30 results on '"Bilal Azhar"'
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2. Documenting the Recovery of Vascular Services in European Centres Following the Initial COVID-19 Pandemic Peak: Results from a Multicentre Collaborative Study
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Ruth A. Benson, Maria Antonella Ruffino, Sharon Chan, Patrick Coughlin, Ayoola Awopetu, Philip Stather, Tristan Lane, Dimitrios Theodosiou, Mohamed Abozeid Ahmed, Thodur Vasudevan, Mohammed Ibrahim, Faraj Al Maadany, Mohamed Eljareh, Fatimah Saad Alkhafeefi, Raphael Coscas, Ertekin Utku Ünal, Raffaele Pulli, Sergio Zacà, Domenico Angiletta, Thomas Kotsis, Magdy Moawad, Matteo Tozzi, Nikolaos Patelis, Andreas M. Lazaris, Jason Chuen, Alexander Croo, Elpiniki Tsolaki, Gladiol Zenunaj, Dhafer Kamal, Mahmoud MH. Tolba, Martin Maresch, Vipul Khetarpaul, Joseph Mills, Gaurav Gangwani, Mohamed Elahwal, Rana Khalil, Mohammed A. Azab, Anver Mahomed, Richard Whiston, Ummul Contractor, Davide Esposito, Carlo Pratesi, Elena Giacomelli, Martín Veras Troncoso, Stephane Elkouri, Flavia Gentile Johansson, Ilias Dodos, Marie Benezit, José Vidoedo, João Rocha-Neves, António Henrique Pereira-Neves, Marina Felicidade Dias-Neto, Ana Filipa Campos Jácome, Luis Loureiro, Ivone Silva, Rodrigo Garza-Herrera, Victor Canata, Charlotte Bezard, Kathryn Bowser, Jorge Felipe Tobar, Carlos Gomez Vera, Carolina Salinas Parra, Eugenia Lopez, Yvis Gadelha Serra, Juan Varela, Vanessa Rubio, Gerardo Victoria, Adam Johnson, Leigh Ann O’Banion, Ragai Makar, Tamer Ghatwary Tantawy, Martin Storck, Vincent Jongkind, Orwa falah, Olivia McBride, Arda Isik, Athanasios Papaioannou, Paulo Eduardo Ocke Reis, Umberto Marcello Bracale, Ellie Atkins, Giovanni Tinelli, Emma Scott, Lucy Wales, Ashwin Sivaharan, Georgia Priona, Craig Nesbitt, Tabitha Grainger, Lauren Shelmerdine, Patrick Chong, Adnan Bajwa, Luke Arwynck, Nancy Hadjievangelou, Ahmed Elbasty, Oscar Rubio, Michael Ricardo, Jorge H. Ulloa, Marcos Tarazona, Manuel Pabon, Georgios Pitoulias, Kevin Corless, Orestis Ioannidis, Oliver Friedrich, Isabelle Van Herzeele, Badri Vijaynagar, Tina Cohnert, Rachel Bell, Hayley Moore, Prakash Saha, Edward Gifford, Matti Laine, Adel Barkat, Christos Karkos, Lenny Suryani Binti Safri, Gabriel Buitron, Javier Del Castillo, Paul Carrera, Nilson Salinas, Rodrigo Bruno Biagioni, Sergio Benites, César Andrés Mafla, Putera Mas Pian, Pereira Albino, Ernesto Serrano, Andres Marin, Marco González, Marsha Foreroga, Alejandro Russo, Andrés Reyes, Daniel Guglielmone, Lorena Grillo, Ronald Flumignan, Francisco Gomez Palones, Pierre Galvagni Silveira, Rosnelifaizur Bin Ramely, Sara Edeiken, Ian Chetter, Lucy Green, Abhilash Sudarsanam, Oliver Lyons, Gary Lemmon, Richard Neville, Mariano Castelli, Carlos A. Hinojosa, Rubén Rodríguez Carvajal, Aksim Rivera, Peng Wong, Laura Drudi, Jeremy Perkins, Kishore Sieunarine, Doaa Attia, Mahmoud Atef, Lostoridis Eftychios, Fred Weaver, Leong Chuo Ren, Mohannad Alomari, Reda Jamjoom, Qusai Aljarrah, Ayman Abbas, Faris Alomran, Ambrish Kumar, Abdulmajeed Altoijri, Kareem T. ElSanhoury, Ahmed Alhumaid, Tamer Fekry, Raghuram Sekhar, Panagiotis Theodoridis, Theodoridis Panagiotis, Konstantinos Roditis, Paraskevi Tsiantoula, Afroditi Antoniou, Raphael Soler, Natasha Hasemaki, Efstratia Baili, Eustratia Mpaili, Bella Huasen, Tom Wallace, Andrew Duncan, Matthew Metcalfe, Kristyn Mannoia, Carlos F. Bechara, Nikolaos Tsilimparis, Nathan Aranson, David Riding, Mariano Palena, Ciarán McDonnell, Nicolas J. Mouawad, Shonda Banegas, Peter Rossi, Taohid Oshodi, Rodney Diaz, Rana Afifi, Shiva Dindyal, Ankur Thapar, Ali Kordzadeh, Gonzalo Pullas, Stephanie Lin, Chris Davies, Katy Darvall, Akio Kodama, Thushan Gooneratne, Nalaka Gunawansa, Alberto Munoz, Ng Jun Jie, Nicholas Bradley, Wissam Al-Jundi, Felicity Meyer, Cheong Lee, Martin Malina, Sophie Renton, Dennis Lui, Andrew Batchelder, Grzegorz Oszkinis, Antonio Freyrie, Jacopo Giordano, Nikolaos Saratzis, Konstantinos Tigkiropoulos, Stavridis Kyriakos, Guriy Popov, Muhammad Usman Cheema, Pierfrancesco Lapolla, Yih Chun Ling Patricia, Raed Ennab, Brant W. Ullery, Ketino Pasenidou, Jacky Tam, Gabriel Sidel, Vivek Vardhan Jayaprakash, Lisa Bennett, Simon Hardy, Emma Davies, Sara Baker, Lasantha Wijesinghe, Adam Tam, Ken McCune, Manik Chana, Chris Lowe, Aaron Goh, Katarzyna Powezka, Ioanna Kyrou, Nishath Altaf, Denis Harkin, Hannah Travers, James Cragg, Atif sharif, Tasleem Akhtar, José Antonio Chávez, Claudia Ordonez, Martin Mazzurco, Edward Choke, Imran Asghar, Virginia Summerour, Paul Dunlop, Rachel Morley, Thomas Hardy, Paul Bevis, Robert Cuff, Konstantinos Stavroulakis, Efthymios Beropoulis, Angeliki Argyriou, Ian Loftus, Bilal Azhar, Sharvil Sheth, Marco Virgilio Usai, Asad Choudhry, Kira Nicole, Emily Boyle, Doireann Joyce, Mohammed Hassan Abdelaty Hassan, Alberto Saltiel, Gert Frahm-Jensen, George Antoniou, Muhammed Elhadi, Ali Kimyaghalam, Rafael Malgor, Leigh Ann O'Banion, Diego Telve, Andrej Isaak, Jürg Schmidli, Kevin McKevitt, Tam Siddiqui, Giuseppe Asciutto, Nikolaos Floros, George Papadopoulos, Alexandros Kafetzakis, Stylianos G. Koutsias, Petroula Nana, Athanasios Giannoukas, Stavros Kakkos, Konstantinos G. Moulakakis, Natasha Shafique, Arkadiusz Jawien, Matthew Popplewell, Chris Imray, Kumar Abayasekara, Timothy Rowlands, Ganesh Kuhan, Sriram Rajagopalan, Anthony Jaipersad, Uzma Sadia, Isaac Kobe, Devender Mittapalli, Ibrahim Enemosah, Christian-Alexander Behrendt, Adam Beck, Muayyad Almudhafer, Stefano Ancetti, Donald Jacobs, Priya Jayakumar, Fatemeh Malekpour, Sherene Shalhub, Boboyor Keldiyorov, Meryl Simon, Manar Khashram, Nicole Rich, Amanda Shepherd, Lewis Meecham, and Daniel Doherty
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AAA ,COVID-19 ,PAD ,Survey ,Vascular surgery ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Objective: To document the recovery of vascular services in Europe following the first COVID-19 pandemic peak. Methods: An online structured vascular service survey with repeated data entry between 23 March and 9 August 2020 was carried out. Unit level data were collected using repeated questionnaires addressing modifications to vascular services during the first peak (March – May 2020, “period 1”), and then again between May and June (“period 2”) and June and July 2020 (“period 3”). The duration of each period was similar. From 2 June, as reductions in cases began to be reported, centres were first asked if they were in a region still affected by rising cases, or if they had passed the peak of the first wave. These centres were asked additional questions about adaptations made to their standard pathways to permit elective surgery to resume. Results: The impact of the pandemic continued to be felt well after countries’ first peak was thought to have passed in 2020. Aneurysm screening had not returned to normal in 21.7% of centres. Carotid surgery was still offered on a case by case basis in 33.8% of centres, and only 52.9% of centres had returned to their normal aneurysm threshold for surgery. Half of centres (49.4%) believed their management of lower limb ischaemia continued to be negatively affected by the pandemic. Reduced operating theatre capacity continued in 45.5% of centres. Twenty per cent of responding centres documented a backlog of at least 20 aortic repairs. At least one negative swab and 14 days of isolation were the most common strategies used for permitting safe elective surgery to recommence. Conclusion: Centres reported a broad return of services approaching pre-pandemic “normal” by July 2020. Many introduced protocols to manage peri-operative COVID-19 risk. Backlogs in cases were reported for all major vascular surgeries.
