Search results for "iTED"

showing 10 items of 2408 documents

Pediatric oncologic endosurgery.

2017

Despite increasing popularity of minimal-invasive techniques in the pediatric population, their use in diagnosis and management of pediatric malignancy is still debated. Moreover, there is limited evidence to clarify this controversy due to low incidence of each individual type of pediatric tumor, huge diversity of the disease entity, heterogeneity of surgical technique, and lack of well-designed studies on pediatric oncologic minimal-invasive surgery. However, a rapid development of medical instruments and technologies accelerated the current trend toward less invasive surgery, including oncologic endosurgery. The aim of this article is to review current literatures about the application o…

medicine.medical_specialtyDisease entitybusiness.industryThoracoscopyMedical instrumentsLess invasive surgeryPediatric TumorEndosurgeryGeneral Medicine03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisPediatric malignancySolid tumorsmedicine030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyLaparoscopyLimited evidenceIntensive care medicinebusinessReview ArticlesChildrenPediatric populationInternational journal of surgery. Oncology
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The FDA Approves Aducanumab for Alzheimer's Disease, Raising Important Scientific Questions1.

2021

medicine.medical_specialtyDrug Industrybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMEDLINEGeneral MedicineDiseaseAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedRaising (linguistics)United StatesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyAlzheimer DiseaseMedicineHumansAducanumabGeriatrics and GerontologybusinessIntensive care medicineDrug ApprovalJournal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD
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Calculating confidence intervals for impact numbers

2006

Abstract Background Standard effect measures such as risk difference and attributable risk are frequently used in epidemiological studies and public health research to describe the effect of exposures. Recently, so-called impact numbers have been proposed, which express the population impact of exposures in form of specific person or case numbers. To describe estimation uncertainty, it is necessary to calculate confidence intervals for these new effect measures. In this paper, we present methods to calculate confidence intervals for the new impact numbers in the situation of cohort studies. Methods Beside the exposure impact number (EIN), which is equivalent to the well-known number needed …

medicine.medical_specialtyEpidemiologyCoronary DiseaseHealth InformaticsRisk AssessmentCohort StudiesJapanRisk FactorsEpidemiologyStatisticsConfidence IntervalsmedicineHumanslcsh:R5-920business.industrySmokingUncertaintyAbsolute risk reductionUnited KingdomConfidence intervalStrokeSample size determinationSample SizeAttributable riskNumber needed to treatlcsh:Medicine (General)Risk assessmentbusinessResearch ArticleCohort studyBMC Medical Research Methodology
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The safety of intravenous fluorescein for confocal laser endomicroscopy in the gastrointestinal tract

2010

Aliment Pharmacol Ther 31, 548–552 Summary Background  Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) is rapidly emerging as a valuable tool for gastrointestinal endoscopic imaging. Fluorescent contrast agents are used to optimize imaging with CLE, and intravenous fluorescein is the most widely used contrast agent. Fluorescein is FDA-cleared for diagnostic angiography of the retina. For these indications, the safety profile of fluorescein has been well-documented; however, to date, fluorescein is not cleared for use with CLE. Aims  To estimate the rate of serious and total adverse events attributable to intravenous fluorescein when used for gastrointestinal CLE. Methods  We performed a cross sectional…

medicine.medical_specialtyErythemaNauseaGastrointestinal DiseasesVomitingContrast MediaPainEndoscopy Gastrointestinalchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)FluoresceinAdverse effectGastrointestinal tractMicroscopy ConfocalHepatologymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryUnited States Food and Drug AdministrationStomachfungiGastroenterologyNauseaExanthemaUnited StatesSurgeryEndoscopymedicine.anatomical_structureCross-Sectional StudieschemistryAnesthesiaInjections IntravenousVomitingFluoresceinmedicine.symptomHypotensionbusinessAlimentary pharmacology & therapeutics
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Clinical trials in children.

2006

Abstract Randomized controlled clinical trials are felt by the medical community to provide the best evidence. Participation in trials involves the possibility of obtaining benefits but also of suffering some risks. Those risks are often considered unacceptable for children but if clinical trials are not conducted in children, clinicians are forced to extrapolate study data from adults. In 1968 H. Shirkey termed children "therapeutic orphans" because of the lack of adequately tested and labeled drugs available in appropriate formulations. Research involving children entails specific difficulties as the need to study children of different ages, the small number of children affected by certai…

medicine.medical_specialtyEthical problems using children in clinical trialsResearch SubjectsAlternative medicinePlacebolaw.inventionEthics ResearchDrug TherapylawmedicineHumansPsychiatryChildRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicPharmacologyClinical Trials as TopicClinical pharmacologyEthical issuesbusiness.industryPatient SelectionGeneral MedicineUnited StatesClinical trialEuropeResearch DesignFamily medicineBest evidencebusinessReviews on recent clinical trials
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Hereditary angio-oedema with normal C1 inhibitor in a family with affected women and men

