the performed surgery in the planning software. Abduction, flexion, and external rotation motion were simulated and recorded. The relationship between C-ROM and P-ROM was investigated using linear regression analysis, Pearson correlation coefficient, and paired t -test. P-ROM was significantly lower than C-ROM at 2 years postoperatively (P <.001), with an average discrepancy of 78° in abduction, 47° in flexion, and 37° in external rotation (C-ROM: abduction 155° ± 21° [80°-180°]; flexion 160° ± 17° [90°-180°]; external rotation 52° ± 14° [10°-80°] vs. P-ROM: abduction 77° ± 13° [53°-107°]; flexion 112° ± 25° [67°-180°]; external rotation 15° ± 21° [0°-79°]). The linear regression analysis indicated weak agreement between C-ROM and P-ROM (abduction R
2 = 0.03; flexion R2 = 0.01; external rotation R2 = 0.04). Pearson's correlation coefficients revealed weak correlations of −0.18, 0.03, and 0.21 for abduction, flexion, and external rotation, respectively. P-ROM based on preoperative software in its current form does not allow the prediction of the C-ROM at 2 years of follow-up for patients undergoing RSA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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27. The hybrid humerus reverse shoulder arthroplasty: a prospective study of bone grafting and metaphyseal fixation with undersized stem in the assessment of proximal humeral stress shielding and associated clinical outcome.
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Pareyon, Roberto, Ingoe, Helen, Jomaa, Mohammad N., Italia, Kristine, Maharaj, Jashint, Whitehouse, Sarah L., Cutbush, Kenneth, and Gupta, Ashish
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PROSTHETICS ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,BONE density ,FRACTURE fixation ,TOTAL shoulder replacement ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,BONE grafting ,X-rays ,REVERSE total shoulder replacement ,CASE studies ,HUMERUS ,EVALUATION - Abstract
A significant proportion of revisions after reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) is attributed to the humeral component. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the radiographic and clinical outcomes of the hybrid humerus technique for RSA using a Grammont-style humeral prosthesis in an onlay fashion with metaphyseal bone impaction grafting technique and undersized stem to avoid humeral stress shielding, notching, and loosening. This is a prospective case series of patients who underwent RSA using the hybrid humerus technique with a minimum 2-year follow-up. Key steps of this technique include the use of undersized Grammont-style stem, impaction bone grafting of the proximal 5 cm of the humerus, and adjusting the height and offset of the stem depending on the patient stature, desired lateralization and distalization, and joint and soft tissue tension. Radiographic assessments were performed immediately after surgery, and at 1 and 2 years after surgery. These included assessment of metaphyseal and diaphyseal filling ratio, cortical narrowing, radiolucent lines, cortical lucencies, spot welding, scapular notching, and stem alignment. Preoperative and 2-year postoperative clinical assessments included American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score, Constant-Murley Score, University of California Los Angeles score, visual analog scale for pain, and active range of motion. Correlation between the filling ratios and clinical outcomes were also evaluated. Sixty-one patients were included in the study. The average metaphyseal and diaphyseal filling ratio on the postoperative X-ray was 0.66 and 0.54, and 0.67 and 0.54 at 2 years, respectively. Stress shielding was graded as none in 24 (40.7%), mild in 33 (55.9%), and moderate in 2 (3.4%). No stem had a change in position of more than 5°. At 2 years of follow-up, no humeral implant loosening was noted, with only 2 (3.4%) of the stems at risk of loosening. Thirty-nine (66.1%) had no notching, 14 (23.7%) were graded as mild, and 6 (10.2%) had moderate signs of notching. All clinical assessments significantly improved at 2 years (P <.001), with a weak negative correlation between visual analog scale and metaphyseal filling ratio (r = −0.268, P =.036) but none between diaphyseal filling ratio and clinical outcomes. The hybrid humerus technique of metaphyseal bone grafting with a low filling ratio stem presents a promising solution for reducing humeral complications in RSA. This technique demonstrates a low incidence of stress shielding and loosening, with excellent clinical outcomes at 2 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Cost, efficiency, and outcomes of pulsed field ablation vs thermal ablation for atrial fibrillation: A real-world study.
- Author
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Calvert, Peter, Mills, Mark T., Xydis, Panagiotis, Essa, Hani, Ding, Wern Yew, Koniari, Ioanna, Farinha, Jose Maria, Harding, Mike, Mahida, Saagar, Snowdon, Richard, Waktare, Johan, Borbas, Zoltan, Modi, Simon, Todd, Derick, Ashrafi, Reza, Luther, Vishal, and Gupta, Dhiraj
- Abstract
With the exponential growth of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF), there is increasing interest in associated health care costs. Pulsed field ablation (PFA) using a single-shot pentaspline multielectrode catheter has been shown to be safe and effective for AF ablation, but its cost efficiency compared to conventional thermal ablation modalities (cryoballoon [CB] or radiofrequency [RF]) has not been evaluated. The purpose of this study was to compare cost, efficiency, effectiveness, and safety between PFA, CB, and RF for AF ablation. We studied 707 consecutive patients (PFA: 208 [46.0%]; CB: 325 [29.4%]; RF: 174 [24.6%]) undergoing first-time AF ablation. Individual procedural costs were calculated, including equipment, laboratory use, and hospital stay, and compared between ablation modalities, as were effectiveness and safety. Skin-to-skin times and catheter laboratory times were significantly shorter with PFA (68 and 102 minutes, respectively) than with CB (91 and 122 minutes) and RF (89 and 123 minutes) (P <.001). General anesthesia use differed across modalities (PFA 100%; CB 10.2%; RF 61.5%) (P <.001). Major complications occurred in 1% of cases, with no significant differences between modalities. Shorter procedural times resulted in lower staffing and laboratory costs with PFA, but these savings were offset by substantially higher equipment costs, resulting in higher overall median costs with PFA (£10,010) than with CB (£8106) and RF (£8949) (P <.001). In this contemporary real-world study of the 3 major AF ablation modalities used concurrently, PFA had shorter skin-to-skin and catheter laboratory times than did CB and RF, with similarly low rates of complications. However, PFA procedures were considerably more expensive, largely because of higher equipment cost. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Durability of thermal pulmonary vein isolation in persistent atrial fibrillation assessed by mandated repeat invasive study.
