289 results on '"N. Wessel"'
Search Results
2. Magnetocardiography at rest predicts cardiac death in patients with acute chest pain
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N. Wessel, J. S. Kim, B. Y. Joung, Y. G. Ko, D. Dischl, A. Gapelyuk, Y. H. Lee, K. W. Kim, J. W. Park, and U. Landmesser
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sudden cardiac death ,magnetocardiography ,acute chest pain ,Kaplan–Meier estimator ,Cox regression model ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
IntroductionSudden cardiac arrest is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide and remains a major public health problem for which better non-invasive prediction tools are needed. Primary preventive therapies, such as implantable cardioverter defibrillators, are not personalized and not predictive. Most of these devices do not deliver life-saving therapy during their lifetime. The individual relationship between fatal arrhythmias and cardiac function abnormalities in predicting cardiac death risk has rarely been explored.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the measurements at rest for 191 patients with acute chest pain (ACP) magnetocardiographically. Our recently introduced analyses are able to detect inhomogeneities of the depolarization and repolarization. Moreover, electrically silent phenomena—intracellular ionic currents as well as vortex currents—can be measured and quantified. All included ACP patients were recruited in 2009 at Yonsei University Hospital and were followed up until 2022.ResultsDuring half of the follow-up period (6.5 years), 11 patients died. Out of all the included nine clinical, eight magnetocardiographical, and nine newly introduced magnetoionographical parameters we tested in this study, three parameters revealed themselves to be outstanding at predicting death: heart rate-corrected QT (QTc) prolongation, depression of repolarization current IKr + IKs, and serum creatinine (all significant in Cox regression, p
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- 2023
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3. Cardiac magnetic field map topology quantified by Kullback–Leibler entropy identifies patients with clinically suspected myocarditis
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M. Pille, A. Gapelyuk, K. Berg, S. Bannasch, J. Mockler, L.-S. Park, J.-W. Park, and N. Wessel
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cardiac magnetic field ,Kullback–Leibler distance ,myocarditis ,magnetocardiography (MCG) ,linear discriminant analysis (LDA) ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundMyocarditis is a condition that can have severe adverse outcomes and lead to sudden cardiac death if remaining undetected. This study tested the capability of cardiac magnetic field mapping to detect patients with clinically suspected myocarditis. This could open up the way for rapid, non-invasive, and cost-effective screening of suspected cases before a gold standard assessment via endomyocardial biopsy.MethodsHistorical cardiac magnetic field maps (n = 97) and data from a state-of-the-art magnetocardiography device (n = 30) were analyzed using the Kullback–Leibler entropy (KLE) for dimensionality reduction and topological quantification. Linear discriminant analysis was used to discern between patients with ongoing myocarditis and healthy controls.ResultsThe STT segment of a magnetocardiogram, i.e., the section between the end of the S wave and the end of the T wave, was best suited to discern both groups. Using a 250-ms excerpt from the onset of the STT segment gave a reliable classification between the myocarditis and control group for both historic data (sensitivity: 0.83, specificity: 0.85, accuracy: 0.84) and recent data (sensitivity: 0.69, specificity: 0.88, accuracy: 0.80) using the KLE to quantify the topology of the cardiac magnetic field map.ConclusionThe implementation based on KLE can reliably distinguish between clinically suspected myocarditis patients and healthy controls. We implemented an automatized feature selection based on LDA to replace the observer-dependent manual thresholding in previous studies.
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- 2023
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4. Altered heart rate and blood pressure variability in mice lacking the Mas protooncogene
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T. Walther, N. Wessel, N. Kang, A. Sander, C. Tschöpe, H. Malberg, M. Bader, and A. Voss
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blood pressure variability ,heart rate variability ,baroreflex sensitivity ,Mas protooncogene ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Heart rate variability is a relevant predictor of cardiovascular risk in humans. A significant genetic influence on heart rate variability is suggested, although the genes involved are ill-defined. The Mas-protooncogene encodes a G-protein-coupled receptor with seven transmembrane domains highly expressed in testis and brain. Since this receptor is supposed to interact with the signaling of angiotensin II, which is an important regulator of cardiovascular homeostasis, heart rate and blood pressure were analyzed in Mas-deficient mice. Using a femoral catheter the blood pressure of mice was measured for a period of 30 min and 250 data values per second were recorded. The mean values and range of heart rate and blood pressure were then calculated. Neither heart rate nor blood pressure were significantly different between knockout mice and controls. However, high resolution recording of these parameters and analysis of the data by non-linear dynamics revealed significant alterations in cardiovascular variability in Mas-deficient animals. In particular, females showed a strong reduction of heart rate variability. Furthermore, the data showed an increased sympathetic tone in knockout animals of both genders. The marked alterations detected in Mas-deficient mice of both genders suggest that the Mas-protooncogene is an important determinant of heart rate and blood pressure variability.
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- 2000
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5. Ninety-day complication rate based on 532 Latarjet procedures in Dutch hospitals with different operation volumes
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Hassanin Alkaduhimi, Nienke W. Willigenburg, Ronald N. Wessel, Nienke Wolterbeek, Egbert J.D. Veen, Rinco C.T. Koorevaar, W. Jaap Willems, Eelco M. Nelissen, Heleen Sonneveld, Petra E. Flikweert, Jantsje H. Pasma, Cornelis P.J. Visser, Maartje E. Meier, Maaike P.J. van den Borne, Arien J. Dijkstra, Tim Kraal, Arthur van Noort, Tjarco D.W. Alta, Michał S. Gałek-Aldridge, Sebastiaan Floor, Michel P.J. van den Bekerom, Denise Eygendaal, Neuromechanics, AMS - Musculoskeletal Health, AMS - Sports, Graduate School, AMS - Amsterdam Movement Sciences, and Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine
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shoulder ,complication ,glenohumeral ,Treatment Study ,General Medicine ,sequelae ,Level IV ,instability ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Latarjet ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Case Series - Abstract
Background: In this study, we aimed to provide insight into the 90-day complication rates following the Latarjet procedure. Data from 2015 were collected from multiple hospitals in the Netherlands, with different volumes of Latarjet procedures. Our second aim was to examine which patient and surgical factors were associated with complications.Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of 13 hospitals between 2015 and 2022. Data regarding complications within 90 days of Latarjet procedures were extracted. The effect of sex, age, body mass index (BMI), smoking, previous shoulder operations, fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time on the complication rate was assessed by multivariable logistic regression analysis.Results: Of the 532 included patients, 58 (10.9%) had complications. The most common complications were material failure (n = 19, 3.6%) and nerve injury (n = 13, 2.4%). The risk of complications was lower for male patients than for female patients (odds ratio, 0.40; 95% confidence interval, 0.21-0.77; P = .006). Age, BMI, smoking, previous shoulder operations, type of fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time were not associated with complications.Conclusion: The 90-day complication rate after the Latarjet procedure was 10.9% and was higher in female patients than in male patients. Age, BMI, smoking, previous shoulder operations, type of fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time did not affect complication rates. We advise setting up a national registry to prevent under-reporting of complications.
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- 2023
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6. Ninety-day complication rate based on 532 Latarjet procedures in six high volume and seven low volume Dutch hospitals
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Hassanin, Alkaduhimi, Nienke W, Willigenburg, Ronald N, Wessel, Nienke, Wolterbeek, Bart-Jan E J D, Veen, Rinco C T, Koorevaar, Jaap W J, Willems, Eelco M, Nelissen, Heleen, Sonneveld, Petra E, Flikweert, Jantsje H, Pasma, Cornelis P J, Visser, Maartje E, Meier, Maaike P J, van den Borne, Arien J, Dijkstra, Tim, Kraal, Arthur, van Noort, Tjarco D W, Alta, Michal S, Galek-Aldridge, Sebastian, Floor, Michael P J, van den Bekerom, and Denise, Eygendaal
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In this study, we provide insight into the 90-day complication rates following the Latarjet procedure. The data are collected from 2015 from multiple hospitals in the Netherlands, with different volumes of Latarjet procedures. Our second aim is to examine which of the patients' and surgical factors are associated with a complication.A retrospective chart review has been conducted in 13 hospitals between 2015 and 2022. Data regarding complications within 90 days of Latarjet procedures were extracted. The effect of sex, age, BMI, smoking, previous shoulder operations, fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time on the complication rate was assessed by multivariable logistic regression analysis.From the 532 included patients 58 (10.9%) had a complication. Most common complications were material failure (n=19; 3.6%) and nerve injuries (n=13; 2.4%). The risk of complications was lower for males than for females (Odds ratio 0.40, CI: 0.21:0.77, p=0.006). Age, BMI, smoking, previous shoulder operations, type of fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time were not associated with a complication.The 90-day complication rate after a Latarjet procedure is 10.9% and is higher in females than in males. Age, BMI, smoking, previous shoulder operations, type of fixation material, hospital volume, screw size, and operation time did not affect complication rate. We advise setting up a national registry to prevent underreporting of complications.
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- 2022
7. Investigation of the efficacy and safety of ultrasoundstandardized autologous blood injection as treatment for lateral epicondylitis
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Christel Braaksma, Jill Otte, Ronald N. Wessel, and Nienke Wolterbeek
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Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
Background: There are various conservative treatment options for lateral epicondylitis (LE). The aim is to evaluate pain, daily functioning, and complications after ultrasound-standardized autologous blood injections in patients with LE. Methods: For this prospective cohort study, consecutive patients (>18 years) diagnosed with LE were included. Autologous blood was injected using a medical device containing an injection disposable with 12 small needles (Instant Tennis Elbow Cure [ITEC]) device. Patient-Rated Tennis Elbow Evaluation (PRTEE), subjective elbow score (SES), palpation and provocation pain, satisfaction, and complications of treatment were measured at baseline and two months after treatment. Paired t-tests and Fisher’s exact tests were used for calculating the difference between pre- and post-treatment outcomes.Results: Fifty-five elbows were analyzed. Mean time between pre- and post-treatment was 11.1 weeks (standard deviation [SD], 8.9 weeks). The mean PRTEE score decreased from 68.2 (SD, 15.7) before surgery to 53.2 (SD, 25.9; p
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- 2021
8. The Popeye sign:a doctor's and not a patient's problem
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Ronald N. Wessel, Michel P.J. van den Bekerom, Marieke F. van Wier, Derek F.P. van Deurzen, Frans L. Garssen, Gino M. M. J. Kerkhoffs, Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, Otolaryngology / Head & Neck Surgery, APH - Quality of Care, AMS - Ageing & Vitality, and AMS - Sports
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Male ,Shoulder ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Popeye ,Diagnostic Study ,Tenodesis ,Popeye sign ,Level III ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Forelimb ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,In patient ,Muscle, Skeletal ,long head of the biceps ,030222 orthopedics ,reliability ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Mean age ,030229 sport sciences ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Interobserver Agreement Design ,Arm ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Background The Popeye sign is a frequently reported finding following long head of the biceps (LHB) surgery and may be more often detected by doctors than by patients. This study investigates agreement between patients and doctors regarding the presence of a Popeye sign following LHB surgery. Method This interobserver study investigates agreement between patients and consulting physicians with regard to assessment of a Popeye sign in patients following LHB surgery. Furthermore, this was compared with assessments by non–consulting physicians (observers) using digital photographs of the operated arm, taken both preoperatively and postoperatively. Data about gender, age, and body mass index (BMI) were collected to investigate their role in doctor’s reporting of a Popeye sign. Patient’s dissatisfaction with a Popeye sign in the operated arm was evaluated as well. Results Ninety-seven patients (mean age 61 ± 6.0 years, 62% male) underwent LHB surgery. A Popeye sign was reported by 2 patients (2%) as opposed to 32 cases (40%) by consulting physicians, of which only 1 case was in agreement. Krippendorff’s alpha (Kalpha) for agreement between observers for preoperative photographs was 0.074 (95% CI −0.277, 0.382) and 0.495 (95% CI 0.317, 0.659) for postoperative cases. Kalpha between observers and consulting physicians for pre- and postoperative cases were 0.033 (95% CI −970, 0.642) and 0.499 (95% CI 0.265, 0.699), respectively. Phi coefficient analysis showed a moderate, statistically significant correlation between male sex and Popeye sign identification. Rank-biserial calculation revealed negligible correlation between BMI and age with regard to detecting a Popeye sign by both consulting physicians and observers. Dissatisfaction about swelling in the upper arm was reported in 1 case, though in a location that did not correspond to the location of a Popeye sign. Conclusion The Popeye sign is more often identified by doctors than by patients after undergoing LHB surgery. BMI and age are not related to the detection of a Popeye sign, but sex is moderately correlated. Together with the low percentage of dissatisfaction of patients with this swelling, this signifies that a Popeye sign seems to be a doctor’s rather than a patient’s problem.
