87 results on '"Gurung, K"'
Search Results
2. Performance evaluation of several sequencing batch biofilm reactors with movable bed in treatment of linear alkyl benzene sulfonate in urban wastewater
- Author
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Seyedsalehi, M., Paladino, O., Hodaifa, G., Sillanpää, M., Gurung, K., Sahafnia, M., and Barzanouni, H.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Structural determination of XeF2/MF4 (M = Mn, Pd) compounds by 3D electron diffraction
- Author
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Gurung, K., primary, Motaln, K., additional, Brázda, P., additional, Radan, K., additional, Lozinšek, M., additional, and Palatinus, L., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Effect of temperature variations in anaerobic fluidized membrane bioreactor: membrane fouling and microbial community dynamics assessment
- Author
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Theuri, S., primary, Gurung, K., additional, Puhakka, V., additional, Anjan, D., additional, and Sillanpaa, M., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. OP053 [Medical Workforce & Education » Staff education]: TEN YEARS AND THREE COUNTRIES, BUILDING SUSTAINABLE LOW MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE CAPACITY WITH HIGH YIELD PEDAGOGY(2011-2021)
- Author
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Smith, S. G., primary, Onoh, M., additional, Laguerre, J., additional, Rai, S. M., additional, Nakarmi, K., additional, Rai, B., additional, Gauchan, R., additional, Gurung, K. B., additional, Seepersaud, M. N., additional, Marrero, A., additional, and Davidson, T., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Climate windows of opportunity for plant expansion during the Phanerozoic
- Author
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Gurung, K., Field, K.J., Batterman, S.A., Goddéris, Y., Donnadieu, Y., Porada, P., Taylor, L.L., and Mills, B.J.W.
- Abstract
Earth’s long-term climate may have profoundly influenced plant evolution. Local climatic factors, including water availability, light, and temperature, play a key role in plant physiology and growth, and have fluctuated substantially over geological time. However, the impact of these key climate variables on global plant biomass across the Phanerozoic has not yet been established. Linking climate and dynamic vegetation modelling, we identify two key ‘windows of opportunity’ during the Ordovician and Jurassic-Paleogene capable of supporting dramatic expansions of potential plant biomass. These conditions are driven by continental dispersion, paleolatitude of continental area and a lack of glaciation, allowing for an intense hydrological cycle and greater water availability. These windows coincide with the initial expansion of land plants and the later angiosperm radiation. Our findings suggest that the timing and expansion of habitable space for plants played an important role in plant evolution and diversification.
- Published
- 2022
7. Crystal structure study of xenon compounds using 3D electron diffraction
- Author
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Gurung, K., primary, Brázda, P., additional, and Palatinus, L., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Industry under the open sky: An exploration of the political economy of brick making in Nepal; ICIMOD Working Paper 2019/7
- Author
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Sharma, S., primary, Gurung, K., additional, Mishra, A., additional, Bajracharya, S., additional, Mathema, L., additional, Hussain, A., additional, and Pradhan, B. B., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Cost‐effectiveness of emergency versus delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute gallbladder pathology
- Author
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Sutton, A. J., Vohra, R. S., Hollyman, M., Marriott, P. J., Buja, A., Alderson, D., Pasquali, S., Griffiths, E. A., Vohra, R. S., Spreadborough, P., Hollyman, M., Marriott, P. J., Kirkham, A., Pasquali, S., Alderson, D., Griffiths, E. A., Fenwick, S., Elmasry, M., Nunes, Q. M., Kennedy, D., Khan, R. B., Khan, M. A. S., Magee, C. J., Jones, S. M., Mason, D., Parappally, C. P., Mathur, P., Saunders, M., Jamel, S., Ul Haque, S., Zafar, S., Shiwani, M. H., Samuel, N., Dar, F., Jackson, A., Lovett, B., Dindyal, S., Winter, H., Fletcher, T., Rahman, S., Wheatley, K., Nieto, T., Ayaani, S., Youssef, H., Nijjar, R. S., Watkin, H., Naumann, D., Emesih, S., Sarmah, P. B., Lee, K., Joji, N., Heath, J., Teasdale, R. L., Weerasinghe, C., Needham, P. J., Welbourn, H., Forster, L., Finch, D., Blazeby, J. M., Robb, W., McNair, A. G. K., Hrycaiczuk, A., Charalabopoulos, A., Kadirkamanathan, S., Tang, C.‐B., Jayanthi, N. V. G., Noor, N., Dobbins, B., Cockbain, A. J., Nilsen‐Nunn, A., de Siqueira, J., Pellen, M., Cowley, J. B., Ho, W.‐M., Miu, V., White, T. J., Hodgkins, K. A., Kinghorn, A., Tutton, M. G., Al‐Abed, Y. A., Menzies, D., Ahmad, A., Reed, J., Khan, S., Monk, D., Vitone, L. J., Murtaza, G., Joel, A., Brennan, S., Shier, D., Zhang, C., Yoganathan, T., Robinson, S. J., McCallum, I. J. D., Jones, M. J., Elsayed, M., Tuck, E., Wayman, J., Carney, K., Aroori, S., Hosie, K. B., Kimble, A., Bunting, D.M., Fawole, A. S., Basheer, M., Dave, R. V., Sarveswaran, J., Jones, E., Kendal, C., Tilston, M. P., Gough, M., Wallace, T., Singh, S., Downing, J., Mockford, K. A., Issa, E., Shah, N., Chauhan, N., Wilson, T. R., Forouzanfar, A., Wild, J. R. L., Nofal, E., Bunnell, C., Madbak, K., Rao, S. T. V., Devoto, L., Siddiqi, N., Khawaja, Z., Hewes, J. C., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Rodriguez, D. U., Sen, G., Robinson, S., Carney, K., Bartlett, F., Rae, D. M., Stevenson, T. E. J., Sarvananthan, K., Dwerryhouse, S. J., Higgs, S. M., Old, O. J., Hardy, T. J., Shah, R., Hornby, S. T., Keogh, K., Frank, L., Al‐Akash, M., Upchurch, E. A., Frame, R. J., Hughes, M., Jelley, C., Weaver, S., Roy, S., Sillo, T. O., Galanopoulos, G., Cuming, T., Cunha, P., Tayeh, S., Kaptanis, S., Heshaishi, M., Eisawi, A., Abayomi, M., Ngu, W. S., Fleming, K., Bajwa, D. S., Chitre, V., Aryal, K., Ferris, P., Silva, M., Lammy, S., Mohamed, S., Khawaja, A., Hussain, A., Ghazanfar, M. A., Bellini, M. I., Ebdewi, H., Elshaer, M., Gravante, G., Drake, B., Ogedegbe, A., Mukherjee, D., Arhi, C., Iqbal, L. G. N., Watson, N. F., Aggarwal, S. K., Orchard, P., Villatoro, E., Willson, P. D., Mok, J., Woodman, T., Deguara, J., Garcea, G., Babu, B. I., Dennison, A. R., Malde, D., Lloyd, D., Satheesan, S., Al‐Taan, O., Boddy, A., Slavin, J. P., Jones, R. P., Ballance, L., Gerakopoulos, S., Jambulingam, P., Mansour, S., Sakai, N., Acharya, V., Sadat, M. M., Karim, L., Larkin, D., Amin, K., Khan, A., Law, J., Jamdar, S., Smith, S. R., Sampat, K., Oʼshea, K. M., Manu, M., Asprou, F. M., Malik, N. S., Chang, J., Johnstone, M., Lewis, M., Roberts, G. P., Karavadra, B., Photi, E., Hewes, J., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Rodriguez, D., OʼReilly, D. A., Rate, A. J., Sekhar, H., Henderson, L. T., Starmer, B. Z., Coe, P. O., Tolofari, S., Barrie, J., Bashir, G., Sloane, J., Madanipour, S., Halkias, C., Trevatt, A. E. J., Borowski, D. W., Hornsby, J., Courtney, M. J., Virupaksha, S., Seymour, K., Robinson, S., Hawkins, H., Bawa, S., Gallagher, P. V., Reid, A., Wood, P., Finch, J. G., Parmar, J., Stirland, E., Gardner‐Thorpe, J., Al‐Muhktar, A., Peterson, M., Majeed, A., Bajwa, F. M., Martin, J., Choy, A., Tsang, A., Pore, N., Andrew, D. R., Al‐Khyatt, W., Taylor, C., Bhandari, S., Chambers, A., Subramanium, D., Toh, S. K. C., Carter, N. C., Tate, S., Pearce, B., Wainwright, D., Mercer, S. J., Knight, B., Vijay, V., Alagaratnam, S., Sinha, S., Khan, S., El‐Hasani, S. S., Hussain, A. A., Bhattacharya, V., Kansal, N., Fasih, T., Jackson, C., Siddiqui, M. N., Chishti, I. A., Fordham, I. J., Siddiqui, Z., Bausbacher, H., Geogloma, I., Gurung, K., Tsavellas, G., Basynat, P., Shrestha, A. K., Basu, S., Mohan, A. C., Harilingam, M., Rabie, M., Akhtar, M., Kumar, P., Jafferbhoy, S. F., Hussain, N., Raza, S., Haque, M., Alam, I., Aseem, R., Patel, S., Asad, M., Booth, M. I., Ball, W. R., Wood, C. P. J., Pinho‐Gomes, A. C., Kausar, A., Obeidallah, M. R., Varghase, J., Lodhia, J., Bradley, D., Rengifo, C., Lindsay, D., Gopalswamy, S., Finlay, I., Wardle, S., Bullen, N., Iftikhar, S. Y., Awan, A., Ahmed, J., Leeder, P., Fusai, G., Bond‐Smith, G., Psica, A., Puri, Y., Hou, D., Noble, F., Szentpali, K., Broadhurst, J., Date, R., Hossack, M. R., Goh, Y. L., Turner, P., Shetty, V., Riera, M., Macano, C. A.W., Sukha, A., Preston, S. R., Hoban, J. R., Puntis, D. J., Williams, S. V., Krysztopik, R., Kynaston, J., Batt, J., Doe, M., Goscimski, A., Jones, G. H., Smith, S. R., Hall, C., Carty, N., Ahmed, J., Panteleimonitis, S., Gunasekera, R. T., Sheel, A. R. G., Lennon, H., Hindley, C., Reddy, M., Kenny, R., Elkheir, N., McGlone, E. R., Rajaganeshan, R., Hancorn, K., Hargreaves, A., Prasad, R., Longbotham, D. A., Vijayanand, D., Wijetunga, I., Ziprin, P., Nicolay, C. R., Yeldham, G., Read, E., Gossage, J. A., Rolph, R. C., Ebied, H., Phull, M., Khan, M. A., Popplewell, M., Kyriakidis, D., Hussain, A., Henley, N., Packer, J. R., Derbyshire, L., Porter, J., Appleton, S., Farouk, M., Basra, M., Jennings, N. A., Ali, S., Kanakala, V., Ali, H., Lane, R., Dickson‐Lowe, R., Zarsadias, P., Mirza, D., Puig, S., Al Amari, K., Vijayan, D., Sutcliffe, R., Marudanayagam, R., Hamady, Z., Prasad, A. R., Patel, A., Durkin, D., Kaur, P., Bowen, L., Byrne, J. P., Pearson, K. L., Delisle, T. G., Davies, J., Tomlinson, M. A., Johnpulle, M. A., Slawinski, C., Macdonald, A., Nicholson, J., Newton, K., Mbuvi, J., Farooq, A., Mothe, B. S., Zafrani, Z., Brett, D., Francombe, J., Spreadborough, P., Barnes, J., Cheung, M., Al‐Bahrani, A. Z., Preziosi, G., Urbonas, T., Alberts, J., Mallik, M., Patel, K., Segaran, A., Doulias, T., Sufi, P. A., Yao, C., Pollock, S., Manzelli, A., Wajed, S., Kourkulos, M., Pezzuto, R., Wadley, M., Hamilton, E., Jaunoo, S., Padwick, R., Sayegh, M., Newton, R. C., Hebbar, M., Farag, S. F., Spearman, J., Hamdan, M. F., DʼCosta, C., Blane, C., Giles, M., Peter, M. B., Hirst, N. A., Hossain, T., Pannu, A., El‐Dhuwaib, Y., Morrison, T. E. M., Taylor, G. W., Thompson, R. L. E., McCune, K., Loughlin, P., Lawther, R., Byrnes, C. K., Simpson, D. J., Mawhinney, A., Warren, C., McKay, D., McIlmunn, C., Martin, S., MacArtney, M., Diamond, T., Davey, P., Jones, C., Clements, J.M., Digney, R., Chan, W. M., McCain, S., Gull, S., Janeczko, A., Dorrian, E., Harris, A., Dawson, S., Johnston, D., McAree, B., Ghareeb, E., Thomas, G., Connelly, M., McKenzie, S., Cieplucha, K., Spence, G., Campbell, W., Hooks, G., Bradley, N., Hill, A. D. K., Cassidy, J. T., Boland, M., Burke, P., Nally, D. M., Hill, A. D. K., Khogali, E., Shabo, W., Iskandar, E., McEntee, G. P., OʼNeill, M. A., Peirce, C., Lyons, E. M., OʼSullivan, A. W., Thakkar, R., Carroll, P., Ivanovski, I., Balfe, P., Lee, M., Winter, D. C., Kelly, M. E., Hoti, E., Maguire, D., Karunakaran, P., Geoghegan, J. G., McDermott, F., Martin, S. T., Cross, K. S., Cooke, F., Zeeshan, S., Murphy, J. O., Mealy, K., Mohan, H. M., Nedujchelyn, Y., Ullah, M. F., Ahmed, I., Giovinazzo, F., Milburn, J., Prince, S., Brooke, E., Buchan, J., Khalil, A. M., Vaughan, E. M., Ramage, M. I., Aldridge, R. C., Gibson, S., Nicholson, G. A., Vass, D. G., Grant, A. J., Holroyd, D. J., Jones, M. A., Sutton, C. M. L. R., OʼDwyer, P., Nilsson, F., Weber, B., Williamson, T. K., Lalla, K., Bryant, A., Carter, C. R., Forrest, C. R., Hunter, D. I., Nassar, A. H., Orizu, M. N., Knight, K., Qandeel, H., Suttie, S., Belding, R., McClarey, A., Boyd, A. T., Guthrie, G. J. K., Lim, P. J., Luhmann, A., Watson, A. J. M., Richards, C. H., Nicol, L., Madurska, M., Harrison, E., Boyce, K. M., Roebuck, A., Ferguson, G., Pati, P., Wilson, M. S. J., Dalgaty, F., Fothergill, L., Driscoll, P. J., Mozolowski, K. L., Banwell, V., Bennett, S. P., Rogers, P. N., Skelly, B. L., Rutherford, C. L., Mirza, A. K., Lazim, T., Lim, H. C. C., Duke, D., Ahmed, T., Beasley, W. D., Wilkinson, M. D., Maharaj, G., Malcolm, C., Brown, T. H., Shingler, G. M., Mowbray, N., Radwan, R., Morcous, P., Wood, S., Kadhim, A., Stewart, D. J., Baker, A. L., Tanner, N., Shenoy, H., Hafiz, S., De Marchi, J. A., Singh‐Ranger, D., Hisham, E., Ainley, P., OʼNeill, S., Terrace, J., Napetti, S., Hopwood, B., Rhys, T., Downing, J., Kanavati, O., Coats, M., Aleksandrov, D., Kallaway, C., Yahya, S., Weber, B., Templeton, A., Trotter, M., Lo, C., Dhillon, A., Heywood, N., Aawsaj, Y., Hamdan, A., Reece‐Bolton, O., McGuigan, A., Shahin, Y., Ali, A., Luther, A., Nicholson, J. A., Rajendran, I., Boal, M., and Ritchie, J.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Predicting the difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy: development and validation of a pre-operative risk score using an objective operative difficulty grading system
- Author
