224 results on '"N MacKay"'
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2. Discharging patients; does it need to be done by a doctor?
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Alison Pottle, J. Bellchambers, S Harrison, N. Mackay, N. Dent, and S. Deane
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Medical staff ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Medical emergency ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Discharge summary ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements None Background Patients undergoing angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) were historically reviewed post procedure by a member of the medical team who assesses the patient’s suitability for discharge and completes the discharge letter. Over the past 10 years, the number of patients admitted for these procedures as day cases has increased significantly. In addition, there has been an expansion in nursing roles in the UK with the development of a variety of clinical nurse specialist (CNS) posts which have taken over many of the traditional medical roles. The majority of patients undergoing elective angiography and PCI are admitted to a day case unit at this tertiary cardiac centre. There is no designated medical cover for the unit and medical staff from the acute cardiac unit are called to review patients and complete their discharge paperwork in addition to their other duties. This frequently results in delayed discharge and patients going home without a discharge summary. It was therefore proposed that suitably qualified CNSs could be trained to discharge these patients and others undergoing day case cardiology procedures. From June 2017, the CNS team took over the role of reviewing patients post procedure and completing the discharge letter. Purpose The aim of the study was to evaluate if CNSs were able to discharge patients and provide a timely and effective service following elective cardiology procedures and to obtain patient feedback. Method Data on the number of patients reviewed by the CNSs from June 2017 to the end of December 2019, were prospectively collected in a dedicated database. A pilot study of patient experience was carried out in January 2020. Patients were given a questionnaire which asked about the explanation they received from the CNS regarding the procedure they had undergone, if their medication was reviewed and discussed with them, and if they received a discharge summary to take home. Results 1287 patients were reviewed by the CNS team during the above period. 811 (63.0%) patients had undergone angiography and 423 (32.9%) PCI. Informal feedback from the staff working on the day case unit included that patients were discharged earlier, had improved knowledge about their procedure and that the discharge letter was more detailed when completed by the CNS team. Eight patients completed the pilot questionnaire. Six were discharged by one of the CNS team, one by a doctor and one patient was not sure who did their discharge. All patients were very satisfied with the process and the information they were given. Conclusion Experienced CNSs can deliver high-quality, timely discharge of patients following cardiology procedures. This process is being used as a template to expand nurse-led discharge to other areas in cardiology. Patient experience will continue to be audited with a larger sample size in 2020.
- Published
- 2021
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3. Same day CT angiography in a nurse-led Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinic
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G Marshall, S. Deane, N. Dent, T Mittal, Alison Pottle, and N. Mackay
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Coronary arteriosclerosis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Chest pain ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Nurse led ,Coronary artery bypass surgery ,Angiography ,medicine ,Rapid access ,Anxiety ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements None Background Rapid Access Chest Pain clinics (RACPCs) were established in the UK in 2000 following the publication of the National Service Framework for Coronary Heart Disease. Patients underwent an exercise test (ETT) in the clinic as part of a ‘one-stop’ protocol with follow-up only if further investigation was required. In 2010, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) produced guidelines for the assessment and diagnosis of chest pain of recent onset (CG95), replacing the recommendation for ETT with non-invasive functional testing for patients with an intermediate pre-test probability of coronary artery disease (CAD), necessitating multiple appointments to evaluate the patient’s symptoms. The guidelines were updated in 2016, with a new recommendation that patients with atypical or typical chest pain should undergo CT coronary angiography (CTCA) as the first diagnostic test. Purpose The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility and potential benefit of performing same -day CTCA in the RACPC. Method From November 2016 all patients with atypical or typical chest pain attending the RACPC at this tertiary cardiac centre were referred for CTCA unless alternative investigation was clinically indicated. From February 2018, same day CTCA was offered to some patients. Up to two scans could be performed in each clinic, which was increased to up to three in June 2018. Results A total of 985 patients were seen in the nurse-led clinic between 12/02/2018 and 30/11/2019. 473 patients were referred for CTCA (48.0%) and 314 scans were carried out in the clinic (66.4%). Of those scans carried out in clinic, 128 patients had a CTCA which showed no evidence of CAD (40.8%) and 34.4% of scans showed non-obstructive CAD. In 18.2% of patients, the CTCA showed significant CAD and in 21 patients (6.7%) the scan was inconclusive. Patient with inconclusive scans underwent further testing which was negative in all cases. The outcome for patients with significant CAD (57 patients) is shown in the table. Conclusion CTCA on the same day as the RACPC appointment is feasible and facilitates rapid further investigation and treatment of patients with potentially significant CAD. It also enables patients with non-significant or no CAD to be reassured that their symptoms are unlikely to be cardiac which will reduce anxiety and allow timely investigation of other causes of the chest pain. Nurses need training in the risks of radiation in order to be able to request the scans and enable the clinic to be nurse-led.
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- 2021
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4. Running away or running to? Do prey make decisions solely based on the landscape of fear or do they also include stimuli from a landscape of safety?
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Tyler C. Wood, Rebecca N. MacKay, and Paul A. Moore
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Physiology ,Fear ,Aquatic Science ,Crayfish ,Predation ,Running ,ALARM ,Insect Science ,Behavioral ecology ,Predatory Behavior ,Sensory ecology ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Aversive Stimulus ,Cues ,Psychology ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecosystem ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Predator–prey interactions are a key part of ecosystem function, and non-consumptive effects fall under the landscape of fear theory. Under the landscape of fear, the antipredator responses of prey are based on the spatial and temporal distribution of predatory cues in the environment. However, the aversive stimuli (fear) are not the only stimuli prey can utilize when making behavioral decisions. Prey might also be using attractive stimuli that represent safety to guide decision making. Using a novel, orthogonal design, we were able to spatially separate aversive and attractive stimuli to determine whether prey are utilizing safety cues to navigate their environment. Crayfish Faxonius rusticus were placed in the center of a behavioral arena. Aversive stimuli of either predatory bass Micropterus salmoides cues or conspecific alarm cues increased along the x-axis of the behavioral arena. Safety cues (shelters) increased along the y-axis by decreasing the number of shelter openings in this direction. Crayfish were allowed two phases to explore the arena: one without the fearful stimuli and one with the stimuli. Linear mixed models were conducted to determine whether movement behaviors and habitat utilization were affected by the phase of the trial and the type of aversive stimuli. Crayfish responded more strongly to alarm cues than to fear cues, with only alarm cues significantly impacting habitat utilization. When responding to alarm cues, crayfish used safety cues as well as fear cues to relocate themselves within the arena. Based on these results, we argue that crayfish utilize a landscape of safety in conjunction with a landscape of fear when navigating their environment.
