42 results on '"Lobner K"'
Search Results
2. Pain Assessment Tools in Studies of Invasive Procedures for Painful Chronic Pancreatitis: A Systematic Review
- Author
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Mahya Faghih, Ramsey, Mitchell L., Phillips, Anna E., Lobner, K., Han, S., Hart, Phil A., Elham Afghani, Bick, Benjamin L., Dhiraj Yadav, Olesen, S. S., Singh, Vikesh K., and Asbjørn Drewes
- Published
- 2021
3. Prevalence of Painful Chronic Pancreatitis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Author
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Bhullar, F. A., Faghih, M., Akshintala, V. S., Singh, G., Lobner, K, Afghani, E., Phillips, A. E., Hart, P. A., Ramsey, M. L., Bick, B., Kuhlmann, L., Drewes, A. M., Yadav, D., Olesen, S. S., and Singh, V. K.
- Published
- 2021
4. Melatonin for anaesthetic indications in paediatric patients: a systematic review
- Author
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Procaccini, D., primary, Lobner, K., additional, Azamfirei, R., additional, and Kudchadkar, S. R., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Glucose-responsive Insulin Secretion is Restored Following Formation of Islet-like Cell Clusters (Pseudo-islets) in the βTC-3 Cell Line; Relevance to Human β Cell Transplantation
- Author
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ROBERTS, G A, LOBNER, K, HAUGE-EVANS, A, PERSAUD, S, JONES, P, and CHRISTIE, M R
- Published
- 2001
6. Insulin Regulates the Expression of IA-2 in Pancreatic Islets
- Author
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LOBNER, K, ROBERTS, G A, BONIFACIO, E, and CHRISTIE, M R
- Published
- 2001
7. Melatonin for anaesthetic indications in paediatric patients: a systematic review.
- Author
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Procaccini, D., Lobner, K., Azamfirei, R., and Kudchadkar, S. R.
- Subjects
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CHILD patients , *MELATONIN , *ANESTHETICS , *SCIENCE databases - Abstract
Summary: The favourable safety profile and ubiquitous nature of melatonin has led to an increase in its use in various clinical settings in adults and children. We performed a systematic review of published studies on the use of melatonin for anaesthetic indications in paediatric patients. To identify relevant articles, PubMed, EMBASE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Web of Science and Scopus databases were searched. Study title and abstract screening, and full text review were performed by two reviewers. Twenty‐seven eligible studies investigating melatonin use for anaesthetic indications were identified. Due to significant heterogeneity in study methodology, a quantitative synthesis of the published findings was not possible. The identified studies were therefore categorised by the indication for melatonin: analgesia, diagnostic sedation and as an anaesthetic adjunct. Melatonin use for anaesthetic‐related indications is safe; may provide analgesia for inflammatory‐associated pain in neonates and children before venepuncture; may decrease the need for, or replace, general anaesthesia for diagnostic procedures; and may serve as an anaesthesia adjunct before induction in paediatric patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Different regulated expression of the tyrosine phosphatase-like proteins IA-2 and phogrin by glucose and insulin in pancreatic islets: relationship to development of insulin secretory rsponses in early life
- Author
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Lobner, K., Steinbrenner, H., Zhidong Ling, Daniel Pipeleers, Pathologic Biochemistry and Physiology, and Institute for Clinical Research
- Subjects
diabetes ,pancreatic islet - Abstract
see pubmed
- Published
- 2002
9. HEALTH DISPARITIES IN PEDIATRIC REHABILITATION: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW.
- Author
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Garg, A., Lobner, K., Mitchell, R., Song, J., Egbunine, A., and Kudchadkar, S. R.
- Published
- 2022
10. EXPERIMENTS WITH EXOTIC NUCLEAR BEAMS IN THE EXPERIMENTAL STORAGE RING ESR.
- Author
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SCHEIDENBERGER, C., ATTALLAH, F., BECKERT, K., BOSCH, F., EICKHOFF, H., FALCH, M., FRANZKE, B., FUJITA, Y., GEISSEL, H., HAUSMANN, M., HELLSTROM, M., HERFURTH, F., KERSCHER, TH., KLEPPER, O., KLUGE, H.-J., KOZHUHAROV, C., LITVINOV, YU. A., LOBNER, K. E. G., MUNZENBERG, G., and NOLDEN, F.
- Subjects
STORAGE rings ,EXOTIC nuclei ,NUCLEAR structure ,RADIOACTIVE nuclear beams ,ATOMIC mass - Published
- 2000
11. 40 EASD Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes : Munich, Germany, 5-9 September 2004
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Veitenhansl, M., Stegner, K., Hierl, F-X, Dieterle, C., Feldmeier, H., Gutt, B., Landgraf, R., Garrow, A. P., Vileikyte, L., Findlow, A., Waterman, C., Boulton, A. J. M., Shankhdhar, K., Shankhdhar, L., Shankhdhar, U., Petrova, N. L., Foster, A. V. M., Edmonds, M. E., Ferraresi, R., Caravaggi, C., Giglio, R., Cavaiani, P., Pogliaghi, I., Sommariva, E., Katz, I. A., Harlan, A., Miranda-Palma, B., Prieto-Sanchez, L., Armstrong, D. G., Bowker, J. H., Mizel, M. S., Cernea, S., Wohlgelernter, J., Kidron, M., Modi, P., Raz, I., Arbit, E., Nosek, L., Kapitza, C., Beckett, P., Gelfand, R., Goldberg, M., Heise, T., Testa, M. A., Turner, R. R., Hayes, J. F., Scranton, R. E., Simonson, D. C., Yang, Y-W, Hsu, Y-J, Naujok, O., Francini, F., Jorns, A., Tiedge, M., Lenzen, S., Abdel-Wahab, Y. H. A., Marenah, L., Orr, D. F., Shaw, C., Flatt, P. R., Chokkalingam, K., Mansell, P. I., Clausen, P., Ekbom, P., Damm, P., Feldt-Rasmussen, U., Nielsen, B., Mathiesen, E. R., Feldt-Rasmussen, B., Dewan, S., Da Silva, N., Ternan, P. Mc, Leong, K. S., Wilding, J. P. H., Asatiani, N., Kurashvili, R., Dundua, M., Shelestova, E., Pagava, K., Ramazashvili, M., Hod, M., Smirnov, S., Petersen, J. L. A., Justesen, T. I., Ringholm Nielsen, L., Muller, C., Hojlund, K., Wensaas, A., Kase, E. T., Aas, V., Rustan, A. C., Thoresen, G. H., Levin, K., Beck-Nielsen, H., Gaster, M., Im, S-S, Kang, S-Y, Kim, S-Y, Ahn, Y-H, Lihn, A. S., Schmoll, D., Werner, T., Kienitz, A., Meyer, M., Barthel, A., Ailett, F., Sutherland, C., Walther, R., Grempler, R., Sasson, S., Reich, R., Tenenbaum, T., Alpert, E., Anfossi, G., Russo, I., Traversa, M., Massucco, P., Mattiello, L., Doronzo, G., Trovati, M., Lally, S., Tan, C. Y., Owens, D., Tomkin, G. H., Porchay, I., Pean, F., Bellili, N., Betoulle, D., Balkau, B., Tichet, J., Marre, M., Fumeron, F., Group D.E.S.I.R., Chatellier, G., Alhenc-Gelas, F., Diabhycar, Study Group, Nichols, G. A., Brown, J. B., Hayes, R. P., Bowman, L., Drexel, H., Saely, C. H., Marte, T., Benzer, W., Langer, P., Hoefle, G., Moll, W., Aczel, S., Karagiannis, E., Lubben, G., Urquhart, R., Edwards, G., Bruce, S., Howlett, H. S. C., Cugnardey, N., Turner, K. C., Park, J-S, Fiedorek, F. T., Avogaro, A., Gallo, A., Pinton, P., Rizzuto, R., Murphy, E., Ceolotto, G., Caterson, I., Guy-Grand, B., Hill, J., Barone, M., Aiello, A., Allochis, G., Borzi, V., Cannata, F., Caronna, S., D Avanzo, A., Elli, R., Formoso, G., Paroli, A., Scardapane, R., Sorichetti, P., Tatti, P., Viviani, G., Santeusanio, F., Italian Repaglinide Study Group, Manzella, D., Grella, R., Abbatecola, A. M., Paolisso, G., Sondergaard, L. G., Monster, T. B. M., Johnsen, S. P., Olsen, M. L., Mclaughlin, J. K., Sorensen, H. T., Lervang, H. H., Rungby, J., Lyssenko, V., Fredriksson, J., Almgren, P., Anevski, D., Orho-Melander, M., Sjogren, M., Tuomi, T., Groop, L., Jaziri, R., Aubert, R., Tuomilehto, J., Hu, G., Jousilahti, P., Peltonen, M., Lindstrom, J., Laina, A., Alevizaki, M., Philippou, G., Souvatzoglou, A., Anastasiou, E., Alba, S., Metcalf, B. S., Voss, L. D., Jeffery, A. N., Wilkin, T. J., Gluimer, C., Colagiuri, S., Vistisen, D., Borch-Johnsen, K., Haynes, A., Bower, C., Bulsara, M. K., Jones, T. W., Davis, E. A., Mortensen, H. B., Hougaard, P., Holl, R., Swift, P., Pociot, F., Knip, M., Hansen, L., Szadkowska, A., Pietrzak, I., Zmyslowska, A., Wyka, K., Bodalski, J., Holl, R. W., Swift, R., Hougaard, R., Gerstl, E-M, Engelsberger, I., Rabl, W., Rosenbauer, J., Grobe, H., Hofer, S. E., Krause, U., DPV-Wiss-Study Group, Dabelea, D., Morgan, T., Pettitt, D. J., Dolan, L., Mayer-Davis, E. J., Pihoker, C., Hillier, T. A., Imperatore, G., Ruggiero, A., Hamman, R. E., Stylianou, A., Tentolouris, N., Perrea, D., Tselepis, A. D., Lourida, E., Kitsou, E., Katsilambros, N., Vedovato, M., Dodesini, A. R., Lepore, G., Tiengo, A., Trevisan, R., Penno, G., Miccoli, R., Pucci, L., Lucchesi, D., Bandinelli, S., Fotino, C., Triscornia, S., Baldassari, E., Del Prato, S., Reboldi, P., Santeusanio, E., Fuller, J., Langham, R. G., Gow, R. M., Zhang, Y., Kelly, D. J., Christensen, P. K., Parving, H-H, Gilbert, R. E., Chibalin, A. V., Zhong, Z., Kotova, O., Davidescu, A., Ehren, I., Ekberg, K., Wahren, J., Wassef, L., Buckley, A. J., Rooney, K. B., Briody, J., Thompson, M., Ozanne, S. E., Thompson, C. H., Chamson-Reig, A., Summers, K., Arany, E. J. R., Hill, D. J., Solerte, S. B., Gazzaruso, C., Locatelli, E., Precerutti, S., Schifino, N., Ferrari, E., Fioravanti, M., Phenekos, C. V., Ginis, A., Fragaki, I., Chalkiadaki, M., Tzioras, C., Powell, L. A., Mcguire, G. M., Jewhurst, V., Trimble, E. R., Rasmussen, B. M., Vessby, B., Uusitupa, M., Berglund, L., Pedersen, E., Riccardi, G., Rivellese, A. A., Tapsell, L., Hermansen, K., Kanwu, Study Group, Da Silva Xavier, G., Rutter, J., Rutter, G. A., Briaud, I. M., Lingohr, M. K., Dickson, L. M., Mccuaig, J. R., Lawrence, J. C., Rhodes, C. J., Wikstrom, J. D., Katzman, S. M., Shirihai, O. S., Yang, J., Deng, S., Wang, X., Hessner, M. J., Wu, J., Wong, R. K., Sukumvanich, S., Markman, J. F., Naji, A., Wolf, B. A., Gao, Z., Rubi, B., Del Arco, A., Satrustegui, J., Maechler, P., Del