285 results on '"Dalton, Richard"'
Search Results
252. Techno-Trends: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly.
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Dalton, Richard
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COMPUTER industry , *PORNOGRAPHY , *WEBSITES , *TELECOMMUNICATION systems equipment , *COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Provides information on trends in products and services that have implications to computer and Internet industries. Development of 900 series communication systems from PictureTel company; Discussion on the problem of pornography on the Internet; Web site for cats.
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- 2000
253. Unwired, Part II: Wireless Or Less Wired?
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Dalton, Richard
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WIRELESS communications , *INTERNET , *WIRELESS telecommunication services industry , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Discusses the concept of wireless technology. Description of the technology in mobile phones; Wireless data technology in Japan; Key elements in the growth of the mobile Internet.
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- 2000
254. Unwired, Part I: Hyperconnectivity.
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Dalton, Richard
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WIRELESS communications , *COMPUTER networks - Abstract
Discusses the developments in mobile Internet access and Bluetooth wireless computer connectivity. Problem facing mobile Internet access technology; Potential of Bluetooth wireless connectivity technology; How Bluetooth technology will affect local area networking system.
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- 2000
255. E-Tail Wags The Dog.
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Dalton, Richard
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ELECTRONIC commerce , *CUSTOMER services , *RETAIL industry , *COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Discusses several issues on electronic retailing (e-retailing). Growth of e-retailing; Problems in the customer service aspect of e-retailing; Tips online shoppers.
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- 2000
256. Polish Your Image (Part II).
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Dalton, Richard
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WEBSITES , *DIGITAL image processing , *SCANNING systems - Abstract
Provides information on Web sites which serve as photo albums for digital images. Information on PhotoPoint.com; Scanning services offered by Kodak's PhotoNet.com; Description of Shoebox indexes.
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- 2000
257. Ten Wishes For A New Millennium.
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Dalton, Richard
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TECHNOLOGY , *LIFESTYLES , *PRIVACY - Abstract
Expresses the wishes of the author concerning technologies that could bring better lifestyle to everyone. Privacy of consumers involved in electronic commerce; Improvement of electronic books; Innovation in electronic voting.
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- 2000
258. Lucent Optical Allusions Bode Bandwidth Glut.
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Dalton, Richard
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OPTICAL communications , *OPTICAL fiber networks , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Reveals that Lucent Technologies company has developed an optical network that is capable of transmitting 160 billion bits of data per second over a single wavelength. Vision of the company; Implications of the optical technology to the nature of network computing and telecommunications.
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- 1999
259. It's A Big World After All.
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Dalton, Richard
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ELECTRONIC commerce , *CROSS-cultural communication , *INTERNET marketing - Abstract
Argues that understanding the culture of people in various countries is the key issue in exploiting the potentials of electronic commerce for companies in the United States. Dominance of the English language on the Internet; Problems of multiple language communications; Characteristics of context cultures; Impact of the Internet.
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- 1999
260. What Is The Internet Good For? Part II.
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Dalton, Richard
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INTERNET , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *INFORMATION technology - Abstract
Part II. Focuses on the impact of the Internet on information and communication technologies. Advantages and disadvantages; Impact on customer service; Issue on financial planning.
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- 1999
261. Checking E-ttendance.
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Dalton, Richard
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EXHIBITIONS , *COMPUTER industry , *COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Discusses the possibility of attending a computer industry trade shows through the Internet. Significance of trade shows in the computer industry; Cost of conducting trade shows; Marketing computers; Discussion on distance learning.
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- 1999
262. You've Got (Too Much) Mail!
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Dalton, Richard
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SOCIOLOGY of email , *EMAIL , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *SOCIETIES - Abstract
Discusses the social impact of e-mail messages in the United States (US). Average e-mail of a US worker a day according to the Institute for the Future; Expectations of the Electronic Messaging Association on the number of e-mail messages by 2000; Opinion on the concept of unified messaging, collection of all type of messages in a single repository.
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- 1999
263. The Home Of The Future: Again.
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Dalton, Richard
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INTERNETWORKING , *INTERNET servers - Abstract
Focuses on a central home server empowered to manage people's physical lives with minimal intervention. Case examples; Environmental impacts; Advantages of home Internetworking.
- Published
- 1999
264. FREE TO CARE.
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Dalton, Richard
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DETOXIFICATION (Alternative medicine) , *HEALTH , *PRISONS , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *NURSES , *NURSING services - Abstract
Relates the author's experience of working in Leeds, one of six pilot sites receiving government investment to produce a detox program that will reduce self-harm and suicide in the prison in England. Programs offered in prisons; Health screening for each client who enters the program; Activities used by the author to prevent further injury to the clients.
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- 2005
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265. Impact of anaemia at discharge following colorectal cancer surgery.
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Dru, Rebecca C., Curtis, Nathan J., Court, Emma L., Spencer, Catherine, El Falaha, Sara, Dennison, Godwin, Dalton, Richard, Allison, Andrew, Ockrim, Jonathan, and Francis, Nader K.