- Published
- 2021
5. Analysis of aggregation and disaggregation effects for grid-based hydrological models and the development of improved precipitation disaggregation procedures for GCMs
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H. S. Wheater, T. J. Jolley, C. Onof, N. Mackay, and R. E. Chandler
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Technology ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Appropriate representation of hydrological processes within atmospheric General Circulation Models (GCMs) is important with respect to internal model dynamics (e.g. surface feedback effects on atmospheric fluxes, continental runoff production) and to simulation of terrestrial impacts of climate change. However, at the scale of a GCM grid-square, several methodological problems arise. Spatial disaggregation of grid-square average climatological parameters is required in particular to produce appropriate point intensities from average precipitation. Conversely, aggregation of land surface heterogeneity is necessary for grid-scale or catchment scale application. The performance of grid-based hydrological models is evaluated for two large (104km2) UK catchments. Simple schemes, using sub-grid average of individual land use at 40 km scale and with no calibration, perform well at the annual time-scale and, with the addition of a (calibrated) routing component, at the daily and monthly time-scale. Decoupling of hillslope and channel routing does not necessarily improve performance or identifiability. Scale dependence is investigated through application of distribution functions for rainfall and soil moisture at 100 km scale. The results depend on climate, but show interdependence of the representation of sub-grid rainfall and soil moisture distribution. Rainfall distribution is analysed directly using radar rainfall data from the UK and the Arkansas Red River, USA. Among other properties, the scale dependence of spatial coverage upon radar pixel resolution and GCM grid-scale, as well as the serial correlation of coverages are investigated. This leads to a revised methodology for GCM application, as a simple extension of current procedures. A new location-based approach using an image processing technique is then presented, to allow for the preservation of the spatial memory of the process.
- Published
- 1999
6. Caring for the dying: how prepared do newly qualified physiotherapists feel about providing care for patients who are dying?
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N. Mackay
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Nursing ,business.industry ,Newly qualified ,Medicine ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,business - Published
- 2020
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7. P280Usefulness of clinical decision support system as tool of good clinical practice in patients at low risk of coronary artery disease. The ARTICA co-operative database
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M Mazzanti, Alison Pottle, N. Dent, Francesca Pugliese, Richard Underwood, N. Mackay, E. Hasimi, E Shirka, S. Deane, H Gjergo, and A Goda
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Co operative ,Coronary artery disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Good clinical practice ,medicine ,In patient ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Clinical decision support system - Published
- 2018
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8. P279Underuse of non-invasive functional imaging in patients at intermediate risk of coronary artery disease. A decision support system in the clinical practice. The ARTICA database
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M Mazzanti, S. Deane, H Gjergo, Francesca Pugliese, N. Dent, Alison Pottle, E Shirka, S E Underwood, E. Hasimi, A Goda, and N. Mackay
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Decision support system ,business.industry ,Non invasive ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Practice ,Functional imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,Medicine ,In patient ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Intermediate risk - Published
- 2018
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9. P613Nurse-led pre-admission clinics for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) patients are beneficial and are positively evaluated by patients
- Author
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S. Grigg, N. Dent, C. Hayes, M. Mason, S. Deane, N. Mackay, F. Eggenton, J. Bellchambers, and Alison Pottle
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Emergency medicine ,Conventional PCI ,medicine ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2017
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10. P3235Artificial intelligence in cardiology by clinical decision support system to predict correct diagnosis in subjects with stable chest pain from ARTICA co-operative database
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V. Paparisto, Alison Pottle, A. Rossi, E. Hasimi, N. Mackay, S.R. Underwood, Francesca Pugliese, H Gjergo, Artica, A Goda, E Shirka, N. Dent, and M Mazzanti
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Co operative ,business.industry ,medicine ,Medical emergency ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Chest pain ,medicine.disease ,business ,Clinical decision support system - Published
- 2017
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11. Individual differences in spatial configuration learning predict the occurrence of intrusive memories
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Tom Smeets, Thomas Meyer, Conny W.E.M. Quaedflieg, Marta M. Girardelli, Georgina R. N. Mackay, Timo Giesbrecht, Harald Merckelbach, Clinical Psychological Science, and RS: FPN CPS IV
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Adult ,Male ,Reflex, Startle ,REPRESENTATION ,Adolescent ,Spatial configuration ,INFORMATION ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Intrusions ,Emotions ,education ,Individuality ,Context (language use) ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Developmental psychology ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER ,Spatial contextual cuing task ,Perception ,HIPPOCAMPAL FUNCTION ,Humans ,ENTORHINAL CORTEX ,Reactivity (psychology) ,METAANALYSIS ,media_common ,TRAUMA ,Startle paradigm ,Association Learning ,Posttraumatic stress disorder ,MEDIAL TEMPORAL-LOBE ,PTSD ,Posttraumatic stress ,Distress ,CONTEXT ,Intrusive memories ,Mental Recall ,Female ,Cues ,Construct (philosophy) ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The dual-representation model of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD; Brewin, Gregory, Lipton, & Burgess, Psychological Review, 117, 210-232 2010) argues that intrusions occur when people fail to construct context-based representations during adverse experiences. The present study tested a specific prediction flowing from this model. In particular, we investigated whether the efficiency of temporal-lobe-based spatial configuration learning would account for individual differences in intrusive experiences and physiological reactivity in the laboratory. Participants (N = 82) completed the contextual cuing paradigm, which assesses spatial configuration learning that is believed to depend on associative encoding in the parahippocampus. They were then shown a trauma film. Afterward, startle responses were quantified during presentation of trauma reminder pictures versus unrelated neutral and emotional pictures. PTSD symptoms were recorded in the week following participation. Better configuration learning performance was associated with fewer perceptual intrusions, r = -.33, p < .01, but was unrelated to physiological responses to trauma reminder images (ps > .46) and had no direct effect on intrusion-related distress and overall PTSD symptoms, rs > -.12, ps > .29. However, configuration learning performance tended to be associated with reduced physiological responses to unrelated negative images, r = -.20, p = .07. Thus, while spatial configuration learning appears to be unrelated to affective responding to trauma reminders, our overall findings support the idea that the context-based memory system helps to reduce intrusions.
