99 results on '"Schild U"'
Search Results
2. Future determination of entities in Talmudic public announcement logic
- Author
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Abraham, M., Belfer, I., Gabbay, D.M., and Schild, U.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Analysis of the Talmudic Argumentum a Fortiori Inference Rule (Kal Vachomer) using Matrix Abduction
- Author
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Abraham, M., Gabbay, Dov M., and Schild, U.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The potential impact of biomarker-guided triage decisions for patients with urinary tract infections
- Author
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Litke, A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Reutlinger, B., Mueller, B., and Albrich, W. C.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Influence of procalcitonin on decision to start antibiotic treatment in patients with a lower respiratory tract infection: insight from the observational multicentric ProREAL surveillance
- Author
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Dusemund, F., Bucher, B., Meyer, S., Thomann, R., Kühn, F., Bassetti, S., Sprenger, M., Baechli, E., Sigrist, T., Schwietert, M., Amin, D., Hausfater, P., Carre, E., Schuetz, P., Gaillat, J., Regez, K., Bossart, R., Schild, U., Müller, B., Albrich, W. C., and For the ProREAL study team
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Contrary to time conditionals in Talmudic logic
- Author
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Abraham, M., Gabbay, D. M., and Schild, U.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Obligations and prohibitions in Talmudic deontic logic
- Author
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Abraham, M., Gabbay, D. M., and Schild, U.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Effect of proadrenomedullin in interdisciplinary risk assessment for patients with lower respiratory tract infections - an interventional randomised controlled trial: O177
- Author
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Albrich, W. C., Rüegger, K., Dusemund, F., Schuetz, P., Arici, B., Litke, A., Blum, C. A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Schubert, M., de Geest, S., Reutlinger, B., Irani, S., Bürgi, U., Huber, A., and Müller, B.
- Published
- 2012
9. A role for IgE in extrinsic allergic alveolitis?
- Author
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Pforte, A., Schild, U., Breyer, G., Häussinger, K., and Ziegler-Heitbrock, H. W. L.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Optimized patient transfer using an innovative multidisciplinary assessment in the Kanton Aargau (OPTIMA I): an observational survey in lower respiratory tract infections
- Author
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Dusemund, F, Albrich, W, Rüegger, K, Bossart, R, Regez, K, Schild, U, Conca, A, Schuetz, P, Sigrist, T, Huber, A, Reutlinger, B, and Müller, B
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The potential impact of biomarker-guided triage decisions for patients with urinary tract infections
- Author
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Litke, A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Reutlinger, B., Mueller, B., Albrich, W., Litke, A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Reutlinger, B., Mueller, B., and Albrich, W.
- Abstract
Objectives: Current guidelines provide limited evidence as to which patients with urinary tract infection (UTI) require hospitalisation. We evaluated the currently used triage routine and tested whether a set of criteria including biomarkers like proadrenomedullin (proADM) and urea have the potential to improve triage decisions. Methods: Consecutive adults with UTI presenting to our emergency department (ED) were recruited and followed for 30days. We defined three virtual triage algorithms, which included either guideline-based clinical criteria, optimised admission proADM or urea levels in addition to a set of clinical criteria. We compared actual treatment sites and observed adverse events based on the physician judgment with the proportion of patients assigned to treatment sites according to the three virtual algorithms. Adverse outcome was defined as transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU), death, recurrence of UTI or rehospitalisation for any reason. Results: We recruited 127 patients (age 61.8±20.8 years; 73.2% females) and analysed the data of 123 patients with a final diagnosis of UTI. Of these 123 patients, 27 (22.0%) were treated as outpatients. Virtual triage based only on clinical signs would have treated only 22 (17.9%) patients as outpatients, with higher proportions of outpatients equally in both biomarker groups (29.3%; p=0.02). There were no significant differences in adverse events between outpatients according to the clinical (4.5%), proADM (2.8%) or urea groups (2.8%). The mean length of stay was 6.6days, including 2.2days after reaching medical stability. Conclusions: Adding biomarkers to clinical criteria has the potential to improve risk-based triage without impairing safety. Current rates of admission and length of stay could be shortened in patients with UTI
- Published
- 2018
12. Which patients with lower respiratory tract infections need to be hospitalized? A perception survey of physicians, nurses, patients and relatives
- Author
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Baechni, C, Meier, S, Spreiter, P, Schild, U, Regez, K, Bossart, R, Thomann, R, Falconnier, C, Christ-Crain, M, De Geest, Sabina, Müller, B, and Schuetz, P for the ProHosp study group
- Subjects
Science & Technology ,ANTIBIOTIC USE ,HOSPITALIZATION ,Respiratory System ,MANAGEMENT ,LOW-RISK PATIENTS ,COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED PNEUMONIA ,PROCALCITONIN-GUIDANCE ,CARE ,CONTROLLED-TRIAL ,GUIDELINES ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,THERAPY - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite recommendations for outpatient management, low risk patients with lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) are often hospitalized. This survey analyzed perceptions of physicians, nurses, patients and relatives about feasibility of outpatient management and required duration of hospital stay. METHODS: We performed a prospective, observational questionnaire survey in hospitalized patients with LRTI as part of a multicenter trial. Treating physicians and nurses, patients and their relatives were asked on admission and before discharge about feasibility of outpatient treatment over 5 dimensions (medical, nursing, organizational factors, and patients' and relatives' preferences) using continuous scales. RESULTS: On admission, 12.6% of physicians, 15.1% of nurses, 18.0% of patients and 5.2% of relatives believed that outpatient treatment would be possible. Before hospital discharge, 31.1% of physicians, 32.2% of nurses, 11.6% of patients and 4.1% of relatives thought that earlier discharge would have been feasible. Medical factors were the most frequently perceived motives for inpatient management. These perceptions were similar in all LRTI subgroups and independent of disease severity and associated expected mortality risks as assessed by the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI). CONCLUSION: Independent of type and severity of respiratory tract infection, the misperceived high severity and expected mortality and morbidity were the predominant reasons why treating physicians, nurses, patients and their relatives unanimously believed that inpatient management was necessary. Better assessment and communication about true expected medical risks might contribute to a pathway to shorten in-hospital days and to introduce a more risk-targeted and individually tailored allocation of health-care resources. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT00350987. ispartof: BMC Pulmonary Medicine vol:10 issue:1 ispartof: location:England status: published
- Published
- 2010
13. Non-Deductive Inference in the Talmud
- Author
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Gabbay, Dov M., Abraham, Michael, Schild, U., Gabbay, Dov M., Abraham, Michael, and Schild, U.
- Published
- 2010
14. Analysis of the Talmudic Argumentum A Fortiori Inference Rule (Kal-Vachomer) using Matrix Abduction
- Author
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Abraham, Michael, Gabbay, Dov M., Schild, U., Abraham, Michael, Gabbay, Dov M., and Schild, U.
