82 results on '"F. Toledano"'
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2. Normal Weight Central Obesity among Filipinos and Its Association with Cardiovascular Risk: A Cross-Sectional Study
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Bryan Rene F. Toledano, Emily Mae L. Yap, and Gerald C. Vilela
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General Medicine - Abstract
INTRODUCTION The study aims to measure the prevalence of normal-weight central obesity, to measure its association with cardiovascular risks and diseases and to compare it across the different subtypes of obesity among Filipinos. METHODS The participants were Filipinos age 20 years old above who had participated and completed the desired data in the National Nutrition Survey II. The participants were categorized into the following groups: normal weight (BMI 18.5–24.9 kg/m2) and no central obesity; normal weight with central obesity (WC ≥ 80cm or WHR ≥ 0.85 for females, WC ≥ 90cm or WHR ≥ 0.90 for males); overweight (BMI ≥25-29.9kg/m2); overweight with central obesity; obese (BMI ≥30kg/m2) and obese with central obesity (OBCO). A Binary logistic regression was utilized to determine the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for hypertension, diabetes, and dyslipidemia. RESULTS A total of 5,920 participants (2,883 men and 3,037 women) were analyzed. The prevalence of normal weight central obesity was 39.3%. In comparison to normal weight, the ORs for hypertension (OR=1.84, p=0.001), diabetes (OR=2.1, p=.001), dyslipidemia (OR=1.3, p=.002), in Obese with central obesity for hypertension (OR=2.2, p=.001), diabetes (OR=2.7, p=.001), dyslipidemia (OR=1.29, p=.10) and in Overweight with central obesity hypertension (OR=1.65, p=.001), diabetes (OR=1.58, p=.001), dyslipidemia (OR 1.28, p=.004) were significantly higher in Normal weight central obesity. CONCLUSION Normal weight central obesity is a common finding among Filipinos and is associated with greater cardiovascular risks of hypertension, diabetes, or dyslipidemia in comparison with obese and overweight. KEYWORDS normal weight central obesity, Filipinos, obesity paradox
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- 2022
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3. Outcomes of Tricuspid Regurgitation after Percutaneous Mitral Commissurotomy
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Maria Johanna Jaluage-Villanueva, Sharon Marisse Lacson, and Bryan Rene F. Toledano
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,Regurgitation (circulation) ,business ,Mitral commissurotomy - Abstract
PURPOSE The gap in evidence in the management of multivalvular lesions can be addressed by providing more data on clinical and echocardiographic outcomes after Percutaneous Mitral commissurotomy (PMC). METHODS Participants were Filipinos aged >/= 19 years old, admitted due to severe mitral stenosis with moderate to severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR). The outcome of PMC was divided into 2 groups: Significant TR which included the progression of moderate to severe TR or persistence of severe TR and Insignificant TR group which included those with mild TR, regression to moderate to mild TR, severe to moderate, or persistence of moderate TR. These groups were compared from baseline, 24th hour, 1st month, and 6th month using the same echocardiographic parameters. The numerical data between significant and nonsignificant tricuspid regurgitation were compared using non-parametric Mann Whitney U test and categorical data using the Chi-Square test. RESULTS A total of 38 participants were analyzed. On the 24th-hour post- PTMC, the Significant TR group had significantly higher RAVI (42.3 vs 26.1, p=.004), RVD mid (3.81 vs 2.92, p=.001), SPAP (60.5 vs 38.5, p=.003), and RVOT (2.8 vs 2.2, p=.001) and lower MV planimetry (1.25 vs 1.58, p=.009); On the 1st-month RVD mid (3.4 vs 2.8, p=.02) and TV annulus (3.35 vs 2.76, p=0.10) were significantly higher in the Significant TR group; On the 6th month RAVI (59 vs 24.7, p=.001), RVD mid (4 vs 2.73, p=.006), and TV annulus (4.5 vs 2.67 p=.001) were significantly higher in the Significant TR group when compared to Insignificant TR group. CONCLUSION PMC improved baseline parameters of SPAP, MV planimetry, MV gradient, and functional class on short-term follow-up on both groups of TR. Majority of outcomes after the procedure had insignificant TR. However, those with significant TR had higher RVD mid and TV annulus from the 24th hour to 6 months when compared to the insignificant TR group.
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- 2021
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4. A Rare and Fatal Case of Aortobronchial Fistula Secondary to Disseminated Tuberculous Aortitis and Takayasu Arteritis
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Bryan Rene F. Toledano, Joel S. Paz, Glenn Valloso, Leonisa S. Sagun, Teresita De Guia, Paul P. Salandanan, Vanessa Yu Ma., and Therese Eileen B. Lladoc-Natividad
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Takayasu arteritis ,cardiovascular system ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,General Medicine ,Radiology ,Aortobronchial fistula ,business ,medicine.disease ,Aortitis - Abstract
BACKGROUND Aortobronchial fistula (ABF) is a rare complication of a chronic thoracic aneurysm. An ABF secondary to Disseminated Tuberculous (TB) Aortitis and Takayasu Arteritis (TA) may present with extensive combinations of aneurysms and stenoses in different parts of the arterial system with involvement of other organs. CASE PRESENTATION A 29-year-old Filipino female, married, who was admitted to our institution due to sudden massive hemoptysis. A Computed Tomography of the chest showed pulmonary tuberculosis with lymph node involvement and pseudoaneurysm of the descending aorta. The pertinent physical examinations are blood pressure (BP) differential of 20mmhg of upper extremities, painless multiple nodular tongue, multiple cervical, and supraclavicular lymphadenopathies, grade 3/6 holosystolic murmur. On Computed Tomography of the aorta, there are combinations of aneurysms of the mid to distal descending thoracic aorta, distal abdominal aorta, superior mesenteric artery with stenoses of the subclavian and left renal arteries. She was immediately started on anti-TB medications, corticosteroids and was scheduled for aortic aneurysmal repair. However, there was a recurrence of massive hemoptysis leading to her demise. An autopsy of the thorax and abdomen revealed an acute pulmonary hemorrhage, aortobronchial fistula secondary to Disseminated Tuberculous Aortitis and Takayasu Arteritis. CONCLUSION A masked ABF should be suspected in a patient with massive hemoptysis and a pseudoaneurysm of the descending aorta. In a young female with disseminated TB aortitis, a concomitant TA should be investigated. Both can share the same clinical, radiological and pathologic features. It is fatal and needs prompt surgical or endovascular intervention.
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- 2020
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5. Underweight and normal weight central obesity among filipinos and its association with cardiovascular risks and diseases
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Bryan Rene F Toledano and Gerald C Vilela
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Normal weight ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Medicine ,Underweight ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Association (psychology) ,Obesity - Abstract
Introduction Underweight (UW) and normal weight with central obesity (NWCO) groups are either underrepresented, excluded or merged to the normal weight category in data analysis of epidemiological studies. Purpose This is a local study conducted that explored the association of underweight versus normal weight central obesity in terms of cardiovascular risks and diseases among Filipinos. Methods The participants were Filipinos age 20 years old above who had participated and completed the desired data in the National Nutrition Survey II. The participants were categorized into the following groups: underweight ( Results A total of 3,009 participants were included in this study, 684 (22.7%) UW and 2,325 (77.3%) NWCO. The mean age was UW 47.8 versus NWCO 43.2, females 56.6% versus males 43.4%. In comparison to NWCO using adjustment models for age and sex, the ORs for hypertension (OR=1.498, 95% CI 1.23–1.82, p=.001), diabetes (OR=1.71, 95% CI 1.1–2.72, p=.023) and dyslipidemia (OR=1.8, 95% CI 1.5–2.16, p=.0001). Using age stratified model, CAD 25thP (31 years old) OR= 2, 95%Cl 1.5,2.6 p Conclusion Lipid and blood pressure parameters differed among male and female UW. A greater association in hypertension and coronary artery disease in all age groups, stroke among the older age group, and diabetes among the younger and older age group is seen among UW versus NWCO among Filipinos. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None.
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- 2021
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6. Clinical Profile and Cost of Treatment among Patients with Lymphedema in Philippine Heart Center from 2018-2020
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Bryan Rene F. Toledano, Catherine V. Sta Monica, and Gertie May B. Plameras
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General Medicine - Abstract
PURPOSE This is a local study conducted that describes the clinical profile and cost incurred of patients with lymphedema among Filipinos seen in our institution. METHODS A descriptive study using the data from the Philippine Heart Center Lymphedema clinic from 2018-2020. It consists of the patient’s name, age, sex, lymphedema onset, classification, type, stage, affected site, treatment modality, and the number of sessions. The cost incurred was based on the clinic’s costing list, treatment modality, and the number of sessions rendered. RESULTS The analysis included a total of 97 patients. The mean age was 60.3 (± 14.3) years old, with female predominance (74.2% versus 25.8%). The majority is classified as secondary (91.8%) versus primary (8.2%). The classification of primary lymphedema are praecox (62.5%), congenital (25%) and tarda (12.5%) while for secondary it is cancer related (53.9%), phlebolymphedema (34.8%), lipolymphedema (3.4%), obesity induced 3.4%, trauma related, infection (3.4%) and iatrogenic (1.1). The stage of severity is stage IIA (60.8%), III (17.6%), IIB (13.4%), and I (8.2%). The most affected site is bilateral lower extremities (30%), followed by left (18.5%) and right (17.5%) lower extremities. The right and left upper extremities showed equal (16.5%) with no bilateral upper extremities affectation. The majority of treatment is unilateral (68.8%) versus bilateral (31.2%) decompressive lymphatic therapy. The total cost incurred was an average of P17,753 per patient and mostly came from the private section (89.7%) versus (10.3%). CONCLUSION Lymphedema is a chronic and recurrent disease that carries a substantial cost to patients. Its exact incidence, treatment outcomes, and quality of life among Filipinos are yet to be explored. A clinical profile will be the first step to raise awareness and to identify the different subset of populations for prevention, support, and treatment. Keywords Clinical profile, Cost of treatment, Lymphedema
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- 2020
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7. Poster Session Wednesday 5 December all day Display * Determinants of left ventricular performance
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J. Skranes, I. Andreadou, A. Germain, A. Alghamdi, C. Santoro, Z. Markovic, G. Jones, N. Lousada, K. Shahgaldi, A. Iqbal, L. Carpinteiro, O. Dzikowska-Diduch, J. Khoo, H. Vago, Y. Juilliere, M. L. Del Pino, M. Lisi, J. Choi, Y. Yotov, M. Monaghan, P. Seferovic, R. Beanlands, K. Dima, J. Suarez De Lezo Herreros De Tejada, I. D-Angeli, S. Veioglanis, A. Magalhaes, R. Esposito, D. Damaskos, L. Faber, M. Centeno, A. Sahlen, A. Stoylen, K. Adamyan, R. Gao, C. Zito, M. Gomez-Rubin, A. Simon, N. Markovic Nikolic, J. Gibbs, J. Dahl, S. Gati, A. Omran, K. Aonuma, B. Michalski, B. Zweig, V. Katsi, S. Giannitsi, S. Wrideier, D. Marcadet, S. Malm, S. Rahman Haley, B. Rybus-Kalinowska, S. Yurdakul, N. Haas, C. Katseli, M. Caplin, D. Haghi, L. Drvol, S. Bosi, M. M. Gurzun, B. Merkely, T. Alvarez, L. Capotosto, G. Draganic, C. Lowery, D. J. Cuthbertson, T. Kovats, S. Gherardi, F. Elmkies, H.-J. Trappe, S. Backovic, A. Koumoulidis, W. Sheng, S. G. Da Silva, M. Alam, I. Felekos, L. Badano, A. Manouras, W. Burchert, H. Direskeneli, M. Alraies, B. Natali, L. Weinert, A. Scullion, Y. Noguchi, K. Chun, M. Borggrefe, A. Barbieri, S. Hassantash, M. Banovic, M. Takeuchi, E. Sfendouraki, D. Horstkotte, W. Gin-Sing, K. Gatzoulis, W. Choi, K. Grudzka, G. Luzza, J. Sellal, M. Galderisi, C. Halley, O. Hallioglu, T. Sueselbeck, A. Nagy, S. Eroglu, N. Mansencal, H. Seggewiss, V. Kuznetsov, M. Anastasiou-Nana, M. Lourenco, W. Jaber, L. Howard, S. Piret, P. Palczewski, A. Mohamed, R. Dekemp, S. Habash, L. Videbaek, B. Kilicaslan, E. Nestaas, C. Marin, C. Selton-Suty, I. Ikonomidis, G. Sjoberg, L. Stefanczyk, S. Goliszek, A. Charalampopoulos, A. Travlou, V. Pipitone, N. Matveeva, T. G. Alujas, K. Ananthasubramaniam, M. Karvandi, D. Ermacora, A. Rodriguez-Ogando, J. Silva Marques, J. Kim, L. Michalis, M. Prull, O. Wendler, J. Chattahi, M. Baldelli, J.-L. Philip, A. Squeri, D. Jiminez, I. Tzoulaki, J. Hallberg, G. Truscelli, P. Zinzius, L. Santos, D. Tousoulis, I. B. Surribas, B. Stojcevski, C. Reverberi, S. Ghani, F. Toledano Delgado, D. Han, M. Hedger, I. Ilic-Djordjevic, S. Berthier, B. Tasdelen, G. Pushkarev, P. Maccarthy, M. Cikes, L. Arnold, M. Ostojic, A. Massoni, D. Fugelseth, K. Szymczyk, F. Caranci, Y. Seo, O. Kunchev, E. Picano, A. Nunes Diogo, V. Vukcevic, S. Martins, C. Doesch, M. Chiavarelli, M. Petrovic, O. Enescu, H. Al-Shehri, D. Cini, M. Kalinowski, A. Zaidi, T. Song, Z. Cosic, S. Lupu, I. Koutagiar, J. Stabryla, S. Rangamani, M. Ciurzynski, C. Medrano, L. Tong, A. Ylitalo, J. Sanderson, B. Prendergast, L. R. Tumasyan, E. Gunyeli, F. Castillo Bernal, A. Vershinina, M. Krupa, A. Madaffari, D. Ledoux, M. Ozeren, A. Baltabaeva, A. Mladenovic, T. Christophersen, T. Papavassiliu, C. Yu, P. Lipiec, M. Fischer, D. Bacic, A. Padiyath, I. Paraskevaidis, T. Kukulski, M. Stamatelatou, H. Houle, S. Sideris, G. Kolunin, S. Boedeker, K.