Guerra, S., Lupi, R., Bugliani, M., Sbrana, S., Torri, S., Boggi, U., Vistoli, F., Mosca, F., Marchetti, P., Rennings, A. J. M., Smits, P., Stewart, M. W., Tack, C. J. J., Li, L., Nystrom, T., Gutniak, M., Ahren, B., Holst, J., Sjoholm, A., Gomes, M. B., Cailleaux, S., Tibirica, E., Albertini, J-P, Chen, H., Mather, R., Valensi, P. E., Chisalita, S. I., Arnqvist, H. J., Kraenkel, N., Adams, V., Linke, A., Gielen, S., Schuler, G., Humbrecht, R., Cipollone, F., Iezzi, A., Fazia, M., Pini, B., Cucurullo, C., Cesare, D., Schmidt, A. M., Mazurek, T., Zang, L. F., Mannion, J., Diehl, J., Martin, J., Martella, A., Zalewski, A., Shi, Y., Otter, W., Winter, M., Doering, W., Standi, E., Schnell, O., Kragelund, C., Kober, L., Faber, J., Hildebrandt, P., Steffensen, R., Pankowska, E., Szypowska, A., Lipka, M., Herwig, J., Scholl-Schilling, G., Bohles, H., Robertson, K. J., Schonle, E., Gucev, Z., Mordhorst, L., Tamer, S. C., Gall, M-A, Ludvigsson, J., Hoogma, R. P. L., Hammond, P. J., Gomis, R., Kerr, D., Bruttomesso, D., Bouter, P., Wiefels, K. J., La Calle, H., Schweitzer, D. H., Pfohl, M., Torlone, E., Krinelke, L. G., 205-Nations Study Group, Conget, I., Storms, F., Rodriguez, J., Leperlier, C., Davies, M., At Lantus, Study Group, Peter, R., Luzio, S. D., Dunseath, G., Miles, A., Hare, B., Backx, K., Pauvaday, V., Owens, D. R., Caselli, A., Marfia, G. A., Battista, C., Veves, A., Spallone, V., Uccioli, L., Gonzalez, J. S., Peyrot, M. F., Rubin, R. R., Leventhal, H., Scheffler, N., Ulbrecht, J. S., Cavanagh, P. R., Boulton, A. J., Perrin, N. A., Oglesby, A., Bastyr, E. J., Ziegler, D., Siekierka-Kleiser, E., Meyer, B., Schweers, M., Selvarajah, D., Wilkinson, I. D., Emery, C. J., Shaw, P. J., Griffiths, P. D., Tesfaye, S., Obrosova, I. G., Arezzo, J., Phillips, K., Fidarestat Study Group, Gribble, F. M., Williams, L., Reimann, F., Iakoubov, R., Whiteside, C., Brubaker, P. L., Acitores, A., Gonzalez, N., Sancho, V., Valverde, I., Villanueva-Penacarrillo, M. L., Martin-Duce, A., Trigo, M. V., Arnes, L., Burkart, V., Ichino, N., Ohashi, A., Klein, B. S., Paxian, S., Schmid, R., Karlsen, A. E., Heding, P. E., Frobose, H., Ronn, S. G., Kruhoffer, M., Orntoft, T. F., Nerup, J., Mandrup-Poulsen, T., Billestrup, N., Cardozo, A. K., Ortis, F., Feng, Y-M, Rasschaert, J., Eylen, F., Storling, J., Herchuelz, A., Eizirik, D. L., Wang, H., Kouri, G., Wollheim, C. B., Ribaux, P., Hammar, E., Parnaud, G., Rouiller, D., Bosco, D., Halban, P., Midthjell, K., Carlsson, S., Grill, V., Lau, C., Farch, K., Glumer, C., Tetens, I., Jorgensen, T., Tillin, T., Forouhi, N., Mckeigue, P., Chaturvedi, N., Zethelius, B., Hales, C. N., Berne, C., Coleman, R. L., Stevens, R. J., Holman, R. R., Christensen, J. O., Sandbak, A., Lauritzen, T., Irwin, N., Gault, V. A., Green, B. D., Harriott, P., O Harte, F. P. M., Bouman, S. D., Urso, B., Brand, C. L., Rolin, B., Ribel, U., Schaffer, L., Maggs, D. G., Ceriello, A., Frias, J. P., Wang, Y., Ruggles, J. A., Kolterman, O. G., Piconi, L., Weyer, C., Want, L. L., Ratner, R. E., Uwaifo, G. I., Thornberry, N. A., Eiermann, G., Kim, D., Lankas, G., Leiting, B., Li, Z., Lyons, K., Petrov, A., Sinha Roy, R., Woods, A., Woods, J., Zhang, B. B., Fisher, M., Moller, D. E., Weber, A. E., Dreyer, M., Bellin, C., Schmitz, V., Roesen, R., Nescheret, A. P., Bose, A. K., Mocanu, M. M., Carr, R. D., Yellon, D. M., Manolopoulos, K., Born, S., Wagner, A., Jeziorska, M., Ben Drief, A., Bashir, M., Tomlinson, D., Malik, R. A., Zeymer, U., Schwarzmaier-D Assie, A., Petzinna, D., Chiasson, J-L, Stratton, I. M., Af Bjorkesten, C-G, Fagerudd, J., Rosengard-Barlund, M., Forsblom, C., Pettersson-Fernholm, K., Waden, J., Saraheimo, M., Ronnback, M., Thorn, L., Groop, P-H, Mollsten, A., Svensson, M., Kockum, I., Rudberg, S., Brismar, K., Dahlquist, G., Hovind, P., Hansen, T. K., Tarnow, L., Thiel, S., Jensen, B. R., Flyvbjerg, A., Kankova, K., Hertlova, M., Krusova, D., Schwenke, S., Ott, J., Thom, S. A. M., Mistry, P., Sjolie, A., Larsen, B., Witt, N., Hughes, A. D., Samira, H. H., Lahiry, S., Howlader, S. R., Parveen, S., Azad Khan, A. K., Clarke, P. M., Gray, A., Stevens, R., Holman, R., Phillips, L., Phillips, P. J., Chittleborough, C., Baldock, K., Taylor, A., North West Adelaide Health Study Team, Davis, W. A., Davis, T. M. E., Knuiman, M. W., Hendrie, D., Worthley, D., Nicolucci, A., Pellegrini, F., Berardis, G., Franciosi, M., Belfiglio, M., Rossi, M. C. E., Sacco, M., Valentini, M., Richardson, C. C., Jones, P., Persaud, S., Hussain, K., Clark, A., Christie, M. R., Gniuli, D., Hribal, M. L., Accili, D., Khan, M., Zervou, S., Cheung, L., Abouna, S., Ifandi, V., Pelengaris, S., Luco, R. F., Ferrer, J., Ma, D., Shield, J. P. H., Dean, W., Leclerc, I., Knauf, C., Burcelin, R., Kelsey, G., Powers, A. C., Shostak, A., Ferrara, N., Poffenberger, G., Jerome, W. G., Brissova, M., Geloneze, S. R., Tambascia, M. A., Pareja, J. C., Chaim, E., Silveira, H. V., Geloneze, B., Ravikumar, B., Carey, P. E., Snaar, J. E., Dheelchand, D., Cook, D. B., Neely, D., Taylor, G., Morris, P. G., Taylor, R., Stears, A. J., Masding, M. G., Wootton, S. A., Sandeman, D. D., Klimes, I., Wein, S., Gasperikova, D., Ukropec, J., Wiernsperger, N., Sebokova, E., Manco, M., Mingrone, G., Granato, L., Greco, A. V., Nanni, G., Castagneto, M., Vidal, H., Calvani, M., Ferrannini, E., Alvarsson, M., Sundkvist, G., Lager, I., Henricsson, M., Berntorp, K., Fernqvist-Forbes, E., Steen, L., Orn, T., Shutler, S., Bianchi-Biscay, M., Rosenstock, J., Sugimoto, D., Strange, P., Stewart, J., Soltes Rak, E., Dailey, G., Kloos, C., Muller, U., Samann, A., Femerling, M., Risse, A., Jecht, M., Haak, T., Garg, R., Lawrence, I. G., Akinsola, M. O., Davies, M. J., Mcnally, P. G., Garber, A. J., Kim, H., Draeger, E., Aydin, L., Sengul, A., Kurklu, A., Ucak, S., Basat, O., Seber, S., Altuntas, Y., Jin, J., Yu, Y., Yu, H., Zhang, X., Mattoo, V., Eckland, D., Widel, M., Duran, S., Fajardo, C., Strand, J., Knight, D., Oakley, D., Tan, M., Sato, A., Nagao, M., Aki, N., Nakagami, T., Iwamoto, Y., Zhou, Z., Li, X., Huang, G., Yan, X., Yang, L., Peng, J., Wang, J., Tan, S., Tang, W., Furnsinn, C., Brunmair, B., Wagner, L., Gras, F., Artwohl, M., Zierhut, B., Waldhausl, W., Shine, B. L., Hopkins, D., Anand, V., Lim, E., Raval, U., Sharp, P., Corder, R., Lipkin, D., Lahiri, A., Bartnik, M., Ryden, L., Ferrari, R., Malmberg, K., Pyorala, K., Simoons, M. L., Standl, E., Soler-Soler, J., Ohrvik, J., Euro Heart Survey Investigators, Bruce, D. G., Starkstein, S. E., Schauer, U. J. W., Astrup, A. S., Pietraszek, L., Nielsen, F. S., Rossing, P., Ali, S., Smidt, U. M., Yokoyama, H., Pavkov, M. E., Knowler, W. C., Bennett, P. H., Nelson, R. G., Lopez-Alba, A., Morcillo, L., Caballero, A., Montoya, L., Jimenez, A., Maceira, B., Lewis, J. B., Ravid, M., Wajman, A., Tadgell, C., Remuzzi, G., Hunsicker, L. G., Wessman, M., Taskinen, M-R, FinnDiane Study Group, Pugliese, G., Amadio, L., Menini, S., Oddi, G., Ricci, C., Iacobini, C., Pricci, F., Sorcini, M., Pesce, C., Migliaccio, E., Giorgio, M., Pelicci, P., Di Mario, U., Lassila, M., Jandeleit-Dahm, K., Seah, K. K., Calkin, A. C., Allen, T. J., Cooper, M. E., Lopes Faria, J. M., Cavakcanti, T. C., Silva, K. C., Ferrari, A. L., Lopes Faria, J. B., Cellek, S., Foxwell, N. A., Cotter, M. A., Cameron, N. E., Tennagels, N., Jordan, H., Stahl, P., Voss, M. D., Welte, S., Werner, U., Lehmann, R., Moeschel, K., Baumgartner, F., Oeckinghaus, A., Beck, A., Weigert, C., Hennige, A., Schleicher, E. D., Haring, H. U., Mussig, K., Staiger, H., Haring, H-U, Natalicchio, A., Laviola, L., Tullio, C., Renna, L., Giorgino, R., Giorgino, F., Falasca, M., Maffucci, T., Park, D., Kang, S., Song, J., Lee, D., Lee, Y., Hariharan, N., Kunselman, L., Gu, L., Sasseville, V., Harrity, T., Cheng, P. T. W., Pratley, R. E., Schweizer, A., Mills, D., Kim, T-H, Song, X-L, Poelje, P. D., Potter, S. C., Dang, Q., Fujitaki, J. M., Linemeyer, D. L., Landau, B. R., Erion, M. D., Pankop, M., Golay, A., Despres, J., Sjostrom, L., Lawlor, D. L., Legg, K. T., Ur, E., Houweling, S. T., Kleefstra, N., Meyboom-De Jong, B., Bilo, H. J. G., Schlomer, G. J., Meyer, G., Kasper, J., Muhlhauser, I., Young, B., Taylor, J., Friede, T., Hollis, S., Mason, J., Long, A., Gambling, T., Pauline, L., Burns, E., New, J., Gibson, M., Betteridge, D. J., Leiter, L. A., Audit, Investigators, Whitty, P. M., Eccles, M. P., Hawthorne, G., Grimshaw, J., Steen, I. N., Vanoli, A., Wood, L., Speed, C., Mcdowell, D., Rewers, M., Maahs, D., Wadwa, R., Eckel, R., Tracy, R., Pfutzner, A., Strotmann, H-J, Schulze, J., Hohberg, C., Pahler, S., Forst, T., Ambery, P. D., Sydall, H., Cooper, C., Dennison, E., Sayer, A. Aihie, Barker, D., Phillips, D., Lalic, N. M., Ostojic, M., Lalic, K., Zamaklar, M., Jotic, A., Ilic, M., Rajkovic, N., Lukic, L., Milicic, T., Verges, B., Zeller, M., Steg, P. G., Beer, J. C., Brisard, C., Brindisi, M. C., Dentan, G., Laurent, Y., Janin-Manificat, L., Makki, H., Ravisy, J., Cottin, Y., Ajjan, R. A., Grant, P. J., Futers, T. S., Brown, J. M., Carter, A. M., Rasmussen, M. S., Bruun, J. M., Pedersen, S. B., Richelsen, B., Dietze-Schroeder, D., Sell, H., Koenen, M., Eckel, J., Delporte, M-L L., Bauche, I. B., Brichard, S. M., Ait El Mkadem, S., Rezsohazy, R., Tsiotra, P. C., Tsigos, C., Gatsiou, C., Raptis, S. A., Walker, C. G., Bryson, J. M., Hancock, D. P., Caterson, I. D., Takahashi, N., Hatakeyama, H., Kasai, H., Gauthier, B. R., Iezzi, M., Fukuda, M., Duhamel, D. L., Ravier, M. A., Dufer, M., Neye, Y., Krippeit-Drews, P., Hennige, A. M., Sausbier, U., Arntz, C., Sausbier, M., Neuhuber, W., Ruth, P., Drews, G., Beauvois, M. C., Rolland, J-F, Jonas, J-C, Merezak, C., Henquin, J-C, Gilon, P., Jabin Gustafsson, A., Dzabic, M., Islam, M. S., Vaxillaire, M., Cheyssac, C., Dina, C., Vasseur-Delannoy, V., Lepretre, F., Siddiq, A., Froguel, P., Neve, B., Fernandez-Zapico, M. E., Ashkenazi-Katalan, V., Urrutia, R., Melloul, D., Froguel, R., Poulsen, P., Wojtaszewski, J., Richter, E., Vaag, A., Granhall, C., Renstrom, E., Luthman, H., Isomaa, B., Gloyn, A. L., Edghill, E. L., Pearson, E. 