- Abstract
We motivate and introduce a new method of abduction, Matrix Abduction, and apply it to modelling the use of non-deductive inferences in the Talmud such as Ana- logy and the rule of Argumentum A Fortiori. Given a matrix A with entries in {0,1},we allow for one or more blank squares in the matrix, say ai,j=?. The method allows us to decide whether to declare ai,j=0 or ai,j=1 or ai,j=? undecided. This algorithmic method is then applied to modelling several legal and practical reasoning situations including the Talmudic rule of Kal-Vachomer. We add an Appendix showing that this new rule of Matrix Abduction, arising from the Talmud, can also be applied to the analysis of paradoxes in voting and judgement aggregation. In fact we have here a general method for executing non-deductive inferences.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Optimised patient transfer using an innovative multidisciplinary assessment in Kanton Aargau (OPTIMA I) - an observational survey in lower respiratory tract infections
- Author
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Albrich, WC, primary, Rüegger, K, additional, Dusemund, F, additional, Bossart, R, additional, Regez, K, additional, Schild, U, additional, Conca, A, additional, Schuetz, P, additional, Sigrist, T, additional, Huber, A, additional, Reutlinger, B, additional, and Müller, B, additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Effect of procalcitonin-based guidelines compared with standard guidelines on antibiotic use in lower respiratory tract infections: the randomized-controlled multicenter ProHOSP trial
- Author
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Schuetz, P, primary, Christ-Crain, M, additional, Thomann, R, additional, Falconnier, C, additional, Wolbers, M, additional, Widmer, I, additional, Neidet, S, additional, Blum, C, additional, Fricker, T, additional, Schild, U, additional, Regez, K, additional, Schoenenberger, R, additional, Henzen, C, additional, Bregenzer, T, additional, Krausse, M, additional, Hoess, C, additional, Bucher, H, additional, Zimmerli, W, additional, and Mueller, B, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Sinnvolle Anwendung endokrinologischer Tests
- Author
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ChristCrain, M, primary, Schild, U, additional, and Müller, B, additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Focusing of Aerosols into a Particle Beam at Pressures from 10 to 150 Torr
- Author
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Schreiner, J., primary, Schild, U., additional, Voigt, C., additional, and Mauersberger, K., additional
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Screening by Social Workers in Medical Patients with Risk of Post-Acute Care Needs: A Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomized Trial / Evaluation eines Screenings durch Sozialarbeiter bei medizinischen Patienten mit einem Risiko für post-akuten Nachsorgebedarf: eine stepped wedge clusterrandomisierte Studie
- Author
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Conca Antoinette, Ebrahim Doaa, Noack Sandra, Gabele Angela, Weber Helen, Prins Mehrnaz, Keller Anja, Hari Mariann, Engel Angela, Regez Katharina, Schild Ursula, Schuetz Philipp, Müller Beat, Haubitz Sebastian, Kutz Alexander, Huber Andreas, Faessler Lukas, and Schäfer-Keller Petra
- Subjects
screening by social workers ,post-acute care discharge score ,discharge planning ,social worker notification ,self-referral ,stepped wedge ,screening durch sozialarbeiter ,nachsorgebedarf ,austrittsmanagement ,sozialdienst-anmeldung ,selbst-zuweisung ,stepped-wedge-design ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Elderly patients often need post-acute care after hospital discharge. Involvement of social workers can positively affect the discharge planning process.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Computer-Assisted Densitometric Image Analysis of Digital Subtraction Images: In Vivo Error of the Method and Effect of Thresholding
- Author
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Brägger, U., primary, Bürgin, W., additional, Fourmousis, I., additional, Schmid, G., additional, Schild, U., additional, and Lang, N.P., additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Statistical information systems for sentencing: a cookbook
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Schild, U., primary
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Effect of chlorhexidine (0.12%) rinses on periodontal tissue healing after tooth extraction
- Author
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Brägger, U., primary, Schild, U., additional, and Lang, N. P., additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Effect of chlorhexidine (0.12%) rinses on periodontal tissue healing after tooth extraction
- Author
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Lang, N. P., primary, Schild, U., additional, and Brägger, U., additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Effectiveness and Safety of Procalcitonin-Guided Antibiotic Therapy in Lower Respiratory Tract Infections in 'Real Life': An International, Multicenter Poststudy Survey (ProREAL)
- Author
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Albrich WC, Dusemund F, Bucher B, Meyer S, Thomann R, Kühn F, Bassetti S, Sprenger M, Bachli E, Sigrist T, Schwietert M, Amin D, Hausfater P, Carre E, Gaillat J, Schuetz P, Regez K, Bossart R, Schild U, and Mueller B
- Published
- 2012
25. Effect of procalcitonin-based guidelines vs standard guidelines on antibiotic use in lower respiratory tract infections: the ProHOSP randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Schuetz P, Christ-Crain M, Thomann R, Falconnier C, Wolbers M, Widmer I, Neidert S, Fricker T, Blum C, Schild U, Regez K, Schoenenberger R, Henzen C, Bregenzer T, Hoess C, Krause M, Bucher HC, Zimmerli W, Mueller B, and ProHOSP Study Group
- Abstract
Context: In previous smaller trials, a procalcitonin (PCT) algorithm reduced antibiotic use in patients with lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs).Objective: To examine whether a PCT algorithm can reduce antibiotic exposure without increasing the risk for serious adverse outcomes.Design, Setting, and Patients: A multicenter, noninferiority, randomized controlled trial in emergency departments of 6 tertiary care hospitals in Switzerland with an open intervention of 1359 patients with mostly severe LRTIs randomized between October 2006 and March 2008.Intervention: Patients were randomized to administration of antibiotics based on a PCT algorithm with predefined cutoff ranges for initiating or stopping antibiotics (PCT group) or according to standard guidelines (control group). Serum PCT was measured locally in each hospital and instructions were Web-based.Main Outcome Measures: Noninferiority of the composite adverse outcomes of death, intensive care unit admission, disease-specific complications, or recurrent infection requiring antibiotic treatment within 30 days, with a predefined noninferiority boundary of 7.5%; and antibiotic exposure and adverse effects from antibiotics.Results: The rate of overall adverse outcomes was similar in the PCT and control groups (15.4% [n = 103] vs 18.9% [n = 130]; difference, -3.5%; 95% CI, -7.6% to 0.4%). The mean duration of antibiotics exposure in the PCT vs control groups was lower in all patients (5.7 vs 8.7 days; relative change, -34.8%; 95% CI, -40.3% to -28.7%) and in the subgroups of patients with community-acquired pneumonia (n = 925, 7.2 vs 10.7 days; -32.4%; 95% CI, -37.6% to -26.9%), exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (n = 228, 2.5 vs 5.1 days; -50.4%; 95% CI, -64.0% to -34.0%), and acute bronchitis (n = 151, 1.0 vs 2.8 days; -65.0%; 95% CI, -84.7% to -37.5%). Antibiotic-associated adverse effects were less frequent in the PCT group (19.8% [n = 133] vs 28.1% [n = 193]; difference, -8.2%; 95% CI, -12.7% to -3.7%).Conclusion: In patients with LRTIs, a strategy of PCT guidance compared with standard guidelines resulted in similar rates of adverse outcomes, as well as lower rates of antibiotic exposure and antibiotic-associated adverse effects.Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN95122877. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Effect of chlorhexidine (0.12%) rinses on periodontal tissue after tooth extraction: (II). Radiographic parameters.
