62,195 results on '"Diagnostic medicine"'
Search Results
2. A population-based study of the appearances of enteric Campylobacter and non-typhoidal Salmonella infections on computed tomography.
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Ljungquist, Oskar, Poijes, Sophie, Sunnerhagen, Torgny, and Bläckberg, Anna
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SALMONELLA diseases ,CAMPYLOBACTER infections ,MEDICAL microbiology ,COMPUTED tomography ,CAMPYLOBACTER ,SHIGELLOSIS ,SALMONELLA food poisoning - Abstract
Background: Swift identification and diagnosis of gastrointestinal infections are crucial for prompt treatment, prevention of complications, and reduction of the risk of hospital transmission. The radiological appearance on computed tomography could potentially provide important clues to the etiology of gastrointestinal infections. We aimed to describe features based on computed tomography of patients diagnosed with Campylobacter, Salmonella or Shigella infections in South Sweden. Methods: This was a retrospective observational population-based cohort study conducted between 2019 and 2022 in Skane, southern Sweden, a region populated by 1.4 million people. Using data from the Department of Clinical Microbiology combined with data from the Department of Radiology, we identified all patients who underwent computed tomography of the abdomen CTA two days before and up to seven days after sampling due to the suspicion of Campylobacter, Salmonella or Shigella during the study period. Results: A total of 215 CTA s scans performed on 213 patients during the study period were included in the study. The median age of included patients was 45 years (range 11-86 years), and 54% (114/213) of the patients were women. Of the 215 CTA s, 80% (n = 172) had been performed due to Campylobacter and 20% (n = 43) due to Salmonella enteritis. CTA was not performed for any individual diagnosed with Shigella during the study period. There were no statistically significant differences in the radiological presentation of Campylobacter and Salmonella infections. Conclusion: The most common location of Campylobacter and Salmonella infections was the cecum, followed by the ascending colon. Enteric wall edema, contrast loading of the affected mucosa, and enteric fat stranding are typical features of both infections. The CTA characteristics of Campylobacter and Salmonella are similar, and cannot be used to reliably differentiate between different infectious etiologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. A population-based study of the appearances of enteric Campylobacter and non-typhoidal Salmonella infections on computed tomography
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Oskar Ljungquist, Sophie Poijes, Torgny Sunnerhagen, and Anna Bläckberg
- Subjects
Diagnostic medicine ,foodborne infections ,diarrhea ,colitis ,radiology ,Medicine - Abstract
AbstractBackground Swift identification and diagnosis of gastrointestinal infections are crucial for prompt treatment, prevention of complications, and reduction of the risk of hospital transmission. The radiological appearance on computed tomography could potentially provide important clues to the etiology of gastrointestinal infections. We aimed to describe features based on computed tomography of patients diagnosed with Campylobacter, Salmonella or Shigella infections in South Sweden.Methods This was a retrospective observational population-based cohort study conducted between 2019 and 2022 in Skåne, southern Sweden, a region populated by 1.4 million people. Using data from the Department of Clinical Microbiology combined with data from the Department of Radiology, we identified all patients who underwent computed tomography of the abdomen CTA two days before and up to seven days after sampling due to the suspicion of Campylobacter, Salmonella or Shigella during the study period.Results A total of 215 CTAs scans performed on 213 patients during the study period were included in the study. The median age of included patients was 45 years (range 11–86 years), and 54% (114/213) of the patients were women. Of the 215 CTAs, 80% (n = 172) had been performed due to Campylobacter and 20% (n = 43) due to Salmonella enteritis. CTA was not performed for any individual diagnosed with Shigella during the study period. There were no statistically significant differences in the radiological presentation of Campylobacter and Salmonella infections.Conclusion The most common location of Campylobacter and Salmonella infections was the cecum, followed by the ascending colon. Enteric wall edema, contrast loading of the affected mucosa, and enteric fat stranding are typical features of both infections. The CTA characteristics of Campylobacter and Salmonella are similar, and cannot be used to reliably differentiate between different infectious etiologies.
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- 2024
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4. Challenges and barriers of using large language models (LLM) such as ChatGPT for diagnostic medicine with a focus on digital pathology – a recent scoping review.
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Ullah, Ehsan, Parwani, Anil, Baig, Mirza Mansoor, and Singh, Rajendra
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LANGUAGE models , *CHATGPT , *MEDICAL personnel , *PATHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: The integration of large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT in diagnostic medicine, with a focus on digital pathology, has garnered significant attention. However, understanding the challenges and barriers associated with the use of LLMs in this context is crucial for their successful implementation. Methods: A scoping review was conducted to explore the challenges and barriers of using LLMs, in diagnostic medicine with a focus on digital pathology. A comprehensive search was conducted using electronic databases, including PubMed and Google Scholar, for relevant articles published within the past four years. The selected articles were critically analyzed to identify and summarize the challenges and barriers reported in the literature. Results: The scoping review identified several challenges and barriers associated with the use of LLMs in diagnostic medicine. These included limitations in contextual understanding and interpretability, biases in training data, ethical considerations, impact on healthcare professionals, and regulatory concerns. Contextual understanding and interpretability challenges arise due to the lack of true understanding of medical concepts and lack of these models being explicitly trained on medical records selected by trained professionals, and the black-box nature of LLMs. Biases in training data pose a risk of perpetuating disparities and inaccuracies in diagnoses. Ethical considerations include patient privacy, data security, and responsible AI use. The integration of LLMs may impact healthcare professionals' autonomy and decision-making abilities. Regulatory concerns surround the need for guidelines and frameworks to ensure safe and ethical implementation. Conclusion: The scoping review highlights the challenges and barriers of using LLMs in diagnostic medicine with a focus on digital pathology. Understanding these challenges is essential for addressing the limitations and developing strategies to overcome barriers. It is critical for health professionals to be involved in the selection of data and fine tuning of the models. Further research, validation, and collaboration between AI developers, healthcare professionals, and regulatory bodies are necessary to ensure the responsible and effective integration of LLMs in diagnostic medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Menopause Predisposes Women to Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease.
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Kamińska, Magdalena Sylwia, Schneider-Matyka, Daria, Rachubińska, Kamila, Panczyk, Mariusz, Grochans, Elżbieta, and Cybulska, Anna Maria
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CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors , *PREMATURE menopause , *MENOPAUSE , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *BLOOD pressure measurement , *HEART metabolism disorders , *BIOMARKERS - Abstract
(1) Background: Menopause is an important event in women's lives, possibly contributing to the development of CVD, which is associated with changes in the cardiovascular risk profile, markers of metabolic health, and subclinical atherosclerosis. The aim of this study was to assess the association of menopause with CVD risk factors and subclinical markers of cardiometabolic disease. (2) Methods: The study involved 235 women from the general population at different stages of menopause. The methods used in this study were: diagnostic survey, anthropometric measurement (WC, height, BMI, WHtR), blood pressure measurement, biochemical analysis of venous blood (lipid profile, glucose, insulin, HbA1c), and CVD risk assessment (ASCVD Risk Calculator, POL-SCORE, SCORE-2). (3) Results: The vast majority of respondents had low cardiovascular risk, irrespective of the scale used for measuring the risk of CVD. The age at menopause was not an independent risk factor for CVD. In Model 1, the age at menopause and the time since menopause were found to be factors that increased CVD risk (OR = 1.186 and 1.267, respectively). In Models 2 and 3, the severity of menopausal symptoms was not a risk factor for CVD. Models 3 and 4 demonstrated that women with metabolic syndrome (MetS) were at a significantly higher risk of CVD. In model 5, the odds ratio of CVD with MetS as a standalone factor was 13.812. (4) Conclusions: Menopause predisposes women to an increased risk and MetS to a significantly higher risk of CVD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Artificial Intelligence applications in diagnostic medicine: a decade of expectations.
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Cabral, Bernardo Pereira, Castro, Leonardo, Fornazin, Marcelo, Penteado, Bruno Elias, Castro Silva, Sandro L. F., Maciel Braga, Luiza Amara, Conte Filho, Carlos Gilbert, and Mota, Fábio Batista
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,X-rays ,HEART beat ,PUBLICATIONS - Abstract
Considered a new paradigm in healthcare, AI is expected to change diagnostic medicine in the coming decades. However, its future is still uncertain - partly because it is an emerging technology being gradually applied to a mature field of medicine. We conducted a global cross-sectional survey with more than 1,400 authors of recent scientific publications indexed by the Web of Science to foresee the future of AI in diagnostic medicine. Most respondents expect AI to change diagnostic medicine in this decade radically. In this period, the two most likely outcomes are reduced screening costs and increased diagnostic reliability. X-ray diagnosis and heart rhythm interpretation are the two diagnostic tools most likely to be integrated with AI. The two main barriers are the difficulty of incorporating it into clinical practice and the ethical-regulatory issues. Respondents’ expectations align with the literature and suggest that AI may substantially change diagnostic medicine within this decade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
7. Hybrid Rough-Genetic Classification Model for IoT Heart Disease Monitoring System
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Eisa, Mohammed M., Alnaggar, Mona H., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Magdi, Dalia A., editor, Helmy, Yehia K., editor, Mamdouh, Mohamed, editor, and Joshi, Amit, editor
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- 2022
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8. A network approach to compute hypervolume under receiver operating characteristic manifold for multi‐class biomarkers.
