76 results on '"Evangelia Samara"'
Search Results
2. Coronal Models and Detection of the Open Magnetic Field
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Eleanna Asvestari, Manuela Temmer, Ronald M. Caplan, Jon A. Linker, Stephan G. Heinemann, Rui F. Pinto, Carl J. Henney, Charles N. Arge, Mathew J. Owens, Maria S. Madjarska, Jens Pomoell, Stefan J. Hofmeister, Camilla Scolini, and Evangelia Samara
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Solar corona ,Solar magnetic fields ,Solar physics ,Solar coronal holes ,Solar active regions ,Magnetohydrodynamics ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
A plethora of coronal models, from empirical to more complex magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) ones, are being used for reconstructing the coronal magnetic field topology and estimating the open magnetic flux. However, no individual solution fully agrees with coronal hole observations and in situ measurements of open flux at 1 au, as there is a strong deficit between the model and observations contributing to the known problem of the missing open flux. In this paper, we investigate the possible origin of the discrepancy between modeled and observed magnetic field topology by assessing the effect on the simulation output by the choice of the input boundary conditions and the simulation setup, including the choice of numerical schemes and the parameter initialization. In the frame of this work, we considered four potential field source surface-based models and one fully MHD model, different types of global magnetic field maps, and model initiation parameters. After assessing the model outputs using a variety of metrics, we conclude that they are highly comparable regardless of the differences set at initiation. When comparing all models to coronal hole boundaries extracted by extreme-ultraviolet filtergrams, we find that they do not compare well. This mismatch between observed and modeled regions of the open field is a candidate contributing to the open flux problem.
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- 2024
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3. Globally altered sleep patterns and physical activity levels by confinement in 5056 individuals: ECLB COVID-19 international online survey
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Khaled Trabelsi, Achraf Ammar, Liwa Masmoudi, Omar Boukhris, Hamdi Chtourou, Bassem Bouaziz, Michael Brach, Ellen Bentlage, Daniella How, Mona Ahmed, Patrick Mueller, Notger Mueller, Hsen Hsouna, Mohamed Romdhani, Omar Hammouda, Laisa Paineiras-Domingos, Annemarie Braakman-jansen, Christian Wrede, Sophia Bastoni, Carlos Pernambuco, Leonardo Mataruna-Dos-Santos, Morteza Taheri, Khadijeh Irandoust, Aïmen Khacharem, Nicola Bragazzi, Jana Strahler, Jad Washif, Albina Andreeva, Stephen Bailey, Jarred Acton, Emma Mitchell, Nicholas Bott, Faiez Gargouri, Lotfi Chaari, Hadj Batatia, Samira khoshnami, Evangelia Samara, Vasiliki Zisi, Parasanth Sankar, Waseem Ahmed, Gamal Ali, Osama Abdelkarim, Mohamed Jarraya, Kais Abed, Wassim Moalla, Nafaa Souissi, Asma Aloui, Nizar Souissi, Lisette Gemert-Pijnen, Bryan Riemann, Laurel Riemann, Jan Delhey, Jonathan Gómez-Raja, Monique Epstein, Robbert Sanderman, Sebastian Schulz, Achim Jerg, Ramzi Al-Horani, Taysir Mansi, Ismail Dergaa, Mohamed Jmail, Fernando Barbosa, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Boštjan Šimunič, Rado Pišot, Saša Pišot, Andrea Gaggioli, Jürgen Steinacker, Piotr Zmijewski, Cain C.T. Clark, Christian Apfelbacher, Jordan Glenn, Helmi Saad, Karim Chamari, Tarak Driss, and Anita Hoekelmann
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covid-19 pandemic ,lockdowns ,sleep ,sedentary lifestyle ,health. ,Sports medicine ,RC1200-1245 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Symptoms of psychological distress and disorder have been widely reported in people under quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic; in addition to severe disruption of peoples’ daily activity and sleep patterns. This study investigates the association between physical-activity levels and sleep patterns in quarantined individuals. An international Google online survey was launched in April 6th, 2020 for 12-weeks. Forty-one research organizations from Europe, North-Africa, Western-Asia, and the Americas promoted the survey through their networks to the general society, which was made available in 14 languages. The survey was presented in a differential format with questions related to responses “before” and “during” the confinement period. Participants responded to the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire and the short form of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. 5056 replies (59.4% female), from Europe (46.4%), Western-Asia (25.4%), America (14.8%) and North-Africa (13.3%) were analysed. The COVID-19 home confinement led to impaired sleep quality, as evidenced by the increase in the global PSQI score (4.37 ± 2.71 before home confinement vs. 5.32 ± 3.23 during home confinement) (p < 0.001). The frequency of individuals experiencing a good sleep decreased from 61% (n = 3063) before home confinement to 48% (n = 2405) during home confinement with highly active individuals experienced better sleep quality (p < 0.001) in both conditions. Time spent engaged in all physical-activity and the metabolic equivalent of task in each physical-activity category (i.e., vigorous, moderate, walking) decreased significantly during COVID-19 home confinement (p < 0.001). The number of hours of daily-sitting increased by ~2 hours/days during home confinement (p < 0.001). COVID-19 home confinement resulted in significantly negative alterations in sleep patterns and physical-activity levels. To maintain health during home confinement, physical-activity promotion and sleep hygiene education and support are strongly warranted.
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- 2020
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4. Effects of home confinement on mental health and lifestyle behaviours during the COVID-19 outbreak: Insight from the ECLB-COVID19 multicenter study
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Achraf Ammar, Khaled Trabelsi, Michael Brach, Hamdi Chtourou, Omar Boukhris, Liwa Masmoudi, Bassem Bouaziz, Ellen Bentlage, Daniella How, Mona Ahmed, Patrick Mueller, Notger Mueller, Omar Hammouda, Laisa Paineiras-Domingos, Annemarie Braakman-jansen, Christian Wrede, Sophia Bastoni, Carlos Pernambuco, Leonardo Mataruna, Morteza Taheri, Khadijeh Irandoust, Aïmen Khacharem, Nicola Bragazzi, Jana Strahler, Jad Adrian, Albina Andreeva, Jordan Glenn, Nicholas Bott, Faiez Gargouri, Lotfi Chaari, Hadj Batatia, Samira khoshnami, Evangelia Samara, Vasiliki Zisi, Parasanth Sankar, Waseem Ahmed, Gamal Ali, Osama Abdelkarim, Mohamed Jarraya, Kais Abed, Wassim Moalla, Mohamed Romdhani, Asma Aloui, Nizar Souissi, Lisette GemertPijnen, Bryan Riemann, Laurel Riemann, Jan Delhey, Jonathan Gómez-Raja, Monique Epstein, Robbert Sanderman, Sebastian Schulz, Achim Jerg, Ramzi Al-Horani, Taysir Mansi, Mohamed Jmail, Fernando Barbosa, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Boštjan Šimunič, Rado Pišot, Saša Pišot, Andrea Gaggioli, Piotr Zmijewski, Stephen Bailey, Jürgen Steinacker, Karim Chamari, Tarak Driss, and Anita Hoekelmann
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public health ,pandemic ,mental wellbeing ,depression ,satisfaction ,behaviours ,Sports medicine ,RC1200-1245 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Although recognised as effective measures to curb the spread of the COVID-19 outbreak, social distancing and self-isolation have been suggested to generate a burden throughout the population. To provide scientific data to help identify risk factors for the psychosocial strain during the COVID-19 outbreak, an international cross-disciplinary online survey was circulated in April 2020. This report outlines the mental, emotional and behavioural consequences of COVID-19 home confinement. The ECLB-COVID19 electronic survey was designed by a steering group of multidisciplinary scientists, following a structured review of the literature. The survey was uploaded and shared on the Google online survey platform and was promoted by thirty-five research organizations from Europe, North Africa, Western Asia and the Americas. Questions were presented in a differential format with questions related to responses “before” and “during” the confinement period. 1047 replies (54% women) from Western Asia (36%), North Africa (40%), Europe (21%) and other continents (3%) were analysed. The COVID-19 home confinement evoked a negative effect on mental wellbeing and emotional status (P < 0.001; 0.43 ≤ d ≤ 0.65) with a greater proportion of individuals experiencing psychosocial and emotional disorders (+10% to +16.5%). These psychosocial tolls were associated with unhealthy lifestyle behaviours with a greater proportion of individuals experiencing (i) physical (+15.2%) and social (+71.2%) inactivity, (ii) poor sleep quality (+12.8%), (iii) unhealthy diet behaviours (+10%), and (iv) unemployment (6%). Conversely, participants demonstrated a greater use (+15%) of technology during the confinement period. These findings elucidate the risk of psychosocial strain during the COVID-19 home confinement period and provide a clear remit for the urgent implementation of technology-based intervention to foster an Active and Healthy Confinement Lifestyle AHCL).
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- 2020
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5. The Effect of Cell Salvage on Bleeding and Transfusion Needs in Cardiac Surgery
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Frixos Tachias, Evangelia Samara, Anastasios Petrou, Agathi Karakosta, Stavros Siminelakis, Efstratios Apostolakis, and Petros Tzimas
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Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Introduction. Cell salvaging is well established in the blood management of cardiac patients, but there remain some concerns about its effects on perioperative bleeding and transfusion variables. This randomized controlled study investigated the potential effects of the centrifuged end-product on bleeding, transfusion rates, and other transfusion-related variables in adult cardiac surgery patients submitted to extracorporeal circulation. Materials and Methods. Patients were randomly chosen to receive (cell-salvage group, 99 patients) or not to receive (control group, 110 patients) the centrifuged product of a cell salvage apparatus. Bleeding and transfusion rates according to the universal definition of perioperative bleeding (UDPB) classification, postoperative hemoglobin, coagulation, and oxygenation indices were recorded and compared between the groups. Results. Both groups had almost identical bleeding and transfusion rates (median value: 2 units of red blood cells (RBC) and no units of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and platelets (PLT) for both groups, p>0.05). Patients in the cell-salvage group presented slightly higher hemoglobin concentrations (10.6 ± 1.1 vs. 10.1 ± 1.7 g/dL, p
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- 2022
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6. How urologists deal with chronic prostatitis? The preliminary results of a Mediterranean survey
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Konstantinos Stamatiou, Vittorio Magri, Gianpaolo Perletti, Evangelia Samara, Georgios Christopoulos, and Alberto Trinchieri
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Chronic prostatitis ,Prostate ,Infection ,Stamey-Meyers ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Objectives: We performed a questionnaire survey to investigate various issues in the diagnosis of chronic prostatitis (CP) performed by Greek urologists and to assess some aspects of prostatitis workup in Greece. Replies were compared with those of Italian clinical research partners in an attempt to clarify the CP diagnostic approaches in Southern European Mediterranean countries. Methods: We translated the original Italian questionnaire presented by Magri and Montanari in the frame of a urological congress held in Milan on October 26th, 2018. Τhis 5-item questionnaire explores clinical practice characteristics, attitudes, and diagnostic strategies for the management of chronic prostatitis (Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis or Chronic Prostatitis/Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome, according to NIH criteria). After its validation the questionnaire was uploaded in the internet and Greek healthcare professionals were invited by mail to respond. Responses were compared with those of Italian urologists, in order to determine similarities and differences in attitudes between clinicians regarding the diagnostic assessment of CP. Results: There is a wide variation in participants' preferences for diagnostic methods, laboratory tests and clinical examinations both in Italy and in Greece. In both countries many diagnostic tests performed in affected patients are only geared to exclude other treatable conditions (e.g., benign prostatic hyperplasia, bladder cancer), but more suitable methods and tests for the assessment of CP are less frequently used. Conclusions: Urologists' choices for the diagnostic workup of CP, show a wide international or intra-national variability between Greece and Italy. Although several diagnostic tests are available to differentiate and categorize the types of CP, a large number of urologists use less suitable methods and tests. This fact reflects both the lack of consensual vision in the literature and the difficulties encountered on a daily basis by the physicians. Under the light of this evidence, the need of studies establishing consensual guidelines for the optimal diagnosis of CP is becoming imperative.