- Author
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Calvert, Peter, Ding, Wern Yew, Mills, Mark T., Snowdon, Richard, Borbas, Zoltan, Modi, Simon, Hall, Mark, Morgan, Maureen, Clarkson, Nichola, Chackochen, Sijimole, Barton, Janet, Kemp, Ian, Luther, Vishal, and Gupta, Dhiraj
- Abstract
No study has assessed the durability of pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) with radiofrequency (RF) and cryoballoon (CB) in patients with persistent atrial fibrillation. These data are especially lacking for those with significantly diseased left atria (LA). The goals of this study were to assess PVI durability in patients with significant LA disease and to compare reconnection rates between RF and CB. Forty-four patients (mean age 63 years; 34 (77%) male; median time since atrial fibrillation diagnosis 22.5 months; median indexed LA volume 36 mL/m
2 ) were randomized 1:1 to RF or CB PVI. A redo procedure using ultra-high-density electroanatomic mapping was mandated at 2 months, where PV reconnections were identified and reisolated. Thirty-eight patients underwent both procedures (CB n = 17; RF n = 21). Index RF procedures were longer (median 158 minutes vs 97 minutes; P <.001) but required less fluoroscopy (9.5 minutes vs 23 minutes; P <.001). At the index RF procedure, a median of 47% of LA myocardium had voltage < 0.5 mV, suggesting that half of the mapped LA comprised scar. PV reconnection was observed in 73 of 152 PVs (48.0%) and was more frequent with CB (58.8%) than with RF (39.3%) (P =.022). Reconnection of at least 1 PV was detected in >75% of patients. Significantly more ablation was required during the redo procedure to reisolate PVs in the CB arm (median 10.8 minutes vs 1.2 minutes; P <.001). PVI durability may be poor in those with significant LA scarring and dilatation, even with modern thermal ablation technologies. RF resulted in significantly better PVI durability than did CB in this complex population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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30. PLAstic Surgery Teaching In the Undergraduate Curriculum of Medical Students—United Kingdom (PLASTICS-UK): A UK national collaborative survey of plastic surgery in the undergraduate medical curriculum.
- Author
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Gupta, Shubham, Luu, Jennifer, Shah, Viraj, Barnes, Sydney LA, and Miranda, Ben H.
- Abstract
To undertake a United Kingdom national medical student survey investigating undergraduate plastic surgery exposure and specialty perceptions. Plastic surgery incorporates all anatomical regions, age groups and tissue types; clinical challenges vary from trauma and burns to congenital defects and cancer and although around 50% of the workload is trauma, it is often misperceived to revolve around cosmetic surgery. Following ethical approval, a national survey was conducted across 27 included UK medical schools (31/03/23-07/07/23). Trends were analysed, with comparisons made between surgical and non-surgical aspirants. Data were included from 2513 students; 29.2% had surgical career aspirations. Students perceived plastic surgery as challenging, competitive, and impacting quality of life; however, most had no formal teaching (56.3%); merely 6.2% had clinical exposure and 30.4% had an undergraduate plastic surgery placement available. Breast reconstruction was the most frequently correctly identified surgery (91.8%), with head and neck cancer surgery the least (35.9%). Surgical aspirants were less likely to overestimate private practice (p < 0.001) but demonstrated greater self-confidence in plastic surgery understanding (p < 0.001) and their future ability to make plastic surgery referrals (p < 0.001), being more likely to pursue it (p < 0.001). Surgical aspirants were 17.3% more likely to obtain non-curricular plastic surgery experience (p < 0.001), and 5.6% more self-confident dressing basic wounds (p < 0.001). A greater need for undergraduate plastic surgery teaching was determined. Significant heterogeneity across medical schools was identified. Formation of a national undergraduate plastic surgery curriculum, led by professional bodies, may tackle disparities among medical schools, improve accessibility and facilitate knowledge acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Impact of Tricuspid Regurgitation on Outcomes of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement With Balloon-Expandable Valves.
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Zahr, Firas, Elmariah, Sammy, Vemulapalli, Sreekanth, Kodali, Susheel K., Hahn, Rebecca T., Anderson, Allen S., Eleid, Mackram F., Davidson, Charles J., Sharma, Rahul P., O'Neill, William W., Bethea, Brian, Thourani, Vinod H., Chakravarty, Tarun, Gupta, Aakriti, and Makkar, Raj R.