- Author
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Brägger, U., Schild, U., and Lang, N. P.
- Subjects
- *
CHLORHEXIDINE , *DISINFECTION & disinfectants , *DENTAL radiography , *DENSITOMETRY , *OPTICAL measurements , *GINGIVA - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to assess the influence of a I-month period of chlorhexidine digluconate (CHX) rinses on the remodelling activity of periodontal tissues adjacent to an extraction wound. From 12 patients assigned to the test group rinsing 2 x daily with 15 ml of 0.12% CHX solution (Peridex®) starting 2 days after tooth extraction and from 11 patients assigned to the control group rinsing with a placebo solution, standardized radiographs were available taken immediately after tooth extraction and 1, 2, 3 and 6 months thereafter. Computer assisted densitometric image analysis (CADIA) was applied in order to quantify changes in density during the healing phase after tooth extraction. Regions of interest (ROl) were chosen for CADIA covering supracrestal periodontal soft tissue adjacent to the extraction wound. ROIs were also defined on crestal alveolar bone adjacent to the extraction wound. In the active group, 15/20 sites demonstrated an increase in alveolar bone density between months 1 and 6 (mean CADIA value 6.7±10.0), whereas in the control group 11/21 sites demonstrated a loss in density (mean CADIA values - 1.4 ± 10.5). Similar observations were made when the ROIs covering supracrestal periodontal tissues were analyzed (mean CADIA values 7.8 ± 8.4 for the experimental group and -0.3 ± 10.5 for the control group). These differences were statistically significant (p <0.04). The digitized series of standardized radiographs were also evaluated for changes in bone height. The distances from the alveolar bone crest to reference points were measured in mm within the baseline: the 1, 2, 3 and 6 month radiographs. Whereas the control group rinsing with a placebo solution lost almost 1 mm of bone height over 6 months after tooth extraction, it was obvious that in the patients rinsing with the CHX solution, the crestal alveolar bone level was maintained. It was concluded that the administration of 0.12% chlorhexidine rinses for 1 month following tooth extraction resulted in a beneficial healing effect on the periodontal conditions of teeth adjacent to the extraction site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Origin and Forms of Drama in the East African Context
- Author
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Schipper, Mineke and Schild U.
- Published
- 1980
28. The potential impact of biomarker-guided triage decisions for patients with urinary tract infections
- Author
-
Litke, A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Reutlinger, B., Mueller, B., Albrich, W., Litke, A., Bossart, R., Regez, K., Schild, U., Guglielmetti, M., Conca, A., Schäfer, P., Reutlinger, B., Mueller, B., and Albrich, W.
- Abstract
Objectives: Current guidelines provide limited evidence as to which patients with urinary tract infection (UTI) require hospitalisation. We evaluated the currently used triage routine and tested whether a set of criteria including biomarkers like proadrenomedullin (proADM) and urea have the potential to improve triage decisions. Methods: Consecutive adults with UTI presenting to our emergency department (ED) were recruited and followed for 30days. We defined three virtual triage algorithms, which included either guideline-based clinical criteria, optimised admission proADM or urea levels in addition to a set of clinical criteria. We compared actual treatment sites and observed adverse events based on the physician judgment with the proportion of patients assigned to treatment sites according to the three virtual algorithms. Adverse outcome was defined as transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU), death, recurrence of UTI or rehospitalisation for any reason. Results: We recruited 127 patients (age 61.8±20.8 years; 73.2% females) and analysed the data of 123 patients with a final diagnosis of UTI. Of these 123 patients, 27 (22.0%) were treated as outpatients. Virtual triage based only on clinical signs would have treated only 22 (17.9%) patients as outpatients, with higher proportions of outpatients equally in both biomarker groups (29.3%; p=0.02). There were no significant differences in adverse events between outpatients according to the clinical (4.5%), proADM (2.8%) or urea groups (2.8%). The mean length of stay was 6.6days, including 2.2days after reaching medical stability. Conclusions: Adding biomarkers to clinical criteria has the potential to improve risk-based triage without impairing safety. Current rates of admission and length of stay could be shortened in patients with UTI
29. Which patients with lower respiratory tract infections need inpatient treatment? Perceptions of physicians, nurses, patients and relatives
- Author
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Falconnier Claudine, Thomann Robert, Bossart Rita, Regez Katharina, Schild Ursula, Spreiter Pamela, Meier Sabine, Baehni Claudia, Christ-Crain Mirjam, De Geest Sabina, Müller Beat, and Schuetz Philipp
- Subjects
Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Despite recommendations for outpatient management, low risk patients with lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) are often hospitalized. This survey analyzed perceptions of physicians, nurses, patients and relatives about feasibility of outpatient management and required duration of hospital stay. Methods We performed a prospective, observational questionnaire survey in hospitalized patients with LRTI as part of a multicenter trial. Treating physicians and nurses, patients and their relatives were asked on admission and before discharge about feasibility of outpatient treatment over 5 dimensions (medical, nursing, organizational factors, and patients' and relatives' preferences) using continuous scales. Results On admission, 12.6% of physicians, 15.1% of nurses, 18.0% of patients and 5.2% of relatives believed that outpatient treatment would be possible. Before hospital discharge, 31.1% of physicians, 32.2% of nurses, 11.6% of patients and 4.1% of relatives thought that earlier discharge would have been feasible. Medical factors were the most frequently perceived motives for inpatient management. These perceptions were similar in all LRTI subgroups and independent of disease severity and associated expected mortality risks as assessed by the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI). Conclusion Independent of type and severity of respiratory tract infection, the misperceived high severity and expected mortality and morbidity were the predominant reasons why treating physicians, nurses, patients and their relatives unanimously believed that inpatient management was necessary. Better assessment and communication about true expected medical risks might contribute to a pathway to shorten in-hospital days and to introduce a more risk-targeted and individually tailored allocation of health-care resources. Trial Registration NCT00350987
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Effect of a 14-day course of systemic corticosteroids on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-axis in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Author
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Nusbaumer Charly, Baty Florent, Facompre Michael, Süess Erika, Schild Ursula, Christ-Crain Mirjam, Schuetz Philipp, Brutsche Martin, and Müller Beat
- Subjects
Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Background As supra-physiological intake of corticosteroids is a well known risk factor for the development of adrenal insufficiency, we investigated the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis during a 14-day course of systemic corticosteroids in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease using clinical and laboratory measures. Methods A systematic clinical and laboratory assessment including measurement of basal cortisol levels and the response to low dose (1 μg) ACTH stimulation was performed in nine patients before, on the first and the last day of treatment, as well as 2, 7 and 21 days after corticosteroid withdrawal. Results At baseline, all nine patients had normal responses to 1 μg ACTH. On the first day of steroid treatment, 78% had a blunted peak cortisol response. This percentage increased to 89% after 14 days of steroid treatment. 78%, 33% and 33% of the patients had a blunted cortisol response to ACTH 2, 7, and 21 days after corticosteroid withdrawal, respectively. ROC curve analysis revealed that only basal cortisol concentrations (AUC 0.89), but not ACTH concentrations (AUC 0.49) or clinical signs (AUC 0.47) were predictive of an impaired function of the HPA axis. Basal cortisol levels of > 400 and < 150 nmol/l were 96% and 100% sensitive for a normal or pathological response to the ACTH stimulation test, respectively. Conclusion Immediate and prolonged suppression of the HPA axis is a common finding in otherwise asymptomatic patients undergoing systemic steroid treatment for acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and can reliably be assessed with the low-dose ACTH test.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Procalcitonin guided antibiotic therapy and hospitalization in patients with lower respiratory tract infections: a prospective, multicenter, randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Henzen Christoph, Schönenberger Ronald, Blum Claudine A, Neidert Stefanie, Widmer Isabelle, Falconnier Claudine, Thomann Robert, Schild Ursula, Wolbers Marcel, Christ-Crain Mirjam, Schuetz Philipp, Bregenzer Thomas, Hoess Claus, Krause Martin, Bucher Heiner C, Zimmerli Werner, and Müller Beat
- Subjects
Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background: Lower respiratory tract infections like acute bronchitis, exacerbated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and community-acquired pneumonia are often unnecessarily treated with antibiotics, mainly because of physicians' difficulties to distinguish viral from bacterial cause and to estimate disease-severity. The goal of this trial is to compare medical outcomes, use of antibiotics and hospital resources in a strategy based on enforced evidence-based guidelines versus procalcitonin guided antibiotic therapy in patients with lower respiratory tract infections. Methods and design: We describe a prospective randomized controlled non-inferiority trial with an open intervention. We aim to randomize over a fixed recruitment period of 18 months a minimal number of 1002 patients from 6 hospitals in Switzerland. Patients must be >18 years of age with a lower respiratory tract infections Discussion: Use of and prolonged exposure to antibiotics in lower respiratory tract infections is high. The proposed trial investigates whether procalcitonin-guidance may safely reduce antibiotic consumption along with reductions in hospitalization costs and antibiotic resistance. It will additionally generate insights for improved prognostic assessment of patients with lower respiratory tract infections. Trial registration: ISRCTN95122877
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Effect of a 14-day course of systemic corticosteroids on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-axis in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
- Author
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Schuetz P, Christ-Crain M, Schild U, Süess E, Facompre M, Baty F, Nusbaumer C, Brutsche M, Müller B, Schuetz, Philipp, Christ-Crain, Mirjam, Schild, Ursula, Süess, Erika, Facompre, Michael, Baty, Florent, Nusbaumer, Charly, Brutsche, Martin, and Müller, Beat
- Abstract
Background: As supra-physiological intake of corticosteroids is a well known risk factor for the development of adrenal insufficiency, we investigated the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis during a 14-day course of systemic corticosteroids in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease using clinical and laboratory measures.Methods: A systematic clinical and laboratory assessment including measurement of basal cortisol levels and the response to low dose (1 mug) ACTH stimulation was performed in nine patients before, on the first and the last day of treatment, as well as 2, 7 and 21 days after corticosteroid withdrawal.Results: At baseline, all nine patients had normal responses to 1 mug ACTH. On the first day of steroid treatment, 78% had a blunted peak cortisol response. This percentage increased to 89% after 14 days of steroid treatment. 78%, 33% and 33% of the patients had a blunted cortisol response to ACTH 2, 7, and 21 days after corticosteroid withdrawal, respectively. ROC curve analysis revealed that only basal cortisol concentrations (AUC 0.89), but not ACTH concentrations (AUC 0.49) or clinical signs (AUC 0.47) were predictive of an impaired function of the HPA axis. Basal cortisol levels of > 400 and < 150 nmol/l were 96% and 100% sensitive for a normal or pathological response to the ACTH stimulation test, respectively.Conclusion: Immediate and prolonged suppression of the HPA axis is a common finding in otherwise asymptomatic patients undergoing systemic steroid treatment for acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and can reliably be assessed with the low-dose ACTH test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Child and adolescent psychiatry staff's knowledge on pain management.
- Author
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Geremek A, Ruby L, Lindner C, Niederberger U, Schild U, Jung M, Soyka O, and Siniatchkin M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Child, Clinical Competence, Adolescent Psychiatry, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Attitude of Health Personnel, Pain Management methods, Chronic Pain
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the level of child and adolescent psychiatric staff's knowledge regarding pain management, to determine group differences between the medically more educated (physicians, nurses) and the less educated (psychologists, educators, special therapists) and to investigate the influence of gender, age, or professional experience as well as staff's own pain experiences., Methods: A total of 193 staff members from different professional backgrounds from three independent child and adolescent psychiatry clinics in Northern Germany were tested using the German version of the Pediatric Nurses' Knowledge and Attitudes Survey Regarding Pain Shriner's revision (PNKAS-Sr)., Results: In total, the staff scored correctly 66% of the inventory questions. There was no difference between medically more educated and less educated staff members regarding the knowledge of pain management. The main factors influencing PNKAS score were age, profession, and pain education training., Conclusions: Although chronic pain is not one of the main aspects of continuing education in child and adolescent psychiatry, the resulting level of knowledge was comparable to results of similar surveys with paediatric staffs. Nevertheless, further education is needed to enhance knowledge and understanding of children's pain in child psychiatry staff in order to professionally treat patients with chronic somatic and mental illnesses.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. No Evidence of Robust Noun-Referent Associations in German-Learning 6- to 14-Month-Olds.
- Author
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Steil JN, Friedrich CK, and Schild U
- Abstract
Work with the looking-while-listening (LWL-) paradigm suggested that 6-month-old English-learning infants associated several labels for common nouns with pictures of their referents: While one distractor picture was present, infants systematically fixated the named target picture. However, recent work revealed constraints of infants' noun comprehension. The age at which these abilities can be obtained appears to relate to the infants' familiarity with the talker, the target language, and word frequency differences in target-distractor pairs. Here, we present further data to this newly established field of research. We tested 42 monolingual German-learning infants aged 6-14 months by means of the LWL-paradigm. Infants saw two pictures side-by-side on a screen, whilst an unfamiliar male talker named one of both. Overall, infants did not fixate the target picture more than the distractor picture. In line with previous results, infants' performance on the task was higher when target and distractor differed within their word frequency-as operationalized by the parental rating of word exposure. Together, our results add further evidence for constraints on early word learning. They point to cross-linguistic differences in early word learning and strengthen the view that infants might use extra-linguistic cues within the stimulus pairing, such as frequency imbalance, to disambiguate between two potential referents., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Steil, Friedrich and Schild.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Phonemic Training Modulates Early Speech Processing in Pre-reading Children.