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- 2022
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3. Children’s Sentiment Analysis from Texts by Using Weight Updated Tuned with Random Forest Classification
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Bilal, Azhar Ahmed, primary, Erdem, O. Ayhan, additional, and Toklu, Sinan, additional
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- 2024
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4. Applying Sentiment Analysis on Children’s Stories
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Bilal, Azhar Ahmed, primary, Erdem, O. Ayhan, additional, and Toklu, Sinan, additional
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- 2023
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5. Wedelolactone mitigates UVB induced oxidative stress, inflammation and early tumor promotion events in murine skin: plausible role of NFkB pathway
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Ali, Farrah, Khan, Bilal Azhar, and Sultana, Sarwat
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- 2016
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6. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Re. 'Endovascular Radiofrequency Ablation of Nerves For Treatment of Raynaud's Phenomenon'
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James Budge, Bilal Azhar, and Mital Desai
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Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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7. How Durable Is the Solution To Poor Durability?
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Bilal Azhar and Mital Desai
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Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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8. Giant and Controllable Photoplasticity and Photoelasticity in Compound Semiconductors
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Jiahao Dong, Yifei Li, Yuying Zhou, Alan Schwartzman, Haowei Xu, Bilal Azhar, Joseph Bennett, Ju Li, and R. Jaramillo
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General Physics and Astronomy - Abstract
We show that the wide-band gap compound semiconductors ZnO, ZnS, and CdS feature large photoplastic and photoelastic effects that are mediated by point defects. We measure the mechanical properties of ceramics and single crystals using nanoindentation, and we find that elasticity and plasticity vary strongly with moderate illumination. For instance, the elastic stiffness of ZnO can increase by greater than 40% due to blue illumination of intensity 1.4 mW/cm^{2}. Above-band-gap illumination (e.g., uv light) has the strongest effect, and the relative effect of subband gap illumination varies between samples-a clear sign of defect-mediated processes. We show giant optomechanical effects can be tuned by materials processing, and that processing dependence can be understood within a framework of point defect equilibrium. The photoplastic effect can be understood by a long-established theory of charged dislocation motion. The photoelastic effect requires a new theoretical framework which we present using density functional theory to study the effect of point defect ionization on local lattice structure and elastic tensors. Our results update the longstanding but lesser-studied field of semiconductor optomechanics, and suggest interesting applications.
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- 2022
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9. The Effect of Mergers and Acquisitions on the Financial Performance of Micro Finance Banks
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Ansari, Muhammad Akbar Ali, primary, Bilal, Azhar, additional, Khan, Ali Junaid, additional, and Tahir, Muhammad Sohail, additional
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- 2021
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10. [A02] The Utility of Post-EVAR Sac Size Change in Informing the Risk of Future Endograft Failure
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Bilal Azhar, James Budge, Arsalan Wafi, Ian Loftus, and Peter Holt
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Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
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11. Doping-Enabled Reconfigurable Strongly Correlated Phase in a Quasi-2D Perovskite
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Saloni Pendse, Shu-Kai Yao, Yuwei Guo, Zhizhong Chen, Jian Shi, Chengliang Sun, Yang Hu, Lifu Zhang, Zhiting Tian, Ru Jia, Yao Cai, Jie Jiang, Bilal Azhar, and Peilin Liao
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Superconductivity ,Materials science ,Hydrogen ,Doping ,Conductance ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Atomic orbital ,Octahedron ,chemistry ,Chemical physics ,Phase (matter) ,General Materials Science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Perovskite (structure) - Abstract
Highlighted by the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity, strongly correlated oxides with highly distorted perovskite structures serve as intriguing model systems for pursuing emerging materials physics and testing technological concepts. While 3d correlated oxides with a distorted perovskite structure are not uncommon, their 4d counterparts are unfortunately rare. In this work, we report the tuning of the electrical and optical properties of a quasi-2D perovskite niobate CsBiNb2O7 via hydrogenation. It is observed that hydrogenation induces drastic changes of lattice dynamics, optical transmission, and conductance. It is suggested that changing the orbital occupancy of Nb d orbitals could trigger the on-site Coulomb interaction in the NbO6 octahedron. The observed hydrogen doping-induced electrical plasticity is implemented for simulating neural synaptic activity. Our finding sheds light on the role of hydrogen in 4d transition metal oxides and suggests a new avenue for the design and development of novel electronic phases.
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- 2021
12. Electrically Reconfigurable Nonvolatile Metasurface based on Phase Change Materials
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Mikhail Y. Shalaginov, Jeffrey B. Chou, Clayton Fowler, Skylar Deckoff-Jones, Carlos Ríos, Clara Rivero-Baleine, Junhao Liang, Tian Gu, Juejun Hu, Sensong An, Myungkoo Kang, Vladimir Liberman, Christopher M. Roberts, Yifei Zhang, Kathleen Richardson, Hualiang Zhang, and Bilal Azhar
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Fresnel zone ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Beam steering ,Amorphous solid ,Blueshift ,symbols.namesake ,Fourier transform ,symbols ,Optoelectronics ,Thin film ,business ,Electrical conductor ,Refractive index - Abstract
We report an electrically reconfigurable metasurface platform based on optical phase change materials. Multi-cycle reversible switching is realized using conductive micro-heaters. Large-contrast spectral tuning and beam-steering are demonstrated.