- Abstract
Tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is highly prevalent in the transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) population, but clear management guidelines are lacking. The aims of this study were to elucidate the prevalence and consequences of severe TR in patients with aortic stenosis undergoing TAVR and to examine the change in TR post-TAVR, including predictors of improvement and its impact on longer term mortality. Using Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services–linked TVT (Transcatheter Valve Therapy) Registry data, a propensity-matched analysis was performed among patients undergoing TAVR with baseline mild, moderate, or severe TR. Kaplan-Meier estimates were used to assess the impact of TR on 3-year mortality. Multivariable analysis identified predictors of 30-day TR improvement. Of the 312,320 included patients, 84% had mild, 13% moderate, and 3% severe TR. In a propensity-matched cohort, severe baseline TR was associated with higher in-hospital mortality (2.5% vs 2.1% for moderate TR and 1.8% for mild TR; P = 0.009), higher 1-year mortality (24% vs 19.6% for moderate TR and 16.6% for mild TR; P < 0.0001), and 3-year mortality (54.2% vs 48.5% for moderate TR and 43.3% for mild TR; P < 0.0001). Among the patients with severe TR at baseline, 76.4% improved to moderate or less TR 30 days after TAVR. Baseline mitral regurgitation moderate or greater, preserved ejection fraction, higher aortic valve gradient, and better kidney function predicted TR improvement after TAVR. However, severe 30-day residual TR was associated with higher 1-year mortality (27.4% vs 18.7% for moderate TR and 16.8% for mild TR; P < 0.0001). Severe baseline and 30-day residual TR after TAVR are associated with increased mortality up to 3 years. This analysis identifies a higher risk group that could be evaluated for the recently approved tricuspid interventions. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Novel stroke prevention strategies following catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation.
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Ding, Wern Yew, Calvert, Peter, Lip, Gregory Y H, and Gupta, Dhiraj
- Abstract
Copyright of Revista Española de Cardiología (18855857) is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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33. Leprosy.
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Manoj, Rohan, Singh, Shrishti, Buccha, Yash, Deokar, Shubham, Iqbal, Banyameen, and Gupta, Aayush
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- 2024
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34. Efficacy of 10%,25% and 50% dextrose in the treatment of hypoglycemia in the emergency department – A randomized controlled study.
- Author
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Verma, Ankur, Jaiswal, Sanjay, Reid, Clifford, Borah, Priyadarshini, Lal, Maheshwar, Gupta, Saumya, and Khanna, Palak
- Abstract
Documented symptomatic hypoglycemia is defined as "event during which typical symptoms of hypoglycemia are accompanied by measured blood glucose of ≤70 mg/dL. Most of the studies and recommendations for the unconscious hypoglycemic adult advocate the use of 25 g of glucose as 50 mL of 50% dextrose solution intravenous or 1 mg of intramuscular glucagon. To compare the efficacy and safety of 5 g boluses of 10%, 25% and 50% dextrose in the treatment of hypoglycemic patients presenting to our emergency department. This was a randomized controlled single blinded study. Hypoglycemic patients in altered mental status were randomized into three treatment arms to be administered 10%, 25% or 50% dextrose. 5 g aliquots of intravenous 10%,25% or 50% dextrose were administered over 1 min. Time taken to achieve a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of 15 and median total doses (g) were the primary outcomes. Data of 204 patients were analysed in the study. There was no difference in the median time to achieve a GCS of 15 in all three treatment arms (6 min). Total median dose administered in the 10% and 25% groups was lower than 50% (10 g vs 15 g). Proportion of patients who received the maximum dose of 25 g was higher in the 50% group as compared to 10% and 25% groups (12%, 3%, 4%). There was no difference in 10% dextrose and 25% dextrose as compared to 50% dextrose in achieving the baseline mental status (or GCS 15) in the treatment of hypoglycemia in the ED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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35. An Unusual Case of Colitis in a Bone Marrow Transplant Patient.
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Gupta, Nikita Y., Al Diffalha, Sameer, and Russ, Kirk B.
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- 2024
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36. Funding bias in shoulder arthroplasty research.
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Haislup, Brett D., Gupta, Suhasini, Fleisher, Ilan, Murthi, Anand M., and Wright, Melissa A.
- Abstract
Prior research has shown that industry funding can impact the outcomes reported in medical literature. Limited data exist on the degree of bias that industry funding may have on shoulder arthroplasty literature outside of the Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery. The purpose of this study is to characterize the type and frequency of funding for recently published shoulder arthroplasty studies and the impact of industry funding on reported outcomes. We hypothesized that studies with industry funding are more likely to report positive outcomes than those without. We performed a retrospective study searching all articles with the term "shoulder arthroplasty," "reverse shoulder arthroplasty," "anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty," or "total shoulder arthroplasty" on PubMed from the years January 2020 to December 2022. The primary outcome of studies was coded as either positive, negative, or neutral. A positive result was defined as one in which the null hypothesis was rejected. A negative result was defined as one in which the result did not favor the group in which the industry-funded implant was used. A neutral result was defined as one in which the null hypothesis was confirmed. Article funding type, subcategorized as National Institutes of Health funding or industry funding was recorded. Author disclosures were recorded to determine conflicts of interest. Statistical analysis was conducted using the χ
2 test and Fisher exact test. A total of 750 articles reported on either conflict of interest or funding source and were included in the study. Of the total number of industry-funded studies, the majority were found to have a positive primary endpoint (58.1%, 104 of 179), as compared to a negative (7.8%, 14 of 179) or neutral endpoint (33.5%, 60 of 179) (P =.004). Overall, 363 articles reported an author conflict of interest, and the majority of these studies had positive primary endpoint (55.6%, 202 of 363) as compared to negative (9.1%, 33 of 363) or neutral endpoints (34.4%, 125 of 363) (P =.002). The results of this study suggest that there is a significant relationship between conflicts of interest and the primary outcome of shoulder arthroplasty studies, beyond the overall positive publication bias. Studies with industry funding and author conflicts of interest both report positive outcomes more frequently than negative outcomes. Shoulder surgeons should be aware of this potential bias when choosing to base clinical practice on published data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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37. Mandibular reconstruction using an iliac bone flap with perforator-supported external oblique abdominal muscle island: a pilot study.