-L. Ang, G. A. Derumeaux, L. Agoston-Coldea, M. Baeza Garzon, B. Buyukakilli, S. Antoniou, A. Buno, G. Roussakis, L. Sargento, A. Ouss, M. Losito, O. Azevedo, M. M. Urdaniz, G. Arpesella, B. Lichodziejewska, B. Vujisic-Tesic, T. Butz, J. Davar, M. Poulsen, A. Grasso, G. Gkiouras, J. Moller, A. Apor, O. Dettori, T. Ruddy, W. Aljaroudi, G. Saifullina, C. Mabbet, N. Sheikh, M. De Maio, R. Sharma, G. Sutherland, J. Sun, M. Frenneaux, A. Saitta, D. Mahadevan, A. Angelov, F. Maffessanti, C. Gouva, A. Almeida, W. Serra, G. Tamborini, R. Winter, R. Medeiros, R. Ionasec, L. Gapon, P. Carrilho Ferreira, E. Ramirez, D. Roberson, A. Sadykov, R. P. Dos Reis, M. Burgess, P. Bruno, J. Hamilton, A. E. Masip, F. Oner, A. Erraki, M. Naldi, M. Massetti, C. Calisto, J. Lopez-Sendon, S. Gao, E. Kartsagoulis, J. Lof, D. Muraru, J. Kwong, V. Muthurangu, F. Degener, B. Bijnens, R. Arunkumar, S. Ranjbar, S. Longo, M. Pietila, W. Streb, T. Bombardini, H. Zemir, D. Silva, Q. Zhang, S. Lee, K. Naka, F. Vecchio, F. Schaefer, C. Marcos, A. Kottam, L. Brunvand, A. Burghardt, M. Satendra, I. Machado, M. Toth, J. Nowak, G. Gnanavelu, S. Stojkovic, E. Maroto, Y. Park, S. Coulibaly, N. Ozgunes, O. Oldenburg, S. Gurgul, M. Canales, T. Rudbaek, T. Lopez-Fernandez, P. Katsimbri, M. Dekleva, F. Liu, J. Thomas, L. Garcia Cuenllas, P. Meimoun, K. Egstrup, T. Mocan, J. Coghlan, R. Bader, B. Loegstrup, F. Barilla, S. Ribeiro, S. Akhunova, F. Sibellas, C. Aggeli, N. Swaminathan, I. Zyrianov, D. Citirik, J. Suzic Lazic, A. Lourenco, A. Cox, S. Tzortzis, G. Makavos, M. Szulik, P. Massion, R. Sicari, B. Wozniakowski, B. Bahlay, A. Rosner, S. Kutty, J. Lekakis, R. Tripodi, D. Hofsten, M. Pepi, J. Davies, D. Trifunovic, B. Sasko, A. Bircan, M. Camino, J. Stepanovic, A. Bernardes, P. Marie, S. H. Kim, R. Dulgheru, S. Aytekin, B. Pencic, I. Papadakis, G. Dwivedi, D. Danford, J. Sousa, R. Klein, P. Pruszczyk, M. Altman, J. Schwartz, F. De Torres, A. Sahinarslan, A. Moysich, A. Chilingaryan, P. Goktas, N. Cortez-Dias, M. Maccherini, M. Mpougialkli, K. Kurnicka, L.-A. Mohlkert, M D Mesa Rubio, E. Imbalzano, O. Huttin, T. Kiviniemi, P. Wiesen, M. Norman, A. Sezgin, B. Pirat, M. Mercy, N. Shurkevich, J. Clerc, A. Pereira, K. Katopodis, P. Dilaveris, A. Saraste, A. Kisheva, B. Chow, S. Sahin, A. Ionescu, C. Toumpanakis, A. Rudd, J. Srinivasan, S. Chachalos, T. Kuehne, X. Liu, S. Mihaila, A. Aydinalp, T. Ishizu, M. Cameli, G. Pavlidis, A. Aussoleil, M. Hussein, F. Streitner, H. Schirmer, J.-C. Eicher, C. Bergerot, L. A. Pierard, A. Chernjavskiy, H. Raju, S. Mondillo, A. Taylor, S. Carerj, T. Lehtinen, C. Stefanadis, D. Chin, C. Barreiros, R. Davies, M. Schumann, R. Riezebos, D. Gemma, R. Capoulade, B. Montalvan, A. Ciobanu, J. D'hooge, D. I. Del Valle, J. Feliu, D. Duman, D. Donato, D. G. Dorado, V. Bistola, J. B. Rius, M. Kleut, T. Myrmel, M. Bessonova, F. Ballesteros, M. Delgado Ortega, I. Grapsa, C. Papadopoulos, P. Pellikka, D. Muthukumar, A. Flyvbjerg, H. Triantafyllidi, M. Al-Mallah, L. Mircheva, I. Quelhas, R. Rimbas, M. Boricic, J. F. R. Palomares, J. Kasprzak, M. Ravi, Y. Harimura, F. Sargin, V. Dhandapani, D. Knight, J.-L. Canivet, N. Kouris, A. Sljivic, R. A. Dobson, G. Nartsissova, G. T. Tura, P. Trivilou, C. Sousa, I. Ali, C. Jorge, S. Chidambaram, A. Rotkiewicz, R. Grimm, K. Yun, E. Yaroslavskaya, E. Poulidakis, O. Dubourg, P. Lancellotti, D. Dedovic, H. Muderrisoglu, P. Pibarot, A. Rodriguez, A. Vitarelli, D. Kececioglu, R. Placido, P. T. Mas, C. Halvorsen, F. Fang, M. van Bracht, M. Galinanes, A. Toth, Z. Kalarus, M. Ruiz Ortiz, M. Bjerre, J.-E. Wolf, A. Majstorovic, G. Karthikeyan, N. D. Papamichael, E. Szymczyk, I. Kallikazaros, S. Singh, S. Venkatesan, A. Chan, A. Stevanovic, L. Sade, L. G. Garcia-Moreno, B. Lorcerie, A. Tsantes, M. Loudon, C. Olympios, B. K. Avci, K. Laser, Y. Feng, H. Koerperich, L. Rodriguez, I. Schilling, A. Avgeropoulou, S. Goncalves, J. Guardado, R. Reynolds, V. De Cicco, V. Kostopoulos, D. Karassavidou, R. Lang, S. Stankovic, S. Granja, H. Thibault, L. Rasmussen, C. Prinz, N. Banner, F. Mazuelos, E. Bonnefoy-Cudraz, R. Jasaityte, B. Popovic, L. Li, R. Del Bene, P. Karjalainen, W. Tsang, I. Vlasseros, P. Gripari, S. Binno, K. Airaksinen, V. Celic, J. Magne, D. Krinochkin, E. Ferdenzi, D. Avenarius, K. Meenakshi, D. Vinereanu, Z. Elhonsali, S. Sharma, J. D'arcy, D. Dawson, M. Cusma-Piccione, A. Inan, A. Rodriguez Lopez, G. M. Nasr, M. Kostrubiec, D. Iaccarino, H. Botker, M. Morenate Navio, V. Cui, and A. Luycx-Bore
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Session (computer science) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2012
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8. Poster session Thursday 6 December - AM: Other myocardial diseases
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Z. Ojaghi-Haghighi, A. Mostafavi, H. Moladoust, F. Noohi, M. Maleki, M. Esmaeilzadeh, N. Samiei, S. Hosseini, R. Jasaityte, A. Teske, P. Claus, B. Verheyden, F. Rademakers, J. D'hooge, A. Patrianakos, A. Zacharaki, A. Kalogerakis, E. Nyktari, P. Maniatakis, F. Parthenakis, P. Vardas, J. M. Hilde, I. Skjoerten, S. Humerfelt, V. Hansteen, M. Melsom, J. Hisdal, K. Steine, R. Ippolito, P. Gripari, D. Muraru, R. Esposito, G. Kocabay, G. Tamborini, M. Galderisi, F. Maffessanti, L. Badano, M. Pepi, S. Yurdakul, F. Oner, T. Sahin, B. Avci, Y. Tayyareci, H. Direskeneli, S. Aytekin, T. Filali, B. Jedaida, D. Lahidheb, M. Gommidh, H. Mahfoudhi, N. Hajlaoui, R. Dahmani, W. Fehri, H. Haouala, V. Andova, L. Georgievska-Ismail, E. Srbinovska-Kostovska, Y. Gardinger, J. Joanna Hlebowicz, O. Ola Bjorgell, M. Magnus Dencker, M.-T. Liao, C.-T. Tsai, J.-L. Lin, K. Piestrzeniewicz, K. Luczak, M. Maciejewski, J. Komorowski, J. Jankiewicz-Wika, J. Drozdz, M. F. Ismail, A. Alasfar, M. Elassal, S. El-Sayed, M. Ibraheim, P. Dobrowolski, A. Klisiewicz, E. Florczak, A. Prejbisz, E. Szwench, J. Rybicka, A. Januszewicz, P. Hoffman, M. Santos Furtado, K. Nogueira, A. Arruda, A. C. Rodrigues, F. Carvalho, M. Silva, A. Cardoso, E. Lira-Filho, J. Pinheiro, J. L. Andrade, M. Mohammed, C. Zito, M. Cusma-Piccione, G. Di Bella, N. Taha, D. Zagari, A. Oteri, A. Quattrone, I. Boretti, S. Carerj, O. Obremska, B. Boratynska, P. Poczatek, Z. Zon, M. Magott, K. Klinger, O. Szenczi, Z. Szelid, P. Soos, Z. Bagyura, E. Edes, P. Jozan, B. Merkely, J. Ahn, D. Kim, D. Jeon, I. Kim, F. Baeza Garzon, M. Delgado, D. Mesa, M. Ruiz, J. S. De Lezo, M. Pan, C. Leon, F. Castillo, M. Morenate, F. Toledano, L. Zhong, E. Lim, N. Shanmugam, S. Law, B. Ong, K. Katwadi, R. Tan, Y. Chua, R. Liew, Z. Ding, H. Von Bibra, C. Leclerque, T. Schuster, P.-M. Schumm-Draeger, M. Bonios, A. Kaladaridou, O. Papadopoulou, A. Tasoulis, C. Pamboucas, A. Ntalianis, J. Nanas, S. Toumanidis, D. Silva, N. Cortez-Dias, P. Carrilho-Ferreira, R. Placido, C. Jorge, C. Calisto, S. Robalo Martins, J. Carvalho De Sousa, F. Pinto, A. Nunes Diogo, M. Przewlocka-Kosmala, A. Orda, B. Karolko, A. Mysiak, W. Kosmala, S. Moral Torres, J. Rodriguez-Palomares, V. Pineda, D. Gruosso, A. Evangelista, D. Garcia-Dorado, J. Figueras, E. Cambronero, M. J. Corbi, A. Valle, J. Cordoba, C. Llanos, M. Fernandez, I. Lopez, V. Hidalgo, M. Barambio, J. Jimenez, A. D'andrea, L. Riegler, R. Cocchia, M. Russo, E. Bossone, R. Calabro, A. Iniesta Manjavacas, S. Valbuena Lopez, T. Lopez Fernandez, S. Garcia-Blas, F. De Torres Alba, J. G. De Diego, U. Ramirez Valdiris, J. Mesa Garcia, M. Moreno Yanguela, J. Lopez-Sendon, B. Logstrup, H. Andersen, L. Thuesen, E. Christiansen, K. Terp, K. Klaaborg, S. Poulsen, A. Cacicedo, S. Velasco, U. Aguirre, J. Onaindia, I. Rodriguez, G. Oria, A. Subinas, G. Zugazabeitia, A. Romero, E. Laraudogoitia Zaldumbide, S. Weisz, J. Magne, R. Dulgheru, M. Rosca, L. Pierard, P. Lancellotti, V. Auffret, E. Donal, M. Bedossa, D. Boulmier, M. Laurent, J. Verhoye, H. Le Breton, S. Van Hall, T. Herbrand, U. Ketterer, S. Keymel, Y. Boering, T. Rassaf, C. Meyer, T. Zeus, M. Kelm, J. Balzer, M. Floria, S. Seldrum, M. Mariciuc, G. Laurence, M. Buche, P. Eucher, Y. Louagie, J. Jamart, B. Marchandise, E. Schroeder, A. Venkatesh, A. Sahlen, J. Johnson, L. Brodin, R. Winter, K. Shahgaldi, A. Manouras, L. Fusini, M. Muratori, F. Alamanni, A. Bartorelli, C. Ferrari, E. Caiani, E. Yaroslavskaya, V. Kuznetsov, G. Pushkarev, D. Krinochkin, I. Zyrianov, C. Ciobotaru, Y. Kobayashi, K. Yamamoto, E. Hirose, A. Hirohata, T. Ohe, P. Jhund, T. Cunningham, V. Murday, I. Findlay, P. Sonecki, I. Rangel, C. Sousa, A. Goncalves, A. Correia, A. Vigario, E. Martins, J. Silva-Cardoso, F. Macedo, M. Maciel, D. Lovric, J. Samardzic, D. Milicic, V. Reskovic, Z. Baricevic, I. Ivanac, J. Separovic Hanzevacki, K. Kim, J. Song, H. Jeong, H. Yoon, Y. Ahn, M. Jeong, J. Cho, J. Park, J. Kang, A. Iorio, B. Pinamonti, M. Bobbo, M. Merlo, G. Barbati, L. Massa, G. Faganello, A. Di Lenarda, G. Sinagra, F. Heggemann, K. Hamm, F. Streitner, T. Sueselbeck, T. Papavassiliu, M. Borggrefe, D. Haghi, F. Ferreira, A. Galrinho, R. Soares, L. Branco, J. Abreu, J. Feliciano, A. Papoila, M. Alves, A. Leal, R. Ferreira, A. Reynaud, L. H. Lund, E. Oger, E. Drouet, C. Hage, F. Bauer, C. Linde, J. Daubert, F. Schnell, P. Lentz, G. Kervio, G. Leurent, P. Mabo, F. Carre, A. Rodrigues, M. Roque, D. Becker, S. Barros, F. Kay, T. Emerick, P. Sampaio-Barros, J. Andrade, S. Yamada, K. Okada, H. Iwano, H. Nishino, M. Nakabachi, S. Yokoyama, S. Kaga, T. Mikami, H. Tsutsui, R. Mincu, S. Magda, S. Dumitrache Rujinski, T. Constantinescu, S. Mihaila, A. Ciobanu, M. Florescu, D. Vinereanu, T. Ashcheulova, O. Kovalyova, E. Ardeleanu, D. Gurgus, A. Gruici, R. Suciu, I. Ana, L. Bergenzaun, H. Ohlin, P. Gudmundsson, R. Willenheimer, M. Chew, A. Charalampopoulos, L. Howard, R. Davies, W. Gin-Sing, I. Tzoulaki, I. Grapsa, S. Gibbs, P. Massabuau, L. Weinert, O. Lairez, M. Berry, M. Sotaquira, P. Vaida, R. Lang, I. Khan, D. Waterhouse, S. Asegdom, M. Alqaseer, D. Foley, B. Mcadam, P. Colonna, E. Michelotto, W. Genco, M. Rubino, S. Pugliese, A. Belfiore, M. Sorino, M. Trisorio Liuzzi, G. Antonelli, G. Palasciano, A. Duszanska, I. Skoczylas, W. Streb, T. Kukulski, L. Polonski, Z. Kalarus, A. Fleig, K. Seitz, S. Secades, M. Martin, C. Corros, M. Rodriguez, J. De La Hera, A. Garcia, E. Velasco, E. Fernandez, V. Barriales, J. Lambert, D. R. Zwas, S. Hoss, D. Leibowitz, R. Beeri, C. Lotan, D. Gilon, K. Wierzbowska-Drabik, N. Roszczyk, M. Sobczak, M. Plewka, L. Chrzanowski, P. Lipiec, J. Kasprzak, K. Wita, K. Mizia-Stec, W. Wrobel, E. Plonska-Gosciniak, T. Pinho, Y. Wang, H. Houle, A. J. Madureira, J. Zamorano, M. J. Maciel, R. Ancona, S. Comenale Pinto, P. Caso, M. Coppola, O. Rapisarda, R. Calabro', R. Cadenas Chamorro, T. Lopez, J. Gomez, M. Moreno, P. Salinas, C. Jimenez Rubio, S. Valbuena, A. Manjavacas, F. De Torres, T. Vaugrenard, O. Huttin, A. Rouge, J. Schwartz, P. Zinzius, B. Popovic, J. Sellal, E. Aliot, Y. Juilliere, C. Selton-Suty, J. Looi, A. Lee, M. Hsiung, W. Song, R. Wong, M. J. Underwood, F. Fang, Q. Lin, Y. Lam, C. Yu, A. Vitarelli, B. Nguyen, L. Capotosto, G. D-Alessandro, M. D-Ascanio, A. Rafique, E. Gang, F. Barilla, R. Siegel, A. Kydd, F. Khan, W. Watson, L. Mccormick, M. Virdee, D. Dutka, S. Ranjbar, M. Karvandi, S. Hassantash, J. Grapsa, I. Efthimiadis, T. Pakrashi, D. Dawson, P. Punjabi, P. Nihoyannopoulos, M. Henein, S. Soderberg, E. Tossavainen, P. Lindqvist, H. Bellsham-Revell, A. Bell, O. Miller, J. Simpson, E. Altekin, M. Kucuk, A. Yanikoglu, S. Karakas, A. Er, D. Ozel, C. Ermis, I. Demir, G. Bajraktari, G. Di Salvo, L. Baldini, F. Del Gaizo, A. Rea, V. Pergola, G. Pacileo, B. Fadel, J.-S. Seo, G.-N. Choi, H.-Y. Jin, S.-H. Seol, J.-S. Jang, T.-H. Yang, D.-K. Kim, D.-S. Kim, E. Papadopoulou, S. Hatzidou, J. Agrios, C. Pamboukas, A. Antoniou, P. Gargiulo, S. Dellegrottaglie, D. Bruzzese, O. Scala, C. D'amore, D. Ruggiero, C. Marciano, E. Vassallo, E. Pirozzi, P. Perrone Filardi, V. Mor-Avi, N. Kachenoura, J. Lodato, S. Port, S. Chandra, B. Freed, N. Bhave, B. Newby, A. Patel, G. Dwivedi, M. Alam, K. Boczar, B. Chow, G. Staskiewicz, E. Czekajska-Chehab, S. Uhlig, A. Tomaszewski, J. Przegalinski, R. Maciejewski, A. Drop, G. Di Giammarco, C. Canosa, M. Foschi, G. Liberti, M. Bedir, D. Marinelli, S. Masuyama, R. Rabozzi, S. Vijayan, H. Miller, R. Muthusamy, S. Smith, L. Gargani, P. Pang, E. Davis, A. Schumacher, R. Sicari, E. Picano, A. Chmiel, M. Mizia, M. Haberka, K. Gieszczyk, A. Sikora - Puz, B. Lasota, O. Trojnarska, S. Grajek, Z. Gasior, A. Koumoulidis, I. Vlasseros, D. Tousoulis, V. Katsi, A. Avgeropoulou, M. Divani, C. Stefanadis, and I. Kallikazaros
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Function (mathematics) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Independent predictor ,business ,Ventricular geometry - Published
- 2012
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9. Poster session Friday 7 December - PM: Effect of systemic illnesses on the heart