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COLORECTAL cancer , *ONCOLOGIC surgery , *PROCTOLOGY , *ANEMIA , *SURGICAL blood loss - Abstract
Objectives: Preoperative anaemia is common in patients with colorectal cancer and increasingly optimised prior to surgery. Comparably little attention is given to the prevalence and consequences of postoperative anaemia. We aimed to investigate the frequency and short- or long-term impact of anaemia at discharge following colorectal cancer resection. Methods: A dedicated, prospectively populated database of elective laparoscopic colorectal cancer procedures undertaken with curative intent within a fully implemented ERAS protocol was utilised. The primary endpoint was anaemia at time of discharge (haemoglobin (Hb) < 120 g/L for women and < 135 g/L for men). Patient demographics, tumour characteristics, operative details and postoperative outcomes were captured. Median follow-up was 61 months with overall survival calculated with the Kaplan-Meier log rank method and Cox proportional hazard regression based on anaemia at time of hospital discharge. Results: A total of 532 patients with median 61-month follow-up were included. 46.4% were anaemic preoperatively (cohort mean Hb 129.4 g/L ± 18.7). Median surgical blood loss was 100 mL (IQR 0–200 mL). Upon discharge, most patients were anaemic (76.6%, Hb 116.3 g/L ± 14, mean 19 g/L ± 11 below lower limit of normal, p < 0.001). 16.7% experienced postoperative complications which were associated with lower discharge Hb (112 g/L ± 12 vs. 117 g/L ± 14, p = 0.001). Patients discharged anaemic had longer hospital stays (7 [5–11] vs. 6 [5–8], p = 0.037). Anaemia at discharge was independently associated with reduced overall survival (82% vs. 70%, p = 0.018; HR 1.6 (95% CI 1.04–2.5), p = 0.034). Conclusion: Anaemia at time of discharge following elective laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery and ERAS care is common with associated negative impacts upon short-term clinical outcomes and long-term overall survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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266. Book Reviews.
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Dalton, Richard
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- DELAYED Posttraumatic Stress Disorders From Infancy (Book)
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Reviews the book `Delayed Post Traumatic Stress Disorders From Infancy,' by Clancy McKenzie and Lance Wright.
- Published
- 1999
267. Adolescents, Alcohol, and Substance Abuse (Book).
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Dalton, Richard
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book 'Adolescents, Alcohol, and Substance Abuse: Reaching Teens Through Brief Interventions,' edited by Peter M. Monti.
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- 2002
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268. Changes in platelet function with inflammation in patients undergoing vascular surgery.
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Olechowski, Bartosz, Khanna, Vikram, Mariathas, Mark, Ashby, Alexander, Dalton, Richard T, Nordon, Ian, Harris, Scott, Nicholas, Zoe, Thayalasamy, Kala, Mahmoudi, Michael, Curzen, Nick, and Englyst, Nicola
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VASCULAR surgery , *INFLAMMATION - Abstract
The role of platelets in ischaemic events is well established. Aspirin represents the default antiplatelet and blocks the metabolism of arachidonic acid (AA) at the cyclo-oxygenase enzyme (COX). AA is commonly used as a test of response to aspirin, but recent data raise uncertainty about the validity of this approach. Specifically, in some patients AA-induced clotting is not suppressed, but the level of COX-dependent AA metabolite, thromboxane B2 (TXB2) is negligible. Furthermore, AA-induced whole blood clotting varies dynamically in individuals, who are aspirin responsive according to TXB2 levels. The aim of this study was to assess the level of AA-, ADP- and thrombin-mediated platelet reactivity in patients on aspirin before, during, and after major vascular surgery, which represents a model of on/off vascular inflammation. Firstly, we hypothesized, that in association with this inflammatory episode AA-, ADP- and thrombin-induced clotting would change in a dynamic manner. Secondly, that AA-induced clotting will be modified despite complete suppression of platelet TXB2 production by aspirin throughout the periprocedural period, possibly via a lipoxygenase-mediated mechanism. Fourty patients underwent major vascular surgery (open abdominal aortic aneurysm operation, infrainguinal bypass for subcritical limb ischaemia or peripheral aneurysm repair with bypass). They were all on 75 mg of aspirin prior to and throughout the perioperative period and received 5000 units of unfractionated heparin intraoperatively. AA-, ADP-, and thrombin-induced clotting, AA metabolites (TXB2 and 12-Hyroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE)) and inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6, TNF-α and CD40) were measured pre-procedure and at 2, 24, 48 hours, 3 to 5 days and 3 months after surgery. AA-, ADP- and thrombin-induced platelet reactivity was assessed using thrombelastography. TXB2, 12-HETE, IL-6, TNF-α, CD40 were determined using the sequential competitive binding Enzyme-Linked ImmunoAssay technique and CRP was determined using an immune-turbidimetric test on human serum. There was a transient rise in inflammatory markers in the early perioperative period (CRP at 24, 48 hours and 3 to 5 days p < 0.001 and IL-6 at 2, 24, 48 hours and 3 to 5 days p < 0.001 as compared to baseline). Patients had negligible levels of TXB2 throughout, confirming a consistent therapeutic response to aspirin. There was a transient rise in thrombin-mediated clotting (MAThrombin at 48 hours p = 0.001 and 3 to 5 days p < 0.001) and a fall in AA- and ADP-induced clotting in the early post op period (both MAAA and MAADP p = 0.001 at 2 hours). At 3 months, the level of AA- and ADP-induced clotting was significantly higher than at baseline (p = 0.008 for MAAA and p = 0.002 for MAADP), hence demonstrating a rebound effect. These data demonstrate a novel dynamic variation in platelet aggregation with acute vascular inflammation, including AA-induced whole blood clotting which is apparently COX-1 independent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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269. Does the number of operating specialists influence the conversion rate and outcomes after laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery?