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Zhang, Y., Shi, J., Zhang, Z., Gupta, A., Xiao, M., and Wang, L.
- Subjects
ABDOMINAL muscles ,ILIAC artery ,PERFORATOR flaps (Surgery) ,DOPPLER ultrasonography ,ISLANDS ,SURGICAL flaps ,PILOT projects ,BONE grafting - Abstract
The deep circumflex iliac artery (DCIA) flap is one of the bone flaps commonly used for mandibular reconstruction. Observation of the skin paddle and Doppler ultrasound are methods that are usually used to monitor DCIA flaps after mandibular reconstruction surgery. The aim of this study was to introduce a novel DCIA flap with a perforator-supported external oblique abdominal muscle (EOAM) island for postoperative flap monitoring. This study included five patients who underwent mandibular reconstruction using this modified technique. The DCIA flap and the EOAM island supplied by the ascending branch of the DCIA were harvested during the surgery. After mandibular reconstruction, the EOAM island was placed in the submandibular region to monitor the blood supply to the DCIA flap after surgery. The blood supply to the DCIA flap was monitored by observing the colour, texture, and bleeding condition of the EOAM island. After the monitoring period, the EOAM was removed and the ascending branch of the DCIA was ligated. The outcome was successful in all patients. The EOAM island supported by the ascending branch of the DCIA is reliable and safe, thus providing a robust option to monitor the blood supply to the DCIA flap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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38. Dynamic volume-outcome association for esophagectomies: Do current volume thresholds still apply?
- Author
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Jogerst, Kristen, Zhang, Chi, Chang, Yu-Hui, Gupta, Nikita, Stucky, Chee-Chee, D'Cunha, Jonathan, and Wasif, Nabil
- Abstract
It is unknown if the current minimum case volume recommendation of 20 cases per year per hospital is applicable to contemporary practice. Patients undergoing esophageal resection between 2005 and 2015 were identified in the National Cancer Database. High, medium, and low-volume hospital strata were defined by quartiles. Adjusted odds ratios and adjusted 30-day mortality between low-, medium-, and high-volume hospitals were calculated using logistic regression analyses and trended over time. Only 1.1% of hospitals had ≥20 annual cases. The unadjusted 30-day mortality for esophagectomy was 3.8% overall. Unadjusted and adjusted 30-day mortality trended down for all three strata between 2005 and 2015, with disproportionate decreases for low-volume and medium-volume versus high-volume hospitals. By 2015, adjusted 30-day mortality was similar in medium- and high-volume hospitals (odds ratio 1.35, 95% confidence interval 0.96–1.91). For hospitals with 20 or more annual cases the adjusted 30-day mortality was 2.7% overall. To achieve this same 30-day mortality the minimum volume threshold had lowered to 7 annual cases by 2015. Only 1.1% of hospitals meet current volume recommendations for esophagectomy. Differential improvements in postoperative mortality at low- and medium- versus high-volume hospitals have led to 7 cases in 2015 achieving the same adjusted 30-day mortality as 20 cases in the overall cohort. Lowering volume thresholds for esophagectomy in contemporary practice would potentially increase the proportion of hospitals able to meet volume standards and increase access to quality care without sacrificing quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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39. Effect of Back-Pressure Anesthesia on Postoperative Pain after the Endodontic Treatment in Patients with Symptomatic Irreversible Pulpitis: Randomized Double-Blind Clinical Trial.
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Aggarwal, Vivek, Singla, Mamta, Gupta, Alpa, Saatchi, Masoud, Nabi, Shahnaz, Rastogi, Shweta, Ansari, Irfan, and Miglani, Sanjay
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MANDIBULAR nerve ,NERVE block ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,POSTOPERATIVE pain ,MOLARS ,PULPITIS - Abstract
The present study evaluated the effect of 2 different back pressure-based supplemental anesthesia on postoperative pain in patients receiving endodontic treatment for a mandibular molar with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis. One-hundred-thirty-five adult patients with symptomatic irreversible pulpits in a mandibular first or second molar, received an initial inferior alveolar nerve block (IANB) injection with 2% lidocaine with 1:80,000 epinephrine. Ten minutes following the injection, access to cavity preparation began. Lip numbness was a must for all patients. The Heft-Parker visual analogue scale (HP-VAS) was used to measure pain during endodontic therapy. Success of primary injections was defined as no or mild pain (less than 55 mm on HP-VAS) during access preparation. The patients with initial successful anesthesia served as control and received endodontic treatment. Ninety-five patients with unsuccessful primary anesthesia randomly received either intraligamentary injections of 2% lidocaine with 1:80,000 epinephrine or intrapulpal injections with similar anesthetic solution. Endodontic treatment was re-initiated and canals were instrumented till working length under copious irrigation. Intracanal medicament of calcium hydroxide was placed and teeth received a temporary restoration. Postoperative pain was measured at 2 hours, 4 hours, 6 hours, 24 hours, and 3 days. Data were analyzed using the Pearson chi-square test, one-way analysis of variance, and one-way repeated measures analysis of variance. The initial initial inferior alveolar nerve block was successful in 40 cases (out of 135). The intraligamentary injections were successful in 33 out of 47 cases (70%), and intrapulpal injections were successful in all cases (45/45). The patients receiving intraligamentary injections reported significantly higher pain scores at all intervals till 24 hours. After 3 days, the pain significantly reduced in all the groups with no significant difference between them. Patients receiving supplementary intraligamentary injections can experience increased postoperative pain till 24 hours after the endodontic treatment. The pain scores reduced to the level of the control group after 3 days. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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40. Neurotrophic keratopathy following rhegmatogenous retinal detachment surgery.
