9 results on '"Joudi H"'
Search Results
2. Fatigue bei Patienten mit Multipler Sklerose oder Neuromyelitis optica: Ein systematischer Vergleich [Fatigue in patients with multiple sclerosis or neuromyelitis optica: A systematic comparison]
- Author
-
Hildebrandt, H., Belhaj, I., Al-Joudi, H., Eling, P.A.T.M., Hildebrandt, H., Belhaj, I., Al-Joudi, H., and Eling, P.A.T.M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Die Ursachen und die qualitative Struktur des Fatigueerlebens bei MS sind weiterhin nicht wirklich geklärt. Die Untersuchung des Fatigueerlebens bei unterschiedlichen Autoimmunerkrankungen könnte hilfreich sein, um hier Fortschritte zu erzielen, da diese im Unterschied zur MS weniger oder keine kortikalen Herde aufweisen oder eine schnellere Progression der körperlichen Behinderung. Wir verglichen 12 Neuromyelitis-optica-Patienten, 22 MS-Patienten und 22 gesunde Kontrollen mit der Modifizierten Fatigue Impact Scale, wobei wir uns auf die physische und mentale Fatigue konzentrierten. Zudem wurden diese Gruppen hinsichtlich ihrer körperlichen Einschränkung mit dem EDSS beurteilt und neuropsychologisch untersucht. MS- und NMO-Patienten litten unter einer vergleichbar hohen Fatigue, allerdings war bei NMO-Patienten die physische Fatigue gegenüber der Kontrollgruppe erhöht, die mentale Fatigue nicht. NMO-Patienten zeigten eine höhere globale Beeinträchtigung im EDSS, unterschieden sich aber nicht von den MS Patienten in ihrer kognitiven Leistungsfähigkeit (worin beide signifikant unterhalb des Niveaus der Kontrollgruppe lagen). Unsere Untersuchung ergibt, dass die Unterscheidung zwischen mentaler und physischer Fatigue wesentlich ist, wenn verschiedene Autoimmunerkrankungen hinsichtlich der Fatigue verglichen werden. Unidimensionale Fatigueskalen dürften damit nicht hinreichend sein, um Fatigue zu erfassen. Wir spekulieren, dass möglicherweise die Erfahrung der Qualität der primären objektiven Beeinträchtigung für die Selbstbeurteilung der Fatigue eine Rolle spielen könnte, dass aber weitere vergleichende Untersuchungen geeignet sein könnten, um die Fatigueforschung auf ein festeres Fundament zu stellen. English abstract: The causes and the qualitative structure of the fatigue experience in MS are still not clear. Investigating the fatigue experience in various autoimmune diseases could be helpful in making progress since, unlike MS, these have fewer or no cortical foci
- Published
- 2021
3. Salt-related knowledge, attitudes and practices and their relationship with 24-h urinary sodium and potassium excretions among a group of healthy residents in the UAE: a cross-sectional study
- Author
-
Amjad H Jarrar, Pariyarath S Thondre, Leila Cheikh Ismail, Helen Lightowler, Mo’ath F Bataineh, Alia K Al Baloushi, Amira Y Al Braiki, Shaima Al Halabi, Joudi Hajouz, Usama Souka, Fatima Al Meqbaali, Lily Stojanovska, Habiba I Ali, Johaina T Idriss, Rameez Al Daour, Sheima T Saleh, Maysm N Mohamad, and Ayesha S Al Dhaheri
- Subjects
Urinary sodium ,Potassium ,Food-related knowledge ,Sodium sources ,UAE ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: This study aimed to measure urinary sodium and potassium as a measure of sodium and potassium intake concerning the knowledge, attitude and practice towards sodium intake among a group of healthy residents in the UAE. Design: A cross-sectional study on a sample of healthy adults in the UAE. In addition to the knowledge, attitude and practice questionnaire, sodium and potassium excretions and food records were taken. Setting: The UAE. Participants: A sample of 190 healthy individuals aged between 20 and 60 years. Results: The mean (± s d) age of the sample was 38·6 (± 12·5) years, and 50·5 % were females. The mean urinary sodium and potassium intake were 2816·2 ± 675·7 mg/d and 2533·3 ± 615 mg/d, respectively. The means were significantly different compared with the WHO recommendation of sodium and potassium (P < 0·001). About 65 % of the participants exceeded the WHO recommendations for salt intake, and participants’ knowledge classification for health-related issues was fair, while food-related knowledge was poor (P = 0·001). A two-stage stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that knowledge, attitude and practice scores were negatively associated with urinary sodium excretion (r = –0·174; P = 0·017) and those older participants and females had lower urinary sodium excretion (P < 0·001). Conclusions: These findings may suggest an increase in the risk of hypertension in the UAE population. Moreover, these findings emphasise the need to establish education and public awareness programmes focusing on identifying the sodium contents of foods and establishing national regulations regarding food reformulation, particularly for staple foods such as bread.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Equilibrium And Kinetic Modeling Of Adsorption Of Disperse Blue 79 Onto Different Adsorbents