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G. Forleo, T. Henriques-Coelho, A. Kalogerakis, A. Nestoruc, R. Conti, G. Guzman Martinez, M. Ostojic, S. Aytekin, P. Margetis, D. Kremastinos, A. Hagege, M. Sunbul, L. Hazarapetyan, M. Fernandes, A. Pfuetzner, M. Akkaya, I. Paraskevaides, C. Zito, F. Castillo, D. G. Dorado, A Di Cori, O. Azevedo, M. Pizzarelli, TM Li Causi, A. Jaccard, A. Chilingaryan, A. Lourenco, B. Mutlu, E. Ermis, M. Martinek, D. Duval, L. Tumasyan, J. Thambo, P. Virot, P. De Araujo Goncalves, I. Sari, F. Colazzo, A. Stepura, M. S. Carvalho, B. Beleslin, P. Nihoyannopoulos, A. Corciu, E. Langesaeter, F. Kyndt, J. Schott, A. Diogo, G. Andersen, D. De Palma, H. Skulstad, P. Crea, S. Wirdeier, M. Olszowska, S. Castelvecchio, M. Muiesan, M. Kalantzi, G. Ertas, K. Branidou, I. Alvarez Pichel, E. Shkolnik, T. Schuster, M. J. Monaghan, A. Parkhomenko, V. Schiano Lomoriello, A. Ahmed, C. Jimenez Rubio, M. M. Urdaniz, A. M. Lesniak-Sobelga, G. Rubagotti, S. Gustavsson, Verena Stangl, F. Bertacchini, J. Otterstad, S. Matsushita, G. Macri, W. Streb, C. David, Y. Nogami, L. Faber, J. Kim, M. Chigira, M. Cusma-Piccione, S.-H. Shin, Cristina Maria Stanescu, M. Hlawaty, C. Napolitano, T. Kaier, S. Yurdakul, A. E. Masip, A. Zacharaki, S. Adawi, L. Menicanti, L. Tomkiewicz-Pajak, A. Patrianakos, S. Ercan, J. Stepanovic, F. Matei, U. Richter, E. Erdogan, R. Shaikh, A. Kepez, E. Soldati, K. Jarosz, M. Miceli, J. Grapsa, M. Cardoso, L. Boubrit, J. Singelton, M. Morenate, Henryk Dreger, I. Comanescu, L. Fontana, S. Morner, C. Agabiti Rosei, L. Brodin, J. Vaskelyte, E. Hamodraka, K. Uno, Fabian Knebel, R. Petraco, M. Komeda, L. Weinert, I. Daha, A. Shiran, V. Stinziani, I. Asmer, F. Antonini-Canterin, L. Iliuta, M. Rosca, P. Lindqvist, N. Cortez-Dias, E. Mueller, Z. Katidis, Y. Vasyuk, P. Rubis, R. Jonkaitiene, J. G. Acosta Velez, S. Lafitte, K. Fox, T. Rakowski, C. Manisty, D. Stassaldi, R. Piazza, L. Spinelli, S. Han, R. Lang, L. Oreto, T. Le Tourneau, L. Li, J. Areias, R. Isnard, D. Silva, Karl Stangl, T. Kukulski, M. Gaspari, A. Tsatsopoulou, Miguel Mota Carmo, P. Pugliatti, A. Atsumi, J. Hammel, J. B. Rius, F. D'auria, O. Ozer, A. Comaglio, Giulio Zucchelli, R. Sicari, P. Claus, D. Horstkotte, A. Di Molfetta, J. De La Hera Galarza, P. Wathen, M. Ganaeem, E. Nyktari, G. Alongi, N. Hayashi, L. Castiglioni, C. El Hamel, A. Melidonis, Y. Seo, M. Cogne, C. Corros, F. Procaccio, L. Fresiello, T. Graven, D. De Guillebon, I. Machado, V. Mor-Avi, R. Rubinshtein, E. Durmus, A. Venkatesh, A. Paini, E. Truemper, A. Aleixo, A. Sahlen, C. Wunderlich, H. Uyarel, R. Ippolito, J. Huhta, D. Morgan, M. Petrovic, G. Cole, C. Piper, N. Zhuravskaya, J. Dubiel, R. Bloise, A. Iniesta Manjavacas, J. Kleinau, J. Lambert Rodriguez, E. Pasanisi, V. Petitalot, D. Beldekos, H. Lim, P. Kleczynski, N. Echahidi, K. Linask, A. Tasal, U. Guerrini, B. Haugen, V. Pereira, M. Banovic, A. Moreo, J. Miralles Ibarra, J F Rodriguez Palomares, C. Park, O. Mjolstad, R. Levine, M. T. G. Alujas, A. Zagatina, M. Martin Fernandez, J. Voigt, E. Psathakis, Y.-Y. Yang, B. Smith, A. Marciniak, T. Yoshikawa, M. Mohammed, C. Aggiusti, H. Tountas, M. Montoro Lopez, M. Guazzi, T. Przewlocki, D. Kim, A. Vannozzi, P. Kogoj, A. Kablak-Ziembicka, S. Goncalves, P. Heilmeyer, S. Censi, J. Kwan, S. Crispo, I. Nogueira, G. Isasti Aizpurua, F. Parthenakis, K. Sveric, O. Uku, F. Anglano, R. Jozwa, A. Karamanou, B. Ozben, M. Delgado, A. Santoro, A. Scafa Udriste, B. Vujisic-Tesic, Y. Kameda, L. Mathias, M. Bongiorni, S. Gianstefani, K.-S. Hsieh, J. Cousins, M. Prull, M. Isailovic-Kekovic, M. Turfan, J. Reiken, R. Muscariello, O. Fernandez Cimadevilla, E. Tremoli, S. Gherardi, F. Musca, S. Kutty, B. Popovic, D. Dudek, L. Gullestad, Michael Laule, A. Almeida, S. Vrakas, C. Santoro, M. Moreno Yanguela, V. Nesvetov, I. Lekakis, V. Mizariene, H. Yamagata, I. Karch, C. Davos, E. Stepien, E. A. Di Panzillo, C. Morisco, S. Kim, M. Takeuchi, R. Del Bene, A. Gaspar, C. Choi, M. Duprey, C. Cefalu, P. Regnier, Q. Ciampi, D. Francis, Gerd Baldenhofer, J. Trochu, A. Dziewierz, T. Bombardini, I. Nedeljkovic, O. Tautu, O. Suhr, M. Enomoto, K.-P. Weng, E. Enache, J. Johnson, J. Legutko, S. Grigoryan, R. Winter, J. Sousa, K. Aonuma, G. Wulf, S. Priori, J. Attebery, A. Squeri, S. Bosi, D. Lavergne, F. Bandera, P. T. Mas, X. Iriart, P. Vardas, A. Brzozowska-Czarnek, B. Trimarco, J. Kasprzak, K. Stuuer, R. Arena, J. O. Na, E. Picano, A. Horovitz, M. Sucu, M. Vatankulu, Vasile Manoliu, Z. Siudak, T. Damy, H. Dores, G. Tsaoussis, Gert Baumann, J. Jakala, Z. Kalarus, R. Jasaityte, G. Dan, K. Takenaka, M. Gurzun, M. Mavroidis, R. Florez Gomez, S. Winter, A. Ebihara, E. Fousteris, N. Catibog, B. Kilickiran Avci, A. Deligiorgis, R. Sharma, A. Alonso Ladreda, M. Dorobantu, Y. Lutay, P. Barbier, O. Jobard, J. Jedrzychowska-Baraniak, M. Perez-Lopez, Y. Yatomi, C. Itziar Soto, P. Polisca, K. Adamyan, B. Putnikovic, M. Lourenco, N. Taha, C. Ebner, K. Obase, P. Podolec, F. Romeo, M. Yamamoto, K. Shahgaldi, T. Edvardsen, C. Leon, A. Varela, A. Anastasakis, D. Oh, I. Di Matteo, A. Manouras, A. Theodosis-Georgilas, J. Bernstein, D. Cini, P. Reant, L. Santini, I. Quelhas, A. Bacaksiz, E. Agabiti Rosei, S. Bartosh-Zelenaya, R. Enache, C. Baicus, G. T. Tura, K. Kimura, R. Esposito, P. Kekovic, A. Whittaker, K. Park, N. Monteforte, S. Foussas, M. Kostkiewicz, S. Damjanovic, T. Ishizu, I. Ene, L. Chiariello, M. van Bracht, L. Segreti, T. Gaspar, A. Neves, M. Estensen, S. Carerj, H. Nesser, K. Yoshida, E. Prappa, S. Connolly, A. Djordjevic-Dikic, A. Calin, P. Carrilho-Ferreira, V. Di Bello, C. Beladan, S. Im, Sebastian Spethmann, S. Hakky, U. Trecroci, S. Tamai, L. Wrotniak, J. Necas, H. Marques, A. Neskovic, K. Skjetne, M. Galderisi, V. Ruddox, C. Adam, J. Leshko, H. Le Marec, A. Mateescu, L. Tunyan, F. Baeza, R. De Lucia, S. Aakhus, W. Serra, D. Simion, I. Stankovic, L. G. Garcia-Moreno, S. Sahin, P. Seferovic, M. Casartelli, E. Nobili, J. Marques, V. Davutoglu, O. Goktekin, C. Ginghina, D. Gemma, C. Yodwut, T. Sakakura, M. Nedeljkovic, S. Viani, H. Von Bibra, N. Protonotarios, R. Onut, H. Dalen, E. Romo, S. Woo, M. Franzosi, D. Zamfir, P. Ierano, J. S. De Lezo, E. Yeager, H.-J. Trappe, F. Pereira Machado, S. Grego, C. Gronlund, J. O'driscoll, C. Tsilafakis, L. Carpinteiro, L. Sironi, B. Diaz Molina, V. Probst, P. Sousa, N. Hammoudi, S. Kovalova, L. Paperini, M. Lunati, H. Seo, G. Ferrari, J. Roquette, F. Toledano, R. Jurkevicius, G. Nicolosi, D. Mohty, V. Giga, R. Sachner, T. Butz, F. Pousset, O. Sonmez, N. Reckefuss, O. Vriz, G. Dobson, J. Zdzienicka, V. Labate, F. Pinto, C. Jorge, F. Purcarea, T. Wutthachusin, R. Strasser, I. Kostavassili, M. Szulik, D. Danford, J. Vignalou, D. Popovic, M. Ruiz Ortiz, B. Popescu, O. Guseva, J. Rios Blanco, S. Purkayastha, D. Zaliaduonyte-Peksiene, J. Lopez Sendon, A. Magalhaes, G. Plehn, A. Tanrikulu, D. Mesa, G. Di Bella, D. Muraru, M. Salvetti, A. Arandjelovic, and M. Costantino
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Alternative medicine ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Session (computer science) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
10. Poster Session: Right ventricular systolic function
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M. Altman, C. Bergerot, H. Thibault, A. Aussoleil, E. Skuldadt Davidsen, M. Barthelet, G. A. Derumeaux, J. Grapsa, I. Zimbarra Cabrita, J. Afilalo, S. Paschou, D. Dawson, G. Durighel, D. O'regan, L. Howard, J. Gibbs, P. Nihoyannopoulos, M. Morenate Navio, M. Mesa Rubio, M. D. Ortega, M. Ruiz Ortiz, F. Castillo Bernal, C. L. Del Pino, F. Toledano, M. P. Alvarez-Ossorio, S. Ojeda Pineda, J. S. D. Lezo Cruz-Conde, R. Jasaityte, P. Claus, A. Teske, L. Herbots, B. Verheyden, F. Rademakers, J. D'hooge, C. G. Tocchetti, C. Coppola, D. Rea, C. Quintavalle, L. Guarino, N. Castaldo, C. De Lorenzo, G. Condorelli, C. Arra, N. Maurea, D. Voilliot, O. Huttin, Y. Camara, W. Djaballah, S. Carillo, P. Zinzius, J. Sellal, M. Angioi, Y. Juilliere, C. Selton-Suty, P. Dobrowolski, A. Klisiewicz, E. Florczak, A. Prejbisz, E. Szwench, J. Rybicka, A. Januszewicz, P. Hoffman, A. Jurado Roman, S. De Dios Perez, J. M. M. De Nicolas, B. Diaz Anton, B. Rubio Alonso, R. Martin Asenjo, S. Mayordomo Gomez, L. Villagraz Tecedor, L. Blazquez, R. T. De Meneses, A. Bernard, A. I. Hernandez, A. Reynaud, C. Lerclercq, J. Daubert, E. Donal, R. Arjan Singh, S. Sivarani, S. Lim, W. Azman, M. Almeida, N. Cardim, V. Fonseca, V. Carmelo, S. Santos, T. Santos, J. Toste, W. Kosmala, A. Orda, B. Karolko, A. Mysiak, M. Przewlocka-Kosmala, K. Farsalinos, D. Tsiapras, S. Kyrzopoulos, E. Avramidou, D. Vassilopoulou, V. Voudris, H. Hayrapetyan, K. Adamyan, J. Montero Cabezas, C. Granda Nistal, B. Garcia Aranda, V. Sanchez Sanchez, A. Sestito, P. Lamendola, A. Di Franco, C. Lauria, G. Lanza, M. Kukucka, A. Unbehaun, S. Buz, A. Mladenow, H. Kuppe, M. Pasic, H. Habazettl, D. Gemma, N. Montoro Lopez, M. G. R. De Celix, T. Lopez Fernandez, F. De Torres Alba, D. I. Del Valle, U. Ramirez, J. Mesa, M. Moreno Yanguela, J. Lopez Sendon, G. W. Eveborn, H. Schirmer, P. Lunde, G. Heggelund, K. Rasmussen, Z. Wang, B. Lasota, K. Mizia-Stec, M. Mizia, A. Chmiel, T. Adamczyk, J. Chudek, Z. Gasior, A. Venkatesh, J. Johnson, A. Sahlen, L. Brodin, R. Winter, K. Shahgaldi, A. Manouras, S. Valbuena, A. Iniesta, T. Lopez, F. De Torres, P. Salinas, S. Garcia, M. Moreno, J. Lopez-Sendon, I. Lebid, T. Kobets, T. Kuzmenko, S. Katsanos, K. Yiu, M. Clavel, N. Nina Ajmone, F. Van Der Kley, J. Rodes Cabau, M. Schalij, J. Bax, P. Pibarot, V. Delgado, L. Fusini, G. Tamborini, M. Muratori, P. Gripari, N. Marsan, C. Cefalu', S. Ewe, F. Maffessanti, M. Pepi, N. Hasselberg, K. Haugaa, H. Petri, K. Berge, T. Leren, H. Bundgaard, T. Edvardsen, R. Ancona, S. Comenale Pinto, P. Caso, M. Coppola, O. Rapisarda, C. Cavallaro, F. Vecchione, A. D'onofrio, R. Calabro', R. Rimbas, S. Mihaila, O. Enescu, N. Patrascu, R. Dragoi, M. Rimbas, C. Pop, D. Vinereanu, S. Gustafsson, S. Morner, C. Gronlund, O. Suhr, P. Lindqvist, G. Di Bella, C. Zito, F. Minutoli, A. Madaffari, M. Cusma Piccione, A. Mazzeo, R. Massimo, M. Pasquale, G. Vita, S. Carerj, I. Rangel, A. Goncalves, C. Sousa, A. Correia, E. Martins, J. Silva-Cardoso, F. Macedo, M. Maciel, B. Pfeiffer, A. Rigopoulos, H. Seggewiss, M. Alvarez Fuente, T. Sainz Costa, C. Medrano, M. Navarro, D. Blazquez Gamero, J. Ramos, M. Mellado, M. De Jose, M. Munoz, E. Maroto, L. Gargani, P. Gosciniak, L. Pratali, G. Agoston, C. Bruni, S. Guiducci, M. Matucci Cerinic, A. Varga, R. Sicari, E. Picano, C. Zhao, M. Mei, C. Yeung, C. Siu, H. Tse, M. Florescu, L. Magda, R. Mincu, I. Daha, C. M. Stanescu, L. Chirila, C. Baicus, A. Vlase, G. Dan, M. Montoro Lopez, R. Florez Gomez, A. Alonso Ladreda, C. Itziar Soto, J. Rios Blanco, G. Guzman Martinez, B. Lichodziejewska, K. Kurnicka, S. Goliszek, M. Kostrubiec, O. Dzikowska-Diduch, M. Ciurzynski, A. Labyk, M. Krupa, P. Palczewski, P. Pruszczyk, C. C. De Sousa, A. Vigario, T. Pinho, J. Silva Cardoso, S.-J. Park, J.-E. Song, Y.-J. Lee, M.-R. Ha, S.-A. Chang, J.-O. Choi, S.-C. Lee, S. Park, J. Oh, A. Van De Bruaene, P. De Meester, R. Buys, L. Vanhees, M. Delcroix, J. Voigt, W. Budts, A. Blundo, S. Buccheri, I. P. Monte, S. Leggio, C. Tamburino, M. Sotaquira, R. Lang, E. Caiani, M. Floria, L. De Roy, O. Xhaet, D. Blommaert, J. Jamart, M. Gerard, O. Deceuninck, B. Marchandise, S. Seldrum, E. Schroeder, B. Unsworth, S. Sohaib, K. Kulwant-Kaur, L. Malcolme-Lawes, P. Kanagaratnam, I. Malik, B. Ren, H. Mulder, A. Haak, M. Van Stralen, T. Szili-Torok, J. Pluim, M. Geleijnse, J. Bosch, R. Baglini, A. Amaducci, G. D'ancona, S. Van Den Oord, Z. Akkus, G. Ten Kate, G. Renaud, E. Sijbrands, N. De Jong, A. Van Der Lugt, A. Van Der Steen, A. Schinkel, A. Bjallmark, M. Larsson, D. Grishenkov, L.-A. Brodin, T. Brismar, G. Paradossi, K. A. Sveen, T. Nerdrum, K. Hanssen, K. Dahl-Jorgensen, K. Steine, S. Cimino, G. Pedrizzetti, G. Tonti, E. Canali, V. Petronilli, F. Cicogna, L. Arcari, L. De Luca, C. Iacoboni, L. Agati, S. S. Abdel Moneim, S. Eifert Rain, M. Bernier, G. Bhat, M. Hagen, D. Bott-Kitslaar, R. Castello, S. Wilansky, P. Pellikka, S. Mulvagh, I. Delithanasis, J. Celutkiene, C. Kenny, M. Monaghan, W. Park, G. Hong, J. Son, S. Lee, U. Kim, J. Park, D. Shin, Y. Kim, K. Toutouzas, M. Drakopoulou, C. Aggeli, I. Felekos, C. Nikolaou, A. Synetos, K. Stathogiannis, E. Tsiamis, E. Siores, C. Stefanadis, B. Plicht, P. Kahlert, T. Grave, T. Buck, T. Konorza, M. Gursoy, T. Gokdeniz, M. Astarcioglu, Z. Bayram, B. Cakal, S. Karakoyun, M. Kalcik, R. Acar, G. Kahveci, M. Ozkan, W. Tsang, L. Weinert, S. Yurdakul, B. Avci, S. Sahin, B. Dilekci, S. Aytekin, F. Arenga, S. Hascoet, R. Martin, Y. Dulac, M. Peyre, C. Benzouid, K. Hadeed, P. Acar, D. Zakarkaite, V. Skorniakov, V. Zvironaite, V. Grabauskiene, J. Burca, L. Ciparyte, A. Laucevicius, G. Di Salvo, A. Rea, A. D'aiello, F. Del Gaizo, V. Pergola, A. D'andrea, G. Pacileo, R. Calabro, M. Russo, C. Dedobbeleer, A. Hadefi, R. Naeije, P. Unger, C. Mornos, D. Cozma, A. Ionac, A. Mornos, M. Valcovici, S. Pescariu, L. Petrescu, K. Hu, D. Liu, M. Niemann, S. Herrmann, M. Cikes, S. Stoerk, S. Knop, G. Ertl, B. Bijnens, F. Weidemann, M. De Knegt, T. Biering-Sorensen, P. Sogaard, J. Sivertsen, J. Jensen, R. Mogelvang, W. Lam, M. Tang, K. Chan, Y. Yang, F. Fang, J. Sun, C. Yu, Y. Lam, V. Panoulas, S. Sulemane, A. Bratsas, K. Konstantinou, M. Francone, T. Schau, M. Seifert, D. Ridjab, M. Schoep, M. Gottwald, M. Neuss, J. Meyhoefer, M. Zaenker, C. Butter, A. Tarr, S. Stoebe, D. Pfeiffer, A. Hagendorff, E. Maret, B.-M. Ahlander, P.-G. Bjorklund, J. Engvall, G. Staskiewicz, E. Czekajska-Chehab, P. Adamczyk, E. Siek, P. Przybylski, R. Maciejewski, A. Drop, C. Jimenez Rubio, G. Isasti Aizpurua, J. Miralles Ibarra, M. Al-Mallah, T. Somg, S. Alam, J. Chattahi, B. Zweig, K. Dhanalakota, S. Boedeker, K. Ananthasubramaniam, C. Park, K. March, S. Jones, J. Mayet, T. Tillin, N. Chaturvedi, A. Hughes, E. Hamodraka, E. Kallistratos, A. Karamanou, T. Tsoukas, D. Mavropoulos, N. Kouremenos, I. Zaharopoulou, N. Nikolaidis, D. Kremastinos, A. Manolis, M. Loboz-Rudnicka, J. Jaroch, Z. Bociaga, E. Kruszynska, B. Ciecierzynska, M. Dziuba, K. Dudek, I. Uchmanowicz, K. Loboz-Grudzien, D. Silva, A. Magalhaes, C. Jorge, N. Cortez-Dias, P. Carrilho-Ferreira, J. Silva Marques, I. Portela, C. Pascoa, A. Nunes Diogo, D. Brito, B. Roosens, G. Bala, S. Droogmans, J. Hostens, J. Somja, E. Delvenne, J. Schiettecatte, T. Lahoutte, G. Van Camp, and B. Cosyns
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Session (computer science) ,Systolic function ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2012
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11. Poster session V * Saturday 11 December 2010, 08:30-12:30