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Israilevich, Rachel N., Syed, Zeba A., Xu, David, Kaiser, Richard S., Garg, Sunir J., Spirn, Marc J., Mehta, Sonia, Gupta, Omesh P., Ho, Allen C., Kuriyan, Ajay E., Yonekawa, Yoshihiro, and Starr, Matthew R.
- Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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41. Coexistence of exchange bias and memory effect in nanocrystalline CoCr2O4
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Goswami, S., Gupta, P., Bedanta, S., Chakraborty, M., and De, D.
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- 2022
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42. A multi-scale model for simulation of electrochemically induced stresses on scales of active particles, electrode layers, and battery level in lithium-ion batteries
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Gupta, P. and Gudmundson, P.
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- 2021
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43. Increased electrode impedance as an indicator for early detection of deep brain stimulation (DBS) hardware Infection: Clinical experience and in vitro study.
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Singh, Hargunbir, Sawal, Nishit, Gupta, Vipin K., Jha, Rohan, Stamm, Michaela, Arjun, Shivani, Gupta, Varsha, and Rolston, John D.
- Abstract
• Earlier detection strategies for Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) hardware are required. • Hardware infection was associated with increased impedance in vitro. • Similar increases in impedance were observed in a patient case with hardware infection. • Increasing impedance 1–2 months post-DBS surgery may serve as an early indicator. When deep brain stimulation (DBS) infections are identified, they are often too advanced to treat without complete hardware removal. New objective markers to promptly identify DBS infections are needed. We present a patient with GPi (globus pallidus interna) DBS for dystonia, where the electrode impedance unexpectedly increased 3-months post-operatively, followed by serologic and hematologic markers of inflammation at 6-months, prompting explantation surgery. We recreated these conditions in a laboratory environment to analyze the pattern of changing of electrical impedance across the contacts of a DBS lead following Staphylococcus biofilm formation. A stainless-steel culture chamber containing 1 % brain heart infusion agar was used. A DBS electrode was dipped in peptone water containing a strain of S. aureus and subsequently introduced into the chamber. The apparatus was incubated at 37 °C for 6 days. Impedance was measured at 24hr intervals. A control experiment without S. Aureus inoculation was used to determine changes in impedance over a period of 6-days. The mean monopolar impedance on day-1 was 751.8 ± 23.8 Ω and on day-3 was 1004.8 ± 68.7 Ω, a 33.7 % rise (p = 0.007). A faint biofilm formation could be seen around the DBS lead by day-2 and florid growth by day-3. After addition of the linezolid solution, a 15.9 % decrease in monopolar impedance was observed from day 3–6 (p = 0.003). This study gives insight into impedance trends following a hardware infection in DBS. Increased impedance outside expected norms may be valuable for early prediction of infection. Furthermore, timely management using antibiotics might reduce the frequency of infection-related explant surgeries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Design and Implementation of Artificial Neural Network Classifiers based on Hypertuning Parameters for Breast Cancer Diagnosis.
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Gupta, Neetu, Gupta, Hemant Kumar, Srivastava, Rahul, Saxena, Chhavi, and Surjeet
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CANCER diagnosis ,BREAST cancer ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DEATH rate - Abstract
Breast cancer is an extremely prevalent disease which impacts women all over the world, and minimizing the death rate among women requires detection at an early stage. This research employs Artificial Neural Network (ANN) to predict and detect breast cancer at an early stage. The suggested model is trained and tested using the 569 patient records taken from Wisconsin Diagnostic dataset for breast cancer. The dataset is split between training and testing sets using 80:20 ratio, with the random states being 0, 1, and 2 for each set. With random state 1 benign and malignant cases are split in same ratio as were in original dataset. The binary cross-entropy function is used to calculate the discrepancy between the predicted class probability and the actual class label. In this research, an Adam optimizer is employed to reduce the loss function. Overall, the parameters of the model are tuned to produce the best outcomes for particular tasks depending on the choice of different random states, activation function, loss function, and optimizer. Several measurements, including training and testing accuracy, confusion matrix, precision, sensitivity, F1_Score, FPR, MCC (Matthews correlation coefficient), AUC, and ROC curve, are employed to evaluate the model performance. Our experimental findings show that the suggested model is capable of making precise predictions and diagnosis of breast cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Congenital heart disease in the ESC EORP Registry of Pregnancy and Cardiac disease (ROPAC)
