Search results for "AREs"

showing 10 items of 1717 documents

Two-rescuer CPR results in hyperventilation in the ventilating rescuer.

2005

The "Guidelines 2000 for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care--International Consensus on Science" recommend a tidal ventilation volume of 10 ml/kg body-weight without the use of supplemental oxygen during two-rescuer adult cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This relates to a ventilation volume of about 6.4 l/min. Additionally, the first aid provider ventilating the victim will breathe for him/herself during the external chest compression period adding another 3.2 l/min of ventilation. Finally, a deep breath is recommended before each ventilation to increase the end-expiratory oxygen concentration of the air exhaled. To investigate the effects of these recommend…

AdultMaleResuscitationmedicine.medical_treatmentBlood PressureEmergency NursingDizzinesslaw.inventionlawHeart RateIntensive careHeart rateHyperventilationMedicineHumansHyperventilationCardiopulmonary resuscitationParesthesiaOxygen saturation (medicine)business.industryCarbon DioxideCardiopulmonary ResuscitationBlood pressureCaregiversAnesthesiaVentilation (architecture)Emergency MedicineFemalemedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessResuscitation
researchProduct

Relationships of working conditions, health problems and vehicle accidents in bus rapid transit (BRT) drivers

2018

Background The aim of this study was to estimate accident risk rates and mental health of bus rapid transit (BRT) drivers based on psychosocial risk factors at work leading to increased stress and health problems. Methods A cross-sectional research design utilized a self-report questionnaire completed by 524 BRT drivers. Results Some working conditions of BRT drivers (lack of social support from supervisors and perceived potential for risk) may partially explain Bogota's BRT drivers' involvement in road accidents. Drivers' mental health problems were associated with higher job strain, less support from co-workers, fewer rewards and greater signal conflict while driving. Conclusions To preve…

AdultMaleRiskCondiciones de trabajoBRT driversJob controlApplied psychologyPsychological interventionTransportationColombiaOccupational safety and healthOccupational StressSocial supportJob stressSurveys and Questionnaires0502 economics and businessHumansMedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050107 human factorsBus rapid transit050210 logistics & transportationOccupational healthJob strainbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAccidents TrafficPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSocial SupportMiddle AgedMental healthMotor VehiclesCross-Sectional StudiesMental HealthMental healthFemaleEnfermedades cardiovascularesbusinessRisk assessmentEstrés laboralhuman activitiesAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine
researchProduct

Time course of adverse events most commonly associated with topiramate for migraine prevention

2007

The efficacy, safety and tolerability of topiramate has been demonstrated in three large multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials. To characterize the time course of adverse events (AEs) that led to treatment discontinuation in/=2% of patients who received topiramate 100 mg/day during three pivotal, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, and 26-week trials. The pooled population comprised all randomized patients who reported safety data during the double-blind phase (topiramate 100 mg/day, n = 386; placebo n = 372), which consisted of a 4-week titration period and a 22-week maintenance period. Incidence, time to onset, and cumulative mean rate of …

AdultMaleTopiramateTime FactorsNauseaMigraine DisordersPopulationFructosePlaceboTimelaw.inventionPlacebosDouble-Blind MethodRandomized controlled trialTopiramatelawmedicineHumansParesthesiaeducationFatigueeducation.field_of_studyDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industryNauseaMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAnorexiaDiscontinuationWithholding TreatmentNeurologyTolerabilityMigraineAnesthesiaPatient ComplianceAnticonvulsantsFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomCognition Disordersbusinessmedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Neurology
researchProduct

The Role of Third Ventriculostomy in the Management of Obstructive Hydrocephalus

2003

Objective: Endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) is an effective treatment for occlusive hydrocephalus caused by an obstruction of the CSF flow in the aqueduct or the posterior fossa. We evaluated the factors age, pathology and surgical technique on the results of the ETV. Methods: Between November 1992 and October 2000 171 ETV have been performed in 159 patients. The follow-up was evaluated in 150 patients. The age ranged from 10 days to 77 years (mean age 35 years). The hydrocephalus was caused by benign aqueductal stenosis in 77 patients, space-occupying lesions in 59, by intraventricular hemorrhages in 11, and by other causes in 3 patients. The trajectory was planned in 31 patients by …

AdultMaleVentriculostomymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.medical_treatmentObstructive hydrocephalusVentriculostomyStereotaxic TechniquesCentral nervous system diseasePostoperative ComplicationsOutcome Assessment Health CaremedicineHumansChildAgedThird Ventriclemedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryAge FactorsInfant NewbornEndoscopic third ventriculostomyInfantEndoscopyGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSurgeryHydrocephalusEndoscopyHemiparesisAqueductal stenosisChild PreschoolFemaleSurgeryNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessFollow-Up StudiesHydrocephalusmin - Minimally Invasive Neurosurgery
researchProduct

Localization of emotional and volitional facial paresis.

1992

Emotional facial paresis is characterized by impaired activation of face muscles with emotion but normal voluntary activation. We report seven patients with this sign. Their lesions involved the frontal lobe white matter, the striatocapsular territory, the anterolateral thalamus and insula, the posterior thalamus and operculum, and the mesial temporal lobe and insula each in one patient, and the posterior thalamus in two patients. Volitional facial paresis affects facial movements with voluntary effort, sparing activation on emotion. We report four such patients, with lesions involving the motor cortex in one and the pyramidal tract in the cerebral hemisphere in three.

AdultMaleVolitionEmotionsFacial ParalysisTemporal lobemedicineHumansOperculum (brain)ParesisAgedPyramidal tractsBrainAnatomyMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance ImagingFacial musclesmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemFrontal lobeCerebral hemisphereFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomPsychologyInsulaNeurology
researchProduct

Acquired monocular elevation paresis. An asymmetric upgaze palsy.

1992

Five patients with acquired monocular elevation paresis were investigated using direct current electrooculography. With recovery, upward saccade velocities significantly increased in both eyes in all patients. The gain of upward-following eye movements significantly increased in the paretic eye of all patients and in the opposite eye of four patients. These findings are interpreted in terms of an asymmetric upgaze palsy which clinically presented as monocular elevation paresis in the more severely affected eye. A brainstem lesion contralateral to monocular elevation paresis was suggested in four patients by contralateral Horner's syndrome and contralateral abduction paresis, each in one pat…

AdultMalegenetic structuresEye DiseasesEye MovementsEye diseaseHorner syndromePtosisUpgaze palsymedicineParalysisSaccadesHumansParalysisParesisAgedOphthalmoplegiamedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryElectrooculographyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesAnesthesiaSaccadeFemalesense organsNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessBrain : a journal of neurology
researchProduct

Texture analysis in susceptibility-weighted imaging may be useful to differentiate acute from chronic multiple sclerosis lesions.

2020

To evaluate the diagnostic performance of texture analysis (TA) applied on non-contrast-enhanced susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) to differentiate acute (enhancing) from chronic (non-enhancing) multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions. We analyzed 175 lesions from 58 patients with relapsing-remitting MS imaged on a 3.0 T MRI scanner and applied TA on T2-w and SWI images to extract texture features. We evaluated the presence or absence of lesion enhancement on T1-w post-contrast images and performed a computational statistical analysis to assess if there was any significant correlation between the texture features and the presence of lesion activity. ROC curves and leave-one-out cross-validation…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentContrast Media030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingLesion03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineMultiple Sclerosis Relapsing-RemittingImage Processing Computer-AssistedMedicineHumansMultiple sclerosiRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingDiagnosis Computer-AssistedLeast-Squares AnalysisNeuroradiologyAgedRetrospective Studiesmedicine.diagnostic_testReceiver operating characteristicbusiness.industryMultiple sclerosisUltrasoundReproducibility of ResultsMagnetic resonance imagingGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingRegressionLogistic modelsContrast agentROC Curve030220 oncology & carcinogenesisArea Under CurveSusceptibility weighted imagingAcute DiseaseChronic DiseaseRegression AnalysisFemaleRadiologymedicine.symptomSettore MED/36 - Diagnostica Per Immagini E RadioterapiabusinessEuropean radiology
researchProduct