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- 2020
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7. Psychological consequences of COVID-19 home confinement: The ECLB-COVID19 multicenter study.
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Achraf Ammar, Patrick Mueller, Khaled Trabelsi, Hamdi Chtourou, Omar Boukhris, Liwa Masmoudi, Bassem Bouaziz, Michael Brach, Marlen Schmicker, Ellen Bentlage, Daniella How, Mona Ahmed, Asma Aloui, Omar Hammouda, Laisa Liane Paineiras-Domingos, Annemarie Braakman-Jansen, Christian Wrede, Sophia Bastoni, Carlos Soares Pernambuco, Leonardo Jose Mataruna-Dos-Santos, Morteza Taheri, Khadijeh Irandoust, Aïmen Khacharem, Nicola L Bragazzi, Jad Adrian Washif, Jordan M Glenn, Nicholas T Bott, Faiez Gargouri, Lotfi Chaari, Hadj Batatia, Samira C Khoshnami, Evangelia Samara, Vasiliki Zisi, Parasanth Sankar, Waseem N Ahmed, Gamal Mohamed Ali, Osama Abdelkarim, Mohamed Jarraya, Kais El Abed, Mohamed Romdhani, Nizar Souissi, Lisette Van Gemert-Pijnen, Stephen J Bailey, Wassim Moalla, Jonathan Gómez-Raja, Monique Epstein, Robbert Sanderman, Sebastian Schulz, Achim Jerg, Ramzi Al-Horani, Taysir Mansi, Mohamed Jmail, Fernando Barbosa, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Boštjan Šimunič, Rado Pišot, Andrea Gaggioli, Piotr Zmijewski, Jürgen M Steinacker, Jana Strahler, Laurel Riemann, Bryan L Riemann, Notger Mueller, Karim Chamari, Tarak Driss, Anita Hoekelmann, and ECLB-COVID19 Consortium
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundPublic health recommendations and government measures during the COVID-19 pandemic have enforced restrictions on daily-living. While these measures are imperative to abate the spreading of COVID-19, the impact of these restrictions on mental health and emotional wellbeing is undefined. Therefore, an international online survey (ECLB-COVID19) was launched on April 6, 2020 in seven languages to elucidate the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on mental health and emotional wellbeing.MethodsThe ECLB-COVID19 electronic survey was designed by a steering group of multidisciplinary scientists, following a structured review of the literature. The survey was uploaded and shared on the Google online-survey-platform and was promoted by thirty-five research organizations from Europe, North-Africa, Western-Asia and the Americas. All participants were asked for their mental wellbeing (SWEMWS) and depressive symptoms (SMFQ) with regard to "during" and "before" home confinement.ResultsAnalysis was conducted on the first 1047 replies (54% women) from Asia (36%), Africa (40%), Europe (21%) and other (3%). The COVID-19 home confinement had a negative effect on both mental-wellbeing and on mood and feelings. Specifically, a significant decrease (p < .001 and Δ% = 9.4%) in total score of the SWEMWS questionnaire was noted. More individuals (+12.89%) reported a low mental wellbeing "during" compared to "before" home confinement. Furthermore, results from the mood and feelings questionnaire showed a significant increase by 44.9% (p < .001) in SMFQ total score with more people (+10%) showing depressive symptoms "during" compared to "before" home confinement.ConclusionThe ECLB-COVID19 survey revealed an increased psychosocial strain triggered by the home confinement. To mitigate this high risk of mental disorders and to foster an Active and Healthy Confinement Lifestyle (AHCL), a crisis-oriented interdisciplinary intervention is urgently needed.
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- 2020
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8. Clinical Validation of the Greek Version of the Acute Cystitis Symptom Score (ACSS)—Part II
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Konstantinos Stamatiou, Evangelia Samara, Jakhongir F. Alidjanov, Adrian M. E. Pilatz, Kurt G. Naber, and Florian M. E. Wagenlehner
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Acute Cystitis Symptom Score ,cystitis ,patient-reported outcome ,questionnaire ,women ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
The Acute Cystitis Symptom Score (ACSS) is a patient self-reporting questionnaire for the clinical diagnosis and patient-reported outcome (PRO) in women with acute uncomplicated cystitis (AC). The aim of the current study (part II) is the clinical validation of the Greek ACSS questionnaire. After linguistic validation according to internationally accepted guidelines and cognitive assessment (part I), the clinical validation was performed by using the Greek ACSS study version in 92 evaluable female participants including 53 patients with symptoms suspicious of AC and 39 controls. The clinical outcome using the ACSS questionnaire at different points in time after the start of treatment was demonstrated as well. The age (mean ± SD) of the 53 patients (44.7 ± 17.0 years) and 39 controls (49.3 ± 15.9 years) and their additional conditions at baseline visits, such as menstruation, premenstrual syndrome, pregnancy, menopause, diabetes mellitus, were comparable. There was, however, a significant difference (p < 0.001) between patients and controls at baseline visit regarding sum score of the ACSS domains, such as typical symptoms and quality of life. The clinical outcome of up to 7 days showed a fast reduction of the symptom scores and improvement of quality of life. The optimal thresholds for the patient-reported outcome of successful therapy could be established. The linguistically and clinically validated Greek ACSS questionnaire can now be used for clinical or epidemiological studies and also for patients’ self-diagnosis of AC and as a PRO measure tool.
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- 2021
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9. Cardiac arrest after administration of sugammadex as neuromuscular blockade reversal agent and full recovery from anesthesia
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Evangelia Samara, Ioanna Iatrelli, Theofilos Georgakis, and Petros Tzimas
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Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Published
- 2020
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10. Unifying the Validation of Ambient Solar Wind Models
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Martin A Reiss, Karin Muglach, Richard Mullinix, Maria M Kuznetsova, Chiu Wiegand, Manuela Temmer, Charles N Arge, Sergio Dasso, Shing F Fung, José Juan González-Avilés, Siegfried Gonzi, Lan Jian, Peter MacNeice, Christian Möstl, Mathew Owens, Barbara Perri, Rui F Pinto, Lutz Rastaetter, Pete Riley, and Evangelia Samara
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Geophysics - Abstract
Progress in space weather research and awareness needs community-wide strategies and procedures to evaluate our modeling assets. Here we present the activities of the Ambient Solar Wind Validation Team embedded in the COSPAR ISWAT initiative. We aim to bridge the gap between model developers and end-users to provide the community with an assessment of the state-of-the-art in solar wind forecasting. To this end, we develop an open online platform for validating solar wind models by comparing their solutions with in situ spacecraft measurements. The online platform will allow the space weather community to test the quality of state-of-the-art solar wind models with unified metrics providing an unbiased assessment of progress over time. In this study, we propose a metadata architecture and recommend community-wide forecasting goals and validation metrics. We conclude with a status update of the online platform and outline future perspectives.
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- 2022
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11. Low-Profile Altura Endograft System for Endovascular Abdominal Aorta Aneurysm Repair. Preliminary Results in Elective and Emergent Situations
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Georgios I. Karaolanis, Demetrios Hadjis, Evangelia Samara, Ilias P. Gomatos, Petros Tzimas, and Georgios K. Glantzounis
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Surgery ,General Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
12. The fast component of the solar wind: origins, correlations and modeling with EUHFORIA
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Evangelia Samara, Jasmina Magdalenic, Luciano Rodriguez, Stefaan Poedts, Manolis K. Georgoulis, Rui F. Pinto, Charles N. Arge, Stephan G. Heinemann, and Stefan J. Hofmeister
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It is widely known that the fast solar wind originates mainly from coronal holes (CHs) in the solar corona. Associations between the CH characteristics and the properties of the fast solar wind in situ have been studied throughout the years from different authors leading to diverse degrees of correlation (Nolte et al. 1976; Vršnak et al. 2007; Karachik et al. 2011; Rotter et al. 2012a; Hofmeister et al. 2018; Heinemann et al. 2020). In this work, we introduce and quantify the geometrical complexity of CHs, a parameter that has been neglected so far in similar studies. For a particular CH sample, we explore how complexity affects the peak speed of the fast solar wind at Earth and its association with other CH properties. We further compare observations of fast solar wind at Earth with forecasts from EUHFORIA. We evaluate our results, and present the efforts and restrictions we encounter towards improving our prediction capabilities by exploiting recent PSP observations.
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- 2023
13. From research to the operation of solar wind forecasting with SafeSpace Helio1D: lessons learned and ways forward
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Rungployphan Kieokaew, Rui Pinto, Mikel Indurain, Evangelia Samara, Benoit Lavraud, Antoine Brunet, Stefaan Poedts, Vincent Génot, Alexis Rouillard, Sébastien Bourdarie, and Ioannis Daglis
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Our current capability of space weather prediction in the Earth's radiation belts is limited to only an hour in advance using solar wind monitoring at the Lagrangian L1 point. To mitigate the impacts of space weather on telecommunication satellites, advancing the lead time of the prediction is a critical task. We develop a prototype pipeline called "Helio1D" to forecast ambient solar wind conditions (speed, density, temperature, tangential magnetic field) at L1 with a lead time of 4 days. This pipeline predicts Corotating Interaction Regions (CIRs) in which their compressed stream interfaces and high-speed streams can increase high-energy fluxes in the radiation belts. The Helio1D pipeline connects the Multi-VP model, which provides real-time solar wind emergence at 0.14 AU, and the 1D MHD model. Using the long-term data from Multi-VP, we benchmark the Helio1D pipeline for solar wind speed against the observation data in 2004 - 2013 and 2017 - 2018. We developed a framework based on the Fast Dynamic Time Warping technique that allows us to continuously compare time-series outputs containing CIRs to observations to measure the pipeline's performance. In particular, we use this framework to calibrate and improve the pipeline's performance for operational forecasting. Since the 1D MHD model is computationally inexpensive, we provide daily ensemble forecasting of 21 members, including several targets around the Earth to account for the uncertainties. This pipeline can be used to feed real-time, daily solar wind forecasting to predict the dynamics of the inner magnetosphere and the radiation belts. In this presentation, we will share the lessons from this research-to-operation project and discuss ways to effectively implement operational space weather pipelines.
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- 2023
14. The effect of the morphology of coronal holes on the propagational evolution of high-speed solar wind streams in the inner heliosphere
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Stefan Hofmeister, Eleanna Asvestari, Jingnan Guo, Verena Heidrich-Meisner, Stephan Heinemann, Jasmina Magdalenic, Stefaan Poedts, Evangelia Samara, Manuela Temmer, Susanne Vennerstrom, Astrid Veronig, Bojan Vrsnak, and Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber
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Since the 1970s it has been empirically known that the area of solar coronal holes a ects the properties of high-speed solar windstreams (HSSs) at Earth. We derive a simple analytical model for the propagation of HSSs from the Sun to Earth and thereby showhow the area of coronal holes and the size of their boundary regions a ect the HSS velocity, temperature, and density near Earth.We assume that velocity, temperature, and density profiles form across the HSS cross section close to the Sun and that these spatialprofiles translate into corresponding temporal profiles in a given radial direction due to the solar rotation. These temporal distributionsdrive the stream interface to the preceding slow solar wind plasma and disperse with distance from the Sun. The HSS properties at1AU are then given by all HSS plasma parcels launched from the Sun that did not run into the stream interface at Earth distance.We show that the velocity plateau region of HSSs as seen at 1AU, if apparent, originates from the center region of the HSS closeto the Sun, whereas the velocity tail at 1AU originates from the trailing boundary region. Small HSSs can be described to entirelyconsist of boundary region plasma, which intrinsically results in smaller peak velocities. The peak velocity of HSSs at Earth furtherdepends on the longitudinal width of the HSS close to the Sun. The shorter the longitudinal width of an HSS close to the Sun, themore of its “fastest” HSS plasma parcels from the HSS core and trailing boundary region have impinged upon the stream interfacewith the preceding slow solar wind, and the smaller is the peak velocity of the HSS at Earth. As the longitudinal width is statisticallycorrelated to the area of coronal holes, this also explains the well-known empirical relationship between coronal hole areas and HSSpeak velocities. Further, the temperature and density of HSS plasma parcels at Earth depend on their radial expansion from the Sunto Earth. The radial expansion is determined by the velocity gradient across the HSS boundary region close to the Sun and gives thevelocity-temperature and density-temperature relationships at Earth their specific shape. When considering a large number of HSSs,the assumed correlation between the HSS velocities and temperatures close to the Sun degrades only slightly up to 1AU, but thecorrelation between the velocities and densities is strongly disrupted up to 1AU due to the radial expansion. Finally, we show howthe number of particles of the piled-up slow solar wind in the stream interaction region depends on the velocities and densities of theHSS and preceding slow solar wind plasma.