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Hall, Roger, Roos-Hesselink, Jolien, Stein, Joerg, Parsonage, William Anthony, Budts, Werner, De Backer, Julie, Grewal, Jasmin, Marelli, Ariane, Kaemmerer, Harald, Jondeau, Guillaume, Johnson, Mark, Maggioni, Aldo P., Tavazzi, Luigi, Thilen, Ulf, Elkayam, Uri, Otto, Catherine, Sliwa, Karen, Aquieri, A., Saad, A., Vega, H. Ruda, Hojman, J., Caparros, J.M., Blanco, M. Vazquez, Arstall, M., Chung, C.M., Mahadavan, G., Aldridge, E., Wittwer, M., Chow, Y.Y., Parsonage, W.A., Lust, K., Collins, N., Warner, G., Hatton, R., Gordon, A., Nyman, E., Stein, J., Donhauser, E., Gabriel, H., Bahshaliyev, A., Guliyev, F., Hasanova, I., Jahangirov, T., Gasimov, Z., Salim, A., Ahmed, C.M., Begum, F., Hoque, M.H., Mahmood, M., Islam, M.N., Haque, P.P., Banerjee, S.K., Parveen, T., Morissens, M., De Backer, J., Demulier, L., de Hosson, M., Budts, W., Beckx, M., Kozic, M., Lovric, M., Kovacevic-Preradovic, T., Chilingirova, N., Kratunkov, P., Wahab, N., McLean, S., Gordon, E., Walter, L., Marelli, A., Montesclaros, A.R., Monsalve, G., Rodriguez, C., Balthazar, F., Quintero, V., Palacio, W., Cadavid, L.A. Mejía, Ortiz, E. Munoz, Hoyos, F. Fortich, Guerrero, E. Arevalo, Ricardo, J. Gandara, Penagos, J. Velasquez, Vavera, Z., Prague, Popelova, J., Vejlstrup, N., Grønbeck, L., Johansen, M., Ersboll, A., Elrakshy, Y., Eltamawy, K., Abd-El Aziz, M. Gamal, El Nagar, A., Ebaid, H., Elenin, H. Abo, Saed, M., Farag, S., Makled, W., Sorour, K., Ashour, Z., El-Sayed, G., Meguid Mahdy, M. Abdel, Taha, N., Dardeer, A., Shabaan, M., Ali, M., Moceri, P., Duthoit, G., Gouton, M., Nizard, J., Baris, L., Cohen, S., Ladouceur, M., Khimoud, D., Iung, B., Berger, F., Olsson, A., Gembruch, U., Merz, W.M., Reinert, E., Clade, S., Kliesch, Y., Wald, C., Sinning, C., Kozlik-Feldmann, R., Blankenberg, S., Zengin-Sahm, E., Mueller, G., Hillebrand, M., Hauck, P., von Kodolitsch, Y., Zarniko, N., Baumgartner, Muenster H., Schmidt, R., Hellige, A., Tutarel, O., Kaemmerer, H., Kuschel, B., Nagdyman, N., Motz, R., Maisuradze, D., Frogoudaki, A., Iliodromitis, E., Anastasiou-Nana, M., Marousi, Triantafyllis, D., Bekiaris, G., Karvounis, H., Giannakoulas, G., Ntiloudi, D., Mouratoglou, S.A., Temesvari, A., Balint, H., Kohalmi, D., Merkely, B., Liptai, C., Nemes, A., Forster, T., Kalapos, A., Berek, K., Havasi, K., Ambrus, N., Shelke, A., Kawade, R., Patil, S., Martanto, E., Aprami, T.M., Purnomowati, A., Cool, C.J., Hasan, M., Akbar, R., Hidayat, S., Dewi, T.I., Permadi, W., Soedarsono, D.A., Ansari-Ramandi, M.M., Samiei, N., Tabib, A., Kashfi, F., Ansari-Ramandi, S., Rezaei, S., Farhan, H. Ali, Al-Hussein, A., Al-Saedi, G., Mahmood, G., Yaseen, I.F., Al-Yousuf, L., AlBayati, M., Mahmood, S., Raheem, S., AlHaidari, T., Dakhil, Z., Thornton, P., Donnelly, J., Bowen, M., Blatt, A., Elbaz-Greener, G., Shotan, A., Yalonetsky, S., Goland, S., Biener, M., Assenza, G. Egidy, Bonvicini, M., Donti, A., Bulgarelli, A., Prandstraller, D., Romeo, C., Crepaz, R., Sciatti, E., Metra, M., Orabona, R., Ali, L. Ait, Festa, P., Fesslova, V., Bonanomi, C., Calcagnino, M., Lombardi, F., Colli, A.M., Ossola, M.W., Gobbi, C., Gherbesi, E., Tondi, L., Schiavone, M., Squillace, M., Carmina, M.G., Maina, A., Macchi, C., Gollo, E., Comoglio, F.M., Montali, N., Re, P., Bordese, R., Todros, T., Donvito, V., Marra, W. Grosso, Sinagra, G., D'Agata Mottolese, B., Bobbo, M., Gesuete, V., Rakar, S., Ramani, F., Niwa, K., Mekebekova, D., Mussagaliyeva, A., Lee, T., Mirrakhimov, E., Abilova, S., Bektasheva, E., Neronova, K., Lunegova, O., Žaliūnas, R., Jonkaitienė, R., Petrauskaitė, J., Laucevicius, A., Jancauskaite, D., Lauciuviene, L., Gumbiene, L., Lankutiene, L., Glaveckaite, S., Laukyte, M., Solovjova, S., Rudiene, V., Chee, K.H., Yim, C.C.-W., Ang, H.L., Kuppusamy, R., Watson, T., Caruana, M., Estensen, M.