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Feng, Qunqiang, Liu, Pan, Kuan, Pei‐Fen, Zou, Fei, Chen, Jianan, and Li, Jialiang
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RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *BIOMARKERS , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *MILD cognitive impairment , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) - Abstract
Computation of hypervolume under ROC manifold (HUM) is necessary to evaluate biomarkers for their capability to discriminate among multiple disease types or diagnostic groups. However the original definition of HUM involves multiple integration and thus a medical investigation for multi‐class receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis could suffer from huge computational cost when the formula is implemented naively. We introduce a novel graph‐based approach to compute HUM efficiently in this article. The computational method avoids the time‐consuming multiple summation when sample size or the number of categories is large. We conduct extensive simulation studies to demonstrate the improvement of our method over existing R packages. We apply our method to two real biomedical data sets to illustrate its application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Fluorescent carbon quantum dots for effective tumor diagnosis: A comprehensive review
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B. Divya Latha, Kondi Soumya, Namdev More, Choppadandi Mounika, Aditya Teja Guduru, Gajendar Singh, and Govinda Kapusetti
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Carbon quantum dots ,Photoluminescence ,Tumor imaging ,Diagnostic medicine ,Cancer ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
The Fluorescent Carbon Quantum Dots (FCQDs) have been extensively explored for medical applications. Primarily, the research concentrated on diagnosis, imaging, and alternative therapeutics for various diseases. The FCQDs, a class of new-generation carbon nanoparticles with a size of less than 10 nm, demonstrate a quantum confinement effect. They have an atomic nature and inherent features like high photostability, variable photoluminescence (PL), high biocompatibility, and good water solubility. All these properties with minimum invasiveness have made quantum dots grab the spotlight in cancer diagnosis. The review introduces tunable fluorescence properties of quantum dots and provides a brief classification of FCQDs. Furthermore, the recent advances of FCQDs for tumor imaging and their refinements for futuristic applications are highlighted.
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- 2023
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10. Menopause Predisposes Women to Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
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Magdalena Sylwia Kamińska, Daria Schneider-Matyka, Kamila Rachubińska, Mariusz Panczyk, Elżbieta Grochans, and Anna Maria Cybulska
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cardiovascular disease ,coronary heart disease ,diagnostic medicine ,medical risk factors ,menopause ,women’s health ,Medicine - Abstract
(1) Background: Menopause is an important event in women’s lives, possibly contributing to the development of CVD, which is associated with changes in the cardiovascular risk profile, markers of metabolic health, and subclinical atherosclerosis. The aim of this study was to assess the association of menopause with CVD risk factors and subclinical markers of cardiometabolic disease. (2) Methods: The study involved 235 women from the general population at different stages of menopause. The methods used in this study were: diagnostic survey, anthropometric measurement (WC, height, BMI, WHtR), blood pressure measurement, biochemical analysis of venous blood (lipid profile, glucose, insulin, HbA1c), and CVD risk assessment (ASCVD Risk Calculator, POL-SCORE, SCORE-2). (3) Results: The vast majority of respondents had low cardiovascular risk, irrespective of the scale used for measuring the risk of CVD. The age at menopause was not an independent risk factor for CVD. In Model 1, the age at menopause and the time since menopause were found to be factors that increased CVD risk (OR = 1.186 and 1.267, respectively). In Models 2 and 3, the severity of menopausal symptoms was not a risk factor for CVD. Models 3 and 4 demonstrated that women with metabolic syndrome (MetS) were at a significantly higher risk of CVD. In model 5, the odds ratio of CVD with MetS as a standalone factor was 13.812. (4) Conclusions: Menopause predisposes women to an increased risk and MetS to a significantly higher risk of CVD.
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- 2023
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11. Hypothesis tests in ordinal predictive models with optimal accuracy.
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Liu Y, Luo S, and Li J
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- Humans, Likelihood Functions, ROC Curve, Biometry methods, Algorithms, Computer Simulation, Models, Statistical
- Abstract
In real-world applications involving multi-class ordinal discrimination, a common approach is to aggregate multiple predictive variables into a linear combination, aiming to develop a classifier with high prediction accuracy. Assessment of such multi-class classifiers often utilizes the hypervolume under ROC manifolds (HUM). When dealing with a substantial pool of potential predictors and achieving optimal HUM, it becomes imperative to conduct appropriate statistical inference. However, prevalent methodologies in existing literature are computationally expensive. We propose to use the jackknife empirical likelihood method to address this issue. The Wilks' theorem under moderate conditions is established and the power analysis under the Pitman alternative is provided. We also introduce a novel network-based rapid computation algorithm specifically designed for computing a general multi-sample $U$-statistic in our test procedure. To compare our approach against existing approaches, we conduct extensive simulations. Results demonstrate the superior performance of our method in terms of test size, power, and implementation time. Furthermore, we apply our method to analyze a real medical dataset and obtain some new findings., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The International Biometric Society.)
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- 2024
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12. Could the Use of Antihistamines Have Triggered Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome? A Case Report
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Sara Assadi, Latif Rahman, Mark Kong, and Sukaina Asad
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anti-histamines ,reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome ,headache ,diagnostic medicine ,Medicine - Abstract
A 38-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with recurrent severe headaches. Although initial computer tomography (CT) brain imaging was unremarkable, a later CT venogram demonstrated a small subarachnoid haemorrhage. Magnetic resonance angiogram (MRA) brain imaging subsequently confirmed reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS). In the acute setting, RCVS rarely falls into a differential diagnosis for headache presentations, as in this case. The radiological variability can make diagnosis of RCVS challenging. However, there are clinical consistencies that can aid physicians into accurately diagnosing RCVS. A thorough history, including a medication history, can help identify potential triggers of RCVS. As in this case, the combination of commonly used drugs, including antihistamines, provides a plausible trigger for RCVS. The direct vasoactive role of antihistamines is unclear, yet there is suggestion for its ability to potentiate the vasoactive action of other drugs. In this case we propose a causal relationship between the use of antihistamine and the development of RCVS.
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- 2021
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13. Augmenting epidemiological models with point-of-care diagnostics data
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Ozmen, Ozgur [Oak Ridge National Lab. (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States)]
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- 2016
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14. Hypervolume under ROC manifold for discrete biomarkers with ties.
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Feng, Qunqiang, Li, Jialiang, Ping, Xingrun, and Van Calster, Ben
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CONTINUOUS distributions , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) , *PERFORMANCE theory - Abstract
Medical multi-category diagnostic problems may involve discrete biomarkers. Many traditional accuracy measures are based on the assumption that all biomarkers follow continuous distributions and consequently may underestimate the true discrimination ability of the discrete markers. In particular, we focus on Hypervolume Under ROC Manifold (HUM) in this paper and propose an extension of the familiar continuous version of HUM to incorporate discrete biomarkers with ties. Statistical estimation and inference procedures are proposed along with asymptotic properties. We carry out simulation studies to examine the performance of our proposed estimators for the new HUM measure. A real medical example is analysed to illustrate our methodology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Receiver operating characteristic curves and confidence bands for support vector machines.
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Luckett, Daniel J., Laber, Eric B., El‐Kamary, Samer S., Fan, Cheng, Jhaveri, Ravi, Perou, Charles M., Shebl, Fatma M., and Kosorok, Michael R.
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RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *SUPPORT vector machines , *HIGH-dimensional model representation , *CONFIDENCE - Abstract
Many problems that appear in biomedical decision‐making, such as diagnosing disease and predicting response to treatment, can be expressed as binary classification problems. The support vector machine (SVM) is a popular classification technique that is robust to model misspecification and effectively handles high‐dimensional data. The relative costs of false positives and false negatives can vary across application domains. The receiving operating characteristic (ROC) curve provides a visual representation of the trade‐off between these two types of errors. Because the SVM does not produce a predicted probability, an ROC curve cannot be constructed in the traditional way of thresholding a predicted probability. However, a sequence of weighted SVMs can be used to construct an ROC curve. Although ROC curves constructed using weighted SVMs have great potential for allowing ROC curves analyses that cannot be done by thresholding predicted probabilities, their theoretical properties have heretofore been underdeveloped. We propose a method for constructing confidence bands for the SVM ROC curve and provide the theoretical justification for the SVM ROC curve by showing that the risk function of the estimated decision rule is uniformly consistent across the weight parameter. We demonstrate the proposed confidence band method using simulation studies. We present a predictive model for treatment response in breast cancer as an illustrative example. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Summary concordance index for meta‐analysis of prognosis studies with a survival outcome.
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Hattori, Satoshi and Zhou, Xiao‐Hua
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SURVIVAL rate , *LOG-rank test , *PROGNOSIS , *BREAST cancer , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) - Abstract
In prognosis studies to evaluate association between a continuous biomarker and a survival outcome, investigators often classify subjects into two subclasses of the high‐ and low‐expression groups and apply simple survival analysis techniques of the Kaplan‐Meier method and the logrank test. The high‐ and low‐expressions are defined according to whether or not the observation of the biomarker is higher than the cut‐off value, which is heterogeneous across studies. The heterogeneous definitions of the cut‐off value make it difficult to apply the standard meta‐analysis techniques. We propose a method to estimate the concordance index for a survival outcome synthesizing published prognosis studies, in which the Kaplan‐Meier estimates for the high‐ and low‐expression groups are reported. We illustrate our proposed method with a real dataset for meta‐analysis of prognosis studies evaluating Ki‐67 in early breast cancer and evaluate its performance with a simulation study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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17. Non-monotone transformation of biomarkers.