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- 2023
15. Impact of Lower Tidal Volumes During One-Lung Ventilation: A 2022 Update of the Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials
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Mohamed R. El Tahan, Evangelia Samara, Nandor Marczin, Giovanni Landoni, and Laura Pasin
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
16. How much does the postoperative delirium really count as a risk factor for poorer quality of life with long-term cognitive and functional decline after cardiac surgery?
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Evangelia Samara, Agathi Karakosta, Frixos Tachias, and Petros Tzimas
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
17. Peri-interventional outcome study in the elderly in Europe A 30-day prospective cohort study
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Ana Sekulic, Selene Martinez Perez, Danny Feike Hoogma, GÖKHAN KILINÇ, Marc Danguy des Déserts, Evangelia Samara, AYSE HIZAL, Nicolai Goettel, Martin Scharffenberg, Sofia Fernandes, Jose Ignacio García-Sánchez, Tobias Kammerer, Marc Moritz Berger, Florian Piekarski, CEREN AYGÜN MUÇUOĞLU, PATRICIA PIÑEIRO OTERO, Angel Becerra, Aurelio Rodriguez-Perez, Ülkü Ceren Köksoy, Jakob Wittenstein, Lars Lundstrøm, Diana Zamudio Penko, Hans-Joerg Gillmann, Dianne De Korte-de Boer, Jose miguel Marcos-vidal, Sebastian Ziemann, Tournoy, Jos, Kowark, Ana, Rossaint, Rolf, Matot, Idit, Nickel, Frank, Grau Torradeflot, Laura, Coburn, Mark, Berger, Marc, Farcher, Helmut, Opperer, Mathias, Adriaensens, Ine, Saldien, Vera, Berghmans, Johan, Van Hove, Sofie, Rex, Steffen, Beran, Maud, Eerdekens, Gert-Jan, Mesotten, Dieter, Timmers, Maxim, Vandermeulen, Elly, De Bruyne, Ann, De Hert, Stefan, De Ruyter, Hendrik, Van Belleghem, Vincent, Boscart, Isabelle, Steinmetz, Jacob, De Corte, Wouter, Desmet, Matthias, Missant, Carlo, Carlier, Stefaan, Castelain, Charlotte, Demeyer, Caroline, Vandenbossche, Carl, Detienne, Hans, Devroe, Sarah, Dewinter, Geertrui, Hoogma, Danny, Huygens, Christel, Meeusen, Roselien, Van de Velde, Marc, Lebrun, Christophe, Poels, Stéphanie, Soetens, Filiep, Fenger-Eriksen, Christian, Alanoglu, Zekeriyya, Draegert, Christina, Santos, Sofia Gaspar, Soelling, Christine, Andersen, Gertrud, Dalsø, Sille M., Haderslev, Pernille, Rasmussen, Vibe M., Vester-Andersen, Morten, Sommer, Tine G., Berger, Marc M., Kirkegaard, Johan, Lundstrøm, Lars H., Olesen, Christian M., Paramanathan, Sansu, Jensen, Lisbet Tokkesdal, Knudsen, Halfdan H., Schmidt, Jens C., Stehen, Nick P., Dupont, Hervé, Herbinet, Clément, Falières, Xavier, Lorne, Emmanuel, Mahjoub, Yazine, Ntouba, Alexandre, Fritsch, Marine, Garcia, Manuela, Lasocki, Sigismond, Petit Phan, Jonathan, Lieutaud, Thomas, Bonneric, Laura, Boselli, Emmanuel, Goettel, Nicolai, Gaillet, Maxime, des Déserts, Marc Danguy, Montelescaut, Etienne, Lamblin, Antoine, Muller, Violaine, Lagrange, Celine, Le Moal, Charlene, Robert, Alain, Staikowsky, Frederik, Lebas, Benoit, Kartalov, Andrijan, Lebuffe, Gilles, Garot, Matthias, Beuvelot, Johanne, Dejour, David, Deligne, Emmanuel, Desebbe, Olivier, Delannoy, Bertand, Gignoux, Benoit, Guillaud, Olivier, Nloga, Joseph, Katsanoulas, Konstantinos, Prunier-Bossion, Florence, Sibellas, Franck, Abraham, Paul, Bidon, Cyril, Rimmele, Thomas, Bruge-Ansel, Marie-Hélène, Friggeri, Arnaud, Lukaszewicz, Anne-Claire, Dziadzko, Mikhail, Leone, Marc, Rückbeil, Marcia V., Kenig, Jakub, Meresse, Zoe, Pastene, Bruno, Odin, Isabelle, Bonnal, Aurelien, Bouic, Nicolas, Trinh Duc, Pierre, Pillant, Thomas, Riboulet, Fabien, Degoul, Samuel, Saumier, Nicolas, Khoronenko, Victoria, Wasilewski, Marion, Asehnoune, Karim, Roquilly, Antoine, Glasman, Pauline, Puybasset, Louis, Garnier, Fanny, Verdonk, Franck, Samama, Charles M., Towa, Line, Blet, Alice, Barrau, Stéphanie, Boisson, Matthieu, Debaene, Bertrand, Frasca, Denis, Imzi, Nadia, Delvaux, Bernard, Huynh, Davy, Maupain, Olivier, Mercadal, Luc, Zanoun, Nabil, Macharadze, Tamar, de Baene, Armelle, Boulay-Maninovsky, Catherine, Fernandes, Olivier, Giltaire, Agathe, Gomis, Philippe, Malinovsky, Jean-Marc, Romain, François-Xavier, Calmelet, Astrid, Dupont, Ségolène, Gouraud, David, Milenovic, Miodrag, Millet, Sophie, Simonneau, Frédéric, Charret, Francoise, Couturier, Charlène, Lanoiselée, Julien, Lornage, Estelle, Mallard, Jeremy, Milati, Ryan, Passot, Sylvie, Vallier, Sylvain, Molliex, Serge, Agavriloaia, Mihaela L., Badoux, Quentin, Lewandowski, Mehdi, Mermet, Yanis, Michel, Denis, Kiskira, Olga, Adjavon, Sherifa, Dumans, Virginie, Le Guen, Morgan, Josserand, Julien, Órfão, Rosário, Ma, Sabrina, Castanera, Jeremy, Massiera, Benjamin, Petua, Philippe, Bounes-Vardon, Fanny, Bosc, Gaëlle, Bosch, Laëtitia, Clermond, Edouard, Ferre, Fabrice, Labaste, François, Soro, Marina, Martin, Charlotte, Menut, Rémi, Minville, Vincent, Srairi, Mohamed, Tarasi, Maria, Varin, Florent, Grüßer, Linda, Stefan, Mihai, Van Waesberghe, Julia, Ziemann, Sebastian, Bergmann, Lars, Nowak, Hartmuth, Oprea, Günther, Rump, Katharina, Unterberg, Matthias, Vogelsang, Heike, Klutzny, Mitja, Neumann, Claudia, Sungur, Zerrin, Soehle, Martin, Wittmann, Maria, Scharffenberg, Martin, Wittenstein, Jakob, Hinterberg, Jonas, Kienbaum, Peter, Lurati-Buse, Giovanna, Schäfer, Maximilian, Lindau, Simone, Hilgers, Ralf-Dieter, Szakmany, Tamas, Meybohm, Patrick, Gillmann, Hans-Joerg, Piekarski, Florian, Kaufhold, Theresa A., Koppert, Wolfgang, Leffler, Andreas, Reiffen, Hans-Peter, Rudolph, Diana, Starke, Henning, Stueber, Thomas, Baños, Victoria, Bischoff, Petra, Haberecht, Heinz, Plehn, Heiko, Bauer, Michael, Kortgen, Andreas, Sponholz, Christoph, Krüger, Uwe, Müller-Esch, Sabine, Otto, Mareike, Rempf, Christian, Rodriguez, Mireia, Schmidt, Christian, Schumacher, Dunja, Blazek, Juliane, Büttner, Christin, Leibeling, Andrea, Rüsch, Dirk, Wulf, Hinnerk, Burow, Karsten, El-Hilali, Eugen A., Greke, Christian, Martinez, Selene, Großmann, Paul, Kluth, Mario, Schulz, Regina, Dridi, Sofiane, Popovska, Ivana, Brenes, Andrés, Ranft, Andreas, Feddersen, Pia, Gerstmeyer, Dominik, Fthenakis, Philippe, Saller, Thomas, Schneider, Gerhard, Miketta, Dirk, von Dossow, Vera, Groene, Philipp, Höchter, Dominik, Hofmann-Kiefer, Klaus, Kammerer, Tobias, Kamrath, Malte, Schaefer, Simon T., Schäfer, Simon T., Tomasi, Roland, Wiedemann, Tobias, Zeuzem-Lampert, Catharina, Zwissler, Bernhard, Braune, Stephan, Brune, Mona, Gurlit, Simone, Hemping-Bovenkerk, André, Möllmann, Michael, Santamaria, Mario, Schirwitz, Leonie M., Meersch, Melanie, Zarbock, Alexander, Guenther, Ulf, Decker, Stefanie, Drexler, Berthold, Hipp, Silvia, Hofmann, Pascal, Müller, Markus, Roth, Judith, Seiß, Miriam, Adam, Christian, Schwartges, Ingo, Kranke, Peter, Chloropoulou, Pelagia, Andreeva, Antonia, Dimakopoulou, Antonia, Douma, Amalia, Gregoriadou, Iphigeneia, Koutsouli, Evelina, Mendrinou, Konstantina, Mavrommati, Eirini, Stathopoulos, Anastasios, Batistaki, Chrysanthi, Matsota, Paraskevi, Kalopita, Konstantina, Skandalou, Vasiliki, Balanika, Marina, Papathanakos, Georgios, Tzimas, Petros, Ketikidou, Evgenia, Vachlioti, Anastasia, Kiamiloglou, Bioulent, Nikouli, Evangelia, Arnaoutoglou, Eleni, Kolonia, Konstantina, Laou, Eleni, Stamoulis, Konstantinos, Vlachakis, Epaminondas, Bilotta, Federico, Karpetas, Georgios, Lianou, Ioanna, Spyraki, Maria, Tatani, Irini, Panagiotou, Eleni, Samara, Evangelia, Kolesnikova, Anna, Sifaki, Freideriki, Zarzava, Eirini, Bampzelis, Athanasios, Georgopoulou, Eleni, Christidou, Eleni, Tsaousi, Georgia, Nastou, Maria, Ioannidis, Orestis, Dolzenko, Eugene, Geleve, Georgia, Logotheti, Eleni, Yfantidis, Fotios, Lee, Peter, Rajamanickam, Senbagam, Ramaswamy, Shanmuga, Switzer, Timothy, Das Punshi, Gurmukh, Srinivasan, Karthikeyan, Gilmartin, Michael, Morris, Osmond, Buchman, Immanuel, Gozal, Yaacov, Merissat, Amar, Peled, Reut, Willner, Dafna, Chariski, Hila A., Eidelman, Leonid A., Livne, Michal