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- 2013
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12. Results of lipid lowering with statins in patients following acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in a tertiary centre
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S. Deane, J. Bellchambers, M. Barbir, N. Mackay, F. Eggenton, M. Mason, S. Grigg, Alison Pottle, and N. Dent
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,In patient ,Lipid lowering ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2017
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13. Punishment - viewed as a dignified alternative
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Thomas A. W. N. Mackay
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Punishment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Treatment Setting ,social sciences ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Psychology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Pediatrics ,Social psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes ,media_common - Abstract
SUMMARY Punishment is clearly defined and re-examined as a treatment technique in a positive and not negative light. A treatment setting involving handicapped children is described and a system of punishment is outlined as an essential part of the regime. The objections to punishment are considered and, in conclusion, a philosophical basis is provided on which it is contended that punishment is a dignified alternative.
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- 2009
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14. THE EFFECTS OF VARYING DIGIT MESSAGE STRUCTURES ON THEIR RECALL BY MONGOLS AND NON-MONGOL SUBNORMALS
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D. N. Mackay and G. McDONALD
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Adult ,Intelligence Tests ,Epilepsy ,Recall ,Rehabilitation ,Association Learning ,Numerical digit ,Education of Intellectually Disabled ,Developmental psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Memory ,Intellectual Disability ,Mental Recall ,Humans ,Learning ,Neurology (clinical) ,Down Syndrome ,Psychology - Published
- 2008
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15. THE LIFE EXPECTATION OF THE MENTALLY SUBNORMAL UNDER COMMUNITY AND HOSPITAL CARE*
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D N Mackay, B G Scally, and R McCurley
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Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Northern Ireland ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Life Expectancy ,Sex Factors ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Sex factors ,Intellectual Disability ,Birth Injuries ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Aged ,Epilepsy ,business.industry ,Cerebral Palsy ,Rehabilitation ,Infant ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Middle Aged ,Community Mental Health Services ,Hospital care ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Microcephaly ,Life expectancy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Down Syndrome ,business ,Hydrocephalus - Published
- 2008
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16. Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Deficiency Presenting as Intermittent Isolated Acute Ataxia
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Marie Lambert, Rachel Laframboise, R. Gagne, François-Guillaume Debray, Grant A. Mitchell, B. H. Robinson, N. MacKay, and Bruno Maranda
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ataxia ,Encephalopathy ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Fatal Outcome ,Basal Ganglia Diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase (Lipoamide) ,Lactic Acid ,Child ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease ,Episodic ataxia ,Dystonia ,Binding Sites ,Movement Disorders ,Muscle Weakness ,Brain Diseases, Metabolic ,business.industry ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency ,Endocrinology ,Child, Preschool ,Mutation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Thiamine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Thiamine Pyrophosphate ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Thiamine pyrophosphate binding - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is to report and emphasize unusual presentations of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) deficiency (OMIM 312170). Methods: PDH activity and PDHA1 gene were studied in two siblings presenting with intermittent ataxia in childhood. Similar presentations in reported PDH-deficient patients were searched for using the Medline database. Results: Both patients had PDH deficiency caused by a new mutation (G585C) in the PDHA1 gene, which is predicted to replace a highly conserved glycine at codon 195 by alanine. Although this mutation lies within the thiamine pyrophosphate binding domain, there was no thiamine responsiveness in vivo. The patients presented recurrent episodes of acute isolated ataxia in infancy. Both had normal blood and CSF lactate levels. Although symptoms initially resolved between episodes during the first decade, both patients subsequently worsened and developed progressive and severe encephalopathy, leading to death in their twenties. The spectrum of intermittent presentations in PDH deficiency includes episodic ataxia, intermittent peripheral weakness, recurrent dystonia and extrapyramidal movement disorders. Conclusions: PDH deficiency should be considered in patients with unexplained intermittent and recurrent acute neurological symptoms. Long-term prognosis and outcome remain uncertain. PDH deficiency can occur even with normal CSF lactate concentration.
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- 2008
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17. Bulk and boundaryg2factorizedS-matrices
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B. Short and N. MacKay
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Physics ,FOS: Physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Boundary (topology) ,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics ,Coupling (probability) ,Physics::History of Physics ,Symmetry (physics) ,High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th) ,Mathematics - Quantum Algebra ,FOS: Mathematics ,Quantum Algebra (math.QA) ,Multiplet ,Mathematical Physics ,Mathematical physics - Abstract
We investigate the $g_2$-invariant bulk (1+1D, factorized) $S$-matrix constructed by Ogievetsky, using the bootstrap on the three-point coupling of the vector multiplet to constrain its CDD ambiguity. We then construct the corresponding boundary $S$-matrix, demonstrating it to be consistent with $Y(g_2,a_1\times a_1)$ symmetry., Comment: 7 pages
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- 2003
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18. The effect of weather factors on the performance of herbicides to control Alopecurus myosuroides in winter wheat
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L V Collings, A M Blair, A P Gay, C J Dyer, and N Mackay
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biology ,business.industry ,Clodinafop-propargyl ,Alopecurus myosuroides ,Winter wheat ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy ,Agriculture ,Christian ministry ,business ,Weather factors ,Weed ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Collings, L. V., Blair, A. M., Gay, A. P., Dyer, C. J., MacKay, W. (2003). The effect of weather factors on the performance of herbicides to control Alopecurus myosuroides in winter wheat. Weed Research, 43 (2), 146-153. Sponsorship: Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food (now DEFRA)
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- 2003
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19. The prevalence of learning disability in a Health and Social Services Board in Northern Ireland
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G. McDonald and D. N. MacKay
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Rehabilitation ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 1996
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20. Treatment of acute bronchitis in adults without underlying lung disease
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Donald N. MacKay
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Adult ,Clinical Review ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Antibiotics ,acute bronchitis ,Internal medicine ,Bronchodilator ,Epidemiology ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,bronchitis treatment ,Bronchitis ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Lung disease ,Acute Disease ,Immunology ,Etiology ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether antibiotic and bronchodilator treatment of acute bronchitis in patients without lung disease is efficacious. DESIGN: A MEDLINE search of the literature from 1966 to 1995 was done, using “Bronchitis” as the key word. Papers addressing acute bronchitis in adults were used as well as several citations emphasizing pediatric infections. A manual search of papers addressing the microorganisms causing acute bronchitis was also done. Data were extracted manually from relevant publications. SETTING: All published reports were reviewed. Papers dealing with exacerbations of chronic bronchitis were excluded in this review. RESULTS: Although acute bronchitis has multiple causes, the large majority of cases are of viral etiology.Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, andBordetella pertussis are the only bacteria identified as contributing to the cause of acute bronchitis in otherwise healthy adults. Nine double-blind, placebo-controlled trials were reviewed. Four studies showed no advantage for doxycycline and one study showed no advantage for erythromycin. One study using erythromycin and one study using trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole showed that these antibiotics were slightly better than placebo. Two other studies showed an impressive superiority for liquid or inhaled albuterol when compared with erythromycin. CONCLUSIONS: Most studies showed no significant difference between drug and placebo, and the two studies that did showed only small clinical differences. Albuterol had an impressive advantage over erythromycin. Antibiotics should not be used in the treatment of acute bronchitis in healthy persons unless convincing evidence of a bacterial infection is present.