-E., Kayani, M.G.A. Mahmood, Munir, R., Tomaszuk-Kazberuk, A., Sobkowicz, B., Przepiesc, J., Lesniak-Sobelga, A., Tomkiewicz-Pajak, L., Komar, M., Olszowska, M., Podolec, P., Wisniowska-Smialek, S., Lelonek, M., Faflik, U., Cichocka-Radwan, A., Plaskota, K., Trojnarska, O., Guerra, N., de Sousa, L., Cruz, C., Ribeiro, V., Jovanova, S., Petrescu, V., Jurcut, R., Ginghina, C., Coman, I. Mircea, Musteata, M., Osipova, O., Golivets, T., Khamnagadaev, I., Golovchenko, O., Nagibina, A., Ropatko, I., Gaisin, I.R., Shilina, L. Valeryevna, Sharashkina, N., Shlyakhto, E., Irtyuga, O., Moiseeva, O., Karelkina, E., Zazerskaya, I., Kozlenok, A., Sukhova, I., Jovovic, L., Prokšelj, K., Koželj, M., Askar, A.O., Abdilaahi, A.A., Mohamed, M.H., Dirir, A.M., Sliwa, K., Manga, P., Pijuan-Domenech, A., Galian-Gay, L., Tornos, P., Subirana, M.T., T, M., Subirana, Oliver, J.M., Garcia-Aranda Dominguez, B., Gonzalez, I. Hernandez, Jimenez, J.F. Delgado, Subias, P. Escribano, Murga, N., Elbushi, A., Suliman, A., Jazzar, K., Murtada, M., Ahamed, N., Dellborg, M., Furenas, E., Jinesjo, M., Skoglund, K., Eriksson, P., Gilljam, T., Thilen, U., Tobler, D., Wustmann, K., Schwitz, F., Schwerzmann, M., Rutz, T., Bouchardy, J., Greutmann, M., Lopes, B.M. Santos, Meier, L., Arrigo, M., de Boer, K., Konings, T., Wajon, E., Wagenaar, L.J., Polak, P., Pieper, E.P.G., Roos-Hesselink, J., van Hagen, I., Duvekot, H., Cornette, J.M.J., De Groot, C., van Oppen, C., Sarac, L., Esen, O. Batukan, Enar, S. Catirli, Mondo, C., Ingabire, P., Nalwanga, B., Semu, T., Salih, B.T., Almahmeed, W.A.R., Wani, S., Farook, F.S. Mohamed, Ain, Al, Gerges, F., Komaranchath, A.M., Al bakshi, F., Al Mulla, A., Yusufali, A.H., Al Hatou, E.I., Bazargani, N., Hussain, F., Hudsmith, L., Thompson, P., Thorne, S., Bowater, S., Money-Kyrle, A., Clifford, P., Ramrakha, P., Firoozan, S., Chaplin, J., Bowers, N., Adamson, D., Schroeder, F., Wendler, R., Hammond, S., Nihoyannopoulos, P., Norfolk, Norwich, Hall, R., Freeman, L., Veldtman, G., Kerr, J., Tellett, L., Scott, N., Bhatt, A.B., DeFaria Yeh, D., Youniss, M.A., Wood, M., Sarma, A.A., Tsiaras, S., Stefanescu, A., Duran, J.M., Stone, L., Majdalany, D.S., Chapa, J., Chintala, K., Gupta, P., Botti, J., Ting, J., Davidson, W.R., Wells, G., Sparks, D., Paruchuri, V., Marzo, K., Patel, D., Wagner, W., Ahanya, S.N., Colicchia, L., Jentink, T., Han, K., Loichinger, M., Parker, M., Longtin, C., Yetman, A., Erickson, K., Cramer, J., Tsai, S., Fletcher, B., Warta, S., Cohen, C., Lindblade, C., Puntel, R., Nagaran, K., Croft, N., Gurvitz, M., Otto, C., Talluto, C., Murphy, D., Perlroth, M.G., Ramlakhan, Karishma P., Johnson, Mark R., Lelonek, Malgorzata, Saad, Aly, Gasimov, Zaur, Sharashkina, Natalia V., Thornton, Patrick, Arstall, Margaret, and Roos-Hesselink, Jolien W.
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
46. Can generative AI improve the readability of patient education materials at a radiology practice?
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Gupta, M., Gupta, P., Ho, C., Wood, J., Guleria, S., and Virostko, J.
- Subjects
- *
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence , *GEMINI (Chatbot) , *CHATGPT , *WORD frequency , *PATIENT education - Abstract
This study evaluated the readability of existing patient education materials and explored the potential of generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT-4 and Google Gemini, to simplify these materials to a sixth-grade reading level, in accordance with guidelines. Seven patient education documents were selected from a major radiology group. ChatGPT-4 and Gemini were provided the documents and asked to reformulate to target a sixth-grade reading level. Average reading level (ARL) and proportional word count (PWC) change were calculated, and a 1-sample t-test was conducted (p=0.05). Three radiologists assessed the materials on a Likert scale for appropriateness, relevance, clarity, and information retention. The original materials had an ARL of 11.72. ChatGPT ARL was 7.32 ± 0.76 (6/7 significant) and Gemini ARL was 6.55 ± 0.51 (7/7 significant). ChatGPT reduced word count by 15% ± 7%, with 95% retaining at least 75% of information. Gemini reduced word count by 33% ± 7%, with 68% retaining at least 75% of information. ChatGPT outputs were more appropriate (95% vs. 57%), clear (92% vs. 67%), and relevant (95% vs. 76%) than Gemini. Interrater agreement was significantly different for ChatGPT (0.91) than for Gemini (0.46). Generative AI significantly enhances the readability of patient education materials, which did not achieve the recommended sixth-grade ARL. Radiologist evaluations confirmed the appropriateness and relevance of the AI-simplified texts. This study emphasizes the capabilities of generative AI tools and the necessity for ongoing expert review to maintain content accuracy and suitability. • AI tools reduced radiology material reading levels from 11 to ∼7 grade level. • ChatGPT outperformed Google Gemini in appropriateness, clarity, and relevance. • AI simplification maintained high content accuracy and relevance in most cases. • Radiologist oversight remains crucial to ensure patient safety and preparation. • Study suggests AI can make radiology education more accessible to patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The antimicrobial effectiveness of chlorhexidine and chlorhexidine-silver sulfadiazine-impregnated central venous catheters against the emerging fungal pathogen Candida auris.