Y., Mangoubi, Eitan, Berkenstadt, Haim, Orlcin, Dina, Yahav-Shafir, Dana, Aharonov, Rita, Cattan, Anat, Felman, Lior, Refaeli-Awin, Einat, Steinberg, Yohai, Zabeeda, Wisam, Kuzmanovska, Biljana, Naumovski, Filip, Toleska, Marija, Sivevski, Atanas, Andriessen, Anouk, Kortekaas, Minke, Buhre, Wolfgang, Van Gorp, Roos, de Korte-de Boer, Dianne, Smit-Fun, Valerie, Theunissen, Maurice, Droger, Mirjam, van den Enden, Toine, Koopman, Seppe, Marsman, Marije, van Schaik, Eva, Azenha, Marta, Lanzaro, Camile, Borrego, Andreia, Branquinho, Pedro, Fernandes, Sofia, Laires, Miguel, de Noronha, Denise, Ferraz, Inês, Pires, Ana, Silva, Joana, Corneci, Dan, Oprea, Oana, Zahiu, Stefan-Vladimir, Tomescu, Dana R., Grintescu, Ioana M., Filipescu, Daniela, Stefanescu, Elena, Vazenin, Andrey, Baskakov, Danil, Tipisev, Dmitry, Kozlova, Ksenia, Marinkovic, Olivera, Sekulic, Ana, Rajkovic, Marija, Djukanovic, Marija, Nikolic, Jovanka, Sreckovic, Svetlana, Stojanovic, Marina, Ladjevic, Nebojsa, Jovicic, Jelena, Unic-Stojanovic, Dragana, Bollheimer, Leo C., Stosic, Biljana, Bulasevic, Aleksandra, Espinosa-Moreno, Alma M., García-Sánchez, Jose I., Martín-Vaquerizo, Beatriz, Morandeira-Rivas, Clara, Zamudio, Diana, Guadalupe, Nerea, Herranz, Gracia, Baute, Javier, Madrona, Vanesa, de Jose, Roser, Miralles, Jordi, Merten, Alfred, Muñoz, Rolando, Delgado, Anabel, Cruz, Patricia, Moral, Victoria, Blesa, Aleix Carmona, Espejo, Sara, Grau Torredeflot, Laura, Fernández, Alejandro Romero, Sanabra, Maria, Pujol, Pere Serra, Alvira Uribe, Maria J., Perez, Astrid Alvarez, Brunetto, Espedito, Fernández, Carmen, Castelli, Federica, Aguirre, Jorge Gonzalez, Villar, Adriana Herivas, Rojas, Guido Munoz, Montero, Natalia, González, Víctor Baladrón, Becerra-Bolaños, Ángel, Rodríguez-Pérez, Aurelio, Santana-Ortega, Luis, Suárez-Romero, Vanessa, Torres-Machí, María L., Ferrero de Paz, Javier, Marcos-Vidal, Jose M., Garcia, Ana Martín, García, María Merino, Diaz, Consuelo Rego, Santiago, Ana Crespo, Laso, Lourdes Ferreira, Solores, Felix Lobato, Burgos, Alba, Calvo, Alberto, Fernández, Ignacio, Garutti, Ignacio, Higuero, Fernando, Martinez, David, Piñeiro, Patricia, Carazo, Sonia Expósito, Hernández, Rosa Méndez, Rodríguez, Mar Orts, Rueda, Fernando Ramasco, Abad-Motos, Ane, Ripollés-Melchor, Javier, López, Carmen Pastor, Charco, Pedro, Perez-Palao, Sara, Sancho-Iñigo, Laura, Segura, Nasara, Utrera, Esther, Albinarrate, Ania, Fondarella, Ana M., Gallego-Ligorit, Lucia, Torrijos, Luisa Lacosta, Bandschapp, Oliver, Blum, Andrea A., Seeberger, Esther, Steiner, Luzius A., Thomann, Alessandra E., Frei, Seraina, Hoehn, Susan, Baenziger, Bertram, Capaldo, Giuliana, Christ, Daniel, Doerig, Ramon, Hodel, Daniel, Weiss, Andreas, Witt, Lukas, Schumacher, Philippe, Siebing, Dirk A., Akbuz, Seyma Orcan, Bengisun, Zuleyha Kazak, Kazbek, Baturay K., Koksoy, Ulku C., Terzi, Engin Z., Yilmaz, Hakan, Alkis, Neslihan, Turhan, Sanem Cakar, Meco, Basak C., Hajiyeva, Konul, Guclu, Cigdem Yildirim, Ergil, Jülide, Ceran, Emine Unal, Ozcelik, Menekse, Bülent, Atik, Gökhan, Kilinc, Saracoglu, Kemal T., Kir, Bunyamin, Koltka, Kemalettin, Sivrikoz, Nükhet, Dincer, Pelin Corman, Canbolat, Nur, Kudsioglu, Turkan, Aydin, Gaye, Mucuoglu, Ceren Aygün, Inal, Duriye G., Kucukguclu, Semih, Egilmez, Ayse I., Kozanhan, Betul, Yildiz, Munise, Pinar, Hüseyin U., Erdivanlı, Başar, Hızal, Ayşe, Karagöz, Emre, Kazdal, Hızır, Özdemir, Abdullah, Tas Tuna, Ayca, Gulgun, Gamze, Oleg, Dolya, Hoeft, Andreas, MUMC+: MA Anesthesiologie (3), RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, and MUMC+: MA Anesthesiologie (9)
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Patient ,Frailty ,Preoperative assessment ,Surgical outcomes ,Europe ,Hospitalization ,Older ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Humans ,Female ,Surgery ,Prospective Studies ,Derivation ,Mortality ,Aged - Abstract
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to describe the 30-day mortality rate of patients aged 80 years and older undergoing surgical and nonsurgical procedures under anaesthesia in Europe and to identify risk factors associated with mortality. DESIGN A prospective cohort study. SETTING European multicentre study, performed from October 2017 to December 2018. Centres committed to a 30-day recruitment period within the study period. PATIENTS Nine thousand four hundred and ninety-seven consecutively recruited patients aged 80 years and older undergoing any kind of surgical or nonsurgical procedures under anaesthesia. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The primary outcome was all-cause mortality within 30 days after procedure described by Kaplan–Meier curves with 95% CI. Risk factors for 30-day mortality were analysed using a Cox regression model with 14 fixed effects and a random centre effect. RESULTS Data for 9497 patients (median age, 83.0 years; 52.8% women) from 177 academic and nonacademic hospitals in 20 countries were analysed. Patients presented with multimorbidity (77%), frailty (14%) and at least partial functional dependence (38%). The estimated 30-day mortality rate was 4.2% (95% CI 3.8 to 4.7). Among others, independent risk factors for 30-day mortality were multimorbidity, hazard ratio 1.87 (95% CI 1.26 to 2.78), frailty, hazard ratio 2.63 (95% CI 2.10 to 3.30), and limited mobility, hazard ratio 2.19 (95% CI 1.24 to 3.86). The majority of deaths (76%) occurred in hospital. Mortality risk for unplanned ICU admission was higher, hazard ratio 3.57 (95% CI 2.38 to 5.26) than for planned ICU admission, hazard ratio 1.92 (95% CI 1.47 to 2.50). Compared with other studies, the in-hospital complication rates of 17.4 and 3.9% after discharge were low. Admission to a unit with geriatric care within 30 days after the intervention was associated with a better survival within the first 10 days. CONCLUSIONS The estimated 30-day mortality rate of 4.2% was lower than expected in this vulnerable population. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03152734, https://clinicaltrials.gov. ispartof: European Journal Of Anaesthesiology vol:39 issue:3 pages:198-209 ispartof: location:England status: published
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- 2022
18. Pulmonary Artery Catheter Sutured on the Pulmonary Trunk and Relevant Clinical Consequences
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Evangelia Samara, Stavros Siminelakis, Agathi Karakosta, and Petros Tzimas
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
19. Medical Liability in Obstetrics/Gynecology and Co-liability With Anesthesiology in Greece: A Retrospective Study
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Evangelia Samara, Lambros Tzoumas, Konstantinos Tzoumas, Minas Paschopoulos, Petros Tzimas, and Georgios Papadopoulos
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General Engineering - Abstract
Objective To evaluate the current landscape regarding medical liability in obstetric-gynecology (OB/GYN) physicians in Greece. Materials and methods Published court decisions of criminal, civil, administrative, and disciplinary content were searched in legal information banks for the years 1988-2021. The causes that led to the adverse outcome and the decisions were analyzed. Results A total of 184 decisions were directed against OB/GYNs. One hundred seventeen records concerned criminal cases and 67 civil cases. Thirty-four decisions concerned criminal cases of negligent homicide, 35 criminal cases of bodily harm, and 19 were acquittals. The most common causes of bodily injuries were neonatal encephalopathy, obstetric paralysis - quadriplegia and brachial plexus paralysis, and obstetric bleeding. Conclusion According to our results, there is a great need and challenge to maintain high standards in daily practice with continuous training and the use of international protocols. Furthermore, for each case, continuous monitoring of parturients and newborns and coordinated cooperation are necessary to reduce mortality and morbidity.
