284 research outputs found
Effect of Opioids vs NSAIDs and Larger vs Smaller Chest Tube Size on Pain Control and Pleurodesis Efficacy Among Patients With Malignant Pleural Effusion: The TIME1 Randomized Clinical Trial
IMPORTANCE For treatment of malignant pleural effusion, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) are avoided because they may reduce pleurodesis efficacy. Smaller chest
tubes may be less painful than larger tubes, but efficacy in pleurodesis has not been proven.
OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of chest tube size and analgesia (NSAIDs vs opiates) on pain
and clinical efficacy related to pleurodesis in patients with malignant pleural effusion.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A 2×2 factorial phase 3 randomized clinical trial among
320 patients requiring pleurodesis in 16 UK hospitals from 2007 to 2013.
INTERVENTIONS Patients undergoing thoracoscopy (n = 206; clinical decision if biopsy was
required) received a 24F chest tube and were randomized to receive opiates (n = 103) vs
NSAIDs (n = 103), and those not undergoing thoracoscopy (n = 114) were randomized to 1 of
4 groups (24F chest tube and opioids [n = 28]; 24F chest tube and NSAIDs [n = 29]; 12F chest
tube and opioids [n = 29]; or 12F chest tube and NSAIDs [n = 28]).
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Pain while chest tube was in place (0- to 100-mm visual analog
scale [VAS] 4 times/d; superiority comparison) and pleurodesis efficacy at 3 months (failure
defined as need for further pleural intervention; noninferiority comparison; margin, 15%).
RESULTS Pain scores in the opiate group (n = 150) vs the NSAID group (n = 144) were not
significantly different (mean VAS score, 23.8 mm vs 22.1 mm; adjusted difference, −1.5 mm;
95% CI, −5.0 to 2.0 mm; P = .40), but the NSAID group required more rescue analgesia
(26.3% vs 38.1%; rate ratio, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.3-3.4; P = .003). Pleurodesis failure occurred in 30
patients (20%) in the opiate group and 33 (23%) in the NSAID group, meeting criteria for
noninferiority (difference, −3%; 1-sided 95% CI, −10% to ; P = .004 for noninferiority). Pain
scores were lower among patients in the 12F chest tube group (n = 54) vs the 24F group
(n = 56) (mean VAS score, 22.0 mm vs 26.8 mm; adjusted difference, −6.0 mm; 95% CI, −11.7
to −0.2 mm; P = .04) and 12F chest tubes vs 24F chest tubes were associated with higher
pleurodesis failure (30% vs 24%), failing to meet noninferiority criteria (difference, −6%;
1-sided 95% CI, −20% to ; P = .14 for noninferiority). Complications during chest tube
insertion occurred more commonly with 12F tubes (14% vs 24%; odds ratio, 1.91; P = .20).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Use of NSAIDs vs opiates resulted in no significant difference
in pain scores but was associated with more rescue medication. NSAID use resulted in
noninferior rates of pleurodesis efficacy at 3 months. Placement of 12F chest tubes vs 24F
chest tubes was associated with a statistically significant but clinically modest reduction in
pain but failed to meet noninferiority criteria for pleurodesis efficacy
Post-extubation Dysphagia in Liver Transplant Patients
Presented as a poster at Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists Annual Meeting 2020
Identification of pleural infection bacterial patterns. The oxford pleural infection metagenomics study
Building a circular supply chain:Achieving resilient operations with the circular economy
This paper highlights the fundamental contribution that supply chain professionals can make to the transition to a circular economy. It aims to provide a general understanding of how the circular economy and supply chain management fields are related to one another. By exploring the concept of a circular supply chain, the paper illustrates the role of supply chain professionals in operationalising circular economy initiatives within their organisations, as well as the opportunities and challenges they may encounter along the way. The paper also provides initialrecommendations for and examples of companies overcoming some of these challenges, based on the experiences of supply chain professionals involved in the research
The Rivermead head injury follow up questionnaire: a study of a new rating scale and other measures to evaluate outcome after head injury.