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Nassar, A. H. M., Hodson, J., H. J., Ng, Vohra, R. S., Katbeh, T., Zino, S., Griffiths, E. A., Kirkham, A. J., Pasquali, S., Marriott, P., Johnstone, M., Spreadborough, P., Alderson, D., Fenwick, S., Elmasry, M., Nunes, Q. M., Kennedy, D., Khan, R. B., Khan, M. A. S., Magee, C. J., Jones, S. M., Mason, D., Parappally, C. P., Mathur, P., Saunders, M., Jamel, S., Haque, S. U., Zafar, S., Shiwani, M. H., Samuel, N., Dar, F., Jackson, A., Lovett, B., Dindyal, S., Winter, H., Fletcher, T., Rahman, S., Wheatley, K., Nieto, T., Ayaani, S., Youssef, H., Nijjar, R. S., Watkin, H., Naumann, D., Emesih, S., Sarmah, P. B., Lee, K., Joji, N., Lambert, J., Heath, J., Teasdale, R. L., Weerasinghe, C., Needham, P. J., Welbourn, H., Forster, L., Finch, D., Blazeby, J. M., Robb, W., Mcnair, A. G. K., Hrycaiczuk, A., Charalabopoulos, A., Kadirkamanathan, S., Tang, C. -B., Jayanthi, N. V. G., Noor, N., Dobbins, B., Cockbain, A. J., Nilsen-Nunn, A., de Siqueira, J., Pellen, M., Cowley, J. B., W. -M., Ho, Miu, V., White, T. J., Hodgkins, K. A., Kinghorn, A., Tutton, M. G., Al-Abed, Y. A., Menzies, D., Ahmad, A., Reed, J., Khan, S., Monk, D., Vitone, L. J., Murtaza, G., Joel, A., Brennan, S., Shier, D., Zhang, C., Yoganathan, T., Robinson, S. J., Mccallum, I. J. D., Jones, M. J., Elsayed, M., Tuck, L., Wayman, J., Carney, K., Aroori, S., Hosie, K. B., Kimble, A., Bunting, D. M., Fawole, A. S., Basheer, M., Dave, R. V., Sarveswaran, J., Jones, E., Kendal, C., Tilston, M. P., Gough, M., Wallace, T., Singh, S., Mockford, J. D. K. A., Issa, E., Shah, N., Chauhan, N., Wilson, T. R., Forouzanfar, A., Wild, J. R. L., Nofal, E., Bunnell, C., Madbak, K., Rao, S. T. V., Devoto, L., Siddiqi, N., Khawaja, Z., Hewes, J. C., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Rodriguez, D. U., Sen, G., Robinson, S., Bartlett, F., Rae, D. M., Stevenson, T. E. J., Sarvananthan, K., Dwerryhouse, S. J., Higgs, S. M., Old, O. J., Hardy, T. J., Shah, R., Hornby, S. T., Keogh, K., Frank, L., Al-Akash, M., Upchurch, E. A., Frame, R. J., Hughes, M., Jelley, C., Weaver, S., Roy, S., Sillo, T. O., Galanopoulos, G., Cuming, T., Cunha, P., Tayeh, S., Kaptanis, S., Heshaishi, M., Eisawi, A., Abayomi, M., Ngu, W. S., Fleming, K., Bajwa, D. S., Chitre, V., Aryal, K., Ferris, P., Silva, M., Lammy, S., Mohamed, S., Khawaja, A., Hussain, A., Ghazanfar, M. A., Bellini, M. I., Ebdewi, H., Elshaer, M., Gravante, G., Drake, B., Ogedegbe, A., Mukherjee, D., Arhi, C., Giwa, L., Iqbal, N., Watson, N. F., Aggarwal, S. K., Orchard, P., Villatoro, E., Willson, P. D., Mok, K. W. J., Woodman, T., Deguara, J., Garcea, G., Babu, B. I., Dennison, A. R., Malde, D., Lloyd, D., Satheesan, S., Al-Taan, O., Boddy, A., Slavin, J. P., Jones, R. P., Ballance, L., Gerakopoulos, S., Jambulingam, P., Mansour, S., Sakai, N., Acharya, V., Sadat, M. M., Karim, L., Larkin, D., Amin, K., Khan, A., Law, J., Jamdar, S., Smith, S. R., Sampat, K., O'Shea, K. M., Manu, M., Asprou, F. M., Malik, N. S., Chang, J., Lewis, M., Roberts, G. P., Karavadra, B., Photi, E., Hewes, J., Rodriguez, D., O'Reilly, D. A., Rate, A. J., Sekhar, H., Henderson, L. T., Starmer, B. Z., Coe, P. O., Tolofari, S., Barrie, J., Bashir, G., Sloane, J., Madanipour, S., Halkias, C., Trevatt, A. E. J., Borowski, D. W., Hornsby, J., Courtney, M. J., Virupaksha, S., Seymour, K., Hawkins, H., Bawa, S., Gallagher, P. V., Reid, A., Wood, P., Finch, J. G., Guy Finch, J., Parmar, J., Stirland, E., Gardner-Thorpe, J., Al-Muhktar, A., Peterson, M., Majeed, A., Bajwa, F. M., Martin, J., Choy, A., Tsang, A., Pore, N., Andrew, D. R., Al-Khyatt, W., Taylor, C., Bhandari, S., Subramanium, D., Toh, S. K. C., Carter, N. C., Tate, S., Pearce, B., Wainwright, D., Mercer, S. J., Knight, B., Vijay, V., Alagaratnam, S., Sinha, S., El-Hasani, S. S., Hussain, A. A., Bhattacharya, V., Kansal, N., Fasih, T., Jackson, C., Siddiqui, M. N., Chishti, I. A., Fordham, I. J., Siddiqui, Z., Bausbacher, H., Geogloma, I., Gurung, K., Tsavellas, G., Basynat, P., Shrestha, A. K., Basu, S., Chhabra, A., Harilingam, M., Rabie, M., Akhtar, M., Kumar, P., Jafferbhoy, S. F., Hussain, N., Raza, S., Haque, M., Alam, I., Aseem, R., Patel, S., Asad, M., Booth, M. I., Ball, W. R., Wood, C. P. J., Pinho-Gomes, A. C., Kausar, A., Obeidallah, M. R., Varghase, J., Lodhia, J., Bradley, D., Rengifo, C., Lindsay, D., Gopalswamy, S., Finlay, I., Wardle, S., Bullen, N., Iftikhar, S. Y., Awan, A., Ahmed, J., Leeder, P., Fusai, G., Bond-Smith, G., Psica, A., Puri, Y., Hou, D., Noble, F., Szentpali, K., Broadhurst, J., Date, R., Hossack, M. R., Goh, Y. L., Turner, P., Shetty, V., Riera, M., Macano, C. A. W., Sukha, A., Preston, S. R., Hoban, J. R., Puntis, D. J., Williams, S. V., Krysztopik, R., Kynaston, J., Batt, J., Doe, M., Goscimski, A., Jones, G. H., Hall, C., Carty, N., Panteleimonitis, S., Gunasekera, R. T., Sheel, A. R. G., Lennon, H., Hindley, C., Reddy, M., Kenny, R., Elkheir, N., Mcglone, E. R., Rajaganeshan, R., Hancorn, K., Hargreaves, A., Prasad, R., Longbotham, D. A., Vijayanand, D., Wijetunga, I., Ziprin, P., Nicolay, C. R., Yeldham, G., Read, E., Gossage, J. A., Rolph, R. C., Ebied, H., Phull, M., Khan, M. A., Popplewell, M., Kyriakidis, D., Henley, N., Packer, J. R., Derbyshire, L., Porter, J., Appleton, S., Farouk, M., Basra, M., Jennings, N. A., Ali, S., Kanakala, V., Ali, H., Lane, R., Dickson-Lowe, R., Zarsadias, P., Mirza, D., Puig, S., Al Amari, K., Vijayan, D., Sutcliffe, R., Marudanayagam, R., Hamady, Z., Prasad, A. R., Patel, A., Durkin, D., Kaur, P., Bowen, L., Byrne, J. P., Pearson, K. L., Delisle, T. G., Davies, J., Tomlinson, M. A., Johnpulle, M. A., Slawinski, C., Macdonald, A., Nicholson, J., Newton, K., Mbuvi, J., Farooq, A., Mothe, B. S., Zafrani, Z., Brett, D., Francombe, J., Barnes, J., Cheung, M., Al-Bahrani, A. Z., Preziosi, G., Urbonas, T., Alberts, J., Mallik, M., Patel, K., Segaran, A., Doulias, T., Sufi, P. A., Yao, C., Pollock, S., Manzelli, A., Wajed, S., Kourkulos, M., Pezzuto, R., Wadley, M., Hamilton, E., Jaunoo, S., Padwick, R., Sayegh, M., Newton, R. C., Hebbar, M., Farag, S. F., Spearman, J., Hamdan, M. F., D'Costa, C., Blane, C., Giles, M., Peter, M. B., Hirst, N. A., Hossain, T., Pannu, A., El-Dhuwaib, Y., Morrison, T. E. M., Taylor, G. W., Thompson, R. L. E., Mccune, K., Loughlin, P., Lawther, R., Byrnes, C. K., Simpson, D. J., Mawhinney, A., Warren, C., Mckay, D., Mcilmunn, C., Martin, S., Macartney, M., Diamond, T., Davey, P., Jones, C., Clements, J. M., Digney, R., Chan, W. M., Mccain, S., Gull, S., Janeczko, A., Dorrian, E., Harris, A., Dawson, S., Johnston, D., Mcaree, B., Ghareeb, E., Thomas, G., Connelly, M., Mckenzie, S., Cieplucha, K., Spence, G., Campbell, W., Hooks, G., Bradley, N., Hill, A. D. K., Cassidy, J. T., Boland, M., Burke, P., Nally, D. M., Khogali, E., Shabo, W., Iskandar, E., Mcentee, G. P., O'Neill, M. A., Peirce, C., Lyons, E. M., O'Sullivan, A. W., Thakkar, R., Carroll, P., Ivanovski, I., Balfe, P., Lee, M., Winter, D. C., Kelly, M. E., Hoti, E., Maguire, D., Karunakaran, P., Geoghegan, J. G., Mcdermott, F., Martin, S. T., Cross, K. S., Cooke, F., Zeeshan, S., Murphy, J. O., Mealy, K., Mohan, H. M., Nedujchelyn, Y., Ullah, M. F., Ahmed, I., Giovinazzo, F., Milburn, J., Prince, S., Brooke, E., Buchan, J., Khalil, A. M., Vaughan, E. M., Ramage, M. I., Aldridge, R. C., Gibson, S., Nicholson, G. A., Vass, D. G., Grant, A. J., Holroyd, D. J., Jones, M. A., Sutton, C. M. L. R., O'Dwyer, P., Nilsson, F., Weber, B., Williamson, T. K., Lalla, K., Bryant, A., Carter, C. R., Forrest, C. R., Hunter, D. I., Nassar, A. H., Orizu, M. N., Knight, K., Qandeel, H., Suttie, S., Belding, R., Mcclarey, A., Boyd, A. T., Guthrie, G. J. K., Lim, P. J., Luhmann, A., Watson, A. J. M., Richards, C. H., Nicol, L., Madurska, M., Harrison, E., Boyce, K. M., Roebuck, A., Ferguson, G., Pati, P., Wilson, M. S. J., Dalgaty, F., Fothergill, L., Driscoll, P. J., Mozolowski, K. L., Banwell, V., Bennett, S. P., Rogers, P. N., Skelly, B. L., Rutherford, C. L., Mirza, A. K., Lazim, T., Lim, H. C. C., Duke, D., Ahmed, T., Beasley, W. D., Wilkinson, M. D., Maharaj, G., Malcolm, C., Brown, T. H., Al-Sarireh, B., Shingler, G. M., Mowbray, N., Radwan, R., Morcous, P., Wood, S., Kadhim, A., Stewart, D. J., Baker, A. L., Tanner, N., Shenoy, H., Hafiz, S., De Marchi, J. A., Singh-Ranger, D., Hisham, E., Ainley, P., O'Neill, S., Terrace, J., Napetti, S., Hopwood, B., Rhys, T., Downing, J., Kanavati, O., Coats, M., Aleksandrov, D., Kallaway, C., Yahya, S., Templeton, A., Trotter, M., Lo, C., Dhillon, A., Heywood, N., Aawsaj, Y., Hamdan, A., Reece-Bolton, O., Mcguigan, A., Shahin, Y., Aymon, Luther, A. A., Nicholson, J. A., Rajendran, I., Boal, M., and Ritchie, J.
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Adult ,Male ,operative difficulty ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Difficulty grading ,difficult cholecystectomy ,predictive score ,surgery ,laparoscopic ,cholecystectomy ,Surgical planning ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Preoperative Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Laparoscopic cholecystectomy ,Framingham Risk Score ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pre operative ,Single surgeon ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,ROC Curve ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cholecystitis ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,Cholecystectomy ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
The prediction of a difficult cholecystectomy has traditionally been based on certain pre-operative clinical and imaging factors. Most of the previous literature reported small patient cohorts and have not used an objective measure of operative difficulty. The aim of this study was to develop a pre-operative score to predict difficult cholecystectomy, as defined by a validated intra-operative difficulty grading scale. Two cohorts from prospectively maintained databases of patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy were analysed: the CholeS Study (8755 patients) and a single surgeon series (4089 patients). Factors potentially predictive of difficulty were correlated to the Nassar intra-operative difficulty scale. A multivariable binary logistic regression analysis was then used to identify factors that were independently associated with difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy, defined as operative difficulty grades 3 to 5. The resulting model was then converted to a risk score, and validated on both internal and external datasets. Increasing age and ASA classification, male gender, diagnosis of CBD stone or cholecystitis, thick-walled gallbladders, CBD dilation, use of pre-operative ERCP and non-elective operations were found to be significant independent predictors of difficult cases. A risk score based on these factors returned an area under the ROC curve of 0.789 (95% CI 0.773–0.806, p
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Morphological characterization and secondary metabolites profile of black pepper (Piper nigrum L.) genotypes from Sikkim
- Author
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Gurung, K., primary and Manivannan, S., primary
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Correction to: Utilisation of an operative difficulty grading scale for laparoscopic cholecystectomy
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Griffiths, E. A., Hodson, J., Vohra, R. S., Marriott, P., Katbeh, T., Zino, S., Nassar, A. H. M., Kirkham, A. J., Pasquali, S., Johnstone, M., Spreadborough, P., Alderson, D., Fenwick, S., Elmasry, M., Nunes, Q. M., Kennedy, D., Khan, R. B., Khan, M. A. S., Magee, C. J., Jones, S. M., Mason, D., Parappally, C. P., Mathur, P., Saunders, M., Jamel, S., Haque, S. U., Zafar, S., Shiwani, M. H., Samuel, N., Dar, F., Jackson, A., Lovett, B., Dindyal, S., Winter, H., Fletcher, T., Rahman, S., Wheatley, K., Nieto, T., Ayaani, S., Youssef, H., Nijjar, R. S., Watkin, H., Naumann, D., Emesih, S., Sarmah, P. B., Lee, K., Joji, N., Lambert, J., Heath, J., Teasdale, R. L., Weerasinghe, C., Needham, P. J., Welbourn, H., Forster, L., Finch, D., Blazeby, J. M., Robb, W., Mcnair, A. G. K., Hrycaiczuk, A., Charalabopoulos, A., Kadirkamanathan, S., Tang, C. -B., Jayanthi, N. V. G., Noor, N., Dobbins, B., Cockbain, A. J., Nilsen-Nunn, A., de Siqueira, J., Pellen, M., Cowley, J. B., W. -M., Ho, Miu, V., White, T. J., Hodgkins, K. A., Kinghorn, A., Tutton, M. G., Al-Abed, Y. A., Menzies, D., Ahmad, A., Reed, J., Khan, S., Monk, D., Vitone, L. J., Murtaza, G., Joel, A., Brennan, S., Shier, D., Zhang, C., Yoganathan, T., Robinson, S. J., Mccallum, I. J. D., Jones, M. J., Elsayed, M., Tuck, L., Wayman, J., Carney, K., Aroori, S., Hosie, K. B., Kimble, A., Bunting, D. M., Fawole, A. S., Basheer, M., Dave, R. V., Sarveswaran, J., Jones, E., Kendal, C., Tilston, M. P., Gough, M., Wallace, T., Singh, S., Mockford, J. D. K. A., Issa, E., Shah, N., Chauhan, N., Wilson, T. R., Forouzanfar, A., Wild, J. R. L., Nofal, E., Bunnell, C., Madbak, K., Rao, S. T. V., Devoto, L., Siddiqi, N., Khawaja, Z., Hewes, J. C., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Rodriguez, D. U., Sen, G., Robinson, S., Bartlett, F., Rae, D. M., Stevenson, T. E. J., Sarvananthan, K., Dwerryhouse, S. J., Higgs, S. M., Old, O. J., Hardy, T. J., Hornby, R. S. S. T., Keogh, K., Frank, L., Al-Akash, M., Upchurch, E. A., Frame, R. J., Hughes, M., Jelley, C., Weaver, S., Roy, S., Sillo, T. O., Galanopoulos, G., Cuming, T., Cunha, P., Tayeh, S., Kaptanis, S., Heshaishi, M., Eisawi, A., Abayomi, M., Ngu, W. S., Fleming, K., Bajwa, D. S., Chitre, V., Aryal, K., Ferris, P., Silva, M., Mohamed, S. L. S., Khawaja, A., Hussain, A., Ghazanfar, M. A., Bellini, M. I., Ebdewi, H., Elshaer, M., Gravante, G., Drake, B., Ogedegbe, A., Mukherjee, D., Arhi, C., Iqbal, L. G. N., Watson, N. F., Aggarwal, S. K., Orchard, P., Villatoro, E., Willson, P. D., Mok, K. W. J., Woodman, T., Deguara, J., Garcea, G., Babu, B. I., Dennison, A. R., Malde, D., Lloyd, D., Satheesan, S., Al-Taan, O., Boddy, A., Slavin, J. P., Jones, R. P., Ballance, L., Gerakopoulos, S., Jambulingam, P., Mansour, S., Sakai, N., Acharya, V., Sadat, M. M., Karim, L., Larkin, D., Amin, K., Khan, A., Law, J., Jamdar, S., Smith, S. R., Sampat, K., O'Shea, K. M., Manu, M., Asprou, F. M., Malik, N. S., Chang, J., Lewis, M., Roberts, G. P., Karavadra, B., Photi, E., Hewes, J., Rodriguez, D., O'Reilly, D. A., Rate, A. J., Sekhar, H., Henderson, L. T., Starmer, B. Z., Coe, P. O., Tolofari, S., Barrie, J., Bashir, G., Sloane, J., Madanipour, S., Halkias, C., Trevatt, A. E. J., Borowski, D. W., Hornsby, J., Courtney, M. J., Virupaksha, S., Seymour, K., Hawkins, H., Bawa, S., Gallagher, P. V., Reid, A., Wood, P., Finch, J. G., Guy