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Francis, Nader K., Curtis, Nathan J., Crilly, Louise, Noble, Emma, Dyke, Tamsin, Hipkiss, Rob, Dalton, Richard, Allison, Andrew, Salib, Emad, and Ockrim, Jonathan
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COLON cancer treatment , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *COLECTOMY , *COLON tumors , *LAPAROSCOPY , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *MENTAL health surveys , *SURGEONS , *OPERATIVE surgery , *TREATMENT effectiveness ,LAPAROSCOPIC surgery complications ,RECTUM tumors - Abstract
Background: Laparoscopic techniques in colorectal surgery have been widely utilised due to short-term patient benefits but conversion to open surgery is associated with adverse short- and long-term patient outcomes. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of dual specialist operating on the conversion rate and patient outcomes following laparoscopic colorectal surgery.Methods: A prospectively populated colorectal cancer surgery database was reviewed. Cases were grouped into single or dual consultant procedures. Cluster analysis and odds ratio (OR) were used to identify risk factors for conversion. Primary outcome measures were conversion to open and five year overall survival (OS) calculated using the Kaplan-Meier log-rank method.Results: 750 patients underwent laparoscopic colorectal cancer resection between 2002 and 2015 (median age 73, 319 (42.5%) female, 282 (37.6%) rectal malignancies, 135 patients (18%) had two consultants). The single surgeon conversion rate was 20.4% compared to 5.5% for dual operating (OR 4.4, 95% CI 1.87-10.2, p < 0.001). There were no demographic or tumour differences between the laparoscopic/converted and number of surgeon groups. Two-step cluster analysis identified cluster I (lower risk) 406 patients, 8% converted and cluster II (higher risk) 261 patients, conversion rate 30%. Median follow-up was 48 months (range 0-168). Five-year OS was significantly inferior for both converted and single surgeon cases (63% vs. 77%, p < 0.001 and 61% vs. 70%, p = 0.033, respectively).Conclusion: In selected colorectal cancer patients operated by fully trained laparoscopic surgeons, we observed a reduction in conversion with associated long-term survival benefit from dual operating specialists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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270. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Failure in Preterm Infants: Incidence, Predictors and Consequences.
- Author
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Dargaville, Peter a., aiyappan, ajit, De Paoli, antonio G., Dalton, Richard G.B., Kuschel, Carl a., Kamlin, C. Omar, Orsini, Francesca, Carlin, John B., and Davis, Peter G.
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PREMATURE infants , *CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure , *RESPIRATORY distress syndrome , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *OXYGEN therapy - Abstract
Background: Preterm infants ≤32 weeks' gestation are increasingly being managed on continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), without prior intubation and surfactant therapy. Some infants treated in this way ultimately fail on CPAP and require intubation and ventilation. Objectives: To define the incidence, predictors and consequences of CPAP failure in preterm infants managed with CPAP from the outset. Methods: Preterm infants 25-32 weeks' gestation were included in the study if inborn and managed with CPAP as the initial respiratory support, with division into two gestation ranges and grouping according to whether they were successfully managed on CPAP (CPAP-S) or failed on CPAP and required intubation <72 h (CPAP-F). Predictors of CPAP failure were sought, and outcomes compared between the groups. Results: 297 infants received CPAP, of which 65 (22%) failed, with CPAP failure being more likely at lower gestational age. Most infants failing CPAP had moderate or severe respiratory distress syndrome radiologically. In multivariate analysis, CPAP failure was found to be predicted by the highest FiO2 in the first hours of life. CPAP-F infants had a prolonged need for respiratory support and oxygen therapy, and a higher risk of death or bronchopulmonary dysplasia at 25-28 weeks' gestation (CPAP-F 53% vs. CPAP-S 14%, relative risk 3.8, 95% CI 1.6, 9.3) and a substantially higher risk of pneumothorax at 29-32 weeks. Conclusion: CPAP failure in preterm infants usually occurs because of unremitting respiratory distress syndrome, is predicted by an FiO2 ≥0.3 in the first hours of life, and is associated with adverse outcomes. Copyright © 2013 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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271. Variable ventilation improves ventilation and lung compliance in preterm lambs.