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- 2021
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9. Reductive hydroformylation with a selective and highly active rhodium amine system
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Thorsten Rösler, Kira R. Ehmann, Walter Leitner, K. Köhnke, N. Wessel, M. Leutzsch, and Andreas J. Vorholt
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Steric effects ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Hydride ,chemistry.chemical_element ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,3. Good health ,Rhodium ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Catalytic cycle ,Polymer chemistry ,ddc:540 ,Amine gas treating ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Hydroformylation ,Carbon monoxide - Abstract
Journal of catalysis 400, 234-243 (2021). doi:10.1016/j.jcat.2021.06.001, Published by Elsevier, Amsterdam [u.a.]
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- 2021
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10. The normative Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index values for age and sex
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Julie R.A. Massier, Ronald N. Wessel, and Nienke Wolterbeek
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Age and sex ,Standard deviation ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rotator Cuff ,0302 clinical medicine ,Shoulder pathology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Ontario ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,Rotator cuff injury ,030229 sport sciences ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Shoulder disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical therapy ,Normative ,Surgery ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background The Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index (WORC) is a widely used disease-specific outcome tool developed for patients with rotator cuff injuries. The determination of age- and sex-adjusted normative WORC values enables us to determine whether a procedure is more beneficial in specific patient groups because the results can be compared with a matched standard. The purpose of this study was to determine normative WORC values and assess whether the WORC needs an adjusted score for age and sex. Methods We included participants using an online data-capturing program. We collected the following variables: age, sex, presence of shoulder pathology, Subjective Shoulder Value, and WORC score. We defined the mean normative WORC score per age category and analyzed sex differences in WORC scores per age category and in all domains of the WORC score. Results A total of 470 participants filled out the questionnaire. We excluded 44 participants because of pre-existing shoulder complaints or incomplete questionnaires. The mean total WORC score was 94% (standard deviation, 9%), and the mean total WORC score in every age and sex category was >90%. Of all participants, 85% scored between 91% and 100%; 63 participants (15%) scored 100%. The mean overall Subjective Shoulder Value was 98% (standard deviation, 6%). We found no statistically significant differences between sexes in the overall score, in the domain scores, and within the age categories. Conclusion We defined normative values for the WORC questionnaire in a random prospective cohort and found no difference in scores between sexes. The mean normative scores all were within the variance of the maximum, and the WORC score did not deteriorate with age. It seems that the results of this subjective questionnaire change with the participant's perspective. An adjusted WORC score for age and sex is not necessary. This information can serve as a basis for comparison with patients with shoulder disease.
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- 2020
11. Review of Latarjet (1954) on the treatment of recurrent shoulder dislocations
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Ronald N. Wessel, Michel P.J. van den Bekerom, John N Trantalis, and Just A. van der Linde
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030222 orthopedics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Shoulder surgery ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Soft tissue ,030229 sport sciences ,Anterior shoulder ,Latarjet procedure ,Coracoid process ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,In patient ,Bankart repair ,business ,Shoulder Dislocations - Abstract
This classic discusses the original publication ‘Treatment of recurrent dislocation of the shoulder' on the Latarjet procedure. This surgical technique that has become one of the basics in shoulder-stabilising surgery, introduced by Latarjet in 1954 in the journal Lyon Chirurgical. Inspired by publications of colleagues in the field of shoulder surgery, Latarjet introduced a technique that transfers the coracoid process to the anterior glenoid rim in patients with anterior shoulder instability. Although being outrun in popularity by the Bankart repair for several decades, improved knowledge regarding long-term outcomes, surgical techniques and patient characteristics such as bone loss and participation in contact sports has led to renewed interest in the Latarjet procedure. This especially accounts for patients with significant glenohumeral bone loss or patients with a previously failed soft tissue repairs. Whereas the increase in popularity has led to many studies focussing on various aspects, the 15 basics of the initial procedure have virtually remained unchanged.
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- 2018
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12. Responsiveness and disease specificity of the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff index
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Ronald N. Wessel, Rob A. de Bie, Loes Lavrijsen, Nienke Wolterbeek, Anouk J.M. Fermont, Henk van Mameren, Epidemiologie, and RS: CAPHRI - R3 - Functioning, Participating and Rehabilitation
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Disease specific ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DISORDERS ,SPADI ,QUESTIONNAIRE ,Disease ,Article ,WORC INDEX ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Validation ,medicine ,Rotator cuff repair ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,VERSION ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,WORC ,Instability ,Responsiveness ,INSTRUMENTS ,musculoskeletal system ,Disease specificity ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,RELIABILITY ,Tears ,business - Abstract
The goal of this study was to determine the disease specificity and responsiveness of the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index (WORC). Responsiveness, two cut-off points of the minimal important change, the area under the curve, standard error of measurement, the minimal detectable change and the standardized response mean were determined. Patients undergoing a rotator cuff repair need to improve more than 35 points to be considered clinical importantly improved. The WORC is disease specific and has a high responsiveness in patients undergoing rotator cuff repair and patients with disease of the rotator cuff without rotator cuff tears.
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- 2018
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13. Demand, capacity, and access of the outpatient clinic: A framework for analysis and improvement
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Erik Martijn van Bussel, Godefridus G. van Merode, Ronald N. Wessel, Marc Boudewijn Victor Rouppe van der Voort, RS: CAPHRI - R2 - Creating Value-Based Health Care, and Health Services Research
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supply ,Capacity Building ,Evidence-based practice ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,consultations ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,DELAYS ,02 engineering and technology ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,access time ,Health care ,Humans ,Outpatient clinic ,Operations management ,Retrospective Studies ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,021103 operations research ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Capacity building ,Patient data ,Models, Theoretical ,TIME ,Evidence-Based Practice ,HEALTH-CARE ,APPOINTMENTS ,hospital outpatient clinics ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Decision model ,Access time ,orthopaedics ,waiting - Abstract
Rationale While theoretical frameworks for optimization of the outpatient processes are abundant, practical step-by-step analyses to give leads for improvement, to forecast capacity, and to support decision making are sparse. Aims and objectives This article demonstrates how to evaluate and optimize the triad of demand, (future) capacity, and access time of the outpatient clinic using a structured six-step method. Methods All individual logistical patient data of an orthopaedic outpatient clinic of one complete year were analysed using a 6-step method to evaluate demand, supply, and access time. Trends in the data were retrospectively analysed and evaluated for potential improvements. A model for decision making was tested. Both the analysis of the method and actual results were considered as main outcomes. Results More than 25 000 appointments were analysed. The 6-step method showed to be sufficient to result in valuable insights and leads for improvement. While the overall match between demand and capacity was considered adequate, the variability in capacity was much higher than in demand, thereby leading to delays in access time. Holidays and subsequent weeks showed to be of great influence for demand, capacity, and access time. Using the six-step method, several unfavourable characteristics of the outpatient clinic were revealed and a better match between demand, supply, and access time could have been reached with only minor adjustments. Last, a clinic specific prediction and decision model for demand and capacity was made using the 6-step method. Conclusions The 6-step analysis can successfully be applied to redesign and improve the outpatient health care process. The results of the analysis showed that national holidays and variability in demand and capacity have a big influence on the outpatient clinic. Using the 6-step method, practical improvements in outpatient logistics were easily found and leads for future decision making were contrived.
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- 2018
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14. Long Head of Biceps Tenotomy Is Not Inferior to Suprapectoral Tenodesis in Arthroscopic Repair of Nontraumatic Rotator Cuff Tears: A Multicenter, Non-inferiority, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial
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Loes W A H van Beers, Ronald N. Wessel, Jacco A.C. Zijl, Eelke Lemmens, Max A. Hoelen, Derek F.P. van Deurzen, Nienke Wolterbeek, Lukas P.E. Verweij, Kiem G. Auw Yang, Mariella Volkers, Max Teuwen, W. Jaap Willems, Koen L. M. Koenraadt, Ron Onstenk, Maaike P.J. van den Borne, Michel P.J. van den Bekerom, Navin Gurnani, Nienke W. Willigenburg, Vanessa A. Scholtes, Frans L. Garssen, Amanda D. Klaassen, Nina M C Mathijssen, Brechtje Hesseling, Roel Janssens, Reinier W.A. Spek, Eric E. J. Raven, and Roos I. van Rhijn
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tenotomy ,Tenodesis ,Biceps ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,law.invention ,Arthroscopy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Deformity ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Prospective Studies ,030222 orthopedics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,030229 sport sciences ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Arm ,Quality of Life ,Tears ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Purpose To determine if long head of the biceps (LHB) tenotomy is not inferior to suprapectoral LHB tenodesis when performed in conjunction with arthroscopic repair of small- to medium-sized nontraumatic rotator cuff tears. Methods This multicenter, randomized, non-inferiority trial recruited 100 participants older than 50 years who had a supraspinatus and/or infraspinatus tear sagittally smaller than 3 cm and arthroscopically confirmed LHB pathology. During arthroscopic rotator cuff repair, we randomized 48 patients to undergo suprapectoral LHB tenodesis and 52 patients to undergo LHB tenotomy. Data were collected preoperatively and at 6 weeks, 3 months, and 1 year postoperatively. The primary outcome was non-inferiority of the Constant-Murley score (CMS) at 1-year follow-up. Secondary outcomes included the Dutch Oxford Shoulder Score; Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand questionnaire; Popeye deformity; elbow flexion strength index; arm cramping pain; and quality of life (EQ-5D score). The integrity of the rotator cuff repair was assessed with magnetic resonance imaging. Differences between intervention groups were analyzed by mixed modeling. Results The mean CMS in the LHB tenotomy group improved from 44 (95% confidence interval [CI], 39-48) to 73 (95% CI, 68-79). In patients with LHB tenodesis, the mean CMS improved from 42 (95% CI, 37-48) to 78 (95% CI, 74-82). The difference between groups at 1-year follow-up was 4.8 (97.5% CI, –∞ to 11.4), with a P value for non-inferiority of .06. The secondary outcomes also improved over time, with no remarkable differences between groups. A Popeye deformity occurred in 33% of tenodesis patients and 47% of tenotomy patients (P = .17). Tenotomy was performed with a shorter operative time (73 minutes vs 82 minutes, P = .03). Magnetic resonance imaging showed a recurrent rotator cuff tear in 20% of all cases. Conclusions Although statistically “inconclusive” regarding non-inferiority of the CMS at 1-year follow-up, any observed differences between patients with LHB tenotomy and those with LHB tenodesis in all outcome scores were small. Level of Evidence Level I, randomized controlled trial and treatment study.