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- 2021
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13. COVID-19 antibody tests: statistical implications
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Hadyn K.N. Kankam, Cassie Pope, George J.M. Hourston, Bilal Azhar, and Pahalavi Ravindran
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Public economics ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Predictive value ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID-19 Testing ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Socioeconomic status ,Public health policy - Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had significant implications for society, with the introduction of restrictive social measures. Antibody tests provide a way of identifying patients who have been previously exposed to the virus and thus may have a degree of immunity. This is important in the development of public health policy, as local and national bodies seek to relax social restrictions in an attempt to mitigate the socioeconomic impact of the pandemic. This article explores the essential statistical concepts used to interpret the findings of diagnostic investigations, with examples illustrated using COVID-19 antibody tests.
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- 2020
14. Timing of carotid endarterectomy and clinical outcomes
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Arsalan Wafi, Bilal Azhar, Ian Loftus, and James Budge
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Review Article on Carotid Artery Stenosis and Stroke: Prevention and Treatment Part I ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,Perioperative ,Amaurosis fugax ,Carotid endarterectomy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stenosis ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Stroke ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The timing of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) for symptomatic ipsilateral carotid artery stenosis has evolved in practice over time. Key landmark trials outlined the benefit of performing CEA in the recently symptomatic carotid artery stenosis, defined as revascularisation within 6 months of the index neurological event. Further evidence and sub-analysis demonstrate that performing CEA within 2 weeks of symptoms has the maximal benefit in reducing stroke free survival and is associated with a safe perioperative complication profile. This has translated into guideline recommendations and widespread clinical practice. The case for performing urgent CEA (within 48 hours of index neurological event) over early CEA (within 2 weeks) has been put forward and studied. Data examining perioperative complications for urgent CEA are mostly derived from retrospective single series studies. A moderate balance exists in the literature for the safety and risk of urgent CEA. Although many studies present acceptable perioperative stroke and mortality rates associated with urgent CEA, evidence still exists that the perioperative complications may not be insignificant. This is particularly the case if the presenting neurology is a stroke, rather than a transient ischaemic attack (TIA) or amaurosis fugax. This should be contextualised in the practice of modern aggressive medical therapy with dual antiplatelets and statins, with evidence suggesting a reduction in recurrent ischaemic events prior to surgical intervention. Careful patient selection, presenting neurology and medical therapy is likely to be a key feature in considering urgent CEA versus early CEA.
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- 2020
15. Electrically Reconfigurable Nonvolatile Metasurface Using Low-Loss Optical Phase Change Material
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Clara Rivero-Baleine, Jeffrey B. Chou, Skylar Deckoff-Jones, Myungkoo Kang, Tian Gu, Juejun Hu, Carlos Ríos, Sensong An, Christopher Roberts, Mikhail Y. Shalaginov, Clayton Fowler, Kathleen Richardson, Vladimir Liberman, Hualiang Zhang, Yifei Zhang, Junhao Liang, and Bilal Azhar
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Materials science ,Optical contrast ,business.industry ,Optical beam ,Biomedical Engineering ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Bioengineering ,Applied Physics (physics.app-ph) ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Octave (electronics) ,Phase-change material ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Design for manufacturability ,Modulation ,Broadband ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Optics (physics.optics) ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
Active metasurfaces promise reconfigurable optics with drastically improved compactness, ruggedness, manufacturability, and functionality compared to their traditional bulk counterparts. Optical phase change materials (O-PCMs) offer an appealing material solution for active metasurface devices with their large index contrast and nonvolatile switching characteristics. Here we report what we believe to be the first electrically reconfigurable nonvolatile metasurfaces based on O-PCMs. The O-PCM alloy used in the devices, Ge2Sb2Se4Te1 (GSST), uniquely combines giant non-volatile index modulation capability, broadband low optical loss, and a large reversible switching volume, enabling significantly enhanced light-matter interactions within the active O-PCM medium. Capitalizing on these favorable attributes, we demonstrated continuously tunable active metasurfaces with record half-octave spectral tuning range and large optical contrast of over 400%. We further prototyped a polarization-insensitive phase-gradient metasurface to realize dynamic optical beam steering., 12 pages, 5 figures
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- 2020
16. Medical leadership in the NHS during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Bilal Azhar, S Fizza Tanzeem, Bayanne Olabi, Martin Fischer, and Sara Warraich
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Coping (psychology) ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Systems Analysis ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,State Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physicians ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Humans ,Systems thinking ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pandemics ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,United Kingdom ,Leadership ,Personal experience ,business ,Coronavirus Infections ,Healthcare system - Abstract
Amid the global COVID-19 pandemic, adaptation of healthcare systems, with strong medical leadership, has been integral to coping with the ever-changing situation. This article is based on the personal experiences of doctors in the NHS and insights into the frontline response to this situation. It reflects on leadership dilemmas and strategies implemented to overcome them, with a focus on systems thinking and adaptive leadership.