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- 1996
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21. Disorders of pyruvate carboxylase and the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
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N. MacKay, Mingfu Ling, Brian H. Robinson, and Kathy Chun
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Male ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex ,PKM2 ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pyruvate Carboxylase Deficiency Disease ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Thiamine ,Dihydrolipoyl transacetylase ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease ,Genetics (clinical) ,Pyruvate Carboxylase ,Mutation ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,Molecular biology ,Pyruvate carboxylase ,Female - Abstract
The most common defect associated with deficiency of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex occurs in the E1 component, specifically due to mutations in the X-linked E1 alpha gene. Clinical sequelae of these mutations, which range from severe neonatal lactic acidosis to carbohydrate-sensitive ataxia, can be different in males and females depending on the nature of the mutation and, in the case of females, on the X-inactivation pattern in different tissues. Males have a high representation of missense mutations among the patient cohort, while females are much more likely to have DNA rearrangements, particularly toward the 3' end of the coding sequence of the gene. Missplicing mutations involving exon 6 deletion have been reported, as has a missense mutation conferring true thiamin-responsiveness of the enzyme and the patient's clinical symptoms. Pyruvate carboxylase deficiency, on the other hand, is a true autosomal recessive disease, though it has high occurrences in particular ethnic groups, especially in Algonkian-speaking Amerindians and in Arabs. In the former group the defect is a simple type in which material cross-reactive to pyruvate carboxylase antibody is present in cultured cells (CRM+ve). In the latter group, cross-reacting material is rarely present (CRM-ve). The CRM+ve patients can survive into teenage years with careful supervision, while the CRM-ve patients have complications due to hyperammonaemia and dysfunction of the urea cycle and rarely survive beyond 3 months of life.
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- 1996
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22. Three Dimensional Printing in Orthopaedic Surgery
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Jonathan Mulford, Sina Babazadeh, and N MacKay
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medicine.medical_specialty ,3d printed ,Preoperative planning ,business.industry ,3D printing ,Surgical planning ,Surgery ,Three dimensional printing ,Orthopedic surgery ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Narrative review ,Medical physics ,The Internet ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Three dimensional (3D) printing technology has many current and future applications in orthopaedics. The objectives of this article are to review published literature regarding applications of 3D technology in orthopaedic surgery with a focus on knee surgery. Methods: A narrative review of the applications of 3D printing technology in orthopaedic practice was achieved by a search of computerised databases, internet and reviewing references of identified publications. Results: There is current widespread use of 3D printing technology in orthopaedics. 3D technology can be used in education, preoperative planning and custom manufacturing. Custom manufacturing applications include surgical guides, prosthetics and implants. Many future applications exist including biological applications. 3D printed models of anatomy have assisted in the education of patients, students, trainees and surgeons. 3D printed models also assist with surgical planning of complex injuries or unusual anatomy. 3D printed surgical guides may simplify surgery, make surgery precise and reduce operative time. Computer models based on MRI or CT scans are utilised to plan surgery and placement of implants. Complex osteotomies can be performed using 3D printed surgical guides. This can be particularly useful around the knee. A 3D printed guide allows pre osteotomy drill holes for the plate fixation and provides an osteotomy guide to allow precise osteotomy. 3D printed surgical guides for knee replacement are widely available. 3D printing has allowed the emergence of custom implants. Custom implants that are patient specific have been particularly used for complex revision arthroplasty or for very difficult cases with altered anatomy. Future applications are likely to include biological 3D printing of cartilage and bone scaffolds. Conclusion: 3D printing in orthopaedic surgery has and will continue to change orthopaedic practice. Its role is to provide safe, reproducible, reliable models with reduced operative time and improves patient outcomes compared to traditional surgical techniques. Long term follow up of the techniques is still required.
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- 2016
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23. Meeting the needs of pupils with learning difficulties. What do primary and secondary schools expect of their educational psychologists?
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T.A.W. N. MacKay and J. M. Boyle
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education ,Local authority ,Pedagogy ,Questionnaire ,Learning support ,Psychology ,Education ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
Summary A questionnaire survey was conducted in all primary schools in the Dunbarton division of Strathclyde region (N=117) to obtain the views of headteachers regarding the involvement of local authority educational psychologists in the area of learning difficulties. This was a follow‐up to a previously published study of the views of learning support coordinators in secondary schools throughout the division. The results of the primary survey are presented and comparisons made with the secondary schools. The findings suggest that schools perceive psychologists as having a central role to play in the area of learning difficulties but indicate a considerable shortfall between present and desired levels of service. It was also noted that after more than a decade of reconstruction of psychological services in which a major theme has been a reduced emphasis on direct work with individual children, the traditional role of individual assessment and counselling is the one which continues to be strongly endorsed ...
