280 results on '"Johnson EE"'
Search Results
2. 3-DIMENSIONAL STEREOGRAPHIC DISPLAY OF 3D RECONSTRUCTED CT SCANS OF THE PELVIS AND ACETABULUM
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GAUTSCH, TL, JOHNSON, EE, and SEEGER, LL
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- 1994
3. How do hearing aid dispensers pick their buying preferences?
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Johnson EE and Mueller G
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- 2010
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4. Statistically derived factors of varied importance to audiologists when making a hearing aid brand preference decision.
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Johnson EE, Mueller HG, and Ricketts TA
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Purpose: To determine the amount of importance audiologists place on various items related to their selection of a preferred hearing aid brand manufacturer.Research Design: Three hundred forty-three hearing aid-dispensing audiologists rated a total of 32 randomized items by survey methodology.Results: Principle component analysis identified seven orthogonal statistical factors of importance. In rank order, these factors were Aptitude of the Brand, Image, Cost, Sales and Speed of Delivery, Exposure, Colleague Recommendations, and Contracts and Incentives. While it was hypothesized that differences among audiologists in the importance ratings of these factors would dictate their preference for a given brand, that was not our finding. Specifically, mean ratings for the six most important factors did not differ among audiologists preferring different brands. A statistically significant difference among audiologists preferring different brands was present, however, for one factor: Contracts and Incentives. Its assigned importance, though, was always lower than that for the other six factors.Conclusions: Although most audiologists have a preferred hearing aid brand, differences in the perceived importance of common factors attributed to brands do not largely determine preference for a particular brand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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5. Practitioners give high marks for user benefit to open-canal mini-BTEs.
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Johnson EE
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- 2008
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6. Flatiron mice and ferroportin disease.
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Johnson EE and Wessling-Resnick M
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- 2007
7. The effect of digital phase cancellation feedback reduction systems on amplified sound quality.
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Johnson EE, Ricketts TA, and Hornsby BWY
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The effect of feedback reduction (FBR) systems on sound quality recorded from two commercially available hearing aids was evaluated using paired comparison judgments by 16 participants with mild to severe sloping hearing loss. These comparisons were made with the FBR systems on and off without audible feedback and while attempting to control for differences in gain and clinical fitting factors. Wilcoxon signed rank test analyses showed that the participants were unable to differentiate between signals that had been recorded with the FBR systems on and off within the same hearing aid. However, significant between-instrument differences in sound quality were identified. The results support the activation of the FFT-phase cancellation FBR systems evaluated herein without concern for a noticeable degradation of sound quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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8. Survey finds higher sales and prices, plus more open fittings and directional mics.
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Johnson EE
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- 2007
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9. Survey explores how dispensers use and choose their preferred hearing aid brands.
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Johnson EE
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- 2007
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10. Failure of LCP condylar plate fixation in the distal part of the femur.
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Johnson EE, Vallier HA, Sontich JK, Patterson BM, and Johnson, Eric E
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- 2006
11. Segmenting dispensers: factors in selecting open-canal fittings.
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Johnson EE
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- 2006
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12. Pathologic patellar fracture at the site of an old Sinding-Larsen-Johansson lesion: a case report of a 33-year-old male.
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Freedman DM, Kono M, Johnson EE, Freedman, Douglas M, Kono, Michiyuki, and Johnson, Eric E
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- 2005
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13. Adaptive directional benefit in the near field: competing sound angle and level effects.
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Ricketts TA, Hornsby BWY, and Johnson EE
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- 2005
14. Despite having more advanced features, hearing aids hold line on retail price.
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Johnson EE
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- 2008
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15. The effects of speech and speechlike maskers on unaided and aided speech recognition in persons with hearing loss.
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Hornsby BWY, Ricketts TA, and Johnson EE
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Speech understanding in noise is affected by both the energetic and informational masking components of the background noise. In addition, when the background noise is everyday speech, the relative contributions of the energetic and informational masking components to the overall difficulties in understanding speech are unclear. This study estimated informational masking effects, in conversational speech settings, on the speech understanding of persons with and without hearing loss. The benefits and limitations of amplification in settings containing both informational and energetic masking components were also explored. Speech recognition was assessed in the presence of two types of maskers (speech and noise) that varied in the amount of informational masking they were expected to produce. Persons with hearing loss were tested both unaided and aided. Study results suggest that background noise, consisting of individual talkers, results in both informational and energetic masking. In addition, the benefits of amplification are limited when the background noise contains both informational and energetic masking components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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16. Reporting of Patient and Public Involvement in Technology Appraisal and Assessment Reports: A Rapid Scoping Review.
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Johnson EE, Uteh CO, Belilios E, and Pearson F
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Background: The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) produces guidance on the use of health technologies (including new and existing medicines, medical devices, diagnostics and interventional procedures) in the National Health Service. Technology Appraisals inform recommendations on the use of new and existing health technologies. As part of its health technology evaluation process, NICE ask independent research groups known as Evidence or External Assessment Groups (EAGs) to assess or evaluate the available evidence surrounding health technologies. Although patients and the public are involved in the wider NICE Heath Technology Evaluation and Assessment process, little is known about the extent to which patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) is undertaken and documented in EAG Reports., Objectives: This rapid scoping review aimed to discover the extent to which PPIE is currently undertaken and documented in EAG Reports, which feed into the wider NICE health technology assessment process, and whether EAG Reports contain a plain language summary., Methods: We searched the NICE website for guidance published between 27 September, 2022 and 27 September, 2023. All records were downloaded directly from the NICE website into an Excel spreadsheet for extraction. Evaluations that were terminated before guidance was published or where an EAG Report was not available as supporting evidence were excluded. One researcher charted information regarding the type of each EAG Report, whether a plain language summary was included, and whether documentation of PPIE was included in the EAG Report either within a stand-alone section or throughout the main text of the report. A second researcher checked charted information for 20% of these records. We tabulated data and described PPIE conduct and documentation in included EAG Reports within a narrative synthesis., Results: A total of 97 EAG Reports were included in this rapid scoping review, the majority of which were documenting Single Technology Appraisals (N = 55). Of the 97 EAG Reports, 11 included a plain language summary. Of these 11 reports, two were Multiple Technology Appraisals, five were Diagnostic Assessment Reviews and four were Early Value Assessments. One Early Value Assessment, one Diagnostic Assessment Review and one Multiple Technology Appraisal reported that they did not conduct PPIE because of time constraints and noted that patients were involved in the wider NICE Appraisal process. Two Early Value Assessments that explicitly reported on PPIE used heterogenous methods of involvement., Conclusions: There is currently limited PPIE documented in EAG Reports and inclusion of a plain language summary is uncommon. Further guidance is required to assist EAGs with embedding PPIE and a plain language summary into their Reports taking into consideration the ultra-rapid nature of the production of these reports., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2024
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17. Conservative, physical and surgical interventions for managing faecal incontinence and constipation in adults with central neurological diseases.
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Todd CL, Johnson EE, Stewart F, Wallace SA, Bryant A, Woodward S, and Norton C
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- Adult, Humans, Bias, Conservative Treatment methods, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Central Nervous System Diseases complications, Constipation therapy, Constipation etiology, Fecal Incontinence therapy, Fecal Incontinence etiology
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Background: People with central neurological disease or injury have a much higher risk of both faecal incontinence (FI) and constipation than the general population. There is often a fine line between the two symptoms, with management intended to ameliorate one risking precipitating the other. Bowel problems are observed to be the cause of much anxiety and may reduce quality of life in these people. Current bowel management is largely empirical, with a limited research base. The review is relevant to individuals with any disease directly and chronically affecting the central nervous system (post-traumatic, degenerative, ischaemic or neoplastic), such as multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2001 and subsequently updated in 2003, 2006 and 2014., Objectives: To assess the effects of conservative, physical and surgical interventions for managing FI and constipation in people with a neurological disease or injury affecting the central nervous system., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register (searched 27 March 2023), which includes searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP as well as handsearching of journals and conference proceedings; and all reference lists of relevant articles., Selection Criteria: We included randomised, quasi-randomised (where allocation is not strictly random), cross-over and cluster-randomised trials evaluating any type of conservative, physical or surgical intervention against placebo, usual care or no intervention for the management of FI and constipation in people with central neurological disease or injury., Data Collection and Analysis: At least two review authors independently assessed the risk of bias in eligible trials using Cochrane's 'Risk of bias' tool and independently extracted data from the included trials using a range of prespecified outcome measures. We produced summary of findings tables for our main outcome measures and assessed the certainty of the evidence using GRADE., Main Results: We included 25 studies with 1598 participants. The studies were generally at high risk of bias due to lack of blinding of participants and personnel to the intervention. Half of the included studies were also at high risk of bias in terms of selective reporting. Outcomes were often reported heterogeneously across studies, making it difficult to pool data. We did not find enough evidence to be able to analyse the effects of interventions on individual central neurological diseases. Additionally, very few studies reported on the primary outcomes of self-reported improvement in FI or constipation, or Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score. Conservative interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Thirteen studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included assessment-based nursing, holistic nursing, probiotics, psyllium, faecal microbiota transplantation, and a stepwise protocol of increasingly invasive evacuation methods. Conservative interventions may result in a large improvement in faecal incontinence (standardised mean difference (SMD) -1.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) -3.47 to -0.23; 3 studies; n = 410; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.80 as a large effect. It was not possible to pool all data from studies that assessed improvement in constipation, but the evidence suggested that conservative interventions may improve constipation symptoms (data not pooled; 8 studies; n = 612; low-certainty evidence). Conservative interventions may lead to a reduction in mean time taken on bowel care (data not pooled; 5 studies; n = 526; low-certainty evidence). The evidence is uncertain about the effects of conservative interventions on condition-specific quality of life and adverse events. Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score was not reported. Physical therapy compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo Twelve studies assessed this comparison. The interventions included massage therapy, standing, osteopathic manipulative treatment, electrical stimulation, transanal irrigation, and conventional physical therapy with visceral mobilisation. Physical therapies may make little to no difference to self-reported faecal continence assessed using the St Mark's Faecal Incontinence Score, where the minimally important difference is five, or the Cleveland Constipation Score (MD -2.60, 95% CI -4.91 to -0.29; 3 studies; n = 155; low-certainty evidence). Physical therapies may result in a moderate improvement in constipation symptoms (SMD -0.62, 95% CI -1.10 to -0.14; 9 studies; n = 431; low-certainty evidence). We interpreted SMD ≥ 0.5 as a moderate effect. However, physical therapies may make little to no difference in Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction Score as the minimally important difference for this tool is 3 (MD -1.94, 95% CI -3.36 to -0.51; 7 studies; n = 358; low-certainty evidence). We are very uncertain about the effects of physical therapies on the time spent on bowel care, condition-specific quality of life and adverse effects (all very low-certainty evidence). Surgical interventions compared with usual care, no active treatment or placebo No studies were found for surgical interventions that met the inclusion criteria for this review., Authors' Conclusions: There remains little research on this common and, for patients, very significant issue of bowel management. The available evidence is almost uniformly of low methodological quality. The clinical significance of some of the research findings presented here is difficult to interpret, not least because each intervention has only been addressed in individual trials, against control rather than compared against each other, and the interventions are very different from each other. Understanding whether there is a clinically-meaningful difference from the results of available trials is largely hampered by the lack of uniform outcome measures. This is due to an absence of core outcome sets, and development of these needs to be a research priority to allow studies to be compared directly. Some studies used validated constipation, incontinence or condition-specific measures; however, others used unvalidated analogue scales to report effectiveness. Some studies did not use any patient-reported outcomes and focused on physiological outcome measures, which is of relatively limited significance in terms of clinical implementation. There was evidence in favour of some conservative interventions, but these findings need to be confirmed by larger, well-designed controlled trials, which should include evaluation of the acceptability of the intervention to patients and the effect on their quality of life., (Copyright © 2024 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2024
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18. Rates of Reporting and Analyzing Race and Ethnicity in Athlete-Specific Sports Medicine Research: A Systematic Review.