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- 2020
17. Global impact of the first coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic wave on vascular services
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Ruth A Benson, Sandip Nandhra, Joseph Shalhoub, Nikesh Dattani, Graeme K Ambler, David C Banquet, David C Bosanquet, Rachael Forsythe, Sarah Onida, George Dovell, Louise Hitchman, Ryan Preece, Athanasios Saratzis, Chris Imray, Adam Johnson, Andrew Choong, Jun Jie Ng, Sarah Aitken, Jana-Lee Moss, Abhilash Sudarsanam, Adam Tam, Adam W Beck, Adel Barkat, Adnan Bajwa, Ahmed Elbasty, A I Awopetu, Akio Kodama, Aksim G Rivera, Alberto Munoz, Alberto Saltiel, Alejandro Russo, Alex Rolls, Alexandros Kafetzakis, Ali Kimyaghalam, Ali Kordzadeh, Amanda Shepherd, Aminder Singh, Andrea Mingoli, Andreas M Lazaris, Andrej Isaak, Andres Marin, Andrés Reyes Valdivia, Andrew Batchelder, Andrew Duncan, Angeliki Argyriou, Anthony S Jaipersad, Antonio Freyrie, António Pereira-Neves, Anver Mahomed, Arda Isik, Arkadiusz Jawien, Asad J Choudhry, Ashwin Sivaharan, Athanasios Giannoukas, Athanasios Papaioannou, Ayman Abbas, Bakoyiannis Christos, Bekir Bogachan Akkaya, Bella Huasen, Bibombe Patrice, Mwipatayi, Bilal Azhar, Boboyor Keldiyorov, Brant W Ullery, Carlo Pratesi, Carlos A Hinojosa, Carlos F Bechara, Carolina Salinas Parra, Charalabopoulos Alexandros, Charlotte Bezard, Cheong Jun Lee, Chris Davies, Christian-Alexander Behrendt, Christopher Lowe, Christos D Karkos, Chun Ling Patricia Yih, Ciarán McDonnell, Claudia Ordonez, Craig Nesbitt, Croo Alexander, Daniel Guglielmone, Daniel T Doherty, David M Riding, Davide Esposito, Denis Harkin, Dennis H Lui, Dhafer M Kamal, Diego Telve, Dimitrios Theodosiou, Domenico Angiletta, Donald Jacobs, Edward Choke, Edward D Gifford, Efthymios Beropoulis, Eftychios Lostoridis, Eleanor Atkins, Elena Giacomelli, Elpiniki Tsolaki, Emma Davies, Emma Scott, Emmanouil Katsogridakis, Ernesto Serrano, Ertekin Utku Unal, Eugenia Lopez, Eustratia Mpaili, Fabrizio Minelli, Fatemeh Malekpour, Fatma Mousa, Felicity Meyer, Felipe Tobar, Filipa Jácome, Flavia Gentile Johansson, Fred Weaver, Gabriel Ab Proaño, Gabriel Sidel, Ganesh Kuhan, Gary Lemmon, George A Antoniou, George Papadopoulos, Georgios Pitoulias, Georgopoulos Sotirios, Gerardo Victoria, Gert Frahm-Jensen, Giovanni Tinelli, Giuseppe Asciutto, Gladiol Zenunaj, Gómez Vera Carlos Eduardo, Gonzalo Pullas, Grzegorz Oszkinis, Guriy Popov, Hakkı Zafer İscan, Hannah C Travers, Hashem Barakat, Hayrettin Levent Mavioglu, Ian Chetter, Ian Loftus, Ilias Dodos, Imran Asghar, Isabelle Van Herzeele, Jacopo Giordano, James Cragg, Jason Chuen, Javier Del Castillo Orrego, Jeremy Perkins, João Rocha-Neves, Jorge H Ulloa, José Antonio Chávez, José Vidoedo, Joseph Faraj, Joseph Mills, Juan Varela, Jürg Schmidli, Kakavia Kiriaki, Katarzyna Powezka, Kathryn Bowser, Katy Darvall, Kenneth McCune, Ketino Pasenidou, Kevin Corless, Kevin McKevitt, Kira Nicole Long, Konstantinos G Moulakakis, Konstantinos Roditis, Konstantinos Stavroulakis, Konstantinos Tigkiropoulos, Kristyn Mannoia, Kumar Abayasekara, Lalithapriya Jayakumar, Lasantha Wijesinghe, Laura Drudi, Lauren Shelmerdine, Leigh Ann O'Banion, Lewis Meecham, Lisa F Bennett, Lorena Grillo, Lucy Green, Lucy Wales, Luís Loureiro, Luis Mariano Palena, Mahmoud Mh Tolba, Manar Khashram, Manik Chana, Manuel Pabon, Marco González, Marco Virgilio Usai, Marcos Tarazona, Maria A Ruffino, Mariano Castelli, Marie Benezit, Marina Dias-Neto, Martin Malina, Martin Maresch, Martin Mazzurco, Martin Storck, Martín Veras Troncoso, Matt Popplewell, Matteo Tozzi, Matthew Metcalfe, Matti Laine, Mhammed Rawhi, Michael Ricardo, Mingzheng Aaron Goh, Mohamed Abozeid Ahmed, Mohammed Ibrahim, Mohannad Alomari, Muayyad Almudhafer, Muhammed Elhadi, Nalaka Gunawansa, Nancy Hadjievangelou, Natasha Hasemaki, Natasha Shafique, Nathan Aranson, Nicholas Bradley, Nicolas J Mouawad, Nicole C Rich, Nikolaos Floros, Nikolaos Patelis, Nikolaos Saratzis, Nikolaos Tsilimparis, Nilson Salinas, Nishath Altaf, Oliver Friedrich, Oliver Lyons, Olivia M B McBride, Orestis Ioannidis, Orwa Falah, Panagiotis Theodoridis, Paolo Sapienza, Paraskevi Tsiantoula, Patrick Chong, Patrick Coughlin, Paul Bevis, Paul Carrera, Paul Dunlop, Peng Foo Wong, Pereira Albino, Peter Rossi, Petroula Nana, Philip W Stather, Pierfrancesco Lapolla, Pierre Galvagni Silveira, Prakash Saha, Pranav Somaiya, Putera Mas Pian, Rachael L Morley, Rachel Bell, Raed M Ennab, Rafael Malgor, Raffaele Pulli, Ragai Makar, Raghuram Sekhar, Rana Afifi, Raphael Coscas, Raphael Soler, Robert F Cuff, Rodney Diaz, Rodrigo Biagioni, Rosnelifaizur Bin Ramely, Rubén Rodríguez Carvajal, Sandeep Jhajj, Sara Edeiken, Sergio Benites, Sergio Zacà, Sharath Paravastu, Sharon Chan, Sharvil Sheth, Sherene Shalhub, Shiva Dindyal, Shonda Banegas, Simon Hardy, Simona Sica, Siu Chung Tam, Sivaram Premnath, Sophie Renton, Sriram Rajagopalan, Stavridis Kyriakos, Stavros Kakkos, Stefano Ancetti, Stephane Elkouri, Stephanie Lin, Stephen Wing Keung Cheng, Stylianos G Koutsias, Tabitha Grainger, Tamer Fekry, Tamer Ghatwary Tantawy, Tamim Siddiqui, Taohid Oshodi, Tasleem Akhtar, Thomas James Hardy, Thomas Kotsis, Thushan Gooneratne, Timothy Rowlands, Tina U Cohnert, Tom Wallace, Tristan R A Lane, Umberto Marcello Bracale, Usman Cheema, Uzma Sadia, Vanessa Rubio, Victor Canata, Vincent Jongkind, Vipul Khetarpaul, Virginia Summerour, Walter Dorigo, Wissam Al-Jundi, Xun Luo, Yamume Tshomba, Yvis Gadelha Serra, A Benson, Ruth, Nandhra, Sandip, Shalhoub, Joseph, Dattani, Nikesh, K Ambler, Graeme, C Banquet, David, C Bosanquet, David, Forsythe, Rachael, Onida, Sarah, Dovell, George, Hitchman, Louise, Preece, Ryan, Saratzis, Athanasio, Imray, Chri, Johnson, Adam, Choong, Andrew, Jie Ng, Jun, Aitken, Sarah, Moss, Jana-Lee, Sudarsanam, Abhilash, Tam, Adam, W Beck, Adam, Barkat, Adel, Bajwa, Adnan, Elbasty, Ahmed, I Awopetu, A, Kodama, Akio, G Rivera, Aksim, Munoz, Alberto, Saltiel, Alberto, Russo, Alejandro, Rolls, Alex, Kafetzakis, Alexandro, Kimyaghalam, Ali, Kordzadeh, Ali, Shepherd, Amanda, Singh, Aminder, Mingoli, Andrea, M Lazaris, Andrea, Isaak, Andrej, Marin, Andre, Reyes Valdivia, André, Batchelder, Andrew, Duncan, Andrew, Argyriou, Angeliki, S Jaipersad, Anthony, Freyrie, Antonio, Pereira-Neves, António, Mahomed, Anver, Isik, Arda, Jawien, Arkadiusz, J Choudhry, Asad, Sivaharan, Ashwin, Giannoukas, Athanasio, Papaioannou, Athanasio, Abbas, Ayman, Christos, Bakoyianni, Bogachan Akkaya, Bekir, Huasen, Bella, Patrice, Bibombe, Mwipatayi, Azhar, Bilal, Keldiyorov, Boboyor, W Ullery, Brant, Pratesi, Carlo, A Hinojosa, Carlo, F Bechara, Carlo, Salinas Parra, Carolina, Alexandros, Charalabopoulo, Bezard, Charlotte, Jun Lee, Cheong, Davies, Chri, Behrendt, Christian-Alexander, Lowe, Christopher, D Karkos, Christo, Ling Patricia