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M., Fonollosa, A., Berrone, E., Beltramo, E., Solimine, C., Ubertalli, A., Islam, N., Esteve, E., Fernandez, M., Recas, I., Mauri, S., Biarnes, F., Junca, E., Fernadez-Real, J., Rossner, S., Stenlof, K., Levy, B., Perry, B., Fitchet, M., Chrysos, G., Kamaratos, A., Lepeniotis, G., Kokkoris, S., Varytimiadis, K., Stasini, F., Mikros, S., Gianneli, D., Tryfinopoulou, K., Melidonis, A., Nikolopoulou, C., Harley, K., Ryder, R., De, P, Vannieuwenhoven, F. A., Rossing, K., Oliver, N., Goldschmeding, R., Jacobsen, P. K., Tan, F., Liew, S., Mukherjee, J. J., Lim, P., Frojdo, S., Sjolind, L., Parkkonen, M., Makinen, V., Tikellis, C., Nieuwenhoven, F. A. V., Macisaac, R. J., Tsalamandris, C., Mcneil, K. J., Panaiotopoulos, S., Smith, T. J., Ho, M., Matthews, P. G., Jerums, G., Hut, H., Den Meiracker, A. H., Nakhjavani, M., Behjati, J., Esteghamati, A., Esfahanian, F., Aghamohamadzadeh, N., Abbasi, M., Kohnert, K-D, Zander, E., Krabbe, S., Stehouwer, C. D., Schalkwijk, C. G., Saraheimo, M. 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V., Kamarinos, M., Kelly, D., Waltham, M., Dy, V., Yue, D., Langham, R., Gilbert, R., Zdychova, J., Komers, R., Cresci, B., Giannini, S., Manuelli, C., Giunti, S., Pinach, S., Ianni Palarchio, A., Arnaldi, L., Vittone, F., Camussi, G., Cavallo Perin, P., Gruden, G., Marshall, S. M., Jones, S. E., White, K. E., Brizzi, M., Dentelli, P., Rosso, A., Calvi, C., Gambino, R., Cassader, M., Salvidio, G., Deferrari, G., Pegoraro, L., Pagano, G., Cavallo-Perin, P., Oates, R., Ellery, C., Beebe, D., Coutcher, J., Qian, Y-Z, Lowe, V., Appleton, T., Raunig, D., O Neil, S., Mylari, B., Amazonas, R. B., Fujita, A., Doi, A., Matsuno, S., Okamoto, K., Matsumoto, E., Furuta, H., Nishi, M., Tsuno, T., Taniguchi, H., Bessho, H., Wasen, E., Isoaho, R., Mattila, K., Vahlberg, T., Kivela, S-L, Irjala, K., Rigalleau, V., Lasseur, C., Perlemoine, C., Barthes, N., Raffaitin, C., Chauveau, P., Combe, C., Baillet-Blanco, L., Beauvieux, M-C, Gin, H., Heinrich, S., Steiner, T., Ott, U., Holdass, H., Fellstrom, B., Jardine, A., Staffler, B., Logan, J. O., Gimpelewicz, C., Stanciu, C. C., Pena, C. M., Serafinceanu, C. C., Gonzalez-Posada, J. M., Hernandez, D., Perez-Tamajo, L., Lo, A. J., Herna Alarco, M., Meneses, M., Barsotti, M., Rizzo, G., Schmauss, S., Havrdova, T., Saudek, F., Boucek, P., Adamec, M., Invitti, C., Gilardini, L., Parati, G., Mazzilli, G., Pontiggia, B., Sartorio, A., Lutgers, H. L., Groenier, K. H., Zasadzinska, G., Saryusz-Wolska, M., Temelkova-Kurktschiev, T. S., Kurktschiev, D. P., Majdrakova, I., Varbanova, T., Todorova, B., Bajo-Martinez, A., Bernal, E., Sanchez, O., Ugalde-Canitrot, A., Sanchez-Largo, E., Coca-Robinot, D., Fabregate, R., Calbacho, M., Marquez, J., Saban-Ruiz, J., Penesova, A., Cizmarova, E., Blazicek, P., Jongh, R. T., Serne, E. H., Ijzerman, R. G., Vries, G., Stehouwer, C. D. A., Poulsen, P. L., Andersen, N. H., Knudsen, S. T., Helleberg, K., Mogensen, C. E., Walus, M., Idzior-Walus, B., Sztefko, K., Cieslik, G., Fedak, D., Wozniakiewicz, E., Lin, S. D., Guo, M. Y., Lin, C. J., Liu, X. C., Francisco, M-M J., Rodriguez-Rosas, H., Peiro-Martinez, I., Macias-Batista, A., Harte, A. L., Rodriguez-Cuenca, S., Valsamakis, G., Chetty, R., Anderson, L. 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M., Baranova, L. Y., Ikeda, Y., Suehiro, T., Osaki, F., Ota, K., Arii, K., Kumon, Y., Hashimoto, K., Doney, A. S. F., Fischer, B., Morris, A. D., Palmer, C. N. A., Ahn, Y-M, Lee, B-C, Kim, S-I, Byun, S-H, Ahn, S-Y, Doo, H-K, Pagnin, E., Calo, L. A., Fadini, G., Kubaszek, A., Chai, S., Chai, Q., Rasmussen, L., Ledet, T., Wogensen, L., Lengyel, C., Varro, A., Virag, L., Magyar, J., Biro, T., Jost, N., Skoumal, R., Nanasi, P., Toth, M., Horkay, F., Papp, J. G., Zacharopoulou, O., Athanaselis, S., Tsokos, N., Doupis, J., Psallas, M., Cokkinos, D., Pavlatos, S., Liatis, S., Akhobadze, T., Dzneladze, L., Samarguliani, I., Taskiran, M., Rasmussen, V., Rasmussen, B., Jensen, G. B., Fisher, A. A., Petrovsky, N., Davis, M. W., Srikusalanukul, W., Budge, M. M., Trifunovic-Zamaklar, D. D., Zivkovic, M., Jelic, V., Vukomanovic, G., Ristic, A. D., Seferovic, P. M., Costa, J. V., Duarte, S., Manley, S. E., Sailesh, S., Venkataraman, A., Haider, Y., Groza, I., Oprean, M., Ardelean, A., Morosanu, A., Darkow, T., Vanderplas, A., Mamas, M. A., Mcelduff, P., Burns, J., Edwards, R., Fitchet, A., Young, R. J., Gibson, J. M., New, J. P., Lichiardopol, R., Niculescu, N., Totora, A., Pencea, C., Tomescu, I., Cinteza, M., Manicardi, V., Coscelli, C., Navazio, A., Catellani, E., Michelini, M., Dall Asta, D., Guberti, A., Piazza, A., Gasparini, E., Pantaleoni, M., Guiducci, U., Manari, A., Sejil, S., Janand-Delenne, B., Avierinos, J-F, Habib, G., Labastie, N., Vague, P., Lassmann-Vague, V., Luzniak, P., Wojciechowska Luzniak, A., Zairis, M., Lyras, A., Patsourakos, N., Tsirimbis, V., Foussas, S., Lupon, J., Urrutia, A., Herreros, J., Gonzalez, B., Coll, R., Altimir, S., Prats, M., Valle, V., Abreu-Padi, C., Rabago, G., Ivanova, L. A., Brasacchio, D., Calkin, A., Jandeleit-Dahm, K. A., Harno, E., Keenan, A. K., Li, H. L., Yu, Y. R., Lu, Z. M., Zhang, X. E., Ke, L., Liu, H., Zhang, X. X., Jeong, I-K, Chae, M-K, Choi, M-H, Yoo, H-J, Kim, C. D., Yun, M. R., Na, M. A., Kang, Y. H., Kong, O. N., Son, S. M., Kim, I. J., Kim, Y. K., Tanaka, N., Hosoi, M., Matsuyama, Y., Fukumoto, M., Yamakita, T., Yoshioka, K., Ishii, T., Sato, T., Fujii, S., Aoki, T., Shibata, T., Mizutani, N., Suzuki, J-Y, Fowelin, J. H. R., Samuelsson, P., Brandrup-Wogsen, G., Okumura, K., Tokmakova, A. Y., Staroverova, D. N., Antcieferov, M. B., Shutichina, I. V., Kuntchevich, G. I., Vriesendorp, T. M., Morelis, Q. J., Legemate, D. A., Schaper, F., Mainas, E. I., Gkioulmpasanis, I., Panagiotou, I., Vassilikos, G., Skorda, L., Sidira, M., Christoforidou, M., Alaveras, A., Artikis, V., Evdemon, E., Lechleitner, M., Koch, T., Ebenbichler, C., Sturm, W., Moretti, L., Moruzzo, D., Boldrini, E., Pandolfo, C., Kameyama, M., Iwasa, R., Cho, M-H, Nam, J-Y, Kim, C-S, Kim, D-M, Ahn, C-W, Cha, B-S, Lim, S-K, Kim, K-R, Lee, H-C, Huh, K-B, Kaplar, M., Paragh, G., Erdei, A., Csongradi, E., Garai, I., Varga, J., Galuska, L., Udvardy, M., Higa, M., Kaneko, Y., Hiroi, N., Koziarska, D., Nowacki, P., Majkowska, L., Wojciechowska-Luzniak, A., Tushuizen, M. E., Nieuwland, R., Snoeck, D. P., Sturk, A., Diamant, M., Aguiar, L. G. K., Bahia, L., Villela, N., Laflor, C., Conde, C., Bottino, D., Dorigo, D., Bouskela, E., Pu, S., Yu, H. L., Luo, Z. T., Lam, K. S. L., Dan, Q., Xu, A., Shen, J., Cheng, K., Xu, J. Y. U., Thamer, C., Stefan, N., Haap, M., Heller, E., Tschritter, O., Prado, A., Ortiz, A., Ybarra, J., Gich, I., Pou, J. M., Ehren, M., Meyer, M. F., Roggenland, D., Reinsen, B., Klein, H. H., Rittig, K., Stock, J., Kocher, B., Balletshofer, B., Lee, J., Shon, H. S., Chung, D. S., Nakatani, Y., Matsuhisa, M., Kaneto, H., Hatazaki, M., Yoshiuchi, K., Katakami, N., Kawamori, D., Ohtoshi, K., Sakamoto, K., Matsuoka, T-A, Ozawa, K., Ogawa, S., Hori, M., Yamasaki, Y., Zitouni, K., Harry, D., Nourooz-Zadeh, J., Betteridge, J. D., Earle, K. A., Rasmussen, L. M., Olesen, P., Franco, L., Corvaja, C., Semplicini, A., Rosen, P., Lee, I-K, Kim, M-J, Park, K-G, Jung, E-D, Shin, D-W, Jo, S-R, Obuobie, K., Prakash, P. K., Hanna, F. W., Evans, M., Lazarus, J., Varadhan, L., Gurushankar, J., James, D., Sheikh, S., Gaede, P., Li, H., Zou, D., Lee, S. J., Choi, M. G., Kim, D. S., Kim, T. W., Vilarrasa, N., Perez-Maraver, M., Mena, E., Perez, D., Setti, G., Buckingham, R., Urbancic, V., Stefanovska, A., Bernjak, A., Azman-Juvan, K., Kocijancic, A., Glowania, A., Filters, T. S., Fosmark, D. S., Torjesen, P. A., Kilhovd, B., Berg, T. J., Sandvik, L., Hanssen, K. F., Mentink, C. J. A., Kilhovd, B. K., Kuchmerovska, T. M., Shymanskyy, I. O., Donchenko, G. V., Stepanenko, S. P., Klimenko, A. P., Park, J., Maingrette, F., Deng, H. C., Lindenmair, A., Waldhausl, W. K., Freudenthaler, A., Baumgartner-Parzer, S. M., Nizheradze, K., Khoruzhenko, A., Tronko, N., Sheu, W. H. H., Ou, H-C, Shen, H-M, Lin, T-M, Wu, H-S, Yang, C-H, Mogylnytska, L., Mankovsky, B., Schmoelzer, I., Davies, J. I., Band, M., Morris, A., Struthers, A. D., Prazny, M., Skrha, J., Kasalova, Z., Neelotpol, S., Jahan, P., Kauschke, S. G., Harrop, C. A., Schafer, A., Widder, J., Eigenthaler, M., Walter, U., Uchimura, I., Ikebukuro, M., Kaibara, M., Hirata, M., Helal, R., Pervin, F., Khan, A. K. A., Yang, X., Jansson, P-A, Nagaev, I., Jack, M. M., Carvalho, E., Sunnerhagen, K. Stibrant, Cam, M. C., Cushman, S. W., Smith, U., Creely, S. J., Farmer, J., Creely, S., Gustafson, B., Kusminski, C. M., Krusinova, E., Wohl, P., Klementova, M., Lanska, V., Mcdougall, C., Thomas, S. J., Kelly, I., Abbas, Z. G., Lutale, J. K., Archibald, L. K., Karunajeewa, H., Stingemore, N., Stuccio, G., Mcgechie, D., Muller, L. M. A., Hak, E., Goudzwaard, W. L., Montorsi, F., Homering, M., Sprenger, K., Goldstein, I., Asnaghi, V., Ferrari, G., Rastaldi, M., Gabellini, D., Antonio, G., Maestroni, A., Ruggieri, D., Luzi, L., Piemonti, L., Zerbini, G., Anafaroglu, I., Tutuncu, N. B., Sultana, M., Siddiqua, N., Iwasaki, T., Nakajima, A., Yoneda, M., Mukasa, K., Tanaka, S., and Sekihara, H.
12. Low levels of glucose transporters and K+ ATP channels in human pancreatic beta cells early in development
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Richardson, C .C., Hussain, K., Jones, P. M., Persaud, S., Lobner, K., Boehm, A., Clark, A., Christie, Michael R., Richardson, C .C., Hussain, K., Jones, P. M., Persaud, S., Lobner, K., Boehm, A., Clark, A., and Christie, Michael R.
- Abstract