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- 2022
20. Acupuncture for infertility: a case report
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Evangelia Samara
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- 2022
21. Where Should We Leave the Wild 'Raa Raa' During Cardiopulmonary Bypass?
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Evangelia Samara and Mohamed R. El-Tahan
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Cardiopulmonary Bypass ,Humans ,Aorta, Thoracic ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
22. Acupuncture treatment of unregulated glaucoma in the eye of a patient with Adamantiades-Behҫet disease
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Georgios Papadopoulos, Evangelia Samara, and Christos Kalogeropoulos
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Complementary and alternative medicine ,Acupuncture Therapy ,Humans ,Glaucoma ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Published
- 2022
23. Over-expansion of coronal mass ejections modelled using 3D MHD EUHFORIA simulations
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Christine Verbeke, Brigitte Schmieder, Pascal Démoulin, Sergio Dasso, Benjamin Grison, Evangelia Samara, Camilla Scolini, and Stefaan Poedts
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Atmospheric Science ,Geophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Physics::Space Physics ,Aerospace Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) ,Space Physics (physics.space-ph) - Abstract
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are large scale eruptions observed close to the Sun. They are travelling through the heliosphere and possibly interacting with the Earth environment creating interruptions or even damaging new technology instruments. Most of the time their physical conditions (velocity, density, pressure) are only measured in situ at one point in space, with no possibility to have information on the variation of these parameters during their journey from Sun to Earth. Our aim is to understand the evolution of internal physical parameters of a set of three particular fast halo CMEs. These CMEs were launched between 15 and 18 July 2002. Surprisingly, the related interplanetary CMEs (ICMEs), observed near Earth, have a low, and in one case even very low, plasma density. We use the EUropean Heliosphere FORecasting Information Asset (EUHFORIA) model to simulate the propagation of the CMEs in the background solar wind by placing virtual spacecraft along the Sun--Earth line. We set up the initial conditions at 0.1 au, first with a cone model and then with a linear force free spheromak model. A relatively good agreement between simulation results and observations concerning the speed, density and arrival times of the ICMEs is obtained by adapting the initial CME parameters. In particular, this is achieved by increasing the initial magnetic pressure so that a fast expansion is induced in the inner heliosphere. This implied the develop First, we show that a magnetic configuration with an out of force balance close to the Sun mitigates the EUHFORIA assumptions related to an initial uniform velocity. Second, the over-expansion of the ejected magnetic configuration in the inner heliosphere is one plausible origin for the low density observed in some ICMEs at 1 au. The in situ observed very low density has a possible coronal origin of fast expansion for two of the three ICMEs., 20 pages
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- 2022
24. Influence of coronal hole morphology on the solar wind speed at Earth
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Evangelia Samara, Jasmina Magdalenić, Luciano Rodriguez, Stephan G. Heinemann, Manolis K. Georgoulis, Stefan J. Hofmeister, and Stefaan Poedts
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Physics::Space Physics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) ,Space Physics (physics.space-ph) - Abstract
It has long been known that the high-speed stream (HSS) peak velocity at Earth directly depends on the area of the coronal hole (CH) on the Sun. Different degrees of association between the two parameters have been shown by many authors. In this study, we revisit this association in greater detail for a sample of 45 nonpolar CHs during the minimum phase of solar cycle 24. The aim is to understand how CHs of different properties influence the HSS peak speeds observed at Earth and draw from this to improve solar wind modeling. The characteristics of the CHs of our sample were extracted based on the Collection of Analysis Tools for Coronal Holes (CATCH) which employs an intensity threshold technique applied to extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) filtergrams. We first examined all the correlations between the geometric characteristics of the CHs and the HSS peak speed and duration at Earth, for the entire sample. The CHs were then categorized in different groups based on morphological criteria, such as the aspect ratio, the orientation angle and the geometric complexity, a parameter which is often neglected when the formation of the fast solar wind at Earth is studied. Our results, confirmed also by the bootstrapping technique, show that all three aforementioned morphological criteria play a major role in determining the HSS peak speed at 1 AU. Therefore, they need to be taken into consideration for empirical models that aim to forecast the fast solar wind at Earth based on the observed CH solar sources., Accepted by the Astronomy & Astrophysics journal
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- 2022
25. Globally altered sleep patterns and physical activity levels by confinement in 5056 individuals
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Sebastian Schulz, Khadijeh Irandoust, Ramzi Al-Horani, Bassem Bouaziz, Saša Pišot, Liwa Masmoudi, Mohamed Romdhani, Omar Boukhris, Albina Andreeva, Hsen Hsouna, Ellen Bentlage, Jan Delhey, Anita Hoekelmann, Gamal Mohamed Ali, Ismail Dergaa, Nizar Souissi, Andrea Gaggioli, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Khaled Trabelsi, Fernando Barbosa, Helmi Ben Saad, Sophia Bastoni, Kais El Abed, Jonathan Gómez-Raja, Karim Chamari, Cain C T Clark, Omar Hammouda, Mona A. Ahmed, Faiez Gargouri, Osama Abdelkarim, Achraf Ammar, Rado Pišot, Nicholas T. Bott, Daniella How, Wassim Moalla, Monique Epstein, Achim Jerg, Piotr Zmijewski, Carlos Soares Pernambuco, Boštjan Šimunič, Bryan L. Riemann, Tarak Driss, Hamdi Chtourou, Annemarie Braakman-Jansen, Parasanth Sankar, Samira C. khoshnami, Notger Mueller, Christian Apfelbacher, Jordan M. Glenn, Mohamed Jarraya, Jürgen M. Steinacker, Vasiliki Zisi, Jana Strahler, Nafaa Souissi, Leonardo Jose Mataruna-Dos-Santos, Michael Brach, Aïmen Khacharem, Robbert Sanderman, Emma A. Mitchell, Laisa Liane Paineiras-Domingos, Morteza Taheri, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Jarred P Acton, Jad Adrian Washif, Stephen J. Bailey, Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen, Asma Aloui, Waseem Ahmed, Hadj Batatia, Mohamed Jmail, Christian Wrede, Lotfi Chaari, Laurel Riemann, Taysir Mansi, Evangelia Samara, Patrick Mueller, Psychology, Health & Technology, Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educação, Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology, and Health Psychology Research (HPR)
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IMPACT ,pandemije ,coronavirus ,ACTIVITY QUESTIONNAIRE ,QUALITY INDEX ,gibanje ,Metabolic equivalent ,Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index ,restrictions ,psihosocialno zdravje ,0302 clinical medicine ,sedentary lifestyle ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,ddc:796 ,udc:796.012:613.79:616-036.21 ,ukrepi ,življenski stil ,RISK ,Sleep hygiene ,psychosocial health ,public health ,sedentarnost ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Health ,RELIABILITY ,behaviours ,isolation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lifestyle ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,telesna aktivnost ,Lockdowns ,DURATION ,Sedentary lifestyle ,METABOLIC CONSEQUENCES ,COVID-19 pandemic ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Physiology (medical) ,apanje ,BENEFITS ,sleep ,OLDER-ADULTS ,Original Paper ,business.industry ,koronavirus ,Public health ,pandemic ,javno zdravje ,physical activities ,COVID-19 ,Sleep patterns ,obnašanje ,LOCKDOWN ,business ,home confinement ,Sleep ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography ,izolacija - Abstract
Symptoms of psychological distress and disorder have been widely reported in people under quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic;in addition to severe disruption of peoples’ daily activity and sleep patterns This study investigates the association between physical-activity levels and sleep patterns in quarantined individuals An international Google online survey was launched in April 6th, 2020 for 12-weeks Forty-one research organizations from Europe, North-Africa, Western-Asia, and the Americas promoted the survey through their networks to the general society, which was made available in 14 languages The survey was presented in a differential format with questions related to responses “before” and “during” the confinement period Participants responded to the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire and the short form of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire 5056 replies (59 4% female), from Europe (46 4%), Western-Asia (25 4%), America (14 8%) and North-Africa (13 3%) were analysed The COVID-19 home confinement led to impaired sleep quality, as evidenced by the increase in the global PSQI score (4 37 ± 2 71 before home confinement vs 5 32 ± 3 23 during home confinement) (p
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- 2021
26. Intraoperative mydriasis in left ventricular assist device patients. Do eyes never lie?
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Evangelia Samara, Areti Falara, Evangelos Leontiadis, and Theofani Antoniou
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Biomaterials ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,General Medicine - Abstract
We report two cases of transient intraoperative mydriasis in left ventricular assist device (LVAD) patients with no profound underlining neurological pathology. Both cases concern females on LVAD for more than 30 months, due to dilated cardiomyopathy, as a bridge to transplant. A possible pathophysiology mechanism is suggested. As LVAD patients’ life expectancy increases, more and more physiological alterations due to laminar flow will be revealed and must be taken into consideration for the better care of this patient group.
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- 2023
27. Supraventricular Tachycardia Associated With Ondansetron
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Evangelia Samara, Agathi Karakosta, Paraskevas Tseniklidis, and Petros Tzimas
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Pharmacology ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Pharmacy - Published
- 2023
28. Solar wind modelling with EUHFORIA and comparison with the PSP observations
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Senthamizh Pavai Valliappan, Jasmina Magdalenic, Luciano Rodriguez, Stefaan Poedts, and Evangelia Samara
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Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
During recent decades, numerous studies were devoted to improve our understanding of the origin and the propagation of the fast solar wind, and its accurate modelling. The solar wind characteristics were poorly mapped up to now by the in situ observations, available mostly only at about 1AU. The novel Parker Solar Probe (PSP) observations, that are employed in this study, allow us to map the solar wind characteristics in the low solar corona at only few tens of solar radii, and to study the solar wind characteristics. These observations are also very important for understanding how accurately we can model the solar wind characteristics employing models such as EUHFORIA (European heliospheric forecasting information asset, Pomoell & Poedts, 2018), at distances rather close to the Sun.In this study, we inspect the solar wind characteristics during the first eight closest PSP approaches to the Sun. The solar wind plasma characteristics observed by PSP are compared with the modelling results using the default set-up of EUHFORIA. We also calibrate the inner boundary (0.1 AU) conditions in EUHFORIA, but without changing the Wang-Sheeley-Arge formula which describes the solar wind characteristics at the inner boundary. The aim is to better model the solar wind at distances close to the Sun. We also use a magnetic connectivity tool (developed by ESA’s MADAWG group) to better associate the fast solar wind with its source region on the Sun.
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- 2022
29. How the area of solar coronal holes affects the properties of high-speed solar wind streams near Earth. I. An analytical model
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Stefan J. Hofmeister, Eleanna Asvestari, Jingnan Guo, Verena Heidrich-Meisner, Stephan G. Heinemann, Jasmina Magdalenic, Stefaan Poedts, Evangelia Samara, Manuela Temmer, Susanne Vennerstrom, Astrid Veronig, Bojan Vršnak, Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber, Space Physics Research Group, Particle Physics and Astrophysics, and Department of Physics
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corona [Sun] ,Solar wind ,Sun ,Solar-Terrestrial relations ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,solar-terrestrial relations ,VELOCITY ,114 Physical sciences ,solar wind ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,GAS ,Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,corona - Abstract
Since the 1970s it has been empirically known that the area of solar coronal holes affects the properties of high-speed solar wind streams (HSSs) at Earth. We derive a simple analytical model for the propagation of HSSs from the Sun to Earth and thereby show how the area of coronal holes and the size of their boundary regions affect the HSS velocity, temperature, and density near Earth. We assume that velocity, temperature, and density profiles form across the HSS cross section close to the Sun and that these spatial profiles translate into corresponding temporal profiles in a given radial direction due to the solar rotation. These temporal distributions drive the stream interface to the preceding slow solar wind plasma and disperse with distance from the Sun. The HSS properties at 1 AU are then given by all HSS plasma parcels launched from the Sun that did not run into the stream interface at Earth distance. We show that the velocity plateau region of HSSs as seen at 1 AU, if apparent, originates from the center region of the HSS close to the Sun, whereas the velocity tail at 1 AU originates from the trailing boundary region. Small HSSs can be described to entirely consist of boundary region plasma, which intrinsically results in smaller peak velocities. The peak velocity of HSSs at Earth further depends on the longitudinal width of the HSS close to the Sun. The shorter the longitudinal width of an HSS close to the Sun, the more of its “fastest” HSS plasma parcels from the HSS core and trailing boundary region have impinged upon the stream interface with the preceding slow solar wind, and the smaller is the peak velocity of the HSS at Earth. As the longitudinal width is statistically correlated to the area of coronal holes, this also explains the well-known empirical relationship between coronal hole areas and HSS peak velocities. Further, the temperature and density of HSS plasma parcels at Earth depend on their radial expansion from the Sun to Earth. The radial expansion is determined by the velocity gradient across the HSS boundary region close to the Sun and gives the velocity-temperature and density-temperature relationships at Earth their specific shape. When considering a large number of HSSs, the assumed correlation between the HSS velocities and temperatures close to the Sun degrades only slightly up to 1 AU, but the correlation between the velocities and densities is strongly disrupted up to 1 AU due to the radial expansion. Finally, we show how the number of particles of the piled-up slow solar wind in the stream interaction region depends on the velocities and densities of the HSS and preceding slow solar wind plasma.
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- 2022
30. Association between benzodiazepine premedication and 30-day mortality rate: A propensity-score weighted analysis of the Peri-interventional Outcome Study in the Elderly (POSE)
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Ana Sekulic, Selene Martinez Perez, Danny Feike Hoogma, GÖKHAN KILINÇ, Marc Danguy des Déserts, Evangelia Samara, Matthias Schmid, AYSE HIZAL, Nicolai Goettel, Martin Scharffenberg, Sofia Fernandes, Jose Ignacio García-Sánchez, Tobias Kammerer, Marc Moritz Berger, Florian Piekarski, CEREN AYGÜN MUÇUOĞLU, PATRICIA PIÑEIRO OTERO, Angel Becerra, Aurelio Rodriguez-Perez, Ülkü Ceren Köksoy, Jakob Wittenstein, Hakan Yilmaz, Lars Lundstrøm, Diana Zamudio Penko, Hans-Joerg Gillmann, Dianne De Korte-de Boer, Jose miguel Marcos-vidal, Sebastian Ziemann, and Tournoy, Jos
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Benzodiazepine ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Mortality rate ,Premedication ,Hazard ratio ,Clonidine ,Benzodiazepines ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Internal medicine ,Propensity score matching ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Propensity Score ,medicine.drug ,Aged - Abstract
European journal of anaesthesiology : EJA 39(3), 210-218 (2022). doi:10.1097/EJA.0000000000001638, Published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, Pa.