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Adimari, Gianfranco, To, Duc-Khanh, and Chiogna, Monica
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BIOMARKERS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *CLASSIFICATION , *BIOLOGICAL tags - Abstract
We comment here on a recent paper in this journal, on a non-monotone transformation of biomarkers aimed at improving diagnostic accuracy. We highlight that, in a binary classification problem, the proposed transformation finds its motivation in the Neyman-Pearson lemma, so that the underlying approach is very general and it is applicable to many parametric families, other than the normal one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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18. Revista Cubana de Medicina
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clinical method ,clinical internal ,diagnostic medicine ,protocolized medicine ,Medicine - Published
- 2020
19. Statistical inference for decision curve analysis, with applications to cataract diagnosis.
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Sande, Sumaiya Z., Li, Jialiang, D'Agostino, Ralph, Yin Wong, Tien, Cheng, Ching‐Yu, and Cheng, Ching-Yu
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STATISTICAL decision making , *DECISION making , *MATHEMATICAL statistics , *CATARACT , *FORECASTING - Abstract
Statistical learning methods are widely used in medical literature for the purpose of diagnosis or prediction. Conventional accuracy assessment via sensitivity, specificity, and ROC curves does not fully account for clinical utility of a specific model. Decision curve analysis (DCA) becomes a novel complement as it incorporates a clinical judgment of the relative value of benefits (treating a true positive case) and harms (treating a false positive case) associated with prediction models. The preference of a patient or a policy-maker is formulated statistically as the underlying threshold probability, above which the patient would choose to be treated. Net benefit is then calculated for possible threshold probability, which places benefits and harms on the same scale. We consider the inference problems for DCA in this paper. Interval estimation procedure and inference methodology are provided after we derive the relevant asymptotic properties. Our formulation can accommodate the classification problems with multiple categories. We carry out numerical studies to assess the performance of the proposed methods. An eye disease dataset is analyzed to illustrate our proposals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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20. Non-monotone transformation of biomarkers to improve diagnostic and screening accuracy in a DNA methylation study with trichotomous phenotypes.
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Yang, Jianping, Kuan, Pei-Fen, and Li, Jialiang
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DNA methylation , *GENETIC markers , *DNA , *PHENOTYPES , *BIOMARKERS , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *COMPUTER simulation , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *PHARMACOKINETICS , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
We propose a non-monotone transformation to biomarkers in order to improve the diagnostic and screening accuracy. The proposed quadratic transformation only involves modeling the distribution means and variances of the biomarkers and is therefore easy to implement in practice. Mathematical justification was rigorously established to support the validity of the proposed transformation. We conducted extensive simulation studies to assess the performance of the proposed method and compared the new method with the traditional methods. Case studies on real biomedical and epigenetics data were provided to illustrate the proposed transformation. In particular, the proposed method improved the AUC values for a large number of markers in a DNA methylation study and consequently led to the identification of greater number of important biomarkers and biologically meaningful genetic pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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21. Weighted volume under the three-way receiver operating characteristic surface.
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Huang, Lei and Li, Jialiang
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RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *MATHEMATICAL statistics , *LIVER cancer , *LIVER analysis , *GEOMETRIC surfaces , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MICROARRAY technology , *PHARMACOKINETICS , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ROUTINE diagnostic tests , *STATISTICAL models , *STANDARDS - Abstract
It is often necessary to differentiate subjects from multiple categories using medical tests. We may then adopt statistical measures to characterize the performance of these tests. The three-way ROC analysis has been proposed to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of medical tests with three categories, reflecting the correct classification probabilities across all possible decision thresholds. The geometry of the ROC surface is carefully studied, leading to numerical summary measures such as the volume under the surface. This paper generalizes the global volume under the surface of three-way ROC analysis to the weighted volume under the surface (WVUS) by introducing a weight function emphasizing particular regions of correct classification probabilities. This generalization practically allows researchers to calculate the diagnostic accuracy for a medical or clinical biomarker while satisfactorily high probabilities of correct classification for one or two classes are conditionally ensured. We provide the asymptotic properties of the proposed nonparametric and parametric estimators of WVUS, which could easily lend support to statistical inferences. Some simulations have been conducted to assess the proposed estimators and also to demonstrate the necessity of WVUS. A real data analysis about liver cancer illustrates our methodology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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22. Health disparities and chronic disease associated with anemia in free clinics: A retrospective study of uninsured patients in Tampa Bay.
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Mirza, Abu-Sayeef, Chen, Liwei, Amirzadeh, Sean, Majethia, Saagar, Joppen, Jeffrey, Mirza, Sabbir, Mhaskar, Rahul, Jaglal, Michael, and Ashraf, Noman
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MEDICALLY uninsured persons ,HEALTH equity ,CHRONIC diseases ,ANEMIA ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to assess the diagnosis and management of anemic patients in free clinics around the Tampa Bay area.Methods: In this retrospective study we extracted data including demographics, chronic diseases, and laboratory values from medical charts of uninsured patients seen in 9 free clinics from January 2016 through December 2017 in the Tampa Bay area, FL, USA. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to assess relationships between socioeconomic variables and a documented history of anemia.Results: From two years of documented data, 6971 patients were included, of which 367 (5%) had a documented diagnosis of anemia. Most were women (315, 86%), and the median age was 41 years (6-91). Among the 367 patients with anemia,191 (52%) patients had an unspecified type of anemia, 144 (39%) were diagnosed with IDA, 16 (4%) with anemia of chronic disease, and the remaining were other uncommon causes. Only 67% (97/144) of IDA patients had documented iron replacement. Colonoscopies were documented in only 32 (9%) of all patients with anemia, and in 23 (16%) IDA patients. Several chronic diseases were statistically associated and comorbid with a diagnosis of anemia.Conclusions: Uninsured patients with IDA are prescribed iron and undergo colonoscopies at sub-optimal rates. Increasing resources, awareness, and education of providers in these settings could lead to improved treatment practices and decrease the risk of morbidity and mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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23. Identification of a systemic interferon-γ inducible antimicrobial gene signature in leprosy patients undergoing reversal reaction.
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Teles, Rosane M. B., Lu, Jing, Tió-Coma, Maria, Goulart, Isabela M. B., Banu, Sayera, Hagge, Deanna, Bobosha, Kidist, Ottenhoff, Tom, Pellegrini, Matteo, Geluk, Annemieke, and Modlin, Robert L.
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HANSEN'S disease , *PROTEIN binding , *MYCOBACTERIUM leprae , *GENE regulatory networks , *CELLULAR immunity - Abstract
Reversal reactions (RRs) in leprosy are characterized by a reduction in the number of bacilli in lesions associated with an increase in cell-mediated immunity against the intracellular bacterium Mycobacterium leprae, the causative pathogen of leprosy. To identify the mechanisms that contribute to cell-mediated immunity in leprosy, we measured changes in the whole blood-derived transcriptome of patients with leprosy before, during and after RR. We identified an 'RR signature' of 1017 genes that were upregulated at the time of the clinical diagnosis of RR. Using weighted gene correlated network analysis (WGCNA), we detected a module of 794 genes, bisque4, that was significantly correlated with RR, of which 434 genes were part of the RR signature. An enrichment for both IFN-γ and IFN-β downstream gene pathways was present in the RR signature as well as the RR upregulated genes in the bisque4 module, including those encoding proteins of the guanylate binding protein (GBP) family that contributes to antimicrobial responses against mycobacteria. Specifically, GBP1, GBP2, GBP3 and GBP5 mRNAs were upregulated in the RR peripheral blood transcriptome, with GBP1, GBP2 and GBP5 mRNAs also upregulated in the RR disease lesion transcriptome. These data indicate that RRs involve a systemic upregulation of IFN-γ downstream genes including GBP family members as part of the host antimicrobial response against mycobacteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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24. Does antibiotic use accelerate or retard cutaneous repair? A systematic review in animal models.
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Altoé, Luciana Schulthais, Alves, Raul Santos, Sarandy, Mariáurea Matias, Morais-Santos, Mônica, Novaes, Rômulo Dias, and Gonçalves, Reggiani Vilela
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META-analysis , *ANIMAL models in research , *EXTRACELLULAR matrix , *SKIN injuries , *CONNECTIVE tissue cells , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *SONICATION - Abstract
Background: The presence of infections is one of the main factors that leads to delays in healing or non-closure of cutaneous wounds. Although the goal of antibiotic use is to treat or prevent infection, there is currently no agreement on the effectiveness of these products. Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of antibiotic use during the healing process of skin wounds in animal models not intentionally infected, as well as to analyze the advances and limitations of the studies carried out in this field. Main methods: This systematic review was performed according to the PRISMA guidelines, using a structured search on the MedLine (PubMed) and Scopus platforms to retrieve studies published until August 29, 2018, 13:35p.m. The studies included were limited to those that used excision or incision wound models and that were not intentionally infected. The data for the animal models, antibiotic used, and the main results of the studies were extracted, and compared where possible. Bias analysis and methodological quality assessments were examined through the SYRCLE's Risk of Bias tool. Key findings: Twenty-seven studies were selected. Overall, the effects of the antibiotic on the wound decreased inflammatory cell infiltration and promoted an increased number of fibroblasts, extracellular matrix constituents, re-epithelialization and tissue strength. A great deal of important information about the methodology was not presented, such as: the statistical analysis used, the animal model (sex and age), antibiotic dosage, blinding and randomization of the animals chosen. Significance: Based on the results found, we believe that antibiotic therapy can be considered a viable alternative for the treatment of cutaneous wounds. However, current evidence obtained from the methodological quality analysis points towards a high risk of bias. This is due to the incomplete characterization of the experimental design and treatment protocol, which compromises the reproducibility of the studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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25. Burden of treatment-resistant depression in Medicare: A retrospective claims database analysis.
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Pilon, Dominic, Joshi, Kruti, Sheehan, John J., Zichlin, Miriam L., Zuckerman, Peter, Lefebvre, Patrick, and Greenberg, Paul E.