Finch, J., Parmar, J., Stirland, E., Gardner-Thorpe, J., Al-Muhktar, A., Peterson, M., Majeed, A., Bajwa, F. M., Martin, J., Choy, A., Tsang, A., Pore, N., Andrew, D. R., Al-Khyatt, W., Bhandari, C. T. S., Subramanium, D., Toh, S. K. C., Carter, N. C., Tate, S., Pearce, B., Wainwright, D., Mercer, S. J., Knight, B., Vijay, V., Alagaratnam, S., Sinha, S., El-Hasani, S. S., Hussain, A. A., Bhattacharya, V., Kansal, N., Fasih, T., Jackson, C., Siddiqui, M. N., Chishti, I. A., Fordham, I. J., Siddiqui, Z., Bausbacher, H., Geogloma, I., Gurung, K., Tsavellas, G., Basynat, P., Shrestha, A. K., Basu, S., Harilingam, A. C. M., Rabie, M., Akhtar, M., Kumar, P., Jafferbhoy, S. F., Hussain, N., Raza, S., Haque, M., Alam, I., Aseem, R., Patel, S., Asad, M., Booth, M. I., Ball, W. R., Wood, C. P. J., Pinho-Gomes, A. C., Kausar, A., Obeidallah, M. R., Varghase, J., Lodhia, J., Bradley, D., Rengifo, C., Lindsay, D., Gopalswamy, S., Finlay, I., Wardle, S., Bullen, N., Iftikhar, S. Y., Awan, A., Ahmed, J., Leeder, P., Fusai, G., Bond-Smith, G., Psica, A., Puri, Y., Hou, D., Noble, F., Szentpali, K., Broadhurst, J., Date, R., Hossack, M. R., Goh, Y. L., Turner, P., Shetty, V., Riera, M., Macano, C. A. W., Sukha, A., Preston, S. R., Hoban, J. R., Puntis, D. J., Williams, S. V., Krysztopik, R., Kynaston, J., Batt, J., Doe, M., Goscimski, A., Jones, G. H., Hall, C., Carty, N., Panteleimonitis, S., Gunasekera, R. T., Sheel, A. R. G., Lennon, H., Hindley, C., Reddy, M., Kenny, R., Elkheir, N., Mcglone, E. R., Rajaganeshan, R., Hancorn, K., Hargreaves, A., Prasad, R., Longbotham, D. A., Vijayanand, D., Wijetunga, I., Ziprin, P., Nicolay, C. R., Yeldham, G., Read, E., Gossage, J. A., Rolph, R. C., Ebied, H., Phull, M., Khan, M. A., Popplewell, M., Kyriakidis, D., Henley, N., Packer, J. R., Derbyshire, L., Porter, J., Appleton, S., Farouk, M., Basra, M., Jennings, N. A., Ali, S., Kanakala, V., Ali, H., Lane, R., Dickson-Lowe, R., Zarsadias, P., Mirza, D., Puig, S., Amari, K. A., Vijayan, D., Sutcliffe, R., Marudanayagam, R., Hamady, Z., Prasad, A. R., Patel, A., Durkin, D., Kaur, P., Bowen, L., Byrne, J. P., Pearson, K. L., Delisle, T. G., Davies, J., Tomlinson, M. A., Johnpulle, M. A., Slawinski, C., Macdonald, A., Nicholson, J., Newton, K., Mbuvi, J., Farooq, A., Mothe, B. S., Zafrani, Z., Brett, D., Francombe, J., Barnes, J., Cheung, M., Al-Bahrani, A. Z., Preziosi, G., Urbonas, T., Alberts, J., Mallik, M., Patel, K., Segaran, A., Doulias, T., Sufi, P. A., Yao, C., Pollock, S., Manzelli, A., Wajed, S., Kourkulos, M., Pezzuto, R., Wadley, M., Hamilton, E., Jaunoo, S., Padwick, R., Sayegh, M., Newton, R. C., Hebbar, M., Farag, S. F., Spearman, J., Hamdan, M. F., D'Costa, C., Blane, C., Giles, M., Peter, M. B., Hirst, N. A., Hossain, T., El-Dhuwaib, A. P. Y., Morrison, T. E. M., Taylor, G. W., Thompson, R. L. E., Mccune, K., Loughlin, P., Lawther, R., Byrnes, C. K., Simpson, D. J., Mawhinney, A., Warren, C., Mckay, D., Mcilmunn, C., Martin, S., Macartney, M., Diamond, T., Davey, P., Jones, C., Clements, J. M., Digney, R., Chan, W. M., Mccain, S., Gull, S., Janeczko, A., Dorrian, E., Harris, A., Dawson, S., Johnston, D., Mcaree, B., Ghareeb, E., Thomas, G., Connelly, M., Mckenzie, S., Cieplucha, K., Spence, G., Campbell, W., Hooks, G., Bradley, N., Hill, A. D. K., Cassidy, J. T., Boland, M., Burke, P., Nally, D. M., Khogali, E., Shabo, W., Iskandar, E., Mcentee, G. P., O'Neill, M. A., Peirce, C., Lyons, E. M., O'Sullivan, A. W., Thakkar, R., Carroll, P., Ivanovski, I., Balfe, P., Lee, M., Winter, D. C., Kelly, M. E., Hoti, E., Maguire, D., Karunakaran, P., Geoghegan, J. G., Mcdermott, F., Martin, S. T., Cross, K. S., Cooke, F., Zeeshan, S., Murphy, J. O., Mealy, K., Mohan, H. M., Nedujchelyn, Y., Ullah, M. F., Ahmed, I., Giovinazzo, F., Milburn, J., Prince, S., Brooke, E., Buchan, J., Khalil, A. M., Vaughan, E. M., Ramage, M. I., Aldridge, R. C., Gibson, S., Nicholson, G. A., Vass, D. G., Grant, A. J., Holroyd, D. J., Angharad Jones, M., Sutton, C. M. L. R., O'Dwyer, P., Nilsson, F., Weber, B., Williamson, T. K., Lalla, K., Bryant, A., Ross Carter, C., Forrest, C. R., Hunter, D. I., Nassar, A. H., Orizu, M. N., Knight, K., Qandeel, H., Suttie, S., Belding, R., Mcclarey, A., Boyd, A. T., Guthrie, G. J. K., Lim, P. J., Luhmann, A., Watson, A. J. M., Richards, C. H., Nicol, L., Madurska, M., Harrison, E., Boyce, K. M., Roebuck, A., Ferguson, G., Pati, P., Wilson, M. S. J., Dalgaty, F., Fothergill, L., Driscoll, P. J., Mozolowski, K. L., Banwell, V., Bennett, S. P., Rogers, P. N., Skelly, B. L., Rutherford, C. L., Mirza, A. K., Lazim, T., Lim, H. C. C., Duke, D., Ahmed, T., Beasley, W. D., Wilkinson, M. D., Maharaj, G., Malcolm, C., Brown, T. H., Al-Sarireh, B., Shingler, G. M., Mowbray, N., Radwan, R., Morcous, P., Wood, S., Kadhim, A., Stewart, D. J., Baker, A. L., Tanner, N., Shenoy, H., Hafiz, S., De Marchi, J. A., Singh-Ranger, D., Hisham, E., Ainley, P., John Terrace, S. O. N., Napetti, S., Hopwood, B., Rhys, T., Downing, J., Kanavati, O., Coats, M., Aleksandrov, D., Kallaway, C., Yahya, S., Templeton, A., Trotter, M., Lo, C., Dhillon, A., Heywood, N., Aawsaj, Y., Hamdan, A., Reece-Bolton, O., Mcguigan, A., Shahin, Y., Aymon, Luther, A. A., Nicholson, J. A., Rajendran, I., Boal, M., and Ritchie, J.
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Adult ,Male ,operative difficulty ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,cholecystectomy ,difficulty grading ,laparoscopic ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries) ,Laparoscopic cholecystectomy ,Aged ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Correction ,Hepatology ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Conversion to Open Surgery ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,ROC Curve ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Multivariate Analysis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,business ,Grading scale ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
A reliable system for grading operative difficulty of laparoscopic cholecystectomy would standardise description of findings and reporting of outcomes. The aim of this study was to validate a difficulty grading system (Nassar scale), testing its applicability and consistency in two large prospective datasets.Patient and disease-related variables and 30-day outcomes were identified in two prospective cholecystectomy databases: the multi-centre prospective cohort of 8820 patients from the recent CholeS Study and the single-surgeon series containing 4089 patients. Operative data and patient outcomes were correlated with Nassar operative difficultly scale, using Kendall's tau for dichotomous variables, or Jonckheere-Terpstra tests for continuous variables. A ROC curve analysis was performed, to quantify the predictive accuracy of the scale for each outcome, with continuous outcomes dichotomised, prior to analysis.A higher operative difficulty grade was consistently associated with worse outcomes for the patients in both the reference and CholeS cohorts. The median length of stay increased from 0 to 4 days, and the 30-day complication rate from 7.6 to 24.4% as the difficulty grade increased from 1 to 4/5 (both p 0.001). In the CholeS cohort, a higher difficulty grade was found to be most strongly associated with conversion to open and 30-day mortality (AUROC = 0.903, 0.822, respectively). On multivariable analysis, the Nassar operative difficultly scale was found to be a significant independent predictor of operative duration, conversion to open surgery, 30-day complications and 30-day reintervention (all p 0.001).We have shown that an operative difficulty scale can standardise the description of operative findings by multiple grades of surgeons to facilitate audit, training assessment and research. It provides a tool for reporting operative findings, disease severity and technical difficulty and can be utilised in future research to reliably compare outcomes according to case mix and intra-operative difficulty.
- Published
- 2018
13. The development and validation of a scoring tool to predict the operative duration of elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Author
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Bharamgoudar, R., Sonsale, A., Hodson, J., Griffiths, E., Vohra, R.S., Kirkham, A.J., Pasquali, S., Marriott, P., Johnstone, M., Spreadborough, P., Alderson, D., Griffiths, E.A., Fenwick, S., Elmasry, M., Nunes, Q.M., Kennedy, D., Khan, R.B., Khan, M.A.S., Magee, C.J., Jones, S.M., Mason, D., Parappally, C.P., Mathur, P., Saunders, M., Jamel, S., Haque, S.U., Zafar, S., Shiwani, M.H., Samuel, N., Dar, F., Jackson, A., Lovett, B., Dindyal, S., Winter, H., Fletcher, T., Rahman, S., Wheatley, K., Nieto, T., Ayaani, S., Youssef, H., Nijjar, R.S., Watkin, H., Naumann, D., Emesih, S., Sarmah, P.B., Lee, K., Joji, N., Lambert, J., Heath, J., Teasdale, R.L., Weerasinghe, C., Needham, P.J., Welbourn, H., Forster, L., Finch, D., Blazeby, J.M., Robb, W., McNair, A.G.K., Hrycaiczuk, A., Charalabopoulos, A., Kadirkamanathan, S., Tang, C.-B., Jayanthi, N.V.G., Noor, N., Dobbins, B., Cockbain, A.J., Nilsen-Nunn, A., de Siqueira, J., Pellen, M., Cowley, J.B., Ho, W.-M., Miu, V., White, T.J., Hodgkins, K.A., Kinghorn, A., Tutton, M.G., Al-Abed, Y.A., Menzies, D., Ahmad, A., Reed, J., Khan, S., Monk, D., Vitone, L.J., Murtaza, G., Joel, A., Brennan, S., Shier, D., Zhang, C., Yoganathan, T., Robinson, S.J., McCallum, I.J.D., Jones, M.J., Elsayed, M., Tuck, L., Wayman, J., Carney, K., Aroori, S., Hosie, K.B., Kimble, A., Bunting, D.M., Fawole, A.S., Basheer, M., Dave, R.V., Sarveswaran, J., Jones, E., Kendal, C., Tilston, M.P., Gough, M., Wallace, T., Singh, S., Mockford, J.D.K.A., Issa, E., Shah, N., Chauhan, N., Wilson, T.R., Forouzanfar, A., Wild, J.R.L., Nofal, E., Bunnell, C., Madbak, K., Rao, S.T.V., Devoto, L., Siddiqi, N., Khawaja, Z., Hewes, J.C., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Rodriguez, D.U., Sen, G., Robinson, S., Bartlett, F., Rae, D.M., Stevenson, T.E.J., Sarvananthan, K., Dwerryhouse, S.J., Higgs, S.M., Old, O.J., Hardy, T.J., Shah, R., Hornby, S.T., Keogh, K., Frank, L., Al-Akash, M., Upchurch, E.A., Frame, R.J., Hughes, M., Jelley, C., Weaver, S., Roy, S., Sillo, T.O., Galanopoulos, G., Cuming, T., Cunha, P., Tayeh, S., Kaptanis, S., Heshaishi, M., Eisawi, A., Abayomi, M., Ngu, W.S., Fleming, K., Bajwa, D.S., Chitre, V., Aryal, K., Ferris, P., Silva, M., Lammy, S., Mohamed, S., Khawaja, A., Hussain, A., Ghazanfar, M.A., Bellini, M.I., Ebdewi, H., Elshaer, M., Gravante, G., Drake, B., Ogedegbe, A., Mukherjee, D., Arhi, C., Giwa, L., Iqbal, N., Watson, N.F., Aggarwal, S.K., Orchard, P., Villatoro, E., Willson, P.D., Mok, K.W.J., Woodman, T., Deguara, J., Garcea, G., Babu, B.I., Dennison, A.R., Malde, D., Lloyd, D., Satheesan, S., Al-Taan, O., Boddy, A., Slavin, J.P., Jones, R.P., Ballance, L., Gerakopoulos, S., Jambulingam, P., Mansour, S., Sakai, N., Acharya, V., Sadat, M.M., Karim, L., Larkin, D., Amin, K., Khan, A., Law, J., Jamdar, S., Smith, S.R., Sampat, K., O?shea, K.M., Manu, M., Asprou, F.M., Malik, N.S., Chang, J., Lewis, M., Roberts, G.P., Karavadra, B., Photi, E., Hewes, J., Rodriguez, D., O?Reilly, D.A., Rate, A.J., Sekhar, H., Henderson, L.T., Starmer, B.Z., Coe, P.O., Tolofari, S., Barrie, J., Bashir, G., Sloane, J., Madanipour, S., Halkias, C., Trevatt, A.E.J., Borowski, D.W., Hornsby, J., Courtney, M.J., Virupaksha, S., Seymour, K., Hawkins, H., Bawa, S., Gallagher, P.V., Reid, A., Wood, P., Finch, J.G., Guy Finch, J., Parmar, J., Stirland, E., Gardner-Thorpe, J., Al-Muhktar, A., Peterson, M., Majeed, A., Bajwa, F.M., Martin, J., Choy, A., Tsang, A., Pore, N., Andrew, D.R., Al-Khyatt, W., Taylor, C., Bhandari, S., Subramanium, D., Toh, S.K.C., Carter, N.C., Tate, S., Pearce, B., Wainwright, D., Mercer, S.J., Knight, B., Vijay, V., Alagaratnam, S., Sinha, S., El-Hasani, S.S., Hussain, A.A., Bhattacharya, V., Kansal, N., Fasih, T., Jackson, C., Siddiqui, M.N., Chishti, I.A., Fordham, I.J., Siddiqui, Z., Bausbacher, H., Geogloma, I., Gurung, K., Tsavellas, G., Basynat, P., Shrestha, A.K., Basu, S., Chhabra, A., Harilingam, M., Rabie, M., Akhtar, M., Kumar, P., Jafferbhoy, S.F., Hussain, N., Raza, S., Haque, M., Alam, I., Aseem, R., Patel, S., Asad, M., Booth, M.I., Ball, W.R., Wood, C.P.J., Pinho-Gomes, A.C., Kausar, A., Obeidallah, M.R., Varghase, J., Lodhia, J., Bradley, D., Rengifo, C., Lindsay, D., Gopalswamy, S., Finlay, I., Wardle, S., Bullen, N., Iftikhar, S.Y., Awan, A., Ahmed, J., Leeder, P., Fusai, G., Bond-Smith, G., Psica, A., Puri, Y., Hou, D., Noble, F., Szentpali, K., Broadhurst, J., Date, R., Hossack, M.R., Goh, Y.L., Turner, P., Shetty, V., Riera, M., Macano, C.A.W., Sukha, A., Preston, S.R., Hoban, J.R., Puntis, D.J., Williams, S.V., Krysztopik, R., Kynaston, J., Batt, J., Doe, M., Goscimski, A., Jones, G.H., Hall, C., Carty, N., Panteleimonitis, S., Gunasekera, R.T., Sheel, A.R.G., Lennon, H., Hindley, C., Reddy, M., Kenny, R., Elkheir, N., McGlone, E.R., Rajaganeshan, R., Hancorn, K., Hargreaves, A., Prasad, R., Longbotham, D.A., Vijayanand, D., Wijetunga, I., Ziprin, P., Nicolay, C.R., Yeldham, G., Read, E., Gossage, J.A., Rolph, R.C., Ebied, H., Phull, M., Khan, M.A., Popplewell, M., Kyriakidis, D., Henley, N., Packer, J.R., Derbyshire, L., Porter, J., Appleton, S., Farouk, M., Basra, M., Jennings, N.A., Ali, S., Kanakala, V., Ali, H., Lane, R., Dickson-Lowe, R., Zarsadias, P., Mirza, D., Puig, S., Al Amari, K., Vijayan, D., Sutcliffe, R., Marudanayagam, R., Hamady, Z., Prasad, A.R., Patel, A., Durkin, D., Kaur, P., Bowen, L., Byrne, J.P., Pearson, K.L., Delisle, T.G., Davies, J., Tomlinson, M.A., Johnpulle, M.A., Slawinski, C., Macdonald, A., Nicholson, J., Newton, K., Mbuvi, J., Farooq, A., Mothe, B.S., Zafrani, Z., Brett, D., Francombe, J., Barnes, J., Cheung, M., Al-Bahrani, A.Z., Preziosi, G., Urbonas, T., Alberts, J., Mallik, M., Patel, K., Segaran, A., Doulias, T., Sufi, P.A., Yao, C., Pollock, S., Manzelli, A., Wajed, S., Kourkulos, M., Pezzuto, R., Wadley, M., Hamilton, E., Jaunoo, S., Padwick, R., Sayegh, M., Newton, R.C., Hebbar, M., Farag, S.F., Spearman, J., Hamdan, M.F., D?Costa, C., Blane, C., Giles, M., Peter, M.B., Hirst, N.A., Hossain, T., Pannu, A., El-Dhuwaib, Y., Morrison, T.E.M., Taylor, G.W., Thompson, R.L.E., McCune, K., Loughlin, P., Lawther, R., Byrnes, C.K., Simpson, D.J., Mawhinney, A., Warren, C., McKay, D., McIlmunn, C., Martin, S., MacArtney, M., Diamond, T., Davey, P., Jones, C., Clements, J.M., Digney, R., Chan, W.M., McCain, S., Gull, S., Janeczko, A., Dorrian, E., Harris, A., Dawson, S., Johnston, D., McAree, B., Ghareeb, E., Thomas, G., Connelly, M., McKenzie, S., Cieplucha, K., Spence, G., Campbell, W., Hooks, G., Bradley, N., Hill, A.D.K., Cassidy, J.T., Boland, M., Burke, P., Nally, D.M., Khogali, E., Shabo, W., Iskandar, E., McEntee, G.P., O?Neill, M.A., Peirce, C., Lyons, E.M., O?Sullivan, A.W., Thakkar, R., Carroll, P., Ivanovski, I., Balfe, P., Lee, M., Winter, D.C., Kelly, M.E., Hoti, E., Maguire, D., Karunakaran, P., Geoghegan, J.G., McDermott, F., Martin, S.T., Cross, K.S., Cooke, F., Zeeshan, S., Murphy, J.O., Mealy, K., Mohan, H.M., Nedujchelyn, Y., Ullah, M.F., Ahmed, I., Giovinazzo, F., Milburn, J., Prince, S., Brooke, E., Buchan, J., Khalil, A.M., Vaughan, E.M., Ramage, M.I., Aldridge, R.C., Gibson, S., Nicholson, G.A., Vass, D.G., Grant, A.J., Holroyd, D.J., Jones, M.A., Sutton, C.M.L.R., O?Dwyer, P., Nilsson, F., Weber, B., Williamson, T.K., Lalla, K., Bryant, A., Carter, C.R., Forrest, C.R., Hunter, D.I., Nassar, A.H., Orizu, M.N., Knight, K., Qandeel, H., Suttie, S., Belding, R., McClarey, A., Boyd, A.T., Guthrie, G.J.K., Lim, P.J., Luhmann, A., Watson, A.J.M., Richards, C.H., Nicol, L., Madurska, M., Harrison, E., Boyce, K.M., Roebuck, A., Ferguson, G., Pati, P., Wilson, M.S.J., Dalgaty, F., Fothergill, L., Driscoll, P.J., Mozolowski, K.L., Banwell, V., Bennett, S.P., Rogers, P.N., Skelly, B.L., Rutherford, C.L., Mirza, A.K., Lazim, T., Lim, H.C.C., Duke, D., Ahmed, T., Beasley, W.D., Wilkinson, M.D., Maharaj, G., Malcolm, C., Brown, T.H., Al-Sarireh, B., Shingler, G.M., Mowbray, N., Radwan, R., Morcous, P., Wood, S., Kadhim, A., Stewart, D.J., Baker, A.L., Tanner, N., Shenoy, H., Hafiz, S., De Marchi, J.A., Singh-Ranger, D., Hisham, E., Ainley, P., O?Neill, S., Terrace, J., Napetti, S., Hopwood, B., Rhys, T., Downing, J., Kanavati, O., Coats, M., Aleksandrov, D., Kallaway, C., Yahya, S., Templeton, A., Trotter, M., Lo, C., Dhillon, A., Heywood, N., Aawsaj, Y., Hamdan, A., Reece-Bolton, O., McGuigan, A., Shahin, Y., Aymon, Luther, A.A., Nicholson, J.A., Rajendran, I., Boal, M., and Ritchie, J.