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- 2021
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15. Response shift of the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff index in patients undergoing arthroscopic rotator cuff repair
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Ronald N. Wessel, Nienke Wolterbeek, and Freek Hollman
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,Arthroscopy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,In patient ,Rotator cuff ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Patient Satisfaction ,Quality of Life ,Physical therapy ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Hypothesis This study determined the response shift in patients undergoing rotator cuff repair using the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff index (WORC), a disease-specific quality of life questionnaire. We hypothesized there would be a response shift with a positive recalibration (overestimated their preoperative disability) on the WORC and increases over time. Methods The study prospectively included 36 patients undergoing arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. At baseline, 3 months (T1), and 1 year (T2) after surgery the WORC, EuroQol (EQ)-5D-3L, and the patient's level of satisfaction after surgery were scored. To evaluate the response shift, patients also completed the WORC at 3 months (Pre-T1) and 1 year (Pre-T2) as how they perceived themselves to have been before surgery. Results The result on Pre-T1 and Pre-T2 results revealed that patients retrospectively rated their overall WORC score comparable with the baseline WORC score (Pre-T0; T0 = 40.5 ± 18.4, Pre-T1 = 45.0 ± 22.7, Pre-T2 = 34.3 ± 21.3). No response shift was observed on all domains except a negative recalibrated response shift for emotional disability on T1 ( P = .04). Conclusions No significant group-level response shift was observed using the WORC, except for the subdomain emotional disability at 3 months after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. With the absence of any shift in patient's perception on the self-administered quality of life–related WORC questionnaire, this study suggests one could retrospectively reliably conduct group-level preoperative baseline information on quality of life up to 1 year after surgery.
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- 2016
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16. Isotopic Study of the Mechanism of Ozone Formation
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Larsen, N. Wessel, primary, Pedersen, T., additional, and Sehested, J., additional
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- 1992
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17. Prognostic Factors for Successful Recovery After Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair: A Systematic Literature Review
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Ronald N. Wessel, Nienke Wolterbeek, Jean-Pierre Baeyens, Anouk J.M. Fermont, Rob A. de Bie, Epidemiologie, RS: CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, RS: CAPHRI - Epidemiology of musculoskeletal Disorders, Faculty of Physical Education and Physical Therapy, Biomechanics and Human Biometry, and Biomechanics
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Treatment outcome ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Arthroscopy ,Rotator Cuff ,medicine ,Humans ,Rotator cuff ,Shoulder disorder ,Tendon healing ,Aged ,Surgical repair ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Systematic review ,Female ,business ,Systematic search - Abstract
STUDY DESIGN: Systematic literature review. OBJECTIVES: To perform a systematic review of the literature on prognostic factors for successful recovery after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. BACKGROUND: Rotator cuff lesion is a common shoulder disorder, with a prevalence ranging from 13% in people over 50 years of age to more than 50% in people over 80 years of age. Several factors can affect the extent to which a person will recover after the surgical repair of a rotator cuff tear. More knowledge about these prognostic factors may lead to a better understanding of why the recovery process is successful in some patients but not in others. METHODS: A systematic literature search from 1995 to November 2013 was performed to identify studies reporting prognostic factors for successful recovery after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. RESULTS: A total of 455 studies were initially identified, 10 of which were included in the review. For all included studies, the percentage of patients with complete tendon healing at final assessment ranged from 60% to 88%. Twelve prognostic factors, which could be divided into 4 categories, were identified as being associated with better recovery: demographic factors (younger age, male gender), clinical factors (higher bone mineral density, absence of diabetes mellitus, higher level of sports activity, greater preoperative range of motion, absence of obesity), factors related to cuff integrity (smaller sagittal size of the cuff lesion, less retraction of the cuff, less fatty infiltration, no multiple tendon involvement), and factors related to the surgical procedure (no concomitant biceps or acromioclavicular joint procedures). CONCLUSION: Knowledge and understanding of prognostic factors should be used in the decision-making process concerning arthroscopic rotator cuff repair to offer better care to patients. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognosis, level 2a-.
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- 2014
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18. Fracture fixation in the operative management of hip fractures (FAITH): an international, multicentre, randomised controlled trial
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Aaron Nauth, Aaron T. Creek, Abby Zellar, Abdel-Rahman Lawendy, Adam Dowrick, Ajay Gupta, Akhil Dadi, Albert van Kampen, Albert Yee, Alexander C. de Vries, Alexander de Mol van Otterloo, Alisha Garibaldi, Allen Liew, Allison W. McIntyre, Amal Shankar Prasad, Amanda W. Romero, Amar Rangan, Amber Oatt, Amir Sanghavi, Amy L. Foley, Anders Karlsten, Andrea Dolenc, Andrew Bucknill, Andrew Chia, Andrew Evans, Andrew Gong, Andrew H. Schmidt, Andrew J. Marcantonio, Andrew Jennings, Angela Ward, Angshuman Khanna, Anil Rai, Anke B. Smits, Annamarie D. Horan, Anne Christine Brekke, Annette Flynn, Aravin Duraikannan, Are Stødle, Arie B. van Vugt, Arlene Luther, Arthur W. Zurcher, Arvind Jain, Asgeir Amundsen, Ash Moaveni, Ashley Carr, Ateet Sharma, Austin D. Hill, Axel Trommer, B. Sachidananda Rai, Barbara Hileman, Bart Schreurs, Bart Verhoeven, Benjamin B. Barden, Bernhard Flatøy, Berry I. Cleffken, Berthe Bøe, Bertrand Perey, Birgit C. Hanusch, Brad Weening, Bram Fioole, Bram Rijbroek, Brett D. Crist, Brett Halliday, Brett Peterson, Brian Mullis, C. Glen Richardson, Callum Clark, Carlos A. Sagebien, Carmen C. van der Pol, Carol Bowler, Catherine A. Humphrey, Catherine Coady, Cees L. Koppert, Chad Coles, Chadi Tannoury, Charles J. DePaolo, Chris Gayton, Chris Herriott, Christina Reeves, Christina Tieszer, Christine Dobb, Christopher G. Anderson, Claire Sage, Claudine Cuento, Clifford B. Jones, Coks H.R. Bosman, Colleen Linehan, Cor P. van der Hart, Corey Henderson, Courtland G. Lewis, Craig A. Davis, Craig Donohue, Cyril Mauffrey, D.C. Sundaresh, Dana J. Farrell, Daniel B. Whelan, Daniel Horwitz, Daniel Stinner, Darius Viskontas, Darren M. Roffey, David Alexander, David E. Karges, David Hak, David Johnston, David Love, David M. Wright, David P. Zamorano, David R. Goetz, David Sanders, David Stephen, David Yen, Davide Bardana, Davy J Olakkengil, Deanna Lawson, Deborah Maddock, Debra L. Sietsema, Deeba Pourmand, Dennis Den Hartog, Derek Donegan, Diane Heels-Ansdell, Diane Nam, Dominic Inman, Dory Boyer, Doug Li, Douglas Gibula, Dustin M. Price, Dylan J. Watson, E. Mark Hammerberg, Edward T.C.H. Tan, Eelco J.R. de Graaf, Elise Berg Vesterhus, Elizabeth Roper, Elton Edwards, Emil H. Schemitsch, Eric R. Hammacher, Eric R. Henderson, Erica Whatley, Erick T. Torres, Erik G.J. Vermeulen, Erin Finn, Esther M.M. Van Lieshout, Eugene K. Wai, Evan R. Bannister, Evelyn Kile, Evert B.M. Theunissen, Ewan D. Ritchie, Farah Khan, Farhad Moola, Fiona Howells, Frank de Nies, Frank H.W.M. van der Heijden, Frank R.A.J. de Meulemeester, Frede Frihagen, Fredrik Nilsen, G. Ben Schmidt, G.H. Robert Albers, Garland K. Gudger, Garth Johnson, Gary Gruen, Gary Zohman, Gaurav Sharma, Gavin Wood, Geert W.M. Tetteroo, Geir Hjorthaug, Geir Jomaas, Geoff Donald, Geoffrey Ryan Rieser, Gerald Reardon, Gerard P. Slobogean, Gert R Roukema, Gijs A. Visser, Gilbert Moatshe, Gillian Horner, Glynis Rose, Gordon Guyatt, Graham Chuter, Greg Etherington, Gregory J. Della Rocca, Guri Ekås, Gwendolyn Dobbin, H. Michael Lemke, Hamish Curry, Han Boxma, Hannah Gissel, Hans Kreder, Hans Kuiken, Hans L.F. Brom, Hans-Christoph Pape, Harm M van der Vis, Harvinder Bedi, Heather A. Vallier, Heather Brien, Heather Silva, Heike Newman, Helena Viveiros, Henk van der Hoeven, Henry Ahn, Herman Johal, Herman Rijna, Heyn Stockmann, Hong A. Josaputra, Hope Carlisle, Igor van der Brand, Imro Dawson, Ivan Tarkin, Ivan Wong, J. Andrew Parr, J. Andrew Trenholm, J. Carel Goslings, J. David Amirault, J. Scott Broderick, Jaap P. Snellen, Jacco A.C. Zijl, Jaimo Ahn, James Ficke, James Irrgang, James Powell, James R. Ringler, James Shaer, James T. Monica, Jan Biert, Jan Bosma, Jan Egil Brattgjerd, Jan Paul M. Frölke, Jan Wille, Janakiraman Rajakumar, Jane E. Walker, Janell K. Baker, Janos P. Ertl, Jean Paul P.M. de Vries, Jean W.M. Gardeniers, Jedediah May, Jeff Yach, Jennifer T. Hidy, Jerald R. Westberg, Jeremy A. Hall, Jeroen van Mulken, Jessica Cooper McBeth, Jochem Hoogendoorn, Jodi M. Hoffman, Joe Joseph Cherian, John A. Tanksley, John Clarke-Jenssen, John D. Adams, John Esterhai, John F. Tilzey, John Murnaghan, John P. Ketz, John S. Garfi, John Schwappach, John T. Gorczyca, John Wyrick, Jonas Rydinge, Jonathan L. Foret, Jonathan M. Gross, Jonathan P. Keeve, Joost Meijer, Joris J.G. Scheepers, Joseph Baele, Joseph O'Neil, Joseph R. Cass, Joseph R. Hsu, Jules Dumais, Julia Lee, Julie A. Switzer, Julie Agel, Justin E. Richards, Justin W. Langan, Kahn Turckan, Kaili Pecorella, Kamal Rai, Kamran Aurang, Karl Shively, Karlijn van Wessem, Karyn Moon, Kate Eke, Katie Erwin, Katrine Milner, Kees Jan Ponsen, Kelli Mills, Kelly Apostle, Kelly Johnston, Kelly Trask, Kent Strohecker, Kenya Stringfellow, Kevin K. Kruse, Kevin Tetsworth, Khalis Mitchell, Kieran Browner, Kim Hemlock, Kimberly Carcary, Knut Jørgen Haug, Krista Noble, Kristin Robbins, Krystal Payton, Kyle J. Jeray, L. Joseph Rubino, Lauren A. Nastoff, Lauren C. Leffler, Laurents P.S. Stassen, Lawrence K. O'Malley, Lawrence M. Specht, Lehana Thabane, Leo M.G. Geeraedts, Leslie E. Shell, Linda K. Anderson, Linda S. Eickhoff, Lindsey Lyle, Lindsey Pilling, Lisa Buckingham, Lisa K. Cannada, Lisa M. Wild, Liz Dulaney-Cripe, Lodewijk M.S.J. Poelhekke, Lonneke Govaert, Lu Ton, Lucksy Kottam, Luke P.H. Leenen, Lydia Clipper, Lyle T. Jackson, Lynne Hampton, Maarten C. de Waal Malefijt, Maarten P. Simons, Maarten van der Elst, Maarten W.G.A. Bronkhorst, Mahesh Bhatia, Marc Swiontkowski, Margaret J. Lobo, Marilyn Swinton, Marinis Pirpiris, Marius Molund, Mark Gichuru, Mark Glazebrook, Mark Harrison, Mark Jenkins, Mark MacLeod, Mark R. de Vries, Mark S. Butler, Markku Nousiainen, Martijne van 't Riet, Martin C. Tynan, Martin Campo, Martin G. Eversdijk, Martin J. Heetveld, Martin Richardson, Mary Breslin, Mary Fan, Matt Edison, Matthew Napierala, Matthias