0339 Assessment of severity of neuropathy by electromyography among diabetic neuropathy patient population attending to the turkish university hospital outpatient clinics

2005 ◽  
Vol 238 ◽  
pp. S185-S186
2005 ◽  
Vol 123 (5) ◽  
pp. 229-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabel de Camargo Neves Sacco ◽  
Silvia Maria Amado João ◽  
Denise Alignani ◽  
Daniela Kinoshita Ota ◽  
Cristina Dallemole Sartor ◽  
...  

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE: Physiotherapy can contribute towards recovering or preventing physical and sensory alterations in diabetic neuropathy patients. Our objective was to create and apply a protocol for functional assessment of diabetic neuropathy patients' lower limbs, to guide future physiotherapy. DESIGN AND SETTING: Clinical study at the University Hospital and teaching/research center of Universidade de São Paulo. METHODS: An intentional sample of diabetic neuropathy patients was utilized. The protocol was divided into: (1) preliminary investigation with identification of relevant clinical diabetes and neuropathy characteristics; (2) thermal, tactile and proprioceptive sensitivity tests on the feet; (3) evaluations of muscle function, range of motion, lower limb function, foot anthropometry. RESULTS: The patients' mean age was 57 years, and they had had the diagnosis for 13 years on average. Distal numbness and tingling/prickling were present in 62% and 67%, respectively. There were tactile sensitivity alterations above the heel in 50%, with thermal sensitivity in 40% to 60%. The worst muscle function test responses were at the triceps surae and foot intrinsic muscles. Longitudinal plantar arches were lowered in 50%. Decreased thermal and tactile sensitivity of the heels was found. There was a general reduction in range of motion. CONCLUSIONS: The results provided detailed characterization of the patients. This protocol may be easily applied in healthcare services, since it requires little equipment, at low cost, and it is well understood by patients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amal S. Taha

Context: Cataract is the leading cause of poor vision worldwide. Patients who knowledgeable and skillful nurses well prepare are better prepared to engage in appropriate self-care activities post-cataract surgery. Aim: This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of nursing intervention protocol on nurses' performance and patients’ self-care after cataract surgery. Methods: The study followed a quasi-experimental, pretest-posttest design. The study was conducted in ophthalmology surgical inpatient units and the outpatient clinics at Benha University Hospital. The sample consisted of all available nurses (35) working in the ophthalmology surgical inpatient units, and the outpatient clinics who are willing and agreed to participate in the study and a convenient sample consisted of 50 patients of both genders were also included in the current study before implementing nursing intervention protocol. Three tools were used to conduct the study: A structured interview questionnaire, nurses' practice checklist, and patients’ self-care activity checklist. Results: The results showed statistically significant improvements in nurses' performance (knowledge and practice) immediately post and one-month follow-up post-nursing intervention protocol compared with pre-nursing intervention protocol implementation (p<0.001). General improvement in patients’ self-care activities (41.6±11.042) increased significantly to (64.2±13.65) after nursing intervention protocol implementation at p=0.001. However, after one month of implementing the nursing intervention protocol, a slight decline occurred after one month (52.46±10.97) compared to pre intervention level. Highly statistically significant differences were observed at a p-value ≤0.001. Conclusion: Findings of this study conclude that the nursing intervention protocol was effective in improving nurses' performance, which was reflected in improving the practice of patients' self-care activities cared for by nurses exposed to nursing intervention protocol implementation.  It is recommended that further studies are suggested to investigate the outcome of the implementing nursing intervention protocol on decreasing the occurrence of complications post-cataract surgery.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hasan Durmuş ◽  
Ahmet Timur ◽  
Serkan Yıldız ◽  
Fevziye Çetinkaya

