29 results on '"Campbell, Doug"'
Search Results
2. Protocol for the MAnagement of Systolic blood pressure during Thrombectomy by Endovascular Route for acute ischemic STROKE randomized clinical trial: The MASTERSTROKE trial.
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Campbell, Doug, Deng, Carolyn, McBryde, Fiona, Billing, Robyn, Diprose, William K, Short, Timothy G, Frampton, Christopher, Brew, Stefan, and Barber, P Alan
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SYSTOLIC blood pressure , *ISCHEMIC stroke , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CEREBRAL circulation , *CLINICAL trials , *GENERAL anesthesia , *REPERFUSION injury , *HYPERPERFUSION , *MYOCARDIAL reperfusion - Abstract
Registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12619001274167p Rationale: Cerebral blood flow is blood pressure-dependent when cerebral autoregulation is impaired. Cerebral ischemia and anesthetic drugs impair cerebral autoregulation. In ischemic stroke patients treated with endovascular thrombectomy, induced hypertension is a plausible intervention to increase blood flow in the ischemic penumbra until reperfusion is achieved. This could potentially reduce final infarct size and improve functional recovery. Aim: To test if patients with large vessel occlusion stroke treated with endovascular thrombectomy will benefit from induced hypertension. Design: Prospective, randomized, parallel group, open label, multicenter clinical trial with blinded assessment of outcomes. Procedures: Patients with anterior circulation stroke treated with endovascular thrombectomy with general anesthesia within 6 h of symptom onset, and patients with 'wake up' stroke or presenting within 6 to 24 h with potentially salvageable tissue on computed tomography perfusion scanning, are included. Participants are randomized to a systolic blood pressure target of 140 mmHg or 170 mmHg from procedure initiation until recanalization. Methods to maintain the blood pressure are at the discretion of the procedural anesthesiologist. Study outcomes: The primary efficacy outcome is improvement in disability measured by modified Rankin Scale score at 90 days. The primary safety outcome is all-cause mortality at 90 days. Analysis: The Mann-Whitney U test will be used to test the ordinal shift in the seven-category modified Rankin Scale score. All-cause mortality will be estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using a log-rank test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Are We Saving Enough? Households and Retirement.
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Campbell, Doug and Weinberg, John A.
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BABY boom generation , *SAVINGS , *RETIREMENT planning , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *FEDERAL budgets , *SOCIAL Security (United States) - Abstract
An essay is presented on the misconceptions about the saving habits of Americans, particularly the baby boom generations focusing on the trends of demographics, pensions and wealth. The authors explore topics including the demographic shift affecting the federal budget and household consumption, the different approaches to savings, and their economic tradeoffs and unintended effects. Also mentioned is Kathleen Casey-Kirschling, the first baby boomer to get Social Security payments.
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- 2015
4. Sports-related extensor carpi ulnaris pathology: a review of functional anatomy, sports injury and management.
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Campbell, Doug, Campbell, Rob, O'Connor, Phil, and Hawkes, Roger
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The extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) muscle plays a key role not only in the active movements of wrist extension and ulnar deviation but also in providing stability to the ulnar side of the wrist. Its position relative to the other structures in the wrist changes with forearm pronation and supination. As such, it must be mobile yet stable. The ECU tendon relies on specific stabilising structures to hold it in the correct positions to perform its different functions. These structures can be injured in a variety of different athletic activities such as tennis, golf and rugby league, yet their injury and disruption is predictable when the mechanics of the ECU and the techniques of the sport are understood. The ECU tendon is also vulnerable to tendon pathologies other than instability. It lies subcutaneously and is easily palpated and visualised with diagnostic ultrasound, allowing early diagnosis and management of its specific conditions. Treatment includes rest, splintage and surgery with each modality having specific indications and recognised outcomes. This review described the functional anatomy in relevant sporting situations and explained how problems occur as well as when and how to intervene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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5. Sports-related extensor carpi ulnaris pathology: a review of functional anatomy, sports injury and management.