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Bauch A, Friedrich CK, and Schild U
- Abstract
Phonemic awareness and rudimentary grapheme knowledge concurrently develop in pre-school age. In a training study, we tried to disentangle the role of both precursor functions of reading for spoken word recognition. Two groups of children exercised with phonemic materials, but only one of both groups learnt corresponding letters to trained phonemes. A control group exercised finger-number associations (non-linguistic training). After the training, we tested how sensitive children were to prime-target variation in word onset priming. A group of young adults took part in the same experiment to provide data from experienced readers. While decision latencies to the targets suggested fine-grained spoken word processing in all groups, event-related potentials (ERPs) indicated that both phonemic training groups processed phonemic variation in more detail than the non-linguistic training group and young adults at early stages of speech processing. Our results indicate temporal plasticity of implicit speech processing in pre-school age as a function of explicit phonemic training., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Bauch, Friedrich and Schild.)
- Published
- 2021
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36. A Finger-Based Numerical Training Failed to Improve Arithmetic Skills in Kindergarten Children Beyond Effects of an Active Non-numerical Control Training.
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Schild U, Bauch A, and Nuerk HC
- Abstract
It is widely accepted that finger and number representations are associated: many correlations (including longitudinal ones) between finger gnosis/counting and numerical/arithmetical abilities have been reported. However, such correlations do not necessarily imply causal influence of early finger-number training; even in longitudinal designs, mediating variables may be underlying such correlations. Therefore, we investigated whether there may be a causal relation by means of an extensive experimental intervention in which the impact of finger-number training on initial arithmetic skills was tested in kindergarteners to see whether they benefit from the intervention even before they start formal schooling. The experimental group received 50 training sessions altogether for 10 weeks on a daily basis. A control group received phonology training of a similar duration and intensity. All children improved in the arithmetic tasks. To our surprise and contrary to most accounts in the literature, the improvement shown by the experimental training group was not superior to that of the active control group. We discuss conceptual and methodological reasons why the finger-number training employed in this study did not increase the initial arithmetic skills beyond the unspecific effects of the control intervention., (Copyright © 2020 Schild, Bauch and Nuerk.)
- Published
- 2020
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37. Integrative hospital treatment in older patients to benchmark and improve outcome and length of stay - the In-HospiTOOL study.
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Kutz A, Koch D, Conca A, Baechli C, Haubitz S, Regez K, Schild U, Caldara Z, Ebrahimi F, Bassetti S, Eckstein J, Beer J, Egloff M, Kaplan V, Ehmann T, Hoess C, Schaad H, Wagner U, de Geest S, Schuetz P, and Mueller B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Humans, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Clinical Trials as Topic, Comparative Effectiveness Research, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated standards, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Interprofessional Relations, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Patient Discharge standards, Patient Readmission standards, Patient Transfer standards, Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic, Prospective Studies, Quality of Health Care, Resource Allocation, Benchmarking standards, Multiple Chronic Conditions therapy
- Abstract
Background: A comprehensive in-hospital patient management with reasonable and economic resource allocation is arguably the major challenge of health-care systems worldwide, especially in elderly, frail, and polymorbid patients. The need for patient management tools to improve the transition process and allocation of health care resources in routine clinical care particularly for the inpatient setting is obvious. To address these issues, a large prospective trial is warranted., Methods: The "Integrative Hospital Treatment in Older patients to benchmark and improve Outcome and Length of stay" (In-HospiTOOL) study is an investigator-initiated, multicenter effectiveness trial to compare the effects of a novel in-hospital management tool on length of hospital stay, readmission rate, quality of care, and other clinical outcomes using a time-series model. The study aims to include approximately 35`000 polymorbid medical patients over an 18-month period, divided in an observation, implementation, and intervention phase. Detailed data on treatment and outcome of polymorbid medical patients during the in-hospital stay and after 30 days will be gathered to investigate differences in resource use, inter-professional collaborations and to establish representative benchmarking data to promote measurement and display of quality of care data across seven Swiss hospitals. The trial will inform whether the "In-HospiTOOL" optimizes inter-professional collaboration and thereby reduces length of hospital stay without harming subjective and objective patient-oriented outcome markers., Discussion: Many of the current quality-mirroring tools do not reflect the real need and use of resources, especially in polymorbid and elderly patients. In addition, a validated tool for optimization of patient transition and discharge processes is still missing. The proposed multicenter effectiveness trial has potential to improve interprofessional collaboration and optimizes resource allocation from hospital admission to discharge. The results will enable inter-hospital comparison of transition processes and accomplish a benchmarking for inpatient care quality.
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- 2019
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38. Time and distance estimation in children using an egocentric navigation task.
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Thurley K and Schild U
- Subjects
- Acceleration, Adult, Age Factors, Child, Egocentrism, Female, Humans, Male, Motor Skills, Movement physiology, Time Factors, Young Adult, Distance Perception physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Self Concept, Spatial Navigation physiology, Virtual Reality
- Abstract
Navigation crucially depends on the capability to estimate time elapsed and distance covered during movement. From adults it is known that magnitude estimation is subject to characteristic biases. Most intriguing is the regression effect (central tendency), whose strength depends on the stimulus distribution (i.e. stimulus range), a second characteristic of magnitude estimation known as range effect. We examined regression and range effects for time and distance estimation in eleven-year-olds and young adults, using an egocentric virtual navigation task. Regression effects were stronger for distance compared to time and depended on stimulus range. These effects were more pronounced in children compared to adults due to a more heterogeneous performance among the children. Few children showed veridical estimations similar to adults; most children, however, performed less accurate displaying stronger regression effects. Our findings suggest that children use magnitude processing strategies similar to adults, but it seems that these are not yet fully developed in all eleven-year-olds and are further refined throughout adolescence.
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- 2018
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39. ERP evidence for implicit L2 word stress knowledge in listeners of a fixed-stress language.
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Kóbor A, Honbolygó F, Becker ABC, Schild U, Csépe V, and Friedrich CK
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- Adolescent, Adult, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Evoked Potentials physiology, Multilingualism, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Psycholinguistics, Reading, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Languages with contrastive stress, such as English or German, distinguish some words only via the stress status of their syllables, such as "CONtent" and "conTENT" (capitals indicate a stressed syllable). Listeners with a fixed-stress native language, such as Hungarian, have difficulties in explicitly discriminating variation of the stress position in a second language (L2). However, Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) indicate that Hungarian listeners implicitly notice variation from their native fixed-stress pattern. Here we used ERPs to investigate Hungarian listeners' implicit L2 processing. In a cross-modal word fragment priming experiment, we presented spoken stressed and unstressed German word onsets (primes) followed by printed versions of initially stressed and initially unstressed German words (targets). ERPs reflected stress priming exerted by both prime types. This indicates that Hungarian listeners implicitly linked German words with the stress status of the primes. Thus, the formerly described explicit stress discrimination difficulty associated with a fixed-stress native language does not generalize to implicit aspects of L2 word stress processing., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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40. What determines the speed of speech recognition? Evidence from congenitally blind adults.