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaldoon Aljerian

Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is a bariatric surgical procedure performed in patients with morbid obesity that provides the opportunity to review histopathological changes. The aim of this study was to characterize resected gastric specimens obtained from a Saudi patient population at a single center for a prospectively maintained database of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy cases. The histopathological findings from all patients undergoing laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomies at King Khalid University Hospital between 2010 and 2015 were retrospectively reviewed. Of the 602 cases reviewed, the majority (83.4% [n=502]) exhibited chronic gastritis, whereas 22.3% (n=134) involved Helicobacter pylori infections with active gastritis, 1% (n=6) had intestinal metaplasia, and one case (0.17%) revealed gastric adenocarcinoma. As the findings revealed conditions that are treatable, I highly recommend histological examinations of all sleeve gastrectomy specimens from a Saudi patient population.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 5015-5015
Author(s):  
Francesco Cicone ◽  
Francesco Scopinaro ◽  
Sebastien Baechler ◽  
Nicolas Ketterer ◽  
Franz Buchegger ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aim: Due to limited data regarding the efficacy of Radioimmunotherapy with 90Y-Zevalin (RIT-Z) outside of controlled clinical trials, we carried out a biinstitutional, international retrospective study to assess the efficacy of RIT-Z in a routine clinical setting. The relationship between the number of previous therapies and outcomes as well as the response to the last therapy was assessed. Possible differences in outcomes for patients treated in the two different centers were also analyzed. Materials and Methods: Forty-three consecutive patients treated at the University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV, Switzerland) and at S. Andrea University Hospital of Rome (Italy) were evaluated, none of which had been previously included in clinical trials. Only 31 patients entered the final analysis: patients lost at follow up, undergoing autologous transplantation (ASCT), or treated within the last 3 months were excluded. Efficacy of therapy was evaluated in terms of Overall Survival (OS), Progression Free Survival (PFS), and Time to Next Treatment (TTNT). Survival curves were obtained with the Kaplan- Meier method (statistical significance = p&lt;0.05). Results: Characteristics of the patient population are listed in Table 1. Although 50% of the patients had aggressive histologies, patients treated at S. Andrea had slightly more favorable features than those treated at CHUV. Fourteen patients (45%) had received at least 4 previous treatments, and all had received Rituximab. Fourteen patients (45%) had not responded to the last therapy, while 6 (19%), all treated at S.Andrea, were considered disease-free at the time of RIT-Z, which was administered for consolidation. Median follow up time was 20 months (11.5 vs. 25 months for S.Andrea and CHUV, respectively). Median PFS and TTNT were similar. After achieving a partial response, 2 patients were referred to Rituximab maintenance after RIT-Z and remain progression-free. Median OS was still not attained. Although not statistically significant, a trend towards better outcomes for S. Andrea patients was found. In comparing patients with indolent and aggressive lymphoma, only PFS was found to be significantly different (median PFS: 10 vs. 5 months, p&lt;0.05). In patients with &lt;4 and ≥ 4 previous therapies, twenty month OS was 88% vs. 53.6% (p=0.02), respectively; median TTNT was 22 vs. 5 months (p=0.013), while differences in PFS did not attain statistical significance. The duration of response in non-responders to their last therapy was shorter than in responders: 20-month OS- 44% vs. 94% (p=0.0015), median PFS and TTNT- 3.5 vs. 15 months (p=0.0002) and 4 vs. 15 months (p=0.0001), respectively. Median PFS and TTNT after RIT-Z did not differ from those found after the last therapy. A significant difference in outcomes for heavily pretreated or refractory patients was found in those with low grade follicular lymphoma. Conclusions: Poorer outcomes were found in our patient population treated in a routine clinical setting compared to those enrolled in clinical trials. This may be related to greater heterogeneity of our study cohort which included more patients with unfavorable conditions (e.g. aggressive NHL, ≥4 treatment courses including rituximab in all, and ASCT in 25%). Our results suggest that the best benefit may be expected with RIT-Z either for consolidation or relatively earlier in the course of NHL treatment. Table 1. Total CHUV S. Andrea Population Analyzed (72%) Number of patients 43 23 20 31 Median Age 61 63 58,5 62 Aggressive Histology (FL grade 3 or DLBCL) 18 (41,8%) 8 (34,7%) 10 (50%) 11 (35,5%) Indolent Histology (FL grade 1 or 2) (%) 25 (58,2%) 15 (65,3%) 10 (50%) 20 (64,5%) Patients with ≥4 previous treatments 19 (44,2%) 12 (52,1%) 7 (35%) 14 (45,2%) Patients with previous ASCT 11 (25,6%) 6 (26%) 5 (25%) 8 (25%)


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