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Pillow, J. Jane, Musk, Gabrielle C., McLean, Carryn M., Polglase, Graeme R., Dalton, Richard G. B., Jobe, Alan H., and Suki, Béla
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LAMB physiology , *VENTILATION-perfusion ratio , *SURFACE active agents , *CYTOKINES , *RNA , *ARTIFICIAL respiration , *RESPIRATORY distress syndrome - Abstract
Purpose: In adult animals, ventilation with variable tidal volume and rate improves lung mechanics, arterial oxygenation and ventilation compared to a monotonously controlled ventilation pattern. We assessed the physiological consequences of variable ventilation in the immature lung. Methods: Lambs delivered at 129 days (term = 150 days) were euthanised ( n = 9) or anaesthetised, tracheostomised and suctioned prior to prophylactic intra-tracheal surfactant instillation (Curosurf, 100 mg/kg) and commencement of controlled ventilation (50 breaths/min, tidal volume 7.7 ± 0.8 mL/kg). Volume history was standardised at 20 min with two sustained (3 s) inflations to 30 cmHO followed immediately by measurement of baseline dynamic lung mechanics (FlexiVent™, Scireq, Canada). Ventilation was continued according to prior randomisation (variable or conventional ventilation). For variable ventilation ( n = 9), breath-to-breath tidal volume and respiratory rate varied but intra-breath minute volume (MV) and average tidal volume were equivalent to the conventional ventilation group with fixed tidal volume and rate ( n = 7). Lung mechanics and gas exchange were measured at intervals. Lambs were euthanised at 2 h. Inflammatory cell counts and protein from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and lung tissue cytokine mRNA were quantified. Results: At study completion, PaCO ( p = 0.026) and mean airway pressure ( p = 0.002) were lower and pH ( p = 0.047), ventilation efficiency index ( p = 0.021) and dynamic compliance were higher ( p = 0.003) in lambs on variable rather than conventional ventilation. However, oxygenation indices and post-mortem static compliances were not different between groups. Conclusion: Variable ventilation improves ventilation efficiency and in vivo lung compliance in the preterm lung, but unlike adult models, had no effect on arterial oxygenation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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272. Cardiopulmonary haemodynamics in lambs during induced capillary leakage immediately after preterm birth.
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Polglase, Graeme R, Kluckow, Martin, Gill, Andrew W, Allison, Beth J, Moss, Timothy JM, Dalton, Richard GB, Pillow, J Jane, Andersen, Chad C, Nitsos, Ilias, and Hooper, Stuart B
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CARDIOPULMONARY system , *HEMODYNAMICS , *LAMBS , *PREMATURE labor , *EXTRACELLULAR fluid , *DOPPLER echocardiography , *PREMATURE infants , *BLOOD flow - Abstract
1. Early postnatal events might play a critical role in the development of cardiorespiratory diseases of prematurity. Although the exact mechanism is unknown, capillary leakage resulting in increased interstitial fluid volume has been postulated to play a critical role. We investigated the effects of capillary leakage, induced by a volume load, on cardiopulmonary and systemic haemodynamics immediately after preterm delivery. 2. Fetal sheep were instrumented at 129 days gestation, delivered and ventilated. After 15 min, lambs in the volume load group received intravenous saline (50 mL/kg) infused over 10 min; control lambs received no infusion. At 30 min, lambs underwent a pulmonary challenge by increasing positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) by 2 cmHO every 10 min to 10 cmHO, with similar decrements back to baseline PEEP. Pulmonary blood flow (PBF) and arterial pressures were recorded in real-time and cardiovascular variables were measured by Doppler echocardiography. 3. Total protein concentration in the bronchoalveolar-lavage fluid was higher in volume load lambs compared with controls, and histological interstitial fluid retention was evident in volume load lambs, both indicative of capillary leak. PBF increased immediately after the volume load, but PBF, pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures, and oxygenation all deteriorated during the PEEP challenge compared with controls, coinciding with an increase in downstream pulmonary resistance. Three of six volume load lambs had pulmonary haemorrhage, which was not observed in control lambs. 4. Capillary leakage had moderate effects, but subsequent high levels of PEEP had significant negative effects on cardiopulmonary and respiratory function in preterm lambs. Capillary leakage might contribute to postnatal cardiopulmonary failure in preterm infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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273. An Examination of Treatment Completers and Non-Completers at a Child and Adolescent Community Mental Health Clinic.
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Pellerin, Karen A., Costa, Natalie M., Weems, Carl F., and Dalton, Richard F.
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COMMUNITY mental health services , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *PSYCHIATRY , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
This study examined sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of treatment completers ( N = 114) and non-completers ( N = 136) at a child and adolescent community mental health clinic. Results indicated that children who completed treatment significantly differ from those who prematurely drop out of treatment. Non-completers presented with considerably more impairment in functioning and psychiatric symptoms, and their caregiver reported experiencing significantly more parenting stress and depressive symptoms. Results suggest that mental health treatment is not readily provided to the most difficult to reach and most at-risk youth and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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274. The Leeds Evaluation of Efficacy of Detoxification Study (LEEDS) prisons project pilot study: protocol for a randomised controlled trial comparing dihydrocodeine and buprenorphine for opiate detoxification.
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Sheard, Laura, Adams, Clive E., Wright, Nat M. J., El-Sayeh, Hany, Dalton, Richard, and Tompkins, Charlotte N. E.