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Adult ,Male ,Scoring tool ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Patient factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Operative Time ,Operative duration ,030230 surgery ,Logistic regression ,Article ,patient factors ,03 medical and health sciences ,Laparoscopic cholecystectomy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,030202 anesthesiology ,Interquartile range ,medicine ,Humans ,theatre utilisation ,Propensity Score ,Aged ,Framingham Risk Score ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,prediction ,Middle Aged ,operative duration ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,ROC Curve ,scoring tool ,Centre for Surgical Research ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Theatre utilisation ,Emergency medicine ,Cohort ,Propensity score matching ,Female ,Surgery ,Cholecystectomy ,Prediction ,business - Abstract
Background The ability to accurately predict operative duration has the potential to optimise theatre efficiency and utilisation, thus reducing costs and increasing staff and patient satisfaction. With laparoscopic cholecystectomy being one of the most commonly performed procedures worldwide, a tool to predict operative duration could be extremely beneficial to healthcare organisations. Methods Data collected from the CholeS study on patients undergoing cholecystectomy in UK and Irish hospitals between 04/2014 and 05/2014 were used to study operative duration. A multivariable binary logistic regression model was produced in order to identify significant independent predictors of long (> 90 min) operations. The resulting model was converted to a risk score, which was subsequently validated on second cohort of patients using ROC curves. Results After exclusions, data were available for 7227 patients in the derivation (CholeS) cohort. The median operative duration was 60 min (interquartile range 45–85), with 17.7% of operations lasting longer than 90 min. Ten factors were found to be significant independent predictors of operative durations > 90 min, including ASA, age, previous surgical admissions, BMI, gallbladder wall thickness and CBD diameter. A risk score was then produced from these factors, and applied to a cohort of 2405 patients from a tertiary centre for external validation. This returned an area under the ROC curve of 0.708 (SE = 0.013, p 90 min increasing more than eightfold from 5.1 to 41.8% in the extremes of the score. Conclusion The scoring tool produced in this study was found to be significantly predictive of long operative durations on validation in an external cohort. As such, the tool may have the potential to enable organisations to better organise theatre lists and deliver greater efficiencies in care.
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- 2018
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14. Performance evaluation of several sequencing batch biofilm reactors with movable bed in treatment of linear alkyl benzene sulfonate in urban wastewater
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Seyedsalehi, M., primary, Paladino, O., additional, Hodaifa, G., additional, Sillanpää, M., additional, Gurung, K., additional, Sahafnia, M., additional, and Barzanouni, H., additional
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- 2018
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15. Observations on Obtaining Immunizations for International Travel and the Need for Routine Immunizations
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Jong, E. C., Gurung, K., Steffen, Robert, editor, Lobel, Hans, editor, Haworth, James, editor, and Bradley, David J., editor
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- 1989
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16. Population-based cohort study of outcomes following cholecystectomy for benign gallbladder diseases
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Vohra, RS, Pasquali, S, Kirkham, AJ, Marriott, P, Johnstone, M, Spreadborough, P, Alderson, D, Griffiths, EA, Fenwick, S, Elmasry, M, Nunes, Q, Kennedy, D, Khan, RB, Khan, MAS, Magee, CJ, Jones, SM, Mason, D, Parappally, CP, Mathur, P, Saunders, M, Jamel, S, Ul Haque, S, Zafar, S, Shiwani, MH, Samuel, N, Dar, F, Jackson, A, Lovett, B, Dindyal, S, Winter, H, Fletcher, T, Rahman, S, Wheatley, K, Nieto, T, Ayaani, S, Youssef, H, Nijjar, RS, Watkin, H, Naumann, D, Emeshi, S, Sarmah, PB, Lee, K, Joji, N, Heath, J, Teasdale, RL, Weerasinghe, C, Needham, PJ, Welbourn, H, Forster, L, Finch, D, Blazeby, JM, Robb, W, McNair, AGK, Hrycaiczuk, A, Kadirkamanathan, S, Tang, C-B, Jayanthi, NVG, Noor, N, Dobbins, B, Cockbain, AJ, Nilsen-Nunn, A, de Siqueira, J, Pellen, M, Cowley, JB, Ho, W-M, Miu, V, White, TJ, Hodgkins, KA, Kinghorn, A, Tutton, MG, Al-Abed, YA, Menzies, D, Ahmad, A, Reed, J, Khan, S, Monk, D, Vitone, LJ, Murtaza, G, Joel, A, Brennan, S, Shier, D, Zhang, C, Yoganathan, T, Robinson, SJ, McCallum, IJD, Jones, MJ, Elsayed, M, Tuck, L, Wayman, J, Carney, K, Aroori, S, Hosie, KB, Kimble, A, Bunting, DM, Fawole, AS, Basheer, M, Dave, RV, Sarveswaran, J, Jones, E, Kendal, C, Tilston, MP, Gough, M, Wallace, T, Singh, S, Downing, J, Mockford, KA, Issa, E, Shah, N, Chauhan, N, Wilson, TR, Forouzanfar, A, Wild, JRL, Nofal, E, Bunnell, C, Madbak, K, Rao, STV, Devoto, L, Siddiqi, N, Khawaja, Z, Hewes, JC, Gould, L, Chambers, A, Rodriguez, DU, Sen, G, Robinson, S, Bartlett, F, Rae, DM, Stevenson, TEJ, Sarvananthan, K, Dwerryhouse, SJ, Higgs, SM, Old, OJ, Hardy, TJ, Shah, R, Hornby, ST, Keogh, K, Frank, L, Al-Akash, M, Upchurch, EA, Frame, RJ, Hughes, M, Jelley, C, Weaver, S, Roy, S, Sillo, TO, Galanopoulos, G, Cuming, T, Cunha, P, Tayeh, S, Kaptanis, S, Heshaishi, M, Eisawi, A, Abayomi, M, Ngu, WS, Fleming, K, Bajwa, DS, Chitre, V, Aryal, K, Ferris, P, Silva, M, Lammy, S, Mohamed, S, Khawaja, A, Hussain, A, Ghazanfar, MA, Bellini, MI, Ebdewi, H, Elshaer, M, Gravante, G, Drake, B, Ogedegbe, A, Mukherjee, D, Arhi, C, Iqbal, LGN, Watson, NF, Aggarwal, SK, Orchard, P, Villatoro, E, Willson, PD, Wa, K, Mok, J, Woodman, T, Deguara, J, Garcea, G, Babu, BI, Dennison, AR, Malde, D, Lloyd, D, Satheesan, S, Al-Taan, O, Boddy, A, Slavin, JP, Jones, RP, Ballance, L, Gerakopoulos, S, Jambulingam, P, Mansour, S, Sakai, N, Acharya, V, Sadat, MM, Karim, L, Larkin, D, Amin, K, Khan, A, Law, J, Jamdar, S, Smith, SR, Sampat, K, O'Shea, KM, Manu, M, Asprou, FM, Malik, NS, Chang, J, Lewis, M, Roberts, GP, Karavadra, B, Photi, E, Hewes, J, Rodriguez, D, O'Reilly, DA, Rate, AJ, Sekhar, H, Henderson, LT, Starmer, BZ, Coe, PO, Tolofari, S, Barrie, J, Bashir, G, Sloane, J, Madanipour, S, Halkias, C, Trevatt, AEJ, Borowski, DW, Hornsby, J, Courtney, MJ, Seymour, K, Hawkins, H, Bawa, S, Gallagher, PV, Reid, A, Wood, P, Finch, JG, Parmar, J, Stirland, E, Gardner-Thorpe, J, Al-Muhktar, A, Peterson, M, Majeed, A, Bajwa, FM, Martin, J, Choy, A, Tsang, A, Pore, N, Andrew, DR, Al-Khyatt, W, Taylor, C, Bhandari, S, Subramanium, D, Toh, SKC, Carter, NC, Mercer, SJ, Knight, B, Tate, S, Pearce, B, Wainwright, D, Vijay, V, Alagaratnam, S, Sinha, S, El-Hasani, SS, Hussain, AA, Bhattacharya, V, Kansal, N, Fasih, T, Jackson, C, Siddiqui, MN, Chishti, IA, Fordham, IJ, Siddiqui, Z, Bausbacher, H, Geogloma, I, Gurung, K, Tsavellas, G, Basynat, P, Shrestha, AK, Basu, S, Harilingam, ACM, Rabie, M, Akhtar, M, Kumar, P, Jafferbhoy, SF, Hussain, N, Raza, S, Haque, M, Alam, I, Aseem, R, Patel, S, Asad, M, Booth, MI, Ball, WR, Wood, CPJ, Pinho-Gomes, AC, Kausar, A, Obeidallah, MR, Varghase, J, Lodhia, J, Bradley, D, Rengifo, C, Lindsay, D, Gopalswamy, S, Finlay, I, Wardle, S, Bullen, N, Iftikhar, SY, Awan, A, Ahmed, J, Leeder, P, Fusai, G, Bond-Smith, G, Psica, A, Puri, Y, Hou, D, Noble, F, Szentpali, K, Broadhurst, J, Date, R, Hossack, MR, Goh, YL, Turner, P, Shetty, V, Riera, M, Macano, CAW, Sukha, A, Preston, SR, Hoban, JR, Puntis, DJ, Williams, SV, Krysztopik, R, Kynaston, J, Batt, J, Doe, M, Goscimski, A, Jones, GH, Hall, C, Carty, N, Panteleimonitis, S, Gunasekera, RT, Sheel, ARG, Lennon, H, Hindley, C, Reddy, M, Kenny, R, Elkheir, N, McGlone, ER, Rajaganeshan, R, Hancorn, K, Hargreaves, A, Prasad, R, Longbotham, DA, Vijayanand, D, Wijetunga, I, Ziprin, P, Nicolay, CR, Yeldham, G, Read, E, Gossage, JA, Rolph, RC, Ebied, H, Phull, M, Khan, MA, Popplewell, M, Kyriakidis, D, Henley, N, Packer, JR, Derbyshire, L, Porter, J, Appleton, S, Farouk, M, Basra, M, Jennings, NA, Ali, S, Kanakala, V, Ali, H, Lane, R, Dickson-Lowe, R, Zarsadias, P, Mirza, D, Puig, S, Al Amari, K, Vijayan, D, Sutcliffe, R, Marudanayagam, R, Hamady, Z, Prasad, AR, Patel, A, Durkin, D, Kaur, P, Bowen, L, Byrne, JP, Pearson, KL, Delisle, TG, Davies, J, Tomlinson, MA, Johnpulle, MA, Slawinski, C, Macdonald, A, Nicholson, J, Newton, K, Mbuvi, J, Farooq, A, Mothe, BS, Zafrani, Z, Brett, D, Francombe, J, Barnes, J, Cheung, M, Al-Bahrani, AZ, Preziosi, G, Urbonas, T, Alberts, J, Mallik, M, Patel, K, Segaran, A, Doulias, T, Sufi, PA, Yao, C, Pollock, S, Manzelli, A, Wajed, S, Kourkulos, M, Pezzuto, R, Wadley, M, Hamilton, E, Jaunoo, S, Padwick, R, Sayegh, M, Newton, RC, Hebbar, M, Farag, SF, Spearman, J, Hamdan, MF, D'Costa, C, Blane, C, Giles, M, Peter, MB, Hirst, NA, Hossain, T, Pannu, A, El-Dhuwaib, Y, Morrison, TEM, Taylor, GW, Thompson, RLE, McCune, K, Loughlin, P, Lawther, R, Byrnes, CK, Simpson, DJ, Mawhinney, A, Warren, C, Mckay, D, McIlmunn, C, Martin, S, MacArtney, M, Diamond, T, Davey, P, Jones, C, Clements, JM, Digney, R, Chan, WM, McCain, S, Gull, S, Janeczko, A, Dorrian, E, Harris, A, Dawson, S, Johnston, D, McAree, B, Ghareeb, E, Thomas, G, Connelly, M, McKenzie, S, Cieplucha, K, Spence, G, Campbell, W, Hooks, G, Bradley, N, Hill, ADK, Cassidy, JT, Boland, M, Burke, P, Nally, DM, Khogali, E, Shabo, W, Iskandar, E, McEntee, GP, O'Neill, MA, Peirce, C, Lyons, EM, O'Sullivan, AW, Thakkar, R, Carroll, P, Ivanovski, I, Balfe, P, Lee, M, Winter, DC, Kelly, ME, Hoti, E, Maguire, D, Karunakaran, P, Geoghegan, JG, Martin, ST, McDermott, F, Cross, KS, Cooke, F, Zeeshan, S, Murphy, JO, Mealy, K, Mohan, HM, Nedujchelyn, Y, Ullah, MF, Ahmed, I, Giovinazzo, F, Milburn, J, Prince, S, Brooke, E, Buchan, J, Khalil, AM, Vaughan, EM, Ramage, MI, Aldridge, RC, Gibson, S, Nicholson, GA, Vass, DG, Grant, AJ, Holroyd, DJ, Jones, MA, Sutton, CMLR, O'Dwyer, P, Nilsson, F, Weber, B, Williamson, TK, Lalla, K, Bryant, A, Carter, CR, Forrest, CR, Hunter, DI, Nassar, AH, Orizu, MN, Knight, K, Qandeel, H, Suttie, S, Belding, R, McClarey, A, Boyd, AT, Guthrie, GJK, Lim, PJ, Luhmann, A, Watson, AJM, Richards, CH, Nicol, L, Madurska, M, Harrison, E, Boyce, KM, Roebuck, A, Ferguson, G, Pati, P, Wilson, MSJ, Dalgaty, F, Fothergill, L, Driscoll, PJ, Mozolowski, KL, Banwell, V, Bennett, SP, Rogers, PN, Skelly, BL, Rutherford, CL, Mirza, AK, Lazim, T, Lim, HCC, Duke, D, Ahmed, T, Beasley, WD, Wilkinson, MD, Maharaj, G, Malcolm, C, Brown, TH, Shingler, GM, Mowbray, N, Radwan, R, Morcous, P, Wood, S, Kadhim, A, Stewart, DJ, Baker, AL, Tanner, N, Shenoy, H, Hafiz, S, De Marchi, JA, Singh-Ranger, D, Hisham, E, Ainley, P, O'Neill, S, Terrace, J, Napetti, S, Hopwood, B, Rhys, T, Kanavati, O, Coats, M, Aleksandrov, D, Kallaway, C, Yahya, S, Templeton, A, Trotter, M, Lo, C, Dhillon, A, Heywood, N, Aawsaj, Y, Hamdan, A, Reece-Bolton, O, McGuigan, A, Shahin, Y, Ali, A, Luther, A, Nicholson, JA, Rajendran, I, Boal, M, Ritchie, J, Grp, CS, and Collaborative, WMR
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Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030230 surgery ,outcomes ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,80 and over ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Middle Aged ,Conversion to Open Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,Centre for Surgical Research ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Female ,Elective Surgical Procedure ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Gallbladder disease ,Gallbladder Diseases ,Aged ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Cholecystectomy ,Emergency Treatment ,Humans ,Ireland ,Patient Readmission ,Time-to-Treatment ,United Kingdom ,Surgery ,benign disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Laparoscopic ,medicine ,education ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Gallbladder ,medicine.disease ,business ,Complication - Abstract
Background The aim was to describe the management of benign gallbladder disease and identify characteristics associated with all-cause 30-day readmissions and complications in a prospective population-based cohort. Methods Data were collected on consecutive patients undergoing cholecystectomy in acute UK and Irish hospitals between 1 March and 1 May 2014. Potential explanatory variables influencing all-cause 30-day readmissions and complications were analysed by means of multilevel, multivariable logistic regression modelling using a two-level hierarchical structure with patients (level 1) nested within hospitals (level 2). Results Data were collected on 8909 patients undergoing cholecystectomy from 167 hospitals. Some 1451 cholecystectomies (16·3 per cent) were performed as an emergency, 4165 (46·8 per cent) as elective operations, and 3293 patients (37·0 per cent) had had at least one previous emergency admission, but had surgery on a delayed basis. The readmission and complication rates at 30 days were 7·1 per cent (633 of 8909) and 10·8 per cent (962 of 8909) respectively. Both readmissions and complications were independently associated with increasing ASA fitness grade, duration of surgery, and increasing numbers of emergency admissions with gallbladder disease before cholecystectomy. No identifiable hospital characteristics were linked to readmissions and complications. Conclusion Readmissions and complications following cholecystectomy are common and associated with patient and disease characteristics.