Aims/hypothesis: Although cells expressing insulin are detected early in human fetal development, islets isolated from fetal pancreases show poor insulin secretory responses to glucose, which may be the result of deficient glucose sensing. We have used dual and triple immunolabelling of human fetal and adult pancreas sections to investigate the presence of proteins that participate in glucose sensing in the pancreatic beta cell, namely glucose transporter 1 (GLUT 1, also known as SLC2A1), glucose transporter 2 (GLUT2, also known as SLC2A2), glucokinase (GCK) and inwardly rectifying K+ channel (KIR6.2, also known as KCNJ11) and sulphonylurea receptor 1 (SUR1, also known as ABCC8) subunits of ATP-sensitive K+ channels (K+ ATP channels). Materials and methods: Pancreases obtained with ethical approval from human fetuses from 11 to 36 weeks of gestation, from infants and from adults were formalin-fixed and embedded in paraffin. Sections were labelled with antibodies to proteins of interest. Co-production of antigens was examined by dual and triple immunolabelling. Results: GLUT2 and K+ ATP channel labelling was detected in the 11-week pancreas, but largely within the pancreatic epithelium, whereas no labelling for GLUT1 was observed. From 15 weeks, GLUT1, GCK and K+ ATP channel labelling was detected in an increasing proportion of insulin-positive cells and epithelial labelling with K+ ATP channel antibodies diminished. GLUT2 was seen in the majority of beta cells only after 7 months of age. Conclusions/ interpretation: The results demonstrate that only a subpopulation of beta cells in the human fetal pancreas produce all key elements of the glucose-sensing apparatus, which may contribute to poor secretory responses in early life. © 2007 Springer-Verlag.
13. Superspreading of SARS-CoV-2: a systematic review and meta-analysis of event attack rates and individual transmission patterns.
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McKee CD, Yu EX, Garcia A, Jackson J, Koyuncu A, Rose S, Azman AS, Lobner K, Sacks E, Van Kerkhove MD, and Gurley ES
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- Humans, Contact Tracing, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 transmission, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, SARS-CoV-2 pathogenicity
- Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 superspreading occurs when transmission is highly efficient and/or an individual infects many others, contributing to rapid spread. To better quantify heterogeneity in SARS-CoV-2 transmission, particularly superspreading, we performed a systematic review of transmission events with data on secondary attack rates or contact tracing of individual index cases published before September 2021 prior to the emergence of variants of concern and widespread vaccination. We reviewed 592 distinct events and 9,883 index cases from 491 papers. A meta-analysis of secondary attack rates identified substantial heterogeneity across 12 chosen event types/settings, with the highest transmission (25-35%) in co-living situations including households, nursing homes, and other congregate housing. Among index cases, 67% reported zero secondary cases and only 3% (287) infected >5 secondary cases ("superspreaders"). Index case demographic data were limited, with only 55% of individuals reporting age, sex, symptoms, real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) cycle threshold values, or total contacts. With the data available, we identified a higher percentage of superspreaders among symptomatic individuals, individuals aged 49-64 years, and individuals with over 100 total contacts. Addressing gaps in the literature regarding transmission events and contact tracing is needed to properly explain the heterogeneity in transmission and facilitate control efforts for SARS-CoV-2 and other infections.
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- 2024
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14. The Effects of Intraoperative Methadone on Postoperative Pain Control in Pediatric Patients: A Scoping Review.
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Azamfirei R, Procaccini D, Lobner K, and Kudchadkar SR
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- Humans, Child, Pain Management methods, Treatment Outcome, Pain Measurement, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Methadone adverse effects, Methadone therapeutic use, Methadone administration & dosage, Pain, Postoperative prevention & control, Pain, Postoperative diagnosis, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Analgesics, Opioid administration & dosage, Intraoperative Care methods
- Abstract
Inadequate perioperative pain control has deleterious effects on children's development and can lead to heightened pain experiences and the avoidance of future medical procedures. Reports of perioperative use of methadone in children are increasing, as it has a favorable pharmacodynamic profile; however, the effectiveness of methadone in reducing postoperative pain has not been established. We, therefore, aimed to provide a scoping review of the literature comparing the effect of intraoperative methadone versus other opioids on postoperative opioid consumption, pain scores, and adverse events in pediatric patients. We identified studies in PubMed, Scopus, Embase, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) databases from inception to January 2023. Postoperative opioid consumption, pain scores, and adverse events were extracted for analysis. We screened 1864 studies, of which 83 studies were selected for full-text review. Five studies were included in the final analysis. Postoperative opioid consumption was decreased overall in children who received methadone compared to those who did not. The majority of studies indicated that methadone was superior to other opioids in reported pain scores, while the frequency of adverse events was similar between the groups. Although the data reviewed highlight a potential benefit of intraoperative methadone in pediatric patients, 4 of the 5 studies had serious methodological concerns. Thus, we cannot make strong recommendations for the regular use of methadone in the perioperative setting at this time. Our results highlight the need for large, well-designed randomized trials to fully evaluate the safety and efficacy of intraoperative methadone in diverse pediatric surgical populations., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 International Anesthesia Research Society.)
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- 2024
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15. First-Onset Psychosis After COVID-19 Infection: A Systematic Review of the Literature.
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Han J, Pontikes TK, Zabinski J, Gilbert C, Hicks C, Fayez R, Walterfang M, Mahdanian A, Nanavati J, Lobner K, Leppla I, and Roy D
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- Humans, Pandemics, Cohort Studies, COVID-19 complications, Psychotic Disorders etiology, Delirium complications
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has been an inciting factor for a wide variety of neuropsychiatric symptoms, including first-episode psychosis (FEP)., Objective: The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the current literature on COVID-19 associated postviral FEP., Methods: A systematic review was completed using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines and identified 81 articles that met inclusion criteria., Results: Articles included case reports, case series, and cohort studies with postviral FEP occurring outside the setting of delirium, demonstrating a broad range of symptoms., Conclusions: This systematic review shows that postviral FEP associated with COVID-19 follows a pattern similar to psychosis associated with other viral infections and is an important consideration when building a differential for FEP when delirium has been ruled out. Better understanding of postviral FEP associated with COVID-19 and other viral illnesses may help clarify aspects of underlying pathophysiology of psychotic symptoms broadly., (Copyright © 2023 Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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16. Simulation Training in the Management of Adverse Contrast Reactions: A Systematic Review.
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Wahl AD, Saini N, Trinh K, Patel S, Lobner K, Huang J, and Deng F
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- Clinical Competence, Educational Measurement, Internship and Residency, Simulation Training, Contrast Media adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Simulation-based training has become increasingly prominent within medical education, but its utility within radiology remains underexplored., Objective: To appraise the evidence for the effectiveness of simulation on the management of adverse reactions to contrast media., Methods: A systematic search of the literature was conducted. Eligible studies recruited radiology residents, provided simulation-based training focused on contrast reaction management, and measured any effectiveness outcome compared with any nonsimulation training or no training. The quality of studies was appraised and outcomes were classified according to Kirkpatrick's hierarchy and the strength of evidence., Results: Out of 146 screened results, 15 articles were included that described 17 studies-3 randomized trials and 14 pretest-posttest studies of hands-on or, less commonly, computer-based simulation. In all 16 studies that assessed knowledge before and after intervention, written test scores improved after simulation. Most studies noted improvements in comfort or confidence managing contrast reactions as well. In all three studies that assessed knowledge after simulation and after didactic lecture as a control, posttest scores were not statistically significantly better in the simulation groups than the lecture groups. Common study limitations included single-group designs, measuring only learning outcomes using unvalidated instruments, modest sample sizes, and limited assessment of long-term retention., Conclusion: Simulation produces subjective improvements and knowledge gain relevant to contrast reaction management. Further research is required to demonstrate superiority of simulation-based contrast reaction management training over traditional didactic lecture-based instruction., (Copyright © 2023 American College of Radiology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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17. The effect of nature exposure on pain experience and quality of life in patients with chronic pain: A systematic review and meta-analysis protocol.