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DETOXIFICATION (Substance abuse treatment) , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *DIHYDROCODEINE , *BUPRENORPHINE , *PEOPLE with heroin addiction , *DRUG efficacy - Abstract
Background: In the United Kingdom (UK), there is an extensive market for the class 'A' drug heroin. Many heroin users spend time in prison. People addicted to heroin often require prescribed medication when attempting to cease their drug use. The most commonly used detoxification agents in UK prisons are buprenorphine, dihydrocodeine and methadone. However, national guidelines do not state a detoxification drug of choice. Indeed, there is a paucity of research evaluating the most effective treatment for opiate detoxification in prisons. This study seeks to address the paucity by evaluating routinely used interventions amongst drug using prisoners within UK prisons. Methods/Design: The Leeds Evaluation of Efficacy of Detoxification Study (LEEDS) Prisons Pilot Study will use randomised controlled trial methodology to compare the open use of buprenorphine and dihydrocodeine for opiate detoxification, given in the context of routine care, within HMP Leeds. Prisoners who are eligible and give informed consent will be entered into the trial. The primary outcome measure will be abstinence status at five days post detoxification, as determined by a urine test. Secondary outcomes during the detoxification and then at one, three and six months post detoxification will be recorded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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275. Parenting Stress and Childhood Psychopathology: An Examination of Specificity to Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms.
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Costa, Natalie, Weems, Carl, Pellerin, Karen, and Dalton, Richard
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PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PARENTING , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *FAMILIES , *CHILDREN , *CHILD psychology , *MENTAL health - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine if specificity exists between three factors of parenting stress (i.e., parental distress, parent–child (PC) dysfunctional interactions, and difficult child) and childhood internalizing and externalizing symptoms. The incremental validity of parenting stress beyond parental psychopathology was also examined. The sample was drawn from families of children aged 5–17 ( N = 300), who sought treatment for their child from a community mental health clinic. Results indicated that the PC dysfunctional interactions factor showed specificity to internalizing symptoms when controlling for parental psychopathology. Parental distress did not show specificity or incremental validity and the difficult child factor was associated with both internalizing and externalizing symptoms when controlling for parental psychopathology. The influence of age, gender, and ethnicity on these associations is also presented, and findings are discussed in terms of how the results add to understanding the specific relations between parenting stress and child and adolescent symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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276. Improving delivery and uptake of PACES exam teaching for medical trainees in a south London district general hospital.
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Kearney J, Vassallo P, Dalton R, So A, and Surendran A
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- 2023
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277. Leveraging an established neighbourhood-level, open access wastewater monitoring network to address public health priorities: a population-based study.
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Bowes DA, Driver EM, Kraberger S, Fontenele RS, Holland LA, Wright J, Johnston B, Savic S, Engstrom Newell M, Adhikari S, Kumar R, Goetz H, Binsfeld A, Nessi K, Watkins P, Mahant A, Zevitz J, Deitrick S, Brown P, Dalton R, Garcia C, Inchausti R, Holmes W, Tian XJ, Varsani A, Lim ES, Scotch M, and Halden RU
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- Humans, Access to Information, Analgesics, Opioid, Pandemics, Research Design, SARS-CoV-2, United States, COVID-19 epidemiology, Health Priorities, Wastewater
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Background: Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the US opioid epidemic triggered a collaborative municipal and academic effort in Tempe, Arizona, which resulted in the world's first open access dashboard featuring neighbourhood-level trends informed by wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE). This study aimed to showcase how wastewater monitoring, once established and accepted by a community, could readily be adapted to respond to newly emerging public health priorities., Methods: In this population-based study in Greater Tempe, Arizona, an existing opioid monitoring WBE network was modified to track SARS-CoV-2 transmission through the analysis of 11 contiguous wastewater catchments. Flow-weighted and time-weighted 24 h composite samples of untreated wastewater were collected at each sampling location within the wastewater collection system for 3 days each week (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) from April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021 (Area 7 and Tempe St Luke's Hospital were added in July, 2020). Reverse transcription quantitative PCR targeting the E gene of SARS-CoV-2 isolated from the wastewater samples was used to determine the number of genome copies in each catchment. Newly detected clinical cases of COVID-19 by zip code within the City of Tempe, Arizona were reported daily by the Arizona Department of Health Services from May 23, 2020. Maricopa County-level new positive cases, COVID-19-related hospitalisations, deaths, and long-term care facility deaths per day are publicly available and were collected from the Maricopa County Epidemic Curve Dashboard. Viral loads of SARS-CoV-2 (genome copies per day) measured in wastewater from each catchment were aggregated at the zip code level and city level and compared with the clinically reported data using root mean square error to investigate early warning capability of WBE., Findings: Between April 1, 2020, and March 31, 2021, 1556 wastewater samples were analysed. Most locations showed two waves in viral levels peaking in June, 2020, and December, 2020-January, 2021. An additional wave of viral load was seen in catchments close to Arizona State University (Areas 6 and 7) at the beginning of the fall (autumn) semester in late August, 2020. Additionally, an early infection hotspot was detected in the Town of Guadalupe, Arizona, starting the week of May 4, 2020, that was successfully mitigated through targeted interventions. A shift in early warning potential of WBE was seen, from a leading (mean of 8·5 days [SD 2·1], June, 2020) to a lagging (-2·0 days [1·4], January, 2021) indicator compared with newly reported clinical cases., Interpretation: Lessons learned from leveraging an existing neighbourhood-level WBE reporting dashboard include: (1) community buy-in is key, (2) public data sharing is effective, and (3) sub-ZIP-code (postal code) data can help to pinpoint populations at risk, track intervention success in real time, and reveal the effect of local clinical testing capacity on WBE's early warning capability. This successful demonstration of transitioning WBE efforts from opioids to COVID-19 encourages an expansion of WBE to tackle newly emerging and re-emerging threats (eg, mpox and polio)., Funding: National Institutes of Health's RADx-rad initiative, National Science Foundation, Virginia G Piper Charitable Trust, J M Kaplan Fund, and The Flinn Foundation., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests EMD is a managing member of AquaVitas, a company working in the field of wastewater-based epidemiology. RUH is a managing member of AquaVitas and founder of the Arizona State University non-profit project OneWaterOneHealth operating in the same intellectual space. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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278. Rapid Transcoronary Pacing to Facilitate Ostial Stent Placement.