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Sonnier JH, Coladonato C, Khan IA, Connors G, Paul RW, Hall AT, Johnson EE, Bishop ME, Tjoumakaris FP, and Freedman KB
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Background: Race- and ethnicity-based differences in treatment access and outcomes have been reported in the orthopaedic sports medicine literature. However, the rate at which race and ethnicity are reported and incorporated into the statistical analysis of sports medicine studies remains unclear., Purpose: To determine the rate at which race and ethnicity are reported and analyzed in athlete-specific sports medicine literature., Study Design: Systematic review; Level of evidence, 4., Methods: Using PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines, articles published by the 3 journals of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine between 2017 and 2021 were considered for inclusion. Original sports medicine research studies that focused on athletes were included. Outcome measures included reporting and analysis of patient demographics (age, sex, race, ethnicity). Studies that included demographic variables in a multivariate analysis or that performed a race-/ethnicity-based stratified analyses were considered to have analyzed that variable. Studies that reported and/or analyzed patient demographics were examined. Chi-square tests were performed to determine statistical significance., Results: A total of 5140 publications were screened, and 842 met the inclusion criteria. Age and sex were well reported (84.1% and 87.0%, respectively), while race (3.8%) and ethnicity (2.0%) were poorly reported. There was no difference in rates of reporting age, sex, race, or ethnicity between the American Journal of Sports Medicine ( AJSM ), the Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine ( OJSM ), or Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach ( Sports Health ). The rate of analysis was also calculated as a percentage of the studies that reported that variable. Of the studies that reported age, 38.5% analyzed age. Using this method, 26.2% of studies analyzed sex, 40.6% analyzed race, and 17.6% analyzed ethnicity. Although there was no difference in the overall rate at which studies from the 3 journals analyzed ethnicity, Sports Health studies analyzed age ( P = .044), sex ( P = .001), and race ( P = .027) more frequently than studies published in AJSM and OJSM . Of the studies that analyzed race, most of those studies (8/13, 61.5%) found significant race-based differences in reported outcomes., Conclusion: This systematic review demonstrated that race and ethnicity are poorly reported and analyzed in athlete-specific sports medicine literature, despite the fact that a majority of studies analyzing race found significant differences between racial groups. Improved reporting of race and ethnicity can determine whether race- and ethnicity-based differences exist in patient interventions to ameliorate disparities in patient outcomes., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: F.P.T. has received consulting fees from DePuy Synthes Products and Medical Device Business Services; hospitality payments from MicroVention and Smith+Nephew; and holds stock options from Trice Medical. M.E.B. has received a grant from Arthrex; education payments from Gotham Surgical Solutions & Devices, Arthrex, and Smith+Nephew; and hospitality payments from Stryker. K.B.F. has received a grant from Vericel; education payments from Liberty Surgical; consulting fees from Vericel, Innocoll, and Medical Device Business Services; nonconsulting fees from Vericel; and honoraria from Vericel. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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19. Analysis of Patients Who Undergo Index Arthroscopy With Biopsy but Not Implantation for Staged Chondrocyte Cell Transplantation.
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Kemler BR, Johnson EE, Evert BM, Dees AN, Giakas AM, Hanna AJ, D'Amore T, Freedman KB, and Hammoud S
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Background: Autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) and matrix-induced autologous chondrocyte implantation (MACI) are 2-stage procedures requiring an index full-thickness cartilage biopsy. Only a portion of patients ultimately undergo second-stage ACI/MACI., Purpose: To identify patients with articular cartilage defects who underwent arthroscopic debridement with biopsy for ACI/MACI and compare those who did with those who did not proceed with implantation within 2 years after biopsy. Additionally, the authors sought to identify why patients did not proceed with implantation., Study Design: Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3., Methods: Patients who underwent arthroscopy and autologous chondrocyte biopsy from January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2019, and who had minimum 2-year follow-up data were grouped into those who proceeded with second-stage ACI/MACI (implant group; n = 97) and those who did not (biopsy group; n = 63). Demographic factors, cartilage defect characteristics, and preoperative International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) scores were analyzed. Patients in both groups were evaluated postoperatively using the IKDC, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation (SANE), and visual analog scale (VAS) for pain, and patients who did not undergo implantation were asked for their reasoning., Results: Body mass index (BMI) ( P < .001) and Outerbridge grades at index arthroscopy ( P = .047) were significantly higher for the implant group than the biopsy group. Both groups had significantly improved IKDC scores from their initial presentation to final follow-up (implant group: 46.4 ± 16.2 preoperative vs 69.6 ± 20.6 postoperative [ P < .001]; biopsy group: 47.2 ± 15.9 preoperative vs 70.7 ± 19.1 postoperative [ P < .001]); however, the level of improvement did not differ significantly between groups. Postoperative WOMAC, SANE, and VAS pain scores were also similar between groups. In the biopsy group, 23 patients (37%) cited symptom resolution or activity level improvement after initial arthroscopy as the reason for not proceeding with implantation., Conclusion: Patients who proceeded to the second stage of chondrocyte implantation via either ACI or MACI had higher-grade articular defects and higher BMI compared with those who underwent biopsy with concomitant debridement chondroplasty alone. Postoperative outcomes were similar between the groups., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: B.R.K. has received education payments from Eclipse Technology Solutions, Liberty Surgical, and Paladin Technology Solutions. T.D. has received education payments from Liberty Surgical and Paladin Technology Solutions. K.B.F. has received grant support from Vericel; education payments from Liberty Surgical; consulting fees from Vericel, Innocoll, and Medical Device Business Services; nonconsulting fees from Vericel; and honoraria from Vericel. S.H. has received education payments from Arthrex, nonconsulting fees from Arthrex, and hospitality payments from Smith+Nephew. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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20. Emerging Technologies for Improving Musculoskeletal Health: A Systematic Evidence Gap Map.
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Tanner L, Still M, Ghasri S, Sadiq A, Harris B, Haston S, Potter R, Uteh CO, Al-Assaf A, Johnson EE, Moral SGG, Mkwashi A, Craig D, Angadji A, Thomas M, and Pearson F
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- Humans, Evidence Gaps, Musculoskeletal Diseases therapy
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Introduction: Musculoskeletal (MSK) conditions are the largest contributor to disability worldwide. The aim of this project was to undertake a horizon scan and generate an evidence gap map (EGM) to highlight technological innovations in development for preventing and managing MSK conditions at early stages of the clinical treatment pathway, and to identify areas of unmet need., Methods: In February 2024, bibliographic databases, a clinical trial registry, research funding portals, and company websites were searched for relevant records. Identified records were screened for relevance; they had to be a device or digital "innovative" technology for maintaining or recovering positive musculoskeletal health in adults. The characteristics of relevant technologies, delivery setting and outcomes assessed were coded. An EGM was generated to illustrate the results. Methods followed Cochrane Rapid Reviews Guidance to ensure robustness., Results: One hundred and nine relevant technologies were identified. Nearly half (49.5%) of these technologies were designed for use at home. Most (50.5%) were digital technologies (e.g., mobile apps) or devices with a digital component (19.3%) (e.g., digital pain reduction kit). The impact of these technologies was most assessed by changes seen in measures of pain and mobility., Discussion and Conclusion: The proportion of technologies used at home compared to other settings indicates a shift in the setting of therapy provision for individuals with MSK conditions. Future evaluative studies should consider measuring a broader set of outcome domains in order to understand the direct and wider impacts of health technologies for those with MSK conditions., (© 2024 Orthopaedic Research UK and The Author(s). Musculoskeletal Care published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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21. Vaccination to Prevent Lyme Disease: A Movement Towards Anti-Tick Approaches.
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Johnson EE, Hart TM, and Fikrig E
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- Humans, Animals, Vaccination, Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins immunology, Bacterial Vaccines immunology, Bacterial Vaccines administration & dosage, Antigens, Surface immunology, Lipoproteins immunology, Lyme Disease prevention & control, Lyme Disease immunology, Borrelia burgdorferi immunology, Lyme Disease Vaccines immunology, Ixodes microbiology
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Lyme disease is caused by the spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, which is transmitted by Ixodes spp ticks. The rise in Lyme disease cases since its discovery in the 1970s has reinforced the need for a vaccine. A vaccine based on B burgdorferi outer surface protein A (OspA) was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) several decades ago, but was pulled from the market a few years later, reportedly due to poor sales, despite multiple organizations concluding that it was safe and effective. Newer OspA-based vaccines are being developed and are likely to be available in the coming years. More recently, there has been a push to develop vaccines that target the tick vector instead of the pathogen to inhibit tick feeding and thus prevent transmission of tick-borne pathogens to humans and wildlife reservoirs. This review outlines the history of Lyme disease vaccines and this movement to anti-tick vaccine approaches., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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22. A theory of coverage rate differences for hearing aids around the world based on correlational observation and analysis.
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Johnson EE and Bisgaard N
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Objective: Our objective was to ascertain likely reasons for explaining variation in coverage rates for hearing aids (HAs) among various countries around the world., Design: A retrospective analysis of past coverage rates and their association to demographic and economic variables of apriori logical consideration., Study Sample: Data was obtained on macroeconomic conditions from 37 countries in the OECD and estimated coverage rates for HAs using recent actual sales data., Results: Two variables were identified with a very strong correlation (R = 0.97, R
2 = 0.95) to coverage rates. The first variable was the level of subsidy provided for the citizens to obtain HAs. The second variable was the GNI/capita which reflects the income available to citizens to make the purchase of HAs., Conclusion: In countries where subsidy for HAs are made available through either public or private health service/insurance, an increase in coverage rates is likely to occur. The effect of subsidy is likely to surpass any effect of OTC HAs that has been demonstrated to date. Where and when feasible, subsidy presence and encouraging income generation among able citizens of a country should be sought in tandem - a complex interplay of improving coverage rates for HAs with economics.- Published
- 2024
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23. The effects of radiofrequency exposure on adverse female reproductive outcomes: A systematic review of human observational studies with dose-response meta-analysis.