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Campbell, Doug, Campbell, Rob, O'Connor, Phil, and Hawkes, Roger
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EXTENSOR muscles , *WRIST extension , *TENDONS , *MUSCLES , *ANATOMY - Abstract
The extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) muscle plays a key role not only in the active movements of wrist extension and ulnar deviation but also in providing stability to the ulnar side of the wrist. Its position relative to the other structures in the wrist changes with forearm pronation and supination. As such, it must be mobile yet stable. The ECU tendon relies on specific stabilising structures to hold it in the correct positions to perform its different functions. These structures can be injured in a variety of different athletic activities such as tennis, golf and rugby league, yet their injury and disruption is predictable when the mechanics of the ECU and the techniques of the sport are understood. The ECU tendon is also vulnerable to tendon pathologies other than instability. It lies subcutaneously and is easily palpated and visualised with diagnostic ultrasound, allowing early diagnosis and management of its specific conditions. Treatment includes rest, splintage and surgery with each modality having specific indications and recognised outcomes. This review described the functional anatomy in relevant sporting situations and explained how problems occur as well as when and how to intervene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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6. Letters to the Editor.
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Campbell, Doug
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LETTERS to the editor , *BUDDHISTS - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to an article by John Garland which reviewed Mark Moyar's book "Triumph Forsaken."
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- 2007
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7. 624: INVASIVE INTRA-ABDOMINAL ZYGOMYCOSIS IN AN IMMUNOCOMPETENT PATIENT WITH PROLONGED SEPTIC SHOCK.
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Campbell, Doug, Wright, Franklin, Zimmer, Shanta, and Brainard, Jason
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SEPTIC shock , *MUCORMYCOSIS , *INTRA-abdominal infections , *MULTIPLE organ failure , *MYCOSES , *OPPORTUNISTIC infections - Abstract
B Learning Objectives: b Invasive fungal infections are a rare but life-threatening disease entity. She remained in the ICU for over 50 days with refractory septic shock, recurrent intra-abdominal abscesses, and multisystem organ failure requiring broad-spectrum antibiotics and antifungals, mechanical ventilation, renal replacement therapy, and vasopressor support. B Results: b Disseminated mucormycosis is an opportunistic infection that usually affects patients with immunocompromised states, such as malignancies, neutropenia, solid organ transplants, or diabetes. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2019
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8. Penumbral cooling in ischemic stroke with intraarterial, intravenous or active conductive head cooling: A thermal modeling study.
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Diprose, William K, Rao, Avinash, Ghate, Kaustubha, Dyer, Zoe, Campbell, Doug, Almekhlafi, Mohammed, and Barber, P Alan
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In ischemic stroke, selectively cooling the ischemic penumbra might lead to neuroprotection while avoiding systemic complications. Because penumbral tissue has reduced cerebral blood flow and in vivo brain temperature measurement remains challenging, the effect of different methods of therapeutic hypothermia on penumbral temperature are unknown. We used the COMSOL Multiphysics® software to model a range of cases of therapeutic hypothermia in ischemic stroke. Four ischemic stroke models were developed with ischemic core and/or penumbra volumes between 33–300 mL. Four experiments were performed on each model, including no cooling, and intraarterial, intravenous, and active conductive head cooling. The steady-state temperature of the non-ischemic brain, ischemic penumbra, and ischemic core without cooling was 37.3 °C, 37.5–37.8 °C, and 38.9–39.4 °C respectively. Intraarterial, intravenous and active conductive head cooling reduced non-ischemic brain temperature by 4.3 °C, 2.1 °C, and 0.7–0.8 °C respectively. Intraarterial, intravenous and head cooling reduced the temperature of the ischemic penumbra by 3.9–4.3 °C, 1.9–2.1 °C, and 1.2–3.4 °C respectively. Active conductive head cooling was the only method to selectively reduce penumbral temperature. Clinical studies that measure brain temperature in ischemic stroke patients undergoing therapeutic hypothermia are required to validate these hypothesis-generating findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Modulation of simultaneously collected hemodynamic and electrophysiological functional connectivity by ketamine and midazolam.
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Forsyth, Anna, McMillan, Rebecca, Campbell, Doug, Malpas, Gemma, Maxwell, Elizabeth, Sleigh, Jamie, Dukart, Juergen, Hipp, Jörg, and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh D.