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- 2022
31. Soluble Urokinase Plasminogen Activator Receptor: A Biomarker for Predicting Complications and Critical Care Admission of COVID-19 Patients
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Athanasios Chalkias, Ioannis Pantazopoulos, Angeliki Mouzarou, Evangelia Samara, Theodoros Xanthos, and Eleni Ischaki
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Population ,medicine.disease_cause ,Receptors, Urokinase Plasminogen Activator ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,law ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Pandemics ,Coronavirus ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,Intensive care unit ,Pneumonia ,030104 developmental biology ,Solubility ,SuPAR ,Current Opinion ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular Medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Coronavirus Infections ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The novel coronavirus infection has spread worldwide, causing a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. Most patients develop moderate clinical illness, but a substantial number will experience severe pneumonia, which may rapidly progress to acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiple organ failure. In this population, soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (suPAR) could serve as a quick triage test and independent marker of clinical severity, hospital and intensive care unit admission, complications, and mortality.
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- 2020
32. On the Run to Minimally Invasive Left Ventricular Assist Device Off-Pump Implantation: Anesthesiologists' Reflections
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Evangelia Samara and Mohamed R. El-Tahan
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Heart Failure ,Prosthesis Implantation ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Thoracotomy ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Heart-Assist Devices ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Anesthesiologists - Published
- 2022
33. Medical liability in neurosurgery. greek courts decisions analysis
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Evangelia, Samara, Lampros, Tzoumas, Konstantinos, Tzoumas, Arian, Lenas, and Georgios, Papadopoulos
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
The purpose of the research was to assess the current situation regarding medical liability in Neurosurgery in Greece, the involvement of Anesthesiologists in court decisions, the impact of court cases and decisions, the time until the final decision, and the relationship between these issues and judicial results.Published court decisions of criminal, civil, administrative and disciplinary content were searched in legal information banks, from 1985 to 2021.A total of 52 court decisions were retrieved, 11 criminal court cases and 10 civil cases, involving 7 cases of negligent homicide and 14 bodily injuries were retrieved. The duration of litigation in 17 cases was 5.5 years, while in 4 cases the duration was 14.5 years. The average compensation paid was € 101,701.Neurosurgery has a relatively small number of reported complaints of medical negligence compared to other surgical specialties in Greece. Complications of spinal surgeries represent the majority of court cases. There is a need for immediate judicial - legislative reform of the framework for seeking medical liability of doctors.
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- 2022
34. Multi-ensemble MHD coronal modeling to improve background wind for CME propagation for EUHFORIA 2.0
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Barbara Perri, Peter Leitner, Michaela Brchnelova, Tinatin Baratashvili, Blazej Kuzma, Fan Zhang, Andrea Lani, Stefaan Poedts, Andrey Kochanov, Evangelia Samara, Allan Sacha Brun, and Antoine Strugarek
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Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Space weather has the difficult task to try to anticipate the propagation of eruptive events such as coronal mass ejections (CMEs) in order to assess their possible impact on the Earth’s space environment. This requires an accurate description of the background in which CMEs propagate, mainly the continuum ejecta of particles that is the solar wind and the dynamo-generated heliospheric magnetic field. This proves challenging as the solar wind and dynamo magnetic field are interacting with each other depending on the activity cycle of our star, both at large and small scales. To be able to model accurately such a wide variety of scales and parameter regimes, the approach used by the EUHFORIA 2.0 project is to use a chain of models, taking advantage of existing codes to combine their strengths through numerical coupling across the heliosphere. The first step of this chain is the data-driven modeling of the inner corona, from photosphere measurements up until 0.1 AU, and it proves especially critical as it serves as boundary condition for the rest of the models. In that regard, we will present here two coronal MHD models implemented as an alternative to the semi-empirical WSA and SCS models used so far in EUHFORIA. By using the COOLFluiD framework, we developed a new coronal model with implicit solving methods and unstructured meshes, which proves faster than traditional explicit methods on regular grids. We used the coronal code Wind-Predict to benchmark this new model for the simple polytropic approximation in the first place, and we present the similarities and differences obtained for data-driven configurations and compare them with observations (white-light images, coronal hole boundaries, in-situ data at 1 AU after coupling with EUHFORIA). We then present the improvements foreseen for each codes, especially for the heating terms: Wind-Predict will incorporate self-consistent Alfvén waves while COOLFluiD will use ad-hoc heating terms and a multi-species treatment. We will finally discuss the implications for the coupling with EUHFORIA and the CME propagation between 0.1 and 1 AU.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Modelling the propagation of solar disturbances to Earth for the EU H2020 SafeSpace project
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Rungployphan Kieokaew, Rui Ferreira Pinto, Benoit Lavraud, Antoine Brunet, Guillerme Bernoux, Evangelia SAMARA, Stefaan Poedts, Vincent Génot, Alexis Rouillard, Sebastien Bourdarie, Benjamin Grison, Jan Souček, and Ioannis Daglis
- Published
- 2021
36. Post Laparoscopy Neuropathic Pain Treated by Capsaicin 8% Dermal Patch
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Stavroula Economou, Konstantinos Stamatiou, Petros Tzimas, and Evangelia Samara
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Left flank ,Single application ,030230 surgery ,medicine.disease ,Dermal patch ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Safety profile ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,chemistry ,Capsaicin ,Neuropathic pain ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Cyst ,business ,Laparoscopy ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
We report a case of chronic left flank neuropathic pain after a renal cyst removal in a 54-year old female. The patient was treated with a single application of capsaicin 8% dermal patch, with satisfactory results at an eight week follow up visit. Capsaicin 8% dermal patch could be a suitable alternative in the conservative management of post laparoscopy neuropathic pain, as it can be effective and has a well-tolerated safety profile.
- Published
- 2021
37. Έκπτωση γνωσιακών λειτουργιών σε ασθενείς με κάταγμα άνω πέρατος μηριαίου οστού που υποβάλλονται σε γενική ή περιοχική αναισθησία
- Author
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Evangelia Samara
- Abstract
ΣΚΟΠΟΣ: Σκοπός της μελέτης μας ήταν η διερεύνηση της επίδρασης της γενικής και της υπαραχνοειδούς αναισθησίας στη μετεγχειρητική έκπτωση των νευρογνωσιακών λειτουργιών σε ηλικιωμένους ασθενείς με κάταγμα ισχίου. ΥΛΙΚΟ ΚΑΙ ΜΕΘΟΔΟΣ: Μετά από έγκριση της επιστημονικής επιτροπής του νοσοκομείου και ενυπόγραφη δήλωση συγκατάθεσης των ασθενών, μελετήθηκαν 70 ασθενείς ηλικίας, 76,16 ± 6,7 ετών, κατηγορίας ASA I-III, που επρόκειτο να υποβληθούν σε επέμβαση αποκατάστασης κατάγματος ισχίου. Οι ασθενείς χωρίστηκαν τυχαία σε δύο ομάδες, την ομάδα Α (n=33) που υποβλήθηκε σε γενική αναισθησία και την ομάδα Β (n=37) που υποβλήθηκε σε υπαραχνοειδή αναισθησία. Οι ασθενείς αξιολογήθηκαν προεγχειρητικά και μετεγχειρητικά με μια σειρά νευρογνωσιακών δοκιμασιών. ΑΠΟΤΕΛΕΣΜΑΤΑ: Σε έκβαση 30 μέρες μετεγχειρητικά οι ασθενείς που υποβλήθηκαν σε γενική αναισθησία παρουσίασαν χειροτέρευση στην ενεργό μνήμη. Οι ασθενείς που υποβλήθηκαν σε περιοχική αναισθησία παρουσίασαν επιδείνωση στην ενεργό μνήμη, στην αδρή νευρογνωσιακή κατάσταση, στην οπτικοκινητική ικανότητα, τη σύνθετη προσοχή και τη λεκτική ευχέρεια και μάθηση. Μεταξύ των δυο ομάδων καταγράφηκε σημαντική διαφορά στη σύνθετη προσοχή, με την ομάδα των ασθενών που υποβλήθηκε σε γενική αναισθησία να σημειώνει καλύτερες επιδόσεις. ΣΥΜΠΕΡΑΣΜΑΤΑ: Οι ασθενείς που υποβάλλονται σε γενική αναισθησία σε έκβαση 30 μέρες μετεγχειρητικά έχουν καλύτερη νευρογνωσιακή λειτουργία στο επίπεδο της σύνθετης προσοχής από τους ασθενείς που υποβάλλονται σε υπαραχνοειδή αναισθησία. Περισσότερες έρευνες είναι ωστόσο αναγκαίες.
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- 2021
38. Coronal Hole Detection and Open Magnetic Flux
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Mathew J. Owens, Eleanna Asvestari, Stephan G. Heinemann, Stefan J. Hofmeister, Jens Pomoell, Cooper Downs, Ronald M. Caplan, Evangelia Samara, Jon A. Linker, Charles N. Arge, Immanuel Christopher Jebaraj, Manuela Temmer, Bojan Vršnak, Véronique Delouille, Maria S. Madjarska, Camilla Scolini, Rui F. Pinto, Space Physics Research Group, Particle Physics and Astrophysics, Department of Physics, Astrophysique Interprétation Modélisation (AIM (UMR_7158 / UMR_E_9005 / UM_112)), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), Institut de recherche en astrophysique et planétologie (IRAP), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (OMP), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Services communs OMP (UMS 831)
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Field (physics) ,Solar magnetic fields ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Coronal hole ,Flux ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Standard deviation ,Physics - Space Physics ,0103 physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,EUV ,FIELD ,SPEED ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,MISSION ,Physics ,Science & Technology ,[SDU.ASTR]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,SUN ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,solar coronal holes ,solar magnetic fields ,interplanetary magnetic fields ,Astrophysics - solar and stellar astrophysics ,physics - space physics ,115 Astronomy, Space science ,Corona ,Space Physics (physics.space-ph) ,Magnetic flux ,Computational physics ,Solar wind ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,13. Climate action ,Space and Planetary Science ,[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics] ,SOLAR-WIND ,Physical Sciences ,Solar coronal holes ,Magnetohydrodynamics ,Interplanetary magnetic fields - Abstract
Many scientists use coronal hole (CH) detections to infer open magnetic flux. Detection techniques differ in the areas that they assign as open, and may obtain different values for the open magnetic flux. We characterize the uncertainties of these methods, by applying six different detection methods to deduce the area and open flux of a near-disk center CH observed on 9/19/2010, and applying a single method to five different EUV filtergrams for this CH. Open flux was calculated using five different magnetic maps. The standard deviation (interpreted as the uncertainty) in the open flux estimate for this CH was about 26%. However, including the variability of different magnetic data sources, this uncertainty almost doubles to 45%. We use two of the methods to characterize the area and open flux for all CHs in this time period. We find that the open flux is greatly underestimated compared to values inferred from in-situ measurements (by 2.2-4 times). We also test our detection techniques on simulated emission images from a thermodynamic MHD model of the solar corona. We find that the methods overestimate the area and open flux in the simulated CH, but the average error in the flux is only about 7%. The full-Sun detections on the simulated corona underestimate the model open flux, but by factors well below what is needed to account for the missing flux in the observations. Under-detection of open flux in coronal holes likely contributes to the recognized deficit in solar open flux, but is unlikely to resolve it., 28 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2021
39. Το ταξίδι
- Author
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Evangelia Samara
- Abstract
Αντικείμενο μελέτης της παρούσας διδακτορικής διατριβής αποτελούν οι Έλληνες που ταξιδεύουν στο εξωτερικό για τουρισμό τουλάχιστον μία φορά τον χρόνο, μεμονωμένα ή οργανωμένα και στόχος της είναι να αναδείξει την ιδιαίτερη σχέση που αναπτύσσουν οι άνθρωποι που ταξιδεύουν με το ταξίδι, σχέση την οποία αξιολογούν ως κομβική στη διαδικασία συγκρότησης της ταυτότητάς τους. Μέσα από συμμετοχική έρευνα και ημιδομημένες συνεντεύξεις, η έρευνα στοχεύει στη διερεύνηση των τρόπων με τους οποίους βιώνεται η εμπειρία του ταξιδιού, αλλά και του τρόπου με τον οποίο αυτή γίνεται αντιληπτή αναστοχαστικά στην επιστροφή. Πώς, δηλαδή, η εμπειρία του ταξιδιού μετατρέπεται σε αντικείμενο αφήγησης και παρουσίασης σε σημαντικούς και μη σημαντικούς Άλλους.Πιο συγκεκριμένα, τα βασικά ερωτήματα που στα οποία επιχειρεί να απαντήσει η διατριβή μπορούν να συνοψιστούν ως εξής: Αν και σε ποιο βαθμό οι άνθρωποι που συμμετέχουν σε οργανωμένα ταξίδια ανταποκρίνονται στις κυρίαρχες αναπαραστάσεις των τουριστών-καταναλωτών. Κατά πόσο το ταξίδι αποτελεί «εξαιρετική εμπειρία», όπως την ορίζει ο Dilthey, απόλυτα διακριτή από την καθημερινότητα των ανθρώπων που ταξιδεύουν ή μήπως αποτελεί απλώς συνέχεια της καθημερινότητάς τους. Με ποιον τρόπο επιτελείται και βιώνεται η υποκειμενικότητα στο ταξίδι μέσα από καταναλωτικές πρακτικές και πώς αυτές οι πρακτικές ερμηνεύονται από τους ταξιδιώτες και χρησιμοποιούνται ως μέσο της κατά Bourdieu διάκρισης, όταν γίνονται αντικείμενο αφήγησης. Τέλος, ποιες είναι οι εννοιολογήσεις που αποδίδουν οι πληροφορητές μου στο ταξίδι, ποιος ο ρόλος της κατανάλωσης και η σημασία των αντικειμένων που αποκτώνται κατά τη διάρκειά του και με ποιον τρόπο αυτά εμπλέκονται στις παραπάνω υποθέσεις έρευνας.Η εθνογραφική αυτή μελέτη, υιοθετώντας ορισμένες από τις βασικές υποθέσεις του υπαρξισμού, αντλεί από τις θεωρητικές αναζητήσεις πεδίων όπως η Ανθρωπολογία του Τουρισμού, η Ανθρωπολογία της Εμπειρίας, η μελέτης της Κατανάλωσης και του Υλικού Πολιτισμού.