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Johnson EE, Kenny RPW, Adesanya AM, Richmond C, Beyer F, Calderon C, Rankin J, Pearce MS, Toledano M, Craig D, and Pearson F
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- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Abortion, Spontaneous epidemiology, Abortion, Spontaneous etiology, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Maternal Exposure adverse effects, Observational Studies as Topic, Premature Birth, Reproduction radiation effects, Stillbirth epidemiology, Electromagnetic Fields adverse effects, Pregnancy Outcome, Radio Waves adverse effects
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Background: To inform radiofrequency electromagnetic field (RF-EMF) exposure guidelines the World Health Organization (WHO) is bringing together evidence on RF-EMF in relation to health outcomes prioritised for evaluation by experts in this field. Given this, a network of topic experts and methodologists have conducted a series of systematic reviews collecting, assessing, and synthesising data of relevance to these guidelines. Here we present a systematic review of the effect of RF-EMF exposure on adverse pregnancy outcomes in human observational studies which follows the WHO handbook for guideline development and the COSTER conduct guidelines., Methods: We conducted a broad, sensitive search for potentially relevant records within the following bibliographic databases: MEDLINE; Embase; and the EMF Portal. Grey literature searches were also conducted through relevant databases (including OpenGrey), organisational websites and via consultation of RF-EMF experts. We included quantitative human observational studies on the effect of RF-EMF exposure in adults' preconception or pregnant women on pre-term birth, small for gestational age (SGA; associated with intrauterine growth restriction), miscarriage, stillbirth, low birth weight (LBW) and congenital anomalies. In blinded duplicate, titles and abstracts then full texts were screened against eligibility criteria. A third reviewer gave input when consensus was not reached. Citation chaining of included studies was completed. Two reviewers' data extracted and assessed included studies for risk of bias using the Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT) tool. Random effects meta-analyses of the highest versus the lowest exposures and dose-response meta-analysis were conducted as appropriate and plausible. Two reviewers assessed the certainty in each body of evidence using the OHAT GRADE tool., Results: We identified 18 studies in this review; eight were general public studies (with the general public as the population of interest) and 10 were occupational studies (with the population of interest specific workers/workforces). General public studies. From pairwise meta-analyses of general public studies, the evidence is very uncertain about the effects of RF-EMF from mobile phone exposure on preterm birth risk (relative risk (RR) 1.14, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.97-1.34, 95% prediction interval (PI): 0.83-1.57; 4 studies), LBW (RR 1.14, 95% CI: 0.96-1.36, 95% PI: 0.84-1.57; 4 studies) or SGA (RR 1.13, 95% CI: 1.02-1.24, 95% PI: 0.99-1.28; 2 studies) due to very low-certainty evidence. It was not feasible to meta-analyse studies reporting on the effect of RF-EMF from mobile phone exposure on congenital anomalies or miscarriage risk. The reported effects from the studies assessing these outcomes varied and the studies were at some risk of bias. No studies of the general public assessed the impact of RF-EMF exposure on stillbirth. Occupational studies. In occupational studies, based on dose-response meta-analyses, the evidence is very uncertain about the effects of RF-EMF amongst female physiotherapists using shortwave diathermy on miscarriage due to very low-certainty evidence (OR 1.02 95% CI 0.94-1.1; 2 studies). Amongst offspring of female physiotherapists using shortwave diathermy, the evidence is very uncertain about the effects of RF-EMF on the risk of congenital malformations due to very low-certainty evidence (OR 1.4, 95% CI 0.85 to 2.32; 2 studies). From pairwise meta-analyses, the evidence is very uncertain about the effects of RF-EMF on the risk of miscarriage (RR 1.06, 95% CI 0.96 to 1.18; very low-certainty evidence), pre-term births (RR 1.19, 95% CI 0.32 to 4.37; 3 studies; very low-certainty evidence), and low birth weight (RR 2.90, 95% CI: 0.69 to 12.23; 3 studies; very low-certainty evidence). Results for stillbirth and SGA could not be pooled in meta-analyses. The results from the studies reporting these outcomes were inconsistent and the studies were at some risk of bias., Discussion: Most of the evidence identified in this review was from general public studies assessing localised RF-EMF exposure from mobile phone use on female reproductive outcomes. In occupational settings, each study was of heterogenous whole-body RF-EMF exposure from radar, short or microwave diathermy, surveillance and welding equipment and its effect on female reproductive outcomes. Overall, the body of evidence is very uncertain about the effect of RF-EMF exposure on female reproductive outcomes. Further prospective studies conducted with greater rigour (particularly improved accuracy of exposure measurement and using appropriate statistical methods) are required to identify any potential effects of RF-EMF exposure on female reproductive outcomes of interest., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: [Mireille Toledano has been involved in funded research assessing mobile phone and other wireless technologies usage on health outcomes: the SCAMP (study cognition adolescents and mobile phones) prospective cohort study which is currently ongoing (2015–2021), and the COSMOS (cohort study of mobile phone use and health) a longitudinal cohort study which is completed (2019). Carolina Calderon has been involved in MOBI-Kids (risk of brain cancer from exposure to radiofrequency fields in childhood adolescence) and GERoNIMO, of which the Tsarna 2019 study was one of the outcomes. However, they were not directly involved in the Tsarna 2019 paper and was not involved in the selection, data extraction or risk of bias assessment for this study.]., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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24. Interventions for cold homes: a rapid review of the health impacts.
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Lazo Green K, Tan MMC, Johnson EE, Ahmed N, Eastaugh C, Beyer F, Craig D, Spiers GF, and Hanratty B
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- Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Aged, Housing, Quality of Life, Male, Female, Heating, Middle Aged, Adult, Adolescent, Health Status, Cold Temperature
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Background: Cold homes are associated with an increased risk of adverse health outcomes for older people. To mitigate this risk, homes need to be heated to an appropriate temperature. This review aims to identify interventions designed to improve heating and temperatures within homes and summarize its impact on health, health service utilization and cost effectiveness., Methods: A rapid review was conducted. Studies assessing the effects of structural, financial, or behavioural interventions designed to improve home temperatures of residents aged 18+ years were eligible. Searches were carried out in four databases. A search for grey literature, and backward and forward citation searching were performed. Data were summarized in a narrative synthesis and mapped using EPPI-Reviewer and EPPI-Mapper software., Results: Eighteen studies reported across 19 publications were included. Structural interventions were associated with better mental health and quality of life, a reduction in health service utilization, and improvements in satisfaction with internal home temperature, social interactions and financial difficulties. The impact on physical health outcomes varied by age, gender and long-term conditions. Evidence about the impact of behavioural interventions was inconsistent., Conclusion: Structural improvements to increase home temperatures may offer the potential to improve some aspects of health. However, the impact on physical health, including which groups are most likely to benefit, is unclear. Key gaps include the lack of evidence about the impact of financial interventions, and the impact of all types of interventions, on quality of life, mortality and costs., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association.)
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- 2024
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25. Interventions to Prevent Hospital Admissions in Long-Term Care Facilities: A Rapid Review of Economic Evidence.
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Johnson EE, Searle B, Lazo Green K, Walbaum M, Barker R, Brotherhood K, Spiers GF, Craig D, and Hanratty B
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- Humans, Hospitalization economics, Aged, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Nursing Homes economics, Male, Female, Long-Term Care economics
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Objectives: Hospital admissions can be hazardous for older adults, particularly those living in long-term care facilities. Preventing nonessential admissions can be beneficial for this population, as well as reducing demand on health services. This review summarizes the economic evidence surrounding effective interventions to reduce hospital attendances and admissions for people living in long-term care facilities., Design: Rapid review of economic evidence., Setting and Participants: People living in long-term facilities., Methods: We searched MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane CENTRAL, PubMed, and Web of Science on September 20, 2022, and again on January 10, 2023. Full economic evaluations and cost analyses reporting on advanced care planning, goals of care setting, nurse practitioner input, palliative care, influenza vaccinations, and enhancing access to intravenous therapies were eligible. Data were extracted using a prepiloted data extraction form and critically appraised using either the Drummond-Jefferson checklist or an amended NIH Critical Appraisal Tool appended with questions from a critical appraisal checklist for cost analyses. Data were synthesized narratively., Results: We included 7 studies: 3 full economic evaluations and 4 cost analyses. Because of lack of clarity on the underlying study design, we did not include one of the cost analyses in our synthesis. Advanced care planning, a palliative care program, and a high-dose influenza vaccination reported potential cost savings. Economic evidence for a multicomponent intervention and a nurse practitioner model was inconclusive. The overall quality of the evidence varied between studies., Conclusions and Implications: A number of potentially cost-effective approaches to reduce demand on hospital services from long-term care facilities were identified. However, further economic evaluations are needed to overcome limitations of the current evidence base and offer more confident conclusions., Competing Interests: Disclosures The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. An atlas of human vector-borne microbe interactions reveals pathogenicity mechanisms.
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Hart TM, Sonnert ND, Tang X, Chaurasia R, Allen PE, Hunt JR, Read CB, Johnson EE, Arora G, Dai Y, Cui Y, Chuang YM, Yu Q, Rahman MS, Mendes MT, Rolandelli A, Singh P, Tripathi AK, Ben Mamoun C, Caimano MJ, Radolf JD, Lin YP, Fingerle V, Margos G, Pal U, Johnson RM, Pedra JHF, Azad AF, Salje J, Dimopoulos G, Vinetz JM, Carlyon JA, Palm NW, Fikrig E, and Ring AM
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- Humans, Animals, Lyme Disease microbiology, Vector Borne Diseases, Host Microbial Interactions, Borrelia burgdorferi pathogenicity, Borrelia burgdorferi metabolism, Host-Pathogen Interactions
- Abstract
Vector-borne diseases are a leading cause of death worldwide and pose a substantial unmet medical need. Pathogens binding to host extracellular proteins (the "exoproteome") represents a crucial interface in the etiology of vector-borne disease. Here, we used bacterial selection to elucidate host-microbe interactions in high throughput (BASEHIT)-a technique enabling interrogation of microbial interactions with 3,324 human exoproteins-to profile the interactomes of 82 human-pathogen samples, including 30 strains of arthropod-borne pathogens and 8 strains of related non-vector-borne pathogens. The resulting atlas revealed 1,303 putative interactions, including hundreds of pairings with potential roles in pathogenesis, including cell invasion, tissue colonization, immune evasion, and host sensing. Subsequent functional investigations uncovered that Lyme disease spirochetes recognize epidermal growth factor as an environmental cue of transcriptional regulation and that conserved interactions between intracellular pathogens and thioredoxins facilitate cell invasion. In summary, this interactome atlas provides molecular-level insights into microbial pathogenesis and reveals potential host-directed targets for next-generation therapeutics., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests N.W.P. and A.M.R. are inventors of a patent describing the BASEHIT technique., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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27. Postoperative Care and Outcomes in Solid-Organ Transplant Patients Undergoing Lower Extremity Fracture Treatment.
