Search results for "eps"

showing 10 items of 1777 documents

Vacuum-Assisted Abdominal Closure in Surgical Emergency: A Single Institution Experience Treating a Cohort with a Prevalence of Faecal Peritonitis

2021

Abstract Vacuum-assisted abdominal closure (VAAC) has evolved as a promising method for treatment of emergent surgical patients. The aim of the study was an assessment of the complication rate and outcomes following routine application of VAAC in a cohort of patients suffering predominantly with peritonitis of the lower gastrointestinal tract (GIT) origin. The prospectively collected data was analysed retrospectively, including demographic data, aetiological factors, comorbid conditions and severity of the disease. The indications for VAAC included complicated intra-abdominal infection, purulent peritonitis with sepsis and/or risk of increased intra-abdominal pressure. In total, 130 patient…

medicine.medical_specialtyMultidisciplinarybusiness.industryVacuum assistedScienceQcomplicated intra-abdominal infection030230 surgeryFaecal peritonitisintra-abdominal hypertensionSurgerysepsis03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohortmedicineSurgical emergencySingle institutionClosure (psychology)businessProceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B, Natural Sciences
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Electrically induced torque decrease reflects more than muscle fatigue

2014

The aim of the study was to compare the fatigue induced by different electrical stimulation (ES) protocols. The triceps surae muscle of 8 healthy subjects was fatigued with 4 protocols (30 Hz-500 μs, 30 Hz-1 ms, 100 Hz-1 ms, and 100 Hz-500 μs), composed of 60 trains (4 s on-6 s off), delivered at an intensity evoking 30% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). Fatigue was quantified by ES and MVC torque decreases. The amplitude of the twitch delivered at the intensity and pulse width used in each fatiguing protocol (twitch at Istim ) was analyzed. All parameters decreased significantly after all protocols. The ES torque decrease correlated positively with the twitch decrease elicited at Ist…

medicine.medical_specialtyMuscle fatiguePhysiologyChemistryHealthy subjectsStimulationIntensity (physics)Cellular and Molecular NeurosciencePhysical medicine and rehabilitationVoluntary contractionTriceps surae musclePhysiology (medical)medicineTorqueNeurology (clinical)Biomedical engineeringMuscle & Nerve
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New diagnostic possibilities in systemic neonatal infections: metabolomics

2014

Systemic neonatal infection is a serious complication in preterm and term infants and is defined as a complex clinical syndrome caused by bacteria, fungi and virus. Sepsis remains among the leading causes of death in both developed and underdeveloped countries above all in the neonatal period. Earlier diagnosis may offer the ability to initiate treatment to prevent adverse outcomes. There have been many studies on various diagnostic haematological markers like acute phase reactants, C-reactive protein, procalcitonin, interleukins and presepsin. However, there is still no single test that satisfies the criteria as being the ideal marker for the early diagnosis of neonatal sepsis. In this reg…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeonatal infections; metabolomicsNeonatal sepsisbusiness.industryAcute-phase proteinInfant NewbornObstetrics and Gynecologymedicine.diseaseProcalcitoninSingle testSepsisNeonatal infectionMetabolomicsSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaSepsisPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthmedicineHumansMetabolomicsbusinessIntensive care medicineComplicationNeonatal infectionBiomarkers
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Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infection in Neonates: A Systematic Review of the Literature and Meta-Analysis

2019

Purpose: Surgical site infections (SSI) contribute to postoperative morbidity and mortality in children. Our aim was to evaluate the prevalence and identify risk factors for SSI in neonates. Methods: Using a defined strategy, three investigators searched articles on neonatal SSI published since 2000. Studies on neonates and/or patients admitted to neonatal intensive care unit following cervical/thoracic/abdominal surgery were included. Risk factors were identified from comparative studies. Meta-analysis was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines using RevMan 5.3. Data are (mean ± SD) prevalence. Results: Systematic review—of 885 abstracts screened, 48 studies (27,760 neonates) were includ…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeonatal intensive care unitBirth weight030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyPediatricsneonatal surgerySepsis03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinesystematic reviewnewborn030225 pediatricsInternal medicinemedicinerisk factorsProspective cohort studybusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)lcsh:RJ1-570Gestational agelcsh:Pediatricsmedicine.disease3. Good healthmeta-analysisMeta-analysisPediatrics Perinatology and Child Healthwound infectionbusinessAbdominal surgeryFrontiers in Pediatrics
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Antimicrobial therapy in neonatal intensive care unit

2015

Severe infections represent the main cause of neonatal mortality accounting for more than one million neonatal deaths worldwide every year. Antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed medications in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and in industrialized countries about 1% of neonates are exposed to antibiotic therapy. Sepsis has often nonspecific signs and symptoms and empiric antimicrobial therapy is promptly initiated in high risk of sepsis or symptomatic infants. However continued use of empiric broad-spectrum antibiotic treatment in the setting of negative cultures especially in preterm infants may not be harmless. The benefits of antibiotic therapy when indicated are clearly enor…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeonatal intensive care unitmedicine.drug_classAntibioticsReviewGlobal HealthInfant Newborn DiseasesSepsisIntensive Care Units NeonatalIntensive caremedicineHumansAntibiotic prophylaxisAdverse effectIntensive care medicineEmpiric therapyAntibiotic stewardshipNeonatal sepsisbusiness.industryInfant NewbornAntibioticAntibiotic ProphylaxisNewbornmedicine.diseaseAnti-Bacterial AgentsAntibiotic; Antibiotic stewardship; Empiric therapy; Neonatal sepsis; Newborn; Resistant bacteria; Pediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthNeonatal sepsisNeonatal sepsiResistant bacteriabusinessEmpiric therapyItalian Journal of Pediatrics
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Neuronavigation and epilepsy surgery