Yih, Chun, Mcdonnell, Ciarán, Ordonez, Claudia, Nesbitt, Craig, Alexander, Croo, Guglielmone, Daniel, T Doherty, Daniel, M Riding, David, Esposito, Davide, Harkin, Deni, H Lui, Denni, M Kamal, Dhafer, Telve, Diego, Theodosiou, Dimitrio, Angiletta, Domenico, Jacobs, Donald, Choke, Edward, D Gifford, Edward, Beropoulis, Efthymio, Lostoridis, Eftychio, Atkins, Eleanor, Giacomelli, Elena, Tsolaki, Elpiniki, Davies, Emma, Scott, Emma, Katsogridakis, Emmanouil, Serrano, Ernesto, Utku Unal, Ertekin, Lopez, Eugenia, Mpaili, Eustratia, Minelli, Fabrizio, Malekpour, Fatemeh, Mousa, Fatma, Meyer, Felicity, Tobar, Felipe, Jácome, Filipa, Gentile Johansson, Flavia, Weaver, Fred, Ab Proaño, Gabriel, Sidel, Gabriel, Kuhan, Ganesh, Lemmon, Gary, A Antoniou, George, Papadopoulos, George, Pitoulias, Georgio, Sotirios, Georgopoulo, Victoria, Gerardo, Frahm-Jensen, Gert, Tinelli, Giovanni, Asciutto, Giuseppe, Zenunaj, Gladiol, Vera Carlos Eduardo, Gómez, Pullas, Gonzalo, Oszkinis, Grzegorz, Popov, Guriy, Zafer İscan, Hakkı, C Travers, Hannah, Barakat, Hashem, Levent Mavioglu, Hayrettin, Chetter, Ian, Loftus, Ian, Dodos, Ilia, Asghar, Imran, Van Herzeele, Isabelle, Giordano, Jacopo, Cragg, Jame, Chuen, Jason, Del Castillo Orrego, Javier, Perkins, Jeremy, Rocha-Neves, João, H Ulloa, Jorge, Antonio Chávez, José, Vidoedo, José, Faraj, Joseph, Mills, Joseph, Varela, Juan, Schmidli, Jürg, Kiriaki, Kakavia, Powezka, Katarzyna, Bowser, Kathryn, Darvall, Katy, Mccune, Kenneth, Pasenidou, Ketino, Corless, Kevin, Mckevitt, Kevin, Nicole Long, Kira, G Moulakakis, Konstantino, Roditis, Konstantino, Stavroulakis, Konstantino, Tigkiropoulos, Konstantino, Mannoia, Kristyn, Abayasekara, Kumar, Jayakumar, Lalithapriya, Wijesinghe, Lasantha, Drudi, Laura, Shelmerdine, Lauren, Ann O'Banion, Leigh, Meecham, Lewi, F Bennett, Lisa, Grillo, Lorena, Green, Lucy, Wales, Lucy, Loureiro, Luí, Mariano Palena, Lui, Mh Tolba, Mahmoud, Khashram, Manar, Chana, Manik, Pabon, Manuel, González, Marco, Virgilio Usai, Marco, Tarazona, Marco, A Ruffino, Maria, Castelli, Mariano, Benezit, Marie, Dias-Neto, Marina, Malina, Martin, Maresch, Martin, Mazzurco, Martin, Storck, Martin, Veras Troncoso, Martín, Popplewell, Matt, Tozzi, Matteo, Metcalfe, Matthew, Laine, Matti, Rawhi, Mhammed, Ricardo, Michael, Aaron Goh, Mingzheng, Abozeid Ahmed, Mohamed, Ibrahim, Mohammed, Alomari, Mohannad, Almudhafer, Muayyad, Elhadi, Muhammed, Gunawansa, Nalaka, Hadjievangelou, Nancy, Hasemaki, Natasha, Shafique, Natasha, Aranson, Nathan, Bradley, Nichola, J Mouawad, Nicola, C Rich, Nicole, Floros, Nikolao, Patelis, Nikolao, Saratzis, Nikolao, Tsilimparis, Nikolao, Salinas, Nilson, Altaf, Nishath, Friedrich, Oliver, Lyons, Oliver, B McBride, Olivia M, Ioannidis, Oresti, Falah, Orwa, Theodoridis, Panagioti, Sapienza, Paolo, Tsiantoula, Paraskevi, Chong, Patrick, Coughlin, Patrick, Bevis, Paul, Carrera, Paul, Dunlop, Paul, Foo Wong, Peng, Albino, Pereira, Rossi, Peter, Nana, Petroula, W Stather, Philip, Lapolla, Pierfrancesco, Galvagni Silveira, Pierre, Saha, Prakash, Somaiya, Pranav, Mas Pian, Putera, L Morley, Rachael, Bell, Rachel, M Ennab, Raed, Malgor, Rafael, Pulli, Raffaele, Makar, Ragai, Sekhar, Raghuram, Afifi, Rana, Coscas, Raphael, Soler, Raphael, F Cuff, Robert, Diaz, Rodney, Biagioni, Rodrigo, Bin Ramely, Rosnelifaizur, Rodríguez Carvajal, Rubén, Jhajj, Sandeep, Edeiken, Sara, Benites, Sergio, Zacà, Sergio, Paravastu, Sharath, Chan, Sharon, Sheth, Sharvil, Shalhub, Sherene, Dindyal, Shiva, Banegas, Shonda, Hardy, Simon, Sica, Simona, Chung Tam, Siu, Premnath, Sivaram, Renton, Sophie, Rajagopalan, Sriram, Kyriakos, Stavridi, Kakkos, Stavro, Ancetti, Stefano, Elkouri, Stephane, Lin, Stephanie, Wing Keung Cheng, Stephen, G Koutsias, Styliano, Grainger, Tabitha, Fekry, Tamer, Ghatwary Tantawy, Tamer, Siddiqui, Tamim, Oshodi, Taohid, Akhtar, Tasleem, James Hardy, Thoma, Kotsis, Thoma, Gooneratne, Thushan, Rowlands, Timothy, U Cohnert, Tina, Wallace, Tom, A Lane, Tristan R, Bracale, UMBERTO MARCELLO, Cheema, Usman, Sadia, Uzma, Rubio, Vanessa, Canata, Victor, Jongkind, Vincent, Khetarpaul, Vipul, Summerour, Virginia, Dorigo, Walter, Al-Jundi, Wissam, Luo, Xun, Tshomba, Yamume, and Gadelha Serra, Yvis
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Global Health ,Health Care Surveys ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Prospective Studies ,Vascular Surgical Procedures ,COVID-19 ,Physicians' ,Pandemic ,Practice Patterns ,Settore MED/22 - CHIRURGIA VASCOLARE ,Prospective Studie ,Global health ,health care surveys ,health services accessibility ,humans ,pandemics ,practice patterns ,physicians' ,prospective studies ,vascular surgical procedures ,Health Care Survey ,Rapid Research Communication ,Human ,Vascular Surgical Procedure - Abstract
Graphical Abstract This online structured survey has demonstrated the global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on vascular services. The majority of centres have documented marked reductions in operating and services provided to vascular patients. In the months during recovery from the resource restrictions imposed during the pandemic peaks, there will be a significant vascular disease burden awaiting surgeons. Graphical Abstract One of the most affected specialties
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- 2020
18. The role of technology in the management of Diabetes mellitus [Letter]
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Khan,Inayat and Bilal,Azhar Ramzan
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Patient Preference and Adherence - Abstract
Inayat Hussain Khan, Azhar Ramzan BilalFaculty of Medicine, St George’s Hospital Medical School, London, UKWe read this article by Khurana et al1 with great interest. It is encouraging to see astudy which explored how adherence in patients with Type 2 Diabetes mellituscould potentially be improved.Diabetes is a condition affecting an increasing number of people and themacrovascular and microvascular changes are damaging to long term health,predisposing to vascular events such as heart attacks and strokes.2Adherence to treatment plans is essential for good glycaemic control and toprevent such complications. A study found that effective communication betweendoctors and patients is key to ensuring adherence to individual treatment plans butof course this does not always take place.3 This current study1 evaluated howtechnology can help to bridge this gap in the management of chronic conditionslike diabetes where treatment is lifelong and complex. Khurana et al1 showed thatthere is an appetite amongst patients for better use of technology to help managechronic conditions; more than 80% of the participants surveyed in this studywere interested in using electronic methods to assist them in managing theirdiabetes.Read the original article byKhurana and collegueshere. 