- Author
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Gupta, Nisha, Haughton, Shanna, Kemper, Sydney, Koehler, Monica, Antoon, Roula, Edwards, Colin G., and Bardin, Amy
- Abstract
Candida auris is an emerging multidrug-resistant fungus associated with catheter-related bloodstream infections. In vitro efficacy of chlorhexidine (CHX) and CHX-silver sulfadiazine-impregnated (CHX-S) antimicrobial central venous catheters (CVCs) against C auris was investigated. Minimum inhibitory and bactericidal CHX concentrations were determined against 19 C auris isolates. To assess extraluminal efficacy, segments from CVCs impregnated externally (CHX-S1) and both externally and internally (CHX-S2) were plasma-conditioned for 1- and 6-day, and to assess intraluminal efficacy, CHX-S2 CVCs were preconditioned with saline-lock for 6 days, followed by 24-hour C auris inoculation and microbial adherence determination on impregnated and nonimpregnated CVCs. CHX inhibited all C auris isolates with minimum inhibitory and bactericidal concentrations range of 8 to 128 μg/mL. C auris adherence was reduced on CHX-S1 and CHX-S2 extraluminally by 100% on day 1, 86.96% to 100% on day 7, and intraluminally on CHX-S2 by 56.86% to 90.52% on day 7. CHX and CHX-S CVC performance against C auris observed in this study is consistent with antimicrobial benefits observed in prior preclinical and randomized controlled clinical studies. CHX showed strong inhibitory and cidal effects on C auris. CHX-S CVCs proved highly efficacious against this pathogen under in vitro conditions. Additional studies, however, are required to confirm clinical benefit. • Candida auris is an emerging catheter-related bloodstream infection pathogen. • Chlorhexidine has strong inhibitory and cidal effects against C auris. • Chlorhexidine-silver sulfadiazine-impregnated central venous catheters are effective against C auris. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Prevotella Is Associated With Sex-Based Differences in Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
- Author
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Dong, Tien S., Peters, Kirstin, Gupta, Arpana, Jacobs, Jonathan P., and Chang, Lin
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The role of Sodium-Glucose Transporter-2 Inhibitors (SGLT-2i) in preventing chronic obstructive disease exacerbation in patients with diabetes and COPD: An electronic health database analysis.
- Author
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Gupta, Sushan, Mohta, Avani, Lauinger, Alexa, and Thameem, Danish
- Abstract
• The incidence of COPD exacerbation was lower in patients on SGLT2i medication. • Any hospitalization post-COPD exacerbation was significantly lower in the SGLT-2i group. • There was a non-significant trend for lower ICU admissions and intubations in participants with SGLT-2i. Sodium Glucose Transporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT-2i) medications reduce inflammation, improve glycemic control, and impart weight loss, all of which may play a role in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) pathophysiology. The primary objective of our study was to explore the incidence of COPD exacerbation in patients with diabetes and COPD on SGLT-2i medications. The secondary objective was to assess the impact of SGLT-2i medications on COPD exacerbations needing hospitalization, ICU admission, and mechanical ventilation. This was a retrospective cohort analysis of COPD patients with diabetes enrolled in the COPD registry at a Mid-west Tertiary care teaching hospital from January 1, 2022, to December 31, 2022. We used Slicer-Dicer, a self-service cohort exploration tool embedded in EPIC for data extraction. We had 31,411 patients registered with the COPD registry during the study period. Of these, 18,713 had diabetes, and 1295 patients were on SGLT-2i medication. The incidence of COPD exacerbation, including severe COPD exacerbation needing hospitalization, was significantly lower in the SGLT-2i medication group (3.16% vs 18.3%, p < 0.05; 1.2% vs 5.04%, p < 0.05). Also, there was a non-significant trend suggesting that the incidence of COPD exacerbation needing intensive care unit admission and intubation was lower in the SGLT-2i medication group (0.07% vs 3.4%; 0 vs 0.04%). SGLT-2i medication use was associated with reduced incidence of COPD exacerbation irrespective of underlying control of diabetes. Our study suggests possible role of SGLT-2i in preventing COPD exacerbation. Randomized trials are needed in the future to confirm or refute these findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Is a Failed Spinal Attempt Associated With a Worse Clinical Course Following Primary Total Hip and Knee Arthroplasty?
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Chandrashekar, Anoop S., Hymel, Alicia M., Pennings, Jacquelyn S., Wilson, Jacob M., Gupta, Rajnish K., Polkowski, Gregory G., and Martin, J. Ryan
- Abstract
Spinal anesthesia (SA) is the preferred anesthesia modality for total joint arthroplasty (TJA). However, studies establishing SA as preferential may be subject to selection bias given that general anesthesia (GA) is often selectively utilized on more difficult, higher-risk operations. The optimal comparison group, therefore, is the patient converted to GA due to a failed attempt at SA. The purpose of this study was to determine risk factors and outcomes following failed SA with conversion to GA during primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA). A consecutive cohort of 4,483 patients who underwent primary TJA at our institution was identified (2,004 THA and 2,479 TKA). Of these patients, 3,307 underwent GA (73.8%), 1,056 underwent SA (23.3%), and 130 patients failed SA with conversion to GA (2.90%). Primary outcomes included rescue analgesia requirement in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU), time to ambulation, pain scores in the PACU, estimated blood loss, and 90-day complications. Risk factors for SA failure included older age and a higher comorbidity burden. Failure of SA was associated with increased estimated blood loss, rescue intravenous opioid use, and time to ambulation when compared to the successful SA group in both THA and TKA patients (P <.001). The anesthesia modality was not associated with significant differences in PACU pain scores. The 90-day complication rate was similar between the failed SA and GA groups. There was a higher incidence of postoperative pain prompting unplanned visits and thromboembolism when comparing failed SA to successful SA in both THA and TKA patients (P <.05). In our series, patients who had failed SA demonstrated inferior outcomes to patients receiving successful SA and similar outcomes to patients receiving GA who did not have an SA attempt. This emphasizes the importance of success in the initial attempt at SA for optimizing outcomes following TJA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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