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Mallek K, Dalton RT, Pareek N, and Dworakowski R
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- Coronary Angiography, Humans, Stents, Treatment Outcome, Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Funding Support And Author Disclosures This work was funded in part by a King’s College Hospital R&D grant and was supported by the Department of Health via a National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre award to Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with King’s College London and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
- Published
- 2021
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279. Factors Predicting Operative Difficulty of Laparoscopic Total Mesorectal Excision.
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Curtis NJ, Thomas C, Dennison G, Ockrim JB, Conti JA, Dalton R, Allison AS, and Francis NK
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- Aged, Elective Surgical Procedures, Female, Humans, Laparoscopy, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Obesity complications, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Colectomy methods, Medical Errors statistics & numerical data, Obesity epidemiology, Rectal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: Laparoscopic total mesorectal excision is a challenging procedure requiring high-quality surgery for optimal outcomes. Patient, tumor, and pelvic factors are believed to determine difficulty, but previous studies were limited to postoperative data., Objective: This study aimed to report factors predicting laparoscopic total mesorectal excision performance by using objective intraoperative assessment., Design: Data from a multicenter laparoscopic total mesorectal excision randomized trial (ISRCTN59485808) were reviewed., Setting: This study was conducted at 4 centers in the United Kingdom., Patients and Intervention: Seventy-one patients underwent elective laparoscopic total mesorectal excision for rectal adenocarcinoma with curative intent: 53% were men, mean age was 69 years, body mass index was 27.7, tumor height was 8.5 cm, 24% underwent neoadjuvant therapy, and 25% had previous surgery., Main Outcome Measures: Surgical performance was assessed through the identification of intraoperative adverse events by using observational clinical human reliability analysis. Univariate analysis and multivariate binomial regression were performed to establish factors predicting the number of intraoperative errors, surgeon-reported case difficulty, and short-term clinical and histopathological outcomes., Results: A total of 1331 intraoperative errors were identified from 365 hours of surgery (median, 18 per case; interquartile range, 16-22; and range, 9-49). No patient, tumor, or bony pelvimetry measurement correlated with total or pelvic error count, surgeon-reported case difficulty, cognitive load, operative data, specimen quality, number or severity of 30-day morbidity events and length of stay (all r not exceeding ±0.26, p > 0.05). Mesorectal area was associated with major intraoperative adverse events (OR, 1.09; 95%CI, 1.01-1.16; p = 0.015) and postoperative morbidity (OR, 1.1; 95% CI, 1.01-1.2; p = 0.033). Obese men were subjectively reported as harder cases (24 vs 36 mm, p = 0.042), but no detrimental effects on performance or outcomes were seen., Limitations: Our sample size is modest, risking type II errors and overfitting of the statistical models., Conclusion: Patient, tumor, and bony pelvic anatomical characteristics are not seen to influence laparoscopic total mesorectal excision operative difficulty. Mesorectal area is identified as a risk factor for intraoperative and postoperative morbidity. See Video Abstract at http://links.lww.com/DCR/B35. FACTORES QUE PREDICEN LA DIFICULTAD OPERATIVA DE LA ESCISIÓN MESORRECTAL TOTAL LAPAROSCÓPICA: La escisión mesorrectal total laparoscópica es un procedimiento desafiante. Para obtener resultados óptimos, se requiere cirugía de alta calidad. Se cree que, factores como el paciente, el tumor y la pelvis, determinan la dificultad, pero estudios previos solamente se han limitado a datos postoperatorios.Informar de los factores que predicen el resultado de la escisión mesorrectal total laparoscópica, mediante una evaluación intraoperatoria objetiva.Datos de un ensayo multicéntrico y randomizado de escisión mesorrectal total laparoscópica (ISRCTN59485808).Cuatro centros del Reino Unido.Un total de 71 pacientes fueron sometidos a escisión mesorrectal total laparoscópica electiva, para adenocarcinoma rectal con intención curativa. 53% hombres, edad media, índice de masa corporal y altura del tumor 69, 27.7 y 8.5 cm respectivamente, 24% terapia neoadyuvante y 25% cirugía previa.Rendimiento quirúrgico evaluado mediante la identificación de eventos intraoperatorios adversos, mediante el análisis clínico observacional de confiabilidad humana. Se realizaron análisis univariado y la regresión binomial multivariada para establecer factores que predicen el número de errores intraoperatorios, reportes del cirujano sobre la dificultad del caso y los resultados clínicos e histopatológicos a corto plazo.Se identificaron un total de 1,331 errores intraoperatorios en 365 horas de cirugía (media de 18 por caso, IQR 16-22, rango 9-49). Ningún paciente, tumor o medición de pelvimetría pélvica, se correlacionó con la cuenta de errores pélvicos o totales, reporte del cirujano sobre dificultad del caso, carga cognitiva, datos operativos, calidad de la muestra, número o gravedad de eventos de morbilidad de 30 días y duración de la estadía (todos r <± 0.26, p > 0.05). El área mesorrectal se asoció con eventos adversos intraoperatorios importantes (OR, 1.09; IC 95%, 1.01-1.16; p = 0.015) y morbilidad postoperatoria (OR, 1.1; IC 95%, 1.01-1.2; p = 0.033). Como información subjetiva, hombres obesos fueron casos más difíciles (24 mm frente a 36 mm, p = 0.042) pero no se observaron efectos perjudiciales sobre el rendimiento o los resultados.Nuestro tamaño de muestra es un modesto riesgo de errores de tipo II y el sobreajuste de los modelos estadísticos.No se observa que las características anatómicas del paciente, tumor y pelvis ósea influyan en la dificultad operatoria de la escisión mesorrectal laparoscópica total. El área mesorrectal se identifica como un factor de riesgo para la morbilidad intraoperatoria y postoperatoria. Vea el resumen del video en http://links.lww.com/DCR/B35.