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- 2019
19. Analysis of multimodal learning styles in the contemporary medical school
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Bilal, Azhar-Ramzan, Naeem, Zishan, and Nisar, Zain
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Letter ,Advances in Medical Education and Practice - Abstract
Azhar-Ramzan Bilal, Zishan Naeem, Zain NisarFaculty of Medicine, St George’s Hospital Medical School, London, UK Undergraduate teaching represents a significant change in education style for individuals,presenting a challenge to preclinical medical students. Based on this, we weregreatly interested in the study conducted by Parashar et al regarding the assessment oflearning styles of medical students in India in the era of digitization.1 Pertinently, theauthors identified most students possessed multimodal learning styles, with auditoryand kinesthetic being most common. As medical students within the UK, we wouldlike to offer our perspective through discussing the applicability of authors recommendationsto the contemporary medical school in the UK. View the original paper byParashar and colleagues.
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- 2019
20. The effect of aortic morphology on peri-operative mortality of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm
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Tom Wallace, Ian Chetter, PINAR ULUG, David Metcalfe, Bilal Azhar, Simon Howell, Timothy Rowlands, Michael Sweeting, and Janet Powell
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Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,Aortic Rupture ,law.invention ,Aneurysm ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal/mortality ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Aortic rupture ,Aged ,Surgical repair ,Aorta ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Perioperative ,Endovascular Procedures/mortality ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Aortic Rupture/mortality ,Treatment Outcome ,Centre for Surgical Research ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal - Abstract
AIMS: To investigate whether aneurysm shape and extent, which indicate whether a patient with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (rAAA) is eligible for endovascular repair (EVAR), influence the outcome of both EVAR and open surgical repair.METHODS AND RESULTS: The influence of six morphological parameters (maximum aortic diameter, aneurysm neck diameter, length and conicality, proximal neck angle, and maximum common iliac diameter) on mortality and reinterventions within 30 days was investigated in rAAA patients randomized before morphological assessment in the Immediate Management of the Patient with Rupture: Open Versus Endovascular strategies (IMPROVE) trial. Patients with a proven diagnosis of rAAA, who underwent repair and had their admission computerized tomography scan submitted to the core laboratory, were included. Among 458 patients (364 men, mean age 76 years), who had either EVAR (n = 177) or open repair (n = 281) started, there were 155 deaths and 88 re-interventions within 30 days of randomization analysed according to a pre-specified plan. The mean maximum aortic diameter was 8.6 cm. There were no substantial correlations between the six morphological variables. Aneurysm neck length was shorter in those undergoing open repair (vs. EVAR). Aneurysm neck length (mean 23.3, SD 16.1 mm) was inversely associated with mortality for open repair and overall: adjusted OR 0.72 (95% CI 0.57, 0.92) for each 16 mm (SD) increase in length. There were no convincing associations of morphological parameters with reinterventions.CONCLUSION: Short aneurysm necks adversely influence mortality after open repair of rAAA and preclude conventional EVAR. This may help explain why observational studies, but not randomized trials, have shown an early survival benefit for EVAR.CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN 48334791.
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- 2019
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21. Electrically Reconfigurable Nonvolatile Metasurface Using Optical Phase Change Materials
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Yifei Zhang, Junhao Liang, Mikhail Shalaginov, Skylar Deckoff-Jones, Carlos Ríos, Jeffrey B. Chou, Christopher Roberts, Sensong An, Clayton Fowler, Sawyer D. Campbell, Bilal Azhar, Claudia Gonçalves, Kathleen Richardson, Hualiang Zhang, Douglas H. Werner, Tian Gu, and Juejun Hu
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- 2019
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22. National prospective cohort study of the burden of acute small bowel obstruction
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Charn Gill, Rhiannon Harries, Dale Vimalachandran, Laura Hancock, Simon Bach, Gillian Tierney, John O'Callaghan, Adam Nunn, Alex Boddy, Alexandros Charalabopoulos, Kathryn Lee, Allan Golder, Daniel Hind, Andrew Williamson, Jonathan Lund, Peter Coe, Arfon Powell, James Glasbey, Martyn Stott, Lauren Shelmerdine, Dinh Van Chi Mai, Giulio Cuffolo, James Haddow, Georgina Hicks, Vijitha Chandima Halahakoon, Michael Shinkwin, Bilal Azhar, Angus McNair, Philip Herrod, Luca Ponchietti, Katie Mellor, Mingzheng Aaron Goh, James Olivier, Lisa Massey, Stephen O'Neill, Raimundas Lunevicius, Mohammed Deputy, Gareth Bashir, Julie Cornish, Jordan Fletcher, Emanuele Gammeri, Adele Elizabeth Sayers, Siobhan McKay, and Matthew Lee
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,lcsh:Surgery ,Conservative Treatment ,Patient Readmission ,Postoperative Complications ,Cost of Illness ,Intensive care ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Humans ,Hernia ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Surgical emergency ,Mortality ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Mortality rate ,Malnutrition ,Acute kidney injury ,Original Articles ,General Medicine ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Bowel obstruction ,Intensive Care Units ,Acute Disease ,Etiology ,Female ,Original Article ,Morbidity ,business ,Intestinal Obstruction - Abstract
Background Small bowel obstruction is a common surgical emergency, and is associated with high levels of morbidity and mortality across the world. The literature provides little information on the conservatively managed group. The aim of this study was to describe the burden of small bowel obstruction in the UK. Methods This prospective cohort study was conducted in 131 acute hospitals in the UK between January and April 2017, delivered by trainee research collaboratives. Adult patients with a diagnosis of mechanical small bowel obstruction were included. The primary outcome was in‐hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included complications, unplanned intensive care admission and readmission within 30 days of discharge. Practice measures, including use of radiological investigations, water soluble contrast, operative and nutritional interventions, were collected. Results Of 2341 patients identified, 693 (29·6 per cent) underwent immediate surgery (within 24 h of admission), 500 (21·4 per cent) had delayed surgery after initial conservative management, and 1148 (49·0 per cent) were managed non‐operatively. The mortality rate was 6·6 per cent (6·4 per cent for non‐operative management, 6·8 per cent for immediate surgery, 6·8 per cent for delayed surgery; P = 0·911). The major complication rate was 14·4 per cent overall, affecting 19·0 per cent in the immediate surgery, 23·6 per cent in the delayed surgery and 7·7 per cent in the non‐operative management groups (P < 0·001). Cox regression found hernia or malignant aetiology and malnutrition to be associated with higher rates of death. Malignant aetiology, operative intervention, acute kidney injury and malnutrition were associated with increased risk of major complication. Conclusion Small bowel obstruction represents a significant healthcare burden. Patient‐level factors such as timing of surgery, acute kidney injury and nutritional status are factors that might be modified to improve outcomes. © 2019 The Authors. BJS Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJS Society Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
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- 2018
23. Appearance of the Nellix Endovascular Aneurysm Sealing System on Computed Tomography