- Author
-
M. Joudi*, H. Hafdi, J. Mouldar, H. Nasrellah, M.A. El Mhammedi, M. Bakasse
- Subjects
Adsorption ,Disperse Blue 79 ,Chitosan ,Phosphogypsum ,Natural Phosphate ,Isotherm models - Abstract
Azo dyes are generally used in food, cosmetic, textile, pharmaceutical, and leather industries. Many of these dyes are carcinogens and need a treatment. The aim of the present study was to use chitosan (CHT), phosphogypsum (PG) and natural phosphate (NP) powders for the removal of Disperse Blue 79 (DB 79) from aqueous solution. The effects of contact time, initial dye concentration, absorbents doses, solution pH, and temperature on the batch adsorption process were systematically studied. Isotherm models were applied to the experimental equilibrium data and pseudo-first order, pseudo-second order kinetic models were used to describe the kinetic data and to evaluate the rate constants. The thermodynamic parameters, such as the changes in enthalpy, entropy, and Gibbs free energy were also studied. The results show that the chitosan, phosphogypsum and natural phosphate could be used for the removal of DB 79 in wastewater treatment.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Neonatal resuscitation with continuous chest compressions and high frequency percussive ventilation in preterm lambs.
- Author
-
Giusto E, Sankaran D, Lesneski A, Joudi H, Hardie M, Hammitt V, Zeinali L, Lakshminrusimha S, and Vali P
- Subjects
- Animals, Sheep, Respiration, Artificial, Hemodynamics, Sheep, Domestic, Oxygen, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Background: Cerebral oxygen delivery (cDO
2 ) is low during chest compressions (CC). We hypothesized that gas exchange and cDO2 are better with continuous CC with high frequency percussive ventilation (CCC + HFPV) compared to conventional 3:1 compressions-to-ventilation (C:V) resuscitation during neonatal resuscitation in preterm lambs with cardiac arrest induced by umbilical cord compression., Methods: Fourteen lambs in cardiac arrest were randomized to 3:1 C:V resuscitation (90CC + 30 breaths/min) per the Neonatal Resuscitation Program guidelines or CCC + HFPV (120CC + HFPV continuously). Intravenous epinephrine was given every 3 min until return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC)., Results: There was no difference in the incidence and time to ROSC between both groups. Median (IQR) PaCO2 was significantly lower with CCC + HFPV during CC, at ROSC and 15 min post-ROSC-[104 (99-112), 83 (77-99), and 43 (40-64)], respectively compared to 3:1 C:V-[149 (139-167), 153 (143-168), and 153 (138-178) mmHg. PaO2 and cDO2 were higher with CCC + HFPV during CC and at ROSC. PaO2 was similar 15 min post-ROSC with a lower FiO2 in the CCC + HFPV group 0.4 (0.4-0.5) vs. 1 (0.6-1)., Conclusion: In preterm lambs with perinatal cardiac-arrest, continuous chest compressions with HFPV does not improve ROSC but enhances gas exchange and increases cerebral oxygen delivery compared to 3:1 C:V during neonatal resuscitation., Impact Statement: Ventilation is the most important intervention in newborn resuscitation. Currently recommended 3:1 compression-to-ventilation ratio is associated with hypercarbia and poor oxygen delivery to the brain. Providing uninterrupted continuous chest compressions during high frequency percussive ventilation is feasible in a lamb model of perinatal cardiac arrest, and demonstrates improved gas exchange and oxygen delivery to the brain. This is the first study in premature lambs evaluating high frequency percussive ventilation with asynchronous chest compressions and lays the groundwork for future clinical studies to optimize gas exchange and hemodynamics during chest compressions in newborns., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The impact of COVID-19 on health care-associated infections in intensive care units in low- and middle-income countries: International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) findings.