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Chiou D, Mooney BH, Shi B, Upfill-Brown A, Kallini J, SooHoo N, and Johnson EE
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Postoperative Care methods, Organ Transplantation, Treatment Outcome, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Fractures, Bone surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine the postoperative outcomes in solid-organ transplant (SOT) patients undergoing operative treatment of lower extremity fractures., Design: Retrospective comparative study., Setting: Academic Level 1 trauma center., Patient Selection Criteria: Patients who underwent SOT and operative treatment of lower extremity fracture from 2013 to 2021 were identified, excluding pathologic fractures., Outcome Measures and Comparisons: Postoperative complications, length of stay, time to death, 90-day and 1-year readmission rates, readmission causes, discharge location, and immunosuppressive regiments., Results: Sixty-one patients with an average age of 67 years (range 29-88) were included. The mortality rate was 37.7%. The average follow-up was 15.2 months (range of 2 weeks-10 years). The majority of patients (32.8%) had received a liver transplant, and femoral neck fractures constituted the largest fracture group. The average length of stay was 10 days, with the shortest being 1 day and the longest being 126 days (SD 18). The majority of patients (57.3%) were not discharged home. Only 2 suffered from a postoperative complication requiring another procedure: hardware removal and liner exchange for periprosthetic joint infection, respectively. There was a 27.9% 90-day readmission rate with 2 deaths within that period with the most common being altered mental status (29.4%), genitourinary infections (17.6%), repeat falls (11.8%), and low hemoglobin requiring transfusion (11.8%). The longest average time to death analyzed by transplant type was found among lung transplant patients (1076 days, 62.5% mortality), followed by liver transplant patients (949 days, 35.0% mortality), and then kidney transplant patients (834 days, 38.9% mortality). The shortest time to death was 71 days from index procedure., Conclusions: Family members of SOT patients undergoing operative treatment of lower extremity fractures should be made aware of the high risk for 90-day readmission postoperatively (27.9%) and overall mortality (12.5%). Providers should be aware of the need for multidisciplinary involvement for inpatient care, monitoring postoperative complications, and facilitating discharge planning., Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence., Competing Interests: E. E. Johnson owns stock in RadLink. N. SooHoo is on the editorial or governing board for Orthopedics Today and Techniques in Foot & Ankle Surgery. The remaining authors report no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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28. Postoperative Opioid Usage and Disposal Strategies After Arthroscopic Procedures in a Young Cohort: A Prospective Observational Study.
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Johns WL, Johnson EE, Brutico J, Sherman MB, Freedman KB, Emper W, Salvo JP, and Hammoud S
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Background: Although several studies have noted that patients are routinely overprescribed opioids, few have reported usage after arthroscopic surgery., Purpose: To determine opioid consumption and allocation for unused opioids after common arthroscopic surgeries., Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4., Methods: Patients between the ages of 15 and 40 years who were scheduled to undergo anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR), labral repair of the hip or shoulder, meniscectomy, or meniscal repair were prospectively enrolled. Patients were prescribed either 5 mg hydrocodone-325 mg acetaminophen or 5 mg oxycodone-325 mg acetaminophen based on surgeon preference. Patients completed a daily opioid usage survey during the 2-week postoperative period. In addition, patients completed a survey on postoperative day 21 inquiring about continued opioid use and medication disposal, if applicable. Opioid medication consumption was converted to morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs)., Results: Of the 200 patients who were enrolled in the study, 176 patients had sufficient follow-up after undergoing 85 (48%) ACLR, 26 (14.8%) hip labral repair, 34 (19.3%) shoulder labral repair, 18 (10.2%) meniscectomy, and 13 (7.4%) meniscal repair procedures. Mean age was 26.1 years (SD, 7.38); surgeons prescribed a mean of 26.6 pills whereas patients reported consuming a mean of 15.5 pills. The mean MME consumption in the 14 days after each procedure was calculated: ACLR (95.7; 44% of prescription), hip labral repair (84.8; 37%), shoulder labral repair (57.2; 35%), meniscectomy (18.4; 27%), and meniscal repair (32.1; 42%). This corresponded to approximately 39% of the total opioid prescription being utilized across all procedures. Mean MME consumption was greatest on postoperative day 1 in hip, shoulder, and meniscal procedures and on postoperative day 2 in ACLR. Only 7.04% of patients reported continued opioid use in the third postoperative week. Patients had a mean of 11 unused pills or 77.7 MMEs remaining. Of the patients with remaining medication, 24.7% intended to keep their medication for future use., Conclusion: The results of our study indicate that patients who undergo the aforementioned arthroscopic procedures consume <75 MMEs in the 2-week postoperative period, translating into a mean of 10 to 15 pills consumed. Approximately 60% of total opioids prescribed went unused, and one-fourth of patients intended to keep their remaining medication for future usage. We have provided general prescribing guidelines and recommend that surgeons carefully consider customizing their opioid prescriptions on the basis of procedure site to balance optimal postoperative analgesia with avoidance of dissemination of excess opioids., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: K.B.F. has received consulting fees from Vericel, Innocoll, and Medical Device Business Services; a grant from Vericel; education payments from Liberty Surgical; nonconsulting fees from Vericel; and honoraria from Vericel. J.P.S. has received consulting fees from Stryker. S.H. has received nonconsulting fees from Arthrex; education payments from Paladin Technology Solutions and Liberty Surgical; and hospitality payments from Smith+Nephew and Arthrex. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto. Ethical approval for this study was obtained from Thomas Jefferson University., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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29. Gender Equity Efforts in Sports Medicine.
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Johnson EE, Ode GE, Ireland ML, Middleton K, and Hammoud S
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- Humans, Female, Male, Gender Equity, Sexism, Sports Medicine
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Great progress has been made toward gender equality in athletics, whereas true equality has not yet been realized. Concurrently, women orthopedists along with advocate men have paved the way toward gender equity in orthopedics as a whole and more specifically in sports medicine. The barriers that contribute to gender disparities include lack of exposure, lack of mentorship, stunted career development, childbearing considerations and implicit gender bias and overt gender discrimination., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Retention of stress susceptibility in the mdx mouse model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy after PGC-1α overexpression or ablation of IDO1 or CD38.
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Johnson EE, Southern WM, Doud B, Steiger B, Razzoli M, Bartolomucci A, and Ervasti JM
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- Animals, Mice, Disease Models, Animal, Kynurenic Acid metabolism, Kynurenine metabolism, Mice, Inbred mdx, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, NAD metabolism, Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne pathology, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Coactivator 1-alpha metabolism, Indoleamine-Pyrrole 2,3,-Dioxygenase metabolism, Membrane Glycoproteins metabolism, ADP-ribosyl Cyclase 1 metabolism
- Abstract
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal degenerative muscle wasting disease caused by the loss of the structural protein dystrophin with secondary pathological manifestations including metabolic dysfunction, mood and behavioral disorders. In the mildly affected mdx mouse model of DMD, brief scruff stress causes inactivity, while more severe subordination stress results in lethality. Here, we investigated the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan degradation and the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) metabolic pathway in mdx mice and their involvement as possible mediators of mdx stress-related pathology. We identified downregulation of the kynurenic acid shunt, a neuroprotective branch of the kynurenine pathway, in mdx skeletal muscle associated with attenuated peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1 alpha (PGC-1α) transcriptional regulatory activity. Restoring the kynurenic acid shunt by skeletal muscle-specific PGC-1α overexpression in mdx mice did not prevent scruff -induced inactivity, nor did abrogating extrahepatic kynurenine pathway activity by genetic deletion of the pathway rate-limiting enzyme, indoleamine oxygenase 1. We further show that reduced NAD+ production in mdx skeletal muscle after subordination stress exposure corresponded with elevated levels of NAD+ catabolites produced by ectoenzyme cluster of differentiation 38 (CD38) that have been implicated in lethal mdx response to pharmacological β-adrenergic receptor agonism. However, genetic CD38 ablation did not prevent mdx scruff-induced inactivity. Our data do not support a direct contribution by the kynurenine pathway or CD38 metabolic dysfunction to the exaggerated stress response of mdx mice., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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31. Analyzing Resilience in the Orthopedic Sports Medicine Patient Population.
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Sonnier JH, Looney AM, Johnson EE, Fuller Z, Tjoumakaris FP, and Freedman KB
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Resilience, Psychological, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries surgery, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries complications, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee, Psychological Tests
- Abstract
Little research has been done to compare resilience, as measured by the Brief Resilience Scale (BRS), across common sports medicine patient populations. Our purpose was to investigate resilience levels across sports medicine patient populations. All patients who underwent reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACLR), partial meniscectomy (PM), meniscal repair (MR), rotator cuff repair (RCR), or shoulder stabilization (SS) between January 1 and June 30, 2020, were screened for inclusion. At our institution, BRS scores are routinely collected during the preoperative period. Patients with preoperative BRS scores available were included for analysis. Patients who were eligible on the basis of ACLR who underwent concomitant PM or MR were included in the ACL group. A total of 655 patients with a median age of 49 years were included in analysis. The median preoperative resilience score across all patients was 3.83 (interquartile range, 3.50-4.17), and the highest scores were seen in the ACLR group (median, 4.00; interquartile range, 3.67-4.17). On multivariate regression, scores were significantly and independently lower in the PM and RCR groups. Male patients were found to have significantly higher scores than female patients overall ( P =.028), but in subgroup analysis by pathology, this effect was only seen in the SS and PM groups. Psychological factors are important to consider when surgically treating patients, and resilience specifically may play a role in predicting treatment success. Patients undergoing PM and RCR tend to report lower resilience scores than patients undergoing ACLR at preoperative baseline. [ Orthopedics . 2024;47(2):95-100.].
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- 2024
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32. Tibial Tubercle Trochlear Groove Distance Does Not Correlate With Patellar Tendon Length in Patients Who Underwent Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
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Johnson EE, Johns WL, Kemler B, Muchintala R, Paul RW, Reddy M, and Erickson BJ
- Abstract
Purpose: To examine the relationship between tibial tubercle-trochlear groove (TT-TG) distance and patellar tendon length., Methods: All healthy athletes who underwent anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction who had a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study of the knee on file between July 2018 and June 2019 at a single institution were retrospectively reviewed. Exclusion criteria included patients without an MRI study of the knee on file or with an MRI of insufficient quality precluding reliable calculation of TT-TG and patellar tendon length. MRIs were reviewed to calculate TT-TG, patellar tendon length, and Caton-Deschamps Index (CDI). Patient charts were reviewed to obtain anthropometric characteristics including sex, concomitant injuries, and previous knee procedures as well as age at time of MRI. Spearman correlations were used to assess the relationship between TT-TG, patellar tendon length, and CDI, with regression analysis performed to assess for relationships between TT-TG, patellar tendon length, and patient-specific factors., Results: Overall, 235 patients (99 female [42.1%], 136 male [57.9%]; mean age: 30.0 years [23.0; 40.0]) were included. Inter-rater reliability between the 2 reviewers was 0.888 for TT-TG, 0.804 for patellar tendon length, and 0.748 for CDI, indicating strong agreement. The correlation between TT-TG and patellar tendon length was 0.021, indicating no true relationship. The correlation between TT-TG and CDI was -0.048 and that of patellar tendon length and CDI was 0.411, indicating a weak positive relationship. Regression analysis found that male sex is strongly correlated with a longer patellar tendon length (odds ratio 2.65, 95% confidence interval 1.33-3.97, P < .001)., Conclusions: In this study, no correlation was found between TT-TG and patellar tendon length or CDI. Male sex was correlated with a longer patellar length., Level of Evidence: Level III., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: B.J.E. reports the following conflicts: 10.13039/100009885American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 10.13039/100011549American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, and American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons: board or committee member; Arthrex: paid consultant, research support; DePuy, a Johnson & Johnson Company: research support; Linvatec: research support; PLoS One: editorial or governing board; and Smith & Nephew and Stryker: research support. All other authors (E.E.J., W.L.J., B.K., R.M., R.W.P., M.R.) declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. Full ICMJE author disclosure forms are available for this article online, as supplementary material., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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33. Considerations for the Cure Assumption in an NICE Single Technology Appraisal of Nivolumab with Chemotherapy for Neoadjuvant Treatment of Resectable Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Evidence Assessment Group Perspective.