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Lee MJ, Pradeep A, Lobner K, and Badaki-Makun O
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- Humans, Quality of Life, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Anxiety therapy, Review Literature as Topic, Chronic Pain therapy, Chronic Pain psychology
- Abstract
Background: Chronic pain is a complex condition with short and long-term effects on physical and psychosocial health. Nature exposure therapy has been investigated as a potential non-pharmacological intervention to improve physical and emotional health of individuals with chronic pain. This proposed systematic review aims to examine the effects of nature exposure therapy on pain experience and quality of life in patients with chronic pain., Methods: Studies will be identified by searching the MEDLINE, Embase and Cumulative Index for Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) databases. All included studies will be required to be interventional controlled trials comparing nature exposure therapy to placebo or standard care in patients with chronic pain. Primary outcomes for this review will be pain intensity and quality of life scores. Secondary outcomes will include self-efficacy, depression and pain-related anxiety scores. If 2 or more studies are included, results will be pooled for meta-analysis. If meta-analysis is not possible, the results will be presented in a narrative form., Discussion: Given the adverse effects of opioid use, non-pharmacological interventions are a necessary alternative to treat patients with chronic pain. Nature exposure therapy is an intriguing example of such an intervention. We hope that this systematic review will guide future clinical decision-making for patients with chronic pain and provide evidence for or against the need for natural spaces and improved urban planning., Trial Registration: PROSPERO registration number: CRD42021226949., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Lee et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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18. Scoping Review on Educational Programs for Medical Professionals on the Management of Acute Agitation.
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Leppla I, Tobolowsky W, Patel S, Mahdanian A, Lobner K, Caufield-Noll C, Ponor IL, and Roy D
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- Humans, Curriculum, Behavior Therapy, Dementia
- Abstract
Background: Agitation is a common reason for psychiatric consultation in the general hospital. The consultation-liaison (CL) psychiatrist is often tasked with teaching the medical team how to manage agitation., Objective: The purpose of this scoping review is to explore what resources the CL psychiatrist has for educational tools on teaching about agitation management. Given the frequency with which CL psychiatrists help with on-the-ground management of agitation, we hypothesized that there would be a scarcity of educational resources to teach front-line providers how to manage agitation., Methods: Following current Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines, a scoping review was conducted. The literature search focused on the electronic databases MEDLINE (PubMed), Embase (Embase.com), The Cochrane Library (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Cochrane Methodology Register), PsycInfo (EbscoHost), Cumulated Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (EbscoHost), and Web of Science. Using Covidence software, after screening for titles and abstracts, full texts were screened independently and in duplicate according to our inclusion criteria. For data extraction, we created a predefined set of criteria according to which each article was analyzed. We then grouped the articles in the full-text review according to which patient population a curriculum was designed for., Results: The search yielded a total of 3250 articles. After removing duplicates and reviewing procedures, we included 51 articles. Data extraction captured article type and details; educational program information (staff training, web modules, instructor led seminar); learner population; patient population; and setting. The curricula were further divided based on their target patient population, specifically the acute psychiatric patient (n = 10), the general medical patient (n = 9), and the patient with a major neurocognitive disorder such as dementia or traumatic brain injury (n = 32). Learner outcomes included staff comfort, confidence, skills, and knowledge. Patient outcomes included measurements of agitation or violence using validated scales, PRN medication use, and restraint use., Conclusions: Despite there being numerous agitation curricula in existence, we found that a large majority of these educational programs were done for patients with major neurocognitive disorders in the long-term care setting. This review highlights the gap in education related to agitation management for both patients and providers in the general medical setting, as less than 20% of total studies are focused on this population. The CL psychiatrist plays a critical role in assisting in agitation management in this setting, which often requires collaboration between technicians, nurses, and nonpsychiatric providers. It calls into question whether the lack of educational programs makes the implementation of management interventions more difficult and less effective, even with the assistance of the CL psychiatrist., (Copyright © 2023 Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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19. Social Determinants of Health in Pediatric Rehabilitation for Children with Traumatic Injury: A Systematic Review.
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Garg A, Lobner K, Song J, Mitchell R, Egbunine A, and Kudchadkar SR
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- Child, Humans, Black People, Ethnicity, Hispanic or Latino, Hospitalization, Social Determinants of Health economics, Social Determinants of Health ethnology, Social Determinants of Health statistics & numerical data, Wounds and Injuries rehabilitation, Healthcare Disparities economics, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Healthcare Disparities statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the current evidence regarding health care disparities in pediatric rehabilitation after hospitalization with traumatic injury., Study Design: This systematic review utilized both PubMed and EMBASE, and each was searched with key MESH terms. Studies were included in the systematic review if they (1) addressed social determinants of health including, but not limited to, race, ethnicity, insurance status, and income level; (2) focused on inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation services posthospital stay; (3) were based in the pediatric population; and (4) addressed traumatic injury requiring hospitalization. Only studies from within the US were included., Results: From 10 169 studies identified, 455 abstracts were examined for full-text review, and 24 studies were chosen for data extraction. Synthesis of the 24 studies revealed 3 major themes: (1) access to services; (2) outcomes from rehabilitation; and (3) service provision. Patients with public insurance had decreased availability of service providers and had longer outpatient wait times. Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic children were more likely to have greater injury severity and decreased functional independence after discharge. Lack of interpreter services was associated with decreased utilization of outpatient services., Conclusions: This systematic review identified significant effects of health care disparities on the rehabilitation process in pediatric traumatic injury. Social determinants of health must be thoughtfully addressed to identify key areas of improvement for the provision of equitable health care., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest and Funding Sources A.G. was funded by the Johns Hopkins T32 grant for Training for Clinician Scientists in Pediatric Critical Cardiopulmonary Disease from the National Heart, Lung, And Blood Institute. This funding source provided support for conduct of the research but did not play a role in the study design, data collection, analysis, or decision to submit the paper for publication. The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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20. Neuroimaging Correlates of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review of the Literature.
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Esagoff AI, Stevens DA, Kosyakova N, Woodard K, Jung D, Richey LN, Daneshvari NO, Luna LP, Bray MJC, Bryant BR, Rodriguez CP, Krieg A, Trapp NT, Jones MB, Roper C, Goldwaser EL, Berich-Anastasio E, Pletnikova A, Lobner K, Lauterbach M, Sair HI, and Peters ME
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- Humans, Neuroimaging, Brain, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic etiology, Brain Injuries, Traumatic complications, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Neuroimaging is widely utilized in studying traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The risk for PTSD is greater after TBI than after non-TBI trauma, and PTSD is associated with worse outcomes after TBI. Studying the neuroimaging correlates of TBI-related PTSD may provide insights into the etiology of both conditions and help identify those TBI patients most at risk of developing persistent symptoms. The objectives of this systematic review were to examine the current literature on neuroimaging in TBI-related PTSD, summarize key findings, and highlight strengths and limitations to guide future research. A Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA) compliant literature search was conducted in PubMed (MEDLINE
® ), PsycINFO, Embase, and Scopus databases prior to January 2022. The database query yielded 4486 articles, which were narrowed based on specified inclusion criteria to a final cohort of 16 studies, composed of 854 participants with TBI. There was no consensus regarding neuroimaging correlates of TBI-related PTSD among the included articles. A small number of studies suggest that TBI-related PTSD is associated with white matter tract changes, particularly in frontotemporal regions, as well as changes in whole-brain networks of resting-state connectivity. Future studies hoping to identify reliable neuroimaging correlates of TBI-related PTSD would benefit from ensuring consistent case definition, preferably with clinician-diagnosed TBI and PTSD, selection of comparable control groups, and attention to imaging timing post-injury. Prospective studies are needed and should aim to further differentiate predisposing factors from sequelae of TBI-related PTSD.- Published
- 2023
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21. Safety of Scrambler Therapy: A Systematic Review of Complications and Adverse Effects.
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Wang EJ, Limerick G, D'Souza RS, Lobner K, Williams KA, Cohen SP, and Smith TJ
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- United States, Humans, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
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Objective: The objective was to qualitatively synthesize all reported cases of complications, adverse effects, side effects, or harms arising from the use of scrambler therapy (ST)., Methods and Design: A systematic review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis guidelines. The PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, United States National Library of Medicine clinical trials registry, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials databases were searched from database inception to December 10, 2021. Case reports/series, abstracts, retrospective studies, and prospective studies (e.g., open-label trials, randomized controlled trials) pertaining to ST and any description of a complication, adverse effect, side effect, or harm were screened. The search protocol was developed a priori and registered via the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO ID: CRD42021291838)., Results: A total of six RCTs, 19 prospective open-label trials, and 11 case series / case reports met the inclusion criteria, comprising 1,152 total patients. Two patients experienced contact dermatitis, and one patient reported minor ecchymosis that resolved without intervention. This yielded a composite complication rate of 0.26% (3/1,152). There were zero reported serious adverse events., Conclusions: When used in accordance with the treatment protocols described by the United States Food and Drug Administration and device manual, ST is associated with a reported composite complication rate that is orders of magnitude lower than those of invasive neuromodulation devices. ST neuromodulation is a safe alternative for patients who cannot undergo invasive neuromodulation device implantation because of either risk or preference., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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22. Management of atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response in patients with acute decompensated heart failure: A systematic review.
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Niforatos JD, Ehmann MR, Balhara KS, Hinson JS, Ramcharran L, Lobner K, and Weygandt PL
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- Adult, Humans, Diltiazem therapeutic use, Metoprolol therapeutic use, Anti-Arrhythmia Agents therapeutic use, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Observational Studies as Topic, Atrial Fibrillation complications, Atrial Fibrillation drug therapy, Atrial Flutter complications, Atrial Flutter drug therapy, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure drug therapy
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Objective: The objective was to evaluate the comparative effectiveness and safety of pharmacological and nonpharmacological management options for atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter with rapid ventricular response (AFRVR) in patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) in the acute care setting., Methods: This study was a systematic review of observational studies or randomized clinical trials (RCT) of adult patients with AFRVR and concomitant ADHF in the emergency department (ED), intensive care unit, or step-down unit. The primary effectiveness outcome was successful rate or rhythm control. Safety outcomes were adverse events, such as symptomatic hypotension and venous thromboembolism., Results: A total of 6577 unique articles were identified. Five studies met inclusion criteria: one RCT in the inpatient setting and four retrospective studies, two in the ED and the other three in the inpatient setting. In the RCT of diltiazem versus placebo, 22 patients (100%) in the treatment group had a therapeutic response compared to 0/15 (0%) in the placebo group, with no significant safety differences between the two groups. For three of the observational studies, data were limited. One observation study showed no difference between metoprolol and diltiazem for successful rate control, but worsening heart failure symptoms occurred more frequently in those receiving diltiazem compared to metoprolol (19 patients [33%] vs. 10 patients [15%], p = 0.019). A single study included electrical cardioversion (one patient exposed with failure to convert to sinus rhythm) as nonpharmacological management. The overall risk of bias for included studies ranged from serious to critical. Missing data and heterogeneity of definitions for effectiveness and safety outcomes precluded the combination of results for quantitative meta-analysis., Conclusions: High-level evidence to inform clinical decision making regarding effective and safe management of AFRVR in patients with ADHF in the acute care setting is lacking., (© 2022 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.)
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- 2023
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23. Prognostic and Goals-of-Care Communication in the PICU: A Systematic Review.