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Q. H. Pham, T. G. Von Lueder, S. K. Namtvedt, H. Rosjo, T. Omland, K. Steine, A. T. Timoteo, M. Mota Carmo, M. Simoes, L. M. Branco, R. C. Ferreira, R. Kato, J. Ito, T. Tahara, Y. Yokoyama, T. Ashikaga, Y. Satoh, J. O. Na, H. E. Hong, M. N. Kim, S. Y. Shin, C. U. Choi, E. J. Kim, S. W. Rha, C. G. Park, H. S. Seo, D. J. Oh, R. Ticulescu, S. Brigido, O. Vriz, L. Sparacino, B. A. Popescu, C. Ginghina, S. Carerj, G. L. Nicolosi, F. Antonini-Canterin, J. J. Onaindia Gandarias, A. Romero, E. Laraudogoitia, S. Velasco, O. Quintana, A. Cacicedo, I. Rodriguez, J. A. Alarcon, J. Gonzalez, I. Lekuona, A. Subinas, G. Abdula, L. H. Lund, R. Winter, L. Brodin, A. Sahlen, M. Masaki, Y. M. Cha, T. Yuasa, K. Dong, Y. X. Dong, S. V. Mankad, J. K. Oh, F. Vallet, B. Lequeux, C. Diakov, P. Sosner, L. Christiaens, D. Coisne, C. Kihara, K. Murata, Y. Wada, K. Uchida, T. Ueyama, S. Okuda, T. Susa, M. Matsuzaki, E. J. Cho, K. Y. Choi, B. J. Kwon, D. B. Kim, S. W. Jang, J. S. Cho, H. O. Jung, H. K. Jeon, H. J. Youn, J. H. Kim, M. Cikes, B. Bijnens, V. Velagic, T. Kopjar, D. Milicic, B. Biocina, H. Gasparovic, I. Almuntaser, A. Brown, B. Foley, N. Mulvihill, P. Crean, G. King, R. Murphy, Y. Takata, M. Taniguchi, S. Nobusada, M. Sugawara, N. Toh, K. Kusano, H. Itoh, E. Wellnhofer, C. Kriatselis, S. Nedios, J. H. Gerds-Li, E. Fleck, M. K. Poulsen, J. E. Henriksen, J. Dahl, A. Johansen, T. Haghfelt, P. F. Hoilund-Carlsen, H. Beck-Nielsen, J. E. Moller, R. Dankowski, M. Wierzchowiecki, M. Michalski, A. Nowicka, K. Szymanowska, A. Pajak, K. Poprawski, A. Szyszka, M. Kasner, D. Westermann, H. P. Schultheiss, C. Tschoepe, T. Watanabe, M. Iwai-Takano, A. Kobayashi, H. Machii, Y. Takeishi, B. P. Paelinck, P. L. Van Herck, J. M. Bosmans, C. J. Vrints, H. J. Lamb, A. Doltra, B. Vidal, E. Silva, S. Poyatos, L. Mont, A. Berruezo, A. Castel, J. M. Tolosana, J. Brugada, M. Sitges, M. Dencker, O. Bjorgell, J. Hlebowicz, Z. S. Szelenyi, G. Szenasi, M. Kiss, Z. Prohaszka, A. Patocs, I. Karadi, A. Vereckei, S. K. Saha, P. L. Anderson, S. Govind, M. Govindan, J. C. Moggridge, A. Kiotsekoglou, A. S. Gopal, B. B. Loegstrup, T. B. Christophersen, D. E. Hoefsten, J. E. Moeller, H. E. Boetker, K. Egstrup, M. Graefe, F. Q. Huang, R. S. Zhang, T. T. Le, R. S. Tan, R. Sattarzadeh Badkoubeh, A. Tavoosi, A. R. Elahian, O. Drapkina, V. I. Ivashkin, A. Fazakas, L. Pepo, O. Janosi, I. Kopitovic, A. Goncalves, P. Marcos-Alberca, C. Almeria, G. Feltes, E. Rodriguez, E. Garcia, R. Hernandez-Antolin, C. Macaya, J. Silva Cardoso, J. L. Zamorano, M. S. Navarro, M. Valentin, C. M. Banes, F. Rigo, E. Grolla, F. Tona, V. Cuaia, A. Moreo, L. Badano, A. Raviele, S. Iliceto, P. Tarzia, A. Sestito, R. Nerla, A. Di Monaco, F. Infusino, D. Matera, F. Greco, R. M. Tacchino, G. A. Lanza, F. Crea, A. Nemes, E. Balazs, K. S. Pinter, A. Egyed, M. Csanady, T. Forster, E. Holte, J. Vegsundvag, T. Hole, K. Hegbom, R. Wiseth, D. Sharif, A. Sharif-Rasslan, C. Shahla, A. Khalil, U. Rosenschein, A. Zagatina, N. Zhuravskaya, T. V. Tyurina, E. Tagliamonte, T. Cirillo, A. Coppola, U. Marinelli, C. Romano, G. Riccio, R. Citro, C. Astarita, N. Capuano, G. Quaranta, A. Desiderio, S. Frattini, P. Faggiano, V. Zilioli, E. Locantore, S. Longhi, F. Bellandi, G. Faden, M. Triggiani, L. Dei Cas, M. Dalsgaard, J. Kjaergaard, K. Iversen, C. Hassager, W. Dinh, W. N. Nickl, J. S. Smettan, T. K. Koehler, T. D. Scheffold, M. C. B. Coll Barroso, J. G. Guelker, R. F. Fueth, V. Kamperidis, S. Hadjimiltiades, G. Sianos, G. Efthimiadis, H. Karvounis, G. Parcharidis, I. H. Styliadis, M. S. Velasco Del Castillo, J. J. Onaindia, M. Telleria, H. G. Carstensen, C. Nordenberg, P. Sogaard, T. Fritz-Hansen, J. Bech, S. Galatius, J. S. Jensen, R. Mogelvang, P. E. Bartko, S. Graf, R. Rosenhek, I. G. Burwash, J. Bergler-Klein, M.-A. Clavel, H. Baumgartner, P. Pibarot, G. Mundigler, B. Kirilmaz, I. Eser, N. Tuzun, B. Komur, H. Dogan, A. Taskiran Comez, E. Ercan, M. Cusma-Piccione, C. Zito, G. Oreto, S. Piluso, S. Tripepi, L. Oreto, C. Longordo, L. Ciraci, G. Di Bella, R. Piatkowski, J. Kochanowski, P. Scislo, M. Grabowski, M. Marchel, M. Roik, D. Kosior, G. Opolski, L. Sknouril, M. Dorda, B. Holek, L. Gajdusek, J. Chovancik, M. Branny, M. Fiala, P. Szymanski, M. Lipczynska, A. Klisiewicz, P. Hoffman, N. Jander, J. Minners, G. Martin, W. Zeh, M. Allgeier, C. Gohlke-Baewolf, H. Gohlke, S. Nistri, M. C. Porciani, M. Attanasio, R. Abbate, G. F. Gensini, G. Pepe, R. F. Duncan, C. Piantadosi, A. J. Nelson, G. Wittert, B. Dundon, M. I. Worthley, S. G. Worthley, P. Jung, K. Berlinger, J. Rieber, H. Z. Sohn, P. Schneider, M. Leibig, A. Koenig, V. Klauss, L. Tomkiewicz-Pajak, J. Kolcz, M. Olszowska, M. Pieculewicz, P. Podolec, T. Przewlocki, E. Suchon, B. Sobien, P. Wilkolek, A. Ziembicka, M. Hlawaty, A. Van De Bruaene, H. Hermans, R. Buys, L. Vanhees, M. Delcroix, J.-U. Voigt, W. Budts, E. De Cillis, T. Acquaviva, D. Basile, A. S. Bortone, D. Kalimanovska-Ostric, T. Nastasovic, B. Vujisic-Tesic, I. Jovanovic, B. Milakovic, M. Dostanic, M. Stosic, A. Frogoudaki, K. Andreou, J. Parisis, E. Triantafyllidi, S. Gaitani, J. Paraskevaidis, M. Anastasiou-Nana, G. De Pasquale, A. Kuehn, K. Petzuch, J. Mueller, C. Meierhofer, S. Fratz, A. Hager, J. Hess, M. Vogt, C. H. Attenhofer Jost, J. A. Dearani, C. G. Scott, H. M. Burkhart, H. M. Connolly, A. Vitarelli, D. Battaglia, F. Caranci, V. Padella, G. Continanza, O. Dettori, L. Capotosto, M. Vitarelli, V. De Cicco, M. Cortez Morichetti, K. K. Mohanan Nair, B. Sasidaharan, A. Thajudeen, J. M. Tharakan, L. Mertens, N. Ahmad, P. K. Kantor, L. Grosse-Wortmann, M. K. Friedberg, Y. F. Bernard, M. A. Morel, V. Descotes-Genon, J. Jehl, N. Meneveau, F. Schiele, M. Kaldararova, I. Simkova, P. Tittel, J. Masura, O. Trojnarska, L. Szczepaniak, K. Mizia -Stec, A. Cieplucha, A. Bartczak, S. Grajek, A. Tykarski, Z. Gasior, D. Babovicvuksanovic, C. R. Bonnichsen, G. J. Morgan, C. Slorach, W. Hui, T. Sarkola, K. J. Lee, R. Chaturvedi, L. Benson, T. Bradley, M. E. Iancu, I. Ghiorghiu, M. Serban, I. Craciunescu, A. Hodo, J. Morgan, L. Roche, K. Lee, O. Milanesi, V. Favero, M. Padalino, R. Biffanti, A. Cerutti, N. Maschietto, E. Reffo, V. Vida, G. Stellin, O. Irtyuga, D. Gamazin, I. Voronkina, N. Tsoyi, E. Gudkova, O. Moiseeva, C. Aggeli, C. Kazazaki, I. Felekos, S. Lagoudakou, G. Roussakis, J. Skoumas, C. Pitsavos, C. Stefanadis, C. Cueff, N. Keenan, P. G. Steg, C. Cimadevilla, G. Ducrocq, A. Vahanian, D. Messika-Zeitoun, L. Petrella, A. M. Mazzola, C. V. Villani, R. G. Giancola, M. C. Ciocca, D. E. M. Di Eusanio, S. Nolan, A. Ionescu, T. R. Skaug, B. H. Amundsen, T. Hergum, H. Torp, B. O. Haugen, J. Lopez Aguilera, D. Mesa Rubio, M. Ruiz Ortiz, M. Delgado Ortega, E. Villanueva Fernandez, L. Cejudo Diaz Del Campo, F. Toledano Delgado, M. Leon Del Pino, E. Romo Pena, J. Suarez De Lezo Cruz-Conde, E. De Marco, A. Colucci, G. Comerci, F. A. Gabrielli, R. Natali, B. Garramone, M. Savino, M. Lotrionte, A. Sonaglioni, F. Loperfido, M. Zdravkovic, J. Perunicic, M. Krotin, M. Ristic, V. Vukomanovic, M. Zaja, S. Radovanovic, J. Saric, D. Zdravkovic, C. Cotrim, A. R. Almeida, R. Miranda, A. G. Almeida, E. Picano, M. Carrageta, A. D'andrea, R. Cocchia, L. Riegler, E. Golia, R. Scarafile, P. Caso, M. G. Russo, E. Bossone, R. Calabro', H. Noman, A. Adel, A. M. R. Elfaramawy, M. Abdelraouf, W. A. E. L. Elnaggar, E. Baligh, L. Sargento, D. Silva, S. Goncalves, S. Ribeiro, G. Vinhas Sousa, A. Almeida, M. Lopes, M. Rodriguez-Manero, L. Aguado Gil, P. Azcarate, P. Lloret Luna, A. Macias Gallego, S. A. R. A. Castano, M. Garcia, C. Pujol Salvador, J. Barba, P. Redondo, L. Tomasoni, S. Sitia, F. Atzeni, L. Gianturco, C. Ricci, P. Sarzi-Puttini, M. Turiel, V. De Gennaro Colonna, T. Uejima, J. Jaroch, C. Polombo, A. Hughes, D. Vinereanu, A. Evanvelista, G. Leftheriotis, A. G. Fraser, A. Lewczuk, B. Sobkowicz, A. Tomaszuk-Kazberuk, R. Sawicki, T. Hirnle, B. W. Michalski, D. Filipiak, J. D. Kasprzak, P. Lipiec, H. Dalen, O. C. Mjolstad, B. E. Klykken, T. Graven, M. Martensson, M. Olsson, L.-A. Brodin, R. Enache, E. Leiballi, A. Penhall, R. Perry, M. Altman, A. Sinhal, J. Bennetts, D. P. Chew, M. X. Joseph, L. H. Larsen, T. Kristensen, L. V. Kober, K. F. Kofoed, F. Moscoso Costa, R. Ribeiras, J. Brito, S. Boshoff, J. Neves, R. Teles, M. Canada, M. J. Andrade, R. Gouveia, A. Silva, A. Miskovic, T. P. Poerner, C. S. Stiller, B. G. Goebel, A. M. Moritz, L. Stefani, G. G. Galanti, M. Moraldo, C. Bergamini, P. A. Pabari, N. M. Dhutia, A. S. N. Malaweera, K. Willson, J. Davies, A. D. Hughes, X. Y. Xu, D. P. Francis, R. Jasaityte, B. Amundsen, D. Barbosa, D. Loeckx, G. Kiss, F. Orderud, V. Robesyn, P. Claus, J. D'hooge, T. Nao, T. Miura, K. Shams, S. Samir, R. Samir, M. El-Sayed, A. M. Anwar, Y. Nosir, A. Galal, H. Chamsi-Pasha, A. Ciobanu, R. Dulgheru, S. Bennett, A. De Luca, L. Toncelli, F. Cappelli, B. Cappelli, M. C. R. Vono, G. Galanti, Y. Zorman, M. S. Yilmazer, M. Akyildiz, T. Gurol, A. Aydin, B. Dagdeviren, and A. Kalangos
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Session (computer science) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2010
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12. Poster session IV * Friday 10 December 2010, 14:00-18:00
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B. Mora, E. Base, W. Schmid, M. Andreas, U. Weber, M. Junreitmaier, F. Foerster, M. Hiesmayr, H. D. Tschernich, D. Guldbrand, O. Goetzsche, B. Eika, S. Fumagalli, S. Francini, D. Gabbai, S. Pedri, M. Casalone Rinaldi, Y. Makhanian, R. Sollami, F. Tarantini, N. Marchionni, P. M. Azcarate, S. Castano, M. Rodriguez-Manero, M. Arraiza, B. Levy, J. Barba, G. Rabago, G. Bastarrika, H. Rus, M. Radoi, C. Ciurea, D. Boda, T. Erdei, M. Denes, A. Mihalcz, A. Kardos, C. S. Foldesi, A. Temesvari, M. Lengyel, M. Cameli, M. Lisi, F. Righini, P. Ballo, M. Henein, S. Mondillo, S. Nistri, M. Galderisi, P. C. Ballo, L. Pagliani, I. Olivotto, A. Santoro, B. Papesso, P. Innelli, F. Cecchi, K. Hristova, T. Z. Katova, V. Kostova, Y. Simova, N. Nesheva, B. Ivanovic, M. T. Tadic, D. S. Simic, C. M. Rao, D. Aguglia, G. Casciola, C. Imbesi, A. Marvelli, M. Sgro, D. Benedetto, G. Tripepi, C. Zoccali, F. A. Benedetto, L. Mantziari, V. Kamperidis, E. Damvopoulou, I. Ventoulis, G. Giannakoulas, S. Paraskevaidis, V. Vassilikos, H. Karvounis, I. H. Styliadis, T. K. Sonder, B. B. Loegstrup, J. Lambrechtsen, L. M. Van Bortel, P. Segers, K. Egstrup, A. Tho, P. Moceri, D. Bertora, P. Gibelin, E. J. Cho, K. Y. Choi, B. J. Kim, D. B. Kim, S. W. Jang, C. S. Park, H. O. Jung, H. K. Jeon, H. J. Youn, J. H. Kim, E. Donal, N. Coquerel, S. Bodi, C. Thebault, G. Kervio, F. Carre, M. J. Daly, S. L. Fairley, R. Doherty, K. Ashfield, R. Kirkpatrick, B. Smith, J. Buchanan, L. Hill, L. J. Dixon, M. Rosca, K. O' Connor, J. Magne, G. Romano, A. Calin, B. A. Popescu, C. C. Beladan, L. Pierard, C. Ginghina, P. Lancellotti, T. Bochenek, K. Wita, Z. Tabor, M. Grabka, M. Elzbieciak, M. Trusz-Gluza, O. Moreau, C. Leclercq, A. Sahlen, K. Shahgaldi, A. Aminoff, P. Aagaard, A. Manouras, R. Winter, E. Ehrenborg, F. Braunschweig, G. Bedetti, L. Gargani, C. Pizzi, R. Sicari, E. Picano, J. Zhang, H. B. Zhang, Y. Y. Duan, L. L. Chen, J. Li, L. W. Liu, T. Zhu, H. L. Li, H. L. Su, X. D. Zhou, M. Ruiz Ortiz, D. Mesa Rubio, M. Delgado Ortega, E. Romo Penas, F. Toledano Degado, C. Leon Del Pino, J. Lopez Aguilera, E. Villanueva Fernandez, L. Cejudo Diaz Del Campo, J. Suarez De Lezo, E. Abergel, M. Simon, P. Dehant, E. Bogino, M. Jimenez, J. C. Verdier, C. Chauvel, A. E. Albertsen, J. C. Nielsen, P. T. Mortensen, H. Egeblad, G. M. Nasr, S. Tawfik, A. Omar, M. Olofsson, K. Boman, N. Rezzoug, B. Vaes, J. Degryse, J.-L. Vanoverschelde, A. A. Pasquet, D. Poggio, M. Bonadies, V. Pacher, S. Mazzetti, M. Grillo, E. D'elia, T. Khouri, G. Specchia, C. Mornos, D. Rusinaru, D. Cozma, A. Ionac, L. Petrescu, R. Rotzak, Y. Rosenman, R. D. Patterson, S. Ratnatheepan, R. G. Bogle, B. Goebel, O. Gjesdal, D. Kottke, S. Otto, C. Jung, T. Edvardsen, H. R. Figulla, T. C. Poerner, T. Otsuka, M. Suzuki, H. Yoshikawa, G. Hashimoto, N. Itou, T. Ono, M. Yamamoto, T. Osaki, T. Tsuchida, K. Sugi, T. Wolber, L. Haegeli, D. Huerlimann, C. Brunckhorst, F. Duru, Z. M. Wu, X. H. Shu, L. L. Dong, B. Fan, J. B. Ge, M. Greutmann, D. Tobler, P. Biaggi, M. Mah, A. Crean, E. N. Oechslin, C. K. Silversides, S. Giusca, R. Jurcut, I. Ghiorghiu, I. M. Coman, M. Amzulescu, R. Ionescu, M. Delcroix, J. U. Voigt, R. Piatkowski, J. Kochanowski, P. Scislo, M. Grabowski, M. Marchel, M. Roik, D. Kosior, G. Opolski, A. M. Maceira Gonzalez, J. Cosin-Sales, E. Dalli, B. Igual, J. V. Monmeneu, P. Lopez-Lereu, J. Estornell, J. Ruvira, J. Sotillo, A. Stevanovic, A. Toncev, S. Dimkovic, M. Dekleva, N. Paunovic, D. Toncev, N. Sekularac, O. Yildirimturk, F. F. Helvacioglu, Y. Tayyareci, S. Yurdakul, I. C. C. Demiroglu, S. Aytekin, M. Pinedo Gago, I. Amat Santos, A. Revilla Orodea, J. Lopez Diaz, R. Arnold, L. De La Fuente Galan, A. Recio Platero, I. Gomez Salvador, A. Puerto Sanz, J. A. San Roman Calvar, R. Yotti, J. Bermejo, T. Mombiela, Y. Benito, P. L. Sanchez, J. Solis, R. Prieto, F. Fernandez-Aviles, R. Zilberszac, H. Gabriel, S. Graf, G. Mundigler, G. Maurer, R. Rosenhek, C. Zito, J. Salvia, C. Longordo, D. Donato, E. Alati, M. Miceli, A. Pardeo, S. Arcidiaco, G. Oreto, S. Carerj, S. Hadjimiltiades, G. Sianos, K. Anastasiadis, V. Grosomanidis, G. Efthimiadis, G. Parcharidis, M. Yousry, A. Rickenlund, J. Petrini, T. Gustafsson, J. Liska, A. Hamsten, P. Eriksson, A. Franco-Cereceda, M. J. Eriksson, K. Caidahl, K. Mizia-Stec, P. Pysz, M. Jasinski, A. Drzewiecka-Gerber, M. Krejca, A. Bochenek, S. Wos, Z. Gasior, M. Tendera, K. Niki, M. Sugawara, I. Takamisawa, H. Watanabe, T. Sumiyoshi, S. Hosoda, T. Ida, S. Takanashi, N. T. Olsen, P. Sogaard, C. Jons, R. Mogelvang, H. B. W. Larsson, J. P. Goetze, O. W. Nielsen, T. Fritz-Hansen, N. Sayar, A. L. Orhan, H. B. Erer, M. Eren, H. Atmaca, H. Y. Yilmaz, N. Cakmak, S. Altay, S. Terzi, K. Yesilcimen, R. Garcia Orta, E. Moreno, M. Lopez, I. Uribe, M. Vidal, M. F. Ruiz-Lopez, M. Gonzalez-Molina, J. M. Oyonarte, S. Lopez, J. Azpitarte, C. Szymanski, R. A. Levine, H. Zheng, M. D. Handschumacher, A. Tawakol, J. Hung, F. Le Ven, Y. Etienne, Y. Jobic, I. Frachon, P. Castellant, M. Fatemi, J. J. Blanc, C. Tribouilloy, F. Grigioni, J.-F. Avierinos, A. Barbieri, O. Buiciuc, M. Enriquez-Sarano, K. Said, A. K. Farag, M. El-Ramly, H. Rizk, A. Iorio, B. Pinamonti, M. Bobbo, M. Merlo, L. Massa, G. Faganello, A. Di Lenarda, G. Sinagra, R. Margato, H. Ribeiro, C. Ferreira, A. Matias, P. Fontes, J. I. Moreira, A. Milan, E. Puglisi, C. Magnino, A. Fabbri, D. Leone, A. Vairo, V. Crudo, A. Iannaccone, V. Milazzo, F. Veglio, N. Maroz-Vadalazhskaya, I. Ostrovskiy, E. Imbalzano, A. Saitta, M. Cusma-Piccione, G. Di Bella, R. Nava, M. Ferro, G. Falanga, A. Frigy, J. Buzogany, C. S. Szabados, L. Dan, E. Carasca, I. Ikonomidis, J. Lekakis, S. Tzortzis, D. T. Kremastinos, C. Papadopoulos, I. Paraskevaidis, H. Triantafyllidi, P. Trivilou, K. Venetsanou, M. Anastasiou-Nana, K. Wierzbowska-Drabik, M. Kurpesa, E. Trzos, T. Rechcinski, M. Mozdzan, J. D. Kasprzak, W. Kosmala, T. Kotwica, M. Przewlocka-Kosmala, A. Mysiak, D. Skultetyova, S. Filipova, P. Chnupa, G. Pechlivanidis, H. Dimitroula, W.-C. Tsai, Y.-W. Liu, C.-C. Lin, Y.-Y. Huang, L.-M. Tsai, S. M. Park, Y. H. Kim, S. M. Shin, W. J. Shim, A. Gonzalez Mansilla, J. Torres Macho, V. Sanchez Sanchez, P. Diez, J. Delgado, S. Borruel, C. Saenz De La Calzada, S. Pyxaras, M. Valentincic, G. Barbati, F. Lo Giudice, A. Perkan, S. Magnani, T. Palecek, D. Ambroz, P. Jansa, J. Lindner, M. Vitovec, P. Polacek, K. Jiratova, A. Linhart, M. Baskurt, G. M. Dogan, O. Abaci, A. Kaya, S. Kucukoglu, A. Duszanska, T. Kukulski, I. Skoczylas, A. Majsnerowska, A. Nowowiejska-Wiewiora, W. Streb, M. Szulik, L. Polonski, Z. Kalarus, P. O. Yerly, M. Prella, A. Joly, L. Nicod, J. D. Aubert, N. Aebischer, H. Dores, S. Leal, I. Rosario, M. J. Correia, J. Monge, A. M. Grilo, I. Arroja, C. Fonseca, A. Aleixo, A. Silva, E. Perez-David, M. Sanchez-Alegre, I. Gomez Anta, J. De La Torre, J. Alarcon, J. A. Garcia Robles, J. Lafuente, C. J. Garcia Alonso, N. Vallejo Camazon, A. Gonzalez Guardia, R. Nunez, C. Bosch Carabante, L. Mateu, F. Gual Capllonch, E. Ferrer Sistach, J. Lopez Ayerbe, A. Bayes Genis, A. Tomaszewski, A. Kutarski, M. Tomaszewski, D. Bramos, A. Kalantaridou, D. Takos, E. Skaltsiotis, C. Trika, N. Tsirikos, C. Pamboukas, G. Kottis, S. Toumanidis, C. Aggeli, I. Felekos, G. Roussakis, C. Kazazaki, K. Lampropoulos, S. Lagoudakou, C. Stergiou, C. Pitsavos, C. Stefanadis, C. Kihara, K. Murata, Y. Wada, T. Tanaka, K. Uchida, S. Okuda, T. Susa, M. Matsuzaki, A. Abrahamsson, P. Gudmundsson, L. Brodin, F. Knebel, S. Schattke, W. Sanad, I. Schimke, S. Schroeckh, L. Brechtel, J. Lock, R. Makauskiene, G. Baumann, A. C. Borges, H. E. Moelmen-Hansen, U. Wisloff, I. L. Aamot, A. Stoylen, C. B. Ingul, M.