Knobe, Matthias Russ, Mauri Zomar, Maurits de Brauw, Max Esser, Meghan Hurley, Melissa E. Peters, Melissa Lorenzo, Mengnai Li, Michael Archdeacon, Michael Biddulph, Michael Charlton, Michael D. McDonald, Michael D. McKee, Michael Dunbar, Michael E. Torchia, Michael Gross, Michael Hewitt, Michael Holt, Michael J. Prayson, Michael J.R. Edwards, Michael L. Beckish, Michael L. Brennan, Michael P. Dohm, Michael S.H. Kain, Michelle Vogt, Michelle Yu, Michiel H.J. Verhofstad, Michiel J.M. Segers, Michiel P.C. Siroen, Mike Reed, Milena R. Vicente, Milko M.M. Bruijninckx, Mittal Trivedi, Mohit Bhandari, Molly M. Moore, Monica Kunz, Morten Smedsrud, Naveen Palla, Neeraj Jain, Nico J.M. Out, Nicole Simunovic, Niels W.L. Schep, Oliver Müller, Onno R. Guicherit, Oscar J.F. Van Waes, Otis Wang, Pascal G. Doornebosch, Patricia Seuffert, Patrick J. Hesketh, Patrick Weinrauch, Paul Duffy, Paul Keller, Paul M. Lafferty, Paul Pincus, Paul Tornetta, Paul Zalzal, Paula McKay, Peter A. Cole, Peter D. de Rooij, Peter Hull, Peter M.N.Y.M. Go, Peter Patka, Peter Siska, Peter Weingarten, Philip Kregor, Philip Stahel, Philip Stull, Philippe Wittich, Piet A.R. de Rijcke, Pim Oprel, PJ Devereaux, Qi Zhou, R. Lee Murphy, Rachel Alosky, Rachel Clarkson, Raely Moon, Rajanikanth Logishetty, Rajesh Nanda, Raymond J. Sullivan, Rebecca G. Snider, Richard E. Buckley, Richard Iorio, Richard J Farrugia, Richard Jenkinson, Richard Laughlin, Richard P.R. Groenendijk, Richard W. Gurich, Ripley Worman, Rob Silvis, Robert Haverlag, Robert J. Teasdall, Robert Korley, Robert McCormack, Robert Probe, Robert V. Cantu, Roger B. Huff, Rogier K.J. Simmermacher, Rolf Peters, Roman Pfeifer, Ronald Liem, Ronald N. Wessel, Ronald Verhagen, Ronald Vuylsteke, Ross Leighton, Ross McKercher, Rudolf W. Poolman, Russell Miller, Ryan Bicknell, Ryan Finnan, Ryan M. Khan, Samir Mehta, Sandy Vang, Sanjay Singh, Sanjeev Anand, Sarah A. Anderson, Sarah A. Dawson, Scott B. Marston, Scott E. Porter, Scott T. Watson, Sebastiaan Festen, Shane Lieberman, Shannon Puloski, Shea A. Bielby, Sheila Sprague, Shelley Hess, Shelley MacDonald, Simone Evans, Sofia Bzovsky, Sondre Hasselund, Sophie Lewis, Stein Ugland, Stephanie Caminiti, Stephanie L. Tanner, Stephanie M. Zielinski, Stephanie Shepard, Stephen A. Sems, Stephen D. Walter, Stephen Doig, Stephen H. Finley, Stephen Kates, Stephen Lindenbaum, Stephen P. Kingwell, Steve Csongvay, Steve Papp, Steven E. Buijk, Steven J. Rhemrev, Steven M. Hollenbeck, Steven M. van Gaalen, Steven Yang, Stuart Weinerman, null Subash, Sue Lambert, Susan Liew, Sven A.G. Meylaerts, Taco J. Blokhuis, Tammo S. de Vries Reilingh, Tarjei Lona, Taryn Scott, Teresa K. Swenson, Terrence J. Endres, Terry Axelrod, Teun van Egmond, Thomas B. Pace, Thomas Kibsgård, Thomas M. Schaller, Thuan V. Ly, Timothy J. Miller, Timothy Weber, Toan Le, Todd M. Oliver, Tom M. Karsten, Tor Borch, Tor Magne Hoseth, Tor Nicolaisen, Torben Ianssen, Tori Rutherford, Tracy Nanney, Trevor Gervais, Trevor Stone, Tyson Schrickel, Tyson Scrabeck, Utsav Ganguly, V. Naumetz, Valda Frizzell, Veronica Wadey, Vicki Jones, Victoria Avram, Vimlesh Mishra, Vineet Yadav, Vinod Arora, Vivek Tyagi, Vivian Borsella, W. Jaap Willems, W.H. Hoffman, Wade T. Gofton, Wesley G. Lackey, Wesley Ghent, William Obremskey, William Oxner, William W. Cross, Yvonne M. Murtha, Zoe Murdoch, and Surgery
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Male ,Bone Screws ,Avascular necrosis ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,law.invention ,Fracture Fixation, Internal ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Femur Head Necrosis ,law ,Fracture Fixation ,Fracture fixation ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,80 and over ,Single-Blind Method ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Non-U.S. Gov't ,Aged, 80 and over ,Fracture Healing ,030222 orthopedics ,Hip fracture ,Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ,Hazard ratio ,General Medicine ,Equipment Design ,Femur Head Necrosis/etiology ,3. Good health ,Pulmonary embolism ,Multicenter Study ,Treatment Outcome ,Randomized Controlled Trial ,Fracture Fixation, Internal/adverse effects ,Female ,Reoperation ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Femoral Neck Fractures/surgery ,Internal/adverse effects ,Bone healing ,Research Support ,N.I.H ,03 medical and health sciences ,Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,business.industry ,Extramural ,medicine.disease ,Femoral Neck Fractures ,Surgery ,Reconstructive and regenerative medicine Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 10] ,Reoperation/statistics & numerical data ,Quality of Life ,business - Abstract
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Background Reoperation rates are high after surgery for hip fractures. We investigated the effect of a sliding hip screw versus cancellous screws on the risk of reoperation and other key outcomes. Methods For this international, multicentre, allocation concealed randomised controlled trial, we enrolled patients aged 50 years or older with a low-energy hip fracture requiring fracture fixation from 81 clinical centres in eight countries. Patients were assigned by minimisation with a centralised computer system to receive a single large-diameter screw with a side-plate (sliding hip screw) or the present standard of care, multiple small-diameter cancellous screws. Surgeons and patients were not blinded but the data analyst, while doing the analyses, remained blinded to treatment groups. The primary outcome was hip reoperation within 24 months after initial surgery to promote fracture healing, relieve pain, treat infection, or improve function. Analyses followed the intention-to-treat principle. This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00761813. Findings Between March 3, 2008, and March 31, 2014, we randomly assigned 1108 patients to receive a sliding hip screw (n=557) or cancellous screws (n=551). Reoperations within 24 months did not differ by type of surgical fixation in those included in the primary analysis: 107 (20%) of 542 patients in the sliding hip screw group versus 117 (22%) of 537 patients in the cancellous screws group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·83, 95% CI 0·63–1·09; p=0·18). Avascular necrosis was more common in the sliding hip screw group than in the cancellous screws group (50 patients [9%] vs 28 patients [5%]; HR 1·91, 1·06–3·44; p=0·0319). However, no significant difference was found between the number of medically related adverse events between groups (p=0·82; appendix); these events included pulmonary embolism (two patients [
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Abduction Brace Versus Antirotation Sling After Arthroscopic Cuff Repair: The Effects on Pain and Function
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Jacco A. C. Zijl, Ronald N. Wessel, Sjoerd P.M. van Egeraat, Freek Hollman, and Nienke Wolterbeek
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sling (implant) ,Adolescent ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,03 medical and health sciences ,Arthroscopy ,Immobilization ,Rotator Cuff ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Postoperative Period ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Aged ,Ultrasonography ,Rupture ,030222 orthopedics ,Pain, Postoperative ,Braces ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Shoulder Joint ,Rotator cuff injury ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brace ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Cuff ,Quality of Life ,Shoulder joint ,Female ,business ,Range of motion ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose To study the effects on pain as the main outcome parameter and on function and cuff integrity as the secondary outcome parameters after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair in the short term comparing the abduction brace with an antirotation sling for postoperative shoulder immobilization. Methods Eligible patients were between the ages of 18 and 75 years who were diagnosed with a traumatic or degenerative tear of the supraspinatus and/or infraspinatus tendon, confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging, for which an arthroscopic footprint repair was indicated and performed. Patients were randomly allocated to the antirotation sling or abduction brace group. Postoperative pain and use of analgesics were accurately registered up to 3 months after surgery using a patient diary. Follow-up examinations including the Constant-Murley score, Western Ontario Rotator Cuff index, and glenohumeral range of motion were scheduled 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months, and 1 year after surgery. Results The average level of pain measured directly postoperation up to 1 year after surgery was not significant different between groups. Postoperatively, function scores and glenohumeral range of motion improved significantly for both groups; however, no differences were observed between groups. No retears were observed on ultrasonograph 3 months after surgery. Conclusions In the short term, the level of pain, function, and quality of life were not significantly different between the use of an abduction brace and that of an antirotation sling after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. Based on these findings, the abduction brace used in this study does not seem to be the solution for decreasing the pain experienced in the first postoperative weeks after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair, and both are recommendable. Level of Evidence Level I, randomized controlled trial.
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- 2016
20. Predictors of disease-specific quality of life after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair
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Ronald N. Wessel, Arjen Kolk, Jacco A. C. Zijl, Nienke Wolterbeek, and Kiem G. Auw Yang
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Arthroplasty ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rotator Cuff ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Rupture ,030222 orthopedics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Arthroscopy ,Retrospective cohort study ,030229 sport sciences ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Cohort study ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Disease-specific instruments of quality of life (QOL) are more sensitive to disease-specific changes. The purpose of this study is to identify prognostic factors for disease-specific QOL after all-arthroscopic rotator cuff (RC) repair using the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index (WORC). A total of 140 patients were evaluated after an RC repair with a mean follow-up of 22 ± 6.7 months. Evaluations included the WORC, EQ-5D and anchor questions. Preoperative patient demographics and radiologic characteristics were assessed to identify predictors of disease-specific QOL. Most patients (81.4 %) were satisfied with their surgical result. Minor tear retraction (odds ratio [OR] 2.97, p = 0.030), male gender (OR 3.67, p = 0.003), no social benefits (OR 3.67, p = 0.042) and pre-surgical complaints for more than six months (OR 3.03, p = 0.021) were independent predictors for superior postoperative WORC score in multivariable analysis. None of these factors were predictive for a higher EQ-5D score. These findings highlight the important impact of retraction on QOL after RC repair and underline the utility of disease-specific instruments. Future studies should focus on how these significant predictors can be used to improve decision making and to develop new treatment approaches.