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McSherry ML, Rissman L, Mitchell R, Ali-Thompson S, Madrigal VN, Lobner K, and Kudchadkar SR
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- Humans, Child, Prospective Studies, Prognosis, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Goals, Communication
- Abstract
Objective: Admission to the PICU may result in substantial short- and long-term morbidity for survivors and their families. Engaging caregivers in discussion of prognosis is challenging for PICU clinicians. We sought to summarize the literature on prognostic, goals-of-care conversations (PGOCCs) in the PICU in order to establish current evidence-based practice, highlight knowledge gaps, and identify future directions., Data Sources: PubMed (MEDLINE and PubMed Central), EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Scopus., Study Selection: We reviewed published articles (2001-2022) that examined six themes within PGOCC contextualized to the PICU: 1) caregiver perspectives, 2) clinician perspectives, 3) documentation patterns, 4) communication skills training for clinicians, 5) family conferences, and 6) prospective interventions to improve caregiver-clinician communication., Data Extraction: Two reviewers independently assessed eligibility using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis methodology., Data Synthesis: Of 1,420 publications screened, 65 met criteria for inclusion with several key themes identified. Parent and clinician perspectives highlighted the need for clear, timely, and empathetic prognostic communication. Communication skills training programs are evaluated by a participant's self-perceived improvement. Caregiver and clinician views on quality of family meetings may be discordant. Documentation of PGOCCs is inconsistent and most likely to occur shortly before death. Only two prospective interventions to improve caregiver-clinician communication in the PICU have been reported. The currently available studies reflect an overrepresentation of bereaved White, English-speaking caregivers of children with known chronic conditions., Conclusions: Future research should identify evidence-based communication practices that enhance caregiver-clinician PGOCC in the PICU and address: 1) caregiver and clinician perspectives of underserved and limited English proficiency populations, 2) inclusion of caregivers who are not physically present at the bedside, 3) standardized communication training programs with broader multidisciplinary staff inclusion, 4) improved design of patient and caregiver educational materials, 5) the development of pediatric decision aids, and 6) inclusion of long-term post-PICU outcomes as a measure for PGOCC interventions., Competing Interests: The authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2023
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24. A cross-sectional study of participant recruitment rates in published phase III influenza therapeutic randomized controlled trials conducted in the clinical setting.
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Rothman RE, Niforatos JD, Youbi M, Polydefkis N, Hergenroeder A, Ako MC, Lobner K, Shaw-Saliba K, and Hsieh YH
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Influenza, Human drug therapy
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Objective: A recent academic-government partnership demonstrated the feasibility of utilizing Emergency Departments (ED) as a primary site for subject enrollment in clinical trials and achieved high rates of recruitment in two U.S. EDs. Given the ongoing need to test new therapeutics for influenza and other emerging infections, we sought to describe the historical rates of participant recruitment into influenza Phase III therapeutic RCTs in various clinical venues, including EDs., Study Design: A cross-sectional study was performed of influenza therapeutic Phase III RCTs published in PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Clinicaltrials.gov from January 2000 to June 2019., Main Outcome: To estimate the weighted-average number of influenza-positive participants enrolled per site per season in influenza therapeutic RCT conducted in clinical settings, and to describe basic trial site characteristics., Results: 47 (0.7%) of 7008 articles were included for review of which 43 of 47 (91%) included information regarding enrollment sites; of these, 2 (5%) recruited exclusively from EDs with the remainder recruiting from mixed clinical settings (inpatient, outpatient, and ED). The median enrollment per study was 326 (IQR: 110, 502.5) with a median of 11 sites per study (IQR: 2, 59.5). Included studies reported a median of 201 (IQR: 74, 344.5) confirmed influenza-positive participants per study. The pooled number of participants enrolled per site per season was 11 (95% CI: 10, 12). The pooled enrollment numbers per clinical site after excluding the two 'ED only recruitment' studies were less [10.7 (95% CI: 9.9, 11.6)] than the pooled enrollment numbers per clinical site for the two 'ED only recruitment' studies [89.5 (95% CI 89.2-89.27)]., Conclusion and Relevance: Published RCTs evaluating influenza therapeutics in clinical settings recruit participants from multiple sites but enroll relatively few participants, per site, per season. The few ED-based studies reported recruited more subjects per site per season. Untapped opportunities likely exist for EDs to participate and/or lead therapeutic RCTs for influenza or other emerging respiratory pathogens., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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25. Behavioral and Emotional Dyscontrol Following Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review of Neuroimaging and Electrophysiological Correlates.
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Bryant BR, Richey LN, Jahed S, Heinzerling A, Stevens DA, Pace BD, Tsai J, Bray MJC, Esagoff AI, Adkins J, Cohen I, Narapareddy BR, Rodriguez CP, Jones MB, Roper C, Goldwaser EL, Lobner K, Siddiqi S, Sair HI, Lauterbach M, Luna LP, Peters ME, and Trapp NT
- Subjects
- Humans, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Neuroimaging, Emotions, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Brain Injuries pathology
- Abstract
Background: Behavioral and emotional dyscontrol commonly occur following traumatic brain injury (TBI). Neuroimaging and electrophysiological correlates of dyscontrol have not been systematically summarized in the literature to date., Objective: To complete a systematic review of the literature examining neuroimaging and electrophysiological findings related to behavioral and emotional dyscontrol due to TBI., Methods: A Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses-compliant literature search was conducted in PubMed (MEDLINE), PsycINFO, EMBASE, and Scopus databases prior to May 2019. The database query yielded 4392 unique articles. These articles were narrowed based on specific inclusion criteria (e.g., clear TBI definition, statistical analysis of the relationship between neuroimaging and dyscontrol)., Results: A final cohort of 24 articles resulted, comprising findings from 1552 patients with TBI. Studies included civilian (n = 12), military (n = 10), and sport (n = 2) samples with significant variation in the severity of TBI incorporated. Global and region-based structural imaging was more frequently used to study dyscontrol than functional imaging or diffusion tensor imaging. The prefrontal cortex was the most common neuroanatomical region associated with behavioral and emotional dyscontrol, followed by other frontal and temporal lobe findings., Conclusions: Frontal and temporal lesions are most strongly implicated in the development of postinjury dyscontrol symptoms although they are also the most frequently investigated regions of the brain for these symptom categories. Future studies can make valuable contributions to the field by (1) emphasizing consistent definitions of behavioral and emotional dyscontrol, (2) assessing premorbid dyscontrol symptoms in subjects, (3) utilizing functional or structural connectivity-based imaging techniques, or (4) restricting analyses to more focused brain regions., (Copyright © 2022 Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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26. Bibliometric analysis of interventional radiology studies in PubMed-indexed literature from 1991 to 2020.
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Gowda PC, Lobner K, Hafezi-Nejad N, and Weiss CR
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- Bibliometrics, Child, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, PubMed, Obstetrics, Radiology, Interventional
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Purpose: To evaluate interventional radiology (IR) research over time based on the study type of published articles and the visibility of articles to non-radiology clinicians., Methods: We performed a search of all PubMed-indexed literature from January 1, 1991, through November 11, 2020, for clinical IR articles classified by their study type, categorized as: 1) meta-analyses/systematic reviews/practice guidelines; 2) randomized controlled trials; 3) non-randomized controlled trials; and 4) longitudinal/observational studies. Clinical IR articles were defined as those that met keyword criteria constructed from Society of Interventional Radiology procedure guides. Data were also collected on medical specialty journal categories that published IR-related articles., Results: When we examined the first vs. the last decade of our study period, the number of IR articles published increased across all study types: randomized controlled trials (374 to 2620; 601% change), longitudinal/observational studies (2324 to 12,447; 436%), meta-analyses/systematic reviews/practice guidelines (1179 to 6135; 420%), non-randomized controlled trials (471 to 2161; 359%). The journal categories with the highest mean percentage increase of IR articles across all study types were obstetrics and gynecology (659%), peripheral vascular disease (342%), and emergency medicine (221%). We found a decrease of IR articles published in surgery (-6.0%), pediatrics (-14%), and pulmonary (-21%) journals., Conclusion: The number of IR articles grew quickly and at a similar rate compared with all PubMed-indexed articles and increased as a proportion of articles published in non-imaging specialty journals. This indicates greater visibility of IR studies for all clinicians and is encouraging towards the advancement of IR techniques., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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27. Corrigendum to "Prevalence of primary painless chronic pancreatitis: A systematic review and meta-analysis" [Pancreatology 22 (1) (January 2022) 20-29].
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Bhullar FA, Faghih M, Akshintala VS, Ahmed AI, Lobner K, Afghani E, Phillips AE, Hart PA, Ramsey ML, Bick BL, Kuhlmann L, Drewes AM, Yadav D, Olesen SS, and Singh VK
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- 2022
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28. Medication Errors in Overweight and Obese Pediatric Patients: A Narrative Review.
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Procaccini D, Kim JM, Lobner K, Rowcliffe M, and Mollenkopf N
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Medication Errors, Overweight drug therapy, Anti-Infective Agents, Pediatric Obesity drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The childhood obesity epidemic in the United States has increased utilization of health care and prescribing of medications in overweight and obese children, yet it is unclear whether this has led to more medication errors. The objective of this study was to review all available literature on incidence and types of medication errors in overweight and obese children., Methods: A search of MEDLINE, Embase, and Scopus databases was conducted for all studies and oral abstracts through December 2020 reporting medication errors in overweight or obese children aged ≤ 18 years. All studies were identified and extracted via a Covidence database. Two reviewers independently reviewed studies and rated the methodologic quality of those included per GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations) criteria., Results: The search identified 1,016 abstracts from databases. Following review, full text was obtained for 146 articles, of which 141 were excluded. A total of 5 studies met criteria for inclusion and described dosing errors of antimicrobials, anesthetics, and paracetamol in overweight and obese pediatric patients. Two of the 5 studies compared medication errors in obese to nonobese children, and both found that medication errors (both over- and underdosing) were generally more common among obese children. The identified reasons for medication errors included incorrect dosing weight, incorrect dosing strategy, over- and underdosing with weight-based and flat-fixed dosing, and inapposite use of age-based dosing schemas., Conclusion: There is a paucity of patient safety evidence available evaluating medication use in overweight and obese children and associated medication errors. Overweight and obese children may be at increased risk of medication errors, although the clinical significance of this is unknown., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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29. Neuroimaging Correlates of Syndromal Anxiety Following Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review of the Literature.
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Jahed S, Daneshvari NO, Liang AL, Richey LN, Bryant BR, Krieg A, Bray MJC, Pradeep T, Luna LP, Trapp NT, Jones MB, Stevens DA, Roper C, Goldwaser EL, Berich-Anastasio E, Pletnikova A, Lobner K, Lee DJ, Lauterbach M, Sair HI, and Peters ME
- Subjects
- Anxiety diagnostic imaging, Anxiety etiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neuroimaging methods, Brain Injuries, Traumatic complications, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Tensor Imaging
- Abstract
Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can precipitate new-onset psychiatric symptoms or worsen existing psychiatric conditions. To elucidate specific mechanisms for this interaction, neuroimaging is often used to study both psychiatric conditions and TBI. This systematic review aims to synthesize the existing literature of neuroimaging findings among patients with anxiety after TBI., Methods: We conducted a Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses-compliant literature search via PubMed (MEDLINE), PsychINFO, EMBASE, and Scopus databases before May, 2019. We included studies that clearly defined TBI, measured syndromal anxiety as a primary outcome, and statistically analyzed the relationship between neuroimaging findings and anxiety symptoms., Results: A total of 5982 articles were retrieved from the systematic search, of which 65 studied anxiety and 13 met eligibility criteria. These studies were published between 2004 and 2017, collectively analyzing 764 participants comprised of 470 patients with TBI and 294 non-TBI controls. Imaging modalities used included magnetic resonance imaging, functional magnetic resonance imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, electroencephalogram, magnetic resonance spectrometry, and magnetoencephalography. Eight of 13 studies presented at least one significant finding and together reflect a complex set of changes that lead to anxiety in the setting of TBI. The left cingulate gyrus in particular was found to be significant in 2 studies using different imaging modalities. Two studies also revealed perturbances in functional connectivity within the default mode network., Conclusions: This is the first systemic review of neuroimaging changes associated with anxiety after TBI, which implicated multiple brain structures and circuits, such as the default mode network. Future research with consistent, rigorous measurements of TBI and syndromal anxiety, as well as attention to control groups, previous TBIs, and time interval between TBI and neuroimaging, are warranted. By understanding neuroimaging correlates of psychiatric symptoms, this work could inform future post-TBI screening and surveillance, preventative efforts, and early interventions to improve neuropsychiatric outcomes., (Copyright © 2021 Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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30. Pediatric Organ Dysfunction Information Update Mandate (PODIUM) Contemporary Organ Dysfunction Criteria: Executive Summary.