-E. Estensen, J. O. Beitnes, G. Grindheim, T. Henriksen, L. Aaberge, O. A. Smiseth, L. Gullestad, S. Aakhus, G. Agoston, A. Moggi Pignone, E. Capati, L. Badano, A. Moreo, S. Bombardieri, A. Varga, M. Carrideo, S. Faricelli, A. Corazzini, R. Ippedico, B. Ruggieri, A. Di Blasio, E. D'angelo, A. Di Baldassarre, P. Ripari, S. Gallina, A. Kentrschynskyj, B. Hylander, S. Jacobson, A. Pagels, S. I. Dumitrescu, I. Tintoiu, V. Greere, G. Cristian, L. Chiriac, F. Pinte, I. Droc, G. Neagoe, S. Stanciu, V. A. Voicu, A. Kuch-Wocial, P. Pruszczyk, C. A. Szmigielski, M. Szulc, G. Styczynski, M. Sinski, A. Kaczynska, A. Ryabikov, S. Malyutina, J. Halcox, M. Bobak, Y. U. Nikitin, M. Marmot, D. Barbosa, G. Kiss, F. Orderud, B. Amundsen, R. Jasaityte, D. Loeckx, P. Claus, H. Torp, J. D'hooge, J. T. Kuhl, J. Lonborg, A. Fuchs, M. Andersen, N. Vejlstrup, T. Engstrom, J. E. Moller, K. F. Kofoed, L. A. Smith, A. Bhan, M. Paul, M. J. Monaghan, B. Zaborska, S. Stec, M. Sikora-Frac, T. Krynski, P. Kulakowski, K. Pushparajah, D. Dashwood, A. Barlow, K. Nugent, O. Miller, J. Simpson, N. Valeur, M. K. Ersboll, J. Kjaergaard, R. Greibe, N. Risum, C. Hassager, L. Kober, D. Popovic, I. Nedeljkovic, M. Petrovic, B. Vujisic-Tesic, A. Arandjelovic, S. Stojiljkovic, B. Jakovljevic, S. Damjanovic, M. Ostojic, I. A. Agrios, D. B. Bramos, H. S. Skaltsiotis, D. T. Takos, A. Kaladaridis, N. V. Vasiladiotis, G. K. Kottis, A. A. Antoniou, C. P. Pamboucas, S. T. T. Toumanidis, G. Locorotondo, I. Porto, L. Paraggio, E. Fedele, S. Barchetta, A. R. De Caterina, A. G. Rebuzzi, F. Crea, L. Galiuto, P. Lipiec, E. Szymczyk, B. Michalski, B. Wozniakowski, L. Stefanczyk, A. Rotkiewicz, A. Shim, J. Vainer, J. Habets, A. Lousberg, C. Pont De, J. Waltenberger, H. Farouk, H. Heshmat, A. Adel, K. El Chilali, Y. Baghdady, K. Sorour, U. Gustafsson, M. Larsson, A. Bjallmark, P. Lindqvist, R. A'roch, M. Haney, A. Waldenstrom, Z. Mladenovic, D. Tavciovski, Z. Mijailovic, A. Djordjevic - Dikic, S. Obradovic, R. Matunovic, Z. Jovic, P. Djuric, S. Aase, H. Dalen, T. Sarkola, A. N. Redington, F. Keeley, T. Bradley, E. Jaeggi, and H. Sahlen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Myocardial ischemia ,business.industry ,Ventricle ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Rotation - Published
- 2010
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13. Poster session III * Friday 10 December 2010, 08:30-12:30
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D. Guldbrand, O. Goetzsche, B. Eika, N. Watanabe, M. Taniguchi, T. Akagi, N. Koide, S. Sano, B. Orbovic, B. Obrenovic-Kircanski, S. Ristic, L. J. Soskic, F. Alhabshan, A. Jijeh, H. Abo Remsh, A. Alkhaldi, H. K. Najm, Z. Gasior, M. Skowerski, A. Kulach, L. Szymanski, M. Sosnowski, M. Wang, C. W. Siu, K. Lee, W. S. Yue, G. H. Yan, S. Lee, C. P. Lau, H. F. Tse, K. O'connor, M. Rosca, J. Magne, G. Romano, M. Moonen, L. A. Pierard, P. Lancellotti, M. Floria, L. De Roy, D. Blommaert, J. Jamart, F. Dormal, M. Lacrosse, C. Arsenescu Georgescu, V. Mizariene, S. Bucyte, A. Bertasiute, E. Pociute, D. Zaliaduonyte-Peksiene, K. Baronaite-Dudoniene, R. Sileikiene, J. Vaskelyte, R. Jurkevicius, M. Dencker, O. Thorsson, M. K. Karlsson, C. Linden, P. Wollmer, L. B. Andersen, O. Catalano, M. R. Perotti, E. Colombo, M. De Giorgi, M. Cattaneo, F. Cobelli, S. G. Priori, C. Ober, I. A. Iancu Adrian, P. A. Andreea Parv, C. H. Cadis Horatiu, O. M. Ober Mihai, M. Chmielecki, M. Fijalkowski, R. Galaska, W. Dubaniewicz, L. Lewicki, R. Targonski, D. Ciecwierz, W. Puchalski, A. Koprowski, A. Rynkiewicz, K. Hristova, A. La Gerche, T. Z. Katova, V. Kostova, Y. Simova, A. Kempny, G. P. Diller, S. Orwat, G. Kaleschke, G. Kerckhoff, R. Schmidt, R. M. Radke, H. Baumgartner, K. Smarz, B. Zaborska, T. Jaxa-Chamiec, P. Maciejewski, A. Budaj, A. Kiotsekoglou, S. C. Govind, V. Gadiyaram, J. C. Moggridge, M. Govindan, A. S. Gopal, S. S. Ramesh, L. A. Brodin, S. K. Saha, I. S. Ramzy, P. Lindqvist, Y. Y. Lam, A. M. Duncan, M. Y. Henein, I. S. Craciunescu, M. Serban, M. Iancu, C. Revnic, B. A. Popescu, D. Alexandru, D. Rogoz, V. Uscatescu, C. Ginghina, G. Careri, A. Di Monaco, R. Nerla, P. Tarzia, P. Lamendola, A. Sestito, G. A. Lanza, F. Crea, F. Giannini, B. Pinamonti, S. Santangelo, A. Perkan, G. Vitrella, S. Rakar, M. Merlo, E. Della Grazia, A. Salvi, G. Sinagra, P. Scislo, J. Kochanowski, R. Piatkowski, M. Roik, M. Postula, G. Opolski, J. Castillo, N. Herszkowicz, C. Ferreira, M. T. Lonnebakken, E. M. Staal, J. E. Nordrehaug, E. Gerdts, M. Przewlocka-Kosmala, A. Orda, B. Karolko, G. Bajraktari, U. Gustafsson, A. Holmgren, S. Frattini, P. Faggiano, V. Zilioli, E. Locantore, S. Longhi, F. Bellandi, G. Faden, M. Triggiani, L. Dei Cas, S. M. Seo, H. O. Jung, S. H. An, S. Y. Jung, C. S. Park, H. K. Jeon, H. J. Youn, W. B. Chung, J. H. Kim, J. S. Uhm, W. Mampuya, M. C. Brochu, D. H. Do, B. Essadiqi, P. Farand, S. Lepage, M. J. Daly, M. Monaghan, A. Hamilton, C. Lockhart, V. Kodoth, C. Maguire, A. Morton, G. Manoharan, M. S. Spence, W. Streb, K. Mitrega, J. Nowak, A. Duszanska, M. Szulik, M. Kalinowski, T. Kukulski, Z. Kalarus, F. E. Calvo Iglesias, I. Solla-Ruiz, I. Villanueva-Benito, E. Paredes-Galan, M. Bravo-Amaro, A. Iniguez-Romo, O. Yildirimturk, F. F. Helvacioglu, Y. Tayyareci, S. Yurdakul, I. C. Demiroglu, S. Aytekin, R. Enache, R. Piazza, D. Muraru, A. Roman-Pognuz, A. Calin, E. Leiballi, F. Antonini-Canterin, G. L. Nicolosi, C. Ridard, A. Bellouin, C. Thebault, M. Laurent, E. Donal, A. Sutandar, B. B. Siswanto, I. Irmalita, G. Harimurti, A. Saxena, S. Ramakrishnan, A. Roy, A. Krishnan, P. Misra, B. Bhargava, P. A. Poole-Wilson, B. B. Loegstrup, H. R. Andersen, S. H. Poulsen, K. E. Klaaborg, H. E. Egeblad, X. Gu, X. Y. Gu, Y. H. He, Z. A. Li, J. C. Han, J. Chen, N. Mansencal, E. Mitry, P. Rougier, O. Dubourg, H. Villarraga, K. Adjei-Twum, T. K. M. Cudjoe, A. Clavell, R. M. Schears, F. Cabrera Bueno, M. J. Molina Mora, J. Fernandez Pastor, A. Linde Estrella, J. L. Pena Hernandez, G. Isasti Aizpurua, F. Carrasco Chinchilla, A. Barrera Cordero, F. J. Alzueta Rodriguez, E. De Teresa Galvan, G. C. Gaetano Contegiacomo, F. P. Francesco Pollice, P. P. Paolo Pollice, M. C. Kontos, D. H. Shin, S. Y. Yoo, C. K. Lee, J. K. Jang, S. I. Jung, S. I. Song, S. I. Seo, S. S. Cheong, J. Peteiro, A. Perez-Perez, A. Bouzas-Mosquera, M. Pineiro, P. Pazos, R. Campo, A. Castro-Beiras, N. Gaibazzi, F. Rigo, D. Sartorio, C. Reverberi, S. Sitia, L. Tomasoni, L. Gianturco, L. Ghio, D. Stella, P. Greco, V. De Gennaro Colonna, M. Turiel, S. Cicala, V. Magagnin, E. Caiani, S. Kyrzopoulos, D. Tsiapras, G. Domproglou, E. Avramidou, V. Voudris, K. Wierzbowska-Drabik, P. Lipiec, L. Chrzanowski, N. Roszczyk, K. Kupczynska, J. D. Kasprzak, V. Sachpekidis, A. Bhan, S. Gianstefani, J. Reiken, M. Paul, P. Pearson, D. Harries, M. J. Monaghan, K. Dale, A. Stoylen, V. Kodali, R. Toole, P. Raju, R. A. Mcintosh, J. Silberbauer, O. Baumann, N. R. Patel, N. Sulke, U. Trivedi, J. Hyde, G. Venn, G. Lloyd, P. Wejner-Mik, K. Wierzbowska, J. A. Lowenstein, C. Caniggia, A. Garcia, M. Amor, N. Casso, D. Lowenstein Haber, C. Porley, G. Zambrana, V. Daru, M. Deljanin Ilic, S. Ilic, D. Kalimanovska Ostric, V. Stoickov, M. Zdravkovic, I. Paraskevaidis, I. Ikonomidis, J. Parissis, C. Papadopoulos, V. Stasinos, V. Bistola, M. Anastasiou-Nana, M. Gudin Uriel, J. R. Balaguer Malfagon, J. L. Perez Bosca, F. Ridocci Soriano, N. Martinez Alzamora, R. Paya Serrano, Q. Ciampi, L. Pratali, M. Della Porta, B. Petruzziello, B. Villari, E. Picano, R. Sicari, A. Rosner, D. Avenarius, S. Malm, A. Iqbal, A. Baltabaeva, G. R. Sutherland, B. Bijnens, T. Myrmel, M. Andersen, F. Gustafsson, N. H. Secher, P. Brassard, A. S. Jensen, C. Hassager, P. L. Madsen, J. E. Moller, M. Coutu, D. Greentree, D. Normandin, H. Brun, A. Dipchand, L. Koopman, C. T. Fackoury, S. Truong, C. Manlhiot, L. Mertens, M. Baroni, M. Mariani, H. K. Chabane, S. Berti, A. Ripoli, S. Storti, M. Glauber, P. A. Scopelliti, G. B. Antongiovanni, D. Personeni, A. Saino, M. Tespili, P. Jung, M. Mueller, F. Jander, H. Y. Sohn, J. Rieber, P. Schneider, V. Klauss, E. Agricola, M. Slavich, S. Stella, M. Ancona, M. Oppizzi, L. Bertoglio, G. Melissano, A. Margonato, R. Chiesa, L. Cejudo Diaz Del Campo, D. Mesa Rubio, M. Ruiz Ortiz, M. Delgado Ortega, E. Villanueva Fernandez, J. Lopez Aguilera, F. Toledano Delgado, M. Pan Alvarez-Ossorio, J. Suarez De Lezo Cruz Conde, M. Lafuente, T. Butz, A. Meissner, C. N. Lang, M. W. Prull, G. Plehn, H. J. Trappe, S. V. Nair, L. Lee, I. Mcleod, G. Whyte, J. Shrimpton, D. Hildick Smith, P. R. James, J. Slikkerveer, Y. E. A. Appelman, G. Veen, T. R. Porter, O. Kamp, P. Colonna, F. J. Ten Cate, D. Bokor, A. Daponte, M. Cocciolo, M. Bona, S. Sacchi, H. Becher, S. C. Chai, P. J. Tan, Y. S. Goh, S. H. Ong, J. Chow, L. L. Lee, P. P. Goh, K. L. Tong, R. Kakihara, C. Naruse, H. Hironaka, T. Tsuzuku, K. Ozawa, A. Tomaszuk-Kazberuk, B. Sobkowicz, J. Malyszko, J. S. Malyszko, R. Sawicki, T. Hirnle, S. Dobrzycki, M. Mysliwiec, W. J. Musial, W. Mathias, I. Kowatsch, A. L. R. Saroute, A. F. F. Osorio, J. C. N. Sbano, J. A. F. Ramires, J. M. Tsutsui, K. Sakata, H. Ito, K. Ishii, T. Sakuma, K. Iwakura, H. Yoshino, J. Yoshikawa, K. Shahgaldi, A. Lopez, B. Fernstrom, A. Sahlen, R. Winter, S. Kovalova, J. Necas, B. H. Amundsen, R. Jasaityte, G. Kiss, D. Barbosa, J. D'hooge, H. Torp, C. A. Szmigielski, J. D. Newton, K. Rajpoot, J. A. Noble, R. Kerber, L. P. Koopman, C. Slorach, N. Chahal, W. Hui, T. Sarkola, T. J. Bradley, E. T. Jaeggi, B. W. Mccrindle, A. Staron, M. Jasinski, S. Wos, P. Sengupta, D. Hayat, M. Kloeckner, J. Nahum, C. Dussault, J. L. Dubois Rande, P. Gueret, P. Lim, G. J. King, A. Brown, E. Ho, I. Amuntaser, K. Bennet, N. Mc Elhome, R. T. Murphy, R. M. Cooper, J. D. Somauroo, R. E. Shave, K. L. Williams, J. Forster, C. George, T. Bett, K. P. George, A. D'andrea, L. Riegler, R. Cocchia, E. Golia, R. Gravino, G. Salerno, R. Citro, P. I. O. Caso, E. Bossone, R. Calabro', F. Crispi, F. Figueras, J. Bartrons, E. Eixarch, F. Le Noble, A. Ahmed, E. Gratacos, Q. Shang, W. K. Yip, L. S. Tam, Q. Zhang, C. M. Li, T. Wang, C. Y. Ma, K. M. Li, C. M. Yu, T. Dahlslett, I. Helland, T. Edvardsen, H. Skulstad, L. S. Magda, M. Florescu, A. Ciobanu, R. Dulgheru, R. Mincu, D. Vinereanu, M. Luckie, S. Chacko, S. Nair, M. Mamas, R. S. Khattar, M. El-Omar, A. Kuch-Wocial, P. Pruszczyk, M. Szulc, G. Styczynski, M. Sinski, A. Kaczynska, Z. Vela, E. Haliti, V. Hyseni, R. Olloni, N. Rexhepaj, S. Elezi, J. J. Onaindia, O. Quintana, A. Cacicedo, S. Velasco, J. J. Alarcon, M. Morillas, J. R. Rumoroso, J. Zumalde, I. Lekuona, E. Laraudogoitia Zaldumbide, A. Poniku, A. Ahmeti, R. F. Duncan, J. M. Mccomb, J. Pemberton, S. W. Lord, D. Leong, C. Plummer, G. Macgowan, N. Grubb, M. Leung, A. Kenny, C. Prinz, J. U. Voigt, A. Zaidi, M. Heatley, S. Z. Abildstrom, A. Hvelplund, J. Berning, S. Govind, L. Brodin, A. Gopal, B. Castaldi, G. Di Salvo, G. Santoro, G. Gaio, M. T. Palladino, C. Iacono, G. Pacileo, M. G. Russo, R. Calabro, Y. S. Wang, L. L. Dong, X. H. Shu, C. Z. Pan, D. X. Zhou, T. Sen, O. Tufekcioglu, M. Ozdemir, A. Tuncez, B. Uygur, Z. Golbasi, H. Kisacik, L. Delfino, F. D. De Leo, L. C. Chiappa, B. Abdel Ghani, R. Schiavina, P. Salvade, A. Morganti, F. Bedogni, P. Mahia, L. Gutierrez, V. Pineda, B. Garcia, I. Otaegui, J. F. Rodriguez, M. T. Gonzalez, M. Descalzo, A. Evangelista, D. Garcia-Dorado, H. A. C. M. Bruin De- Bon, R. B. A. Van Den Brink, S. Surie, P. Bresser, J. Vleugels, H. M. Eckmann, D. A. Samson, B. J. Bouma, C. Dedobbeleer, M. Antoine, M. Remmelink, P. Unger, B. Roosens, I. Hmila, S. Hernot, S. Droogmans, G. Van Camp, T. Lahoutte, S. Muyldermans, B. Cosyns, G. Feltes, V. Serra, O. Azevedo, J. Barbado, J. Herrera, A. Rivera, J. Paniagua, V. Valverde, J. Torras, G. Arriba, T. Christodoulides, M. Ioannides, K. Simamonian, K. Yiangou, M. Myrianthefs, E. Nicolaides, M. Pandolfo, S. A. Kleijn, M. F. A. A. Aly, C. B. Terwee, A. C. Van Rossum, V. Delgado, M. Shanks, H. M. Siebelink, A. Sieders, H. Lamb, N. Ajmone Marsan, J. Westenberg, A. De Roos, J. D. Schuijf, J. J. Bax, A. M. Anwar, Y. Nosir, H. Chamsi-Pasha, H. D. Tschernich, J. Seeburger, M. Borger, C. Mukherjee, F. W. Mohr, J. Ender, K. Obase, H. Okura, R. Yamada, Y. Miyamoto, K. Saito, K. Imai, A. Hayashida, and K. Yoshida
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine ,Session (computer science) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2010
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14. Taquiarritmias supraventriculares
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M. Delgado Ortega, M. Anguita Sánchez, D. Mesa Rubio, and F. Toledano Delgado
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General Medicine - Published
- 2009
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15. Protocolo diagnóstico de taquicardias con intervalo RR regular
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F. Toledano Delgado, M Ruiz Ortiz, C. León del Pino, and D Mesa Rubio
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Published
- 2009
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16. Indicaciones de Holter-electrocardiograma
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F. Toledano Delgado, M Ruiz Ortiz, M Delgado Ortega, and C. León del Pino
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Published
- 2009
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17. Development of alcoholic fermentation in non-sterile musts from ‘Pedro Ximenez’ grapes inoculated with pure cultures of selected yeasts
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J. Martinez, F. Toledano, C. Milla´n, and J.M. Ortega
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Wine ,biology ,Inoculation ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,food and beverages ,Ethanol fermentation ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Yeast ,Torulaspora delbrueckii ,Yield (wine) ,Fermentation ,Food science ,Food Science - Abstract
