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《Injury》1986,17(3):149
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BACKGROUND: Although there are many ways to convey knowledge, attitudes, and techniques when teaching residents and students, the most optimal method (lecture, online lecture, online tutorial, simulator practice, and so on) is yet to be determined. METHODS: This study was designed to be a prospective analysis of change in resident behavior, and the model chosen was resident compliance with alcohol screening during admissions to the trauma service. Baseline values were determined the month before the educational "intervention," which was planned to be a 1-hour lecture during Grand Rounds on the importance of screening for alcohol disuse syndromes. After the "intervention," results were analyzed at 3 points in time: during the first month after the lecture and then at 3 and 12 months. RESULTS: Resident compliance with alcohol usage screening rose from 53% at baseline to 80% at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: This straightforward model of utility of a lecture showed a significant change in resident behavior.  相似文献   

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Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is increasingly applied as rescue-therapy for patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Here, we evaluate the effect of different configuration strategies (venovenous vs. venoarterial vs. veno-venoarterial) on the outcome. From 2006 to 2008, 30 patients received ECMO for severe ARDS. Patients were divided into three groups according to the configuration: veno-venous (vv; n = 11), venoarterial (va; n=8) or veno-venoarterial (vva; n = 11). Data were prospectively collected and endpoint was 30-day mortality. To identify independent risk factors, univariate analysis was performed for clinical parameters, such as age, body mass index, gender, configuration, low-pH, oxygenation index (pO(2)/FiO(2)) and underlying disease. Thirty-day mortality was 53% (n = 16) for all comers: 63% (n = 7) died in the vv-group, 75% (n = 6) in the va-group and 27% (n = 3) in the vva-group. Although univariate analysis could not rule out a significant predictor for the outcome, there was a trend visible to decreased mortality in the vva-group when compared to vv- and va-groups (27% vs. 63% vs. 75%; P = 0.057). ECMO provides a survival benefit in patients when considering a predicted mortality rate of 80% in ARDS. The configuration mode appears to impact the outcome as the veno-venoarterial appears to further improve the survival in this subset of patients.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) has been reported to improve the symptoms of Peyronie's disease. However, the response rates to this treatment appear to be variable. This study aimed to determine whether any patient or plaque characteristics are associated with a better outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A series of 36 patients with Peyronie's disease received ESWT as a primary treatment. Subjective response rates were compared on the basis of patient age, degree of pretreatment penile curvature, predisposing medical factors, duration of disease, and extent of plaque calcification. RESULTS: Ten men (27.8%) reported subjective improvements in curvature after ESWT. Of the factors considered, only age and pretreatment curvature influenced outcomes: 50% of the men below the mean age reported improvement compared with 5.6% of older men and 62.5% of men with mild curvature reported improvement compared with 8.3% of those with severe curvature. CONCLUSION: The response to EWST is not the same for all men with Peyronie's disease. Younger men and those with milder curvature have the best outcomes.  相似文献   