- Published
- 1994
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24. A novel mitochondrial DNA mutation in COX1 leads to strokes, seizures, and lactic acidosis
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N. MacKay, J. M. Cameron, A. Feigenbaum, J. B. L. Addis, Robert W. Taylor, B. H. Robinson, Mazhor Al-Dosary, Susan Blaser, E. W. Y. Tam, and C. Ackerley
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Mitochondrial DNA ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Respiratory chain ,Mitochondrion ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Electron Transport Complex IV ,medicine ,MELAS Syndrome ,Cytochrome c oxidase ,Humans ,Histidine ,Magnesium ,Child ,Magnesium ion ,Alleles ,Muscle biopsy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,Learning Disabilities ,General Medicine ,Cerebral Infarction ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Heteroplasmy ,Lactic acidosis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,biology.protein ,Acidosis, Lactic ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Epilepsy, Tonic-Clonic ,Psychomotor Disorders ,business - Abstract
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain, with subunits originating both from the mitochondrial and nuclear genome. An eleven-year-old female presented initially with a seizure followed two months later with tonic-clonic seizures, weakness and aphasia. MRI of the cerebral hemispheres showed multiple infarcts. Previous history suggested gross and fine motor control deficits with learning difficulties. A muscle biopsy showed a specific decrease of COX staining in all fibres and pleomorphic mitochondria. Respiratory chain studies confirmed an isolated complex IV defect in muscle, whilst fibroblasts showed an initial COX activity below normal which rapidly came up to the normal range on culture. Sequencing of mtDNA revealed an heteroplasmic m.7023G>A mutation in the COX1 gene, with levels of 96% in muscle, 70% in blood and 50% in the initial skin fibroblast culture dropping to 10% in later passages. The mutation was present in a critical region of the COX1 gene, the V374M change being close to the two histidine residues His376 and His378 co-ordinating with the heme a and a (3), and His367 which co-ordinates a magnesium ion. This case highlights that a MELAS-like syndrome can occur with isolated COX deficiency.
- Published
- 2009
25. Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase 1 (PDP1) null mutation produces a lethal infantile phenotype
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M.C. Maj, J. M. Cameron, Julian Raiman, S. Blaser, N. MacKay, C. P. Barnett, V. Levandovskiy, A. Schulze, Brian H. Robinson, and Annette Feigenbaum
- Subjects
Gene isoform ,Male ,Nonsense mutation ,Phosphatase ,Exercise intolerance ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Consanguinity ,Dogs ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Lactic Acid ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cells, Cultured ,DNA Primers ,Base Sequence ,Homozygote ,Brain ,Infant ,Fibroblasts ,Null allele ,Molecular biology ,Molecular medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Isoenzymes ,Phenotype ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase (Lipoamide)-Phosphatase ,Codon, Nonsense ,Acidosis, Lactic ,Female ,Genes, Lethal ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase deficiency has previously only been confirmed at the molecular level in two brothers and two breeds of dog with exercise intolerance. A female patient, who died at 6 months, presented with lactic acidemia in the neonatal period with serum lactate levels ranging from 2.5 to 17 mM. Failure of dichloroacetate to activate the PDH complex in skin fibroblasts was evident, but not in early passages. A homozygous c.277G > T (p.E93X) nonsense mutation in the PDP1 gene was identified in genomic DNA and immunoblotting showed a complete absence of PDP1 protein in mitochondria. Native PDHC activity could be restored by the addition of either recombinant PDP1 or PDP2. This highlights the role of PDP2, the second phosphatase isoform, in PDP1-deficient patients for the first time. We conclude that the severity of the clinical course associated with PDP1 deficiency can be quite variable depending on the exact nature of the molecular defect.
- Published
- 2008
26. Defects in the E2 lipoyl transacetylase and the X-lipoyl containing component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in patients with lactic acidemia
- Author
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Brian H. Robinson, R Petrova-Benedict, N MacKay, I Ozalp, T Coskun, Peter W. Stacpoole, and Çocuk Sağlığı ve Hastalıkları
- Subjects
Male ,Blotting, Western ,Population ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex ,Research & Experimental Medicine ,Biology ,Dihydrolipoyllysine-Residue Acetyltransferase ,Acetyltransferases ,medicine ,Humans ,Dihydrolipoyl transacetylase ,Fibroblast ,education ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease ,education.field_of_study ,General Medicine ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,Molecular biology ,Blot ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,Acidosis, Lactic ,Female ,Peptides ,Branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex ,Research Article - Abstract
Three patients with chronic lacticacidemia and deficiency of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex demonstrated in cultured skin fibroblasts showed abnormalities on Western blotting with anti-pyruvate dehydrogenase complex antiserum which were not located in the E1 (alpha and beta) component of the complex. One of these patients had an enzymatically demonstrable deficiency in the E2 dihydrolipoyl transacetylase segment of the complex and very low observable E2 protein component on Western blotting of fibroblast proteins. The other two patients had abnormalities observable in the X component but no observable reduction in either E1, E2, or E3 enzymatic activities. One patient appeared to have a missing X component while the other had two distinct bands where X should be on Western blotting of fibroblast proteins. All three patients appeared to have severe clinical sequelae resulting from these defects. This is the first time that defects in either the E2 or the X component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex have been observed in the human population.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Guided radar for obstacle detection in ground transportation systems
- Author
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N. Mackay and J. Beal
- Subjects
Continuous-wave radar ,Bistatic radar ,Man-portable radar ,Radar engineering details ,Computer science ,Radar imaging ,3D radar ,Fire-control radar ,Radar lock-on ,Remote sensing - Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A dedicated intravenous cannula for postoperative use effect on incidence and severity of phlebitis
- Author
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Gabriella Iohom, N. Mackay, J. Taj, George D. Shorten, and A. Panadero
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thrombophlebitis ,Severity of Illness Index ,Postoperative Complications ,Severity of illness ,Catheterization, Peripheral ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Elective surgery ,Prospective cohort study ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Aged ,Postoperative Care ,Intraoperative Care ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cannula ,Surgery ,Catheter ,surgical procedures, operative ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Injections, Intravenous ,Fluid Therapy ,Female ,Complication ,business - Abstract
A prospective, randomised, controlled clinical study was performed to compare the incidence and severity of postoperative peripheral venous thrombophlebitis associated with a single intravenous cannula used for both intra-operative and postoperative purposes, and two cannulae, one used intra-operatively and the other postoperatively. Sixty American Society of Anaesthesiologists (ASA) physical status I or II patients aged 18-65 years undergoing elective surgery were studied. The technique of cannula insertion was standardised. After surgery, the cannulation sites were examined daily by a blinded investigator for the presence and severity of thrombophlebitis using the Baxter Scale. The two groups were similar in terms of age, gender, weight, type and duration of surgical procedures, and drugs and fluids administered both intra-operatively and postoperatively. The proportion of patients that developed phlebitis was significantly less in the two cannulae group (26.1%) than in the single cannula group (63.3%) (p < 0.0001). The severity of phlebitis was greater in the single cannula group than in the two cannulae group. These results indicate that the use of a dedicated cannula for postoperative use decreases the incidence and severity of postoperative, peripheral, cannula-related phlebitis.