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Schild U and Friedrich CK
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Comprehension physiology, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Blindness physiopathology, Brain physiopathology, Reaction Time physiology, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Speech physiology, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
It is a matter of debate, whether and how improved auditory discrimination abilities enable speeded speech comprehension in congenitally blind adults. Previous research has concentrated on semantic and syntactic aspects of processing. Here we investigated phonologically mediated spoken word access processes by means of word onset priming. Blind adults and age- and gender-matched sighted adults listened to spoken word onsets (primes) followed by complete words (targets). Phonological overlap between primes and targets varied. Blind participants made faster lexical decision responses than sighted participants, yet their speeded responses were not restricted to phonologically overlapping trials. Furthermore, timing of Event Related Potential (ERP) results did not differ between blind and sighted participants. Together these results suggest that blind and sighted listeners are equally fast in implicit phonological encoding and lexical matching mechanisms. It appears that blind adults' speeded speech processing emerges when phonological analysis makes promising word candidates available for further processing. As one possible interpretation, we speculate that lexical selection processes in blind adults do not need to wait for information from the visual domain, while auditory-visual integration mechanisms are mandatorily implemented in speech recognition routines of sighted adults., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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41. Tracking independence and merging of prosodic and phonemic processing across infancy.
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Becker A, Schild U, and Friedrich CK
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child Development physiology, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Infant, Speech, Phonetics, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Recent evidence suggests division of labor in phonological analysis underlying speech recognition. Adults and children appear to decompose the speech stream into phoneme-relevant information and into syllable stress. Here we investigate whether both speech processing streams develop from a common path in infancy, or whether there are two separate streams from early on. We presented stressed and unstressed syllables (spoken primes) followed by initially stressed early learned disyllabic German words (spoken targets). Stress overlap and phoneme overlap between the primes and the initial syllable of the targets varied orthogonally. We tested infants 3, 6 and 9 months after birth. Event-related potentials (ERPs) revealed stress priming without phoneme priming in the 3-month-olds; phoneme priming without stress priming in the 6-month-olds; and phoneme priming, stress priming as well as an interaction of both in 9-month-olds. In general the present findings reveal that infants start with separate processing streams related to syllable stress and to phoneme-relevant information; and that they need to learn to merge both aspects of speech processing. In particular the present results suggest (i) that phoneme-free prosodic processing dominates in early infancy; (ii) that prosody-free phoneme processing dominates in middle infancy; and (iii) that both types of processing are operating in parallel and can be merged in late infancy., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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42. Prediction of post-acute care demand in medical and neurological inpatients: diagnostic assessment of the post-acute discharge score - a prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Conca A, Gabele A, Reutlinger B, Schuetz P, Kutz A, Haubitz S, Faessler L, Batschwaroff M, Schild U, Caldara Z, Regez K, Schirlo S, Vossler G, Kahles T, Nedeltchev K, Keller A, Huber A, De Geest S, Buergi U, Tobias P, Louis Simonet M, Mueller B, and Schäfer-Keller P
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Risk Assessment, Health Services Needs and Demand statistics & numerical data, Inpatients, Nervous System Diseases, Subacute Care
- Abstract
Background: Early identification of patients requiring transfer to post-acute care (PAC) facilities shortens hospital stays. With a focus on interprofessional assessment of biopsychosocial risk, this study's aim was to assess medical and neurological patients' post-acute care discharge (PACD) scores on days 1 and 3 after hospital admission regarding diagnostic accuracy and effectiveness as an early screening tool. The transfer to PAC facilities served as the outcome ("gold standard")., Methods: In this prospective cohort study, registered at ClinicalTrial.gov (NCT01768494) on January 2013, 1432 medical and 464 neurological patients (total n = 1896) were included consecutively between February and October 2013. PACD scores and other relevant data were extracted from electronic records of patient admissions, hospital stays, and interviews at day 30 post-hospital admission. To gauge the scores' accuracy, we plotted receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, calculated area under the curve (AUC), and determined sensitivity and specificity at various cut-off levels., Results: Medical patients' day 1 and day 3 PACD scores accurately predicted discharge to PAC facilities, with respective discriminating powers (AUC) of 0.77 and 0.82. With a PACD cut-off of ≥8 points, day 1 and 3 sensitivities were respectively 72.6% and 83.6%, with respective specificities of 66.5% and 70.0%. Neurological patients' scores showed lower accuracy both days: using the same cut-off, respective day 1 and day 3 AUCs were 0.68 and 0.78, sensitivities 41.4% and 68.7% and specificities 81.4% and 83.4%., Conclusion: PACD scores at days 1 and 3 accurately predicted transfer to PAC facilities, especially in medical patients on day 3. To confirm and refine these results, PACD scores' value to guide discharge planning interventions and subsequent impact on hospital stay warrants further investigation., Trial Registration: ClinialTrials.gov Identifier, NCT01768494 .
- Published
- 2018
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43. Procalcitonin and pyuria-based algorithm reduces antibiotic use in urinary tract infections: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Drozdov D, Schwarz S, Kutz A, Grolimund E, Rast AC, Steiner D, Regez K, Schild U, Guglielmetti M, Conca A, Reutlinger B, Ottiger C, Buchkremer F, Haubitz S, Blum C, Huber A, Buergi U, Schuetz P, Bock A, Fux CA, Mueller B, and Albrich WC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biomarkers analysis, Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Switzerland, Algorithms, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Calcitonin analysis, Protein Precursors analysis, Pyuria, Urinary Tract Infections drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are common drivers of antibiotic use. The minimal effective duration of antibiotic therapy for UTIs is unknown, but any reduction is important to diminish selection pressure for antibiotic resistance, costs, and drug-related side-effects. The aim of this study was to investigate whether an algorithm based on procalcitonin (PCT) and quantitative pyuria reduces antibiotic exposure., Methods: From April 2012 to March 2014, we conducted a factorial design randomized controlled open-label trial. Immunocompetent adults with community-acquired non-catheter-related UTI were enrolled in the emergency department of a tertiary-care 600-bed hospital in northwestern Switzerland. Clinical presentation was used to guide initiation and duration of antibiotic therapy according to current guidelines (control group) or with a PCT-pyuria-based algorithm (PCT-pyuria group). The primary endpoint was overall antibiotic exposure within 90 days. Secondary endpoints included duration of the initial antibiotic therapy, persistent infection 7 days after end of therapy and 30 days after enrollment, recurrence and rehospitalizations within 90 days., Results: Overall, 394 patients were screened, 228 met predefined exclusion criteria, 30 declined to participate, and 11 were not eligible. Of these, 125 (76% women) were enrolled in the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis and 96 patients with microbiologically confirmed UTI constituted the per protocol group; 84 of 125 (67%) patients had a febrile UTI, 28 (22%) had bacteremia, 5 (4%) died, and 3 (2%) were lost to follow-up. Overall antibiotic exposure within 90 days was shorter in the PCT-pyuria group than in the control group (median 7.0 [IQR, 5.0-14.0] vs. 10.0 [IQR, 7.0-16.0] days, P = 0.011) in the ITT analysis. Mortality, rates of persistent infections, recurrences, and rehospitalizations were not different., Conclusions: A PCT-pyuria-based algorithm reduced antibiotic exposure by 30% when compared to current guidelines without apparent negative effects on clinical outcomes.