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Orozco-Leal G, Johnson EE, Hosseinijebeli S, Robinson T, Homer T, Eastaugh CH, Richmond C, Tanner L, Meader N, Kenny R, Wallace SA, and Rice S
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- Humans, Nivolumab therapeutic use, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung drug therapy, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological therapeutic use
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- 2024
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34. A mapping exercise using automated techniques to develop a search strategy to identify systematic review tools.
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Sutton A, O'Keefe H, Johnson EE, and Marshall C
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- MEDLINE, PubMed, Software, Data Mining, Systematic Reviews as Topic methods
- Abstract
The Systematic Review Toolbox aims provide a web-based catalogue of tools that support various tasks within the systematic review and wider evidence synthesis process. Identifying publications surrounding specific systematic review tools is currently challenging, leading to a high screening burden for few eligible records. We aimed to develop a search strategy that could be regularly and automatically run to identify eligible records for the SR Toolbox, thus reducing time on task and burden for those involved. We undertook a mapping exercise to identify the PubMed IDs of papers indexed within the SR Toolbox. We then used the Yale MeSH Analyser and Visualisation of Similarities (VOS) Viewer text-mining software to identify the most commonly used MeSH terms and text words within the eligible records. These MeSH terms and text words were combined using Boolean Operators into a search strategy for Ovid MEDLINE. Prior to the mapping exercise and search strategy development, 81 software tools and 55 'Other' tools were included within the SR Toolbox. Since implementation of the search strategy, 146 tools have been added. There has been an increase in tools added to the toolbox since the search was developed and its corresponding auto-alert in MEDLINE was originally set up. Developing a search strategy based on a mapping exercise is an effective way of identifying new tools to support the systematic review process. Further research could be conducted to help prioritise records for screening to reduce reviewer burden further and to adapt the strategy for disciplines beyond healthcare., (© 2023 The Authors. Research Synthesis Methods published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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35. Single-incision sling operations for urinary incontinence in women.
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Carter E, Johnson EE, Still M, Al-Assaf AS, Bryant A, Aluko P, Jeffery ST, and Nambiar A
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- Female, Humans, Quality of Life, Postoperative Complications, Pain, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Urinary Incontinence, Stress surgery, Urinary Retention, Dyspareunia, Urinary Incontinence surgery
- Abstract
Background: Stress urinary incontinence imposes a significant health and economic burden on individuals and society. Single-incision slings are a minimally-invasive treatment option for stress urinary incontinence. They involve passing a short synthetic device through the anterior vaginal wall to support the mid-urethra. The use of polypropylene mesh in urogynaecology, including mid-urethral slings, is restricted in many countries. This is a review update (previous search date 2012)., Objectives: To assess the effects of single-incision sling operations for treating urinary incontinence in women, and to summarise the principal findings of relevant economic evaluations., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register, which contains trials identified from: CENTRAL, MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, and two trials registers. We handsearched journals, conference proceedings, and reference lists of relevant articles to 20 September 2022., Selection Criteria: We included randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials in women with stress (or stress-predominant mixed) urinary incontinence in which at least one, but not all, trial arms included a single-incision sling., Data Collection and Analysis: We used standard Cochrane methodological procedures. The primary outcome was subjective cure or improvement of urinary incontinence., Main Results: We included 62 studies with a total of 8051 women in this review. We did not identify any studies comparing single-incision slings to no treatment, conservative treatment, colposuspension, or laparoscopic procedures. We assessed most studies as being at low or unclear risk of bias, with five studies at high risk of bias for outcome assessment. Sixteen trials used TVT-Secur, a single-incision sling withdrawn from the market in 2013. The primary analysis in this review excludes trials using TVT-Secur. We report separate analyses for these trials, which did not substantially alter the effect estimates. We identified two cost-effectiveness analyses and one cost-minimisation analysis. Single-incision sling versus autologous fascial sling One study (70 women) compared single-incision slings to autologous fascial slings. It is uncertain if single-incision slings have any effect on risk of dyspareunia (painful sex) or mesh exposure, extrusion or erosion compared with autologous fascial slings. Subjective cure or improvement of urinary incontinence at 12 months, patient-reported pain at 24 months or longer, number of women with urinary retention, quality of life at 12 months and the number of women requiring repeat continence surgery or sling revision were not reported for this comparison. Single-incision sling versus retropubic sling Ten studies compared single-incision slings to retropubic slings. There may be little to no difference between single-incision slings and retropubic slings in subjective cure or improvement of incontinence at 12 months (risk ratio (RR) 0.99, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.91 to 1.07; 2 trials, 297 women; low-certainty evidence). It is uncertain whether single-incision slings increase the risk of mesh exposure, extrusion or erosion compared with retropubic minimally-invasive slings; the wide confidence interval is consistent with both benefit and harm (RR 1.55, 95% CI 0.24 to 9.82; 3 trials, 267 women; low-certainty evidence). It is uncertain whether single-incision slings lead to fewer women having postoperative urinary retention compared with retropubic slings; the wide confidence interval is consistent with possible benefit and harm (RR 0.47, 95% CI 0.12 to 1.84; 2 trials, 209 women; low-certainty evidence). The effect of single-incision slings on the risk of repeat continence surgery or mesh revision compared with retropubic slings is uncertain (RR 4.19, 95% CI 0.31 to 57.28; 2 trials, 182 women; very low-certainty evidence). One study reported quality of life, but not in a suitable format for analysis. Patient-reported pain at more than 24 months and the number of women with dyspareunia were not reported for this comparison. We downgraded the evidence due to concerns about risks of bias, imprecision and inconsistency. Single-incision sling versus transobturator sling Fifty-one studies compared single-incision slings to transobturator slings. The evidence ranged from high to low certainty. There is no evidence of a difference in subjective cure or improvement of incontinence at 12 months when comparing single-incision slings with transobturator slings (RR 1.00, 95% CI 0.97 to 1.03; 17 trials, 2359 women; high-certainty evidence). Single-incision slings probably have a reduced risk of patient-reported pain at 24 months post-surgery compared with transobturator slings (RR 0.12, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.68; 2 trials, 250 women; moderate-certainty evidence). The effect of single-incision slings on the risk of dyspareunia is uncertain compared with transobturator slings, as the wide confidence interval is consistent with possible benefit and possible harm (RR 0.78, 95% CI 0.41 to 1.48; 8 trials, 810 women; moderate-certainty evidence). There are a similar number of mesh exposures, extrusions or erosions with single-incision slings compared with transobturator slings (RR 0.61, 95% CI 0.39 to 0.96; 16 trials, 2378 women; high-certainty evidence). Single-incision slings probably result in similar or reduced cases of postoperative urinary retention compared with transobturator slings (RR 0.68, 95% CI 0.47 to 0.97; 23 trials, 2891 women; moderate-certainty evidence). Women with single-incision slings may have lower quality of life at 12 months compared to transobturator slings (standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.24, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.39; 8 trials, 698 women; low-certainty evidence). It is unclear whether single-incision slings lead to slightly more women requiring repeat continence surgery or mesh revision compared with transobturator slings (95% CI consistent with possible benefit and harm; RR 1.42, 95% CI 0.94 to 2.16; 13 trials, 1460 women; low-certainty evidence). We downgraded the evidence due to indirectness, imprecision and risks of bias., Authors' Conclusions: Single-incision sling operations have been extensively researched in randomised controlled trials. They may be as effective as retropubic slings and are as effective as transobturator slings for subjective cure or improvement of stress urinary incontinence at 12 months. It is uncertain if single-incision slings lead to better or worse rates of subjective cure or improvement compared with autologous fascial slings. There are still uncertainties regarding adverse events and longer-term outcomes. Therefore, longer-term data are needed to clarify the safety and long-term effectiveness of single-incision slings compared to other mid-urethral slings., (Copyright © 2023 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2023
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36. Outcomes of Osteochondral Allograft Transplantation: A Comparative Study of BioUni and Snowman Techniques for Ovoid Lesions.
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Coladonato C, Perez AR, Hanna AJ, Campbell MP, Destine H, Dees AN, Johnson EE, Tucker BS, and Freedman KB
- Abstract
Background: Treatment of large articular cartilage lesions of the knee includes surgical options one of which includes cartilage replacement therapies. Among these therapies include osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation, which can be performed utilizing a BioUni® (Arthrex BioUni® Instrumentation System; Arthrex, Naples, FL) replacement and a 'snowman' technique of repair., Hypothesis/purpose: To compare clinical and radiographic outcomes in patients who have undergone multiplug OCA transplantations utilizing a BioUni® replacement and a 'snowman' technique of repair., Methods: Patients who underwent OCA transplantation utilizing a snowman technique or BioUni® replacement between January 1
st , 2012 and December 31st , 2018, and who had a minimum 1-year follow-up at the same institution were identified for inclusion in this study via current procedural terminology (CPT) codes. Charts of included patients were reviewed for injury and treatment details as well as demographic information. Imaging studies and operative reports were reviewed and pre and postoperative subjective and objective outcome measures were recorded., Results: Twenty-eight patients underwent OCA transplantation with either BioUni® replacement (n=5) or with snowman technique repair (n=23). Defects in both groups had similar characteristics including size, area, location, and classifications. Patient-reported outcomes using the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score-Joint Replacement (KOOS-JR), International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC), and Physical Health Composite Score (PCS-12) were similar at baseline and increased post-operatively for both groups with no significant differences between techniques after a mean follow-up of 2.77 ± 0.83. Although it did not reach significance, the snowman group had higher rates of knee-related complications (13%) and need for revision surgery (22%) when compared to BioUni® (0% and 0%, respectively)., Conclusion: The use of both BioUni® and snowman techniques for large, unicondylar articular cartilage lesions of the femoral condyle demonstrate improved patient-reported outcomes at short-term follow-up. The use of the snowman technique presents relatively higher rates of revision similar to previous studies with no statistical difference in patient-reported outcomes when compared to those of a single plug OCA using a BioUni® system., Competing Interests: The authors have declared financial relationships, which are detailed in the next section., (Copyright © 2023, Coladonato et al.)- Published
- 2023
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37. Development of an Implementation Science Telehealth Toolkit to Promote Research Capacity in Evaluation of Telehealth Programs.