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- 2015
21. Reliability, Validity, and Responsiveness of the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index for Elderly Patients with a Femoral Neck Fracture
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Paul T.P.W. Burgers, Rudolf W Poolman, Theodorus MJ Van Bakel, Wim E Tuinebreijer, Stephanie M Zielinski, Mohit Bhandari, Peter Patka, Esther MM Van Lieshout, P J Devereaux, Gordon H Guyatt, Thomas A Einhorn, Lehana Thabane, Emil H Schemitsch, Kenneth J Koval, Frede Frihagen, Kevin Tetsworth, Ernesto Guerra-Farfan, Stephen D Walter, Sheila Sprague, Marilyn Swinton, Taryn Scott, Paula McKay, Kim Madden, Diane Heels-Ansdell, Lisa Buckingham, Aravin Duraikannan, Heather Silva, Martin J Heetveld, Robert D Zura, Victoria Avram, Ajay Manjoo, Dale Williams, John Antoniou, Tim Ramsay, Earl R Bogoch, Andrew Trenholm, Stephen Lyman, Madhu Mazumdar, Kevin J Bozic, Mark Luborsky, Stuart Goodman, Susan Muray, Rob Korley, Richard Buckley, Paul Duffy, Shannon Puloski, Kimberly Carcary, Melissa Lorenzo, Michael D McKee, Jeremy A Hall, Aaron Nauth, Daniel Whelan, Timothy R Daniels, James P Waddell, Henry Ahn, Milena R Vicente, Jennifer T Hidy, Melanie T MacNevin, Hans Kreder, Terry Axelrod, Richard Jenkinson, Markku Nousiainen, David Stephen, Veronica Wadey, Monica Kunz, Katrine Milner, Ria Cagaanan, Melanie MacNevin, Peter J O’Brien, Piotr A Blachut, Henry M Broekhuyse, Pierre Guy, Kelly A Lefaivre, Gerard P Slobogean, Raman Johal, Irene Leung, Chad Coles, Ross Leighton, C. Glen Richardson, Michael Biddulph, Michael Gross, Michael Dunbar, J. David Amirault, David Alexander, Catherine Coady, Mark Glazebrook, David Johnston, William Oxner, Gerald Reardon, Ivan Wong, Kelly Trask, Shelley MacDonald, Andrew Furey, Craig Stone, Minnie Parsons, Trevor Stone, Mauri Zomar, Robert McCormack, Kelly Apostle, Dory Boyer, Farhad Moola, Bertrand Perey, Darius Viskontas, Karyn Moon, Raely Moon, Yves Laflamme, Benoit Benoit, Pierre Ranger, Michel Malo, Julio Fernandes, Karine Tardif, Julie Fournier, Pascal André Vendittoli, Vincent Massé, Alain G Roy, Martin Lavigne, Daniel Lusignan, Craig Davis, Philip Stull, Stewart Weinerman, Peter Weingarten, Steven Lindenbaum, Michael Hewitt, Rebecca Danielwicz, Janell Baker, Michael Mont, Donald E Delanois, Bhaveen Kapadia, Kimona Issa, Marylou Mullen, Andrew Sems, Barb Foreman, Javad Parvizi, Tiffany Morrison, Courtland Lewis, Stephanie Caminiti, Paul Tornetta, William R Creevy, Michelle J Lespasio, Hope Carlisle, Andrew Marcantonio, Michael Kain, Lawrence Specht, John Tilzey, John Garfi, Samir Mehta, John L Esterhai, Jaimo Ahn, Derek Donegan, Annamarie Horan, Kelly McGinnis, James Roberson, Thomas Bradbury, Greg Erens, Kyle Webb, Brian Mullis, Karl Shively, Andrew Parr, Janos Ertl, Ripley Worman, Mark Webster, Judd Cummings, Valda Frizzell, Molly Moore, Clifford B Jones, James R Ringler, Debra L Sietsema, Jane E Walker, Enes Kanlic, Amr Abdelgawad, Juan Shunia, Charles DePaolo, Susan Sutherland, Rachel Alosky, Robert Zura, Maria Manson, Gregg Strathy, Kathleen Peter, Paul Johnson, Meaghan Morton, James Shaer, Tyson Schrickel, Barbara Hileman, Marina Hanes, Elisha Chance, E. Matthew Heinrich, David Dodgin, Michele LaBadie, David Zamorano, Martin Tynan, Ran Schwarzkopf, John A Scolaro, Ranjan Gupta, Samuel Bederman, Nitin Bhatia, Bang Hoang, Douglas Kiester, Neil Jones, Gregory Rafijah, Damon Alavekios, Jason Lee, Akshay Mehta, Steven Schroder, Tom Chao, Vincent Colin, Phuc (Phil) Dang, Stephen Keun Heng, Gregory Lopez, Samuel Galle, Sohrab Pahlavan, Duy L Phan, Minal Tapadia, Christopher Bui, Nickul Jain, Tyler Moore, Nathan Moroski, Deeba Pourmand, Erik N Kubiak, Jeremy Gililland, David Rothberg, Christopher Peters, Christopher Pelt, Ami R Stuart, Kirby Corbey, Franklin D Shuler, James Day, Tigran Garabekyan, Felix Cheung, Ali Oliashirazi, Jonathon Salava, Linda Morgan, Timothy Wilson-Byrne, Mary Beth Cordle, Leon H.G.J. Elmans, Joost A.A.M. van den Hout, Adrianus JP Joosten, Ad FA van Beurden, Stefan BT Bolder, Denise Eygendaal, Adrianus F.C.M. Moonen, Rutger CI van Geenen, Eric A Hoebink, Robert Wagenmakers, Wouter van Helden, Hans-Peter W van Jonbergen, Herbert Roerdink, Joost M Reuver, Alexander FW Barnaart, Elvira R Flikweert, Rover Krips, J. Bernard Mullers, Hans Schüller, Mark LM Falke, Frans J Kurek, Adrianus CH Slingerland, Jan P van Dijk, Wouter H van Helden, Hugo W Bolhuis, Pieter HJ Bullens, Mike Hogervorst, Karin E de Kroon, Rob H Jansen, Ferry Steenstra, Eric EJ Raven, W. Peter J Fontijne, Saskia C Wiersma, Bastiaan Boetes, Edgar JT ten Holder, Huub JL van der Heide, Jochem Nagels, Enrike H.M.J. van der Linden-van der Zwaag, Stefan B Keizer, Jan-Willem A Swen, Peter HC den Hollander, Bregje JW Thomassen, Willem Jan Kleyn Molekamp, Frank R.A.J. de Meulemeester, Arthur EB Kleipool, Robert Haverlag, Maarten P Simons, Eduard L.A.R. Mutsaerts, Rob Kooijman, Roelf R Postema, René J.T.M. Bleker, Harald IH Lampe, Lein Schuman, John Cheung, Frank van Bommel, W. Paul Winia, Daniel Haverkamp, Harm van der Vis, Peter A Nolte, Michel PJ van den Bekerom, Tjitte de Jong, Arthur van Noort, Diederik A Vergroesen, Bernard G Schutte, Harm M van der Vis, Lijkele Beimers, Jasper de Vries, Arthur W Zurcher, G.H. Rob Albers, Maarten Rademakers, Stefan Breugem, Ibo van der Haven, Pieter Jan Damen, Gythe H Bulstra, Martin M Campo, Mathijs P Somford, Daniël Haverkamp, Susan Liew, Harvinder Bedi, Ashley Carr, Andrew Chia, Steve Csongvay, Craig Donohue, Stephen Doig, Elton Edwards, Max Esser, Richard Freeman, Andrew Gong, Doug Li, Russell Miller, Lu Ton, Otis Wang, Ian Young, Adam Dowrick, Zoe Murdoch, Claire Sage, Richard Page, David Bainbridge, Richard Angliss, Ben Miller, Andrew Thomson, Graeme Brown, Simon Williams, Kevin Eng, David Bowyer, John Skelley, Chatar Goyal, Sally Beattie, Enrique Guerado, Encarnacion Cruz, Juan Ramon Cano, Miguel Angel Froufe, Lluis Marull Serra, Samer Al-dirra, Cristina Martinez, Francisco José Tarazona Santabalbina, Jordi Teixidor Serra, Jordi Tomas Hernandez, Marc Aguilar Garcia, Vicente Molero Garcia, Sergi Barrera, Miriam Garrido, Lars Nordsletten, John Clarke-Jenssen, Geir Hjorthaug, Anne Christine Brekke, Elise Berg Vesterhus, Ingunn Skaugrud, Pradeep Tripathi, Sandesh Katiyar, Preksha Shukla, Marc Swiontkowski, Gordon Guyatt, Kyle Jeray, Stephen Walter, Helena Viveiros, Victoria Truong, Kaitlin Koo, Qi Zhou, Deborah Maddock, Nicole Simunovic, Julie Agel, Amar Rangan, Birgit C Hanusch, Lucksy Kottam, Rachel Clarkson, Gregory J Della Rocca, Gerard Slobogean, Jeffrey Katz, Brenda Gillespie, Gail A Greendale, Curtis Hartman, Craig Rubin, James Waddell, H. Michael Lemke, Amber Oatt, Richard E Buckley, Robert Korley, Kelly Johnston, James Powell, David Sanders, Abdel Lawendy, Christina Tieszer, John Murnaghan, Diane Nam, Albert Yee, Daniel B Whelan, Lisa M Wild, Ryan M Khan, Cathy Coady, David Amirault, Glen Richardson, Gwen Dobbin, Ryan Bicknell, Jeff Yach, Davide Bardana, Gavin Wood, Mark Harrison, David Yen, Sue Lambert, Fiona Howells, Angela Ward, Paul Zalzal, Heather Brien, V Naumetz, Brad Weening, Eugene K Wai, Steve Papp, Wade T Gofton, Stephen P Kingwell, Garth Johnson, Joseph O’Neil, Darren M Roffey, Vivian Borsella, Todd M Oliver, Vicki Jones, Terrence J Endres, Samuel G Agnew, Kyle J Jeray, J. Scott Broderick, David R Goetz, Thomas B Pace, Thomas M Schaller, Scott E Porter, Stephanie L Tanner, Rebecca G Snider, Lauren A Nastoff, Shea A Bielby, Julie A Switzer, Peter A Cole, Sarah A Anderson, Paul M Lafferty, Mengnai Li, Thuan V Ly, Scott B Marston, Amy L Foley, Sandy Vang, David M Wright, Andrew J Marcantonio, Michael SH Kain, Richard Iorio, Lawrence M Specht, John F Tilzey, Margaret J Lobo, John S Garfi, Heather A Vallier, Andrea Dolenc, Chalitha Robinson, Michael J Prayson, Richard Laughlin, L. Joseph Rubino, Jedediah May, Geoffrey Ryan Rieser, Liz Dulaney-Cripe, Chris Gayton, John T Gorczyca, Jonathan M Gross, Catherine A Humphrey, Stephen Kates, Krista Noble, Allison W McIntyre, Kaili Pecorella, Craig A Davis, Stephen Lindenbaum, John Schwappach, Janell K Baker, Tori Rutherford, Heike Newman, Shane Lieberman, Erin Finn, Kristin Robbins, Meghan Hurley, Lindsey Lyle, Khalis Mitchell, Kieran Browner, Erica Whatley, Krystal Payton, Christina Reeves, Lisa K Cannada, David Karges, Leslie Hill, John Esterhai, Annamarie D Horan, Christine A Kaminski, Brynn N Kowalski, Jonathan P Keeve, Christopher G Anderson, Michael D McDonald, Jodi M Hoffman, Ivan Tarkin, Peter Siska, Gary Gruen, Andrew Evans, Dana J Farrell, James Irrgang, Arlene Luther, William W Cross, Joseph R Cass, Stephen A Sems, Michael E Torchia, Tyson Scrabeck, Mark Jenkins, Jules Dumais, Amanda W Romero, Carlos A Sagebien, Mark S Butler, James T Monica, Patricia Seuffert, Joseph R Hsu, James Ficke, Michael Charlton, Matthew Napierala, Mary Fan, Chadi Tannoury, Michael Archdeacon, Ryan Finnan, Toan Le, John Wyrick, Shelley Hess, Michael L Brennan, Robert Probe, Evelyn Kile, Kelli Mills, Lydia Clipper, Michelle Yu, Katie Erwin, Daniel Horwitz, Kent Strohecker, Teresa K Swenson, Andrew H Schmidt, Jerald R Westberg, Kamran Aurang, Gary Zohman, Brett Peterson, Roger B Huff, Joseph Baele, Timothy Weber, Matt Edison, Jessica McBeth, Janos P Ertl, J. Andrew Parr, Molly M Moore, Erin Tobias, Emily Thomas, Charles J DePaolo, Leslie E Shell, Lynne Hampton, Stephanie Shepard, Tracy Nanney, Claudine Cuento, Robert V Cantu, Eric R Henderson, Linda S Eickhoff, E. Mark Hammerberg, Philip Stahel, David Hak, Cyril Mauffrey, Douglas Gibula, Hannah Gissel, Corey Henderson, David P Zamorano, Martin C Tynan, Deanna Lawson, Brett D Crist, Yvonne M Murtha, Linda K Anderson, Colleen Linehan, Lindsey Pilling, Courtland G Lewis, Raymond J Sullivan, Elizabeth Roper, William Obremskey, Philip Kregor, Justin E Richards, Kenya Stringfellow, Michael P Dohm, Abby Zellar, Michiel JM Segers, Jacco AC Zijl, Bart Verhoeven, Anke B Smits, Jean Paul PM de Vries, Bram Fioole, Henk van der Hoeven, Evert BM Theunissen, Tammo S de Vries Reilingh, Lonneke Govaert, Philippe Wittich, Maurits de Brauw, Jan Wille, Peter M.N.Y.M. Go, Ewan D Ritchie, Ronald N Wessel, Eric R Hammacher, Gijs A Visser, Heyn Stockmann, Rob Silvis, Jaap P Snellen, Bram Rijbroek, Joris JG Scheepers, Erik GJ Vermeulen, Michiel PC Siroen, Ronald Vuylsteke, Hans LF Brom, Herman Rijna, Piet AR de Rijcke, Cees L Koppert, Steven E Buijk, Richard PR Groenendijk, Imro Dawson, Geert WM Tetteroo, Milko MM Bruijninckx, Pascal G Doornebosch, Eelco JR de Graaf, Maarten van der Elst, Carmen C van der Pol, Martijne van’t Riet, Tom M Karsten, Mark R de Vries, Laurents PS Stassen, Niels WL Schep, G Ben Schmidt, W H Hoffman, Frank H.W.M. van der Heijden, W. Jaap Willems, Cor P van der Hart, Kahn Turckan, Sebastiaan Festen, Frank de Nies, Nico JM Out, Jan Bosma, Albert van Kampen, Jan Biert, Arie B van Vugt, Michael JR Edwards, Taco J Blokhuis, Jan Paul M Frölke, Leo MG Geeraedts, Jean WM Gardeniers, Edward T.C.H. Tan, Lodewijk M.S.J. Poelhekke, Maarten C de Waal Malefijt, Bart Schreurs, Gert R Roukema, Hong A Josaputra, Paul Keller, Peter D de Rooij, Hans Kuiken, Han Boxma, Berry I Cleffken, Ronald Liem, Steven J