- Author
-
Rosenthal VD, Myatra SN, Divatia JV, Biswas S, Shrivastava A, Al-Ruzzieh MA, Ayaad O, Bat-Erdene A, Bat-Erdene I, Narankhuu B, Gupta D, Mandal S, Sengupta S, Joudi H, Omeis I, Agha HM, Fathallala A, Mohahmed EH, Yesiler I, Oral M, Ozcelik M, Mehta Y, Sarma S, Chatterjee S, Belkebir S, Kanaa A, Jeetawi R, Mclaughlin SA, Shultz JM, Bearman G, Jin Z, and Yin R
- Subjects
- Delivery of Health Care, Developing Countries, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Pandemics, Prospective Studies, COVID-19 epidemiology, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated epidemiology, Urinary Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: This study examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on health care-associated infection (HAI) incidence in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)., Methods: Patients from 7 LMICs were followed up during hospital intensive care unit (ICU) stays from January 2019 to May 2020. HAI rates were calculated using the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) Surveillance Online System applying the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Healthcare Safety Network (CDC-NHSN) criteria. Pre-COVID-19 rates for 2019 were compared with COVID-19 era rates for 2020 for central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs), catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs), ventilator-associated events (VAEs), mortality, and length of stay (LOS)., Results: A total of 7,775 patients were followed up for 49,506 bed days. The 2019 to 2020 rate comparisons were 2.54 and 4.73 CLABSIs per 1,000 central line days (risk ratio [RR] = 1.85, p = .0006), 9.71 and 12.58 VAEs per 1,000 mechanical ventilator days (RR = 1.29, p = .10), and 1.64 and 1.43 CAUTIs per 1,000 urinary catheter days (RR = 1.14; p = .69). Mortality rates were 15.2% and 23.2% for 2019 and 2020 (RR = 1.42; p < .0001), respectively. Mean LOS for 2019 and 2020 were 6.02 and 7.54 days (RR = 1.21, p < .0001), respectively., Discussion: This study documents an increase in HAI rates in 7 LMICs during the first 5 months of the COVID-19 pandemic and highlights the need to reprioritize and return to conventional infection prevention practices., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Spatial Binding Impairments in Visual Working Memory following Temporal Lobectomy.
- Author
-
Alenazi MF, Al-Joudi H, Alotaibi F, Bracewell M, Dundon NM, Katshu MZUH, and d'Avossa G
- Subjects
- Cognition, Humans, Memory Disorders etiology, Mental Recall, Stereotaxic Techniques, Temporal Lobe surgery, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe complications, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery, Memory, Short-Term
- Abstract
Disorders of the medial temporal lobe (MTL) adversely affect visual working memory (vWM) performance, including feature binding. It is unclear whether these impairments generalize across visual dimensions or are specifically spatial. To address this issue, we compared performance in two tasks of 13 epilepsy patients, who had undergone a temporal lobectomy, and 15 healthy controls. In the vWM task, participants recalled the color of one of two polygons, previously displayed side by side. At recall, a location or shape probe identified the target. In the perceptual task, participants estimated the centroid of three visible disks. Patients recalled the target color less accurately than healthy controls because they frequently swapped the nontarget with the target color. Moreover, healthy controls and right temporal lobectomy patients made more swap errors following shape than space probes. Left temporal lobectomy patients, showed the opposite pattern of errors instead. Patients and controls performed similarly in the perceptual task. We conclude that left MTL damage impairs spatial binding in vWM, and that this impairment does not reflect a perceptual or attentional deficit., (Copyright © 2022 Alenazi et al.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Continuous chest compressions with asynchronous ventilations increase carotid blood flow in the perinatal asphyxiated lamb model.