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MEDICAL databases , *MENTAL depression , *MEDICARE - Abstract
Background: Previous studies have assessed the incremental economic burden of treatment-resistant depression (TRD) versus non-treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (i.e., non-TRD MDD) in commercially-insured and Medicaid-insured patients, but none have focused on Medicare-insured patients. Objective: To assess healthcare resource utilization (HRU) and costs of patients with TRD versus non-TRD MDD or without major depressive disorder (MDD; i.e., non-MDD) in a Medicare-insured population. Methods: Adult patients were retrospectively identified from the Chronic Condition Warehouse de-identified 100% Medicare database (01/2010-12/2016). MDD was defined as ≥1 MDD diagnosis and ≥1 claim for an antidepressant. Patients initiated on a third antidepressant following two antidepressant treatment regimens of adequate dose and duration were considered to have TRD. The index date was defined as the date of the first antidepressant claim for the TRD and non-TRD MDD cohorts, and as a randomly imputed date for the non-MDD cohort. Patients with TRD were matched 1:1 to non-TRD MDD patients and randomly selected non-MDD patients based on propensity scores. Analyses were also performed for a subset of patients aged ≥65. Results: Of 29,543 patients with MDD, 3,225 (10.9%) met the study definition of TRD; 157,611 were included in the non-MDD cohort. Matched patients with TRD and non-TRD MDD were, on average, 58.9 and 59.0 years old, respectively. The TRD cohort had higher per-patient-per-year (PPPY) HRU than the non-TRD MDD (e.g., inpatient visits: incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 1.36) and non-MDD cohorts (e.g., inpatient visits: IRR = 1.84, all P<0.001). The TRD cohort had significantly higher total PPPY healthcare costs than the non-TRD MDD cohort ($25,517 vs. $20,425, adjusted cost difference = $3,385) and non-MDD cohort ($25,517 vs. $14,542, adjusted cost difference = $4,015, all P<0.001). Similar results were found for the subset of patients ≥65. Conclusion: Among Medicare-insured patients, those with TRD had higher HRU and costs compared to those with non-TRD MDD and non-MDD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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26. Mechanical effects of MitraClip on leaflet stress and myocardial strain in functional mitral regurgitation – A finite element modeling study.
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Zhang, Yue, Wang, Vicky Y., Morgan, Ashley E., Kim, Jiwon, Handschumacher, Mark D., Moskowitz, Chaya S., Levine, Robert A., Ge, Liang, Guccione, Julius M., Weinsaft, Jonathan W., and Ratcliffe, Mark B.
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MITRAL valve , *MITRAL valve insufficiency , *PAMPHLETS , *RADIAL stresses , *CORONARY disease , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Purpose: MitraClip is the sole percutaneous device approved for functional mitral regurgitation (MR; FMR) but MR recurs in over one third of patients. As device-induced mechanical effects are a potential cause for MR recurrence, we tested the hypothesis that MitraClip increases leaflet stress and procedure-related strain in sub-valvular left ventricular (LV) myocardium in FMR associated with coronary disease (FMR-CAD). Methods: Simulations were performed using finite element models of the LV + mitral valve based on MRI of 5 sheep with FMR-CAD. Models were modified to have a 20% increase in LV volume (↑LV_VOLUME) and MitraClip was simulated with contracting beam elements (virtual sutures) placed between nodes in the center edge of the anterior (AL) and posterior (PL) mitral leaflets. Effects of MitraClip on leaflet stress in the peri-MitraClip region of AL and PL, septo-lateral annular diameter (SLAD), and procedure-related radial strain (Err) in the sub-valvular myocardium were calculated. Results: MitraClip increased peri-MitraClip leaflet stress at end-diastole (ED) by 22.3±7.1 kPa (p<0.0001) in AL and 14.8±1.2 kPa (p<0.0001) in PL. MitraClip decreased SLAD by 6.1±2.2 mm (p<0.0001) and increased Err in the sub-valvular lateral LV myocardium at ED by 0.09±0.04 (p<0.0001)). Furthermore, MitraClip in ↑LV_VOLUME was associated with persistent effects at ED but also at end-systole where peri-MitraClip leaflet stress was increased in AL by 31.9±14.4 kPa (p = 0.0268) and in PL by 22.5±23.7 kPa (p = 0.0101). Conclusions: MitraClip for FMR-CAD increases mitral leaflet stress and radial strain in LV sub-valvular myocardium. Mechanical effects of MitraClip are augmented by LV enlargement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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27. Diagnostic accuracy of midkine on hepatocellular carcinoma: A meta-analysis.
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Zhang, Bo-han, Li, Bo, Kong, Ling-xiang, Yan, Lv-nan, and Yang, Jia-yin
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HEPATOCELLULAR carcinoma , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *META-analysis , *BIVARIATE analysis , *LITERARY sources , *GREY literature - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the dependability and accuracy of midkine (MK) in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods: PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, China Biology Medicine disc and grey literature sources were searched from the date of database inception to January 2019. Two authors (B-H.Z. and B.L.) independently extracted the data and evaluated the study quality using the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 tool. The sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio (LR+) and negative likelihood ratio (LR−) were estimated using a bivariate model. Moreover, hierarchical summary receiver operating characteristic curves were generated. The diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) and area under the curve (AUC) were pooled using a univariate model. Results: Nine articles (11 studies) were included (1941 participants). The bivariate analysis revealed that the sensitivity and specificity of MK for HCC diagnosis were 0.85 (95% CI 0.78–0.91) and 0.83 (95% CI 0.76–0.88), respectively. We also found a LR+ of 5.05 (95% CI 3.33–7.40), a LR− of 0.18 (95% CI 0.11–0.28), a DOR of 31.74 (95% CI 13.98–72.09) and an AUC of 0.91 (95% CI 0.84–0.99). Subgroup analyses showed that MK provided the best efficiency for HCC diagnosis when the cutoff value was greater than 0.5 ng/mL. Conclusions: MK has an excellent diagnostic value for hepatocellular carcinoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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28. Clustering of the structures by using "snakes-&-dragons" approach, or correlation matrix as a signal.
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Andreev, Victor P., Liu, Gang, Zee, Jarcy, Henn, Lisa, Flores, Gilberto E., and Merion, Robert M.
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HUMAN microbiota , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
Biological, ecological, social, and technological systems are complex structures with multiple interacting parts, often represented by networks. Correlation matrices describing interdependency of the variables in such structures provide key information for comparison and classification of such systems. Classification based on correlation matrices could supplement or improve classification based on variable values, since the former reveals similarities in system structures, while the latter relies on the similarities in system states. Importantly, this approach of clustering correlation matrices is different from clustering elements of the correlation matrices, because our goal is to compare and cluster multiple networks–not the nodes within the networks. A novel approach for clustering correlation matrices, named "snakes-&-dragons," is introduced and illustrated by examples from neuroscience, human microbiome, and macroeconomics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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29. Effectiveness of physical and cognitive-behavioural intervention programmes for chronic musculoskeletal pain in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.
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Cheng, Joyce Oi Suet and Cheng, Sheung-Tak
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CHRONIC pain , *META-analysis , *MENTAL illness , *EXERCISE , *NECK pain , *COMORBIDITY , *SPORTS sciences , *LUMBAR pain - Abstract
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to examine the effects of physical exercise cum cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) on alleviating pain intensity, functional disabilities, and mood/mental symptoms in those suffering with chronic musculoskeletal pain. MEDLINE, EMBASE, PubMEd, PsycINFO and CINAHL were searched to identify relevant randomised controlled trials from inception to 31 December 2018. The inclusion criteria were: (a) adults ≥18 years old with chronic musculoskeletal pain ≥3 months, (b) randomised controlled design, (c) a treatment arm consisting of physical intervention and CBT combined, (d) the comparison arm being waitlist, usual care or other non-pharmacological interventions such as physical exercise or CBT alone, and (e) outcomes including pain intensity, pain-related functional disabilities (primary outcomes), or mood/mental symptoms (secondary outcome). The exclusion criteria were: (a) the presence of comorbid mental illnesses other than depression and anxiety and (b) non-English publication. The search resulted in 1696 records and 18 articles were selected for review. Results varied greatly across studies, with most studies reporting null or small effects but a few studies reporting very large effects up to 2-year follow-up. Pooled effect sizes (Hedges' g) were ~1.00 for pain intensity and functional disability, but no effect was found for mood/mental symptoms. The effects were mainly driven by several studies reporting unusually large differences between the exercise cum CBT intervention and exercise alone. When these outliers were removed, the effect on pain intensity disappeared at post-intervention while a weak effect (g = 0.21) favouring the combined intervention remained at follow-up assessment. More consistent effects were observed for functional disability, though the effects were small (g = 0.26 and 0.37 at post-intervention and follow-up respectively). More importantly, the value of adding CBT to exercise interventions is questionable, as consistent benefits were not seen. The clinical implications and directions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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30. Extended-wavelength diffuse reflectance spectroscopy with a machine-learning method for in vivo tissue classification.
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Dahlstrand, Ulf, Sheikh, Rafi, Dybelius Ansson, Cu, Memarzadeh, Khashayar, Reistad, Nina, and Malmsjö, Malin
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REFLECTANCE spectroscopy , *SUPPORT vector machines , *HUMAN skin color , *TISSUES - Abstract
Objectives: An extended-wavelength diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (EWDRS) technique was evaluated for its ability to differentiate between and classify different skin and tissue types in an in vivo pig model. Materials and methods: EWDRS recordings (450–1550 nm) were made on skin with different degrees of pigmentation as well as on the pig snout and tongue. The recordings were used to train a support vector machine to identify and classify the different skin and tissue types. Results: The resulting EWDRS curves for each skin and tissue type had a unique profile. The support vector machine was able to classify each skin and tissue type with an overall accuracy of 98.2%. The sensitivity and specificity were between 96.4 and 100.0% for all skin and tissue types. Conclusion: EWDRS can be used in vivo to differentiate between different skin and tissue types with good accuracy. Further development of the technique may potentially lead to a novel diagnostic tool for e.g. non-invasive tumor margin delineation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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31. ECMO with vasopressor use during early endotoxic shock: Can it improve circulatory support and regional microcirculatory blood flow?
