Their primary identification as care providers shapes their definition of research success around extending their clinical impact; institutional expectations and prevailing healthcare concerns that value this aim facilitate their sustained research engagement. Integrated developmental and organizational interventions adaptive to research context and conducive to a wider range of medical inquiry may better leverage clinicians' direct involvement in patient care and advance progress toward human health and well-being.Good mental health is essential to successful integration for refugee populations that resettle in the U.S. We explored perceptions of mental illnesses and barriers to mental health service use as well as solutions to current mental health problems from the perspective of refugees. The interviews with a convenience sampling of 11 community leaders (6 men and 5 women) from various Burmese ethnic communities revealed three major categories, including sources of mental illnesses (e.g. traumatic experiences and post-resettlement challenges), barriers to service use (e.g. lack of understanding about mental health, linguistic challenges, cultural stigma, alternative treatments, and unresponsive system), and proposed community solutions (e.g. community education, culturally-competent providers, and beyond mental health treatment). The findings suggest that the ethnic community can be a source of potential solutions to mitigate barriers to mental health service use.Metabolic disturbances commonly occur with serious mental illness (SMI). Strategies for weight management include group education, peer support, and follow up. This study evaluated the effects of group peer support on body weight, Confidence and Conviction (C&C), diet quality and health-related quality of life in a mental health setting. Fourteen participants [aged 51.7 + /- 12.2 years; four male ten female] who were unable to achieve and maintain 5% weight loss were recruited from a metabolic clinic at a mental health care facility. Weight, C&C, Dietary Screener Questionnaire (DSQ), and 36-item Short Form Survey Instrument (SF-36) were collected at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months. SF-36 showed significant improvement in Vitality/Energy (-3.823, p = 0.003) and General Health Perception (-2.919, p = 0.014) at 3 months, significant decrease in Physical Functioning (-2.391, p = 0.048) and significant improvement in Pain (-2.885, p = 0.023) from baseline to 12 months. DSQ showed an inverse association between C&C and sugar intake.
Several studies have reported no differences in outcomes between total hip arthroplasty (THA) of osteotomized hips and primary hip THA. However, our results were worse after THA for converted osteotomized hips. Therefore, this study's aim was to clarify the differences between THA after osteotomy and primary THA for osteoarthritis in developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH).
The data were collected retrospectively (December 1998-June 2013). The cohort contained patients with a previous osteotomy (40 femur osteotomies) for osteoarthritis with DDH who then underwent cementless THA (average 192months after osteotomy). The clinical and radiographic outcomes of 40 hips (osteotomy group) were compared with a matched group of 40 hips after primary THA (primary group). THA was performed and investigated only in patients with DDH.
The mean follow-up period of the osteotomy group was 133months. One patient was lost to follow-up. They had significantly higher subluxation and a narrower canal than the primary group (p < 0.0001, 0.017, respectively). Preoperative and final Harris Hip Score values were worse in the osteotomy group than in the primary group (preoperative 35 vs. 44, p = 0.0009; final 88 vs. 96, p = 0.0001, respectively). Manual muscle strengths of the hip flexor at final follow-up were worse in the osteotomy group. Radiographic outcomes of the osteotomy group showed a larger postoperative leg length discrepancy and severe periprosthetic bone atrophy as judged by bone mineral density and stress shielding.
Proximal femoral osteotomies showed worse outcomes after conversion THA at mid-term follow-up.
Proximal femoral osteotomies showed worse outcomes after conversion THA at mid-term follow-up.The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake.Since coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) outbreak in January 2020, several pieces of evidence suggested an association between the spectrum of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). Most findings were reported in the form of case reports or case series, whereas a comprehensive overview is still lacking. We conducted a systematic review and searched for all published cases until July 20th 2020. We included 73 patients reported in 52 publications. A broad age range was affected (mean 55, min 11-max 94 years) with male predominance (68.5%). Most patients showed respiratory and/or systemic symptoms, and developed GBS manifestations after COVID-19. However, asymptomatic cases for COVID-19 were also described. The distributions of clinical variants and electrophysiological subtypes resemble those of classic GBS, with a higher prevalence of the classic sensorimotor form and the acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, although rare variants like Miller Fisher syndrome were also reported. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) albuminocytological dissociation was present in around 71% cases, and CSF SARS-CoV-2 RNA was absent in all tested cases. More than 70% of patients showed a good prognosis, mostly after treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. Patients with less favorable outcome were associated with a significantly older age in accordance with previous findings regarding both classic GBS and COVID-19. COVID-19-associated GBS seems to share most features of classic post-infectious GBS and possibly the same immune-mediated pathogenetic mechanisms. Nevertheless, more extensive epidemiological studies are needed to clarify these issues.
The microbiome has emerged as an important player in the pathophysiology of a whole spectrum of diseases that affect the critically ill. We hypothesized that differences in microbiota composition across vendors can influence murine models of pulmonary lipopolysaccharide (LPS) inflammation and Gram-negative pneumonia.
A multi-vendor approach was used with genetically similar mice derived from three different vendors (Janvier, Envigo, Charles River). https://www.selleckchem.com/products/rgfp966.html This model was employed to study the effect on the host response to a pulmonary LPS challenge (1 μg Klebsiella pneumoniae LPS, intranasal), as well as experimental K. pneumoniae infection (ATCC43816, 1 × 10
CFU, intranasal).
Gut microbiota analysis revealed profound intervendor differences in bacterial composition as shown by beta diversity and at various taxonomic levels. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and interleukin (IL)-6 release in lung and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were determined 6 and 24 h after intranasal treatment with LPS. No differences were found between the groups, with the exception for Envigo, showing a higher level of TNFα in lung and BALF at 6 h compared to Janvier and Charles River.