Non-sterile musts from grapes of the ‘Pedro Xime´nez’ variety collected in three degrees of ripeness were subjected to fermentation by using pure cultures of five yeast races selected from the Montilla-Moriles region. Four were physiological races of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (cerevisiae A, cerevisiae B, chevalieri and capensis ), and the fifth was from the species Torulaspora delbrueckii . Despite the occurrence of indigenous flora, the five inoculated yeasts succeeded in replicating and taking over the fermentations, which they conducted according to their own features to yield wines similar to those obtained from sterile musts fermented by them. The most outstanding results, consistent with those obtained on sterile musts, were the high rate of fermentation of the cerevisiae races in the three types of must, and the low volatile acidity production of T. delbrueckii , particularly in the ripest must.
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- 1990
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18. Person-centered care assessment tool with a focus on quality healthcare: a systematic review of psychometric properties.
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Bru-Luna LM, Martí-Vilar M, Merino-Soto C, Livia-Segovia J, Garduño-Espinosa J, and Toledano-Toledano F
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- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Patient-Centered Care, Psychometrics, Quality of Health Care
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Background: The person-centered care (PCC) approach plays a fundamental role in ensuring quality healthcare. The Person-Centered Care Assessment Tool (P-CAT) is one of the shortest and simplest tools currently available for measuring PCC. The objective of this study was to conduct a systematic review of the evidence in validation studies of the P-CAT, taking the "Standards" as a frame of reference., Methods: First, a systematic literature review was conducted following the PRISMA method. Second, a systematic descriptive literature review of validity tests was conducted following the "Standards" framework. The search strategy and information sources were obtained from the Cochrane, Web of Science (WoS), Scopus and PubMed databases. With regard to the eligibility criteria and selection process, a protocol was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42022335866), and articles had to meet criteria for inclusion in the systematic review., Results: A total of seven articles were included. Empirical evidence indicates that these validations offer a high number of sources related to test content, internal structure for dimensionality and internal consistency. A moderate number of sources pertain to internal structure in terms of test-retest reliability and the relationship with other variables. There is little evidence of response processes, internal structure in measurement invariance terms, and test consequences., Discussion: The various validations of the P-CAT are not framed in a structured, valid, theory-based procedural framework like the "Standards" are. This can affect clinical practice because people's health may depend on it. The findings of this study show that validation studies continue to focus on the types of validity traditionally studied and overlook interpretation of the scores in terms of their intended use., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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19. Emotional Intelligence and Perceived Social Support: Its Relationship with Subjective Well-Being.
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Hidalgo-Fuentes S, Martínez-Álvarez I, Sospedra-Baeza MJ, Martí-Vilar M, Merino-Soto C, and Toledano-Toledano F
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The well-being of people is a key aspect of the field of psychology. Hence, it is important to analyse the variables that are related to life satisfaction and happiness as perceived by individuals and that, therefore, increase their overall well-being. The main objective of this study was to analyse the predictive capacity of emotional intelligence and perceived social support on both the level of life satisfaction and perceived happiness. A total of 380 psychology students completed the Trait Meta Mood Scale, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, the Satisfaction with Life Scale, and the Subjective Happiness Scale. The results show that both emotional intelligence and social support are related to and predictive of subjective happiness and life satisfaction. The importance of developing the components of emotional intelligence and promoting an adequate social network in young people is highlighted.
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- 2024
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20. Validity evidence for the coping strategy indicator-short version (CSI-S) among psychology students.
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Merino-Soto C, Livia-Segovia J, Aguirre-Morales M, and Toledano-Toledano F
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- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Psychometrics, Peru, Coping Skills, Students
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The abbreviated measurement of coping strategies is useful for monitoring and identifying the effects of stress. The Coping strategy indicator-Short version (CSI-S, including the dimensions of seeking support, problem solving and avoidance strategies) is a new adaptation of the full version of this indicator, and additional evidence of its validity is needed. Psychology students (n = 125) from a public university in Lima, Peru, were recruited to help provide such evidence of validity in terms of internal structure, reliability and associations with other variables (perceived stress and general efficacy in cope with difficulties), which were evaluated using nonparametric item response theory procedures. Support-seeking and problem-solving items from the Mokken scale and the avoidance scale exhibited limitations. The correlations between the scales were moderate or low and exhibited theoretical consistency, and the relationship with perceived stress highlighted the predictive capacity of avoidance and problem-solving strategies. In general, the CSI-S exhibits suitable psychometric properties; however, the avoidance score requires further examination or reconstruction of its items., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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21. Direct medical costs of polyarthritis in a pediatric hospital in Mexico.
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Carrillo-Vega MF, Mireles-Dorantes JM, Mendienta-Zerón S, Salinas-Escudero G, Toledano Toledano F, and Granados-García V
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- Humans, Mexico, Child, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Antirheumatic Agents economics, Antirheumatic Agents therapeutic use, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Tertiary Care Centers economics, Drug Costs, Retrospective Studies, Hospitals, Pediatric economics, Arthritis, Juvenile economics, Arthritis, Juvenile drug therapy, Hospitalization economics, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data
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Background: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common rheumatic disease in children. The polyarticular course (polyarthritis) represents 63-66% of patients with JIA. The aim was to determine the direct medical costs (DMC) of JIA of the polyarthritis type in pediatric patients of a tertiary hospital in Mexico., Methods: An analysis of the disease costs was developed from the perspective of the Instituto de Seguridad Social del Estado de México y Municipios Maternal and Child Hospital (HMI). The time horizon was 12 years. All patients diagnosed with JIA with polyarticular course treated by the pediatric rheumatology service of the HMI from January to September 2022 and with an active clinical record were included. Different costing techniques were used. The cost components were consultations, medications, hospitalization, and office and laboratory studies. The costs are reported in USD 2021., Results: Twenty-six records of patients with polyarticular arthritis from the HMI were analyzed, with a mean of 4,555.2 USD (standard deviation [SD] = 1,456.7) and a median of 3,828 USD (SD = 1,492) in the first 10 years of treatment. The components of DMC were medications (82.7%), office and laboratory studies (8.4%), hospitalization (8.0%), and consultations (1.8%). Biological disease-modifying drugs (bDMARDs) accounted for 95.3% of the drug component cost., Conclusion: The cost of bDMARDs represented the most critical cost of polyarticular JIA, reflected in the 2
nd year of treatment. Including generic bDMARDs and reviewing purchase prices by health institutions in Mexico is necessary., (Copyright: © 2024 Permanyer.)- Published
- 2024
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22. Positive Mental Health Questionnaire (PMHQ) for Healthcare Workers: A Psychometric Evaluation.
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Sienra-Monge JJL, Luna D, Figuerola-Escoto RP, Montufar-Burgos II, Hernández-Roque A, Soria-Magaña A, and Toledano-Toledano F
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The Positive Mental Health Questionnaire (PMHQ) has been validated across various populations but has displayed diverse psychometric structures depending on the procedures used. The original version of the PMHQ includes 39 items organized into 6 factors, although there are reports that indicate a reduced structure of between 1 and 4 factors. The aim of this study was to assess the psychometric properties of the PMHQ with 1, 4 and 6 factors. A total of 360 healthcare workers aged 23 to 77 (M = 37.06; SD = 10.79) participated. Construct validity was assessed through confirmatory factor analysis using weighted root mean square residual. The original 6-factor (χ
2 /df: 3.40; RMSEA: 0.085; CFI: 0.913; TLI: 0.906) and a reduced 4-factor (χ2 /df: 2.90; RMSEA: 0.072; CFI: 0.931; TLI: 0.926) structure showed acceptable fit. The fit of the 1-factor model was unacceptable. The internal consistency was evaluated through McDonald's ω, and it was acceptable for 4 of 6 factors of the original structure and for 3 of 4 factors of the reduced structure. In conclusion, these findings suggest that the 6-factor and 4-factor models are valid for measuring positive mental health. However, issues with internal consistency must be investigated.- Published
- 2023
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23. Burnout and Its Relationship with Work Engagement in Healthcare Professionals: A Latent Profile Analysis Approach.
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Luna D, Figuerola-Escoto RP, Sienra-Monge JJL, Hernández-Roque A, Soria-Magaña A, Hernández-Corral S, and Toledano-Toledano F
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The aim of this study was to use latent profile analysis to identify specific profiles of burnout syndrome in combination with work engagement and to identify whether job satisfaction, psychological well-being, and other sociodemographic and work variables affect the probability of presenting a profile of burnout syndrome and low work enthusiasm. A total of 355 healthcare professionals completed the Spanish Burnout Inventory, the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale, the Job Satisfaction Scale, and the Psychological Well-Being Scale for Adults. Latent profile analysis identified four profiles: (1) burnout with high indolence (BwHIn); (2) burnout with low indolence (BwLIn); (3) high engagement, low burnout (HeLb); and (4) in the process of burning out (IPB). Multivariate logistic regression showed that a second job in a government healthcare institution; a shift other than the morning shift; being divorced, separated or widowed; and workload are predictors of burnout profiles with respect to the HeLb profile. These data are useful for designing intervention strategies according to the needs and characteristics of each type of burnout profile.
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- 2023
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24. Health-Related, Social and Cognitive Factors Explaining Gambling Addiction.
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Esparza-Reig J, Martí-Vilar M, González-Sala F, Merino-Soto C, Hernández-Salinas G, and Toledano-Toledano F
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Background: Gambling addiction was the first addictive behavior not related to substance use that was recognized by the DSM-5. It shares diagnostics and comorbidity with other addictions. Extensive studies have investigated the clinical variables involved, but there have been fewer studies of related cognitive and social variables. In this research, an integrative model was developed to advance the understanding of gambling addiction, and an explanatory model was created based on the concept of cognitive distortions., Methods: The sample comprised 258 university students (59.5% women) with a mean age of 20.95 years (SD = 2.19). A series of questionnaires were administered to measure gambling addiction, depression, coping with stress, prosocial behavior, susceptibility to priming and cognitive distortions about gambling. In addition, correlations, multiple linear regressions and a simple mediation model of these variables were analyzed., Results: The results indicated that gambling addiction was correlated with a variety of clinical, social and cognitive factors. These factors contributed to a model that predicted 16.8% of the variance in gambling addiction and another model using cognitive distortions as a predictor and the maximum bet as a mediator that predicted 34.5% of the variance., Conclusions: The study represents an advance by developing a theoretical model from an integrative perspective and providing a new explanatory model. The findings of this research are of great importance in the development of prevention and intervention programs for gambling addiction.
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- 2023
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25. Comparative Analysis of Three Predictive Models of Performance Indicators with Results-Based Management: Cancer Data Statistics in a National Institute of Health.