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- 2021
40. A new type of cloud discovered from Earth in the upper Martian atmosphere
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Clyde Foster, Alexei Pace, Guillaume Bertrand, Marc Delcroix, D. Peach, Mathieu Vincendon, A. Wesley, Evangelia Samara, C. Pellier, C. Go, Jean Lilensten, Jean-Luc Dauvergne, François Colas, Stefaan Poedts, Emmanuel Beaudoin, Μanos Kardasis, and Emil Kraaikamp
- Subjects
business.industry ,Cloud computing ,Earth (chemistry) ,Atmosphere of Mars ,business ,Geology ,Astrobiology - Abstract
During the 2020 Mars opposition, we observe from Earth the occurrence of a non-typical large-scale high-altitude clouds system, extending over thousands of km from the equator to 50°S. Over 3 hours, they emerge from the night side at an altitude of 90 (-15/+30) km and progressively dissipate in the dayside. They occur at a solar longitude of 316°, west of the magnetic anomaly and concomitantly to a regional dust storm. Despite their high altitude, they are composed of relatively large particles, suggesting a probable CO2 ice composition, although H2O cannot be totally excluded. Such ice clouds were not reported previously. We discuss the formation of this new type of clouds and suggest a possible nucleation from cosmic particle precipitation.
- Published
- 2021
41. One, No One and One Hundred Thousand: Patterns of chronic prostatic inflammation and infection
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Konstantinos Stamatiou, Vittorio Magri, Hippocrates Moschouris, Gianpaolo Perletti, Evangelia Samara, and Richard Lacroix
- Subjects
chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostatitis ,Meares-Stamey test ,antibiotics ,chronic bacterial prostatitis ,chronic prostatitis ,infection ,prostate ,susceptibility ,Immunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous) ,Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome ,Prostate ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,business.industry ,Clinical course ,Articles ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Chronic bacterial prostatitis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cohort ,Urology clinic ,business ,Urine sample - Abstract
Chronic prostatic inflammation may be classified into three types that share similar symptoms and are distinguished on the basis of microbiological findings. In the present study, consecutive cases of chronic prostatic inflammation and infection were retrospectively reviewed in order to explore the clinical course and long-term outcomes. The cohort consisted of patients with symptoms of prostatitis who visited the Urology Clinic of the Tzaneion Hospital (Piraeus, Greece) between March 2009 and March 2019. The patients were subjected to the Meares and Stamey '4-glass' test and patients with febrile prostatitis were evaluated with a single mid-stream 'clean' urine sample culture. Bacterial identification was performed using the Vitek 2 Compact system and the sensitivity test with the disc and the Vitek 2 system. A total of 656 patients with prostatitis-like symptoms with 1,783 visits for investigation and follow-up were reviewed and patients were divided into two major groups. Group 1 consisted of 549 cases with a single set of chronic prostatitis (CP)-like symptoms assessed in up to three visits. National Institutes of Health (NIH) category II CP (NIH-II) was most frequently diagnosed in those patients (37,6%). At the follow-up, 125 patients were identified as having a type of CP different from that determined initially. Group 2 (107 cases) had recurring episodes of prostatitis-like symptoms assessed or confirmed over the course of 4-18 visits. Most patients (54.2%) were initially diagnosed with NIH-II followed by disease-free periods and recurrence/reinfection or by shifts to NHI-IIIB. In conclusion, CP remains a poorly understood n medical condition characterized by a variety of clinical manifestations and by transitions between different CP classes during its course.
- Published
- 2021
42. Medico-Legal Analysis of General Surgery Cases in Greece: A 48 Year Study
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Evangelia Samara, Lambros Tzoumas, Georgios Papadopoulos, Petros Tzimas, Konstantinos Vlachos, and Konstantinos Tzoumas
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Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,surgery general ,medicine.medical_treatment ,bariatric surgery ,Medical malpractice ,medical malpractice ,medical error ,Malpractice ,medicine ,medical liability ,Negligent homicide ,health care economics and organizations ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Compensation (psychology) ,Liability ,General Engineering ,laparoscopic surgery ,humanities ,Supreme court ,Harm ,General Surgery ,Emergency Medicine ,Other ,business - Abstract
Introduction Surgery can be dangerous not only for patients, but it also carries a risk for the surgeon in case of medical error, which can affect their future medical career. The purpose of our research is to assess the current situation regarding medical liability in General Surgery in Greece, the reasons for the allegations of medical malpractice as well as the relationship between these issues and the court results. Methods Published court decisions of criminal, civil, administrative and disciplinary content were searched in legal information banks, between year 1973 and 2020. Court decisions were analyzed by an expert, a specialist general surgeon and an anesthesiologist, for the causes of death and the correctness of the court decision in collaboration with the lawyers of the investigation. Results 588 court decisions were retrieved, out if which 103 (17.751%) criminal (n = 81), or civil and administrative decisions (n = 22) for surgeons. Out of a total of 81 first and second instance criminal cases and appellate court decisions of the Supreme Court, 27 cases concerned negligent homicide, 16 cases concerned negligent bodily harm and seven were acquittals. Out of 22 civil cases decisions, awarding or not awarding compensation, three cases concerned negligent homicide, seven bodily harm and two were acquittals. 11 cases of negligent homicide concerned laparoscopic and bariatric surgical procedures. Conclusions Laparoscopic surgery represents one of the most important surgical developments in the last 30 years. However, they represent a great proportion of the cases concerning medical malpractice in the greek legal system. It is important to have a national center for reporting misdiagnosis and complications and a medical liability system that will facilitate improved diagnosis, learning from diagnostic errors and delays in diagnosis, in order to avoid similar cases of malpractice in the future.
- Published
- 2021
43. The influence of anesthetic techniques on postoperative cognitive function in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery: General vs spinal anesthesia
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Anastasios Korompilias, Georgios Papadopoulos, Evangelia Samara, Petros Tzimas, Athanasios Chalkias, and A. Petrou
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Male ,Time Factors ,Activities of daily living ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip ,Anesthesia, General ,Anesthesia, Spinal ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Postoperative Period ,Aged ,General Environmental Science ,Hip fracture ,Hip Fractures ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Neuropsychology ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Anesthetic ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Delirium ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cognition Disorders ,business ,Postoperative cognitive dysfunction ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Hip fracture is common and morbid in elderly patients. Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is also very common in these subjects undergoing surgery with an incidence which exceeds 40% in some reports. To date, the evidence is ambiguous as to whether anesthetic technique may affect the patients’ outcome as far as postoperative cognitive function is concerned. Objective The aim of this study was to compare the effect of general and subarachnoid (spinal) anesthesia on the development of POCD up to 30 days after surgery in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery. Methods Subjects over 65 years with hip fracture undergoing surgery were recruited for this study. They were enrolled and randomized to receive either general anesthesia (GA group) or subarachnoid (spinal) anesthesia (S group). Cognitive function was assessed using a battery of neuropsychological tests undertaken preoperatively and at 30 days postoperatively. The incidence of delirium was examined during the same period and their functional status, in terms of activities of daily living was also recorded. Results A total of seventy patients, 33 men and 37 females, mean age of 76 years were analyzed. Thirty-three patients received general anesthesia (GA group) and 37 subarachnoid (spinal) anesthesia (S group). The two groups of patients were similar with respect to baseline characteristics, comorbidities and perioperative data. The results of neuropsychological testing showed that there were no significant differences between the groups in eight out of ten neurocognitive tests at baseline and 30 days after surgery. There was a statistically significant decline of the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale score in S group compared with group GA on the 30th postoperative day (p = 0.043). A significant decline was also present in Color-Word Task test in S group compared with group GA at baseline (p = 0.014) and 30 days postoperatively (p = 0.003). Postoperative delirium was present in four patients (12%) for the GA group, and in 10 patients (27%) for the group receiving subarachnoid anesthesia. Conclusion We concluded that the choice of anesthesia modality does not appear to influence the emergence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery.