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Bembea MM, Agus M, Akcan-Arikan A, Alexander P, Basu R, Bennett TD, Bohn D, Brandão LR, Brown AM, Carcillo JA, Checchia P, Cholette J, Cheifetz IM, Cornell T, Doctor A, Eckerle M, Erickson S, Farris RWD, Faustino EVS, Fitzgerald JC, Fuhrman DY, Giuliano JS, Guilliams K, Gaies M, Gorga SM, Hall M, Hanson SJ, Hartman M, Hassinger AB, Irving SY, Jeffries H, Jouvet P, Kannan S, Karam O, Khemani RG, Kissoon N, Lacroix J, Laussen P, Leclerc F, Lee JH, Leteurtre S, Lobner K, McKiernan PJ, Menon K, Monagle P, Muszynski JA, Odetola F, Parker R, Pathan N, Pierce RW, Pineda J, Prince JM, Robinson KA, Rowan CM, Ryerson LM, Sanchez-Pinto LN, Schlapbach LJ, Selewski DT, Shekerdemian LS, Simon D, Smith LS, Squires JE, Squires RH, Sutherland SM, Ouellette Y, Spaeder MC, Srinivasan V, Steiner ME, Tasker RC, Thiagarajan R, Thomas N, Tissieres P, Traube C, Tucci M, Typpo KV, Wainwright MS, Ward SL, Watson RS, Weiss S, Whitney J, Willson D, Wynn JL, Yehya N, and Zimmerman JJ
- Subjects
- Child, Critical Care, Critical Illness, Evidence-Based Medicine, Humans, Multiple Organ Failure therapy, Multiple Organ Failure diagnosis, Organ Dysfunction Scores
- Abstract
Prior criteria for organ dysfunction in critically ill children were based mainly on expert opinion. We convened the Pediatric Organ Dysfunction Information Update Mandate (PODIUM) expert panel to summarize data characterizing single and multiple organ dysfunction and to derive contemporary criteria for pediatric organ dysfunction. The panel was composed of 88 members representing 47 institutions and 7 countries. We conducted systematic reviews of the literature to derive evidence-based criteria for single organ dysfunction for neurologic, cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, acute liver, renal, hematologic, coagulation, endocrine, endothelial, and immune system dysfunction. We searched PubMed and Embase from January 1992 to January 2020. Study identification was accomplished using a combination of medical subject headings terms and keywords related to concepts of pediatric organ dysfunction. Electronic searches were performed by medical librarians. Studies were eligible for inclusion if the authors reported original data collected in critically ill children; evaluated performance characteristics of scoring tools or clinical assessments for organ dysfunction; and assessed a patient-centered, clinically meaningful outcome. Data were abstracted from each included study into an electronic data extraction form. Risk of bias was assessed using the Quality in Prognosis Studies tool. Consensus was achieved for a final set of 43 criteria for pediatric organ dysfunction through iterative voting and discussion. Although the PODIUM criteria for organ dysfunction were limited by available evidence and will require validation, they provide a contemporary foundation for researchers to identify and study single and multiple organ dysfunction in critically ill children., Competing Interests: FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE: The authors have indicated they have no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2022
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31. Prevalence of primary painless chronic pancreatitis: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Bhullar FA, Faghih M, Akshintala VS, Ahmed AI, Lobner K, Afghani E, Phillips AE, Hart PA, Ramsey ML, Bick BL, Kuhlmann L, Drewes AM, Yadav D, Olesen SS, and Singh VK
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adenocarcinoma, Diabetes Mellitus, Humans, Pancreatic Neoplasms complications, Pancreatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Prevalence, Abdominal Pain etiology, Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency epidemiology, Pancreatitis, Chronic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background/objectives: While pain is the predominant symptom of chronic pancreatitis (CP), a subset of patients may experience a painless course. This systematic review aimed to determine the prevalence of primary painless CP., Methods: MEDLINE (PubMed), EMBASE and Web of Science Core Collection databases were searched for published studies through September 15, 2020 that included at least 10 consecutive patients with CP and which reported the number with painless CP. The presence of a history of recurrent acute pancreatitis (RAP), exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI), diabetes mellitus (DM) and pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PA) in the painless CP patients was also recorded. A random effects model was used to determine pooled prevalence estimates with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI)., Results: Among the 5057 studies identified and screened, 42 full-text articles were included in the final analysis. There were a total of 14,277 patients with CP among whom 1569 had painless CP. The pooled prevalence of painless CP was 12% (95% CI 10-15%). Among a subset of studies that reported on calcifications (n = 11), DM (n = 12), EPI (n = 8) and history of RAP (n = 14), the pooled prevalence estimates were 96% (95% CI 73-100%), 51% (95% CI 32-70%), and 47% (95% CI 15-81%), respectively. Alcohol, idiopathic/genetic and other etiologies were attributed to be the cause of painless CP in 32.4%, 56.9% and 8.9% patients, respectively., Conclusion: Approximately one in ten patients with CP have primary painless disease with the majority being attributable to an idiopathic/genetic etiology. Further research is needed to determine the optimal management of these patients., (Copyright © 2021 IAP and EPC. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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32. Melatonin Use in Hospitalized Children for Non-Anesthetic Indications: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Procaccini DE, Lobner K, Anton B, and Kudchadkar SR
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Antioxidants therapeutic use, Child, Hospitalized, Melatonin therapeutic use
- Abstract
Melatonin, a potent free radical scavenger, plays an important role in homeostasis of cell and organ physiology. The increased demand and synthesis from the pineal gland during times of oxidative stress suggests a potential benefit of melatonin supplementation during hospitalization for acute illness. Yet, the paucity of clinical studies for non-anesthetic-associated indications in pediatric populations hampers the safe, effective, and consistent use of melatonin. The objective of this study was to systematically review published studies of melatonin use for non-sedative and non-analgesic indications in hospitalized pediatric patients. We conducted a search of PubMed, EMBASE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Web of Science, and Scopus databases for articles on the use of melatonin for pediatric patients in a hospital setting. Thirteen eligible studies, all in neonates, were identified. Data elements extracted included study design, number of study subjects, indication for melatonin therapy, and melatonin regimen (formulation, dosage, and duration). Because study methodologies were very heterogeneous, a quantitative synthesis of the published findings was not possible. The identified studies were therefore categorized by the indication of melatonin (adjuvant-antioxidant or anti-inflammatory therapy) in the following specific disease states: (i) acute infections, (ii) respiratory distress syndrome, (iii) neurologic injury, and (iv) jaundice. The current data suggest that melatonin is safe for use in hospitalized neonates. Melatonin may be beneficial for reducing inflammatory markers in neonatal patients with disease states and clinical sequelae that are associated with increased inflammation and oxidative stress. Melatonin, in conjunction with phototherapy, is not superior to use of vitamin D with phototherapy for treatment of neonatal jaundice. However, studies in other pediatric populations are needed given widespread use across clinical inpatient settings., (© 2020 Pharmacotherapy Publications, Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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33. Efficacy and feasibility of G-POEM in management of patients with refractory gastroparesis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Aghaie Meybodi M, Qumseya BJ, Shakoor D, Lobner K, Vosoughi K, Ichkhanian Y, and Khashab MA
- Abstract
Background and aim Clinical management of patients with gastroparesis is challenging. Prior pyloric targeted procedures are either invasive or have questionable long-term efficacy. Gastric per-oral endoscopic myotomy (G-POEM) has been recently introduced as a minimally invasive approach. In this review, we performed a meta-analysis to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of this technique in the management of patients with refractory gastroparesis. Methods PubMed, Embase, and Scopus databases were searched to identify relevant studies published through May 2018. Weighted pool rates (WPR) of the clinical resolution were calculated. Pooled values of Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index (GCSI) before and after the procedure were compared. Pooled difference in means comparing gastric emptying before and after the procedure was calculated. Fixed or random effect model was used according to the level of heterogeneity. Results Seven studies with 196 patients were included in the meta-analysis. The mean value of procedure duration was 69.7 (95 % confidence interval [95 % CI]: 39 - 99 minutes) and average estimate of hospital stay was 1.96 (95 % CI: 1.22 - 2.95) days. The WPR for clinical success was 82 % (95 % CI: 74 % - 87 %, I
2 = 0). Compared with pre-procedure GCSI values, mean values of GCSI were reduced significantly at 5 days (-1.57 (95 % CI:-2.2,-0.9), I2 = 80 %) ( P < 0.001). Mean values of gastric emptying were significantly decreased 2 - 3 months after the procedure (-22.3 (95 %CI: -32.9, - 11.6), I2 = 67 %) ( P < 0.05). Conclusion Due to the high rate of clinical success and low rate of adverse events, G-POEM should be considered in management of refractory gastroparesis.- Published
- 2019
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34. Reliability and validity of emergency department triage tools in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review.
- Author
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Jenson A, Hansoti B, Rothman R, de Ramirez SS, Lobner K, and Wallis L
- Subjects
- Adult, Emergency Medical Services economics, Emergency Service, Hospital economics, Humans, Insurance, Health economics, National Health Programs organization & administration, Quality of Health Care economics, Review Literature as Topic, Triage, Developing Countries economics, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Insurance, Health organization & administration
- Abstract
Objective: Despite the universal acknowledgment that triage is necessary to prioritize emergency care, there is no review that provides an overview of triage tools evaluated and utilized in resource-poor settings, such as low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We seek to quantify and evaluate studies evaluating triage tools in LMICs., Methods: We performed a systematic review of the literature between 2000 and 2015 to identify studies that evaluated the reliability and validity of triage tools for adult emergency care in LMICs. Studies were then evaluated for the overall quality of evidence using the GRADE criteria., Results: Eighteen studies were included in the review, evaluating six triage tools. Three of the 18 studies were in low-income countries and none were in rural hospitals. Two of the six tools had evaluations of reliability. Each tool positively predicted clinical outcomes, although the variety in resource environments limited ability to compare the predictive nature of any one tool. The South African Triage Scale had the highest quality of evidence. In comparison with high-income countries, the review showed fewer studies evaluating reliability and presented a higher number of studies with small sample sizes that decreased the overall quality of evidence., Conclusion: The quality of evidence supporting any single triage tool's validity and reliability in LMICs is moderate at best. Research on triage tool applicability in low-resource environments must be targeted to the actual clinical environment where the tool will be utilized, and must include low-income countries and rural, primary care settings.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Open Access Journal Policies: A Systematic Analysis of Radiology Journals.
- Author
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Narayan A, Lobner K, and Fritz J
- Subjects
- Bibliometrics, Humans, Access to Information, Open Access Publishing trends, Periodicals as Topic, Radiology
- Abstract
Objective: The open access movement has pushed for greater access to scientific knowledge by expanding access to scientific journal articles. There is limited information about the extent to which open access policies have been adopted by radiology journals. We performed a systematic analysis to ascertain the proportion of radiology journals with open access options., Materials and Methods: A search was performed with the assistance of a clinical informationist. Full and mixed English-language diagnostic and interventional radiology Web of Science journals (impact factors > 1.0) were included. Nuclear medicine, radiation oncology, physics, and solicitation-only journals were excluded. Primary outcome was open access option (yes or no) with additional outcomes including presence or absence of embargo, complete or partial copyright transfer, publication fees, and self-archiving policies. Secondary outcomes included journal citations, journal impact factors, immediacy, Eigenfactor, and article influence scores. Independent double readings were performed with differences resolved by consensus, supplemented by contacting editorial staff at each journal., Results: In all, 125 journals were identified; review yielded 49 journals (39%, mean impact factor of 2.61). Thirty-six of the journals had open access options (73.4%), and four journals were exclusively open access (8.2%). Twelve-month embargoes were most commonly cited (90.6%) with 28.6% of journals stating that they did not require a complete transfer of copyright. Prices for open access options ranged from $750 to $4,000 (median $3,000). No statistically significant differences were found in journal impact measures comparing journals with open access options to journals without open access options., Conclusions: Diagnostic and interventional radiology journals have widely adopted open access options with a few radiology journals being exclusively open access., (Copyright © 2017 American College of Radiology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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36. Novel applications of agent-based modeling in emergency medicine research - A systematic literature review.