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Martínez-Salazar J and Toledano-Toledano F
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Predictive models play a crucial role in RBMs to analyze performance indicator results to manage unexpected events and make timely decisions to resolve them. Their use in Mexico is deficient, and monitoring and evaluation are among the weakest pillars of the model. In response to these needs, the aim of this study was to perform a comparative analysis of three predictive models to analyze 10 medical performance indicators and cancer data related to children with cancer. To accomplish these purposes, a comparative and retrospective study with nonprobabilistic convenience sampling was conducted. The predictive models were exponential smoothing, autoregressive integrated moving average, and linear regression. The lowest mean absolute error was used to identify the best model. Linear regression performed best regarding nine of the ten indicators, with seven showing p < 0.05. Three of their assumptions were checked using the Shapiro-Wilk, Cook's distance, and Breusch-Pagan tests. Predictive models with RBM are a valid and relevant instrument for monitoring and evaluating performance indicator results to support forecasting and decision-making based on evidence and must be promoted for use with cancer data statistics. The place numbers obtained by cancer disease inside the main causes of death, morbidity and hospital outpatients in a National Institute of Health were presented as evidence of the importance of implementing performance indicators associated with children with cancer.
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- 2023
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26. The Columbia-suicide severity rating scale: validity and psychometric properties of an online Spanish-language version in a Mexican population sample.
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Austria-Corrales F, Jiménez-Tapia A, Astudillo-García CI, Arenas-Landgrave P, Xochihua-Tlecuitl T, Cruz-Cruz C, Rivera-Rivera L, Gómez-García JA, Palacios-Hernández B, Pérez-Amezcua B, Toledano-Toledano F, Richards J, and Galynker I
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- Humans, Adolescent, Adult, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Language, Suicide
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the validity and psychometric properties in a Mexican sample of a Spanish-language online version of the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS). Data were collected between May and October 2021 from 3,645 participants aged 18 years and over, who agreed to complete the questionnaire. Reliability analysis, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), and psychometric properties were calculated using a two-parameter model. The results showed a reasonable level of reliability with a Cronbach's alpha of 0.814, and evidence of unidimensionality, and construct validity for suicide risk at three risk levels: low, medium, and high. Analysis of the items suggests that they are consistent with the proposed theoretical model. Our results also demonstrate that the parameters are stable and able to efficiently discriminate individuals at high risk of suicide. We propose the use of this version of the C-SSRS in the Spanish-speaking population, since it is a multifactorial assessment of suicide risk and the inclusion of other clinical and risk factor assessments for a more comprehensive evaluation., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Austria-Corrales, Jiménez-Tapia, Astudillo-García, Arenas-Landgrave, Xochihua-Tlecuitl, Cruz-Cruz, Rivera-Rivera, Gómez-García, Palacios-Hernández, Pérez-Amezcua, Toledano-Toledano, Richards and Galynker.)
- Published
- 2023
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27. Eventos de vida estresantes y su efecto en la conducta suicida en mujeres durante la pandemia por Covid-19 en México.
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Rivera-Rivera L, Palacios-Hernández B, Austria-Corrales F, Séris-Martínez M, Pérez-Amezcua B, Jiménez-Tapia A, Reynales-Shigematsu LM, Toledano-Toledano F, Gómez-García JA, and Astudillo-García CI
- Abstract
Objetivo: Analizar la estructura factorial, la validez convergente y divergente de la Escala Columbia de Severidad Suicida (CSSRS) y el Cuestionario de Eventos de Vida Estresantes (EVE) y medir la asociación entre EVE y conducta suicida (CS) en mujeres mexicanas durante la pandemia por Covid-19. Material y métodos. Se usaron datos de 2 398 mujeres que participaron en un estudio multicéntrico, realizado en México entre mayo y octubre de 2021. La información se recolectó mediante un cuestionario en línea que incluyó la CSSRS y el EVE. Se hizo un análisis factorial confirmatorio para valorar el ajuste de los modelos., Resultados: El modelo final mostró asociación entre los EVE y la CS, y tuvo a la violencia como variable central. Dicho modelo presentó un ajuste adecuado (CFI = 0.950, IFI = 0.950, MFI = 0.975, RMSEA = 0.031, CI RMSEA = 0.026-0.036)., Conclusiones: La pandemia por Covid-19 evidenció la necesidad de crear e implementar estrategias que promuevan el cuidado de la salud mental, reduzcan la exposición a la violencia y faciliten los procesos de duelo para prevenir la CS en mujeres mexicanas.
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- 2023
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28. Design, Development, and Validation of the Self-Perceived Health Scale (SPHS).
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Tinajero-Chávez LI, Mora-Romo JF, Bravo-Doddoli A, Cruz-Narciso BV, Calleja N, and Toledano-Toledano F
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Health is a multidimensional concept with notable psychological factors, such as self-perceived health (SPH). SPH is defined as the subjective assessment of individual health status, and it integrates information related to both physical and psychological aspects, such as lifestyle. This study describes the development of the Self-Perceived Health Scale (SPHS), and its validation in a Mexican sample (n = 600). Exploratory factor analysis (n = 303) and confirmatory factor analysis (n = 293) were carried out, and they supported the three-dimensionality of the SPH construct: physical health, psychological health, and healthy lifestyle. A final 12-item scale was obtained, and the scale showed adequate validity and reliability, as well as measurement invariance between sexes, indicating its robustness.
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- 2023
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29. Positive Mental Health Scale (PMHS) in Parents of Children with Cancer: A Psychometric Evaluation Using Item Response Theory.
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Toledano-Toledano F, Jiménez S, Moral de la Rubia J, Merino-Soto C, and Rivera-Rivera L
- Abstract
Mental health is currently a public health issue worldwide. However, evidence is lacking regarding the validity of the instruments used to measure and assess positive mental health in specific populations. The objective of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the PMHS using IRT. A cross-sectional retrospective study with non-probabilistic convenience sampling was conducted with 623 parents of children undergoing cancer treatment at the National Institute of Health in Mexico City. The participants responded to a battery of tests, including a sociodemographic questionnaire, the PMHS, Measurement Scale of Resilience, Beck Depression Inventory, Inventory of Quality of Life, Beck Anxiety Inventory, an interview regarding caregiver burden, and the World Health Organization Well-Being Index. PMHS responses were analyzed using Samejima's graded response model. The PMHS findings indicated that the IRT-based graded response model validated the single latent trait model. The scale scores were independent of depression, anxiety, well-being, caregiver burden, quality of life, and resilience. The PMHS scores were associated with low subjective well-being. The PMHS findings reveal that from an IRT-based perspective, this scale is unidimensional and is a valid, reliable, and culturally relevant instrument for assessing positive mental health in parents of children with chronic diseases.
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- 2023
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30. Psychosocial Factors Associated with Self-Management in Patients with Diabetes.
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León-Hernández R, Rodríguez-Pérez AC, Pérez-González YM, de Córdova MIP, de León-Escobedo R, Gómez-Gutiérrez T, and Toledano-Toledano F
- Abstract
Despite the significant advances in research on diabetes, relatively few researchers have examined the theoretical and empirical usefulness of explanatory models that contribute to self-management of the disease. In response to the theoretical and empirical approaches related to this topic, the objective of this research was to assess a hypothetical model to explain self-management behavior in patients with type II diabetes through structural equation modeling in a population of users of the services of the State Health Department of Tamaulipas, Mexico. The study used a cross-sectional and explanatory design. The sample was intentional. A total of 183 patients with a diabetes diagnosis completed a sociodemographic data questionnaire, the Partners in Health Scale, the Duke-UNC-11, the Family Apgar, the Self-Efficacy Scale, the Personal Health Questionnaire and the Physical Activity Scale. The results indicated that the hypothetical model was improved by excluding the exercise variable. The appropriate model was used to determine the effects of depression, social support, self-efficacy, family functioning, years of formal education and years with a diagnosis on self-management. The goodness-of-fit indices (GFIs) were good, i.e., χ
2 /gl = 0.89 ( p = 0.529), root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.000, and comparative fit index (CFI) = 1.000, with an acceptable degree of parsimony (PNFI = 0.409 and PGFI = 317). The model explained 33.6% of the variance. Therefore, this model represents an important advance in knowledge concerning self-management and provides empirical and theoretical evidence, particularly for the Mexican or Latino population.- Published
- 2023
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31. Cost-effectiveness analysis of a hand hygiene monitoring system in a tertiary pediatric hospital in Mexico.
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Salinas-Escudero G, la Rosa-Zamboni D, Carrillo-Vega MF, Gamiño-Arroyo AE, Toledano-Toledano F, Ortega-Riosvelasco F, Granados-García V, Villa-Guillén M, and Garduño-Espinosa J
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, Mexico, Hospitals, Pediatric, Hand Hygiene, Cross Infection prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: An automated hand-hygiene monitoring system (AHHMS) was implemented in October 2019 at the Hospital Infantil de México Federico Gómez (HIMFG), a tertiary pediatric referral hospital, in four of the hospital wards with the highest rates of Healthcare Associated Infections (HAIs). The clinical and economic impact of this system had not yet been assessed prior to this study. This study aimed to evaluate if the AHHMS is a cost-effective alternative in reducing HAIs in the HIMFG., Methodology: A full cost-effectiveness economic assessment was carried out for the hospital. The alternatives assessed were AHHMS implementation vis-a-vis AHHMS non-implementation (historical tendency). The outcomes of interest were infection rate per 1,000 patient-days and cost savings as a result of prevented infections. Infection rate data per 1,000 patient-days (PD) were obtained from the hospital's Department of Epidemiology with respect to the AHHMS. As regards historical tendency, an infection-rate model was designed for the most recent 6-year period. Infection costs were obtained from a review of available literature on the subject, and the cost of the implemented AHHMS was provided by the hospital. The assessment period was 6 months. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was estimated. Costs are reported in US Dollars (2021). Univariate sensitivity and threshold analysis for different parameters was conducted., Results: The total estimated cost of the AHHMS alternative represented potential savings of $308,927-$546,795 US Dollars compared to non-implementation of the system (US$464,102 v. US$773,029-$1,010,898) for the period. AHHMS effectiveness was reflected in a diminished number of infections, 46-79 (-43.4-56.7%) compared to non-implementation (60 v. 106-139 infections)., Conclusion: The AHHMS was found to be a cost-saving alternative for the HIMFG given its cost-effectiveness and lower cost vis-a-vis the alternate option. Accordingly, the recommendation was made of extending its use to other areas in the hospital., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Salinas-Escudero, Rosa-Zamboni, Carrillo-Vega, Gamiño-Arroyo, Toledano-Toledano, Ortega-Riosvelasco, Granados-García, Villa-Guillén and Garduño-Espinosa.)
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- 2023
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32. Psychological distress, intimate partner violence and substance use in a representative sample from Mexico: A structural equation model.
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Ortega Ceballos PA, Rivera Rivera L, Reynales Shigematsu LM, Austria Corrales F, Toledano-Toledano F, and Pérez Amezcua B
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- Male, Humans, Female, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Mexico epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Psychological Distress
- Abstract
Introduction: Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a public health concern associated with multiple adverse health outcomes, including psychological distress (PD)., Objective: To assess the association of IPV and psychological distress, and the mediation of tobacco and alcohol consumption in a national representative sample from Mexico., Material and Methods: Data from the Encuesta Nacional de Consumo de Drogas, Tabaco y Alcohol (ENCODAT) were analyzed. The sample included 34,864 people between the ages of 12 and 65 with a partner. Using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), the association between IPV, use alcohol, tobacco and psychological distress was measured., Results: The population was composed of women (51.9%) and men (48.1%); 15.1% (women = 18.2% and men = 11.9%) reported IPV in the last year. The prevalence of psychological distress in the last year was 3.3%, being 3.8% in women, and 2.7% in men. Results from the SEM in women indicated a direct positive effect of the IPV construct on psychological distress (β = 0.298, p < 0.01); these findings confirmed that IPV tended to systematically increase psychological distress. Likewise, the presence of IPV increased the consumption of tobacco (β = 0.077, p < 0.01) and alcohol (β = 0.072, p < 0.01). The SEM results in men showed that alcohol and tobacco consumption tended to increase in the presence of IPV (β = 0.121, p < 0.01, and β = 0.086, p < 0.01, respectively), and in turn, alcohol consumption and tobacco tended to increase psychological distress (β = 0.024, p < 0.01, and β = 0.025, p < 0.01, respectively)., Conclusion: This study indicated that in women, IPV had a direct effect on psychological distress and on alcohol and tobacco consumption. Meanwhile in men, alcohol and tobacco consumption had a mediating effect between IPV and psychological distress. The empirical findings of this study will contribute toward the design of public health policies for the prevention and attention of IPV, alcohol and tobacco consumption, and consequently address the mental health consequences derived from these problems., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Ortega Ceballos, Rivera Rivera, Reynales Shigematsu, Austria Corrales, Toledano-Toledano and Pérez Amezcua.)
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- 2023
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33. Correction: Martínez-Valverde et al. Health Needs Assessment: Chronic Kidney Disease Secondary to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in a Population without Social Security, Mexico 2016-2032. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19 , 9010.
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Martínez-Valverde S, Zepeda-Tello R, Castro-Ríos A, Toledano-Toledano F, Reyes-Morales H, Rodríguez-Matías A, and Durán-Arenas JLG
- Abstract
In the original publication [...].
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- 2023
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34. Violence against Women during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Mexico.
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Rivera Rivera L, Séris Martínez M, Reynales Shigematsu LM, Gómez García JA, Austria Corrales F, Toledano-Toledano F, Jiménez Tapia A, Tejadilla Orozco DI, and Astudillo García CI
- Abstract
This study measured the prevalence of cases of domestic violence against women and some associated factors during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico. Data were collected through a remote survey during 2020. The sample included 47,819 women aged 15 years and older. Jointpoint regression and logistic regression models were used. The prevalence of violence was 11.5%, which decreased in July and subsequently increased. The associated factors were being unemployed (OR = 2.01; 95%CI 1.89-2.16); being partially and totally quarantined (OR = 1.58; 95%CI 1.43-1.75 and OR = 1.47; 95%CI 1.32-1.63); being a caregiver of children; being a caregiver of elderly and/or suffering from a chronic illness (OR = 1.27; 95%CI 1.19-1.36; OR = 1.42; 95%CI 1.33-1.53; OR = 1.59; 95%CI 1.47-1.73); losing a family member to COVID-19 (OR = 1.26; 95%CI 1.13-1.41); and binge drinking (OR = 1.94; 95%CI 1.78-2.12). The confinement measures increased gender inequalities, economic problems and workload which further evidenced violence against women.
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- 2023
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35. Resilience measurement scale in family caregivers of children with cancer: Multidimensional item response theory modeling.
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Jiménez S, Moral de la Rubia J, Varela-Garay RM, Merino-Soto C, and Toledano-Toledano F
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Background: Currently, information about the psychometric properties of the Resilience Measurement Scale (RESI-M) in family caregivers of children with cancer according to item response theory (IRT) is not available; this information could complement and confirm the findings available from classical test theory (CTT). The objective of this study was to test the five-factor structure of the RESI-M using a full information confirmatory multidimensional IRT graded response model and to estimate the multidimensional item-level parameters of discrimination (MDISC) and difficulty (MDIFF) from the RESI-M scale to investigate its construct validity and level of measurement error., Methods: An observational study was carried out, which included a sample of 633 primary caregivers of children with cancer, who were recruited through nonprobabilistic sampling. The caregivers responded to a battery of tests that included a sociodemographic variables questionnaire, the RESI-M, and measures of depression, quality of life, anxiety, and caregiver burden to explore convergent and divergent validity., Results: The main findings confirmed a five-factor structure of the RESI-M scale, with RMSEA = 0.078 (95% CI: 0.075, 0.080), TLI = 0.90, and CFI = 0.91. The estimation of the MDISC and MDIFF parameters indicated different values for each item, showing that all the items contribute differentially to the measurement of the dimensions of resilience., Conclusion: That regardless of the measurement approach (IRT or CTT), the five-factor model of the RESI-M is valid at the theoretical, empirical, and methodological levels., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Jiménez, Moral de la Rubia, Varela-Garay, Merino-Soto and Toledano-Toledano.)
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- 2023
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36. Medical outcomes study social support survey (MOS-SSS) in patients with chronic disease: A psychometric assessment.
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Merino-Soto C, Núñez Benítez MÁ, Domínguez-Guedea MT, Toledano-Toledano F, Moral de la Rubia J, Astudillo-García CI, Rivera-Rivera L, Leyva-López A, Angulo-Ramos M, Flores Laguna OA, Hernández-Salinas G, Rodríguez Castro JH, González Peña OI, and Garduño Espinosa J
- Abstract
Purpose: Currently, information on the psychometric properties of the Medical outcomes study-social support survey (MOS-SSS) for patients with chronic disease in primary health care, suggests problems in the dimensionality, specifically predominant unidimensionality in a multidimensional measure. The aim of this study was to determine the internal structure (dimensionality, measurement invariance and reliability) and association with other variables., Methods: A total of 470 patients with chronic disease from a Family Medicine Unit at the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, IMSS, with a mean age of 51.51 years were included. Participants responded to the Questionnaire of Sociodemographic Variables (Q-SV), SF-36 Health-Related Quality of Life Scale-version 1.1, and MOS-SSS., Results: Non-parametric (Mokken scaling analysis) and parametric (confirmatory factor analysis) analyses indicated unidimensionality, and three-factor model was not representative. A new 8-item version (MOS-S) was developed, where measurement invariance, equivalence with the long version, reliability, and relationship with the SF-36 were satisfactory., Conclusion: The MOS-SSS scale is unidimensional, and the shortened version yields valid and reliable scores for measuring social support in patients with chronic disease at the primary health care., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Merino-Soto, Núñez Benítez, Domínguez-Guedea, Toledano-Toledano, Moral de la Rubia, Astudillo-García, Rivera-Rivera, Leyva-López, Angulo-Ramos, Flores Laguna, Hernández-Salinas, Rodríguez Castro, González Peña and Garduño Espinosa.)
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- 2023
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37. Effects of COVID-19 on sensory and cognitive perception of mild and severe diagnosed and recovered patients versus healthy consumers.