Rhemrev, Coks HR Bosman, Alexander de Mol van Otterloo, Jochem Hoogendoorn, Alexander C de Vries, Sven AG Meylaerts, Michiel HJ Verhofstad, Joost Meijer, Teun van Egmond, Igor van der Brand, Martin G Eversdijk, Rolf Peters, Dennis Den Hartog, Oscar JF Van Waes, Pim Oprel, Martin Campo, Ronald Verhagen, G.H. Robert Albers, Rogier KJ Simmermacher, Jeroen van Mulken, Karlijn van Wessem, Steven M van Gaalen, Luke PH Leenen, Maarten W.G.A. Bronkhorst, Onno R Guicherit, J. Carel Goslings, Kees Jan Ponsen, Mahesh Bhatia, Vinod Arora, Vivek Tyagi, Ajay Gupta, Neeraj Jain, Farah Khan, Ateet Sharma, Amir Sanghavi, Mittal Trivedi, Anil Rai, null Subash, Kamal Rai, Vineet Yadav, Sanjay Singh, Amal Shankar Prasad, Vimlesh Mishra, D C Sundaresh, Angshuman Khanna, Joe Joseph Cherian, Davy J Olakkengil, Gaurav Sharma, Akhil Dadi, Naveen Palla, Utsav Ganguly, B. Sachidananda Rai, Janakiraman Rajakumar, Peter Hull, Sophie Lewis, Simone Evans, Rajesh Nanda, Rajanikanth Logishetty, Sanjeev Anand, Carol Bowler, Andrew Jennings, Graham Chuter, Glynis Rose, Gillian Horner, Callum Clark, Kate Eke, Mike Reed, Chris Herriott, Christine Dobb, Hamish Curry, Greg Etherington, Arvind Jain, Ash Moaveni, Matthias Russ, Geoff Donald, Patrick Weinrauch, Paul Pincus, Steven Yang, Brett Halliday, Trevor Gervais, Michael Holt, Annette Flynn, Marinis Pirpiris, David Love, Andrew Bucknill, Richard J Farrugia, Torben Ianssen, Asgeir Amundsen, Jan Egil Brattgjerd, Tor Borch, Berthe Bøe, Bernhard Flatøy, Sondre Hasselund, Knut Jørgen Haug, Kim Hemlock, Tor Magne Hoseth, Geir Jomaas, Thomas Kibsgård, Tarjei Lona, Gilbert Moatshe, Oliver Müller, Marius Molund, Tor Nicolaisen, Fredrik Nilsen, Jonas Rydinge, Morten Smedsrud, Are Stødle, Axel Trommer, Stein Ugland, Anders Karlsten, Guri Ekås, Hans-Christoph Pape, Matthias Knobe, Roman Pfeifer, Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, Graduate School, Other departments, Surgery, Other Research, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Cardiothoracic Surgery, and Emergency Medicine
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,WOMAC ,Abstracting and Indexing ,Osteoarthritis ,Cronbach's alpha ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Clinical significance ,Femoral neck ,Aged, 80 and over ,Ontario ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Construct validity ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,RELIABILITY VALIDITY ,Femoral Neck Fractures ,Reconstructive and regenerative medicine Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 10] ,Clinical trial ,Reconstructive and regenerative medicine Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 10] ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext BACKGROUND: The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) has been extensively evaluated in groups of patients with osteoarthritis, yet not in patients with a femoral neck fracture. This study aimed to determine the reliability, construct validity, and responsiveness of the WOMAC compared with the Short Form-12 (SF-12) and the EuroQol 5D (EQ-5D) questionnaires for the assessment of elderly patients with a femoral neck fracture. METHODS: Reliability was tested by assessing the Cronbach alpha. Construct validity was determined with the Pearson correlation coefficient. Change scores were calculated from ten weeks to twelve months of follow-up. Standardized response means and floor and ceiling effects were determined. Analyses were performed to compare the results for patients less than eighty years old with those for patients eighty years of age or older. RESULTS: The mean WOMAC total score was 89 points before the fracture in the younger patients and increased from 70 points at ten weeks to 81 points at two years postoperatively. In the older age group, these scores were 86, 75, and 78 points. The mean WOMAC pain scores before the fracture and at ten weeks and two years postoperatively were 92, 76, and 87 points, respectively, in the younger age group and 92, 84, and 93 points in the older age group. Function scores were 89, 68, and 79 points for the younger age group and 84, 71, and 73 points for the older age group. The Cronbach alpha for pain, stiffness, function, and the total scale ranged from 0.83 to 0.98 for the younger age group and from 0.79 to 0.97 for the older age group. Construct validity was good, with 82% and 79% of predefined hypotheses confirmed in the younger and older age groups, respectively. Responsiveness was moderate. No floor effects were found. Moderate to large ceiling effects were found for pain and stiffness scales at ten weeks and twelve months in younger patients (18% to 36%) and in the older age group (38% to 53%). CONCLUSIONS: The WOMAC showed good reliability, construct validity, and responsiveness in both age groups of elderly patients with a femoral neck fracture who had been physically and mentally fit before the fracture. The instrument is suitable for use in future clinical studies in these populations. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The results are based on two clinical trials. The questionnaires used concern pure, clinically relevant issues (ability to walk, climb stairs, etc.). Moreover, the results can be used for future research comparing clinical outcomes (or treatments) for populations with a femoral neck fracture.
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- 2015
22. The Anterior Ankle Impingement Syndrome: Diagnostic Value of Oblique Radiographs
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C. Niek van Dijk, Ronald N. Wessel, Rover Krips, Ronald A. W. Verhagen, Johannes L. Tol, Mario Maas, Marcel G. W. Dijkgraaf, Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, AMS - Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, APH - Amsterdam Public Health, and Epidemiology and Data Science
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Radiography ,Pain ,Arthroscopy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Exostoses ,Mri scan ,Aged ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Oblique case ,Syndrome ,030229 sport sciences ,Anterior ankle impingement ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,respiratory tract diseases ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Ankle ,Joint Diseases ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
Background: The diagnostic value of an oblique radiograph, in addition to a lateral radiograph, for detecting osteophytes in the anterior ankle impingement syndrome was evaluated in a prospective study. The hypothesis was that the application of a lateral radiograph is insufficient to detect osteophytes that are located in the anteromedial aspect of the ankle joint. Oblique anteromedial impingement (AMI) radiographs were hypothesized to be a relevant adjunct, because of their utility to detect these anteromedially located osteophytes. Methods: Presence or absence of tibial and talar osteophytes on both radiographs was compared with the combined findings of CT, MRI scan, and arthroscopic surgery. Estimates of test characteristics were obtained for 60 consecutive patients with an anterior ankle impingement syndrome. Results: It was shown that the sensitivity of lateral radiographs for detecting anterior tibial and talar osteophytes was 40% and 32%, respectively (specificity, 70% and 82%). When the lateral radiograph was combined with an oblique AMI radiograph, these figures increased to 85% and 73%, respectively (specificity decreased to 45% and 68%). This increase was due to the high sensitivity of the oblique AMI radiographs for detecting anteromedial osteophytes (93% for tibial and 67% for talar osteophytes). Conclusion: A lateral radiograph is insufficient to detect all anteriorly located osteophytes. An oblique AMI radiograph is a useful adjunct to routine radiographs and is recommended to detect anteromedial tibial and talar osteophytes.
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- 2004
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23. Prognostic factors for recovery after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: A prognostic study
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Jean-Pierre Baeyens, Ronald N. Wessel, Rob A. de Bie, Anouk J.M. Fermont, Nienke Wolterbeek, Movement and Nutrition for Health and Performance, Movement and Sport Sciences, Biomechanics, Epidemiologie, RS: CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, and RS: CAPHRI - R3 - Functioning, Participating and Rehabilitation
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Adult ,Male ,Prognostic factor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,Arthroscopy ,Rotator Cuff ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Prospective Studies ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Rupture ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Shoulder ,arthroscopic repair ,prognostic factors ,quality of life ,rotator cuff lesion ,Recovery of Function ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Functional recovery ,Tendon ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cuff ,Quality of Life ,Female ,Shoulder Injuries ,business ,Range of motion ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Studies concerning prognostic factors of recovery after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair mostly focus on tendon integrity or functional recovery as an outcome. Little is known about how they influence quality of life after surgery. We therefore tried to identify prognostic factors having an impact on quality of life after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. Methods This study included 30 patients who underwent arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. We assessed Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index as primary outcome and RAND-36, Constant-Murley score, and a shoulder hindrance score as secondary outcomes. Patients were repeatedly measured: once preoperatively and 4 times postoperatively. Preoperative range of motion, obesity, fatty infiltration, and cuff retraction were preselected as prognostic factors. Results Patients were significantly improved at 3 months and 6 months after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. In multiple regression analysis, none of the preselected factors could be identified as a prognostic factor influencing quality of life after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (measured with the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index). For the outcome variables RAND-36 (6 months, 1 year) and shoulder hindrance score (1 year), fatty infiltration Goutallier stages 1 and 2 and retraction grades II, III, and IV were significant predictors. Conclusion Although fatty infiltration and retraction grade predict the RAND-36 and shoulder hindrance score, this study could not support preoperative range of motion, obesity, fatty infiltration, or retraction of the cuff as a prognostic factor for quality of life after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. This study shows that if selection of patients is done properly, these factors do not influence a successful outcome.