- Author
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Adleberg JM, Catlett CL, Rothman RE, Lobner K, and Hsieh YH
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomedical Research, Emergency Medicine, Systems Analysis
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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37. Comparing Practice Patterns Between Pediatric and General Emergency Medicine Physicians: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Chime NO, Katznelson J, Gangadharan S, Walsh B, Lobner K, Brown L, Gawel M, and Auerbach M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, General Practitioners, Humans, Infant, Pediatricians, Young Adult, Emergency Medicine methods, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
- Abstract
Objective: Acutely ill infants and children presenting to the emergency department are treated by either physicians with pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) training or physicians without PEM training, a good proportion of which are general emergency medicine-trained physicians (GEDPs). This scoping review identified published literature comparing the care provided to infants and children (≤21 years of age) by PEM-trained physicians to that provided by GEDPs., Methods: The search was conducted in 2 main steps as follows: (1) initial literature search to identify available literature with evolving feedback from the group while simultaneously deciding search concepts as well as inclusion and exclusion criteria and (2) modification of search concepts and conduction of search using finalized concepts as well as review and selection of articles for final analysis using set inclusion criteria. Each study was independently assessed by 2 reviewers for eligibility and quality. Data were independently abstracted by reviewers, and authors were contacted for missing data., Results: Our search yielded 3137 titles and abstracts. Twenty articles reporting 19 studies were included in the final analysis. The studies were grouped under type of care, diagnostic studies, medication administration, and process of care. The studies addressed differences in the management of fever, croup, bronchiolitis, asthma, urticaria, febrile seizures, and diabetic ketoacidosis., Conclusions: This review highlights the lack of robust studies and heterogeneity of literature comparing practice patterns of PEM-trained physicians with GEDPs. We have outlined a systematic approach to reviewing a body of literature for topics that lack clear terms of comparison across studies.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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38. Influence of vitamin D on liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C: A systematic review and meta-analysis of the pooled clinical trials data.
- Author
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Dadabhai AS, Saberi B, Lobner K, Shinohara RT, and Mullin GE
- Abstract
Aim: To investigate the relationship between vitamin D and liver fibrosis in hepatitis C-monoinfected or hepatitis C virus (HCV)-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infected patients., Methods: Pertinent studies were located by a library literature search in PubMed/Embase/Cochrane/Scopus/LILACS by two individual reviewers. Inclusion criteria: (1) studies with patients with HCV or co-infected HCV/HIV; (2) studies with patients ≥ 18 years old; (3) studies that evaluated liver fibrosis stage, only based on liver biopsy; and (4) studies that reported serum or plasma 25(OH)D levels. Studies that included pediatric patients, other etiologies of liver disease, or did not use liver biopsy for fibrosis evaluation, or studies with inadequate data were excluded. Estimated measures of association reported in the literature, as well as corresponding measures of uncertainty, were recorded and corresponding odds ratios with 95%CI were included in a meta-analysis., Results: The pooled data of this systematic review showed that 9 of the 12 studies correlated advanced liver disease defined as a Metavir value of F3/4 with 25(OH) D level insufficiency. The meta-analysis indicated a significant association across studies., Conclusion: Low vitamin D status is common in chronic Hepatitis C patients and is associated with advanced liver fibrosis., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: All the authors declare that they have no competing interests.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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39. Reliability and validity of pediatric triage tools evaluated in Low resource settings: a systematic review.
- Author
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Hansoti B, Jenson A, Keefe D, De Ramirez SS, Anest T, Twomey M, Lobner K, Kelen G, and Wallis L
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Critical Illness, Developing Countries, Triage methods
- Abstract
Background: Despite the high burden of pediatric mortality from preventable conditions in low and middle income countries and the existence of multiple tools to prioritize critically ill children in low-resource settings, no analysis exists of the reliability and validity of these tools in identifying critically ill children in these scenarios., Methods: The authors performed a systematic search of the peer-reviewed literature published, for studies pertaining to for triage and IMCI in low and middle-income countries in English language, from January 01, 2000 to October 22, 2013. An updated literature search was performed on on July 1, 2015. The databases searched included the Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Medline, PubMed and Web of Science. Only studies that presented data on the reliability and validity evaluations of triage tool were included in this review. Two independent reviewers utilized a data abstraction tool to collect data on demographics, triage tool components and the reliability and validity data and summary findings for each triage tool assessed., Results: Of the 4,717 studies searched, seven studies evaluating triage tools and 10 studies evaluating IMCI were included. There were wide varieties in method for assessing reliability and validity, with different settings, outcome metrics and statistical methods., Conclusions: Studies evaluating triage tools for pediatric patients in low and middle income countries are scarce. Furthermore the methodology utilized in the conduct of these studies varies greatly and does not allow for the comparison of tools across study sites.
- Published
- 2017
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40. Linkage-to-care Methods and Rates in U.S. Emergency Department-based HIV Testing Programs: A Systematic Literature Review Brief Report.
- Author
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Menon AA, Nganga-Good C, Martis M, Wicken C, Lobner K, Rothman RE, and Hsieh YH
- Subjects
- Adult, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Humans, United States, Emergency Service, Hospital, HIV Seropositivity diagnosis, Mass Screening methods
- Abstract
Background: An increasing number of U.S. emergency departments (EDs) have implemented ED-based HIV testing programs since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued revised HIV testing recommendations for clinical settings in 2006. In 2010, the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) set an linkage-to-care (LTC) rate goal of 85% within 90 days of HIV diagnosis. LTC rates for newly diagnosed HIV-infected patients vary markedly by site, and many are suboptimal. The optimal approach for LTC in the ED setting remains unknown., Objective: The objective was to perform a brief descriptive analysis of the LTC methods practiced in EDs across the United States to determine the overall linkage rate of ED-based HIV testing programs., Methods: We conducted a systematic review of literature related to U.S. ED HIV testing in the adult population using PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane. There were 333 articles were identified; 31 articles were selected after a multiphasic screening process. We analyzed data from the 31 articles to assess LTC methods and rates. LTC methods that involved physical escort of the newly diagnosed patient to an HIV/infectious disease (ID) clinic or interaction with a specialist health care provider at the ED were operationally defined as "intensive" LTC protocol. "Mixed" LTC protocol was defined as a program that employed intensive linkage only part of the coverage hours. All other forms of linkage was defined as "nonintensive" LTC protocol. An LTC rate of ≥85% was used to identify characteristics of ED-based HIV testing program associated with a higher LTC rate., Results: There were 37 ED-based HIV testing programs in the 31 articles. The overall LTC rate was 74.4%. Regarding type of protocol, nine (24.3%) employed intensive LTC protocols, 25 (67.6%) nonintensive, two (5.4%) mixed, and one (2.7%) with unclear protocols. LTC rates for programs with intensive and nonintensive LTC protocols were 80.0 and 72.7%, respectively. Four (44.4%) with intensive protocols and nine (36.0%) with the nonintensive protocols had LTC rates > 85%. The linkage staff employed was different between ED programs. Among them, 25 (67.6%) programs used exogenous staff, 10 (27.0%) used the ED staff, and two had no information. All the programs in the nonintensive group utilized drop-in HIV/ID clinic or medical appointments while seven of nine of the programs in the intensive group physically escorted the patients to the initial medical intake appointment. There were no significant differences in characteristics of ED-based HIV testing programs between those with ≥85% LTC rate versus those with <85% within the intensive or nonintensive group., Conclusion: Intensive LTC protocols had a higher LTC rate and a higher proportion of programs that surpassed the >85% NHAS goal compared to nonintensive methods, suggesting that, when possible, ED-based HIV testing programs should adopt intensive LTC strategies to improve LTC outcomes. However, intensive LTC protocols most often required involvement of multidisciplinary non-ED professionals and external research funding. Our findings provide a foundation for developing best practices for ED-based HIV LTC programs., (© 2016 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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41. Medication adherence among pediatric patients with sickle cell disease: a systematic review.
- Author
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Walsh KE, Cutrona SL, Kavanagh PL, Crosby LE, Malone C, Lobner K, and Bundy DG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anemia, Sickle Cell psychology, Child, Drug Monitoring, Drug Substitution, Humans, Hydroxyurea adverse effects, Iron Chelating Agents adverse effects, Patient Education as Topic, Penicillins adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Anemia, Sickle Cell drug therapy, Antibiotic Prophylaxis adverse effects, Antibiotic Prophylaxis psychology, Hydroxyurea therapeutic use, Iron Chelating Agents therapeutic use, Medication Adherence psychology, Penicillins therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objectives: Describe rates of adherence for sickle cell disease (SCD) medications, identify patient and medication characteristics associated with nonadherence, and determine the effect of nonadherence and moderate adherence (defined as taking 60%-80% of doses) on clinical outcomes., Methods: In February 2012 we systematically searched 6 databases for peer-reviewed articles published after 1940. We identified articles evaluating medication adherence among patients <25 years old with SCD. Two authors reviewed each article to determine whether it should be included. Two authors extracted data, including medication studied, adherence measures used, rates of adherence, and barriers to adherence., Results: Of 24 articles in the final review, 23 focused on 1 medication type: antibiotic prophylaxis (13 articles), iron chelation (5 articles), or hydroxyurea (5 articles). Adherence rates ranged from 16% to 89%; most reported moderate adherence. Medication factors contributed to adherence. For example, prophylactic antibiotic adherence was better with intramuscular than oral administration. Barriers included fear of side effects, incorrect dosing, and forgetting. Nonadherence was associated with more vaso-occlusive crises and hospitalizations. The limited data available on moderate adherence to iron chelation and hydroxyurea indicates some clinical benefit., Conclusions: Moderate adherence is typical among pediatric patients with SCD. Multicomponent interventions are needed to optimally deliver life-changing medications to these children and should include routine monitoring of adherence, support to prevent mistakes, and education to improve understanding of medication risks and benefits., (Copyright © 2014 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2014
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42. Interventions to reduce pediatric medication errors: a systematic review.
- Author
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Rinke ML, Bundy DG, Velasquez CA, Rao S, Zerhouni Y, Lobner K, Blanck JF, and Miller MR
- Subjects
- Child, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Humans, Medical Order Entry Systems, Medication Errors economics, Medication Errors prevention & control
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Medication errors cause appreciable morbidity and mortality in children. The objective was to determine the effectiveness of interventions to reduce pediatric medication errors, identify gaps in the literature, and perform meta-analyses on comparable studies., Methods: Relevant studies were identified from searches of PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, and the Cumulative Index to Nursing Allied Health Literature and previous systematic reviews. Inclusion criteria were peer-reviewed original data in any language testing an intervention to reduce medication errors in children. Abstract and full-text article review were conducted by 2 independent authors with sequential data extraction., Results: A total of 274 full-text articles were reviewed and 63 were included. Only 1% of studies were conducted at community hospitals, 11% were conducted in ambulatory populations, 10% reported preventable adverse drug events, 10% examined administering errors, 3% examined dispensing errors, and none reported cost-effectiveness data, suggesting persistent research gaps. Variation existed in the methods, definitions, outcomes, and rate denominators for all studies; and many showed an appreciable risk of bias. Although 26 studies (41%) involved computerized provider order entry, a meta-analysis was not performed because of methodologic heterogeneity. Studies of computerized provider order entry with clinical decision support compared with studies without clinical decision support reported a 36% to 87% reduction in prescribing errors; studies of preprinted order sheets revealed a 27% to 82% reduction in prescribing errors., Conclusions: Pediatric medication errors can be reduced, although our understanding of optimal interventions remains hampered. Research should focus on understudied areas, use standardized definitions and outcomes, and evaluate cost-effectiveness., (Copyright © 2014 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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