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Johnson EE, Kruis R, Verdin R, Wells E, Ford DW, and Sterba KR
- Abstract
Background: The field of telehealth is rapidly growing and expanding access to quality health care, although there have been varied implementation outcomes in telehealth modalities. Dissemination and implementation (D&I) research can provide a systematic approach to identifying barriers and facilitators to telehealth implementation processes and outcomes., Methods: An interdisciplinary research and clinical team developed an implementation science telehealth toolkit to guide D&I evaluations of new and existing telehealth innovations., Results: The toolkit includes a separate section to correspond to each step in the D&I evaluation process. Each section includes resources to guide evaluation steps, telehealth specific considerations, and case study examples based on three completed telehealth evaluations., Discussion: The field of telehealth is forecasted to continue to expand, with potential to increase health care access to populations in need. This toolkit can help guide health care stakeholders to develop and carry out evaluations to improve understanding of telehealth processes and outcomes to maximize implementation and sustainability of these valuable innovations., Competing Interests: No competing financial interests exist., (© Emily E. Johnson et al., 2023; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.)
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- 2023
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38. Inequalities in the Evaluation of Male Versus Female Athletes in Sports Medicine Research: A Systematic Review.
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Paul RW, Sonnier JH, Johnson EE, Hall AT, Osman A, Connors GM, Freedman KB, and Bishop ME
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- Humans, Male, Female, Australia, Athletes, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Athletic Injuries epidemiology, Athletic Injuries etiology, Soccer, Sports Medicine
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Background: Female sports participation continues to rise; however, inequalities between male and female athletes still exist in many areas and may extend into medical research., Purpose: The purpose of this study was to (1) compare the number of published studies evaluating male versus female athletes in various sports and (2) identify which co-ed sports currently underrepresent female athletes in the sports medicine literature., Study Design: Systematic review; Level of evidence, 4., Methods: All nonreview research studies published from 2017 to 2021 in 6 top sports medicine journals were considered for inclusion. Sports medicine studies were included that isolated athletes, reported study outcomes specific to male and/or female patients, provided study outcomes for specific sports, and evaluated ≤3 different sports. The total number of studies reporting on male and/or female athletes were compared for all sports, and odds ratios (ORs) were calculated. Comparisons of study design, level of sports participation, outcomes assessed, and study quality were also made according to participant sex., Results: Overall, 669 studies were included the systematic review. Most studies isolated male athletes (70.7%), while 8.8% isolated female athletes and 20.5% included male and female athletes. Female athletes were more frequently studied in softball and volleyball, while male athletes were more commonly researched in baseball, soccer, American football, basketball, rugby, hockey, and Australian football. Notably, male athletes were largely favored in baseball/softball (91% vs 5%; OR = 18.2), rugby (72% vs 5%; OR = 14.4), soccer (65% vs 15%; OR = 4.3), and basketball (58% vs 18%; OR = 3.2)., Conclusion: Sports medicine research has favored the evaluation of male athletes in most sports, including the majority of co-ed sports. Potential reasons for this inequality of research evaluation include availability of public data and database data, financial and promotional incentives, a high percentage of male sports medicine clinicians and researchers, and sex biases in sport. While the causes of these differences are multifaceted, researchers should consider both sexes for study inclusion whenever possible, and journals should support a more balanced representation of research publications regarding male and female athletes., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: K.B.F. has received consulting fees from Medical Device Business Services and Innocoll Inc, support for education from Liberty Surgical, honoraria from Vericel, and personal fees from DePuy. M.E.B. has received support for education from Smith & Nephew and Gotham Surgical Solutions, hospitality payments from Stryker, and a grant from Arthrex. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto.
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- 2023
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39. Rates of Reporting and Analyzing Patient Sex in Sports Medicine Research: A Systematic Review.
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Sonnier JH, Paul RW, Hall AT, Johnson EE, Connors G, Freedman KB, and Bishop ME
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- Humans, Male, Female, United States, Adolescent, Sports Medicine, Orthopedics, Football, Baseball
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Background: Sex differences in sports medicine are well documented. However, no studies to date have reviewed the rate at which sex is reported and analyzed in the athlete-specific orthopaedic sports medicine literature., Purpose: To determine the rates of reporting and analyzing patient sex in athlete-specific sports medicine literature., Study Design: Systematic review; Level of evidence, 4., Methods: Articles published by the 3 journals of the AOSSM ( American Journal of Sports Medicine [ AJSM ], Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine , and Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach ) between 2017 and 2021 were considered for inclusion. Original sports medicine research studies that isolated athletes were included. Studies that isolated sports that are predominantly single sex at the college and/or professional levels (football, baseball, softball, and wrestling) were excluded., Results: Of the 5140 publications screened, 559 met the inclusion criteria. In total, 93.9% of all studies reported patient sex, and 34.7% of all studies analyzed patient sex. However, 143 studies only included males and 50 studies only included females (n = 193). When excluding these single-sex studies, analysis of the remaining 366 studies found that the rate of sex-specific analysis increased to 53.0%. Rates of reporting patient sex did not significantly differ by journal or by year. Similarly, rates of analyzing patient sex did not differ by year, but Sports Health analyzed sex the most frequently, and AJSM analyzed sex the least frequently ( P = .002). Studies that isolated college (84.1%), youth (66.7%), or recreational (52.6%) athletes analyzed sex at or above the overall rate of 53.0%, but studies of elite athletes (35.7%) tended to analyze sex less frequently., Conclusion: Patient sex is well reported in the athlete-specific sports medicine literature (93.9% of included studies reported sex), demonstrating that most studies include sex as a demographic variable. However, patient sex was analyzed only in 53.0% of studies that included both male and female patients. Given that athlete-specific sex differences are known to exist within the field of sports medicine, many studies that could benefit from using patient sex as a variable for analysis likely fail to do so.
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- 2023
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40. Endosteal plating for the treatment of malunions and nonunions of distal femur fractures.
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Oransky M, Galante C, Cattaneo S, Milano G, Motta M, Biancardi E, Grava G, Johnson EE, and Casiraghi A
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- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Fracture Fixation, Internal adverse effects, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Femur diagnostic imaging, Femur surgery, Bone Plates, Treatment Outcome, Fracture Healing, Femoral Fractures, Distal, Femoral Fractures surgery
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Purpose: To describe the surgical technique and the outcome of a case series of nonunion and malunion of distal femur fractures treated with an endosteal medial plate combined with a lateral locking plate and with autogenous bone grafting., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed a series of patients with malunion or nonunion of the distal femur treated with a medial endosteal plate in combination with a lateral locking plate, in a period between January 2011 and December 2019, Database from chart review was obtained including all the clinical relevant available baseline data (demographics, type of fracture, mechanism of injury, time from injury to surgery, number of previous surgical procedures, type of bone graft, and type of lateral plate). Time to bone healing, limb alignment at follow-up and complications were documented., Results: Ten patients were included into the study: 7 male and 3 female with mean age of 48.3 years (range 21-67). The mechanism of trauma was in 8 cases a road traffic accident and in 2 cases a fall from height. According to AO/OTA classification 5 fractures were 33 A3, 3 were 33 C1, 1 was 33 C2 and 1 was 33 C3. The average follow up was 13.5 months. In all cases but one bony union was achieved. Bone healing was observed in average 3.3 months after surgery. No intraoperative or postoperative complications were reported., Conclusion: A medial endosteal plate is a useful augmentation for lateral plate fixation in nonunion or malunion following distal femur fractures, particularly in cases of medial bone loss, severe comminution, or poor bone quality., Level of Evidence: Level IV (retrospective case series)., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag France SAS, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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41. Differences in the Severity and Location of Patellofemoral Cartilage Damage Between Instability Patients With and Without Patella Alta.
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Johnson EE, Campbell MP, Reddy M, Paul RW, Erickson BJ, Tjoumakaris FP, Freedman KB, and Bishop ME
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Background: Patella alta is a risk factor for recurrent patellar instability. Differences in chondral injury in patients with patellar instability between patella alta and patella norma have not been evaluated., Purpose: To analyze whether preoperative cartilage damage differs in severity and location between patellar instability patients with and without patella alta., Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3., Methods: Patients with patellar instability who underwent patellar realignment surgery at a single institution with preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were included. After measurement of Caton-Deschamps index (CDI) on MRI, patients were divided into patella alta (CDI ≥1.3) and patella norma groups. The area measurement and depth and underlying structures (AMADEUS) score was used to quantify cartilage defect severity on MRI., Results: A total of 121 patients were divided into patella alta (n = 50) and patella norma (n = 71) groups. The groups did not differ significantly in sex ratio, age at MRI, body mass index, mean reported number of previous dislocations, or mean interval between first reported dislocation and date of MRI. A total of 34 (68%) of the patella alta group and 44 (62%) of the patella norma group had chondral defects ( P = .625) with no significant between-group differences in defect size ( P = .419). In both groups, chondral injuries most affected the medial patellar facet (55% in patella alta vs 52% in patella norma), followed by the lateral facet (25% vs 18%), and lateral femoral condyle (10% vs 14%). A smaller proportion of patients had full-thickness defects in the patella alta compared with the patella norma group (60% vs 82%; P = .030). The overall AMADEUS score was higher for the patella alta versus the patella norma group (68.9 vs 62.1; P = .023), indicating superior articular cartilage status., Conclusion: Patients with patella alta had less severe cartilage injury after patellar instability, including a lower proportion with full-thickness defects and better overall cartilage grade. The location of injury when present was similar between alta and norma, with most defects affecting the medial facet, lateral facet, and lateral femoral condyle in descending frequency., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: M.R. has received education payments from Liberty Surgical and Medical Device Business Services. B.J.E. has received research support from Arthrex, DePuy, Linvatec, Smith & Nephew, and Stryker and consulting fees from Arthrex. F.P.T. has received consulting fees from DePuy/Medical Device Business Services, has stock/stock options in Trice Medical, and has received hospitality payments from Smith & Nephew. K.B.F. has received consulting fees from DePuy and Vericel. M.E.B. has received education payments from Gotham Surgical. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2023.)
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- 2023
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42. Oestrogen therapy for treating pelvic organ prolapse in postmenopausal women.