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FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *INDEPENDENT component analysis , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid - Abstract
The pharmacological modulation of functional connectivity in the brain may underlie therapeutic efficacy for several neurological and psychiatric disorders. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) provides a noninvasive method of assessing this modulation, however, the indirect nature of the blood‐oxygen level dependent signal restricts the discrimination of neural from physiological contributions. Here we followed two approaches to assess the validity of fMRI functional connectivity in developing drug biomarkers, using simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG)/fMRI in a placebo‐controlled, three‐way crossover design with ketamine and midazolam. First, we compared seven different preprocessing pipelines to determine their impact on the connectivity of common resting‐state networks. Independent components analysis (ICA)‐denoising resulted in stronger reductions in connectivity after ketamine, and weaker increases after midazolam, than pipelines employing physiological noise modelling or averaged signals from cerebrospinal fluid or white matter. This suggests that pipeline decisions should reflect a drug's unique noise structure, and if this is unknown then accepting possible signal loss when choosing extensive ICA denoising pipelines could engender more confidence in the remaining results. We then compared the temporal correlation structure of fMRI to that derived from two connectivity metrics of EEG, which provides a direct measure of neural activity. While electrophysiological estimates based on the power envelope were more closely aligned to BOLD signal connectivity than those based on phase consistency, no significant relationship between the change in electrophysiological and hemodynamic correlation structures was found, implying caution should be used when making cross‐modal comparisons of pharmacologically‐modulated functional connectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. What differences exist between the lead and trail wrist in extensor carpi ulnaris activity and golf swing joint kinematics in sub-elite golfers?
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Robinson, Patrick G., Carson, Howie J., Richards, Jim, Murray, Andrew, Duckworth, Andrew D., and Campbell, Doug
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SKELETAL muscle physiology , *WRIST joint , *ANALYSIS of variance , *GOLF , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *REPEATED measures design , *BIOMECHANICS , *DATA analysis software , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *KINEMATICS - Abstract
This study assessed the lead and trail arm peak and average extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) muscle activity in association with tri-planar angular velocities of the lead and trail wrists during the golf swing. Fifteen sub-elite, male right-handed golfers (Mage = 34.7 years ±13.3, Mhandicap = 1.5 ± 2.2) were recruited to execute five shots each with their pitching wedge, 7-iron and driver clubs in an indoor golf simulator. Surface electromyography (EMG) sensors were placed over the ECU muscle belly and inertial measurement unit sensors were placed bi-laterally on the distal forearm and dorsum of the hand. There was a statistically greater recruitment of the trail ECU muscle during the downswing (p < 0.001) for all clubs. The lead ECU muscle was recruited more during the backswing (p < 0.001) and follow through (p < 0.024) phases. There were statistically different tri-planar movement patterns between the lead and trail wrist throughout all three phases of the golf swing. No significant relationships were found between downswing EMG data and clubhead kinematics at impact. In conclusion, differing wrist kinematics and associated muscle activity may contribute to the asymmetrical injury pattern seen clinically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Temporal dynamics of the pharmacological MRI response to subanaesthetic ketamine in healthy volunteers: A simultaneous EEG/fMRI study.
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McMillan, Rebecca, Forsyth, Anna, Campbell, Doug, Malpas, Gemma, Maxwell, Elizabeth, Dukart, Juergen, Hipp, Joerg F., and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh
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KETAMINE , *PHARMACOLOGY , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *CINGULATE cortex , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CROSSOVER trials , *INTRAVENOUS therapy , *LIMBIC system , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *OXYGEN , *RESEARCH , *TIME , *EVALUATION research , *BLIND experiment , *EXCITATORY amino acid antagonists , *PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging has been used to investigate the neural effects of subanaesthetic ketamine in healthy volunteers. However, the effect of ketamine has been modelled with a single time course and without consideration of physiological noise.Aims: This study aimed to investigate ketamine-induced alterations in resting neural activity using conventional pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging analysis techniques with physiological noise correction, and a novel analysis utilising simultaneously recorded electroencephalography data.Methods: Simultaneous electroencephalography/functional magnetic resonance imaging and physiological data were collected from 30 healthy male participants before and during a subanaesthetic intravenous ketamine infusion.Results: Consistent with previous literature, we show widespread cortical blood-oxygen-level dependent signal increases and decreased blood-oxygen-level dependent signals in the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex following ketamine. However, the latter effect was attenuated by the inclusion of motion regressors and physiological correction in the model. In a novel analysis, we modelled the pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging response with the power time series of seven electroencephalography frequency bands. This showed evidence for distinct temporal time courses of neural responses to ketamine. No electroencephalography power time series correlated with decreased blood-oxygen-level dependent signal in the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex.Conclusions: We suggest the decrease in blood-oxygen-level dependent signals in the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex typically seen in the literature is the result of physiological noise, in particular cardiac pulsatility. Furthermore, modelling the pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging response with a single temporal model does not completely capture the full spectrum of neuronal dynamics. The use of electroencephalography regressors to model the response can increase confidence that the pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging is directly related to underlying neural activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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12. Comparison of local spectral modulation, and temporal correlation, of simultaneously recorded EEG/fMRI signals during ketamine and midazolam sedation.