Transcriptional responses of Trichodesmium to natural inverse gradients of Fe and P availability
The filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacterium Trichodesmium is responsible for a significant fraction of marine di-nitrogen (N2) fixation. Growth and distribution of Trichodesmium and other diazotrophs in the vast oligotrophic subtropical gyres is influenced by iron (Fe) and phosphorus (P) availability, while reciprocally influencing the biogeochemistry of these nutrients. Here we use observations across natural inverse gradients in Fe and P in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (NASG) to demonstrate how Trichodesmium acclimates in situ to resource availability. Transcriptomic analysis identified progressive upregulation of known iron-stress biomarker genes with decreasing Fe availability, and progressive upregulation of genes involved in the acquisition of diverse P sources with decreasing P availability, while genes involved in N2 fixation were upregulated at the intersection under moderate Fe and P availability. Enhanced N2 fixation within the Fe and P co-stressed transition region was also associated with a distinct, consistent metabolic profile, including the expression of alternative photosynthetic pathways that potentially facilitate ATP generation required for N2 fixation with reduced net oxygen production. The observed response of Trichodesmium to availability of both Fe and P supports suggestions that these biogeochemically significant organisms employ unique molecular, and thus physiological responses as adaptations to specifically exploit the Fe and P co-limited niche they construct
Intoxicants and the invention of 'consumption'
In 1600 the word ‘consumption’ was a term of medical pathology describing the ‘wasting, petrification of things’. By 1700 it was also a term of economic discourse: ‘In commodities, the value rises as its quantity is less and vent greater, which depends upon it being preferred in its consumption’. The article traces the emergence of this key category of economic analysis to debates over the economy in the 1620s and subsequent disputes over the excise tax, showing how ‘consumption’ was an early term in the developing lexicon of political economy. In so doing the article demonstrates the important role of ‘intoxicants’ – i.e. addictive and intoxicating commodities like alcohols and tobaccos – in shaping these early meanings and uses of ‘consumption’. It outlines the discursive importance of intoxicants, both as the foci for discussions of ‘superfluous’ and ‘necessary’ consumption and the target of legislation on consumption. And it argues that while these discussions had an ideological dimension, or dimensions, they were also responses to material increases in the volume and diversity of intoxicants in early seventeenth-century England. By way of conclusion the article suggests the significance of the Low Countries as a point of reference for English writers, as well as a more capacious and semantically sensitive approach to changes in early-modern consumption practices
Diet and BMI correlate with metabolite patterns associated with aggressive prostate cancer
Three metabolite patterns have previously shown prospective inverse associations with the risk of aggressive prostate cancer within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC). Here, we investigated dietary and lifestyle correlates of these three prostate cancer-related metabolite patterns, which included: 64 phosphatidylcholines and three hydroxysphingomyelins (Pattern 1), acylcarnitines C18:1 and C18:2, glutamate, ornithine, and taurine (Pattern 2), and 8 lysophosphatidylcholines (Pattern 3). In a two-stage cross-sectional discovery (n = 2524) and validation (n = 518) design containing 3042 men free of cancer in EPIC, we estimated the associations of 24 dietary and lifestyle variables with each pattern and the contributing individual metabolites. Associations statistically significant after both correction for multiple testing (False Discovery Rate = 0.05) in the discovery set and at p < 0.05 in the validation set were considered robust. Intakes of alcohol, total fish products, and its subsets total fish and lean fish were positively associated with Pattern 1. Body mass index (BMI) was positively associated with Pattern 2, which appeared to be driven by a strong positive BMI-glutamate association. Finally, both BMI and fatty fish were inversely associated with Pattern 3. In conclusion, these results indicate associations of fish and its subtypes, alcohol, and BMI with metabolite patterns that are inversely associated with risk of aggressive prostate cancer
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