- Author
-
Vali P, Lesneski A, Hardie M, Alhassen Z, Chen P, Joudi H, Sankaran D, and Lakshminrusimha S
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Blood Gas Analysis, Blood Pressure, Disease Models, Animal, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Sheep, Asphyxia Neonatorum physiopathology, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Carotid Arteries physiopathology, Regional Blood Flow, Respiration, Artificial
- Abstract
Background: The neonatal resuscitation program (NRP) recommends interrupted chest compressions (CCs) with ventilation in the severely bradycardic neonate. The conventional 3:1 compression-to-ventilation (C:V) resuscitation provides 90 CCs/min, significantly lower than the intrinsic newborn heart rate (120-160 beats/min). Continuous CC with asynchronous ventilation (CCCaV) may improve the success of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC)., Methods: Twenty-two near-term fetal lambs were randomized to interrupted 3:1 C:V (90 CCs + 30 breaths/min) or CCCaV (120 CCs + 30 breaths/min). Asphyxiation was induced by cord occlusion. After 5 min of asystole, resuscitation began following NRP guidelines. The first dose of epinephrine was given at 6 min. Invasive arterial blood pressure and left carotid blood flow were continuously measured. Serial arterial blood gases were collected., Results: Baseline characteristics between groups were similar. Rate of and time to ROSC was similar between groups. CCCaV was associated with a higher PaO
2 (partial oxygen tension) (22 ± 5.3 vs. 15 ± 3.5 mmHg, p < 0.01), greater left carotid blood flow (7.5 ± 3.1 vs. 4.3 ± 2.6 mL/kg/min, p < 0.01) and oxygen delivery (0.40 ± 0.15 vs. 0.13 ± 0.07 mL O2 /kg/min, p < 0.01) compared to 3:1 C:V., Conclusions: In a perinatal asphyxiated cardiac arrest lamb model, CCCaV showed greater carotid blood flow and cerebral oxygen delivery compared to 3:1 C:V resuscitation., Impact: In a perinatal asphyxiated cardiac arrest lamb model, CCCaV improved carotid blood flow and oxygen delivery to the brain compared to the conventional 3:1 C:V resuscitation. Pre-clinical studies assessing neurodevelopmental outcomes and tissue injury comparing continuous uninterrupted chest compressions to the current recommended 3:1 C:V during newborn resuscitation are warranted prior to clinical trials., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to the International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Hematological findings associated with tubulin-folding cofactors D-related encephalopathy: Expanding the phenotype.
- Author
-
Al-Bakheet A, Tohary M, Khan S, Chedrawi A, Edrees A, Tous E, Al-Mousa H, Al-Otaibi L, AlShahrani S, Alsagob M, Al-Quait L, Almass R, Al-Joudi H, Monies D, Al-Semari A, Aldosary M, Daghestani M, Colak D, Kaya N, and Al-Owain M
- Subjects
- Adult, Anemia etiology, Brain Diseases complications, Brain Diseases diagnostic imaging, Child, Female, Humans, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neutropenia etiology, Pedigree, Thrombocytopenia etiology, Young Adult, Brain Diseases blood, Brain Diseases genetics, Microtubule-Associated Proteins genetics, Mutation, Missense
- Abstract
The dysfunction of microtubules (α/β-tubulin polymers) underlies a wide range of nervous system genetic abnormalities. Defects in TBCD, a tubulin-folding cofactor, cause diseases highlighted with early-onset encephalopathy with or without neurodegeneration, intellectual disability, seizures, microcephaly and tetraparaperesis. Utilizing various molecular methods, we describe nine patients from four unrelated families with two novel exon 18 variants in TBCD exhibiting the typical neurological phenotype of the disease. Interestingly, all the investigated patients had previously unreported hematological findings in the form of neutropenia and mild degree of anemia and thrombocytopenia. In addition to delineating the neurological phenotype in several patients with TBCD variants, our study stresses on the new association of neutropenia, in particular, with the disease., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.