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- 2015
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24. The temperature dependence of the exchange reaction between oxygen atoms and dioxygen molecules studied by means of isotopes and spectroscopy
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Thorvald Pedersen, N. Wessel Larsen, M. Regin Wiegell, and Helge Egsgaard
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Oxygen atom ,Isotope ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Molecule ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Photochemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Biochemistry - Published
- 1997
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25. The conceptually equivalent Dutch version of the Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index (WORC)(c)
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Ronald N. Wessel, Nienke Wolterbeek, Anouk J.M. Fermont, Rob A. de Bie, Sharon Griffin, Heleen Sonneveld, Henk van Mameren, RS: CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, and Epidemiologie
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraclass correlation ,Population ,Severity of Illness Index ,Rotator Cuff ,Rheumatology ,Cronbach's alpha ,Validation ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality of life questionnaires ,Rotator cuff repair ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Reliability (statistics) ,Aged ,Netherlands ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Arm Injuries ,business.industry ,WORC ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Standard error ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical therapy ,Translation process ,Constant score ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
The WORC is a quality of life questionnaire designed for patients with disorders of the rotator cuff, originally developed in English. The purpose of this study was to cross-culturally adapt the WORC for use in the Dutch population and to evaluate reliability, agreement and floor and ceiling effects of this Dutch version in a population of patients with rotator cuff disease. Reliability was tested by measuring the Cronbach’s alpha for internal consistency and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) for test-retest reliability. Agreement was measured using the Standard Error of Measurement (SEMagreement); and the smallest detectable change (SDC) was calculated based on the SEM. Pearson Correlations Coefficients were used to comparing the WORC with the RAND-36, the Constant Score and 11-point shoulder hindrance scale. Fifty-seven patients entered into this study of whom 50 were available for test-retest validation. The internal consistency of the Dutch WORC tested by Cronbach’s alpha was 0.95 for the total questionnaire. The ICC for the WORC is 0.91 with a 95% confidence interval of 0.85-0.95. Standard Error of Measurement was 6.0 points with a Smallest Detectable Change of 16.7 points on a 0-100 scale. Pearson Correlations Coefficients showed a significant positive correlation between the Dutch WORC and Constant Score (r = 0.60) and a strong reversed correlation with the shoulder hindrance scale (r = -0.75). The Dutch WORC seems to be a reliable health-related quality of life questionnaire for patients with rotator cuff disorders. NCT01532492 .
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- 2013
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26. Validation of the western ontario rotator cuff index in patients with arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: A study protocol
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Tjoan E Lim, Ronald N. Wessel, Rob A. de Bie, Henk van Mameren, RS: CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, and Epidemiologie
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medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Sports medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,Arthroscopy ,Disability Evaluation ,Rotator Cuff ,Study Protocol ,Postoperative Complications ,Rheumatology ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Rotator cuff ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Protocol (science) ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Orthopedic surgery ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Physical therapy ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,business - Abstract
Background Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair is described as being a successful procedure. These results are often derived from clinical general shoulder examinations, which are then classified as 'excellent', 'good', 'fair' or 'poor'. However, the cut-off points for these classifications vary and sometimes modified scores are used. Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair is performed to improve quality of life. Therefore, disease specific health-related quality of life patient-administered questionnaires are needed. The WORC is a quality of life questionnaire designed for patients with disorders of the rotator cuff. The score is validated for rotator cuff disease, but not for rotator cuff repair specifically. The aim of this study is to investigate reliability, validity and responsiveness of WORC in patients undergoing arthroscopic rotator cuff repair. Methods/Design An approved translation of the WORC into Dutch is used. In this prospective study three groups of patients are used: 1. Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair; 2. Disorders of the rotator cuff without rupture; 3. Shoulder instability. The WORC, SF-36 and the Constant Score are obtained twice before therapy is started to measure reliability and validity. Responsiveness is tested by obtaining the same tests after therapy.
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- 2011
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27. Isotopic study of the mechanism of ozone formation
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Thorvald Pedersen, Jens Sehested, and N. Wessel Larsen
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Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ozone ,chemistry ,Isotope ,Mechanism (philosophy) ,Organic Chemistry ,Rotational spectroscopy ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Nuclear chemistry ,Isotopomers - Abstract
The mechanism of ozone formation has been studied using 16 O and 18 O 2 . High-resolution microwave spectroscopy was used to measure the amounts of the isotopomeric ozone species formed. The study is hampered by the very rapid exchange process between the reactants, that tends to scramble the isotopes and hence give a 2:1 statistical ratio between the two possible isotopomers. We have found a strategy to come around this difficulty and conclude that the mechanism is a simple end-on-addition
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- 1991
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28. Lack of recovery of baroreflex function in patients after heart surgery
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Ruediger Lange, B Retzlaff, N Wessel, Robert Bauernschmitt, and H Malberg
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Surgery ,In patient ,Baroreflex ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2008
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29. Atrial fat pad modification during cardiac surgery: immediate effects on cardiovascular variability parameters
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Ruediger Lange, Robert Bauernschmitt, H Malberg, B Retzlaff, and N Wessel
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Fat pad ,Cardiac surgery - Published
- 2008
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30. Outcome of total claviculectomy in six cases
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Ronald N. Wessel, Gerard R. Schaap, Other Research, and Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Radiography ,Bone Neoplasms ,Malignancy ,Risk Assessment ,Cohort Studies ,Fractures, Bone ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Child ,Total claviculectomy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Biopsy, Needle ,Osteomyelitis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Clavicle ,Surgery ,Osteotomy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Acromioclavicular Joint ,Female ,Osteitis ,business ,Range of motion ,Cohort study ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Total claviculectomy is a rare surgical procedure that has been performed for more than 90 years for a variety of indications, such as malignancy, trauma, and infection. What are the results for the pain score, and what is the influence of a total claviculectomy on the range of motion of the shoulder? We could not find the answers in the literature and analyzed 6 cases of total claviculectomy. The pain scores are good in a chronic osteitis case and in the two malignancy cases. In the 3 posttraumatic cases, the indication was pain, and all 3 had poor results because of persistent pain. All 6 patients had full range of motion. A resection of the entire clavicle did not disturb the motion of the shoulder. A tendency but no final conclusions can be drawn because of too few patients and heterogeneous indications.
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- 2007
31. [Analysis of cardiovascular regulation after heart operation]
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H, Malberg, N, Wessel, B, Kopp, and R, Bauernschmitt
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Male ,Risk ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Blood Pressure ,Coronary Disease ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Vagus Nerve ,Baroreflex ,Middle Aged ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Prognosis ,Survival Rate ,Postoperative Complications ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Aged ,Monitoring, Physiologic - Abstract
Baroreflex sensitivity, heart rate and blood pressure variability have been proven to predict fatal outcome in patients after acute myocardial infarction. This study aims at investigating the time dependent alterations in cardiovascular control to find new predictive parameters for arrhythmic events after surgery. 25 male patients with coronary heart disease following an aortocoronary bypass surgery were examined. The results show significant alterations in sympathetic and vagal mediated regulation. The extubation after 6 hours seems to influence primarily the sympathetic activation. Obviously, there is a vagal suppression 20 h after surgery, while the sympathetic tonus works in a normal range. This unbalanced interaction of the autonomous system seems to be a reason for the high incidence of atrial tachycardias in the early period after cardiac surgery.
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- 2002
32. Oblique radiograph for the detection of bone spurs in anterior ankle impingement
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Mario Maas, Niek C. van Dijk, Johannes L. Tol, Ronald N. Wessel, Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, and Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiography ,Oblique projection ,Osteoarthritis ,Talus ,Cadaver ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Exostoses ,Observer Variation ,Tibia ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Arthroscopy ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Orthopedic surgery ,Bone spurs ,Female ,Ankle ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Ankle Joint - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to develop a radiographic view to detect anteromedial talotibial osteophytes that remain undetected on standard radiographs. Design and patients: In 10 cadaver specimens the maximal size was measured of anteromedial tibial osteophytes that remain undetected on a standard lateral radiograph projection, due to the presence of the anteromedial fibial rim. The average projection of the most prominent anterolateral tibial rim over the anteromedial rim was found to be 7.3 mm. A 7 mm barium-clay osteophyte was attached to this anteromedial rim of the distal tibia. Anteromedial osteophytes become most prominent on an oblique view, in which the radiographic beam is tilted into a 45degrees craniocaudal direction with the leg in 30degrees external rotation. This oblique view was compared with the findings of arthroscopic surgery in 25 consecutive patients with anterior ankle impingement syndrome. Results: Medially located tibial and talar osteophytes remained undetected on a standard lateral projection and became visible on the oblique anteromedial impingement (AMI) radiograph. Anterolateral tibial and talar osteophytes were well detected on a standard lateral radiograph projection but were invisible on the AMI view. There was a high correlation between the location of the osteophyte and the location of symptoms and the findings at arthroscopy. Conclusion: A combination of lateral and oblique radiographs can be used to differentiate between anteromedial and anterolateral bony ankle impingement
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- 2002
33. Symbolic Dynamics
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A. Voss, N. Wessel, J. Kurths, A. Witt, A. Schirdewan, K. J. Osterziel, M. Malik, and R. Dietz
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- 2000
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34. [Symbolic dynamics--an independent method for detecting nonlinear phenomena of heart rate regulation]
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N, Wessel, A, Schirdewan, M, Malik, and A, Voss
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Heart Failure ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,Heart Rate ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Electrocardiography, Ambulatory ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted - Published
- 1998
35. [Dual sequence method for analysis of spontaneous baroreceptor sensitivity]
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H, Malberg, N, Wessel, A, Hasart, K J, Osterziel, and A, Voss
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Adult ,Cardiomyopathy, Dilated ,Male ,Blood Pressure ,Pressoreceptors ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Middle Aged ,Blood Pressure Monitors ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Electrocardiography ,Sensory Thresholds ,Reflex ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Published
- 1998
36. Angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensinogen gene polymorphisms and heart rate variability in twins
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A, Busjahn, A, Voss, H, Knoblauch, M, Knoblauch, E, Jeschke, N, Wessel, J, Bohlender, J, McCarron, H D, Faulhaber, H, Schuster, R, Dietz, and F C, Luft
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Adult ,Male ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Genotype ,Heart Rate ,Germany ,Angiotensinogen ,Twins ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A ,White People - Abstract
Decreased heart rate variability (HRV) is associated with congestive heart failure, post-myocardial infarction, ventricular arrhythmias, sudden cardiac death, and advancing age. A deletion/insertion polymorphism in the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) gene and a substitution (M235T) in the angiotensinogen gene have been associated with risk for heart disease. The aim of this study was to determine the heritability of HRV and related parameters in monozygotic and dizygotic twins and to assess the influence of ACE and angiotensinogen polymorphisms. We studied 95 MZ pairs and 46 DZ pairs. We measured HRV and related parameters, ACE and angiotensinogen levels, plasma norepinephrine, ACE, and angiotensinogen genotypes. We found that HRV and related parameters were significantly influenced by genetic variability, although nonshared genetic effects were also important. Angiotensinogen and plasma norepinephrine were generally correlated with decreased HRV, whereas ACE was correlated with perturbances of normal rhythmic HRV. Nevertheless, the DD ACE genotype was associated with increased HRV (p0.05), whereas angiotensinogen polymorphisms had no effect. We conclude that HRV and related parameters are in part heritable. Interestingly, the DD ACE genotype is associated with increased HRV.