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- 2016
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17. Population-based cohort study of variation in the use of emergency cholecystectomy for benign gallbladder diseases
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Vohra, R. S., Pasquali, S., Kirkham, A. J., Marriott, P., Johnstone, M., Spreadborough, P., Alderson, D., Griffiths, E. A., Fenwick, S., Elmasry, M., Nunes, Q., Kennedy, D., Basit Khan, R., Khan, M. A. S., Magee, C. J., Jones, S. M., Mason, D., Parappally, C. P., Mathur, P., Saunders, M., Jamel, S., Ul Haque, S., Zafar, S., Shiwani, M. H., Samuel, N., Dar, F., Jackson, A., Lovett, B., Dindyal, S., Winter, H., Fletcher, T., Rahman, S., Wheatley, K., Nieto, T., Ayaani, S., Youssef, H., Nijjar, R. S., Watkin, H., Naumann, D., Emeshi, S., Sarmah, P. B., Lee, K., Joji, N., Heath, J., Teasdale, R. L., Weerasinghe, C., Needham, P. J., Welbourn, H., Forster, L., Finch, D., Blazeby, J. M., Robb, W., Mcnair, A. G. K., Hrycaiczuk, A., Charalabopoulos, A., Kadirkamanathan, S., Tang, C. -B., Jayanthi, N. V. G., Noor, N., Dobbins, B., Cockbain, A. J., Nilsen-Nunn, A., de Siqueira, J., Pellen, M., Cowley, J. B., W. -M., Ho, Miu, V., White, T. J., Hodgkins, K. A., Kinghorn, A., Tutton, M. G., Al-Abed, Y. A., Menzies, D., Ahmad, A., Reed, J., Khan, S., Monk, D., Vitone, L. J., Murtaza, G., Joel, A., Brennan, S., Shier, D., Zhang, C., Yoganathan, T., Robinson, S. J., Mccallum, I. J. D., Jones, M. J., Elsayed, M., Tuck, L., Wayman, J., Carney, K., Aroori, S., Hosie, K. B., Kimble, A., Bunting, D. M., Fawole, A. S., Basheer, M., Dave, R. V., Sarveswaran, J., Jones, E., Kendal, C., Tilston, M. P., Gough, M., Wallace, T., Singh, S., Downing, J., Mockford, K. A., Issa, E., Shah, N., Chauhan, N., Wilson, T. R., Forouzanfar, A., Wild, J. R. L., Nofal, E., Bunnell, C., Madbak, K., Rao, S. T. V., Devoto, L., Siddiqi, N., Khawaja, Z., Hewes, J. C., Gould, L., Chambers, A., Urriza Rodriguez, D., Sen, G., Robinson, S., Bartlett, F., Rae, D. M., Stevenson, T. E. J., Sarvananthan, K., Dwerryhouse, S. J., Higgs, S. M., Old, O. J., Hardy, T. J., Shah, R., Hornby, S. T., Keogh, K., Frank, L., Al-Akash, M., Upchurch, E. A., Frame, R. J., Hughes, M., Jelley, C., Weaver, S., Roy, S., Sillo, T. O., Galanopoulos, G., Cuming, T., Cunha, P., Tayeh, S., Kaptanis, S., Heshaishi, M., Eisawi, A., Abayomi, M., Ngu, W. S., Fleming, K., Singh Bajwa, D., Chitre, V., Aryal, K., Ferris, P., Silva, M., Lammy, S., Mohamed, S., Khawaja, A., Hussain, A., Ghazanfar, M. A., Bellini, M. I., Ebdewi, H., Elshaer, M., Gravante, G., Drake, B., Ogedegbe, A., Mukherjee, D., Arhi, C., Giwa Nusrat Iqbal, L., Watson, N. F., Kumar Aggarwal, S., Orchard, P., Villatoro, E., Willson, P. D., Wa, K., Mok, J., Woodman, T., Deguara, J., Garcea, G., Babu, B. I., Dennison, A. R., Malde, D., Lloyd, D., Satheesan, S., Al-Taan, O., Boddy, A., Slavin, J. P., Jones, R. P., Ballance, L., Gerakopoulos, S., Jambulingam, P., Mansour, S., Sakai, N., Acharya, V., Sadat, M. M., Karim, L., Larkin, D., Amin, K., Khan, A., Law, J., Jamdar, S., Smith, S. R., Sampat, K., M O'shea, K., Manu, M., Asprou, F. M., Malik, N. S., Chang, J., Lewis, M., Roberts, G. P., Karavadra, B., Photi, E., Hewes, J., Rodriguez, D., O'Reilly, D. A., Rate, A. J., Sekhar, H., Henderson, L. T., Starmer, B. Z., Coe, P. O., Tolofari, S., Barrie, J., Bashir, G., Sloane, J., Madanipour, S., Halkias, C., Trevatt, A. E. J., Borowski, D. W., Hornsby, J., Courtney, M. J., Virupaksha, S., Seymour, K., Hawkins, H., Bawa, S., Gallagher, P. V., Reid, A., Wood, P., Finch, J. G., Parmar, J., Stirland, E., Gardner-Thorpe, J., Al-Muhktar, A., Peterson, M., Majeed, A., Bajwa, F. M., Martin, J., Choy, A., Tsang, A., Pore, N., Andrew, D. R., Al-Khyatt, W., Taylor, C., Bhandari, S., Subramanium, D., Toh, S. K. C., Carter, N. C., Mercer, S. J., Knight, B., Tate, S., Pearce, B., Wainwright, D., Vijay, V., Alagaratnam, S., Sinha, S., El-Hasani, S. S., Hussain, A. A., Bhattacharya, V., Kansal, N., Fasih, T., Jackson, C., Siddiqui, M. N., Chishti, I. A., Fordham, I. J., Siddiqui, Z., Bausbacher, H., Geogloma, I., Gurung, K., Tsavellas, G., Basynat, P., Kiran Shrestha, A., Basu, S., Chhabra Mohan Harilingam, A., Rabie, M., Akhtar, M., Kumar, P., Jafferbhoy, S. F., Hussain, N., Raza, S., Haque, M., Alam, I., Aseem, R., Patel, S., Asad, M., Booth, M. I., Ball, W. R., Wood, C. P. J., Pinho-Gomes, A. C., Kausar, A., Rami Obeidallah, M., Varghase, J., Lodhia, J., Bradley, D., Rengifo, C., Lindsay, D., Gopalswamy, S., Finlay, I., Wardle, S., Bullen, N., Iftikhar, S. Y., Awan, A., Ahmed, J., Leeder, P., Fusai, G., Bond-Smith, G., Psica, A., Puri, Y., Hou, D., Noble, F., Szentpali, K., Broadhurst, J., Date, R., Hossack, M. R., Li Goh, Y., Turner, P., Shetty, V., Riera, M., Macano, C. A. W., Sukha, A., Preston, S. R., Hoban, J. R., Puntis, D. J., Williams, S. V., Krysztopik, R., Kynaston, J., Batt, J., Doe, M., Goscimski, A., Jones, G. H., Hall, C., Carty, N., Panteleimonitis, S., Gunasekera, R. T., Sheel, A. R. G., Lennon, H., Hindley, C., Reddy, M., Kenny, R., Elkheir, N., Mcglone, E. R., Rajaganeshan, R., Hancorn, K., Hargreaves, A., Prasad, R., Longbotham, D. A., Vijayanand, D., Wijetunga, I., Ziprin, P., Nicolay, C. R., Yeldham, G., Read, E., Gossage, J. A., Rolph, R. C., Ebied, H., Phull, M., Khan, M. A., Popplewell, M., Kyriakidis, D., Henley, N., Packer, J. R., Derbyshire, L., Porter, J., Appleton, S., Farouk, M., Basra, M., Jennings, N. A., Ali, S., Kanakala, V., Ali, H., Lane, R., Dickson-Lowe, R., Zarsadias, P., Mirza, D., Puig, S., Al Amari, K., Vijayan, D., Sutcliffe, R., Marudanayagam, R., Hamady, Z., Prasad, A. R., Patel, A., Durkin, D., Kaur, P., Bowen, L., Byrne, J. P., Pearson, K. L., Delisle, T. G., Davies, J., Tomlinson, M. A., Johnpulle, M. A., Slawinski, C., Macdonald, A., Nicholson, J., Newton, K., Mbuvi, J., Farooq, A., Sidhartha Mothe, B., Zafrani, Z., Brett, D., Francombe, J., Barnes, J., Cheung, M., Al-Bahrani, A. Z., Preziosi, G., Urbonas, T., Alberts, J., Mallik, M., Patel, K., Segaran, A., Doulias, T., Sufi, P. A., Yao, C., Pollock, S., Manzelli, A., Wajed, S., Kourkulos, M., Pezzuto, R., Wadley, M., Hamilton, E., Jaunoo, S., Padwick, R., Sayegh, M., Newton, R. C., Hebbar, M., Farag, S. F., Spearman, J., Hamdan, M. F., D'Costa, C., Blane, C., Giles, M., Peter, M. B., Hirst, N. A., Hossain, T., Pannu, A., El-Dhuwaib, Y., Morrison, T. E. M., Taylor, G. W., Thompson, R. L. E., Mccune, K., Loughlin, P., Lawther, R., Byrnes, C. K., Simpson, D. J., Mawhinney, A., Warren, C., Mckay, D., Mcilmunn, C., Martin, S., Macartney, M., Diamond, T., Davey, P., Jones, C., Clements, J. M., Digney, R., Chan, W. M., Mccain, S., Gull, S., Janeczko, A., Dorrian, E., Harris, A., Dawson, S., Johnston, D., Mcaree, B., Ghareeb, E., Thomas, G., Connelly, M., Mckenzie, S., Cieplucha, K., Spence, G., Campbell, W., Hooks, G., Bradley, N., Hill, A. D. K., Cassidy, J. T., Boland, M., Burke, P., Nally, D. M., Khogali, E., Shabo, W., Iskandar, E., Mcentee, G. P., O'Neill, M. A., Peirce, C., Lyons, E. M., O'Sullivan, A. W., Thakkar, R., Carroll, P., Ivanovski, I., Balfe, P., Lee, M., Winter, D. C., Kelly, M. E., Hoti, E., Maguire, D., Karunakaran, P., Geoghegan, J. G., Martin, S. T., Mcdermott, F., Cross, K. S., Cooke, F., Zeeshan, S., Murphy, J. O., Mealy, K., Mohan, H. M., Nedujchelyn, Y., Fahad Ullah, M., Ahmed, I., Giovinazzo, F., Milburn, J., Prince, S., Brooke, E., Buchan, J., Khalil, A. M., Vaughan, E. M., Ramage, M. I., Aldridge, R. C., Gibson, S., Nicholson, G. A., Vass, D. G., Grant, A. J., Holroyd, D. J., Jones, M. A., Sutton, C. M. L. R., O'Dwyer, P., Nilsson, F., Weber, B., Williamson, T. K., Lalla, K., Bryant, A., Carter, C. R., Forrest, C. R., Hunter, D. I., Nassar, A. H., Orizu, M. N., Knight, K., Qandeel, H., Suttie, S., Belding, R., Mcclarey, A., Boyd, A. T., Guthrie, G. J. K., Lim, P. J., Luhmann, A., Watson, A. J. M., Richards, C. H., Nicol, L., Madurska, M., Harrison, E., Boyce, K. M., Roebuck, A., Ferguson, G., Pati, P., Wilson, M. S. J., Dalgaty, F., Fothergill, L., Driscoll, P. J., Mozolowski, K. L., Banwell, V., Bennett, S. P., Rogers, P. N., Skelly, B. L., Rutherford, C. L., Mirza, A. K., Lazim, T., Lim, H. C. C., Duke, D., Ahmed, T., Beasley, W. D., Wilkinson, M. D., Maharaj, G., Malcolm, C., Brown, T. H., Shingler, G. M., Mowbray, N., Radwan, R., Morcous, P., Wood, S., Kadhim, A., Stewart, D. J., Baker, A. L., Tanner, N., Shenoy, H., Hafiz, S., De Marchi, J. A., Singh-Ranger, D., Hisham, E., Ainley, P., O'Neill, S., Terrace, J., Napetti, S., Hopwood, B., Rhys, T., Kanavati, O., Coats, M., Aleksandrov, D., Kallaway, C., Yahya, S., Templeton, A., Trotter, M., Lo, C., Dhillon, A., Heywood, N., Aawsaj, Y., Hamdan, A., Reece-Bolton, O., Mcguigan, A., Shahin, Y., Ali, A., Luther, A., Nicholson, J. A., Rajendran, I., Boal, M., and Ritchie, J.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gallbladder disease ,Population ,Gallbladder Diseases ,030230 surgery ,Biliary colic ,Time-to-Treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency cholecystectomy ,benign gallbladder disease ,hospital care ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Humans ,Cholecystectomy ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Emergency Treatment ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Gallbladder ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Hospitals ,United Kingdom ,Hospitalization ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Centre for Surgical Research ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Ireland ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background The aims of this prospective population-based cohort study were to identify the patient and hospital characteristics associated with emergency cholecystectomy, and the influences of these in determining variations between hospitals. Methods Data were collected for consecutive patients undergoing cholecystectomy in acute UK and Irish hospitals between 1 March and 1 May 2014. Potential explanatory variables influencing the performance of emergency cholecystectomy were analysed by means of multilevel, multivariable logistic regression modelling using a two-level hierarchical structure with patients (level 1) nested within hospitals (level 2). Results Data were collected on 4744 cholecystectomies from 165 hospitals. Increasing age, lower ASA fitness grade, biliary colic, the need for further imaging (magnetic retrograde cholangiopancreatography), endoscopic interventions (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography) and admission to a non-biliary centre significantly reduced the likelihood of an emergency cholecystectomy being performed. The multilevel model was used to calculate the probability of receiving an emergency cholecystectomy for a woman aged 40 years or over with an ASA grade of I or II and a BMI of at least 25·0 kg/m2, who presented with acute cholecystitis with an ultrasound scan showing a thick-walled gallbladder and a normal common bile duct. The mean predicted probability of receiving an emergency cholecystectomy was 0·52 (95 per cent c.i. 0·45 to 0·57). The predicted probabilities ranged from 0·02 to 0·95 across the 165 hospitals, demonstrating significant variation between hospitals. Conclusion Patients with similar characteristics presenting to different hospitals with acute gallbladder pathology do not receive comparable care.