- Published
- 2015
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44. How space-number associations may be created in preliterate children: six distinct mechanisms.
- Author
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Nuerk HC, Patro K, Cress U, Schild U, Friedrich CK, and Göbel SM
- Abstract
The directionality of space-number association (SNA) is shaped by cultural experiences. It usually follows the culturally dominant reading direction. Smaller numbers are generally associated with the starting side for reading (left side in Western cultures), while larger numbers are associated with the right endpoint side. However, SNAs consistent with cultural reading directions are present before children can actually read and write. Therefore, these SNAs cannot only be shaped by the direction of children's own reading/writing behavior. We propose six distinct processes - one biological and five cultural/educational - underlying directional SNAs before formal reading acquisition: (i) Brain lateralization, (ii) Monitoring adult reading behavior, (iii) Pretend reading and writing, and rudimentary reading and writing skills, (iv) Dominant attentional directional preferences in a society, not directly related to reading direction, (v) Direct spatial-numerical learning, (vi) Other spatial-directional processes independent of reading direction. In this mini-review, we will differentiate between these processes, elaborate when in development they might emerge, discuss how they may create the SNAs observed in preliterate children and propose how they can be studied in the future.
- Published
- 2015
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45. Phoneme-free prosodic representations are involved in pre-lexical and lexical neurobiological mechanisms underlying spoken word processing.
- Author
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Schild U, Becker AB, and Friedrich CK
- Subjects
- Adult, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Language, Male, Middle Aged, Reaction Time, Repetition Priming physiology, Semantics, Speech Acoustics, Young Adult, Evoked Potentials, Phonetics, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Recently we reported that spoken stressed and unstressed primes differently modulate Event Related Potentials (ERPs) of spoken initially stressed targets. ERP stress priming was independent of prime-target phoneme overlap. Here we test whether phoneme-free ERP stress priming involves the lexicon. We used German target words with the same onset phonemes but different onset stress, such as MANdel ("almond") and manDAT ("mandate"; capital letters indicate stress). First syllables of those words served as primes. We orthogonally varied prime-target overlap in stress and phonemes. ERP stress priming did neither interact with phoneme priming nor with the stress pattern of the targets. However, polarity of ERP stress priming was reversed to that previously obtained. The present results are evidence for phoneme-free prosodic processing at the lexical level. Together with the previous results they reveal that phoneme-free prosodic representations at the pre-lexical and lexical level are recruited by neurobiological spoken word recognition., (Copyright © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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46. ERP correlates of word onset priming in infants and young children.
- Author
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Becker AB, Schild U, and Friedrich CK
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Preschool, Decision Making, Female, Germany, Humans, Infant, Male, Reaction Time, Time Factors, Young Adult, Evoked Potentials, Phonetics, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Using word onset priming with early learned words, we tracked access to phonological representations and predictive phonological processing at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months after birth. Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants heard German word onsets (primes) followed by disyllabic spoken words (targets). Primes and target onsets were either congruent or incongruent (ma - Mama vs. so - Mama [Engl. 'mommy']). For an adult control group, ERP differences were found for the N100 complex, which has been related to abstract auditory analysis; and for the P350 deflection, which has been related to lexical access. A combined analysis of all infants and young children revealed an immature instance of an N100 effect, suggesting adult-like abstract speech sound processing. A central negativity effect, which had formerly been obtained when adults or older children were engaged in a lexical decision task, suggests that adult-like predictive phonological processing is available early in infancy. However, the absence of a P350-like effect in the infant data suggests that adult-like access to phonological forms is not established in the first two years of life. Taken together, ERPs recorded in word onset priming proved useful in investigating early phonological processing without an explicit behavioral measure., (Copyright © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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47. Processing of syllable stress is functionally different from phoneme processing and does not profit from literacy acquisition.
- Author
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Schild U, Becker AB, and Friedrich CK
- Abstract
Speech is characterized by phonemes and prosody. Neurocognitive evidence supports the separate processing of each type of information. Therefore, one might suggest individual development of both pathways. In this study, we examine literacy acquisition in middle childhood. Children become aware of the phonemes in speech at that time and refine phoneme processing when they acquire an alphabetic writing system. We test whether an enhanced sensitivity to phonemes in middle childhood extends to other aspects of the speech signal, such as prosody. To investigate prosodic processing, we used stress priming. Spoken stressed and unstressed syllables (primes) preceded spoken German words with stress on the first syllable (targets). We orthogonally varied stress overlap and phoneme overlap between the primes and onsets of the targets. Lexical decisions and Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) for the targets were obtained for pre-reading preschoolers, reading pupils and adults. The behavioral and ERP results were largely comparable across all groups. The fastest responses were observed when the first syllable of the target word shared stress and phonemes with the preceding prime. ERP stress priming and ERP phoneme priming started 200 ms after the target word onset. Bilateral ERP stress priming was characterized by enhanced ERP amplitudes for stress overlap. Left-lateralized ERP phoneme priming replicates previously observed reduced ERP amplitudes for phoneme overlap. Groups differed in the strength of the behavioral phoneme priming and in the late ERP phoneme priming effect. The present results show that enhanced phonological processing in middle childhood is restricted to phonemes and does not extend to prosody. These results are indicative of two parallel processing systems for phonemes and prosody that might follow different developmental trajectories in middle childhood as a function of alphabetic literacy.
- Published
- 2014
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48. Effectiveness of Proadrenomedullin Enhanced CURB65 Score Algorithm in Patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia in "Real Life", an Observational Quality Control Survey.