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- 1998
37. Planarity of 1-chloroborepin
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Larsen, N. Wessel, Hansen, Sonja Rosenlund, Pedersen, T., Larsen, N. Wessel, Hansen, Sonja Rosenlund, and Pedersen, T.
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- 2006
38. [Priapism. Etiology, diagnosis and treatment]
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N, Wessel and E, Hem
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Male ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Priapism - Abstract
Priapism is a condition of prolonged penile erection which often causes pain and is unrelated to sexual desire. There is a high risk of impotence despite immediate intervention. The incidence has doubled since the introduction of intracorporeal injection therapy for impotence. Two subtypes of priapism have been described, depending on the underlying cause. The more common type, termed low flow, is characterised by inadequate venous outflow, leading to a hypoxic painful prolonged erection. The etiology is either idiopathic or related to intracorporeal injection therapy. Treatment consists of aspiration and instillation of a diluted alpha-adrenergic agent, or surgery, depending on the degree of hypoxia. The less common subtype, high flow, is arteriogenic, and causes less pain and no ischemia. Injury to a cavernous artery leads to a fistula between the artery and the corpora cavernosa. Treatment is either conservative with immediate ice pack and compression, or delayed selective embolization of the fistula.
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- 1996
39. The application of methods of non-linear dynamics for the improved and predictive recognition of patients threatened by sudden cardiac death
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A, Voss, J, Kurths, H J, Kleiner, A, Witt, N, Wessel, P, Saparin, K J, Osterziel, R, Schurath, and R, Dietz
- Subjects
Risk ,Electrocardiography ,Death, Sudden, Cardiac ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,Heart Rate ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted - Abstract
This study introduces new methods of non-linear dynamics (NLD) and compares these with traditional methods of heart rate variability (HRV) and high resolution ECG (HRECG) analysis in order to improve the reliability of high risk stratification.Simultaneous 30 min high resolution ECG's and long-term ECG's were recorded from 26 cardiac patients after myocardial infarction (MI). They were divided into two groups depending upon the electrical risk, a low risk group (group 2, n = 10) and a high risk group (group 3, n = 16). The control group consisted of 35 healthy persons (group 1). From these electrocardiograms we extracted standard measures in time and frequency domain as well as measures from the new non-linear methods of symbolic dynamics and renormalized entropy.Applying discriminant function techniques on HRV analysis the parameters of non-linear dynamics led to an acceptable differentiation between healthy persons and high risk patients of 96%. The time domain and frequency domain parameters were successful in less than 90%. The combination of parameters from all domains and a stepwise discriminant function separated these groups completely (100%). Use of this discriminant function classified three patients with apparently low (no) risk into the same cluster as high risk patients. The combination of the HRECG and HRV analysis showed the same individual clustering but increased the positive value of separation.The methods of NLD describe complex rhythm fluctuations and separate structures of non-linear behavior in the heart rate time series more successfully than classical methods of time and frequency domains. This leads to an improved discrimination between a normal (healthy persons) and an abnormal (high risk patients) type of heart beat generation. Some patients with an unknown risk exhibit similar patterns to high risk patients and this suggests a hidden high risk. The methods of symbolic dynamics and renormalized entropy were particularly useful measures for classifying the dynamics of HRV.
- Published
- 1996
40. [Thromboembolic complications in ambulatory surgery. A retrospective study of 1691 patients]
- Author
-
N, Wessel and T, Gerner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Norway ,Risk Factors ,Thromboembolism ,Humans ,Female ,Pulmonary Edema ,Middle Aged ,Thrombophlebitis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The risk of thromboembolic complications in outpatient surgery is regarded as being low. Thromboembolic prophylaxis is seldom administered as a routine. A retrospective study in our outpatient department, based upon patients readmitted for clinical thromboembolism, showed an incidence of deep vein thrombosis of 0.05% (8/1 691) and of pulmonary embolism 0.0006% (1/1 691). None of the patients received prophylaxis for thrombosis, and all operations were performed under regional anaesthesia of the lower extremity. 50% of the operations were performed using a tourniquet. 2/3 of the patients were women and 2/3 were over the age of 50. Operation time was usually 30-45 minutes. Our study indicates that patients undergoing knee arthroscopy, and operations for varicose veins and hallux valgus are at risk of thromboembolism. Prospective studies of these risk groups are necessary to figure out the need for thrombosis prophylaxis.
- Published
- 1996
41. [Spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage]
- Author
-
N, Wessel, B, Mjåset, and T, Gerner
- Subjects
Male ,Humans ,Female ,Hemorrhage ,Retroperitoneal Space ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Abstract
Spontaneous retroperitoneal haemorrhage is most frequently due to rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm. Pathology in other retroperitoneal organs, most often the kidney and the adrenal gland, may cause retroperitoneal haemorrhage. Spontaneous rupture of veins, especially the iliac vein, and haemorrhage secondary to anticoagulant therapy, are less common causes. The symptoms are variable and non-specific, but most often include acute abdominal pain, hypotension, peritoneal irritation and a palpable abdominal mass. The diagnosis is confirmed by ultrasonography, computerized tomography, and if relevant angiography or scintigraphy. We discuss three patients with spontaneous retroperitoneal haemorrhage, examine the clinical approach and the role of the various diagnostic aids, and consider how the various conditions should be dealt with.
- Published
- 1996
42. High-resolution infrared and microwave study of 10BF2OH and 11BF2OH: the 51, 61, 71, 81, 91 and 8191 vibrationally excited states
- Author
-
Perrin, A., Carvajal-Zaera, M., Dutkiewicz, Z., Flaud, J.-M., Collet, D., Bürger, H., Demaison, J., Willaert, F., Mäder, H., Larsen, N. Wessel, Perrin, A., Carvajal-Zaera, M., Dutkiewicz, Z., Flaud, J.-M., Collet, D., Bürger, H., Demaison, J., Willaert, F., Mäder, H., and Larsen, N. Wessel
- Abstract
infrared, microwave
- Published
- 2004
43. [Bladder rupture. Diagnosis, etiology and treatment]
- Author
-
N, Wessel, P C, Medby, and L, Hoffmann
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Radiography ,Rupture ,Urinary Bladder ,Humans ,Female ,Prognosis ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Aged - Abstract
The majority of bladder ruptures (80-90%) are caused by major blunt abdominal trauma. Penetrating injuries account for the rest. Bladder rupture is seen most often in patients with pelvic fracture. More seldom, the rupture can be caused by energetic blunt abdominal trauma. The rupture can either be intraperitoneal or extraperitoneal. The symptoms are macroscopic haematuria, suprapubic pain and, in some patients, an inability to avoid. Retrograde cystography is the diagnostic procedure of choice. An intravenous infusion pyelogram does not provide adequate examination of the bladder. The rupture is treated by operative closure and drainage by catheter. Extraperitoneal rupture may be treated with only catheter drainage and close clinical evaluation. We describe two patients with intraperitoneal bladder rupture after low energetic abdominal trauma.
- Published
- 1995
44. [Should oral contraceptives and postmenopausal hormonal substitution be withdrawn prior to surgery? A questionnaire study in departments of surgery and gynecology]
- Author
-
N, Wessel, T, Gerner, and H K, Grøgaard
- Subjects
Adult ,Norway ,Contraindications ,Estrogen Replacement Therapy ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Postoperative Complications ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Thromboembolism ,Humans ,Female ,Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, Hospital ,Surgery Department, Hospital ,Contraceptives, Oral - Abstract
We conducted a survey among the surgical and gynaecological departments of all Norwegian hospitals, about today's practice concerning oral contraceptives and surgery. Most of the surgical and gynaecological departments recommend discontinuance of the pill two and four weeks prior to surgery, and reintroduction upon mobilisation postoperatively. In surgical emergencies amongst women who use the pill, 4/5 surgical and 2/3 gynaecological departments would prefer to give thrombosis prophylaxis. Low molecular weight heparin was recommended most. Surgical departments especially recommend stopping the use of the progestogene only contraceptive pill, and post menopausal oestrogen substitution, before elective surgery. Both gynaecological and surgical departments give inadequate information about the use of alternative birth control during the period when the pill is not taken. The survey did not show any difference between university and central/county hospitals.
- Published
- 1995
45. 672 Health related quality of life after laparoscopic radical prostatectomy and robot assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy
- Author
-
Lars M. Eri, S. Karlsen, J.R. Hoff, Viktor Berge, R.E. Berg, and N. Wessel
- Subjects
Health related quality of life ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Laparoscopic radical prostatectomy ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General surgery ,Robot assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Utility of Intracardiac Echocardiography in Cavotricuspid Isthmus Ablation for Typical Right Atrial Flutter
- Author
-
Karen P. Phillips and N. Wessel
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cavotricuspid isthmus ,Intracardiac echocardiography ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ablation ,Right atrial ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Flutter ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Deuterium labelling and preparation of 1,4-dihydroxy-, 1,4-dichloro- and 1,4-difluoro-2-butyne
- Author
-
Christiansen, H.A., Wandel, M., Philipp, E.A., Larsen, N. Wessel, Christiansen, H.A., Wandel, M., Philipp, E.A., and Larsen, N. Wessel
- Published
- 2003
48. Kinetics of the reaction of OH radicals with cyclic ethers at 295-381 K
- Author
-
Nielsen, Ole John, Larsen, N. Wessel, Wallington, T.J., Platz, Jesper, Nielsen, Ole John, Larsen, N. Wessel, Wallington, T.J., and Platz, Jesper
- Abstract
Kinetics
- Published
- 2003
49. [New methods for the detection of high risk patients in cardiology]
- Author
-
A, Voss, J, Kurths, H J, Kleiner, A, Witt, P, Saparin, R, Dietz, H, Fiehring, and N, Wessel
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Electrocardiography ,Death, Sudden, Cardiac ,Heart Rate ,Reference Values ,Risk Factors ,Ventricular Fibrillation ,Myocardial Infarction ,Tachycardia, Ventricular ,Humans ,Female ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted - Abstract
Common non-invasive diagnostic methods like Holter monitoring or the analysis of high-resolution ECG and heart rate variability are unable to accurately assess the individual risk for sudden cardiac death, since they describe only statistical, linear or strictly periodic parameters. Using new methods of non-linear dynamics one can now calculate parameters which much better describe the dynamic behaviour of complex systems. The application of these new methods should therefore lead to an improved identification of high-risk patients. The results of this first pilot investigation show on the one hand that ventricular arrhythmias are quick detectable using phase space plots, and on the other hand that the new methods of non-linear dynamics could lead to a new classification of high-risk patients.
- Published
- 1994
50. 187 LAPAROSCOPIC PARTIAL NEPHRECTOMY VERSUS ROBOT ASSISTED PARTIAL NEPHRECTOMY FOR RENAL TUMORS: A SINGLE -INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF PERIOPERATIVE OUTCOMES
- Author
-
Viktor Berge, N. Wessel, J.R. Hoff, and R.E. Berg
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Perioperative ,business ,Nephrectomy ,Surgery - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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