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- 2016
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18. Prevalence of Candida Albicans in Genital Tract of Pregnant Women Attending Antenatal Clinic of Nepalgunj Medical College Hospital
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Rai, Maya, primary, Poudel, T. P., primary, Gurung, K., primary, Neupane, G. P., primary, and B.C., Durga, primary
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- 2017
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19. Cost-effectiveness of emergency versus delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute gallbladder pathology
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Sutton, A J, primary, Vohra, R S, additional, Hollyman, M, additional, Marriott, P J, additional, Buja, A, additional, Alderson, D, additional, Pasquali, S, additional, Griffiths, E A, additional, Spreadborough, P, additional, Kirkham, A, additional, Fenwick, S, additional, Elmasry, M, additional, Nunes, Q M, additional, Kennedy, D, additional, Khan, R B, additional, Khan, M A S, additional, Magee, C J, additional, Jones, S M, additional, Mason, D, additional, Parappally, C P, additional, Mathur, P, additional, Saunders, M, additional, Jamel, S, additional, Ul Haque, S, additional, Zafar, S, additional, Shiwani, M H, additional, Samuel, N, additional, Dar, F, additional, Jackson, A, additional, Lovett, B, additional, Dindyal, S, additional, Winter, H, additional, Fletcher, T, additional, Rahman, S, additional, Wheatley, K, additional, Nieto, T, additional, Ayaani, S, additional, Youssef, H, additional, Nijjar, R S, additional, Watkin, H, additional, Naumann, D, additional, Emesih, S, additional, Sarmah, P B, additional, Lee, K, additional, Joji, N, additional, Heath, J, additional, Teasdale, R L, additional, Weerasinghe, C, additional, Needham, P J, additional, Welbourn, H, additional, Forster, L, additional, Finch, D, additional, Blazeby, J M, additional, Robb, W, additional, McNair, A G K, additional, Hrycaiczuk, A, additional, Charalabopoulos, A, additional, Kadirkamanathan, S, additional, Tang, C-B, additional, Jayanthi, N V G, additional, Noor, N, additional, Dobbins, B, additional, Cockbain, A J, additional, Nilsen-Nunn, A, additional, de Siqueira, J, additional, Pellen, M, additional, Cowley, J B, additional, Ho, W-M, additional, Miu, V, additional, White, T J, additional, Hodgkins, K A, additional, Kinghorn, A, additional, Tutton, M G, additional, Al-Abed, Y A, additional, Menzies, D, additional, Ahmad, A, additional, Reed, J, additional, Khan, S, additional, Monk, D, additional, Vitone, L J, additional, Murtaza, G, additional, Joel, A, additional, Brennan, S, additional, Shier, D, additional, Zhang, C, additional, Yoganathan, T, additional, Robinson, S J, additional, McCallum, I J D, additional, Jones, M J, additional, Elsayed, M, additional, Tuck, E, additional, Wayman, J, additional, Carney, K, additional, Aroori, S, additional, Hosie, K B, additional, Kimble, A, additional, Bunting, D M, additional, Fawole, A S, additional, Basheer, M, additional, Dave, R V, additional, Sarveswaran, J, additional, Jones, E, additional, Kendal, C, additional, Tilston, M P, additional, Gough, M, additional, Wallace, T, additional, Singh, S, additional, Downing, J, additional, Mockford, K A, additional, Issa, E, additional, Shah, N, additional, Chauhan, N, additional, Wilson, T R, additional, Forouzanfar, A, additional, Wild, J R L, additional, Nofal, E, additional, Bunnell, C, additional, Madbak, K, additional, Rao, S T V, additional, Devoto, L, additional, Siddiqi, N, additional, Khawaja, Z, additional, Hewes, J C, additional, Gould, L, additional, Chambers, A, additional, Rodriguez, D U, additional, Sen, G, additional, Robinson, S, additional, Bartlett, F, additional, Rae, D M, additional, Stevenson, T E J, additional, Sarvananthan, K, additional, Dwerryhouse, S J, additional, Higgs, S M, additional, Old, O J, additional, Hardy, T J, additional, Shah, R, additional, Hornby, S T, additional, Keogh, K, additional, Frank, L, additional, Al-Akash, M, additional, Upchurch, E A, additional, Frame, R J, additional, Hughes, M, additional, Jelley, C, additional, Weaver, S, additional, Roy, S, additional, Sillo, T O, additional, Galanopoulos, G, additional, Cuming, T, additional, Cunha, P, additional, Tayeh, S, additional, Kaptanis, S, additional, Heshaishi, M, additional, Eisawi, A, additional, Abayomi, M, additional, Ngu, W S, additional, Fleming, K, additional, Bajwa, D S, additional, Chitre, V, additional, Aryal, K, additional, Ferris, P, additional, Silva, M, additional, Lammy, S, additional, Mohamed, S, additional, Khawaja, A, additional, Hussain, A, additional, Ghazanfar, M A, additional, Bellini, M I, additional, Ebdewi, H, additional, Elshaer, M, additional, Gravante, G, additional, Drake, B, additional, Ogedegbe, A, additional, Mukherjee, D, additional, Arhi, C, additional, Iqbal, L G N, additional, Watson, N F, additional, Aggarwal, S K, additional, Orchard, P, additional, Villatoro, E, additional, Willson, P D, additional, Mok, J, additional, Woodman, T, additional, Deguara, J, additional, Garcea, G, additional, Babu, B I, additional, Dennison, A R, additional, Malde, D, additional, Lloyd, D, additional, Satheesan, S, additional, Al-Taan, O, additional, Boddy, A, additional, Slavin, J P, additional, Jones, R P, additional, Ballance, L, additional, Gerakopoulos, S, additional, Jambulingam, P, additional, Mansour, S, additional, Sakai, N, additional, Acharya, V, additional, Sadat, M M, additional, Karim, L, additional, Larkin, D, additional, Amin, K, additional, Khan, A, additional, Law, J, additional, Jamdar, S, additional, Smith, S R, additional, Sampat, K, additional, O'shea, K M, additional, Manu, M, additional, Asprou, F M, additional, Malik, N S, additional, Chang, J, additional, Johnstone, M, additional, Lewis, M, additional, Roberts, G P, additional, Karavadra, B, additional, Photi, E, additional, Hewes, J, additional, Rodriguez, D, additional, O'Reilly, D A, additional, Rate, A J, additional, Sekhar, H, additional, Henderson, L T, additional, Starmer, B Z, additional, Coe, P O, additional, Tolofari, S, additional, Barrie, J, additional, Bashir, G, additional, Sloane, J, additional, Madanipour, S, additional, Halkias, C, additional, Trevatt, A E J, additional, Borowski, D W, additional, Hornsby, J, additional, Courtney, M J, additional, Virupaksha, S, additional, Seymour, K, additional, Hawkins, H, additional, Bawa, S, additional, Gallagher, P V, additional, Reid, A, additional, Wood, P, additional, Finch, J G, additional, Parmar, J, additional, Stirland, E, additional, Gardner-Thorpe, J, additional, Al-Muhktar, A, additional, Peterson, M, additional, Majeed, A, additional, Bajwa, F M, additional, Martin, J, additional, Choy, A, additional, Tsang, A, additional, Pore, N, additional, Andrew, D R, additional, Al-Khyatt, W, additional, Taylor, C, additional, Bhandari, S, additional, Subramanium, D, additional, Toh, S K C, additional, Carter, N C, additional, Tate, S, additional, Pearce, B, additional, Wainwright, D, additional, Mercer, S J, additional, Knight, B, additional, Vijay, V, additional, Alagaratnam, S, additional, Sinha, S, additional, El-Hasani, S S, additional, Hussain, A A, additional, Bhattacharya, V, additional, Kansal, N, additional, Fasih, T, additional, Jackson, C, additional, Siddiqui, M N, additional, Chishti, I A, additional, Fordham, I J, additional, Siddiqui, Z, additional, Bausbacher, H, additional, Geogloma, I, additional, Gurung, K, additional, Tsavellas, G, additional, Basynat, P, additional, Shrestha, A K, additional, Basu, S, additional, Mohan, A C, additional, Harilingam, M, additional, Rabie, M, additional, Akhtar, M, additional, Kumar, P, additional, Jafferbhoy, S F, additional, Hussain, N, additional, Raza, S, additional, Haque, M, additional, Alam, I, additional, Aseem, R, additional, Patel, S, additional, Asad, M, additional, Booth, M I, additional, Ball, W R, additional, Wood, C P J, additional, Pinho-Gomes, A C, additional, Kausar, A, additional, Obeidallah, M R, additional, Varghase, J, additional, Lodhia, J, additional, Bradley, D, additional, Rengifo, C, additional, Lindsay, D, additional, Gopalswamy, S, additional, Finlay, I, additional, Wardle, S, additional, Bullen, N, additional, Iftikhar, S Y, additional, Awan, A, additional, Ahmed, J, additional, Leeder, P, additional, Fusai, G, additional, Bond-Smith, G, additional, Psica, A, additional, Puri, Y, additional, Hou, D, additional, Noble, F, additional, Szentpali, K, additional, Broadhurst, J, additional, Date, R, additional, Hossack, M R, additional, Goh, Y L, additional, Turner, P, additional, Shetty, V, additional, Riera, M, additional, Macano, C A W, additional, Sukha, A, additional, Preston, S R, additional, Hoban, J R, additional, Puntis, D J, additional, Williams, S V, additional, Krysztopik, R, additional, Kynaston, J, additional, Batt, J, additional, Doe, M, additional, Goscimski, A, additional, Jones, G H, additional, Hall, C, additional, Carty, N, additional, Panteleimonitis, S, additional, Gunasekera, R T, additional, Sheel, A R G, additional, Lennon, H, additional, Hindley, C, additional, Reddy, M, additional, Kenny, R, additional, Elkheir, N, additional, McGlone, E R, additional, Rajaganeshan, R, additional, Hancorn, K, additional, Hargreaves, A, additional, Prasad, R, additional, Longbotham, D A, additional, Vijayanand, D, additional, Wijetunga, I, additional, Ziprin, P, additional, Nicolay, C R, additional, Yeldham, G, additional, Read, E, additional, Gossage, J A, additional, Rolph, R C, additional, Ebied, H, additional, Phull, M, additional, Khan, M A, additional, Popplewell, M, additional, Kyriakidis, D, additional, Henley, N, additional, Packer, J R, additional, Derbyshire, L, additional, Porter, J, additional, Appleton, S, additional, Farouk, M, additional, Basra, M, additional, Jennings, N A, additional, Ali, S, additional, Kanakala, V, additional, Ali, H, additional, Lane, R, additional, Dickson-Lowe, R, additional, Zarsadias, P, additional, Mirza, D, additional, Puig, S, additional, Al Amari, K, additional, Vijayan, D, additional, Sutcliffe, R, additional, Marudanayagam, R, additional, Hamady, Z, additional, Prasad, A R, additional, Patel, A, additional, Durkin, D, additional, Kaur, P, additional, Bowen, L, additional, Byrne, J P, additional, Pearson, K L, additional, Delisle, T G, additional, Davies, J, additional, Tomlinson, M A, additional, Johnpulle, M A, additional, Slawinski, C, additional, Macdonald, A, additional, Nicholson, J, additional, Newton, K, additional, Mbuvi, J, additional, Farooq, A, additional, Mothe, B S, additional, Zafrani, Z, additional, Brett, D, additional, Francombe, J, additional, Barnes, J, additional, Cheung, M, additional, Al-Bahrani, A Z, additional, Preziosi, G, additional, Urbonas, T, additional, Alberts, J, additional, Mallik, M, additional, Patel, K, additional, Segaran, A, additional, Doulias, T, additional, Sufi, P A, additional, Yao, C, additional, Pollock, S, additional, Manzelli, A, additional, Wajed, S, additional, Kourkulos, M, additional, Pezzuto, R, additional, Wadley, M, additional, Hamilton, E, additional, Jaunoo, S, additional, Padwick, R, additional, Sayegh, M, additional, Newton, R C, additional, Hebbar, M, additional, Farag, S F, additional, Spearman, J, additional, Hamdan, M F, additional, D'Costa, C, additional, Blane, C, additional, Giles, M, additional, Peter, M B, additional, Hirst, N A, additional, Hossain, T, additional, Pannu, A, additional, El-Dhuwaib, Y, additional, Morrison, T E M, additional, Taylor, G W, additional, Thompson, R L E, additional, McCune, K, additional, Loughlin, P, additional, Lawther, R, additional, Byrnes, C K, additional, Simpson, D J, additional, Mawhinney, A, additional, Warren, C, additional, McKay, D, additional, McIlmunn, C, additional, Martin, S, additional, MacArtney, M, additional, Diamond, T, additional, Davey, P, additional, Jones, C, additional, Clements, J M, additional, Digney, R, additional, Chan, W M, additional, McCain, S, additional, Gull, S, additional, Janeczko, A, additional, Dorrian, E, additional, Harris, A, additional, Dawson, S, additional, Johnston, D, additional, McAree, B, additional, Ghareeb, E, additional, Thomas, G, additional, Connelly, M, additional, McKenzie, S, additional, Cieplucha, K, additional, Spence, G, additional, Campbell, W, additional, Hooks, G, additional, Bradley, N, additional, Hill, A D K, additional, Cassidy, J T, additional, Boland, M, additional, Burke, P, additional, Nally, D M, additional, Khogali, E, additional, Shabo, W, additional, Iskandar, E, additional, McEntee, G P, additional, O'Neill, M A, additional, Peirce, C, additional, Lyons, E M, additional, O'Sullivan, A W, additional, Thakkar, R, additional, Carroll, P, additional, Ivanovski, I, additional, Balfe, P, additional, Lee, M, additional, Winter, D C, additional, Kelly, M E, additional, Hoti, E, additional, Maguire, D, additional, Karunakaran, P, additional, Geoghegan, J G, additional, McDermott, F, additional, Martin, S T, additional, Cross, K S, additional, Cooke, F, additional, Zeeshan, S, additional, Murphy, J O, additional, Mealy, K, additional, Mohan, H M, additional, Nedujchelyn, Y, additional, Ullah, M F, additional, Ahmed, I, additional, Giovinazzo, F, additional, Milburn, J, additional, Prince, S, additional, Brooke, E, additional, Buchan, J, additional, Khalil, A M, additional, Vaughan, E M, additional, Ramage, M I, additional, Aldridge, R C, additional, Gibson, S, additional, Nicholson, G A, additional, Vass, D G, additional, Grant, A J, additional, Holroyd, D J, additional, Jones, M A, additional, Sutton, C M L R, additional, O'Dwyer, P, additional, Nilsson, F, additional, Weber, B, additional, Williamson, T K, additional, Lalla, K, additional, Bryant, A, additional, Carter, C R, additional, Forrest, C R, additional, Hunter, D I, additional, Nassar, A H, additional, Orizu, M N, additional, Knight, K, additional, Qandeel, H, additional, Suttie, S, additional, Belding, R, additional, McClarey, A, additional, Boyd, A T, additional, Guthrie, G J K, additional, Lim, P J, additional, Luhmann, A, additional, Watson, A J M, additional, Richards, C H, additional, Nicol, L, additional, Madurska, M, additional, Harrison, E, additional, Boyce, K M, additional, Roebuck, A, additional, Ferguson, G, additional, Pati, P, additional, Wilson, M S J, additional, Dalgaty, F, additional, Fothergill, L, additional, Driscoll, P J, additional, Mozolowski, K L, additional, Banwell, V, additional, Bennett, S P, additional, Rogers, P N, additional, Skelly, B L, additional, Rutherford, C L, additional, Mirza, A K, additional, Lazim, T, additional, Lim, H C C, additional, Duke, D, additional, Ahmed, T, additional, Beasley, W D, additional, Wilkinson, M D, additional, Maharaj, G, additional, Malcolm, C, additional, Brown, T H, additional, Shingler, G M, additional, Mowbray, N, additional, Radwan, R, additional, Morcous, P, additional, Wood, S, additional, Kadhim, A, additional, Stewart, D J, additional, Baker, A L, additional, Tanner, N, additional, Shenoy, H, additional, Hafiz, S, additional, De Marchi, J A, additional, Singh-Ranger, D, additional, Hisham, E, additional, Ainley, P, additional, O'Neill, S, additional, Terrace, J, additional, Napetti, S, additional, Hopwood, B, additional, Rhys, T, additional, Kanavati, O, additional, Coats, M, additional, Aleksandrov, D, additional, Kallaway, C, additional, Yahya, S, additional, Templeton, A, additional, Trotter, M, additional, Lo, C, additional, Dhillon, A, additional, Heywood, N, additional, Aawsaj, Y, additional, Hamdan, A, additional, Reece-Bolton, O, additional, McGuigan, A, additional, Shahin, Y, additional, Ali, A, additional, Luther, A, additional, Nicholson, J A, additional, Rajendran, I, additional, Boal, M, additional, and Ritchie, J, additional
- Published
- 2016
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20. ACCURACY OF ENTERAL SYRINGES FOR LIQUID MEDICINES PRESCRIBED IN CHILDREN
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Gurung, K., primary, Arenas-Lopez, S., additional, Wei, L., additional, and Tuleu, C., additional
- Published
- 2014
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21. A Diagnostic Dilemma of Cryptogenic Organising Pneumonia
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Gurung, K, primary
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- 2012
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22. Ocular Morbidity among Orphanages
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Shrestha, M K, primary, Wolf, L, primary, Shrestha, U, primary, Gurung, K, primary, Chansi, B S, primary, Dhungana, P, primary, Gurung, R, primary, and Ruit, S, primary
- Published
- 2010
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23. TEN YEARS AND THREE COUNTRIES, BUILDING SUSTAINABLE LOW MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE CAPACITY WITH HIGH YIELD PEDAGOGY(2011-2021).
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Smith, S. G., Onoh, M., Laguerre, J., Rai, S. M., Nakarmi, K., Rai, B., Gauchan, R., Gurung, K. B., Seepersaud, M. N., Marrero, A., and Davidson, T.
- Published
- 2022
24. Comparison of Heavy Metals Level in Grasses and Grasshoppers from Darjeeling Hills.
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Nath, S., Rai, A., Gurung, K., Das, M., Pradhan, N., Burman, S., and Haldar, P.
- Abstract
The article presents a study that examines the level of heavy metals in various grasshopper species and food plant in Darjeeling Hills, India. The study indicates the presence of zinc in all grasshoppers as well as their food plants. It also reveals no significant differences in the content of zinc and lead in the grasshopper species being collected.
- Published
- 2008
25. Orchids in Rolpa district of Western Nepal: Documentation, stock, trade and conservation
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Koirala, PN, primary, Pyakurel, D, primary, and Gurung, K, primary
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- 1970
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26. Chemical composition and biological properties of Rhododendron anthopogon essential oil
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Maria Carrara, Mariagnese Barbera, Khilendra Gurung, Giuditta Scialino, Stefano Dall'Acqua, Gabbriella Innocenti, Silvio Sosa, Elena Banfi, Innocenti, G., Dall'Acqua, S., Scialino, Giuditta, Banfi, Elena, Sosa, Silvio, Gurung, K., Barbera, M., and Carrara, M.
- Subjects
Antifungal Agents ,Antitubercular Agents ,Pharmaceutical Science ,topical anti-inflammatory activity ,Bacillus subtilis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,law ,Drug Discovery ,Food science ,anti-inflammatory activity ,Candida ,biology ,Strain (chemistry) ,Chemistry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Rhododendron anthopogon ,GC-MS ,essential oil ,antimicrobial activity ,antiproliferative activity ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Molecular Medicine ,Rhododendron ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Sesquiterpene ,Article ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,lcsh:QD241-441 ,lcsh:Organic chemistry ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Botany ,medicine ,Oils, Volatile ,Animals ,Humans ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Essential oil ,Cell Proliferation ,Limonene ,Bacteria ,Organic Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry - Abstract
The essential oil of Rhododendron anthopogon was investigated by GC-MS, and seventeen compounds (representing approximately 98% of the oil) were identified. The major components of the aerial parts of the oil were the monoterpenes alpha-pinene, beta-pinene, limonene and the sesquiterpene delta-cadinene. Biological studies revealed a weak topical anti-inflammatory activity; a significant killing effect against some Gram-positive reference strains: Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcusfecalis, Bacillus subtilis was measured; Mycobacterium tuberculosis reference strain and a clinical isolate of Candida, C. pseudotropicalis were killed by as low as 0.04% (v/v) essential oil. Moreover, the oil was able to reduce cancer cell growth independently of the cell line and the treatment protocols used.
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- 2010
27. Essential oil of Lindera neesiana fruit: chemical analysis and its potential use in topical applications
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Khilendra Gurung, Stefano Comai, Gabbriella Innocenti, Ignazio Castagliuolo, Alessia R. Grillo, Stefano Dall'Acqua, Comai, Stefano, Dall'Acqua, S, Grillo, A, Castagliuolo, I., Gurung, K, and Innocenti, G.
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Keratinocytes ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Drug Discovery ,Oils, Volatile ,Organic chemistry ,Humans ,Medicinal plants ,Essential oil ,Cells, Cultured ,Pharmacology ,Lindera ,beta-Pinene ,alpha-Pinene ,biology ,Traditional medicine ,Molecular Structure ,Plant Extracts ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Terpenoid ,Eucalyptol ,chemistry ,Fruit ,Citronellal ,Anti-Infective Agents, Local - Abstract
The composition of the essential oil of Lindera neesiana Kurz fruit was examined by GC-MS, (1)H, (13)C and bidimensional NMR techniques (HMQC, HMBC, COSY, TOCSY). Forty compounds were identified, representing approximately 86% of the oil: Z-citral (15.08%), E-citral (11.89%), eucalyptol (8.75%), citronellal (6.72%), alpha-pinene (6.63%) and beta-pinene (5.61%) were the major components. The essential oil of L. neesiana fruit showed significant antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans at non-cytotoxic doses in human keratinocytes, suggesting possible topical applications. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: The essential oil of Lindera neesiana was investigated by GC-MS and NMR techniques. Its biological activities suggest possible topical applications.