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Mu, Thornton S., Becker, Amy M., Clark, Aaron J., Batts, Sherreen G., Murata, Lee-Ann M., and Uyehara, Catherine F. T.
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SEPTIC shock , *BLOOD pressure , *BLOOD flow , *EXTRACORPOREAL membrane oxygenation , *OXYGEN consumption - Abstract
Introduction: While extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is effective in preventing further hypoxemia and maintains blood flow in endotoxin-induced shock, ECMO alone does not reverse the hypotension. In this study, we tested whether concurrent vasopressor use with ECMO would provide increased circulatory support and blood flow, and characterized regional blood flow distribution to vital organs. Methods: Endotoxic shock was induced in piglets to achieve a 30% decrease in mean arterial pressure (MAP). Measurements of untreated pigs were compared to pigs treated with ECMO alone or ECMO and vasopressors. Results: ECMO provided cardiac support during vasodilatory endotoxic shock and improved oxygen delivery, but vasopressor therapy was required to return MAP to normotensive levels. Increased blood pressure with vasopressors did not alter oxygen consumption or extraction compared to ECMO alone. Regional microcirculatory blood flow (RBF) to the brain, kidney, and liver were maintained or increased during ECMO with and without vasopressors. Conclusion: ECMO support and concurrent vasopressor use improve regional blood flow and oxygen delivery even in the absence of full blood pressure restoration. Vasopressor-induced selective distribution of blood flow to vital organs is retained when vasopressors are administered with ECMO. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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32. Disease spectrum and outcomes among elderly patients in two tertiary hospitals in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
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Tumaini, Basil, Munseri, Patricia, and Pallangyo, Kisali
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HEALTH facilities , *OLDER patients , *DIAGNOSIS , *NON-communicable diseases , *CHRONIC kidney failure - Abstract
Background: There has been an increase in the number of individuals aged ≥60 years in Tanzania and in sub Saharan Africa in general due to improved survival. However, data is scarce on the disease burden and outcomes following admission in this population. We herein describe the pattern of diagnoses, outcomes and factors associated with the outcomes among elderly patients admitted at Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH) and Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute (JKCI) medical wards. Methodology: From October to December 2017, we consecutively enrolled patients aged ≥60 years (elderly) admitted to the MNH and JKCI medical wards. The ICD 10 was used to code for disease diagnosis at discharge or death. The Modified Barthel index was used to assess for functional activity on admission and at discharge. Results: We enrolled 336 (30.1%) elderly participants out of 1301 medical admissions. The mean age ± SD was 70.6 ± 8.9 years; 169 (50%) were female and the average number of diagnoses was 2 per participant. The most common diagnoses were: hypertension 151 (44.9%), stroke 106 (31.5%), heart failure 62 (18.5%), pneumonia 60 (17.9%), diabetes mellitus 58 (17.3%) and chronic kidney disease 55 (16.4%). The median duration of hospital stay was 5 (IQR 3–10) days and in-hospital mortality was 86 (25.6%), 56 (65%) deaths were due to non-communicable diseases and 48 (55.8%) deaths occurred within 72 hours of hospitalization. A modified Barthel score ≤20 on admission was associated with an OR 15.43 (95% CI: 7.5–31.7, p<0.001) for death. Conclusion: Elderly patients constituted a significant proportion of medical admissions at MNH and JKCI with high in-hospital mortality. A modified Barthel index score ≤20 during admission is associated with mortality and can be used to identify patients requiring special attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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33. Pathogen surveillance in the informal settlement, Kibera, Kenya, using a metagenomics approach.
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Hendriksen, Rene S., Lukjancenko, Oksana, Munk, Patrick, Hjelmsø, Mathis H., Verani, Jennifer R., Ng'eno, Eric, Bigogo, Godfrey, Kiplangat, Samuel, Oumar, Traoré, Bergmark, Lasse, Röder, Timo, Neatherlin, John C., Clayton, Onyango, Hald, Tine, Karlsmose, Susanne, Pamp, Sünje J., Fields, Barry, Montgomery, Joel M., and Aarestrup, Frank M.
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VIBRIO cholerae , *METAGENOMICS , *ROTAVIRUSES , *EMERGING infectious diseases , *PATHOGENIC microorganisms , *HEALTH services accessibility , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Worldwide, the number of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases is increasing, highlighting the importance of global disease pathogen surveillance. Traditional population-based methods may fail to capture important events, particularly in settings with limited access to health care, such as urban informal settlements. In such environments, a mixture of surface water runoff and human feces containing pathogenic microorganisms could be used as a surveillance surrogate. Method: We conducted a temporal metagenomic analysis of urban sewage from Kibera, an urban informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya, to detect and quantify bacterial and associated antimicrobial resistance (AMR) determinants, viral and parasitic pathogens. Data were examined in conjunction with data from ongoing clinical infectious disease surveillance. Results: A large variation of read abundances related to bacteria, viruses, and parasites of medical importance, as well as bacterial associated antimicrobial resistance genes over time were detected. Significant increased abundances were observed for a number of bacterial pathogens coinciding with higher abundances of AMR genes. Vibrio cholerae as well as rotavirus A, among other virus peaked in several weeks during the study period whereas Cryptosporidium spp. and Giardia spp, varied more over time. Conclusion: The metagenomic surveillance approach for monitoring circulating pathogens in sewage was able to detect putative pathogen and resistance loads in an urban informal settlement. Thus, valuable if generated in real time to serve as a comprehensive infectious disease agent surveillance system with the potential to guide disease prevention and treatment. The approach may lead to a paradigm shift in conducting real-time global genomics-based surveillance in settings with limited access to health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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34. Contrast-enhanced spectral mammography with a compact synchrotron source.
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Heck, Lisa, Dierolf, Martin, Jud, Christoph, Eggl, Elena, Sellerer, Thorsten, Mechlem, Korbinian, Günther, Benedikt, Achterhold, Klaus, Gleich, Bernhard, Metz, Stephan, Pfeiffer, Daniela, Kröninger, Kevin, and Herzen, Julia
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SYNCHROTRON radiation sources , *MAMMOGRAMS , *EARLY detection of cancer , *LIGHT sources - Abstract
For early breast cancer detection, mammography is nowadays the commonly used standard imaging approach, offering a valuable clinical tool for visualization of suspicious findings like microcalcifications and tumors within the breast. However, due to the superposition of anatomical structures, the sensitivity of mammography screening is limited. Within the last couple of years, the implementation of contrast-enhanced spectral mammography (CESM) based on K-edge subtraction (KES) imaging helped to improve the identification and classification of uncertain findings. In this study, we introduce another approach for CESM based on a two-material decomposition, with which we expect fundamental improvements compared to the clinical procedure. We demonstrate the potential of our proposed method using the quasi-monochromatic radiation of a compact synchrotron source—the Munich Compact Light Source (MuCLS)—and a modified mammographic accreditation phantom. For direct comparison with the clinical CESM approach, we also performed a standard dual-energy KES at the MuCLS, which outperformed the clinical CESM images in terms of contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and spatial resolution. However, the dual-energy-based two-material decomposition approach achieved even higher CNR values. Our experimental results with quasi-monochromatic radiation show a significant improvement of the image quality at lower mean glandular dose (MGD) than the clinical CESM. At the same time, our study indicates the great potential for the material-decomposition instead of clinically used KES to improve the quantitative outcome of CESM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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35. Impact of peri-intraventricular haemorrhage and periventricular leukomalacia in the neurodevelopment of preterms: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Gotardo, Juliana Wendling, Volkmer, Nathalia de Freitas Valle, Stangler, Guilherme Pucci, Dornelles, Alícia Dorneles, Bohrer, Betânia Barreto de Athayde, and Carvalho, Clarissa Gutierrez
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PERIVENTRICULAR leukomalacia , *META-analysis , *HEARING disorders , *HEMORRHAGE , *CEREBRAL palsy ,PERINATAL care - Abstract
Context: Whether all degrees of periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) and peri-intraventricular haemorrhage (PIVH) have a negative impact on neurodevelopment. Objective: To determine the impact of PVL and PIVH in the incidence of cerebral palsy, sensorineural impairment and development scores in preterm neonates. Registered in PROSPERO (CRD42017073113). Data sources: PubMed, Embase, SciELO, LILACS, and Cochrane databases. Study selection: Prospective cohort studies evaluating neurodevelopment in children born preterm which performed brain imaging in the neonatal period. Data extraction: Two independent researchers extracted data using a predesigned data extraction sheet. Statistical methods: A random-effects model was used, with Mantel-Haenszel approach and a Sidik-Jonkman method for the estimation of variances, combined with Hartung-Knapp-Sidik-Jonkman correction. Heterogeneity was assessed through the I2 statistic and sensitivity analysis were performed when possible. No funnel plots were generated but publication bias was discussed as a possible limitation. Results: Our analysis concluded premature children with any degree of PIVH are at increased risk for cerebral palsy (CP) when compared to children with no PIVH (3.4, 95% CI 1.60–7.22; 9 studies), a finding that persisted on subgroup analysis for studies with mean birth weight of less than 1000 grams. Similarly, PVL was associated with CP, both in its cystic (19.12, 95% CI 4.57–79.90; 2 studies) and non-cystic form (9.27, 95% CI 5.93–14.50; 2 studies). We also found children with cystic PVL may be at risk for visual and hearing impairment compared to normal children, but evidence is weak. Limitations: Major limitations were the lack of data for PVL in general, especially for the outcome of neurodevelopment, the high heterogeneity among methods used to assess neurodevelopment and the small number of studies, which led to meta-analysis with high heterogeneity and wide confidence intervals. Conclusions: There was no evidence supporting the hypothesis that PIVH causes impairment in neuropsychomotor development in our meta-analysis, but review of newer studies show an increased risk for lower intelligence scores in children with severe lesions, both PIVH and PVL. There is evidence to support the hypothesis that children with any degree of PIVH, especially those born below 1000 grams and those with severe haemorrhage, are at increased risk of developing CP, as well as children with PVL, both cystic and non-cystic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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36. Squamous differentiation portends poor prognosis in low and intermediate-risk endometrioid endometrial cancer.