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Cabal-Prieto A, Sánchez-Arellano L, Herrera-Corredor JA, Rodríguez-Miranda J, Prinyawiwatkul W, Ramón-Canul LG, Toledano-Toledano F, Rodríguez-Buenfil IM, Ramírez-Sucre MO, Hernández-Salinas G, and de Ramírez-Rivera EJ
- Abstract
The objective of this research was to analyze the effects of the SARS-CoV-2 virus on the sensory and cognitive perception of mild and severe COVID-19 diagnosed and recovered consumers versus healthy consumers. Three groups of 50 consumers each (healthy vs. mild and severe COVID-19 diagnosed with 30 days after recovery) were used for the evaluation of instant coffee stimuli in concentrations: 4.40, 2.93, 2.20, 1.76, and 1.47% weight (w)/volume (v) and determine their discriminating power, emotions, and memories. Sensory tests were performed remotely. Results indicated that healthy consumers perceived higher intensities in most of the sensory attributes (with the exception of Burnt-A, Bitter-T, Acid-T, and Astringent-T attributes) compared to consumers who presented mild and severe COVID-19. Therefore, consumers diagnosed with mild and severe COVID-19 had a higher discrimination power in the attributes smell, basic tastes, and flavor. Healthy consumers could only discriminate two attributes that correspond to basic flavors. Consumers with mild and severe COVID-19 diagnosis elicited the highest number of negatives emotions (such as bored, disgusted, worried, guilty, wild, and aggressive) and negative memories (disease, pain, death, hurt, obesity, conflict personal, addiction, stench poverty, and accident) than healthy consumers. It is concluded that there were no significant differences between the consumer panels for the identification of sensory attributes. However, P-Healthy consumers perceived the highest intensities in most sensory attributes compared to those in the PCOVID19-Mild and PCOVID19-Severe panels. Finally, consumers diagnosed with mild or severe COVID-19 used a higher number of emotions and memories than those of the healthy panel., Practical Applications: Investigating the effects of COVID-19 on sensory and cognitive perception can be useful for industry and researchers in the sensory field who wish to understand the effects of the disease in order to generate new protocols for the selection and training of people, as well as the possible development and innovation of new products focused on perception of consumers recovered from COVID-19., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
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38. Measurement invariance of the GAD-5 Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale in a Mexican general population sample.
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Astudillo-García CI, Austria-Corrales F, Rivera-Rivera L, Reynales-Shigematsu LM, Gómez-García JA, Séris-Martinez M, Jiménez-Tapia A, Robles R, Morales-Chainé S, López-Montoya A, Cuevas-Renaud C, and Toledano-Toledano F
- Abstract
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the measurement of invariance by sex, age, and educational level of an online version of the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale in a five-item version (GAD-5). Configural, metric, scalar, and strict invariance were evaluated using data from 79,473 respondents who answered a mental health questionnaire during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico. The sex variable was classified as male or female; age was categorized as minors, youth, young adults, adults, and older adults; and educational level was divided into basic, upper secondary, higher, and graduate education. To test for configural invariance, confirmatory factor models were constructed. For metric invariance, equality restrictions were established for the factor loadings between the construct and its items; for scalar invariance, equality restrictions were established between the intercepts; strict variance implied the additional restriction of the residuals. Statistical analysis was performed in R software with the lavaan package. The results show that with respect to sex, age, and educational level, configural and metric measurement invariance was confirmed (ΔCFI < 0.002; ΔRMSEA < 0.015). However, with respect to scalar and strict invariance, the results showed significant differences regarding the fit model (ΔCFI > 0.002; ΔRMSEA > 0.015). We conclude that the GAD-5 presents configural and metric invariance for sex, age, and educational level, and scalar invariance for sex and age groups. However, the scale does not demonstrate strict invariance. We discuss the implications and suggest that this result could be related to the evaluation of sociodemographic variables., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Astudillo-García, Austria-Corrales, Rivera-Rivera, Reynales-Shigematsu, Gómez-García, Séris-Martinez, Jiménez-Tapia, Robles, Morales-Chainé, López-Montoya, Cuevas-Renaud and Toledano-Toledano.)
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- 2022
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39. Social Support and Resilience as Predictors of Prosocial Behaviors before and during COVID-19.
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Esparza-Reig J, Martí-Vilar M, González-Sala F, Merino-Soto C, and Toledano-Toledano F
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The objective of this research was to analyze the relationship between social support and resilience with prosocial behavior before and during the confinement caused by COVID-19. Materials and Methods : The participants were divided into a confined group (228 women and 84 men) and an unconfined group (153 women and 105 men), all of whom were university students. Instruments were applied to measure the variables proposed. Results: Social support predicted 24.4% of the variance in prosocial behavior among women and 12% among men in the confined group; no evidence of this relationship was found in the unconfined groups. Resilience predicted 7% of the variance in prosocial behavior among confined women, 8.4% among confined men, 8.8% among unconfined women, and 5.1% in unconfined men. Discussion and Conclusion: The results show the importance of social support and resilience in prosocial behaviors, which are key elements for the proper functioning of society, especially in the face of a crisis such as COVID-19.
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- 2022
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40. Decision Making in Addictive Behaviors Based on Prospect Theory: A Systematic Review.
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Cabedo-Peris J, González-Sala F, Merino-Soto C, Pablo JÁC, and Toledano-Toledano F
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Traditionally, research on addictive behaviors has been based on the study of their risk factors, with impulsivity being the main risk factor. However, this study aims to approach this topic from the analysis of decision making. According to the prospect theory, low levels of loss and risk aversion will increase the probability of showing addictive behaviors. A systematic review of the possible relationships between these behaviors and prospect theory was carried out. To this end, the works that have studied loss and risk aversion in populations with addictive behaviors to date (N = 15) were compiled. Apart from other eligibility criteria, the selection process was only performed with studies that included the prospect theory or cumulative prospect theory, in English or Spanish, since 1979. WoS, Scopus, Dialnet and PsycInfo were the information sources selected. For this purpose, PRISMA guidelines have been followed. It was found that users of addictive substances show less loss aversion than nonusers. These results cannot be transferred to pathological gamblers. The significance of this work for future research and the implementation of prevention and intervention programs is highlighted. The results show an approach to addictions from a novel perspective.
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- 2022
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41. Health Needs Assessment: Chronic Kidney Disease Secondary to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in a Population without Social Security, Mexico 2016-2032.
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Martínez-Valverde S, Zepeda-Tello R, Castro-Ríos A, Toledano-Toledano F, Reyes-Morales H, Rodríguez-Matías A, and Durán-Arenas JLG
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Mexico epidemiology, Risk Factors, Social Security, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 drug therapy, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic etiology
- Abstract
Health needs assessment is a relevant tracer of planning process of healthcare programs. The objective is to assess the health needs of chronic kidney disease (CKD) secondary to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2 DM) in a population without social security in Mexico. The study design was a statistical simulation model based on data at the national level of Mexico. A stochastic Markov model was used to simulate the progression from diabetes to CKD. The time horizon was 16 years. The results indicate that in 2022, kidney damage progression and affectation in the diabetic patient cohort will be 34.15% based on the time since T2 DM diagnosis. At the end of the 16-year period, assuming that the model of care remains unchanged, early renal involvement will affect slightly more than twice as many patients (118%) and cases with macroalbuminuria will triple (228%). The need for renal replacement therapy will more than double (169%). Meanwhile, deaths associated with cardiovascular risk will more than triple (284%). We concluded that the clinical manifestations of patients with CKD secondary to T2 DM without social security constitute a double challenge. The first refers to the fact that the greatest health need is early care of CKD, and the second is the urgent need to address cardiovascular risk in order to reduce deaths in the population at risk.
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- 2022
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42. Sense of Coherence and Work Stress or Well-Being in Care Professionals: A Systematic Review.
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González-Siles P, Martí-Vilar M, González-Sala F, Merino-Soto C, and Toledano-Toledano F
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Job-related stress affects the physical and psychological health of professionals dedicated to care. This work is a systematic review that aims to determine the relationships between a sense of coherence (SOC) and work stress and well-being perceived by care professionals. The review was carried out following the PRISMA guidelines, and the search was carried out using the Web of Science (WoS), PubMed, and Scopus databases, obtaining a final selection of 41 articles. The results indicate that stress, depression, burnout, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) negatively correlate with SOC; in contrast, job satisfaction, well-being, and quality of life positively correlate with SOC. It is concluded that SOC could act as a mediating variable and as a predictor variable of these health problems.
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- 2022
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43. Estudio de la calidad de vida en cuidadores familiares de personas con discapacidad intelectual.
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Leyva-López A, Rivera-Rivera L, Márquez-Caraveo ME, Toledano-Toledano F, Saldaña-Medina C, Chavarría-Guzmán K, Delgado-Gallegos JL, Katz-Guss G, and Lazcano-Ponce E
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- Caregivers, Humans, Mexico, Retrospective Studies, Intellectual Disability, Quality of Life
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Objetivo: Explorar las experiencias y percepciones de la calidad de vida (CV) en cuidadores familiares (CF) de personas con discapacidad intelectual (PDI) en Morelos y Sinaloa, México. Material y métodos. Estudio cualitativo. Se realizaron 18 entrevistas semiestructuradas a CF de PDI que asistían a escuelas básicas públicas en Huitzilac, Morelos y Culiacán, Sinaloa, México. Se realizó análisis de contenido con apoyo del programa ATLAS.ti.8.0., Resultados: Los CF experimentaron un deterioro en distintas dimensiones: bienestar emocional, físico y material, desarrollo personal, autodeterminación y relaciones interpersonales, deterioro que afecta negativamente su CV. Los lazos de empatía, acompañamiento y motivación con otros CF son beneficiosos y los libera de actividades por lapsos breves, disminuyendo así la carga del cuidado de una PDI., Conclusiones: Cuidar a una PDI puede afectar negativamente la CV de las y los CF. Se sugiere el desarrollo de intervenciones para atención, apoyo y orientación integral; asimismo, crear y fortalecer grupos de ayuda mutua con otros cuidadores.
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- 2022
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44. Variables Impacting the Quality of Care Provided by Professional Caregivers for People with Mental Illness: A Systematic Review.
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Bru-Luna LM, Martí-Vilar M, Merino-Soto C, Salinas-Escudero G, and Toledano-Toledano F
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People with mental illness may need the support of caregivers in certain areas of their lives, and there is an increasing need for quality care for people with mental health problems by qualified health professionals. Often, these professionals may develop so-called burnout syndrome, although some authors point out that positive emotions may also arise. In addition, several variables can act as both protectors and stressors. Therefore, the main aim of the current study is to identify variables related to the professional care of people with mental illness (i.e., protective or stressor variables) through a systematic review. The review was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines with a final selection of 20 articles found in the Web of Science, PubMed, ScienceDirect and Dialnet databases between the months of October and November 2019, and updated in June 2022. The results show that job satisfaction is a strong predictor of the quality of care, and that congruence between personal and organizational values is a very important factor. Meanwhile, working in the same job for successive years, working in community mental health teams and experiencing burnout act as stressors and reduce the quality of care provided.
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- 2022
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45. Item-Level Psychometric Analysis of the Psychosocial Processes at Work Scale (PROPSIT) in Workers.
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Merino-Soto C, Juárez-García A, Salinas-Escudero G, and Toledano-Toledano F
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- Adult, Humans, Male, Peru, Psychometrics, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Occupations, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
The structural attributes and correlates of items have an effect on their composite scores and exploring them strengthens the content validity of a measure adapted to another context. The objective of this study was to evaluate the item properties of a measure of psychosocial work factors (PWFs). Data were collected through a web platform from 188 Peruvian working adults (men = 101, 50.5%) holding various professions and jobs. The instrument was the Psychosocial Processes at Work Scale (PROPSIT), adapted for the Peruvian context. The distributional characteristics, the efficiency of its response options and its correlates with engagement, occupational self-efficacy, general stress and psychological distress (explored with a coefficient of maximum information and another of monotonic association) were analyzed. It was found that the items were asymmetrically distributed, without statistical normality and with a response tendency at low (for psychosocial risk factors (PSRFs)) and medium (favorable psychosocial resources) levels. The number of efficient response options was lower (approximately five options) than the original structure (seven options). The monotonic associations with gender and age were essentially zero and theoretically converged with the external constructs, except for some items related to job demands. The contributions of the results to the content validity of the PROPSIT and the orientation of working hypotheses about PROPSIT item constructs and measures of work effects are discussed.
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- 2022
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46. Parametric and Nonparametric Analysis of the Internal Structure of the Psychosocial Work Processes Questionnaire (PROPSIT) as Applied to Workers.
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Merino-Soto C, Juárez-García A, Escudero GS, and Toledano-Toledano F
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- Factor Analysis, Statistical, Humans, Peru, Surveys and Questionnaires
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The study of the dimensionality or internal structure of a measure has a definitional purpose with notable theoretical and practical implications; this aspect can be analyzed via both parametric and nonparametric approaches. The latter are probably used less often to validate constructs in the context of psychosocial work factors. The aim of the present manuscript was to employ both nonparametric (DETECT and AISP-Mokken) and parametric (semiconfirmatory factor analysis) procedures to analyze the internal structure of the Psychosocial Work Processes Questionnaire (PROPSIT) in the context of two samples of Peruvian workers located in the city of Lima, Perú, with one sample drawn from various work centers (n = 201) and the other comprising elementary education teachers (n = 158). The nonparametric results indicated that the content of the PROPSIT is sufficiently multidimensional to be able to describe a variety of psychosocial factors, while the parametric results require modification of the measurement model to obtain greater factorial congruence. In general, the analyses show a similar structure to those discussed by previous preliminary studies that have reported similar item-level performances. Some findings and considerations for future research are discussed.
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- 2022
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47. Effects of Anonymity versus Examinee Name on a Measure of Depressive Symptoms in Adolescents.
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Merino-Soto C, Copez-Lonzoy A, Toledano-Toledano F, Nabors LA, Rodrígez-Castro JH, Hernández-Salinas G, and Núñez-Benítez MÁ
- Abstract
There is evidence in the literature that anonymity when investigating individual variables could increase the objectivity of the measurement of some psychosocial constructs. However, there is a significant gap in the literature on the theoretical and methodological usefulness of simultaneously assessing the same measurement instrument across two groups, with one group remaining anonymous and a second group revealing identities using names. Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare the psychometric characteristics of a measure of depressive symptoms in two groups of adolescents as a consequence of identification or anonymity at the time of answering the measuring instrument. The participants were 189 adolescents from Metropolitan Lima; classrooms were randomly assigned to the identified group (n = 89; application requesting to write one's own name) or to the anonymous group (n = 100; application under usual conditions), who responded to the Childhood Depression Inventory, short version (CDI-S). Univariate characteristics (mean, dispersion, distribution), dimensionality, reliability, and measurement invariance were analyzed. Specific results in each of the statistical and psychometric aspects evaluated indicated strong psychometric similarity. The practical and ethical implications of the present results for professional and research activity are discussed.
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- 2022
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48. Brief Sensations Seeking Scale (BSSS): Validity Evidence in Mexican Adolescents.
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Merino-Soto C, Salas-Blas E, Pérez-Amezcua B, García-Rivas J, Peña OIG, and Toledano-Toledano F
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- Adolescent, Humans, Mexico, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sensation
- Abstract
Sensation seeking is a construct associated with risky behaviors over a wide age range, but validation studies in Mexico are lacking. The aim of this study was to investigate the validity of two versions of the Brief Sensation Seeking Scale (the BSSS-8 and BSSS-4) in young Mexican individuals. The sample consisted of 2884 students (age: M = 16.6, SD = 1.5) from five preparatory schools in Morelos, Mexico. The internal structure of the BSSS was evaluated according to the structural equation modeling (SEM) parameterization, including measurement invariance (compared to the factor loadings obtained in the meta-analysis); conditional reliability; and equivalence between versions. The unidimensionality and measurement invariance (configurational, factor loadings, thresholds, intercepts, and residuals) across sex and age groups were satisfactory, and the factor loadings were highly congruent with those obtained in the meta-analysis. Reliability was suitably high (greater than 0.80), especially near the mean scores, but was lower for extreme scores. Thus, the instrument was concluded to be optimal for defining the construct of sensation seeking, consistent with the findings of previous studies.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Morpho-agronomic evaluation of native maize races associated with Mexican tropical climate agroforestry systems.
- Author
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Hernández-Salinas G, Toledano-Toledano F, Pérez-García M, Sánchez-Valera OV, Ramírez-Rivera EJ, Serna-Lagunes R, Rocandio-Rodríguez M, Purroy-Vásquez R, Fernández-López CL, López-Morales F, and Garduño-Espinosa J
- Subjects
- Edible Grain genetics, Mexico, Tropical Climate, Zea mays genetics
- Abstract
Maize (Zea mays L.) is native to Mexico, in which wide genetic diversity can be found; however, maize is at risk of genetic erosion, and agroforestry systems (ASs) can be a strategy for conservation and sustainable use of this crop. The objective of this study was to evaluate the variation in the morpho-agronomic characteristics of three native maize races, Tuxpeño, Olotillo × Tuxpeño and Ratón × Tepecintle, cultivated in different AS in a tropical climate of Veracruz, Mexico, as well as its association with microclimatic conditions. In 2019, experiments were established in the localities La Gloria and La Luisa, Veracruz, where the three maize races are cultivated, in a randomized complete block design with three replications in a 3 × 4 factorial scheme (three native maize races and three AS arrrays, plus monoculture). Ten morpho-agronomic variables were recorded in each experiment and were analyzed by analysis of variance (ANOVA; Tukey's post-hoc test, all p ≤ 0.05) and principal component analysis (PCA). Six morpho-agronomic characteristics showed significant differences for the race × system interaction. Consistently standing out both in the Myroxylon with 2.8 m × 2.0 arrays and in the monoculture was the Olotillo × Tuxpeño race, as there were no variations (p ≥ 0.05) in 50% of its morpho-agronomic characteristics. The first three PCs explained 87.7% of the cumulative variance, determined by five variables of the ears, three of the grain and plant height, which were associated with temperature; therefore, the microclimatic conditions of the studied ASs are associated with the morpho-agronomic characteristics of the native maize races. The results show that ASs could be a strategy for the conservation and use of native corn germplasm and could allow the diversification of sustainable production for rural farmers., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A University and Community-Based Partnership: After-School Mentoring Activities to Support Positive Mental Health for Children Who Are Refugees.
- Author
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Nabors LA, Stanton-Chapman TL, and Toledano-Toledano F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Mental Health, Mentors, Universities, Mentoring, Refugees
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to examine mentors' perceptions of a pilot service-learning program designed to provide activities to promote the self-esteem and positive development of elementary school-age children who were refugees. Activities were designed to promote self-esteem, self-confidence, social skills development, and problem-solving. College students completed reflection journals to record their perceptions of mentoring and what the children were learning and experiencing. The results indicated that mentors believed the children were learning ideas to improve their self-esteem and social development. Mentors' impressions were corroborated by reports about the program from staff who worked with the children daily. Involving parents in programming, may have extended the reach of program efforts. Some children may have benefited from evaluations to determine if counseling would benefit them, given the trauma history they and their family members were potentially facing. This was a pilot program implementation study, and a limitation is that data from youth and parents about mental health outcomes were lacking. In the future, assessing perceptions of children, involving their caregivers in programming, and then assessing their caregivers' perceptions of the impact of the program on children's self-esteem and social and emotional functioning will provide critical information about program success and information for program development.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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