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- 2009
28. Identification of fungal pathogens among COVID-19 and non COVID-19 cases in Bhaktapur hospital, Nepal.
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Lamichhane A, Regmi S, Pandit K, Upadhaya S, Acharya J, Koirala S, Aryal S, Gurung K, Thapa J, Adhikari S, Sharma S, Poudel P, and Sharma S
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- Humans, Nepal epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Candida albicans isolation & purification, Candida albicans drug effects, Sputum microbiology, Mycoses microbiology, Mycoses epidemiology, Candida isolation & purification, Candida drug effects, Aged, Aspergillus fumigatus isolation & purification, Aspergillus fumigatus drug effects, Young Adult, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, Candida tropicalis isolation & purification, Candida tropicalis drug effects, Mucor isolation & purification, Mucor drug effects, Aspergillus flavus isolation & purification, Aspergillus flavus drug effects, Prevalence, COVID-19 microbiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Antifungal Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
Objectives: Patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are at increased risk of opportunistic fungal infections. This study aims to identify fungal pathogens among COVID positive and negative patients, assess their antifungal susceptibility and evaluate biofilm forming ability of Candida spp. A cross-sectional study was conducted among sputum samples from 135 COVID positive and 101 COVID negative cases. Fungal pathogens were identified by conventional culture methods. Antifungal susceptibility test of Candida isolates was done by disc diffusion method and biofilm production by microtiter plate method., Results: The prevalence of fungal pathogens among COVID-positive and negative cases was 6.70% and 22.77% respectively. In COVID positive cases, Candida albicans (33.33%) was predominantly followed by Aspergillus flavus 2(22.22%) and Candida tropicalis, Mucor spp. and Aspergillus fumigatus. In COVID negative cases, Candida albicans (69.60%) prevailed followed by Trichosporon spp., Candida parapsilosis, Mucor and Alternaria. Age and gender were not associated with fungal infection. Most Candida spp. were susceptible to miconazole but resistant to ketoconazole. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents the first report from Nepal on critical and high priority fungal pathogens categorized by WHO. With fungal infections on the rise, enhanced clinical vigilanceand antifungal susceptibility testing are warranted., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: This study was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsiki. Ethical approval of this study was obtained from the Institutional Review Committee (IRC) of the Institute of Science and Technology, Tribhuvan University (Ref. No.: IRC-IOST-22–0052). At the time of enrolment, written informed consent was taken from the patients or their legal guardians on behalf of the patients in case of participants under 16 years of age. Participants, parents or guardians were assured about the non-disclosure of information collected from them and were also informed about the use of data for analysis and using the results for improving patient care activities as well as publication without disclosing the name or identity of cases. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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29. Transfusion Camp: The UK experience and its value in improving knowledge of transfusion medicine among postgraduate trainees.
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Aggarwal A, Kaushik K, Morton S, Danaee A, Gurung K, Robinson S, Kapitany C, Charge S, Lin Y, Desborough M, and Murphy MF
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Female, Male, Blood Transfusion, Education, Medical, Graduate, Transfusion Medicine education
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Objectives: To report the UK experience of rolling out Transfusion Camp., Background: Transfusion Camp is a structured education programme developed in Toronto, with the aim of reducing knowledge gaps in transfusion medicine in postgraduate trainees. It consists of didactic lectures viewed online by the participants, then interactive, locally delivered seminars. Since 2015, it has been rolled out in the United Kingdom, and is now available in four centres. Here, we report the UK experience of Transfusion Camp and outcomes., Methods: Trainees are recruited via the training programme directors in each region. Pre- and post-course assessments are administered using the validated BEST (Biomedical Excellence for Safer Transfusion) test, with possible scores 0-20, and confidence measured on an A-E Likert scale., Results: Since 2015, 130 trainees have participated in Transfusion Camp in the United Kingdom. Trainees from all specialties significantly improved their BEST-test scores after attending the course (mean score 11.6/20 before the course, compared with 14.3/20 after the course), and confidence in managing transfusion-related issues was also significantly improved., Conclusion: We recommend that all centres consider offering Transfusion Camp to trainees in haematology and other specialties that frequently use blood transfusions, such as anaesthesia/ICU, Internal Medicine and others., (© 2024 The Author(s). Transfusion Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Blood Transfusion Society.)
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- 2024
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30. Dicarbonyl[10,10-dimethyl-5,15-bis(pentafluorophenyl)biladiene]ruthenium(II): discovery of the first ruthenium tetrapyrrole cis-dicarbonyl complex by X-ray and electron diffraction.
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Pham TN, Shirley H, Merkelbach J, Gurung K, Palatinus L, Yap GPA, and Rosenthal J
- Abstract
Dicarbonyl[10,10-dimethyl-5,15-bis(pentafluorophenyl)biladiene]ruthenium(II), [Ru(C
33 H16 F10 N4 )(CO)2 ] or Ru(CO)2 [DMBil1], is the first reported ruthenium(II) cis-dicarbonyl tetrapyrrole complex. The neutral complex sports two carbonyls and an oligotetrapyrrolic biladiene ligand. Notably, the biladiene adopts a coordination geometry that is well distorted from square planar and much more closely approximates a seesaw arrangement. Accordingly, Ru(CO)2 [DMBil1] is not only the first ruthenium cis-dicarbonyl with a tetrapyrrole ligand, but also the first metal biladiene complex in which the tetrapyrrole does not adopt a (pseudo-)square-planar coordination geometry. Ru(CO)2 [DMBil1] is weakly luminescent, displaying λem = 552 nm upon excitation at λex = 500 nm, supports two reversible 1 e- reductions at -1.45 and -1.73 V (versus Fc+ /Fc), and has significant absorption features at 481 and 531 nm, suggesting suitability for photocatalytic and photosensitization applications. While the structure of Ru(CO)2 [DMBil1] was initially determined by X-ray diffraction, a traditionally acceptable quality structure could not be obtained (despite multiple attempts) because of consistently poor crystal quality. An independent structure obtained from electron diffraction experiments corroborates the structure of this unusual biladiene complex.- Published
- 2024
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31. Reactive Noble-Gas Compounds Explored by 3D Electron Diffraction: XeF 2 -MnF 4 Adducts and a Facile Sample Handling Procedure.
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Motaln K, Gurung K, Brázda P, Kokalj A, Radan K, Dragomir M, Žemva B, Palatinus L, and Lozinšek M
- Abstract
Recent advances in 3D electron diffraction (3D ED) have succeeded in matching the capabilities of single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD), while requiring only submicron crystals for successful structural investigations. One of the many diverse areas to benefit from the 3D ED structural analysis is main-group chemistry, where compounds are often poorly crystalline or single-crystal growth is challenging. A facile method for loading and transferring highly air-sensitive and strongly oxidizing samples at low temperatures to a transmission electron microscope (TEM) for 3D ED analysis was successfully developed and tested on xenon(II) compounds from the XeF
2 -MnF4 system. The crystal structures determined on nanometer-sized crystallites by dynamical refinement of the 3D ED data are in complete agreement with the results obtained by SCXRD on micrometer-sized crystals and by periodic density-functional theory (DFT) calculations, demonstrating the applicability of this approach for structural studies of noble-gas compounds and highly reactive species in general. The compounds 3XeF2 ·2MnF4 , XeF2 ·MnF4 , and XeF2 ·2MnF4 are rare examples of structurally fully characterized xenon difluoride-metal tetrafluoride adducts and thus advance our knowledge of the diverse structural chemistry of these systems, which also includes the hitherto poorly characterized first noble-gas compound, "XePtF6 "., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2024
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32. Silent Screams: A Narrative Review of Cyberbullying Among Indian Adolescents.
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M V, Balamurugan G, Sevak S, Gurung K, G B, X S, P T, and S T
- Abstract
Cyberbullying is bullying with the use of digital technologies, which can take place on social media, messaging platforms, gaming platforms, and mobile phones. It is repeated behavior aimed at scaring, angering, or shaming those who are targeted. India happens to be one of the rapidly improving countries in the cyber world and thus faces a lot of problems regarding cyber crimes, especially cyberbullying. This narrative review aims to provide a thorough assessment of the impact of cyberbullying among Indian adolescents. The database engines such as PubMed, Google Scholar, and PsycINFO were searched relevant to the Indian context, focused on cyberbullying and victimization among adolescents, and published within the last 10 years (2014-2024) were included. Around 19 articles were reviewed and analyzed. Cyberbullying in India is on the rise due to increased technology access, social media, and insufficient awareness and prevention measures, with significant gender differences in aggression patterns. The severe psychological and physiological effects on victims, including depression and stress-related health issues, highlight the need for accurate data and culturally tailored interventions. Studies show varying prevalence rates, emphasizing the urgent need for focused efforts to combat cyberbullying among Indian youth. The review encompasses various aspects, including prevalence, standard methods, forms, causes, consequences, and effects on mental health factors contributing to cyberbullying in India. Additionally, the review explores cyberbullying during COVID-19 and interventions for cyberbullying and highlights the evidence from cohort studies, mixed-method studies, and systematic reviews. A growing number of adolescents are experiencing cyberbullying, which has a severe impact on their lives and leads to unexpected deviances. Cyberbullying remains a growing threat, requiring stronger, coordinated action by the government to genuinely make a difference and safeguard adolescents in India., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest: In compliance with the ICMJE uniform disclosure form, all authors declare the following: Payment/services info: All authors have declared that no financial support was received from any organization for the submitted work. Financial relationships: All authors have declared that they have no financial relationships at present or within the previous three years with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work. Other relationships: All authors have declared that there are no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work., (Copyright © 2024, M et al.)
- Published
- 2024
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33. Lateral medullary syndrome resulting from atrial fibrillation due to rheumatic heart disease: A case report and literature review.
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Shrestha S, Maharjan S, Ghimire B, Mainali N, Gurung K, Yadav HR, Bhandari K, Shrestha S, Halder A, Rajak K, and Jaiswal V
- Abstract
Lateral medullary syndrome, resulting from cerebellar/brainstem infarction, can occur due to cardioembolic stroke from atrial fibrillation caused by rheumatic heart disease. This rare association highlights the importance of strict arrhythmia management, prophylactic anticoagulation, and timely diagnosis to prevent debilitating neurological outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). Clinical Case Reports published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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34. Mental Health Issues Among School Children and Adolescents in India: A Systematic Review.
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Balamurugan G, Sevak S, Gurung K, and Vijayarani M
- Abstract
Childhood and adolescence are critical developmental stages for mental health, and the environment in which they grow has an impact on their well-being and growth. This study aims to assess mental health issues among school children and adolescents in India. A systematic search was conducted on the literature published between January 2013 and August 2023 in PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane Library, and Eric database. Thirty-one studies with a sample size of 30,970 were included in the final quantitative synthesis, of which 14,381 were male. The overall mean age of the school children and adolescents was 14.58 years, with a standard deviation of 1.35. A diverse range of mental health concerns have been documented in school children and adolescents, exhibiting differing degrees of severity and frequency. The analysis showed that depression was the most prevalent mental health issue among children, followed by social, behavioral, and emotional problems, anxiety, psychological distress, internet technology addiction, stress, social phobia, sexual and emotional abuse, violence, and attention deficit hyperactive disorder. The study concludes that school mental health research in India is critical for personalizing interventions to the specific requirements of the diverse student population, decreasing stigma, and enhancing overall student well-being within the cultural and educational context of the country., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2024, Balamurugan et al.)
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- 2024
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35. Structure and absolute configuration of natural fungal product beauveriolide I, isolated from Cordyceps javanica, determined by 3D electron diffraction.
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Gurung K, Šimek P, Jegorov A Jr, and Palatinus L
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- Electrons, Crystallography, X-Ray, Hydrogen Bonding, Biological Products, Cordyceps
- Abstract
Beauveriolides, including the main beauveriolide I {systematic name: (3R,6S,9S,13S)-9-benzyl-13-[(2S)-hexan-2-yl]-6-methyl-3-(2-methylpropyl)-1-oxa-4,7,10-triazacyclotridecane-2,5,8,11-tetrone, C
27 H41 N3 O5 }, are a series of cyclodepsipeptides that have shown promising results in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease and in the prevention of foam cell formation in atherosclerosis. Their crystal structure studies have been difficult due to their tiny crystal size and fibre-like morphology, until now. Recent developments in 3D electron diffraction methodology have made it possible to accurately study the crystal structures of submicron crystals by overcoming the problems of beam sensitivity and dynamical scattering. In this study, the absolute structure of beauveriolide I was determined by 3D electron diffraction. The cyclodepsipeptide crystallizes in the space group I2 with lattice parameters a = 40.2744 (4), b = 5.0976 (5), c = 27.698 (4) Å and β = 105.729 (6)°. After dynamical refinement, its absolute structure was determined by comparing the R factors and calculating the z-scores of the two possible enantiomorphs of beauveriolide I., (open access.)- Published
- 2024
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36. Geographic range of plants drives long-term climate change.
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Gurung K, Field KJ, Batterman SA, Poulton SW, and Mills BJW
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- Plants, Carbon Cycle, Carbon Sequestration, Ecosystem, Climate Change, Carbon Dioxide
- Abstract
Long computation times in vegetation and climate models hamper our ability to evaluate the potentially powerful role of plants on weathering and carbon sequestration over the Phanerozoic Eon. Simulated vegetation over deep time is often homogenous, and disregards the spatial distribution of plants and the impact of local climatic variables on plant function. Here we couple a fast vegetation model (FLORA) to a spatially-resolved long-term climate-biogeochemical model (SCION), to assess links between plant geographical range, the long-term carbon cycle and climate. Model results show lower rates of carbon fixation and up to double the previously predicted atmospheric CO
2 concentration due to a limited plant geographical range over the arid Pangea supercontinent. The Mesozoic dispersion of the continents increases modelled plant geographical range from 65% to > 90%, amplifying global CO2 removal, consistent with geological data. We demonstrate that plant geographical range likely exerted a major, under-explored control on long-term climate change., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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37. Accidental gunshot injury with left-sided lung injury and D11 burst fracture: a case report.
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Chaudhary A, Acharya S, Pradhan SK, Gurung K, Karmacharya RM, Vaidya S, Mahat C, Kunwar K, and Bhatt S
- Abstract
Penetrating chest injuries are mainly caused by gunshot trauma and stab injuries. These lead to damage to the vital structures, which requires a multidisciplinary approach for management., Case Presentation: We present a case of an accidental gunshot injury (GSI) to the chest resulting in left-sided hemopneumothorax, left lung contusion, and D11 burst fracture with spinal cord injury. The patient underwent thoracotomy to remove the bullet along with instrumentation and fixation of the D11 burst fracture., Clinical Discussion: Penetrating trauma to the chest requires prompt resuscitation and stabilization with eventual definitive care. Most GSIs to the chest require chest tube insertion, which helps to create negative pressure in the chest cavity, allowing adequate time for the expansion of the lungs., Conclusion: GSIs to the chest could give rise to life-threatening conditions. However, the patient must be stabilized for at least 48 h before performing any surgical repair to ensure that there are fewer complications following surgery., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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38. Preparation and Characterization of Metalloporphyrin Tröger's and Spiro-Tröger's Base Derivatives.
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Navrátilová T, Tatar A, Havlík M, Hajduch J, Drozdová M, Gurung K, Palatinus L, Čejka J, Sedláček J, Anzenbacher P Jr, and Dolenský B
- Abstract
A series of metalloporphyrin dimers as Tröger's bases 1 or spiro-Tröger's bases 2 was prepared starting from five different C
4 -symmetry porphyrin derivatives substituted in meso -positions by Ph, 3-MeO-Ph, 4-MeO-Ph, 3,4-(MeO)2 -Ph, or 3,5-(MeO)2 -Ph. Free-base porphyrins were converted to metalloporphyrins, which were subsequently nitrated with nickel(II), copper(II), or zinc(II) nitrate to give β-nitrometalloporphyrins. These were further reduced to β-aminometalloporphyrins and treated with a methanal equivalent under acidic conditions to selectively obtain Tröger's base 1 , spiro-Tröger's base 2 , or a mixture of both, in yields up to 41% of 1 and 45% of 2 depending on the reaction conditions used. The ratio of 1 to 2 was influenced by the methanal equivalent used, the strength of the acid, and, above all, the solvent. The presence of a metal ion within the porphyrin core and the use of a chlorinated solvent were found to be essential for the formation of spiro-Tröger's base 2 . The molecular structure of spiroTB 2a-Ni2 was proven by electron diffraction.- Published
- 2022
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39. Improved surgical outcomes following simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation in the contemporary era.
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Sharda B, Jay CL, Gurung K, Harriman D, Gurram V, Farney AC, Orlando G, Rogers J, Garner M, and Stratta RJ
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- Humans, Graft Survival, Postoperative Complications, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Pancreas, Pancreas Transplantation, Kidney Transplantation
- Abstract
Background: Complications leading to early technical failure have been the Achilles' heel of simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT). The study purpose was to analyze longitudinally our experience with early surgical complications following SPKT with an emphasis on changes in practice that improved outcomes in the most recent era., Study Design: Single center retrospective review of all SPKTs from 11/1/01 to 8/12/20 with enteric drainage. Early relaparotomy was defined as occurring within 3 months of SPKT. Patients were stratified into two sequential eras: Era 1 (E1): 11/1/01-5/30/13; Era 2 (E2) 6/1/13-8/12/20 based on changes in practice that occurred pursuant to donor age and pancreas cold ischemia time (CIT)., Results: 255 consecutive SPKTs were analyzed (E1, n = 165; E2, n = 90). E1 patients received organs from older donors (mean E1 27.3 vs. E2 23.1 years) with longer pancreas cold CITs) (mean E1 16.1 vs. E2 13.3 h, both p < .05). E1 patients had a higher early relaparotomy rate (E1 43.0% vs. E2 14.4%) and were more likely to require allograft pancreatectomy (E1 9.1% vs. E2 2.2%, both p < .05). E2 patients underwent systemic venous drainage more frequently (E1 8% vs. E2 29%) but pancreas venous drainage did not influence either relaparotomy or allograft pancreatectomy rates. The most common indications for early relaparotomy in E1 were allograft thrombosis (11.5%) and peri-pancreatic phlegmon/abscess (8.5%) whereas in E2 were thrombosis, pancreatitis/infection, and bowel obstruction (each 3%)., Conclusion: Maximizing donor quality (younger donors) and minimizing pancreas CIT are paramount for reducing early surgical complications following SPKT., (© 2021 The Authors. Clinical Transplantation published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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40. Do working and living conditions influence brick-kiln productivity? Evidence from Nepal.