2010

Resective epilepsy surgery is an elective therapy indicated in focal epilepsy patients who are resistant to pharmacotherapy. Every effort should be undertaken to perform the procedures as safe and less traumatic as possible. Neuronavigation could represent a suitable tool to reduce surgical morbidity and increase surgical radicality. Here, we present a series of 41 patients who were operated on for medically intractable epilepsy using neuronavigation. Overall, complication rate was 17% with a favourable seizure outcome of 88% (Engel’s class I/II). Our data suggest that neuronavigation is a valuable surgical technique to accomplish a favourable outcome in epilepsy surgery.

medicine.medical_specialtyNeuronavigationbusiness.industryMedically intractable epilepsySeizure outcomemedicine.diseaseSurgerySurgical morbidityEpilepsyPharmacotherapyMedicineComplication rateEpilepsy surgerybusinessHealth
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Prevalence of eating disorders and eating attacks in narcolepsy

2008

Norbert Dahmen, Julia Becht, Alice Engel, Monika Thommes, Peter TonnPsychiatry Department, University of Mainz, GermanyAbstract: Narcoleptic patients suffer frequently from obesity and type II diabetes. Most patients show a deficit in the energy balance regulating orexinergic system. Nevertheless, it is not known, why narcoleptic patients tend to be obese. We examined 116 narcoleptic patients and 80 controls with the structured interview for anorectic and bulimic eating disorders (SIAB) to test the hypothesis that typical or atypical eating attacks or eating disorders may be more frequent in narcoleptic patients. No difference in the current prevalence of eating disorders bulimia nervosa, b…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeuropsychiatric Disease and TreatmentnarcolepsyNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryAnorexiaAnorexia nervosaeating attackBinge-eating disordermental disordersMedicinePsychiatryRC346-429Biological PsychiatryOriginal Researchbusiness.industryBulimia nervosadigestive oral and skin physiologymedicine.diseaseObesityPsychiatry and Mental healthEating disordersbulimiaanorexiaeating disorderAnorecticSIABNeurology. Diseases of the nervous systemmedicine.symptombusinessNarcolepsyRC321-571Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
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Tinnitus and tinnitus disorder: Theoretical and operational definitions (an international multidisciplinary proposal)

2021

As for hypertension, chronic pain, epilepsy and other disorders with particular symptoms, a commonly accepted and unambiguous definition provides a common ground for researchers and clinicians to study and treat the problem. The WHO's ICD11 definition only mentions tinnitus as a nonspecific symptom of a hearing disorder, but not as a clinical entity in its own right, and the American Psychiatric Association's DSM-V doesn't mention tinnitus at all. Here we propose that the tinnitus without and with associated suffering should be differentiated by distinct terms: "Tinnitus" for the former and "Tinnitus Disorder" for the latter. The proposed definition then becomes "Tinnitus is the conscious a…

medicine.medical_specialtyOperational definitionbusiness.industryChronic painCognitionDiseaseAudiologymedicine.disease03 medical and health sciencesHearing disorderEpilepsy0302 clinical medicineMultidisciplinary approachotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinemedicine.symptombusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryTinnitus
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T1078 The Validity of a Biomarker Method for Indirect Detection of Gastric Mucosal Atrophy Versus Standard Histopathology

2008

Background Atrophy of the stomach mucosa is considered to be premalignant lesion for gastric cancer development; easy identification of this condition from a blood-sample would allow identifying the group of individuals at increased risk for cancer development.

medicine.medical_specialtyPathologyHepatologybiologybusiness.industryAtrophic gastritisdigestive oral and skin physiologyGastroenterologymedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyIncreased riskAtrophyPepsinInternal medicinemedicinebiology.proteinBiomarker (medicine)HistopathologyCancer developmentbusinessGastric mucosal atrophyGastroenterology
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Concomitant inflammatory pseudotumor of the liver and spleen

2001

We report the case of a 53-year-old man with inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) of the liver and spleen. This concomitant association has rarely been reported. The patient presented with a hypoechoic mass in the liver and a clinical picture of recurrent sepsis; hematochemical exams and imaging data were nonspecific. Antibiotic therapy improved the clinical course, but did not resolve it definitively. After 50 days of therapy, as the hepatic mass decreased a similar lesion appeared in the spleen. The final diagnosis was made on splenectomy and an intra-operative biopsy of the residual liver lesion. The diagnostic problems encountered in this very rare association of IPT of the liver and spleen w…

medicine.medical_specialtyPathologyHepatologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentSplenectomySpleenHepatologymedicine.diseaseSepsisLesionmedicine.anatomical_structureInternal medicineBiopsymedicineInflammatory pseudotumorSplenic diseasemedicine.symptombusinessLiver
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