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Andrade, Diocesio Alves Pinto de, da Silva, Vinicius Duval, Matsushita, Graziela de Macedo, de Lima, Marcos Alves, Vieira, Marcelo de Andrade, Andrade, Carlos Eduardo Mattos Cunha, Schmidt, Ronaldo Luís, Reis, Rui Manuel, and dos Reis, Ricardo
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ENDOMETRIAL cancer , *GLEASON grading system , *PROGRESSION-free survival , *BODY mass index , *TUMOR grading , *PROGNOSIS , *UNIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Background: Endometrial cancer presents well-defined risk factors: myometrial invasion, histological subtype, tumor grade, lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI). Some low and intermediate-risk endometrioid endometrial cancer patients exhibited unexpected outcomes. This study aimed to investigate other clinical-pathological factors that might influence the recurrence rates of patients diagnosed with low and intermediate-risk endometrioid endometrial cancer. Methods: A case-control study from a cohort retrospective of 196 patients diagnosed with low and intermediate-risk endometrioid endometrial cancer at a single institution from 2009 to 2014 was conducted. Medical records were reviewed to compare clinical (race, smoking, menopause age, body mass index) and pathological (endometrioid vs endometrioid with squamous differentiation, tumor differentiation grade, tumor location, endocervical invasion, LVSI) features of patients with recurrence (case) and without recurrence (control) of disease. Three controls for each case were matched for age and staging. Results: Twenty-one patients with recurrence were found (10.7%), of which 14 were stage IA, and 7 were stage IB. In accordance, 63 patients without recurrence were selected as controls. There were no significant differences in any clinical characteristics between cases and controls. Among pathological variables, presence of squamous differentiation (28.6% vs. 4.8%, p = 0.007), tumor differentiation grade 2 or 3 (57.1% vs. 30.2%, p = 0.037) and presence of endocervical invasion (28.6% vs. 12.7%, p = 0.103) were associated with disease recurrence on a univariate analysis. On multivariable analysis, only squamous differentiation was a significant risk factor for recurrence (p = 0.031). Conclusion: Our data suggest that squamous differentiation may be an adverse prognostic factor in patients with low and intermediate-risk endometrioid endometrial cancer, that showed a 5.6-fold increased risk for recurrence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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37. Prevalence of surgically correctable conditions among children in a mixed urban-rural community in Nigeria using the SOSAS survey tool: Implications for paediatric surgical capacity-building.
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Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O., Odugbemi, Tinuola O., Bode, Christopher O., Elebute, Olumide A., Alakaloko, Felix M., Alabi, Eyitayo O., Bankole, Olufemi, Ladipo-Ajayi, Oluwaseun, Seyi-Olajide, Justina O., Okusanya, Babasola, Abazie, Ogechi, Ademuyiwa, Iyabo Y., Onwuka, Amanda, Tran, Tu, Makanjuola, Ayomide, Gupta, Shailvi, Ots, Riinu, Harrison, Ewen M., Poenaru, Dan, and Nwomeh, Benedict C.
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RURAL population , *CITY dwellers , *UMBILICAL hernia , *MEDICAL personnel , *INGUINAL hernia , *PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Background: In many low- and middle-income countries, data on the prevalence of surgical diseases have been derived primarily from hospital-based studies, which may lead to an underestimation of disease burden within the community. Community-based prevalence studies may provide better estimates of surgical need to enable proper resource allocation and prioritization of needs. This study aims to assess the prevalence of common surgical conditions among children in a diverse rural and urban population in Nigeria. Methods: Descriptive cross-sectional, community-based study to determine the prevalence of congenital and acquired surgical conditions among children in a diverse rural-urban area of Nigeria was conducted. Households, defined as one or more persons 'who eat from the same pot' or slept under the same roof the night before the interview, were randomized for inclusion in the study. Data was collected using an adapted and modified version of the interviewer-administered questionnaire—Surgeons OverSeas Assessment of Surgical Need (SOSAS) survey tool and analysed using the REDCap web-based analytic application. Main results: Eight-hundred-and-fifty-six households were surveyed, comprising 1,883 children. Eighty-one conditions were identified, the most common being umbilical hernias (20), inguinal hernias (13), and wound injuries to the extremities (9). The prevalence per 10,000 children was 85 for umbilical hernias (95% CI: 47, 123), and 61 for inguinal hernias (95% CI: 34, 88). The prevalence of hydroceles and undescended testes was comparable at 22 and 26 per 10,000 children, respectively. Children with surgical conditions had similar sociodemographic characteristics to healthy children in the study population. Conclusion: The most common congenital surgical conditions in our setting were umbilical hernias, while injuries were the most common acquired conditions. From our study, it is estimated that there will be about 2.9 million children with surgically correctable conditions in the nation. This suggests an acute need for training more paediatric surgeons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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38. Visual inputs decrease brain activity in frontal areas during silent lipreading.
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Plata Bello, Julio, García-Peña, Carlos, Modroño, Cristián, Hernández-Martín, Estefanía, Pérez-Martín, Yaiza, Marcano, Francisco, and González–Mora, José Luis
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LIPREADING , *VISUAL perception , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
Aim: The aim of the present work is to analyze the modulation of the brain activity within the areas involved in lipreading when an additional visual stimulus is included. Methods: The experiment consisted of two fMRI runs (lipreading_only and lipreading+picture) where two conditions were considered in each one (oral speech sentences condition [OSS] and oral speech syllables condition [OSSY]). Results: During lipreading-only, higher activity in the left middle temporal gyrus (MTG) was identified for OSS than OSSY; during lipreading+picture, apart from the left MTG, higher activity was also present in the supplementary motor area (SMA), the left precentral gyrus (PreCG) and the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). The comparison between these two runs revealed higher activity for lipreading-only in the SMA and the left IFG. Conclusion: The presence of a visual reference during a lipreading task leads to a decrease in activity in frontal areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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39. Safety and efficacy of artesunate-amodiaquine combined with either methylene blue or primaquine in children with falciparum malaria in Burkina Faso: A randomized controlled trial.
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Mendes Jorge, Margarida, Ouermi, Lucienne, Meissner, Peter, Compaoré, Guillaume, Coulibaly, Boubacar, Nebie, Eric, Krisam, Johannes, Klose, Christina, Kieser, Meinhard, Jahn, Albrecht, Lu, Guangyu, D'Alessandro, Umberto, Sié, Ali, Mockenhaupt, Frank Peter, and Müller, Olaf
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METHYLENE blue , *ANTIMALARIALS , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MALARIA , *PRIMAQUINE - Abstract
Artemisinin resistance is threatening global efforts for malaria control and elimination. Primaquine (PQ) and methylene blue (MB) are gametocytocidal drugs that can be combined with artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) to reduce malaria transmission, including resistant strains. Children (6–59 months) with uncomplicated falciparum malaria in Burkina Faso were treated with artesunate-amodiaquine (AS-AQ) and randomized to MB (15 mg/kg/day for 3 days) or PQ (0.25 mg/kg at day 2) with the aim to show non-inferiority of the MB regimen with regard to haematological recovery at day 7 (primary endpoint). MB-AS-AQ could not be shown to be non-inferior to PQ-AS-AQ (mean Hb difference between treatment groups on day 7 was -0.352, 95% CI -0.832–0.128, p = 0.0767), however, haemoglobin recovery following treatment was alike in the two study arms (day 7: mean 0.2±1.4 g/dl vs. 0.5±0.9 g/dl, p = 0.446). Occurrence of adverse events was similar in both groups, except for vomiting, which was more frequent in the MB than in the PQ arm (20/50 vs 7/50, p = 0.003). Adequate clinical and parasitological response was above 95% in both groups, but significantly more asexual parasites were cleared in the MB arm compared to the PQ arm already on day 1 (48/50, 96%, vs 40/50, 80%, p = 0.014). Moreover, P. falciparum gametocyte prevalence and density were lower in the MB arm than in the PQ arm, which reached statistical significance on day 2 (prevalence: 2/50, 4%, vs 15/49, 31%, p<0.001; density: 9.6 vs 41.1/μl, p = 0.024). However, it should be considered that PQ was given only on day 2. MB-ACT appears to be an interesting alternative to PQ-ACT for the treatment of falciparum malaria. While there is a need to further improve MB formulations, MB-ACT may already be considered useful to reduce falciparum malaria transmission intensity, to increase treatment efficacy, and to reduce the risk for resistance development and spread. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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40. Pelvic alignment changes during the perinatal period.