Epidemiology of the sarcomas of the jaws in a Peruvian population

2010

Objective: Analysis of the clinical characteristics of patients with Sarcomas of the Jaws treated in the “Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Neoplasicas. Dr. Eduardo Caceres Graziani” from 1952-2007. Study Design: Review of 155 clinical records of patients with Sarcomas of the Jaws and record of age, gender, size, location, clinical symptoms and signs, histopathological diagnoses and type of treatment. The data obtained were analyzed by means of Student’s statistical t-test, Fisher and Friedman’s test. Results: Analysis of 155 Sarcomas of the Jaws. The average age of patients was 36.8 years old (range: 1-80 years); the female gender was the most frequent (52.9%); the average tumor size was …

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentEstudios transversalesPopulationJaw neoplasmYoung Adultstomatognathic systemNeoplasias mandibularesEpidemiologyPerumedicineEpidemiologíaHumansYoung adulteducationChildGeneral DentistryAgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and overeducation.field_of_studyOral Medicine and Pathologybusiness.industryInfantRetrospective cohort studySarcomaMiddle Agedmedicine.disease:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]DermatologyJaw NeoplasmsSurgerystomatognathic diseasesCross-Sectional StudiesOtorhinolaryngologyChild PreschoolUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASSurgeryFemaleResearch-ArticleSarcomaChondrosarcomabusinessFacial symmetry
researchProduct

Evidence of unilateral isolated utricular hypofunction

2010

The findings demonstrate that an enduring unilateral utricular dysfunction, possibly together with canal hypofunction, can occur after labyrinthine disease or injury. They also suggest that unilateral, isolated utricular dysfunction - or utricle paresis - can occur, representing a novel entity in the differential diagnosis of peripheral vestibular function. The occurrence of subjective visual vertical (SVV) asymmetry in the presence of symmetric vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) also confirms that the information from the utricles, rather than the saccules, dominates SVV estimation.To determine the incidence of unilateral utricular hypofunction.The retrospective clinical study d…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentVestibular evoked myogenic potentialLabyrinth DiseasesElectromyographyVestibular NerveAudiologyFunctional LateralityDiagnosis DifferentialOtolithic MembraneYoung AdultNeck MusclesOrientationUtricleCaloric Testsotorhinolaryngologic diseasesHumansMedicineSaccule and UtricleEvoked PotentialsKinesthesisPostural BalancePathologicalMeniere DiseaseParesisVestibular systemmedicine.diagnostic_testElectromyographybusiness.industrySignal Processing Computer-AssistedGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedVestibular Function TestsProprioceptionPeripheralmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyFemalesense organsDifferential diagnosismedicine.symptombusinessActa Oto-Laryngologica
researchProduct

Seventh nerve palsies may be the only clinical sign of small pontine infarctions in diabetic and hypertensive patients

2002

Backgroud: Small brainstem infarctions are increasingly recognized as a cause of isolated ocular motor and vestibular nerve palsies in diabetic and/or hypertensive patients. This raises the question whether there are also isolated 7th nerve palsies due to pontine infarctions in patients with such risk factors for the development of cerebrovascular diseases. Methods: Over an 11-year-period, we retrospectively identified 10 diabetic and/or hypertensive patients with isolated 7th nerve palsies and electrophysiological abnormalities indicating pontine dysfunction. All patients had examinations of masseter and blink reflexes, brainstem auditory evoked potentials, direct current electro-oculograp…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBrain Stem InfarctionsNeurologyFunctional LateralityDiabetes ComplicationsOcular Motility DisordersPonsInternal medicineNeural PathwaysDiabetes MellitusVestibulocochlear Nerve DiseasesmedicineHumansCranial nerve diseaseStrokeAgedRetrospective StudiesParesisbusiness.industryMiddle AgedVestibular nervemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingFacial nerveFacial paralysisSurgeryFacial NerveNeurologyBasilar ArteryHypertensionCardiologyFemaleDisease SusceptibilityNeurology (clinical)Facial Nerve Diseasesmedicine.symptombusinessJaw jerk reflexJournal of Neurology
researchProduct