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Matt M. Thompson, Ian M. Loftus, Bilal Azhar, Shaneel R. Patel, Alan Karthikesalingam, L Rossi, Peter J. E. Holt, Jorg L. de Bruin, and Robert A. Morgan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Endoleak ,Radiodensity ,Computed tomography ,Prosthesis Design ,Aortography ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation ,Aneurysm ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Interquartile range ,Hounsfield scale ,Hospital discharge ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,medicine.disease ,Abdominal aortic aneurysm ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis ,Treatment Outcome ,Stents ,Surgery ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal - Abstract
Purpose: To describe the imaging characteristics of the Nellix Endovascular Aneurysm Sealing (EVAS) System on serial computed tomography (CT) surveillance. Methods: Sixty-eight patients undergoing EVAS were enrolled in a surveillance protocol that included CT scans prior to hospital discharge and at 3, 6, and 9 months postoperatively. Images were analyzed for the presence of gas within the endobag, endoleak, and for maximum radiodensity measured in Hounsfield units (HU) within the uppermost, middle, and lowermost regions of each endobag. Results: Gas was seen within the endobags of all 68 EVAS repairs at the first postoperative CT compared with 2 (5.6%) of 36 undergoing the 3-month scan. The endobags appeared radiodense during initial imaging, and the median (interquartile range) radiodensity of the Nellix polymer decreased from 158.3 HU (149.5; 169.5) at the postoperative CT to 81.0 HU (74.0; 88.0) at 3 months, excluding 3 cases in which contrast pre-fill was utilized. Type I endoleak was seen at the periphery of the aneurysm sac or in the cleft between the endobags, with a substantially different appearance to endoleak after endovascular aneurysm repair. Conclusion: The evolution of CT appearances after EVAS was characteristic and predictable. The device endobags were initially radiodense, which may impact the detection of endoleak within 3 months of EVAS. Endoleaks after EVAS were seen in a different anatomical area to endoleaks after conventional stent-graft repair.
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- 2015
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24. Analysis of multimodal learning styles in the contemporary medical school
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Bilal,Azhar, Naeem,Zishan, Nisar,Zain, Bilal,Azhar, Naeem,Zishan, and Nisar,Zain
- Abstract
Azhar-Ramzan Bilal, Zishan Naeem, Zain NisarFaculty of Medicine, St George’s Hospital Medical School, London, UK Undergraduate teaching represents a significant change in education style for individuals, presenting a challenge to preclinical medical students. Based on this, we were greatly interested in the study conducted by Parashar et al regarding the assessment of learning styles of medical students in India in the era of digitization.1 Pertinently, the authors identified most students possessed multimodal learning styles, with auditory and kinesthetic being most common. As medical students within the UK, we would like to offer our perspective through discussing the applicability of authors recommendations to the contemporary medical school in the UK. View the original paper by Parashar and colleagues.
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- 2019
25. Open splenectomy for Varicella zoster induced spontaneous splenic rupture
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Mark Christopher, Sykes, Bilal, Azhar, Laurence, John, and Salman, Bokhari
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Infectious disease ,Varicella zoster ,Splenectomy ,virus diseases ,General surgery ,Article - Abstract
Highlights • Spontaneous splenic rupture should be considered in patients presenting with peritonism without preceding trauma. • Haematological and infectious causes, including Varicella Zoster, should be sought when investigating spontaneous splenic rupture. • There is limited published guidance regarding the surgical options when faced with spontaneous splenic rupture., Introduction Here we present a case of atraumatic splenic rupture secondary to varicella infection requiring emergency splenectomy. The presentation was as would be expected for epstein barr virus (EBV) related splenic injury, which is well documented in the literature. Dermatological findings however suggested varicella zoster, and viral serology subsequently confirmed the diagnosis. Presentation of case A young Romanian male presented to the emergency department with peritonism without preceding trauma. Free fluid on USS was aspirated as frank blood and cross-sectional imaging demonstrated a ruptured spleen. He underwent emergency splenectomy and recovered well. During his presentation he was noted to have an erythematous rash with different rates of evolution raising the suspicion for Varicella Zoster. This was subsequently confirmed on viral serology. Discussion A number of precedents have been identified for spontaneous splenic rupture, however Varicella Zoster has only been reported a handful of times. A number of surgical options are available for splenic rupture, and guidelines exist for traumatic splenic injury. There is limited guidance on the most effective surgical management for spontaneous splenic ruptures with haemodyamic compromise. Conclusion Atraumatic splenic rupture should be considered as an important differential in those presenting with abdominal pain and peritonism without a history of preceding trauma. Haematological and infectious diagnoses should be sought to identify causation for the splenic rupture.
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- 2017
26. Malnutrition, nutritional interventions and clinical outcomes of patients with acute small bowel obstruction: results from a national, multicentre, prospective audit
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Rhiannon Harries, Dale Vimalachandran, Laura Hancock, Simon Bach, Gillian Tierney, Alex Boddy, Alexandros Charalabopoulos, Allan Golder, Daniel Hind, Susan Moug, Jonathan Lund, Peter Coe, Arfon Powell, James Glasbey, Martyn Stott, Giulio Cuffolo, James Haddow, Georgina Hicks, Vijitha Chandima Halahakoon, Michael Shinkwin, Bilal Azhar, Angus McNair, Philip Herrod, Luca Ponchietti, Mingzheng Aaron Goh, Lisa Massey, Stephen O'Neill, Raimundas Lunevicius, Mohammed Deputy, Gareth Bashir, Julie Cornish, Emanuele Gammeri, Adele Elizabeth Sayers, Siobhan McKay, and Matthew Lee
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Male ,Parenteral Nutrition ,medicine.medical_specialty ,perioperative care ,Urinary system ,nutritional support ,Nutritional Status ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Humans ,adult surgery ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Clinical Audit ,Wound dehiscence ,business.industry ,Research ,Malnutrition ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Bowel obstruction ,Pneumonia ,Catheter ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Acute Disease ,Delirium ,Surgery ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Intestinal Obstruction - Abstract
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to assess the nutritional status of patients presenting with small bowel obstruction (SBO), along with associated nutritional interventions and clinical outcomes.DesignProspective cohort study.Setting131 UK hospitals with acute surgical services.Participants2069 adult patients with a diagnosis of SBO were included in this study. The mean age was 67.0 years and 54.7% were female.Primary and secondary outcome measuresPrimary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes recorded included: major complications (composite of in-hospital mortality, reoperation, unplanned intensive care admission and 30-day readmission), complications arising from surgery (anastomotic leak, wound dehiscence), infection (pneumonia, surgical site infection, intra-abdominal infection, urinary tract infection, venous catheter infection), cardiac complications, venous thromboembolism and delirium.ResultsPostoperative adhesions were the most common cause of SBO (49.1%). Early surgery (ConclusionsMalnutrition on admission is associated with worse outcomes in patients with SBO, and marked variation in management of malnutrition was observed. Future trials should focus on identifying effective and cost-effective nutritional interventions in SBO.