- Published
- 2002
29. Training initiative list scheme (TILS) for minimal access therapy: the MATTUS experience
- Author
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A, Cuschieri, R G, Wilson, G, Sunderland, I M, McIntyre, G G, Youngson, J D, Cash, N, Mackay, and S R, Shields
- Subjects
Scotland ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,General Surgery ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Educational Measurement ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
The objective of the MATTUS intercollegiate exercise was to set up and audit a training initiative list scheme (TILS) by which funds are awarded to Trust hospitals for operative sessions used specifically for the training of staff in minimal access therapy (MAT). A prospective centralized audit of TILS involving nine Trust hospitals in Scotland over a 12-month period (1 March 1995-end of February 1996) was carried out. These hospitals had contracted for 510 4-h training sessions (389 for minimal access surgery, 121 for allied interventional techniques) by MATTUS accredited consultant tutors. The scheme covered training in technical competence for Minimal Access Surgery (MAS), interventional flexible endoscopy and interventional radiology within Scottish Hospitals. The main outcome measures used in the audit were trainee completion rates, conversion rates, morbidity and mortality, assessment of training received by trainees and assessment of aptitude by the trainers. The results were as follows. Of 510 sessions, 482 (95%) were completed within the deadline. Of these, 463 sessions were audited (367 for MAS, 69 for flexible endoscopy and 27 for interventional radiology). During these sessions, 817 operations/procedures were performed (781 training and 36 developmental). A total of 544 operations were performed during 339 MAS training sessions and 237 radiological/flexible endoscopy procedures in 96 MAT training sessions. The trainee was the principal operator in 643 (82%) procedures and completed the task in 581 (74%) cases. Four per cent of the MAS operations (22/544) required conversion. Post-operative complications occurred in 42 out of 817 patients (5%). Four patients, all with advanced malignancy, died within 30 days of the procedure. Trainees graded 355 sessions as excellent, 109 good, two as average and one as unsatisfactory. The tutors graded their trainees' aptitude to perform the operation as excellent in 34%, good in 53%, average in 11% and poor in1%. The training initiative list scheme which allows unhurried training in MAT by consultant tutors using operating sessions that are extra to the service lists is operationally and educationally viable. Furthermore, it can be implemented within a pre-determined budget. The audit of TILS has also demonstrated that the immediate clinical outcome of patients is not compromised by this type of training.
- Published
- 1997
30. How effective is a nurse-led follow-up clinic for patients post Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI)?
- Author
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S. Deane, N. Dent, L. Priestley-Barnham, Selvanayagam Niranjan, C. Ilsley, N. Mackay, and Alison Pottle
- Subjects
Aspirin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prasugrel ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medication adherence ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Clopidogrel ,Nurse led ,Conventional PCI ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Ticagrelor ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Mutations and polymorphisms in the pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 alpha gene
- Author
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Douglas S. Kerr, H.-H. M. Dahl, N. MacKay, Willy Lissens, L. De Meirleir, Garry K. Brown, Isaiah D. Wexler, Lise Lotte Hansen, Mulchand S. Patel, Ruth M. Brown, Kathy Chun, Brian H. Robinson, Department of Embryology and Genetics, and Pediatrics
- Subjects
Silent mutation ,Mutation rate ,X Chromosome ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Exon ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Diagnosis ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Child ,Codon ,Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency Disease ,Genetics (clinical) ,X chromosome ,Mutation ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Base Sequence ,Point mutation ,Exons ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,Molecular biology ,Female - Abstract
We present an update on mutations and polymorphisms in the human X chromosome located pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 alpha gene. A total of 20 different mutations are tabulated. The mutations include deletions, insertions, and point mutations. Certain sequences seem particularly prone to mutation. Most of the mutations are found in exons 10 and 11. Furthermore, four of the mutations are seen in unrelated patients. Little is known about how the mutations affect the structure or function of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Enteric adenovirus type 40: complementation of the E4 defect in Ad2 dl808
- Author
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V, Mautner and N, Mackay
- Subjects
Adenoviruses, Human ,Adenovirus Early Proteins ,Genetic Complementation Test ,Mutation ,Animals ,Gene Expression ,Humans ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Virus Replication ,Lysogeny ,Vero Cells ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
The enteric adenovirus type 40 cannot be passaged in HeLa cells, but will grow productively in cells that express the E1B region of adenovirus types 2 or 5. Even in such permissive cells, the lytic cycle is prolonged, there is an abnormal pattern of E1B early gene expression and a failure to switch off host cell functions, suggesting that other gene functions might be impaired in Ad40. For Ad2, E4 ORF 6 and ORF 3 proteins are known to have an essential role in progressing from the early to the late phase of lytic infection and the shutoff of host functions requires an interaction between the E4 ORF 6 34K protein and the E1B 55K protein. To test whether E4 functions of Ad40 are impaired, complementation tests have been made between Ad40 and the E4 deletion mutant Ad2 dl808, which lacks all but ORF 1 of the E4 region. In HeLa and Vero cells, Ad40 complements dl808 to levels equivalent to an Ad2 wild-type infection, as demonstrated by measuring virion packaged DNA, virus titration, and viral protein synthesis. Surprisingly, Ad2 dl808 fails to reciprocally complement Ad40. The results show that Ad40 produces functional E4 ORF 6 and/or ORF 3 activity, and that their expression precedes DNA replication.
- Published
- 1991
33. The prevalence of severe mental handicap in Northern Ireland
- Author
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J. R. Mallion, R. Wilson, G. McDonald, and D. N. MacKay
- Subjects
Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Range (biology) ,Northern Ireland ,Northern ireland ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Intellectual Disability ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Child ,Royaume uni ,Reino unido ,Severe mental handicap ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Rehabilitation ,Infant ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Down Syndrome ,business ,Demography - Abstract
There are four administrative areas (Health and Social Services Boards) in Northern Ireland. Two prevalence surveys, carried out several years apart, show that there is a significant geographical gradient in the rates of severe mental handicap (IQ less than 50). The rates in the 20-29-year-old groups in the Eastern and Northern Boards range between 4.07 and 4.82 per thousand; comparable rates in the Southern and Western Boards range between 5.17 and 6.37. A similar gradient was discernible in the distribution of Down's syndrome.