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Bajracharya SB, Mishra A, Hussain A, Gurung K, Mathema L, and Banmali Pradhan B
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- Efficiency, Humans, Nepal, Social Conditions, Occupational Exposure analysis
- Abstract
The brick-kiln (BK) sector in Nepal is largely an informal sector. This study investigated the influence of working and living conditions (WLCs) in BKs on productivity at two levels - BK level and workers' level - using primary data collected from 781 workers and 80 BK entrepreneurs in 12 districts of Nepal. WLCs were assessed based on the provision of nine amenities to workers at BKs. Correlation and regression analyses revealed that WLCs have a positive influence on both BK level as well as workers' level productivity. Moreover, large BKs with better investment in zig-zag technology and mechanization are more likely to spend on improving WLCs than small BKs, who are reluctant to invest in WLCs due mainly to a lack of financial resources. The study suggests an integrated approach emphasizing equally improved WLCs and cleaner technology in the BK sector to transform it into a healthier and socio-environmentally responsible industry.
- Published
- 2022
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41. Climate windows of opportunity for plant expansion during the Phanerozoic.
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Gurung K, Field KJ, Batterman SA, Goddéris Y, Donnadieu Y, Porada P, Taylor LL, and Mills BJW
- Subjects
- Climate Change, Geology, Plant Physiological Phenomena, Water, Climate, Plants
- Abstract
Earth's long-term climate may have profoundly influenced plant evolution. Local climatic factors, including water availability, light, and temperature, play a key role in plant physiology and growth, and have fluctuated substantially over geological time. However, the impact of these key climate variables on global plant biomass across the Phanerozoic has not yet been established. Linking climate and dynamic vegetation modelling, we identify two key 'windows of opportunity' during the Ordovician and Jurassic-Paleogene capable of supporting dramatic expansions of potential plant biomass. These conditions are driven by continental dispersion, paleolatitude of continental area and a lack of glaciation, allowing for an intense hydrological cycle and greater water availability. These windows coincide with the initial expansion of land plants and the later angiosperm radiation. Our findings suggest that the timing and expansion of habitable space for plants played an important role in plant evolution and diversification., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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42. Prevalence of latent structural heart disease in Nepali schoolchildren.
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Shrestha NR, Uranw S, Karki P, Bastola S, Mahato R, Sherpa K, Dhungana S, Gurung K, Pandey N, Agrawal K, Bartkowiak J, Shah P, Rothenbühler M, and Pilgrim T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Echocardiography, Humans, Mass Screening, Prevalence, Schools, Rheumatic Heart Disease diagnostic imaging, Rheumatic Heart Disease epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The present study aimed to quantify the burden of structural heart disease in Nepali children., Methods: We performed a school-based cross-sectional echocardiographic screening study with cluster random sampling among children 5-16 years of age., Results: Between December 2012 and January 2019, 6573 children (mean age 10.6 ± 2.9 years) from 41 randomly selected schools underwent echocardiographic screening. Structural heart disease was detected in 14.0 per 1000 children (95% CI 11.3-17.1) and was congenital in 3.3 per 1000 (95% CI 2.1-5.1) and rheumatic in 10.6 per 1000 (95% CI 8.3-13.4). Rates of rheumatic heart disease were higher among children attending public as compared to private schools (OR 2.8, 95% CI 1.6-5.2, p = 0.0001)., Conclusion: Rheumatic heart disease accounted for three out of four cases of structural heart disease and was more common among children attending public as compared to private schools.
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- 2022
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43. Online Speech Therapy for Cleft Palate Patients in Rural Nepal: Innovations in Providing Essential Care during COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Nakarmi KK, Mehta K, Shakya P, Rai SK, Bhattarai Gurung K, Koirala R, Pradhan B, and Rai SM
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- Child, Communicable Disease Control, Humans, Nepal epidemiology, Pandemics, Speech Therapy, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 epidemiology, Cleft Palate epidemiology, Cleft Palate surgery
- Abstract
Background: Speech therapy is important for ideal functional outcome after cleft palate surgery. Nationwide lockdown due to outbreak of COVID-19 in Nepal restricted the ability of patients to travel to nearby outreach centers for regular speech therapy. The objectives were to assess the feasibility and challenges of conducting online speech therapy with postpalatoplasty children during COVID-19 pandemic; and evaluate the ways to overcome them., Methods: Patients with cleft palate surgery done at least 3 months prior were given online speech therapy. Feasibility, advantages and challenges of online speech therapy were evaluated through interviewing the guardians and speech therapy providers., Results: A total of 89 patients were included in the study. Only 11.2% had secondary palatine procedures. Almost all the children (97.8%) had face to face speech therapy prior to study period. Best use of time, use of audiovisual aid, no need to travel and rapid progress were the most commonly perceived strengths of online speech therapy. The most frequent challenges were internet connectivity, unclear voice, lack of direct interaction and unstable power supply. Recommended ways to improve online speech therapy were cited as better internet connectivity, having a fixed schedule and availing free or affordable Wifi., Conclusions: Despite the challenges, online speech therapy provided us with a way to reach out to the cleft palate children when face-to-face therapy was not possible due to COVID-19 pandemic. We see its role even during non-pandemic situations for the children who are unable to visit the speech therapy centers.
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- 2022
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44. Sickle cell disease patients in two London trusts: Genotyping including RH variants.
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Hui YMT, Gurung K, Layton DM, Ibidapo M, Grimsley S, and Regan F
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- Erythrocytes, Genotype, Humans, Isoantibodies, London, Rh-Hr Blood-Group System, Anemia, Sickle Cell genetics, Anemia, Sickle Cell therapy, Blood Grouping and Crossmatching
- Abstract
Background: All SCD patients need extended RBC antigen typing (by serology or genotyping) for provision of extended RH, K matched blood and to guide RBC selection in those with complex transfusion requirements. Genotyping can also identify RH variants which can cause sensitisation even when extended RH phenotypically matched blood is provided and alloantibodies associated with RH variants can cause HTRs., Objectives: To review the use of RBC genotyping in SCD patients at two London trusts (ICHNT, LNWH) with a focus on RH variants., Methods: Retrospective review with data collected from clinical notes, local and national pathology reporting systems., Results: A 311/482 (64%) ICHNT patients and 181/346 (52%) LNWH patients had extended genotyping. Of genotyped patients, 68 (22%) ICHNT and 31 (17%) LNWH patients had RH variants. Eight ICHNT patients had RH variants and corresponding antibodies associated with RH variants; 4/8 received multiple transfusions with antigen positive RBCs but had no evidence of haemolysis. One LNWH patient had a RH variant with corresponding alloantibody but could not be investigated further for possible HTR., Conclusions: Most patients (59%) had genotyping and a significant number had RH variants (99, 20%). A small proportion (9, 9%) had antibodies associated with RH variants, but with no evidence of clinically significant HTRs despite transfusions in four of them with antigen positive RBCs. All SCD patients should have RBC genotyping including RH variants (preferentially over extended phenotyping) to guide better selection of RBC units. However, where antigen negative blood cannot be provided, the risk of alloimmunisation is not inevitable and subsequent HTRs from antibodies associated with RH variants might not always occur., (© 2021 British Blood Transfusion Society.)
- Published
- 2022
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45. Simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation in Caucasian versus African American patients: Does recipient race influence outcomes?
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Rogers J, Jay CL, Farney AC, Orlando G, Jacobs ML, Harriman D, Gurram V, Sharda B, Gurung K, Reeves-Daniel A, Doares W, Kaczmorski S, Mena-Gutierrez A, Sakhovskaya N, Gautreaux MD, and Stratta RJ
- Subjects
- Black or African American, Graft Rejection epidemiology, Graft Survival, Humans, Pancreas, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Kidney Transplantation, Pancreas Transplantation
- Abstract
The influence of African American (AA) recipient race on outcomes following simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT) is uncertain., Methods: From 11/01 to 2/19, we retrospectively studied 158 Caucasian (C) and 57 AA patients (pts) undergoing SPKT., Results: The AA group had fewer patients on peritoneal dialysis (30% C vs. 14% AA), more patients with longer dialysis duration (28% C vs. 51% AA), more sensitized (PRA ≥20%) patients (6% C vs. 21% AA), and more patients with pretransplant C-peptide levels ≥2.0 ng/ml (11% C vs. 35% AA, all P < .05). With a mean 9.2 year follow-up, patient survival (65% C vs. 77% AA, P = .098) slightly favored the AA group, whereas kidney (55% C vs. 60% AA) and pancreas (48% C vs. 54% AA) graft survival rates (GSRs) were comparable. Death-censored kidney (71% C vs. 68% AA) and pancreas (both 62%) GSRs demonstrated that death with a functioning graft (DWFG) was more common in C vs. AA patients (23% C vs. 12% AA, P = .10). The incidence of death-censored dual graft loss (usually rejection) was 7% C versus 21% AA (P = .005)., Conclusions: Following SPKT, AA patients are at a greater risk for dual immunological graft loss whereas C patients are at greater risk for DWFG., (© 2022 The Authors. Clinical Transplantation published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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46. GeneXpert Based Confirmed Cases among Suspected Cases of Tuberculosis in a Tertiary Care Centre: A Descriptive Cross-sectional Study.
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Pant P, Gurung K, Shrestha N, and Basnet S
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, DNA, Female, Humans, Male, Rifampin therapeutic use, Tertiary Care Centers, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Tuberculosis, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Tuberculosis is an infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis mostly affecting the lungs. Due to the low sensitivity of conventional microscopy and time-consuming culture method, Nucleic acid Amplification Assay Technique is preferred because of its rapidity and sensitivity. This test also helps in finding drug resistance to Rifampicin and also curtails the transmission of disease. The study is aimed to find the prevalence of GeneXpert confirmed cases among suspected cases of tuberculosis in a tertiary care centre., Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study in 104 patients was conducted in a tertiary care centre from 30th Dec 2021 to 3rd Feb 2022. Ethical clearance was taken from the Institutional Review Committee (Reference number: 464/078/079). Sputum samples were collected from patients and were processed for GeneXpert under biological safety standards. GeneXpert Mycobacterium tuberculosis/rifampicin assay, sample processing, deoxyribonucleic acid extraction, and deoxyribonucleic acid amplification occurred in a fully automated cartridge-based real-time Polymerase chain reaction. A convenience sampling method was done. Collected data were coded as per variables and entered in Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 25. Point estimate at 95% Confidence Interval was calculated along with frequency and percentage for binary data., Results: In all 104 patients, GeneXpert detected 10 (9.62%) (3.94-15.26 at 95% Confidence Interval) positive tuberculosis cases. Out of total positive cases, there were 6 (60%) males and 4 (40%) females and there was 1 (10%) rifampicin-resistant case., Conclusions: The prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis among presumptive cases in our study was found to be similar to reported literature., Keywords: multidrug-resistant; nucleic acid amplification test; pulmonary tuberculosis.
- Published
- 2022
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47. Dynamics of microbial community and their effects on membrane fouling in an anoxic-oxic gravity-driven membrane bioreactor under varying solid retention time: A pilot-scale study.
- Author
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Deb A, Gurung K, Rumky J, Sillanpää M, Mänttäri M, and Kallioinen M
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- Bioreactors, Microbiota
- Abstract
Membrane fouling in a membrane bioreactor (MBR) is highly influenced by the characteristics of the influent, the mixed liquor microbial community and the operational parameters, all of which are environment specific. Therefore, we studied the dynamics of microbial community during the treatment of real municipal wastewater in a pilotscale anoxic-oxic (A/O) MBR equipped with a gravity-driven membrane filtration system. The MBR was operated at three different solid retention times (SRTs): 25, 40 and 10 days for a total period of 180 days in Nordic environmental conditions. Analysis of microbial community dynamics revealed a high diversity of microbial species at SRT of 40 days, whereas SRT of 25 days was superior with microbial richness. Production of soluble microbial products (SMP) and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) was found to be intensely connected with the SRT and food to microorganism (F/M) ratio. Relatively longer operational period with the lowest rate of membrane fouling was observed at SRT of 25 days, which was resulted from the superior microbial community, lowest production of SMP and loosely bound EPS as well as the lower filtration resistance of larger sludge flocs. Abundance of quorum quenching (QQ) bacteria and granular floc forming bacterial genera at SRT of 25 days provided relatively lower membrane fouling tendency and larger floc formation, respectively. On the other hand, substantial amount of various surface colonizing and EPS producing bacteria was found at SRT of 10 days, which promoted more rapid membrane fouling compared with the fouling rate seen at other tested SRTs. To sum up, this research provides a realistic insight into the impact of SRT on microbial community dynamics and resulting characteristics of mixed liquor, floc size distribution and membrane fouling for improved MBR operation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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48. The use of marginal kidneys in dual kidney transplantation to expand kidney graft utilization.
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Stratta RJ, Harriman D, Gurram V, Gurung K, and Sharda B
- Subjects
- Adult, Graft Survival, Humans, Kidney, Tissue Donors, United States, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Transplants
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: The purpose of this review is to chronicle the history of dual kidney transplantation (DKT) and identify opportunities to improve utilization of marginal deceased donor (MDD) kidneys through DKT., Recent Findings: The practice of DKT from adult MDDs dates back to the mid-1990s, at which time the primary indication was projected insufficient nephron mass from older donors. Multiple subsequent studies of short- and long-term success have been reported focusing on three major aspects: Identifying appropriate selection criteria/scoring systems based on pre- and postdonation factors; refining technical aspects; and analyzing longer-term outcomes. The number of adult DKTs performed in the United States has declined in the past decade and only about 60 are performed annually. For adult deceased donor kidneys meeting double allocation criteria, >60% are ultimately not transplanted. MDDs with limited renal functional capacity represent a large proportion of potential kidneys doomed to either discard or nonrecovery., Summary: DKT may reduce organ discard and optimize the use of kidneys from MDDs. New and innovative technologies targeting ex vivo organ assessment, repair, and regeneration may have a major impact on the decision whether or not to use recovered kidneys for single or DKT., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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49. Dual kidney transplants from adult marginal donors: Review and perspective.
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Stratta RJ, Harriman D, Gurram V, Gurung K, and Sharda B
- Subjects
- Adult, Graft Survival, Humans, Kidney, Tissue Donors, United States, Kidney Transplantation, Transplants
- Abstract
The practice of dual kidney transplantation (DKT) from adult marginal deceased donors (MDDs) dates back to the mid-1990s with initial pioneering experiences reported by the Stanford and Maryland groups, at which time the primary indication was estimated insufficient nephron mass from older donors. Multiple subsequent studies of short and long-term success have been reported focusing on three major aspects of DKT: Identifying appropriate selection criteria and developing scoring systems based on pre- and post-donation factors; refining technical aspects; and analyzing mid-term outcomes. The number of adult DKTs performed in the United States has declined in the past decade and only about 60 are performed annually. For adult deceased donor kidneys meeting double allocation criteria, > 60% are ultimately not transplanted. Deceased donors with limited renal functional capacity represent a large proportion of potential kidneys doomed to either discard or non-recovery. However, DKT may reduce organ discard and optimize the use of kidneys from MDDs. In an attempt to promote utilization of MDD kidneys, the United Network for Organ Sharing introduced new allocation guidelines pursuant to DKT in 2019. The purpose of this review is to chronicle the history of DKT and identify opportunities to improve utilization of MDD kidneys through DKT., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Do pretransplant C-peptide levels predict outcomes following simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation? A matched case-control study.
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Gurram V, Gurung K, Rogers J, Farney AC, Orlando G, Jay C, Reeves-Daniel A, Mena-Gutierrez A, Sakhovskaya N, Doares W, Kaczmorski S, Sharda B, Gautreaux MD, and Stratta RJ
- Subjects
- C-Peptide, Case-Control Studies, Graft Survival, Humans, Pancreas, Retrospective Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Kidney Transplantation, Pancreas Transplantation
- Abstract
Following simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation (SPKT), survival outcomes are reported as equivalent in patients with detectable pretransplant C-peptide levels (Cp+) and a "type 2″ diabetes mellitus (DM) phenotype compared to type 1 (Cp negative [Cp-]) DM. We retrospectively compared 46 Cp+ patients pretransplant (≥2.0 ng/mL, mean 5.4 ng/mL) to 46 Cp- (level < 0.5 ng/mL) case controls matched for recipient age, gender, race, and transplant date. Early outcomes were comparable. Actual 5-year patient survival (91% versus 94%), kidney graft survival (69% versus 86%, p = .15), and pancreas graft survival (60% versus 86%, p = .03) rates were lower in Cp+ versus Cp- patients, respectively. The Cp+ group had more pancreas graft failures due to insulin resistance (13% Cp+ versus 0% Cp-, p = .026) or rejection (17% Cp+ versus 6.5% Cp-, p = .2). Post-transplant weight gain > 5 kg occurred in 72% of Cp+ versus 26% of Cp- patients (p = .0001). In patients with functioning grafts, mean one-year post-transplant HbA1c levels (5.0 Cp+ versus 5.2% Cp-) were comparable, whereas Cp levels were higher in Cp+ patients (5.0 Cp+ versus 2.6 ng/mL Cp-). In this matched case-control study, outcomes were inferior in Cp+ compared to Cp- patients following SPKT, with post-transplant weight gain, insulin resistance, and rejection as potential mitigating factors., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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