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Taithongchai A, Johnson EE, Ismail SI, Barron-Millar E, Kernohan A, and Thakar R
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- Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Estrogens therapeutic use, Pessaries, Urinary Bladder, Pelvis, Postmenopause
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Background: Pelvic organ prolapse (POP) is the descent of a woman's uterus, bladder, or rectum into the vagina. It affects 50% of women over 50 years old who have given birth to at least one child, and recognised risk factors are older age, higher number of births, and higher body mass index. This review assesses the effects of oestrogen therapy, alone or in combination with other treatments, on POP in postmenopausal women., Objectives: To assess the benefits and harms of local and systemic oestrogen therapy in the management of pelvic organ prolapse symptoms in postmenopausal women, and to summarise the principal findings of relevant economic evaluations., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register (up to 20 June 2022), which includes CENTRAL, MEDLINE, two trials registers, and handsearching of journals and conference proceedings. We also checked the reference lists of relevant articles for additional studies., Selection Criteria: We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), quasi-RCTs, multi-arm RCTs, and cross-over RCTs that evaluated the effects of oestrogen therapy (alone or in combination with other treatments) versus placebo, no treatment, or other interventions in postmenopausal women with any grade of POP., Data Collection and Analysis: Two review authors independently extracted data from the included trials using prespecified outcome measures and a piloted extraction form. The same review authors independently assessed the risk of bias of eligible trials using Cochrane's risk of bias tool. Had data allowed, we would have created summary of findings tables for our main outcome measures and assessed the certainty of the evidence using GRADE., Main Results: We identified 14 studies including a total of 1002 women. In general, studies were at high risk of bias in terms of blinding of participants and personnel, and there were also some concerns about selective reporting. Owing to insufficient data for the outcomes of interest, we were unable to perform our planned subgroup analyses (systemic versus topical oestrogen, parous versus nulliparous women, women with versus without a uterus). No studies assessed the effects of oestrogen therapy alone versus no treatment, placebo, pelvic floor muscle training, devices such as vaginal pessaries, or surgery. However, we did identify three studies that assessed oestrogen therapy in conjunction with vaginal pessaries versus vaginal pessaries alone and 11 studies that assessed oestrogen therapy in conjunction with surgery versus surgery alone., Authors' Conclusions: There was insufficient evidence from RCTs to draw any solid conclusions on the benefits or harms of oestrogen therapy for managing POP symptoms in postmenopausal women. Topical oestrogen in conjunction with pessaries was associated with fewer adverse vaginal events compared with pessaries alone, and topical oestrogen in conjunction with surgery was associated with reduced postoperative urinary tract infections compared with surgery alone; however, these findings should be interpreted with caution, as the studies that contributed data varied substantially in their design. There is a need for larger studies on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of oestrogen therapy, used alone or in conjunction with pelvic floor muscle training, vaginal pessaries, or surgery, for the management of POP. These studies should measure outcomes in the medium and long term., (Copyright © 2023 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2023
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43. A novel murine model of pyoderma gangrenosum reveals that inflammatory skin-gut crosstalk is mediated by IL-1β-primed neutrophils.
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Jatana S, Ponti AK, Johnson EE, Rebert NA, Smith JL, Fulmer CG, Maytin EV, Achkar JP, Fernandez AP, and McDonald C
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- Humans, Animals, Mice, Neutrophils pathology, Disease Models, Animal, Inflammation pathology, Pyoderma Gangrenosum, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases pathology
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Pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) is a debilitating skin condition often accompanied by inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Strikingly, ~40% of patients that present with PG have underlying IBD, suggesting shared but unknown mechanisms of pathogenesis. Impeding the development of effective treatments for PG is the absence of an animal model that exhibits features of both skin and gut manifestations. This study describes the development of the first experimental drug-induced mouse model of PG with concomitant intestinal inflammation. Topical application of pyrimidine synthesis inhibitors on wounded mouse skin generates skin ulcers enriched in neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) as well as pro-inflammatory cellular and soluble mediators mimicking human PG. The mice also develop spontaneous intestinal inflammation demonstrated by histologic damage. Further investigations revealed increased circulating low density IL-1β primed neutrophils that undergo enhanced NETosis at inflamed tissue sites supported by an increase in circulatory citrullinated histone 3, a marker of aberrant NET formation. Granulocyte depletion dampens the intestinal inflammation in this model, further supporting the notion that granulocytes contribute to the skin-gut crosstalk in PG mice. We anticipate that this novel murine PG model will enable researchers to probe common disease mechanisms and identify more effective targets for treatment for PG patients with IBD., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Jatana, Ponti, Johnson, Rebert, Smith, Fulmer, Maytin, Achkar, Fernandez and McDonald.)
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- 2023
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44. Comparison of post-operative outcomes following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction between patients with vs. without elevated tibial tubercle-trochlear groove (TT-TG) distance.
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Paul RW, Johnson EE, Hall A, Clements A, Bishop ME, Ciccotti MG, Cohen SB, and Erickson BJ
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- Humans, Tibia surgery, Tibia pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Retrospective Studies, Patellar Dislocation surgery, Patellofemoral Joint surgery, Patellar Ligament surgery, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Joint Instability surgery
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Purpose: It is unclear if an elevated tibial tubercle-trochlear groove (TT-TG) distance is a risk factor for poor outcomes following ACLR. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine whether patients with an elevated TT-TG have an increased risk of retear following primary ACLR compared to controls with a normal TT-TG., Methods: All patients who underwent primary ACLR between July 2018 and June 2019 with an available preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were eligible for inclusion. TT-TG distance was measured on preoperative MRI scans by two independent investigators. Clinical outcomes, return-to-sport rates, and Lysholm scores were compared between patients with a TT-TG < 12.5 mm (normal) and those with a TT-TG ≥ 12.5 mm (elevated)., Results: Overall, 159 patients were included, 98 with normal TT-TG distance and 61 with elevated TT-TG distance. Patients with an elevated TT-TG distance had worse post-operative Lysholm scores than patients with a normal TT-TG distance (83.0 vs. 95.0, p = 0.010). In patients who received a bone-patellar tendon-bone (BTB) graft, an elevated TT-TG distance was associated with higher rates of subjective instability (13.0% vs. 3.0%, p = 0.041), reoperation (13.0% vs. 1.5%, p = 0.012), and post-operative complications (25.0% vs. 8.2%, p = 0.026), as well as lower ACL psychological readiness scores (324.1 vs. 446.7, p = 0.015)., Conclusion: Patients with an elevated pre-operative TT-TG distance have worse Lysholm scores than patients with normal TT-TG distance. Patients with an elevated pre-operative TT-TG distance who underwent ACLR with BTB grafts had significantly higher rates of subjective instability, reoperation, and post-operative complications., Level of Evidence: III., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery, Arthroscopy (ESSKA).)
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- 2023
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45. Involving people with a lived experience when developing a proposal for Health Technology Assessment research of nonsurgical treatments for pelvic organ prolapse: Process and reflections.
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Johnson EE, Lally J, Farnworth A, and Pearson F
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- Humans, Female, Patient Participation, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Research Personnel, Technology Assessment, Biomedical, Pelvic Organ Prolapse therapy
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Introduction: Patient and public involvement (PPI) is an expectation when conducting research, including Health Technology Assessment (HTA), but practical guidance for those wishing to embed PPI into the grant application process is not always easily accessible. We wanted to ensure that PPI was central when preparing a proposal for an investigator-led evidence synthesis HTA investigating nonsurgical interventions for pelvic organ prolapse (POP) in women. Here, we describe our methods., Methods: We recruited two patient co-applicants separately through an open process to help ensure that patient voice was present within our proposal's management and direction. We invited co-applicants to attend research team meetings and comment on the full proposal. We designed, recruited to and facilitated a scoping workshop, as well as undertook its subsequent evaluation. The insight shared within the workshop for patients with a lived experience of POP, including our patient co-applicants, helped us develop the scope and rationale behind our HTA proposal. We particularly considered the interventions to include within the evidence synthesis. We also considered the outcome measures for both the evidence synthesis and economic evaluation. We elicited ideas about where and how results could be disseminated. Feedback suggested the workshop was as valuable for the attendees as it was for the researchers, making them feel valued and listened to. The time spent by researchers working on the activity was substantial and not directly funded but a necessary and valuable activity in developing our potential HTA. Our work was informed using the UK Standards for Public Involvement and the Authors and Consumers Together Impacting on eVidencE (ACTIVE) framework., Conclusions: PPI can be enormously valuable in both developing and strengthening research proposals. However, further guidance is needed to help researchers recognise the level and type of involvement to use at this early stage, particularly given the large time investment needed to embed meaningful PPI., Patient and Public Contribution: Women with a lived experience of POP were involved at every stage of the grant application process; their involvement is documented in full throughout this work., (© 2023 The Authors. Health Expectations published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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46. Mark Coventry Award: Human Knee Has a Distinct Microbiome: Implications for Periprosthetic Joint Infection.
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Fernández-Rodríguez D, Baker CM, Tarabichi S, Johnson EE, Ciccotti MG, and Parvizi J
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Knee Joint surgery, Reoperation adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee adverse effects, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee methods, Prosthesis-Related Infections etiology, Arthritis, Infectious etiology, Awards and Prizes, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Pathogens causing prosthetic joint infection (PJI) are thought to gain access to the knee during surgery or from a remote site in the body. Recent studies have shown that there is a distinct microbiome in various sites of the body. This prospective study, and first of its kind, was set up to investigate the presence of possible microbiome in human knee and compare the profile in different knee conditions., Methods: We obtained synovial fluid from 65 knees (55 patients) with various conditions that included normal knee, osteoarthritis (OA), aseptic revision, and those undergoing revision for PJI. The contralateral knee of patients who had a PJI were also aspirated for comparison. A minimum of 3 milliliters of synovial fluid was collected per joint. All samples were aliquoted for culture and next-generation sequencing analysis., Results: The highest number of species was found in native osteoarthritic knees (P ≤ .035). Cutibacterium, Staphylococcus, and Paracoccus species were dominant in native nonosteoarthritic knees, and meanwhile a markedly high abundance of Proteobacteria was observed in the osteoarthritic joints. Moreover, the contralateral and aseptic revision knees showed a similar trend in bacterial composition (P = .75). The sequencing analysis of patients who had PJI diagnosis, confirmed the culture results., Conclusion: Distinct knee microbiome profiles can be detected in patients who have OA and other knee conditions. The distinct microbiome in the knee joint and the close host-microbe relationships within the knee joint may play a decisive role in the development of OA and PJI., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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47. Conservative interventions for managing urinary incontinence after prostate surgery.