- Published
- 1991
34. The Fate of Chemicals in Soil
- Author
-
W. B. Betts and N. Mackay
- Subjects
Spillage ,Organic chemicals ,Environmental protection ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Chemical agents ,Environmental science ,Ecosystem ,Leaching (agriculture) ,Pesticide ,business - Abstract
The introduction of organic chemicals to the environment can cause a variety of ecological problems. One of the most serious of these is the accumulation of chemical agents in an ecosystem. Routes for their introduction are diverse and include direct dumping, accidental spillage, run-off, leaching from containment sites or vessels, and intentional application (e. g. agriculture). The types of chemicals are equally varied and range from industrial and household solvents to crude and refined oils (Calabrese and Kostecki 1989) and pesticides (Biggar and Seiber 1987; Grover 1989).
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Badge of the Scottish Society of Physicians
- Author
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N. Mackay, I. T. Boyle, and C. D. Forbes
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Abstract
This short article has been written to ensure that the origin and history of the Badge of the Scottish Society of Physicians is well documented, lest this knowledge be lost.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Novel SCO2 mutation (G1521A) presenting as a spinal muscular atrophy type I phenotype.
- Author
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Mark A. Tarnopolsky, J.M. Bourgeois, M-H. Fu, G. Kataeva, J. Shah, D.K. Simon, D. Mahoney, D. Johns, N. MacKay, and B.H. Robinson
- Abstract
Rare cases of suspected spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) have been found to have cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency. To date, four cases with SMA features have been reported in children with mutations in the synthesis of cytochrome oxidase 2 (SCO2) gene. We report a male neonate who was born hypotonic, with persistent lactic acidosis, spontaneous activity with EMG testing, development of respiratory distress in the first few hours of life, and died at 30 days of age with progressive cardiomyopathy. Testing for survival motor neurone (smn) and NAIP deletions were negative and a skeletal muscle biopsy showed neurogenic features with severe reductions of COX enzymatic and histochemical staining intensity. Post-mortem muscle, heart, and liver biopsies showed severe, moderate, and mild reductions in COX activity, respectively, with parallel findings in the protein content for the mitochondrial DNA (COII) and nuclear DNA (COIV) encoded subunits. DNA sequencing of exon 2 of the SCO2 gene revealed compound heterozygosity with mutations at G1541A (common mutation, E140K) and also at a novel site in the copper binding region (G1521A in the current case (converting a highly conserved cysteine to serine (C133S)); mother heterozygous for G1521A; and father heterozygous for G1541A). This case provides strong support that SCO2 mutations can result in neonatal hypotonia with an SMA 1 phenotype. SCO2 mutations should be screened in suspected SMA cases with normal smn mutation analysis and any one of; cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, or COX deficiency in muscle. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Pass rate in MRCGP examination. Depends on selection of candidates
- Author
-
N MacKay, T S Murray, and L M Campbell
- Subjects
Educational measurement ,Information retrieval ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Pass rate ,General Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,business ,computer ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Adenovirus hexon. Sequence comparison of subgroup C serotypes 2 and 5
- Author
-
V Mautner, R Kinloch, and N Mackay
- Subjects
Genetics ,viruses ,Cell Biology ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,Molecular biology ,DNA sequencing ,Homology (biology) ,Conserved sequence ,stomatognathic diseases ,Restriction site ,Restriction enzyme ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Gene - Abstract
The group C adenoviruses type 2 (Ad2) and type 5 (Ad5) are distinguished serologically by the antigenic determinants of the hexon and fiber capsomers . The hexon-coding region of the viral genome (map units 51.6-59.7) can be divided into three major zones with regard to DNA sequence homology between Ad2 and Ad5 on the basis of fine structure disclosed by restriction endonuclease site mapping ( Boursnell , M.E.G., and Mautner , V. (1981) Virology 112, 198-209). At the NH2-terminal end, there is almost complete restriction enzyme site homology between Ad2 and Ad5, the COOH terminus displays partial homology, and a central zone (map units 52.7-56.0) is heterologous and has no common restriction sites. We report here the DNA sequence of the Ad5 hexon gene (map units 51.6-59.7). This sequence is compared to that established for Ad2 (G. Akusj arvi , P. Alestr om, M. Pettersson , H. Jornvall , and U. Pettersson , manuscript submitted for publication), and the heterologous zone is shown to encode an amino acid sequence that differs from that of Ad2 at many different loci within the zone (map units 52.7-56.0), interspersed with short stretches of highly conserved sequence.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Early and late changes in sulphydryl group and copper protein concentrations and activities during drug treatment with aurothiomalate and auranofin
- Author
-
C J McNeil, K J Rae, D H Brown, Hilary A Capell, C N N Mackay, W E Smith, and D. Lewis
- Subjects
Male ,Auranofin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Pharmacology ,Placebo ,Gold Sodium Thiomalate ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Arthritis, Rheumatoid ,Superoxide dismutase ,Rheumatology ,Extracellular ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,Superoxide Dismutase ,business.industry ,Ceruloplasmin ,medicine.disease ,Sodium aurothiomalate ,Rheumatoid arthritis ,biology.protein ,Female ,business ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Superoxide dismutase activity (SOD), plasma and lysate thiol concentrations (PSH and LSH), and caeruloplasmin oxidase activity (CP) reflect the underlying reduction-oxidation imbalance associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and are believed to be involved in the protection of the cell against free radical activity. The early and late changes in these parameters have been observed and compared with standard clinical and biochemical assessments of disease activity in 90 patients with active RA, randomly assigned to receive either sodium aurothiomalate, auranofin, or auranofin placebo. An index based on clinical criteria was used to identify patients as responders or non-responders after 24 weeks of therapy. In the first six weeks of treatment a change in SOD activity and LSH concentration in a direction away from controls was followed by a return towards control levels in responders only. This suggests that in RA evidence of clinical improvement induced by gold drugs is preceded by an initial biochemical response in an inflammatory direction. The extracellular parameters PSH and CP did not show the same early response, but PSH levels in responders showed a slower change towards normal values, though at no time were values obtained that might suggest a complete remission. Thus the intracellular parameters appear to reflect an early effect of the drugs on cells which may possibly be of use in predicting the outcome of therapy, whereas the extracellular parameters provide confirmatory evidence for an eventual improvement.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. THE DOMAN-DELACATO TREATMENT METHODS
- Author
-
D. N. MacKAY, G. McDONALD, and J. Gollogly
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment method ,Ethnology ,Psychology ,Humanities - Abstract
Presentation de la theorie de l'organisation neurologique decrite par les membres des «Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential» (principalement Doman et Delacato) ainsi que de leurs methodes de traitement pour les enfants soufrant de troubles cerebraux organiques