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Morino, Saori, Ishihara, Mika, Umezaki, Fumiko, Hatanaka, Hiroko, Yamashita, Mamoru, and Aoyama, Tomoki
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ILIUM , *PELVIC bones , *PELVIC floor , *HIGH-risk pregnancy , *CHILDBIRTH , *URINARY incontinence , *BODY weight , *PERINATAL period - Abstract
Background: The function of the pelvic bones is to transfer load generated by body weight. Proper function of the pelvic bones can be disturbed by alignment changes that occur during pregnancy. Further, misalignment of the pelvic bones can lead to pain, urinary incontinence, and other complications. An understanding of the timing and nature of pelvic alignment changes during pregnancy may aid in preventing and treating these complications. Objective: To investigate the changes in pelvic alignment during pregnancy and one month after childbirth. Methods: This is a prospective, longitudinal cohort study. Pelvic measurements were obtained for 201 women at 12, 24, 30, and 36 weeks of pregnancy, and 1 month after childbirth. The anterior and posterior width of the pelvis (the distance between the bilateral anterior superior iliac spines and the bilateral posterior superior iliac spines), the anterior pelvic tilt, and pelvic asymmetry (the mean left and right pelvic tilt degrees and the bilateral difference of the anterior pelvic tilt) were measured. For the change in pelvic alignment, a Friedman test was conducted to determine any significant difference in the measurements over time. Results: The anterior and posterior width of the pelvis became significantly wider with pregnancy progress and the anterior width of the pelvis at 1 month after childbirth remained wider than that at 12 weeks of pregnancy (p < 0.001). The anterior pelvic tilt increased during pregnancy and decreased after childbirth (p < 0.05). Conclusion: Some changes in pelvic alignment occur continuously during the perinatal period. Changes in the anterior width of the pelvis are not recovered at one month post-childbirth. Understanding these perinatal changes may help clinicians avert complications due to pelvic misalignment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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41. Plasma mitochondrial DNA is elevated in obese type 2 diabetes mellitus patients and correlates positively with insulin resistance.
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Yuzefovych, Larysa V., Pastukh, Viktor M., Ruchko, Mykhaylo V., Simmons, Jon D., Richards, William O., and Rachek, Lyudmila I.
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TYPE 2 diabetes , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *INSULIN resistance , *PEOPLE with diabetes , *TUMOR necrosis factors , *SKELETAL muscle - Abstract
Cells damaged by mechanical or infectious injury release proinflammatory mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments into the circulation. We evaluated the relation between plasma levels of mtDNA fragments in obese type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients and measures of chronic inflammation and insulin resistance. In 10 obese T2DM patients and 12 healthy control (HC) subjects, we measured levels of plasma cell-free mtDNA with quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction, and mtDNA damage in skeletal muscle with quantitative alkaline Southern blot. Also, markers of systemic inflammation and oxidative stress in skeletal muscle were measured. Plasma levels of mtDNA fragments, mtDNA damage in skeletal muscle and plasma tumor necrosis factor α levels were greater in obese T2DM patients than HC subjects. Also, the abundance of plasma mtDNA fragments in obese T2DM patients levels positively correlated with insulin resistance. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first published evidence that elevated level of plasma mtDNA fragments is associated with mtDNA damage and oxidative stress in skeletal muscle and correlates with insulin resistance in obese T2DM patients. Plasma mtDNA may be a useful biomarker for predicting and monitoring insulin resistance in obese patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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42. Short-term effects of video gaming on brain response during working memory performance.
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Liu, Shuyan, Kaufmann, Christian, Labadie, Christian, Ströhle, Andreas, Kuschpel, Maxim S., Garbusow, Maria, Hummel, Robert, Schad, Daniel J., Rapp, Michael A., Heinz, Andreas, and Heinzel, Stephan
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SHORT-term memory , *VIDEO games , *JOB performance , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *HEART beat - Abstract
Breaks filled with different break activities often interrupt cognitive performance in everyday life. Previous studies have reported that both enhancing and deteriorating effects on challenging ongoing tasks such as working memory updating, depend on the type of break activity. However, neural mechanisms of these break-related alterations in working memory performance have not been studied, to date. Therefore, we conducted a brain imaging study to identify the neurobiological correlates of effects on the n-back working memory task related to different break activities. Before performing the n-back task in the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner, young adults were exposed to break activities in the MRI scanner involving (i) eyes-open resting, (ii) listening to music, and (iii) playing the video game "Angry Birds". Heart rate was measured by a pulse oximeter during the experiment. We found that increased heart rate during gaming as well as decreased relaxation levels after a video gaming break was related to poorer n-back task performance, as compared to listening to music. On the neural level, video gaming reduced supplementary motor area activation during working memory performance. These results may indicate that video gaming during a break may affect working memory performance by interfering with arousal state and frontal cognitive control functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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43. Can knowledge of election results change recall of our predictions? Neural correlates of political hindsight bias.
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Chen, Yin-Hua, Cheng, Hsu-Po, Lu, Yu-Wen, Lee, Pei-Hong, Northoff, Georg, and Yen, Nai-Shing
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ELECTIONS , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
Hindsight bias (HB) is the tendency to retrospectively exaggerate one's foresight knowledge about the outcome of an event. Cognitive processes influenced by newly obtained outcome information are used to explain the HB phenomenon, but the neural correlates remain unknown. This study investigated HB in the context of election results using a memory design and functional magnetic resonance imaging for the first time. Participants were asked to predict and recall the percentage of votes obtained by (pairs of) candidates before and after an election. The results revealed that 88% of participants showed HB by recalling that their predictions were closer to the actual outcomes than they really were; and participants had HB for 38% of the events. The HB effect was associated with activation in the medial superior frontal gyrus and bilateral inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), which have been implicated in updating an old belief due to new information and is similar to the process of reconstruction bias. Furthermore, participants with a greater HB effect showed greater activation of the left IFG. In conclusion, we successfully observed the HB phenomenon in election results, and our imaging results suggested that the HB phenomenon might involve reconstruction bias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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44. Common pre-diagnostic features in individuals with different rare diseases represent a key for diagnostic support with computerized pattern recognition?
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Grigull, Lorenz, Mehmecke, Sandra, Rother, Ann-Katrin, Blöß, Susanne, Klemann, Christian, Schumacher, Ulrike, Mücke, Urs, Kortum, Xiaowei, Lechner, Werner, and Klawonn, Frank
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MEDICAL personnel , *RARE diseases , *PATTERN recognition systems , *SOMATOFORM disorders , *PHYSICIANS , *INDEPENDENT sets - Abstract
Background: Rare diseases (RD) result in a wide variety of clinical presentations, and this creates a significant diagnostic challenge for health care professionals. We hypothesized that there exist a set of consistent and shared phenomena among all individuals affected by (different) RD during the time before diagnosis is established. Objective: We aimed to identify commonalities between different RD and developed a machine learning diagnostic support tool for RD. Methods: 20 interviews with affected individuals with different RD, focusing on the time period before their diagnosis, were performed and qualitatively analyzed. Out of these pre-diagnostic experiences, we distilled key phenomena and created a questionnaire which was then distributed among individuals with the established diagnosis of i.) RD, ii.) other common non-rare diseases (NRO) iii.) common chronic diseases (CD), iv.), or psychosomatic/somatoform disorders (PSY). Finally, four combined single machine learning methods and a fusion algorithm were used to distinguish the different answer patterns of the questionnaires. Results: The questionnaire contained 53 questions. A total sum of 1763 questionnaires (758 RD, 149 CD, 48 PSY, 200 NRO, 34 healthy individuals and 574 not evaluable questionnaires) were collected. Based on 3 independent data sets the 10-fold stratified cross-validation method for the answer-pattern recognition resulted in sensitivity values of 88.9% to detect the answer pattern of a RD, 86.6% for NRO, 87.7% for CD and 84.2% for PSY. Conclusion: Despite the great diversity in presentation and pathogenesis of each RD, patients with RD share surprisingly similar pre-diagnosis experiences. Our questionnaire and data-mining based approach successfully detected unique patterns in groups of individuals affected by a broad range of different rare diseases. Therefore, these results indicate distinct patterns that may be used for diagnostic support in RD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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45. Higher underestimation of tumour size post-neoadjuvant chemotherapy with breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)—A concordance comparison cohort analysis.
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Wu, Wen-Pei, Wu, Hwa-Koon, Chen, Chih-Jung, Lee, Chih-Wie, Chen, Shou-Tung, Chen, Dar-Ren, Chou, Chen-Te, Mok, Chi Wei, and Lai, Hung-Wen
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MAGNETIC resonance mammography , *COHORT analysis , *CANCER patients , *TUMORS , *CANCER chemotherapy - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of breast MRI for detecting residual tumor and the tumor size whether it would be affected after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: Total 109 patients with NAC and 682 patients without NAC were included in this retrospective study. Measurement of the largest diameter of tumors at pathology was chosen as gold standard and compared with preoperative breast MRI. A concordance threshold of ±25% of maximal tumor size was used. The accuracy of MRI was graded as concordant, underestimation, or overestimation rate. Further subgroup analysis with tumor stages, histologic subgroups and intrinsic subtypes was performed. Results: The post-NAC MRI was associated with 92.5% sensitivity, 55.2% specificity, 85.1% positive predictive value, 72.7% negative predictive value, and overall 82.6% accuracy for detecting residual tumor. In determining tumor size, the overall concordance rates of the non-NAC group and the NAC group were 43.5% and 41.3%, respectively (p = 0.678). But the overestimation rate and underestimation rate were 26.6% and 32.1% for NAC group, and 52.9% and 3.5% for the non-NAC group (p<0.001). While in the subgroups analysis, the concordance rate of the NAC group (26.7%) was lower than that of the non-NAC group (82.1%) at T3 stage (p<0.001). There were no statistically significant differences between different tumor histologic subgroups and intrinsic subtypes. Conclusions: The overall accuracy of MRI in predicting tumor size was not affected by NAC; however, it tends to underestimate tumor size after NAC, especially in patients with T3 lesions and above. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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46. The feasibility of using citizens to segment anatomy from medical images: Accuracy and motivation.