2005

Recurrent angio-oedema is a sign of various acquired and inherited disease entities, including hereditary angio-oedema types I and II that result from a genetic deficiency of C1 inhibitor, and a recently described type of dominantly inherited angio-oedema, which does not show a deficiency of C1 inhibitor. Until now, this new type of hereditary angio-oedema, designated as hereditary angio-oedema type III, has been assumed to be a disorder specific to females. We now describe a four-generation family with dominantly inherited angio-oedema and normal C1 inhibitor in which, in contrast to all previous observations, not only five female but also three male family members were clinically affected…

medicine.medical_specialtyHereditary angio-oedemabiologybusiness.industryDermatologyC1-inhibitorEndocrinologyMale patientInternal medicineNew diseaseImmunopathologyACE inhibitorbiology.proteinMedicineAge of onsetInherited diseasebusinessmedicine.drugBritish Journal of Dermatology
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Drug-Induced Liver Injury Associated With Antidepressive Psychopharmacotherapy: An Explorative Assessment Based on Quantitative Signal Detection Usin…

2015

Drug-induced liver injury is a major problem of pharmacotherapy and is also frequent with antidepressive psychopharmacotherapy. However, there are only few studies using a consistent methodologic approach to study hepatotoxicity of a larger group of antidepress ants. We performed a quantitative signal detection analysis using data from the Uppsala Monitoring Centre from the WHO that records adverse drug reaction (ADR) data from worldwide sources; we retrieved substance- and country-specific (Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States) ADR data and calculated reporting odds ratios as measures for disproportionality within a case/noncase approach. To a…

medicine.medical_specialtyInternationalityDatabases FactualMedDRAMirtazapineAmineptinePharmacology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinePharmacovigilancemedicineAgomelatineAdverse Drug Reaction Reporting SystemsHumansPharmacology (medical)030212 general & internal medicinePharmacologybusiness.industryAustraliaOdds ratiomedicine.diseaseAntidepressive AgentsUnited StatesEuropeChemical and Drug Induced Liver InjuryNefazodonebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAdverse drug reactionmedicine.drugJournal of clinical pharmacology
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Incidence of infective endocarditis before and after the guideline modification regarding a more restrictive use of prophylactic antibiotics therapy …

2019

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a potentially life-threatening disease. Regardless the improvements in IE management, it remains associated with high mortality and severe complications. Staphylococci and streptococci account for 80% of all IE cases. Prevention of IE by appropriate administration of antibiotics before procedures with potential bacteremia in selected patients is recommended according to recent and current guidelines. However, recent studies, have questioned the efficacy of antimicrobial prophylaxis in special situations and in some patient-groups. As a consequence, the guideline of the French working group on IE in 2002, the American Heart Association (AHA) guideline in 2007, …

medicine.medical_specialtyMEDLINENiceDisease030204 cardiovascular system & hematology03 medical and health sciencesPostoperative Complications0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineAntibiotic prophylaxisIntensive care medicinecomputer.programming_languageEndocarditisbusiness.industryIncidenceIncidence (epidemiology)GuidelineAntibiotic Prophylaxismedicine.diseaseUnited StatesEuropeInfective endocarditisBacteremiaGuideline AdherenceCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinesscomputerMinerva Cardioangiologica
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Can eastern wisdom resolve western epidemics? Traditional Chinese medicine therapies and the opioid crisis.

2020

The widespread use of opioids to treat chronic pain led to a nation-wide crisis in the United States. Tens of thousands of deaths annually occur mainly due to respiratory depression, the most dangerous side effect of opioids. Non-opioid drugs and non-pharmacological treatments without addictive potential are urgently required. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is based on a completely different medical theory than academic Western medicine. The scientific basis of acupuncture and herbal treatments as main TCM practices has been considerably improved during the past two decades, and large meta-analyses with thousands of patients provide evidence for their efficacy. Furthermore, opinion lead…

medicine.medical_specialtyModalitiesbusiness.industryChronic painAcupuncture TherapyGeneral MedicineTraditional Chinese medicinemedicine.diseaseUnited StatesScientific evidenceClinical trialAnalgesics OpioidOpioidAcupunctureMedicineHumansMedicine Chinese TraditionalOpioid EpidemicbusinessIntensive care medicineEpidemicsDepression (differential diagnoses)medicine.drugDrugs Chinese HerbalJournal of integrative medicine
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Is lack of habituation a biomarker of migraine? A critical perspective

2015

Processing of sensory stimuli has been supposed to be dysfunctioning in migraine. A basis for such abnormality has been identified in a defective ability to habituate to repetitive sensorial stimulation. Habituation, i.e. the way the nervous system attenuates response to repeated non noxious stimuli is a fundamental function of sensory systems, that allows appropriate adaptation of neural responses to the relevance of incoming stimuli. In humans, habituation can be studied by evoked potentials where it is indexed by a reduction of amplitude of the evoked response to repeated stimulation. After the first evidence by Schoenen et al in 1995[1] of reduced habituation to visual evoked potentials…

medicine.medical_specialtyNeurologybusiness.industryInvited Speaker PresentationClinical NeurologySensory systemStimulationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSomatosensory systemhabituationNeurology (clinical); Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine; habituation; migraineStimulus modalityAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineMigrainemedicineNoxious stimulusmigraineSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaNeurology (clinical)HabituationbusinessNeuroscience
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