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- 2019
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27. Ambulance smartphone tool for field triage of ruptured aortic aneurysms (FILTR): study protocol for a prospective observational validation of diagnostic accuracy
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Rachael Fothergill, Thomas Lorchan Lewis, Heather Jarman, Shaneel Patel, Bilal Azhar, and Alberto Vidal-Diez
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Research design ,Male ,Delayed Diagnosis ,Ambulances ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,030230 surgery ,smartphone ,0302 clinical medicine ,London ,Protocol ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aorta ,Health services research ,General Medicine ,Mobile Applications ,Hospitals ,ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm ,Research Design ,Predictive value of tests ,Female ,Medical emergency ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aortic Rupture ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Clinical decision support system ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Predictive Value of Tests ,mobile app ,medicine ,Humans ,Aortic rupture ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,pre-hospital ,medicine.disease ,VASCULAR SURGERY ,Triage ,Emergency medicine ,Observational study ,Surgery ,business ,Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal - Abstract
Introduction Rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm (rAAA) carries a considerable mortality rate and is often fatal. rAAA can be treated through open or endovascular surgical intervention and it is possible that more rapid access to definitive intervention might be a key aspect of improving mortality for rAAA. Diagnosis is not always straightforward with up to 42% of rAAA initially misdiagnosed, introducing potentially harmful delay. There is a need for an effective clinical decision support tool for accurate prehospital diagnosis and triage to enable transfer to an appropriate centre. Methods and analysis Prospective multicentre observational study assessing the diagnostic accuracy of a prehospital smartphone triage tool for detection of rAAA. The study will be conducted across London in conjunction with London Ambulance Service (LAS). A logistic score predicting the risk of rAAA by assessing ten key parameters was developed and retrospectively validated through logistic regression analysis of ambulance records and Hospital Episode Statistics data for 2200 patients from 2005 to 2010. The triage tool is integrated into a secure mobile app for major smartphone platforms. Key parameters collected from the app will be retrospectively matched with final hospital discharge diagnosis for each patient encounter. The primary outcome is to assess the sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value of the rAAA triage tool logistic score in prospective use as a mob app for prehospital ambulance clinicians. Data collection started in November 2014 and the study will recruit a minimum of 1150 non-consecutive patients over a time period of 2 years. Ethics and dissemination Full ethical approval has been gained for this study. The results of this study will be disseminated in peer-reviewed publications, and international/national presentations. Trial registration number CPMS 16459; pre-results.
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- 2016
28. Wedelolactone mitigates UVB induced oxidative stress, inflammation and early tumor promotion events in murine skin: plausible role of NFkB pathway
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Farrah Ali, Sarwat Sultana, and Bilal Azhar Khan
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Skin Neoplasms ,Carcinogenesis ,Ultraviolet Rays ,Inflammation ,IκB kinase ,Cell Communication ,medicine.disease_cause ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Coumarins ,Psoriasis ,medicine ,Polyamines ,Animals ,Skin ,Pharmacology ,integumentary system ,biology ,Neovascularization, Pathologic ,business.industry ,Transcription Factor RelA ,DNA ,Wedelolactone ,medicine.disease ,Oxidative Stress ,030104 developmental biology ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,chemistry ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Myeloperoxidase ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Tumor promotion ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
UVB (Ultra-violet B) radiation is one of the major etiological factors in various dermal pathology viz. dermatitis, actinic folliculitis, solar urticaria, psoriasis and cancer among many others. UVB causes toxic manifestation in tissues by inciting inflammatory and tumor promoting events. We have designed this study to assess the anti-inflammatory and anti-tumor promotion effect of Wedelolactone (WDL) a specific IKK inhibitor. Results indicate significant restoration of anti-oxidative enzymes due to WDL treatments. We also found that WDL was effective in mitigating inflammatory markers consisting of MPO (myeloperoxidase), Mast cells trafficking, Langerhans cells suppression and COX 2 expression up regulation due to UVB exposure. We also deduce that WDL presented a promising intervention in attenuating early tumor promotion events caused by UVB exposure as indicated by the results of ODC (Ornithine Decarboxylase), Thymidine assay, Vimentin and VEGF (Vascular-endothelial growth factor) expression. This study was able to provide substantial cues for the therapeutic ability of Wedelolactone against inflammatory and tumor promoting events in murine skin depicting plausible role of NFkB pathway.
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- 2015
29. Bilateral Nephrectomy for Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease and Timing of Kidney Transplant: A Review of the Technical Advances in Surgical Management of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Disease
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Fungai, Dengu, Bilal, Azhar, Shaneel, Patel, and Nadey, Hakim
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Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Disease Progression ,Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy ,Humans ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Diffusion of Innovation ,Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant ,Kidney Transplantation ,Nephrectomy ,Time-to-Treatment - Abstract
Autosomal dominant polycystic disease is a multisystem inherited condition affecting the kidneys and is an important cause of end-stage renal disease. Patients with autosomal dominant polycystic disease experience symptoms related to size and cystic nature of their kidneys, which can be difficult to manage. Traditionally, the only surgical option for management was open bilateral/unilateral native nephrectomy, which carried with it significant morbidity and mortality. Therefore, it was deemed unsafe and rarely performed. However, surgery for autosomal dominant polycystic disease has evolved rapidly with the advent of minimally invasive surgery and improved medical management of end-stage renal failure patients. Laparoscopic and hand-assisted laparoscopic techniques have been adopted and have demonstrated reduced morbidity. The timing of this intervention in relation to transplant is controversial and presents a major challenge in managing this patient population.
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- 2015
30. Indications for renal autotransplant: an overview
- Author
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Bilal, Azhar, Shaneel, Patel, Priyanka, Chadha, and Nadey, Hakim
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Renal Artery ,Humans ,Ureteral Diseases ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Prospective Studies ,Vascular Diseases ,Kidney Transplantation ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Renal Veins - Abstract
Advances in transplantation led to the first renal autotransplant in 1963 performed due to high ureteral injury sustained during aortic surgery. The procedure involves excision of the kidney and autologous re-implantation. Subsequently, multiple cases of renal autotransplantation have been reported in the literature for a range of indications. This reviews aims to assess the literature and experiences reported to assess the varying indications for renal autotransplant. The evidence and literature generated from experiences in this procedure are largely limited to case reports and relatively small or moderately sized case series. The main indications reported for performing autotransplant broadly includes renovascular disease, ureteral pathology and neoplastic disease. The advent of laparoscopic techniques and their implications on renal autotransplant also are discussed. Varying degrees of success are reported with this procedure with controversial issues surrounding this procedure remain, particularly in the area of neoplastic surgery. Renal autotransplant may be a useful last resort in preventing kidney loss in highly selected circumstances and when conventional methods have failed.
- Published
- 2015
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