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Meakin, Judith R., Ames, Ryan M., Jeynes, J. Charles G., Welsman, Jo, Gundry, Michael, Knapp, Karen, and Everson, Richard
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IMAGE segmentation , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ACHIEVEMENT motivation , *CITIZEN science , *COMPUTER algorithms - Abstract
The development of automatic methods for segmenting anatomy from medical images is an important goal for many medical and healthcare research areas. Datasets that can be used to train and test computer algorithms, however, are often small due to the difficulties in obtaining experts to segment enough examples. Citizen science provides a potential solution to this problem but the feasibility of using the public to identify and segment anatomy in a medical image has not been investigated. Our study therefore aimed to explore the feasibility, in terms of performance and motivation, of using citizens for such purposes. Public involvement was woven into the study design and evaluation. Twenty-nine citizens were recruited and, after brief training, asked to segment the spine from a dataset of 150 magnetic resonance images. Participants segmented as many images as they could within three one-hour sessions. Their accuracy was evaluated by comparing them, as individuals and as a combined consensus, to the segmentations of three experts. Questionnaires and a focus group were used to determine the citizens' motivation for taking part and their experience of the study. Citizen segmentation accuracy, in terms of agreement with the expert consensus segmentation, varied considerably between individual citizens. The citizen consensus, however, was close to the expert consensus, indicating that when pooled, citizens may be able to replace or supplement experts for generating large image datasets. Personal interest and a desire to help were the two most common reasons for taking part in the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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47. The Nordic Maintenance Care Program: Does psychological profile modify the treatment effect of a preventive manual therapy intervention? A secondary analysis of a pragmatic randomized controlled trial.
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Eklund, Andreas, Jensen, Irene, Leboeuf-Yde, Charlotte, Kongsted, Alice, Jonsson, Mattias, Lövgren, Peter, Petersen-Klingberg, Jakob, Calvert, Christian, and Axén, Iben
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *SECONDARY analysis , *LUMBAR pain , *GENERALIZED estimating equations , *MOLLUSCUM contagiosum , *LINEAR equations , *PRAGMATICS - Abstract
Background: Chiropractic maintenance care is effective as secondary/tertiary prevention of non-specific low back pain (LBP), but the potential effect moderation by psychological characteristics is unknown. The objective was to investigate whether patients in specific psychological sub-groups had different responses to MC with regard to the total number of days with bothersome pain and the number of treatments. Method: Data from a two-arm randomized pragmatic multicenter trial with a 12-month follow up, designed to investigate the effectiveness of maintenance care, was used. Consecutive patients, 18–65 years of age, with recurrent and persistent LBP seeking chiropractic care with a good effect of the initial treatment were included. Eligible subjects were randomized to either maintenance care (prescheduled care) or to the control intervention, symptom-guided care. The primary outcome of the trial was the total number of days with bothersome LBP collected weekly for 12 months using an automated SMS system. Data used to classify patients according to psychological subgroups defined by the West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory (adaptive copers, interpersonally distressed and dysfunctional) were collected at the screening visit. Results: A total of 252 subjects were analyzed using a generalized estimating equations linear regression framework. Patients in the dysfunctional subgroup who received maintenance care reported fewer days with pain (-30.0; 95% CI: -36.6, -23.4) and equal number of treatments compared to the control intervention. In the adaptive coper subgroup, patients who received maintenance care reported more days with pain (10.7; 95% CI: 4.0, 17.5) and more treatments (3.9; 95% CI: 3.5, 4.2). Patients in the interpersonally distressed subgroup reported equal number of days with pain (-0.3; 95% CI: -8.7, 8.1) and more treatments (1.5; 95% CI: 0.9, 2.1) on maintenance care. Conclusions: Psychological and behavioral characteristics modify the effect of MC and should be considered when recommending long-term preventive management of patients with recurrent and persistent LBP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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48. Clinical experiences with the use of oxytocin injection by healthcare providers in a southwestern state of Nigeria: A cross-sectional study.
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Ejekam, Chioma Stella, Okafor, Ifeoma Peace, Anyakora, Chimezie, Ozomata, Ebenezer A., Okunade, Kehinde, Oridota, Sofela Ezekiel, and Nwokike, Jude
- Subjects
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MATERNAL mortality , *MEDICAL personnel , *HEALTH facilities , *CROSS-sectional method , *OXYTOCIN , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Background: Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is a leading cause of maternal mortality in Nigeria and in most low- and middle-income countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) strongly recommends oxytocin as effective, affordable, and the safest drug of first choice in the prevention and treatment of PPH in the third stage of labor. However, there are concerns about its quality. Very high prevalence of poor-quality oxytocin, especially in Africa and Asia, has been reported in literature. Excessive and inappropriate use of oxytocin is also common in low-resource settings. Objective: To assess clinical experiences with quality of oxytocin used by healthcare providers in Lagos State, Nigeria. Methods: This was a descriptive cross-sectional study conducted in 2017, with 705 respondents (doctors and nurses) who use oxytocin for obstetrics and gynecological services recruited from 195 health facilities (public and registered private) across Lagos State. Data collection was quantitative, using a pretested self-administered questionnaire. Data analysis was performed with IBM SPSS version 21. Statistical significance was set at 5 percent (p<0.05). Ethical approval was obtained from Lagos University Teaching Hospital Health Research Ethics Committee. Results: Only 52 percent of the respondents knew oxytocin should be stored at 2°C to 8°C. About 80 percent of respondents used oxytocin for augmentation of labor, 68 percent for induction of labor, 51 percent for stimulation of labor, and 78 percent for management of PPH. Forty-one percent used 20IU and as much as 10% used 30IU to 60IU for management of PPH. About 13 percent of respondents reported believing they had used an ineffective brand of oxytocin in their practice. Just over a third (36%) had an available means of documenting or reporting perceived ineffectiveness of drugs in their facility; of these, only about 12 percent had pharmacovigilance forms in their facilities to report the ineffectiveness. Conclusion: The inappropriate and inconsistent use of oxytocin, especially overdosing, likely led to the high perception of medicine effectiveness among respondents. This is coupled with lack of suspicion of medicine ineffectiveness by clinicians as a possible root cause of poor treatment response or disease progression. Poor knowledge of oxytocin storage and consequent poor storage practices could have contributed to the ineffectiveness reported by some respondents. It is necessary to establish a unified protocol for oxytocin use that is strictly complied with. Continuous training of healthcare providers in medicine safety monitoring is advocated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
- Full Text
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49. Model based estimation of population total in presence of non-ignorable non-response.
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Ahmed, Shakeel and Shabbir, Javid
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MONTE Carlo method , *STATISTICAL association , *PHYSICAL sciences , *RESPONSE rates , *POPULATION , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
The problem of handling non-ignorable non-response has been typically addressed under the design-based approach using the well-known sub-sampling technique introduced by Hansen and Hurwitz [1946, Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol 41(236), Page 517- 529]. Alternatively, the model-based paradigm emphasizes on utilizing the underlying model relationship between the outcome variable and one or more covariate(s) whose population values are known prior to the survey. This article utilizes the model relationship between the study variable and covariate(s) for handling non-ignorable non-response and obtaining an unbiased estimator for the population total under the sub-sampling technique. The main idea is to combine the estimates obtained from the sample on first call and the sub-sample from second call using separate model relationships. The contribution of this paper helps us in providing unbiased estimates with an improved efficiency under model-based paradigm in presence of non-ignorable non-response. The provided method is more economical than the available estimators under callback methods as we are working sub-sampling and also increase response rate as a stronger mode of interview is employed for data collection. A numerical study using Monte Carlo is presented to illustrate the behavior of the proposed and the efficiency comparison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
- Full Text
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50. Inhaled nebulized glatiramer acetate against Gram-negative bacteria is not associated with adverse pulmonary reactions in healthy, young adult female pigs.
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Skovdal, Sandra M., Christiansen, Stig Hill, Johansen, Karen Singers, Viborg, Ole, Bruun, Niels Henrik, Jensen-Fangel, Søren, Holm, Ida Elisabeth, Vorup-Jensen, Thomas, and Petersen, Eskild
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GLATIRAMER acetate , *GRAM-negative bacteria , *INHALERS , *YOUNG adults , *PEPTIDE antibiotics , *DRUG side effects , *PSEUDOMONAS aeruginosa infections - Abstract
The developmental speed of new antimicrobials does not meet the emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria sufficiently. A potential shortcut is assessing the antimicrobial activity of already approved drugs. Intrudingly, the antibacterial action of glatiramer acetate (GA) has recently been discovered. GA is a well-known and safe immunomodulatory drug particular effective against Gram-negative bacteria, which disrupts biological membranes by resembling the activity of antimicrobial peptides. Thus, GA can potentially be included in treatment strategies used to combat infections caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negatives. One potential application is chronic respiratory infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, however the safety of GA inhalation has never been assessed. Here, the safety of inhaling nebulized GA is evaluated in a preclinical pig model. The potential side effects, i.e., bronchoconstriction, respiratory tract symptoms and systemic- and local inflammation were assessed by ventilator monitoring, clinical observation, biochemistry, flowcytometry, and histopathology. No signs of bronchoconstriction assessed by increased airway peak pressure, Ppeak, or decreased oxygen pressure were observed. Also, there were no signs of local inflammation in the final histopathology examination of the pulmonary tissue. As we did not observe any potential pulmonary side effects of inhaled GA, our preliminary results suggest that GA inhalation is safe and potentially can be a part of the treatment strategy targeting chronic lung infections caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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