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Johnson EE, Mamoulakis C, Stoniute A, Omar MI, and Sinha S
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- Male, Adult, Humans, Prostate, Exercise Therapy methods, Pelvic Floor, Electric Stimulation Therapy methods, Urinary Incontinence etiology, Urinary Incontinence therapy, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery
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Background: Men may need to undergo prostate surgery to treat prostate cancer or benign prostatic hyperplasia. After these surgeries, men may experience urinary incontinence (UI). Conservative treatments such as pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT), electrical stimulation and lifestyle changes can be undertaken to help manage the symptoms of UI., Objectives: To assess the effects of conservative interventions for managing urinary incontinence after prostate surgery., Search Methods: We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Specialised Register, which contains trials identified from the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP and handsearched journals and conference proceedings (searched 22 April 2022). We also searched the reference lists of relevant articles., Selection Criteria: We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-RCTs of adult men (aged 18 or over) with UI following prostate surgery for treating prostate cancer or LUTS/BPO. We excluded cross-over and cluster-RCTs. We investigated the following key comparisons: PFMT plus biofeedback versus no treatment; sham treatment or verbal/written instructions; combinations of conservative treatments versus no treatment, sham treatment or verbal/written instructions; and electrical or magnetic stimulation versus no treatment, sham treatment or verbal/written instructions., Data Collection and Analysis: We extracted data using a pre-piloted form and assessed risk of bias using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. We used the GRADE approach to assess the certainty of outcomes and comparisons included in the summary of findings tables. We used an adapted version of GRADE to assess certainty in results where there was no single effect measurement available., Main Results: We identified 25 studies including a total of 3079 participants. Twenty-three studies assessed men who had previously undergone radical prostatectomy or radical retropubic prostatectomy, while only one study assessed men who had undergone transurethral resection of the prostate. One study did not report on previous surgery. Most studies were at high risk of bias for at least one domain. The certainty of evidence assessed using GRADE was mixed. PFMT plus biofeedback versus no treatment, sham treatment or verbal/written instructions Four studies reported on this comparison. PFMT plus biofeedback may result in greater subjective cure of incontinence from 6 to 12 months (1 study; n = 102; low-certainty evidence). However, men undertaking PFMT and biofeedback may be less likely to be objectively cured at from 6 to 12 months (2 studies; n = 269; low-certainty evidence). It is uncertain whether undertaking PFMT and biofeedback has an effect on surface or skin-related adverse events (1 study; n = 205; very low-certainty evidence) or muscle-related adverse events (1 study; n = 205; very low-certainty evidence). Condition-specific quality of life, participant adherence to the intervention and general quality of life were not reported by any study for this comparison. Combinations of conservative treatments versus no treatment, sham treatment or verbal/written instructions Eleven studies assessed this comparison. Combinations of conservative treatments may lead to little difference in the number of men being subjectively cured or improved of incontinence between 6 and 12 months (RR 0.97, 95% CI 0.79 to 1.19; 2 studies; n = 788; low-certainty evidence; in absolute terms: no treatment or sham arm: 307 per 1000 and intervention arm: 297 per 1000). Combinations of conservative treatments probably lead to little difference in condition-specific quality of life (MD -0.28, 95% CI -0.86 to 0.29; 2 studies; n = 788; moderate-certainty evidence) and probably little difference in general quality of life between 6 and 12 months (MD -0.01, 95% CI -0.04 to 0.02; 2 studies; n = 742; moderate-certainty evidence). There is little difference between combinations of conservative treatments and control in terms of objective cure or improvement of incontinence between 6 and 12 months (MD 0.18, 95% CI -0.24 to 0.60; 2 studies; n = 565; high-certainty evidence). However, it is uncertain whether participant adherence to the intervention between 6 and 12 months is increased for those undertaking combinations of conservative treatments (RR 2.08, 95% CI 0.78 to 5.56; 2 studies; n = 763; very low-certainty evidence; in absolute terms: no intervention or sham arm: 172 per 1000 and intervention arm: 358 per 1000). There is probably no difference between combinations and control in terms of the number of men experiencing surface or skin-related adverse events (2 studies; n = 853; moderate-certainty evidence), but it is uncertain whether combinations of treatments lead to more men experiencing muscle-related adverse events (RR 2.92, 95% CI 0.31 to 27.41; 2 studies; n = 136; very low-certainty evidence; in absolute terms: 0 per 1000 for both arms). Electrical or magnetic stimulation versus no treatment, sham treatment or verbal/written instructions We did not identify any studies for this comparison that reported on our key outcomes of interest., Authors' Conclusions: Despite a total of 25 trials, the value of conservative interventions for urinary incontinence following prostate surgery alone, or in combination, remains uncertain. Existing trials are typically small with methodological flaws. These issues are compounded by a lack of standardisation of the PFMT technique and marked variations in protocol concerning combinations of conservative treatments. Adverse events following conservative treatment are often poorly documented and incompletely described. Hence, there is a need for large, high-quality, adequately powered, randomised control trials with robust methodology to address this subject., (Copyright © 2023 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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48. Implementation of a women's reproductive behavioral health telemedicine program: a qualitative study of barriers and facilitators in obstetric and pediatric clinics.
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Sterba KR, Johnson EE, Douglas E, Aujla R, Boyars L, Kruis R, Verdin R, Grater R, King K, Ford D, and Guille C
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- Pregnancy, Child, Female, Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Qualitative Research, Women's Health, Telemedicine, Substance-Related Disorders
- Abstract
Background: Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders and Substance Use Disorders are common and result in significant morbidities and mortality. Despite evidence-based treatment availability, multiple barriers exist to care delivery. Because telemedicine offers opportunities to overcome these barriers, the objective of this study was to characterize barriers and facilitators to implementing a mental health and substance use disorder telemedicine program in community obstetric and pediatric clinics., Methods: Interviews and site surveys were completed with practices engaged in a Women's Reproductive Behavioral Health Telemedicine program (N = 6 sites; 18 participants) at the Medical University of South Carolina and telemedicine providers involved in care delivery (N = 4). Using a structured interview guide based on implementation science principles, we assessed program implementation experiences and perceived barriers and facilitators to implementation. A template analysis approach was used to analyze qualitative data within and across groups., Results: The primary program facilitator was service demand driven by the lack of available maternal mental health and substance use disorder services. Strong commitment to the importance of addressing these health concerns provided a foundation for successful program implementation yet practical challenges such as staffing, space, and technology support were notable barriers. Services were supported by establishing good teamwork within the clinic and with the telemedicine team., Conclusion: Capitalizing on clinics' commitment to care for women's needs and a high demand for mental health and substance use disorder services while also addressing resource and technology needs will facilitate telemedicine program success. Study results may have implications for potential marketing, onboarding and monitoring implementation strategies to support clinics engaging in telemedicine programs., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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49. Preoperative Patella Alta on Caton-Deschamps Index Is a Predictor of Outcome Following Isolated Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Reconstruction.
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Brutico J, Paul RW, Wright M, Destine H, Johnson EE, Bishop ME, Erickson BJ, Freedman KB, and Tjoumakaris FP
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine whether a preoperative Caton-Deschamps index (CDI) ≥ 1.30, as measured by magnetic resonance imaging, is associated with rates of postoperative instability, revision knee surgery, and patient-reported outcomes in patients undergoing isolated medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction., Methods: Patients who underwent primary medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction (MPFLR) between 2015 and 2019 at a single institution were assessed. Only those with at least 2 year follow up were included. Patients who had undergone a previous ipsilateral knee surgery, concomitant tibial tubercle osteotomy and/or ligamentous repair/reconstruction at the time of MPFL reconstruction were excluded from the study. CDIs were evaluated by three investigators based on magnetic resonance imaging measurement. Patients with a CDI ≥ 1.30 were included in the patella alta group, while those with a CDI between 0.70 and 1.29 served as controls. A retrospective review of clinical notes was used to evaluate the number of postoperative instability episodes and revisions. Functional outcomes were measured by the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) and 12-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12) physical and mental scores., Results: Overall, 49 patients (50 knees, 29 males, 59.2%) underwent isolated MPFLR. Nineteen (38.8%) patients had a CDI ≥ 1.30 (mean: 1.41, range: 1.30-1.66). The patella alta group was significantly more likely to experience a postoperative instability episode (36.8% vs 10.0%; P = .023) and was more likely to return to the operating room for any reason (26.3% vs 3.0%; P = .022) compared to those with normal patellar height. Despite this, the patella alta group had significantly greater postoperative IKDC (86.5 vs 72.4; P = .035) and SF-12 physical (54.2 vs 46.5; P = .006) scores. Pearson's correlation showed a significant association between CDI and postoperative IKDC ( R
2 = 0.157; P = .022) and SF-12P ( R2 = .246; P = .002) scores. There was no difference in postoperative Lysholm (87.9 vs 85.1; P = .531). and SF-12M (48.9 vs 52.5; P = .425) scores between the groups., Conclusion: Patients with preoperative patella alta, as measured by CDI had higher rates of postoperative instability and return to the OR with isolated MPFL reconstruction for patellar instability. Despite this, higher preoperative CDI was associated with greater postoperative IKDC scores and SF-12 physical scores in these patients., Level of Evidence: Retrospective cohort study, Level IV., (© 2023 The Authors.)- Published
- 2023
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50. Clinical Outcomes After Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstructions With Concomitant Ulnar Nerve Transposition in Overhead Athletes: A Matched Cohort Analysis.
- Author
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Lynch JC, Johnson EE, Ciccotti MC, Erickson BJ, Dodson CC, Cohen SB, and Ciccotti MG
- Subjects
- Humans, Cohort Studies, Ulnar Nerve surgery, Retrospective Studies, Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction, Baseball injuries, Collateral Ligament, Ulnar injuries, Elbow Joint surgery, Collateral Ligaments surgery
- Abstract
Background: Injury of the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) has become increasingly common, particularly in overhead athletes. There is no consensus on management of the ulnar nerve in UCL reconstruction (UCLR) in patients with preoperative ulnar nerve symptoms, as literature supports both not decompressing the nerve as well as ulnar nerve transposition (UNT)., Hypothesis/purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare subjective clinical outcomes and return-to-sports (RTS) metrics between patients who received UNT during UCLR and a matched cohort who underwent UCLR alone. We hypothesized that there would be no significant difference in patient outcomes or RTS metrics between the cohorts., Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3., Methods: Using an institutional database, patients who underwent UCLR with UNT between 2007 and 2017 were retrospectively identified. These patients were matched based on sex, age at surgery (±3 years), and body mass index (±2 kg/m
2 ) to a comparison group that underwent UCLR alone. Patients completed the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic Shoulder & Elbow (KJOC) score, the Timmerman and Andrews elbow score, the Conway-Jobe scale, and custom patient satisfaction and RTS questionnaires., Results: Thirty patients who underwent UCLR with concomitant UNT and 30 matched patients who underwent UCLR without UNT were available for follow-up at a mean of 6.9 (3.4-9.9) and 8.1 (3.4-13.9) years, respectively. The UNT group reported similar KJOC (78.4 in UNT vs 76.8; P = .780), Conway-Jobe (60% excellent in UNT vs 77% excellent; P = .504), Timmerman and Andrews (86.2 in UNT vs 88.8; P = .496), and satisfaction scores (85.3% in UNT vs 89.3%; P = .512) compared with UCLR group. In terms of RTS rate (84% in UNT vs 93% in UCLR; P = .289) and duration required to RTS (11.1 months in UNT vs 12.5 months in UCLR; P = .176), the 2 groups did not significantly differ. Finally, despite significant differences in preoperative ulnar nerve symptoms (100% in UNT vs 7% in UCLR; P < .001), the 2 groups did not statistically differ in the proportion of patients who experienced postoperative ulnar nerve symptoms (13% in UNT vs 0% in UCLR; P = .112)., Conclusion: This matched cohort analysis showed no statistically significant differences in patient-reported outcomes and RTS between patients undergoing UCLR with and without UNT.- Published
- 2023
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