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Isolation of a full-length complementary DNA coding for human E1 alpha subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
- Author
-
L.J. De Meirleir, Brian H. Robinson, N. MacKay, and A M Lam Hon Wah
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Restriction site ,Restriction map ,chemistry ,Complementary DNA ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,G alpha subunit - Abstract
A 1.5-kilobase cDNA clone for human pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 was isolated from a lambda gt11 expression library by screening with polyclonal antiserum to the E1 alpha subunit of the porcine pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, a polyclonal antibody against bovine pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and a synthetic oligonucleotide based on the known amino acid sequence of the amino-terminal of the bovine pyruvate dehydrogenase-E1 alpha subunit. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the cDNA revealed a 5'-untranslated sequence of 72 nucleotides, a translated sequence of 1170 nucleotides, and a 3'-untranslated sequence of 223 nucleotides with a poly(A) tail. The cDNA structure predicts a leader sequence of 29 amino acids and a mature protein of 362 amino acids comprising an amino-terminal peptide identical to that of the bovine E1 alpha subunit and three serine phosphorylation sites whose sequence was also identical to those in the bovine E1 alpha subunit. The translated sequence for the mature protein differs substantially from that described by Dahl et al. (Dahl, H. H., Hunt, S. M., Hutchison, W. M., and Brown, G. K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 7398-7403) by virtue of a frameslip between bases 390 and 594. This amended sequence is confirmed by the presence of additional restriction sites for the enzymes NaeI and HaeII at the beginning and end, respectively, of this section. The leader sequence is typical for mitochondrial enzymes being composed of a combination of neutral and basic residues. The amino acid composition is strikingly similar to that of the bovine protein. This cDNA clone hybridizes with a 1.8-kilobase mRNA on a Northern blot analysis of human fibroblasts, and a second minor band of 4.4 kilobases is also detected.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. POINT OF VIEW
- Author
-
G. McDONALD, J. Gollogly, and D. N. MacKAY
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Dumping ,Point (geometry) ,Psychology ,Law and economics - Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. THE ADMISSION AND DISCHARGE HISTORIES OF HIGH GRADE SUBNORMALS IN A HOSPITAL IN NORTHERN IRELAND
- Author
-
D. N. MacKAY and G. McDONALD
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Northern ireland ,Psychology ,Demography - Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Cost-effective choice of antimicrobial therapy for serious infections
- Author
-
Howard Ashley, Katherine Taylor Halvorsen, J. Leighton Read, James J. Kresel, Donald N. MacKay, Milton C. Weinstein, and H. Christina Hutchings
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cost effectiveness ,medicine.drug_class ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Antibiotics ,01 natural sciences ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Abdomen ,Ceftizoxime ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Intensive care medicine ,Cross Infection ,Mezlocillin ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Bacterial Infections ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Regimen ,Metronidazole ,Aminoglycosides ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Gentamicin ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The authors evaluated the financial and health implications of treatment choices for three serious classes of infection: hospital-acquired pneumonia, intra-abdominal infection, and sepsis of unknown origin. Data were obtained from a systematic review of clinical literature and published data bases, by written questionnaire from a panel of infectious disease authorities, and from actual costs at a tertiary-care hospital. For pneumonia and sepsis, the third-generation cephalosporin evaluated (ceftizoxime) was found to be less expensive than other regimens, when costs of dose preparation and administration, monitoring, and toxicity were added to drug acquisition costs. The lowest-cost regimen for intra-abdominal infection was metronidazole plus gentamicin. Modest differences in efficacy would easily outweigh differences in toxicity, however, and could justify the use of more expensive regimens (e.g., mezlocillin plus gentamicin for hospital-acquired pneumonia, and cefoxitin plus gentamicin for intra-abdominal infection). If all regimens are assumed to be equally efficacious, then the third-generation cephalosporin was both lowest in cost and, owing to its low toxicity, greatest in net health benefit.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fibrinolytic Activity in Diabetes Mellitus
- Author
-
N Mackay and R. Hume
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Coronary Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary disease ,Diabetic angiopathy ,Fibrinogen ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,business ,Diabetic Angiopathies ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Small intestinal function in neoplastic disease
- Author
-
V Miller, I W Dymock, T J Thomson, J. F. Adams, N MacKay, E H Kennedy, and B Gray
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biopsy ,Schilling Test ,Fats ,Jejunum ,Feces ,Liver Function Tests ,Malabsorption Syndromes ,Intestinal mucosa ,Neoplasms ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Humans ,Histidine ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Aged ,Xylose ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Neoplastic disease ,Anemia ,Middle Aged ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Female ,Malabsorption syndromes ,Liver function tests ,business ,Function (biology) ,Research Article - Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Care of the Mentally Subnormal
- Author
-
A. L. Walby, B. G. Scally, and D. N. Mackay
- Subjects
Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Health Facility Planning ,business.industry ,Northern Ireland ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Text mining ,England ,Intellectual Disability ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,business - Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. SOCIAL COMPETENCE OF SUBNORMAL AND NORMAL CHILDREN LIVING UNDER DIFFERENT TYPES OF RESIDENTIAL CARE
- Author
-
D. N. Mackay and R. Elliott
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Residential care ,Normal children ,Social competence ,Psychology ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effects of Three Mamba Venoms on the Haemostatic Mechanism
- Author
-
G. P. McNicol, J. C. Ferguson, and N. MacKay
- Subjects
Blood Platelets ,Plasmin ,Proteolysis ,Fibrinogen ,complex mixtures ,Thromboplastin ,Thrombin ,medicine ,Animals ,Platelet ,Fibrinolysin ,Blood Coagulation ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Adenine Nucleotides ,Venoms ,Fibrinolysis ,Mamba ,Anticoagulants ,Plasminogen ,Snakes ,Hematology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Prothrombin Time ,Uncompetitive inhibitor ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The venoms of three mambas (Dendroaspis angusticeps, Dendroaspis polylepis and Dendroaspis jamesoni) were shown to be anticoagulant, an effect due largely to interference with the blood thromboplastin mechanism. The venoms were also capable of inhibiting platelet aggregation and reactivity to ADP. All three venoms possessed proteolytic properties but paradoxically reduced euglobulin clot lysis activity. When studied in purified systems this effect was shown to be due to uncompetitive inhibition of plasmin.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Adnexa
- Author
-
A. H. Sellers and E. N. Mackay
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cancer ,Foundation (evidence) ,General Medicine ,Ovarian cancer ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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