- Published
- 2019
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280. Detection of individual responses to clopidogrel: Validation of a novel, rapid analysis using thrombelastography 6s.
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Olechowski B, Dalton RT, Khanna V, Ashby A, Vavyla M, Mariathas M, Harris S, Nicholas Z, Mahmoudi M, and Curzen N
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- Acute Coronary Syndrome blood, Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Area Under Curve, Case-Control Studies, Clopidogrel, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors adverse effects, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Purinergic P2Y Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, ROC Curve, Reproducibility of Results, Ticlopidine adverse effects, Ticlopidine therapeutic use, Time Factors, Whole Blood Coagulation Time, Young Adult, Acute Coronary Syndrome drug therapy, Drug Monitoring methods, Platelet Activation drug effects, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors therapeutic use, Purinergic P2Y Receptor Antagonists therapeutic use, Thrombelastography, Ticlopidine analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Introduction: There is potential value in testing individual response to P2Y12 inhibitors to predict ischemic and bleeding risk in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. The aims of this study were: (1) to validate the ability of a novel point of care (POC) assay, thrombelastography (TEG) 6s, to detect changes in adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-induced whole blood clotting in volunteers and patients given clopidogrel using TEG 5000 as a reference and (2) to compare a novel, rapid parameter, area under the curve at 15 minutes (AUC15), with the traditional maximum clot amplitude (MA) in TEG 6s., Methods: A total of 25 participants were included in whom ADP-induced clotting was measured at 4 time points: (1) 12 healthy volunteers given 600 mg of clopidogrel; (2) 12 patients with ACS given 600 mg of clopidogrel; (3) 1 healthy volunteer given 600 mg of clopidogrel on 5 separate occasions. All samples were tested using conventional TEG 5000 and the new POC TEG 6S, and a new parameter called AUC15 was compared with MA in TEG 6s., Results: (1) TEG 5000 and TEG 6s both detected changes in ADP-induced platelet activation. Bland-Altman analysis demonstrated a good level of agreement between them. (2) For TEG 6S, correlation between MA and the novel AUC15 was strong for both thrombin and ADP channels (R
2 = 0.867, R = .936, P < .001), and the AUC15 result was available on average 13.3 minutes earlier., Conclusions: Thrombelastography 6s is a rapid, easy to use and accurate test of ADP-induced clotting using TEG 5000 as a reference. A novel parameter, AUC15, is a viable, time-saving option for this test and has potential value in personalized P2Y12 inhibitor therapy., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2018
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281. Investigation of liver dysfunction: who should we test for hepatitis E?
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Wallace SJ, Webb GW, Madden RG, Dalton HC, Palmer J, Dalton RT, Pollard A, Martin R, Panayi V, Bennett G, Bendall RP, and Dalton HR
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- Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Area Under Curve, Case-Control Studies, Female, Hepatitis Antibodies blood, Hepatitis E diagnosis, Hepatitis E virus genetics, Humans, Immunoglobulin G blood, Immunoglobulin M blood, Liver Function Tests, Male, Middle Aged, ROC Curve, Retrospective Studies, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sensitivity and Specificity, Alanine Transaminase blood, Alkaline Phosphatase blood, Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury blood, Choledocholithiasis blood, Hepatitis E blood, RNA, Viral blood
- Abstract
Aim: Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is endemic in developed countries, but unrecognized infection is common. Many national guidelines now recommend HEV testing in patients with acute hepatitis irrespective of travel history. The biochemical definition of 'hepatitis' that best predicts HEV infection has not been established. This study aimed to determine parameters of liver biochemistry that should prompt testing for acute HEV., Methods: This was a retrospective study of serial liver function tests (LFTs) in cases of acute HEV (n=74) and three comparator groups: common bile duct stones (CBD, n=87), drug-induced liver injury (DILI, n=69) and patients testing negative for HEV (n=530). To identify the most discriminating parameters, LFTs from HEV cases, CBD and DILI were compared. Optimal LFT cutoffs for HEV testing were determined from HEV true positives and HEV true negatives using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis., Results: Compared with CBD and DILI, HEV cases had a significantly higher maximum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (P<0.001) and ALT/alkaline phosphatase (ALKP) ratio (P<0.001). For HEV cases/patients testing negative for HEV, area under receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.805 for ALT (P<0.001) and 0.749 for the ALT/ALKP ratio (P<0.001). Using an ALT of at least 300 IU/l to prompt HEV testing has a sensitivity of 98.6% and a specificity of 30.3% compared with an ALT/ALKP ratio higher than or equal to 2 (sensitivity 100%, specificity 9.4%)., Conclusion: Patients with ALT higher than or equal to 300 IU/l should be tested for HEV. This is simple, detects nearly all cases and requires fewer samples to be tested than an ALT/ALKP ratio higher than or equal to 2. Where clinically indicated, patients with an ALT less than 300 IU/l should also be tested, particularly if HEV-associated neurological injury is suspected.