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The secret is comprised in three words – work, finish, publish.’Michael FaradayThere are many reasons doctors want to publish their work. For most at an early stage in their career, this may be to add a line to their curriculum vitae and advance their careers but for academics, publishing is an expectation. Many will believe they have something important to say, and wish to provoke debate and discussion; others wish to share knowledge and experiences, which in medicine can lead to a satisfying change in clinical practice. All serve to register one’s idea and educate others. However, for some, the reason is as basic as money. As we celebrate the 350th anniversary of the first academic publication, perhaps we have come full circle when it comes to why people publish?Publishing is a flourishing business. There were approximately 28,100 active scholarly peer-reviewed journals in mid-2012, collectively publishing about 1.8–1.9 million articles per year. The number of articles published each year and the number of journals have both grown steadily for more than two centuries, by about 3% and 3.5% per year respectively.1 Journals have a responsibility to refine and define information and act as a scientific filter. Many of us will receive daily invitations in our email inbox from eclectic and new journals that are likely to take anything – is the filter now too porous? But this industry is like any other commercial activity and the supply still far outstrips the demand. Perhaps the internet revolution has merely fuelled our hunger to publish more?The launch of this exciting and innovative series about publishing coincides with the 350th celebration of the publication of the first academic journal. In the age of social media, the first question is ‘What are journals for?’, which Simon Rallison sets out to answer. Simon is Director of Publications at the Physiological Society, and was previously a journal publisher with Earthscan, Springer and Blackwell.Writing is hard work and, through this series, I hope the reader will get some useful insight into this service industry for academia.Jyoti ShahCommissioning EditorIn an age of the internet and social media, why are we still using (admittedly with refinements and improvements) a form of publication dating from 1665? What exactly is a journal in the 21st century and what role does it have to perform? Surprisingly, the academic journal has not evolved since it was invented 350 years ago.1 The first issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society was published in 1665, the brainchild of Henry Oldenburg and Robert Hooke. Since then, journals have digitised and now offer greater opportunity for research communication – but are authors taking advantage of what journals can offer? The academic and research community is generally very conservative about what it reads and how it views journals. There are, however, also frequent misunderstandings about the operation of journals.  相似文献   

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Aim: To determine retrospectively the safety and efficacy of extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) in patients with Peyronie's disease. Methods: Fifty-three patients with stable Peyronie's disease underwent ESWT (group 1). Fifteen patients matched with the baseline characteristic of the patients in group 1, who received no treatment, were used as the control (group 2). The patients' erectile function (International Index of Erectile Function [IIEF-5] score), pain severity (visual analog scale), plaque size and degree of penile angulation were assessed before and after the treatment in group 1 and during the follow-up in group 2. Results: The mean follow-up time was 32 months (range: 6-64 months) in group 1 and 35 months (range: 9-48 months) in group 2. All the patients were available for the follow-up. Considering erectile function and plaque size, no significant changes (P 〉 0.05) were observed in group 1 before or after the ESWT. A total of 39 patients (74%) reported a significant effect in pain relief in group 1 after ESWT. However, regarding improvement in pain, IIEF-5 score and plaque size, no significant differences were observed between the two groups. In 21 patients (40%) of group 1, the deviation angle was decreased more than 10° with a mean reduction in all patients of 11° (range: 6-20°). No serious complications were noted considering ESWT procedure. Conclusion: ESWT is a minimally invasive and safe alternative procedure for the treatment of Peyronie's disease. However, the effect of ESWT on penile pain, sexual function and plaque size remains questionable.  相似文献   

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Byrne A 《Anaesthesia》2012,67(3):219-225
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The objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of an open or closed recirculation line on flow rate, circuit pressure, and hemodynamic energy transmission in simulated neonatal extracorporeal life support (ECLS) systems. The two neonatal ECLS circuits consisted of a Maquet HL20 roller pump (RP group) or a RotaFlow centrifugal pump (CP group), Quadrox‐iD Pediatric oxygenator, and Biomedicus arterial and venous cannulae (8 Fr and 10 Fr) primed with lactated Ringer's solution and packed red blood cells (hematocrit 35%). Trials were conducted at flow rates ranging from 200 to 600 mL/min (200 mL/min increments) with a closed or open recirculation line at 36°C. Real‐time pressure and flow data were recorded using a custom‐based data acquisition system. In the RP group, the preoxygenator flow did not change when the recirculation line was open while the prearterial cannula flow decreased by 15.7–20.0% (P < 0.01). Circuit pressure, total circuit pressure drop, and hemodynamic energy delivered to patients also decreased (P < 0.01). In the CP group, the prearterial cannula flow did not change while preoxygenator flow increased by 13.6–18.8% (P < 0.01). Circuit pressure drop and hemodynamic energy transmission remained the same. The results showed that the shunt of an open recirculation line could decrease perfusion flow in patients in the ECLS circuit using a roller pump, but did not change perfusion flow in the circuit using a centrifugal pump. An additional flow sensor is needed to monitor perfusion flow in patients if any shunts exist in the ECLS circuit.  相似文献   

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