- Author
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Widmer D, Drozdov D, Rüegger K, Litke A, Arici B, Regez K, Guglielmetti M, Schild U, Conca A, Schäfer P, Kouegbe RB, Reutlinger B, Blum C, Schuetz P, Irani S, Huber A, Bürgi U, Müller B, and Albrich WC
- Abstract
Background: An intervention trial found a trend for shorter length of stay (LOS) in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) when the CURB65 score was combined with the prognostic biomarker proadrenomedullin (ProADM) (CURB65-A). However, the efficacy and safety of CURB65-A in real life situations remains unclear., Methods: From September, 2011, until April, 2012, we performed a post-study prospective observational quality control survey at the cantonal Hospital of Aarau, Switzerland of consecutive adults with CAP. The primary endpoint was length of stay (LOS) during the index hospitalization and within 30 days. We compared the results with two well-defined historic cohorts of CAP patients hospitalized in the same hospital with the use of multivariate regression, namely 83 patients in the observation study without ProADM (OPTIMA I) and the 169 patients in the intervention study (OPTIMA II RCT)., Results: A total of 89 patients with confirmed CAP were included. As compared to patients with CURB65 only observed in the OPTIMA I study, adjusted regression analysis showed a significant shorter initial LOS (7.5 vs. 10.4 days; -2.32; 95% CI, -4.51 to -0.13; p = 0.04) when CURB65-A was used in clinical routine. No significant differences were found for LOS within 30 days. There were no significant differences in safety outcomes in regard to mortality and ICU admission between the cohorts., Conclusion: This post-study survey provides evidence that the use of ProADM in combination with CURB65 (CURB65-A) in "real life" situations reduces initial LOS compared to the CURB65 score alone without apparent negative effects on patient safety.
- Published
- 2014
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49. Biomarker-enhanced triage in respiratory infections: a proof-of-concept feasibility trial.
- Author
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Albrich WC, Rüegger K, Dusemund F, Schuetz P, Arici B, Litke A, Blum CA, Bossart R, Regez K, Schild U, Guglielmetti M, Conca A, Schäfer P, Schubert M, de Geest S, Reutlinger B, Irani S, Bürgi U, Huber A, and Müller B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Algorithms, Blood Pressure, Feasibility Studies, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Length of Stay, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Assessment, Triage methods, Adrenomedullin metabolism, Biomarkers metabolism, Protein Precursors metabolism, Respiratory Tract Infections metabolism, Respiratory Tract Infections physiopathology
- Abstract
Concerns about inadequate performance and complexity limit routine use of clinical risk scores in lower respiratory tract infections. Our aim was to study feasibility and effects of adding the biomarker proadrenomedullin (proADM) to the confusion, urea>7 mmol·L(-1), respiratory rate≥30 breaths·min(-1), blood pressure<90 mmHg (systolic) or ≤60 mmHg (diastolic), age≥65 years (CURB-65) score on triage decisions and length of stay. In a randomised controlled proof-of-concept intervention trial, triage and discharge decisions were made for adults with lower respiratory tract infection according to interprofessional assessment using medical and nursing risk scores either without (control group) or with (proADM group) knowledge of proADM values, measured on admission, and on days 3 and 6. An adjusted generalised linear model was calculated to investigate the effect of our intervention. On initial presentation the algorithms were overruled in 123 (39.3%) of the cases. Mean length of stay tended to be shorter in the proADM (n=154, 6.3 days) compared with the control group (n=159, 6.8 days; adjusted regression coefficient -0.19, 95% CI -0.41-0.04; p=0.1). This trend was robust in subgroup analyses and for overall length of stay within 90 days (7.2 versus 7.9 days; adjusted regression coefficient -0.18, 95% CI -0.40-0.05; p=0.13). There were no differences in adverse outcomes or readmission. Logistic obstacles and overruling are major challenges to implement biomarker-enhanced algorithms in clinical settings and need to be addressed to shorten length of stay.
- Published
- 2013
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50. Optimizing triage and hospitalization in adult general medical emergency patients: the triage project.
- Author
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Schuetz P, Hausfater P, Amin D, Haubitz S, Fässler L, Grolimund E, Kutz A, Schild U, Caldara Z, Regez K, Zhydkov A, Kahles T, Nedeltchev K, von Felten S, De Geest S, Conca A, Schäfer-Keller P, Huber A, Bargetzi M, Buergi U, Sauvin G, Perrig-Chiello P, Reutlinger B, and Mueller B
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Observational Studies as Topic, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Switzerland, Triage organization & administration, Algorithms, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitalization, Triage standards
- Abstract
Background: Patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) currently face inacceptable delays in initial treatment, and long, costly hospital stays due to suboptimal initial triage and site-of-care decisions. Accurate ED triage should focus not only on initial treatment priority, but also on prediction of medical risk and nursing needs to improve site-of-care decisions and to simplify early discharge management. Different triage scores have been proposed, such as the Manchester triage system (MTS). Yet, these scores focus only on treatment priority, have suboptimal performance and lack validation in the Swiss health care system. Because the MTS will be introduced into clinical routine at the Kantonsspital Aarau, we propose a large prospective cohort study to optimize initial patient triage. Specifically, the aim of this trial is to derive a three-part triage algorithm to better predict (a) treatment priority; (b) medical risk and thus need for in-hospital treatment; (c) post-acute care needs of patients at the most proximal time point of ED admission., Methods/design: Prospective, observational, multicenter, multi-national cohort study. We will include all consecutive medical patients seeking ED care into this observational registry. There will be no exclusions except for non-adult and non-medical patients. Vital signs will be recorded and left over blood samples will be stored for later batch analysis of blood markers. Upon ED admission, the post-acute care discharge score (PACD) will be recorded. Attending ED physicians will adjudicate triage priority based on all available results at the time of ED discharge to the medical ward. Patients will be reassessed daily during the hospital course for medical stability and readiness for discharge from the nurses and if involved social workers perspective. To assess outcomes, data from electronic medical records will be used and all patients will be contacted 30 days after hospital admission to assess vital and functional status, re-hospitalization, satisfaction with care and quality of life measures. We aim to include between 5000 and 7000 patients over one year of recruitment to derive the three-part triage algorithm. The respective main endpoints were defined as (a) initial triage priority (high vs. low priority) adjudicated by the attending ED physician at ED discharge, (b) adverse 30 day outcome (death or intensive care unit admission) within 30 days following ED admission to assess patients risk and thus need for in-hospital treatment and (c) post acute care needs after hospital discharge, defined as transfer of patients to a post-acute care institution, for early recognition and planning of post-acute care needs. Other outcomes are time to first physician contact, time to initiation of adequate medical therapy, time to social worker involvement, length of hospital stay, reasons for discharge delays, patient's satisfaction with care, overall hospital costs and patients care needs after returning home., Discussion: Using a reliable initial triage system for estimating initial treatment priority, need for in-hospital treatment and post-acute care needs is an innovative and persuasive approach for a more targeted and efficient management of medical patients in the ED. The proposed interdisciplinary , multi-national project has unprecedented potential to improve initial triage decisions and optimize resource allocation to the sickest patients from admission to discharge. The algorithms derived in this study will be compared in a later randomized controlled trial against a usual care control group in terms of resource use, length of hospital stay, overall costs and patient's outcomes in terms of mortality, re-hospitalization, quality of life and satisfaction with care., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier, NCT01768494.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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