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- 2017
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282. Pulmonary vascular and alveolar development in preterm lambs chronically colonized with Ureaplasma parvum.
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Polglase GR, Dalton RG, Nitsos I, Knox CL, Pillow JJ, Jobe AH, Moss TJ, Newnham JP, and Kallapur SG
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- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid chemistry, Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid cytology, Chorioamnionitis pathology, Female, Fetal Organ Maturity, Interleukins metabolism, Lung blood supply, Lung microbiology, Lung pathology, Pregnancy, Sheep, Domestic, Ureaplasma Infections pathology, Chorioamnionitis veterinary, Lung embryology, Premature Birth veterinary, Ureaplasma, Ureaplasma Infections embryology
- Abstract
Ureaplasma species, the most commonly isolated microorganisms in women with chorioamnionitis, are associated with preterm delivery. Chorioamnionitis increases the risk and severity of bronchopulmonary dysplasia and persistent pulmonary hypertension in newborns. It is not known whether the timing of exposure to inflammation in utero is an important contributor to the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. We hypothesized that chronic inflammation would alter the pulmonary air space and vascular development after 70 days of exposure to infection. Pregnant ewes were given intra-amniotic injection of Ureaplasma parvum serovars 3 or 6 at low (2 x 10(4) cfu) or high doses (2 x 10(7) cfu) or media (controls) at 55 days gestational age. Fetuses were delivered at 125 days (term = 150 days). U. parvum was grown from the lungs of all exposed fetuses, and neutrophils and monocytes were increased in the air spaces. Lung mRNA expression of IL-1beta and IL-8, but not IL-6, was modestly increased in U. parvum-exposed fetuses. U. parvum exposure increased surfactant and improved lung gas volumes. The changes in lung inflammation and maturation were independent of serovar or dose. Exposure to U. parvum did not change multiple indices of air space or vascular development. Parenchymal elastin and collagen content were similar between groups. Expression of several endothelial proteins and pulmonary resistance arteriolar media thickness were also not different between groups. We conclude that chronic exposure to U. parvum does not cause sustained effects on air space or vascular development in premature lambs.
- Published
- 2010
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283. Acute giant gastric volvulus causing cardiac tamponade.
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Williamson JM, Dalton RS, and Mahon D
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- Acute Disease, Aged, 80 and over, Fatal Outcome, Female, Humans, Stomach Volvulus diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Cardiac Tamponade etiology, Stomach Volvulus complications
- Abstract
Introduction: Acute gastric volvulus is an uncommon condition which is rarely associated with cardiac impairment., Discussion: We report a patient with an acute giant gastric volvulus causing cardiac tamponade. Prompt decompression was unsuccessful and the patient died prior to definitive treatment.
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- 2010
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284. Adolescent treatment outcome in a community mental health center.
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Dalton R, Pellerin K, Wolfe M, Stewart L, Thibodeaux D, Clouatre A, and Chase C
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Community Mental Health Centers standards, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anger, Community Mental Health Centers statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders therapy, Outcome Assessment, Health Care
- Abstract
To assess the effectiveness of a community mental health center outpatient adolescent treatment program, outcome measures were completed by the parents of 50 consecutively admitted adolescent patients who were evaluated and treated with one of three therapy modalities. Their results were compared to outcome measures of 29 non-treated adolescent control subjects. Also, self-report outcome measures were completed by 30 treatment subjects. The results demonstrated a significant positive change in the study group following treatment as compared with the control group. Each of the treatment modalities used with the study group was associated with improvement. The staffing referral mechanism used to determine the particular treatment modality for each patient was shown to be consistently and appropriately implemented.
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- 2003
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285. Conflicts of interest associated with the psychiatric hospitalization of children.
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Dalton R and Forman MA
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- Child, Child Behavior Disorders therapy, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Hospitals, Proprietary economics, Hospitals, Psychiatric economics, Humans, Male, Medical Staff Privileges, Physician-Patient Relations, Referral and Consultation economics, Hospitalization economics, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Several possible conflicts of interest are reviewed involving the psychiatric hospitalization of children and adolescents. The roles of physicians, for-profit psychiatric hospitals, and medical universities are examined and possible remedies offered.
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- 1987
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