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- 2018
44. Sleep Quality and Physical Activity as Predictors of Mental Wellbeing Variance in Older Adults during COVID-19 Lockdown
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Carlos Soares Pernambuco, Parasanth Sankar, Achraf Ammar, Jan Delhey, Kais El Abed, Mohamed Jarraya, Jad Adrian Washif, Christian Apfelbacher, Yousri Elghoul, Daniella How, Bryan L. Riemann, Piotr Zmijewski, Liwa Masmoudi, Ismail Dergaa, Jana Strahler, Michael Brach, Samira C. khoshnami, Mohamed Jmail, Omar Boukhris, Laurel Riemann, Taysir Mansi, Patrick Mueller, Mohamed Romdhani, Evangelia Samara, Gamal Mohamed Ali, Emma A. Mitchell, Ramzi Al-Horani, Karim Chamari, Anita Hoekelmann, Hadj Batatia, Notger Mueller, Ellen Bentlage, Mona A. Ahmed, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Tarak Driss, Saša Pišot, Leonardo Jose Mataruna-Dos-Santos, Christian Wrede, Boštjan Šimunič, Hamdi Chtourou, Jordan M. Glenn, Khaled Trabelsi, Faiez Gargouri, Hsen Hsouna, Rado Pišot, Fernando Barbosa, Helmi Ben Saad, Achim Jerg, Albina Andreeva, Jürgen M. Steinacker, Lotfi Chaari, Morteza Taheri, Laisa Liane Paineiras-Domingos, Fernando Ferreira-Santos, Jarred P Acton, Sebastian Schulz, Khadijeh Irandoust, Sofia Bastoni, Bassem Bouaziz, Lisette van Gemert-Pijnen, Cain C T Clark, Jonathan Gómez-Raja, Osama Abdelkarim, Omar Hammouda, Wassim Moalla, Annemarie Braakman-Jansen, Vasiliki Zisi, Aïmen Khacharem, Robbert Sanderman, Nicholas T. Bott, Monique Epstein, Nizar Souissi, Andrea Gaggioli, Asma Aloui, Waseem Ahmed, Nafaa Souissi, Stephen J. Bailey, Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology, Health Psychology Research (HPR), Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educação, and Psychology, Health & Technology
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Gerontology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Mental wellbeing ,Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index ,0302 clinical medicine ,wellbeing ,Africa, Northern ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education.field_of_study ,Regression analysis ,Europe ,Mental health ,Alter ,HEALTH ,BEHAVIOR ,lifestyle behaviors ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Population ,Physical activity ,Wohlbefinden ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Asia, Western ,Humans ,ddc:610 ,education ,Pandemics ,Exercise ,Aged ,Sleep quality ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Pandemie ,pandemic ,MORTALITY ,aging ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,COVID-19 ,Sleep patterns ,LIFE ,LONG ,Communicable Disease Control ,Life style ,Sleep ,business ,home confinement ,DDC 610 / Medicine & health ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Lebensstil ,Schlaf - Abstract
Background. The COVID-19 lockdown could engender disruption to lifestyle behaviors, thus impairing mental wellbeing in the general population. This study investigated whether sociodemographic variables, changes in physical activity, and sleep quality from pre- to during lockdown were predictors of change in mental wellbeing in quarantined older adults. Methods. A 12-week international online survey was launched in 14 languages on 6 April 2020. Forty-one research institutions from Europe, Western-Asia, North-Africa, and the Americas, promoted the survey. The survey was presented in a differential format with questions related to responses “pre” and “during” the lockdown period. Participants responded to the Short Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire, and the short form of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. Results. Replies from older adults (aged >, 55 years, n = 517), mainly from Europe (50.1%), Western-Asia (6.8%), America (30%), and North-Africa (9.3%) were analyzed. The COVID-19 lockdown led to significantly decreased mental wellbeing, sleep quality, and total physical activity energy expenditure levels (all p <, 0.001). Regression analysis showed that the change in total PSQI score and total physical activity energy expenditure (F(2, 514) = 66.41 p <, 0.001) were significant predictors of the decrease in mental wellbeing from pre- to during lockdown (p <, 0.001, R2: 0.20). Conclusion. COVID-19 lockdown deleteriously affected physical activity and sleep patterns. Furthermore, change in the total PSQI score and total physical activity energy expenditure were significant predictors for the decrease in mental wellbeing.
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- 2021
45. The Effect of Sugammadex on Prothrombin and Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time
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Konstantinos Stamatiou, Petros Tzimas, Marina Balanika, and Evangelia Samara
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030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,prothrombin time (pt) ,Sugammadex ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Standard care ,Anesthesiology ,In vivo ,medicine ,coagulation ,Prothrombin time ,Neuromuscular Blockade ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,bleeding ,Coagulation ,Anesthesia ,Hemostasis ,hemostasis ,sugammadex ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,activated partial thromboplastin time (aptt) ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,Partial thromboplastin time ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Sugammadex is routinely used as an effective neuromuscular blockade reversal agent. Several studies have indicated that it may prolong the prothrombin time (PT) and the activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT). This review gathers the relevant in vivo studies to accumulate knowledge on the subject. Nine studies were included. According to the results, sugammadex seems to lead to a transient increase in aPTT and PT values, compared to standard care. However, the clinical impact seems to be trivial. Nevertheless, the trials’ findings reveal great heterogeneity, preventing a meta-analysis. Therefore, more well-designed studies are needed to lead to prudent conclusions.
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- 2021
46. The low-energy ion event on 2020 June 19 measured by Solar Orbiter
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Johan L. Freiherr von Forstner, Raul Gomez-Herrero, Luciano Rodriguez, Laura A. Balmaceda, Evangelia Samara, D. Pacheco, Nicolas Wijsen, Monica Laurenza, Angels Aran, Simone Benella, and David Lario
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Orbiter ,Low energy ,Meteorology ,law ,Event (relativity) ,Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Environmental science ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,law.invention ,Ion - Abstract
Shortly after reaching the first perihelion, the Energetic Particle Detector (EPD) onboard Solar Orbiter measured a low-energy ( 17 MeV/nuc ion measurements. On the other hand, no electron increases were detected. As seen from 1 au, there is no clear evidence of solar activity from the visible disk that could be associated with the origin of this ion event. We hypothesize about the origin of this event as due to either a possible solar eruption occurring behind the visible part of the Sun or to an interplanetary spatial structure. We use interplanetary magnetic field data from the Solar Orbiter Magnetometer (MAG), solar wind electron density derived from measurements of the Solar Orbiter Radio and Plasma Waves (RPW) instrument to specify the in-situ solar wind conditions where the ion event was observed. In addition, we use solar wind plasma measurements from the Solar Orbiter Solar Wind Analyser (SWA) suite gathered during the following solar rotation, for comparison purposes. In order to seek for possible associated solar sources, we use images from the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument onboard Solar Orbiter. Together with the lack of electron observations and Type III radio bursts, the simultaneous response of the ion intensity-time profiles at various energies indicates an interplanetary source for the particles. The two-step FD shape observed during this event suggests that the first step early on June 18 was due to a transient structure, whereas the second step on June 19, together with the ~50 –1000 keV/nuc ion enhancement, was due to a solar wind stream interaction region. The observation of a similar FD in the next solar rotation favours this interpretation, although a more complex structure cannot be discarded due to the lack of concurrent solar wind temperature and velocity observations.Different parts of this research have received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 870405 (EUHFORIA 2.0) and grant agreement No 01004159 (SERPENTINE).
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- 2021
47. Modeling the Sun – Earth propagation of solar disturbances for the H2020 SafeSpace project
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R. Kieokaew, Rui Pinto, Yannis Daglis, Jan Soucek, Vincent Génot, Sebastien Bourdarie, Benoit Lavraud, Stefaan Poedts, Antoine Brunet, Benjamin Grison, Alexis P. Rouillard, and Evangelia Samara
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Earth (chemistry) ,Geophysics ,Geology - Abstract
We present the solar wind forecast pipeline that is being implemented as part of the H2020 SafeSpace project. The Goal of this project is to use several tools in a modular fashion to address the physics of Sun – interplanetary space – Earth’s magnetosphere. This presentation focuses on the part of the pipeline that is dedicated to the forecasting – from solar measurements – of the solar wind properties at the Lagrangian L1 point. The modeling pipeline puts together different mature research models: determination of the background coronal magnetic field, computation of solar wind acceleration profiles (1 to 90 solar radii), propagation across the heliosphere (for regular solar wind, CIRs and CMEs), and comparison to spacecraft measurements. Different magnetogram sources (WSO, SOLIS, GONG, ADAPT) can be combined, as well as coronal field reconstruction methods (PFSS, NLFFF), wind (MULTI-VP) and heliospheric propagation models (CDPP 1D MHD, EUHFORIA). We aim at providing a web-based service that continuously supplies a full set of bulk physical parameters of the solar wind at 1 AU several days in advance, at a time cadence compatible with space weather applications. This work has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 870437.
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- 2021
48. The Dynamic Time Warping as a means to assess modeled solar wind time series
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Jasmina Magdalenic, Brecht Laperre, Evangelia Samara, Luciano Rodriguez, Emmanuel Chané, C. Verbeke, Stefaan Poedts, and Manuela Temmer
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Dynamic time warping ,Solar wind ,Series (mathematics) ,business.industry ,Structural engineering ,business ,Geology - Abstract
In this work, the Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) technique is presented as an alternative method to assess the performance of modeled solar wind time series at Earth (or at any other point in the heliosphere). This method can quantify how similar two time series are by providing a temporal alignment between them, in an optimal way and under certain restrictions. It eventually estimates the optimal alignment between an observed and a modeled series, which we call the warping path, by providing a single number, the so-called DTW cost. A description on the reasons why DTW should be applied as a metric for the assessment of solar wind time series, is presented. Furthermore, examples on how exactly the technique is applied to our modeled solar wind datasets with EUHFORIA, are shown and discussed.This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 870437 (SafeSpace).
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- 2021
49. A Readily Implemented Atmosphere Sustainability Constraint for Terrestrial Exoplanets Orbiting Magnetically Active Stars
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Manolis K. Georgoulis, Spiros Patsourakos, and Evangelia Samara
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Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP) ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Habitability ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Exoplanet ,Astrobiology ,Constraint (information theory) ,Stars ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Planet ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Space Physics ,Coronal mass ejection ,Environmental science ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Circumstellar habitable zone ,Heliosphere ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
With more than 4,300 confirmed exoplanets and counting, the next milestone in exoplanet research is to determine which of these newly found worlds could harbor life. Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), spawn by magnetically active, superflare-triggering dwarf stars, pose a direct threat to the habitability of terrestrial exoplanets as they can deprive them from their atmospheres. Here we develop a readily implementable atmosphere sustainability constraint for terrestrial exoplanets orbiting active dwarfs, relying on the magnetospheric compression caused by CME impacts. Our constraint focuses on a systems understanding of CMEs in our own heliosphere that, applying to a given exoplanet, requires as key input the observed bolometric energy of flares emitted by its host star. Application of our constraint to six famous exoplanets, (Kepler-438b, Proxima-Centauri b, and Trappist-1d, -1e, -1f and -1g), within or in the immediate proximity of their stellar host's habitable zones, showed that only for Kepler-438b might atmospheric sustainability against stellar CMEs be likely. This seems to align with some recent studies that, however, may require far more demanding computational resources and observational inputs. Our physically intuitive constraint can be readily and en masse applied, as is or generalized, to large-scale exoplanet surveys to detect planets that could be sieved for atmospheres and, perhaps, possible biosignatures at higher priority by current and future instrumentation., Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ Letters
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- 2021
50. Sexuality, Sexual Orientation and Chronic Prostatitis
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Konstantinos Stamatiou, Gianpaolo Perletti, and Evangelia Samara
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Therapy Outcome ,Male ,business.industry ,Sexual Behavior ,Health condition ,Prostatitis ,Human sexuality ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Psychology ,Chronic bacterial prostatitis ,Multiple sexual partners ,Chronic Disease ,Sexual orientation ,Medicine ,Bisexuality ,Humans ,Homosexuality, Male ,business ,Sexual function ,Sexuality ,Clinical psychology ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Chronic prostatitis (CP) is a common health condition in men. Albeight obvious, a relationship between microbial induced prostatic inflammation and sexual function has not been as thoroughly investigated. Aiming to investigate possible associations between sexuality/sexual orientation and chronic bacterial prostatitis, we retrospectively evaluated 1783 visits (2009-2019) owing to investigation of prostatitis-like symptoms and routine follow up. A total of 389 patients, provided information regarding sexual orientation and sexuality. The mean age was 45,5 years. According their report, 92.28% were heterosexual, 6.16% homosexual and 1.54% bisexual. Regarding sexuality, 26,6% reported multiple sexual partnerships while 73,4% reported single sexual partnerships. There was a statistically significant association between chronic bacterial prostatitis as initial diagnosis and having multiple sexual partnerships. In contrast, the association between CBP and sexual orientation was not statistically significant Similarly, no significant association between any therapy outcome and having multiple sexual partners was established. Our findings suggest a connection between sexual practices and the onset of CBP which should be further investigated in order to reach to scientific conclusions.
- Published
- 2021
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