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Forsyth, Anna, McMillan, Rebecca, Campbell, Doug, Malpas, Gemma, Maxwell, Elizabeth, Sleigh, Jamie, Dukart, Juergen, Hipp, Joerg F, and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh D
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BIOLOGICAL tags , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *KETAMINE - Abstract
Rationale and objectives: The identification of biomarkers of drug action can be supported by non-invasive brain imaging techniques, such as electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), with simultaneous collection plausibly overcoming the limitations of either modality alone. Despite this, few studies have assessed the feasibility and utility of recording simultaneous EEG/fMRI in a drug study.Methods: We used simultaneous EEG/fMRI to assess the modulation of neural activity by ketamine and midazolam, in a placebo-controlled, single-blind, three-way cross-over design. Specifically, we analysed the sensitivity and direction of the spectral effects of each modality and the temporal correlations between the modulations of power of the common EEG bands and the blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signal.Results and conclusions: Demonstrating feasibility, local spectral effects were similar to those found in previous non-simultaneous EEG and fMRI studies. Ketamine administration resulted in a widespread reduction of BOLD fractional amplitude of low frequency fluctuations (fALFF) and a diverse pattern of effects in the different EEG bands. Midazolam increased fALFF in occipital, parietal, and temporal areas, and frontal delta and beta EEG power. While EEG spectra were more sensitive to pharmacological modulations than the fALFF bands, there was no clear spatial relationship between the two modalities. Additionally, ketamine modulated the temporal correlation strengths between the theta EEG band and the BOLD signal, whereas midazolam altered temporal correlations with the alpha and beta bands. Taken together, these results demonstrate the utility of simultaneous recording: each modality provides unique insights, and combinatorial analyses elicit more information than separate recordings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Processed electroencephalography-guided general anaesthesia to reduce postoperative delirium: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Sumner, Matthew, Deng, Carolyn, Evered, Lis, Frampton, Chris, Leslie, Kate, Short, Timothy, and Campbell, Doug
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DELIRIUM , *ANESTHESIA , *OLDER people , *CRITICAL care medicine , *SURGICAL complications - Abstract
Postoperative delirium (POD) is the most common serious postoperative complication in older adults. It has uncertain aetiology, limited preventative strategies, and poor long-term outcomes. This updated systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to estimate the effect of processed electroencephalography (pEEG)-guided general anaesthesia during surgery on POD incidence. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis by searching OVID MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) electronic databases. Studies of adult patients having general anaesthesia for any surgery where pEEG was used and POD was an outcome measure were included. Full-text reports of RCTs published from database inception until August 28, 2021, were included. Trials were excluded if sedation rather than general anaesthesia was administered, or the setting was intensive care. The primary outcome was POD assessed by validated tools. The study was prospectively registered with PROSPERO. Nine studies, which included 4648 eligible subjects, were identified. The incidence of POD in the pEEG-guided general anaesthesia or lighter pEEG target group was 19.0% (440/2310) compared with 23.3% (545/2338) in the usual care or deeper pEEG target group (pooled odds ratio=0.78; 95% confidence interval, 0.60–1.00; P =0.054). Significant heterogeneity was detected (I 2=53%). Our primary analysis demonstrated a highly sensitive result with a pooled analysis of trials in which the intervention group adhered to manufacturer's recommended guidelines, showing reduced incidence of POD with pEEG guidance. High clinical heterogeneity limits inferences from this and any future meta-analyses. CRD42020199404 (PROSPERO). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Active conductive head cooling of normal and infarcted brain: A magnetic resonance spectroscopy imaging study.
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Diprose, William K, Morgan, Catherine A, Wang, Michael TM, Diprose, James P, Lin, Joanne C, Sheriff, Sulaiman, Campbell, Doug, and Barber, P Alan
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Active conductive head cooling is a simple and non-invasive intervention that may slow infarct growth in ischemic stroke. We investigated the effect of active conductive head cooling on brain temperature using whole brain echo-planar spectroscopic imaging. A cooling cap (WElkins Temperature Regulation System, 2nd Gen) was used to administer cooling for 80 minutes to healthy volunteers and chronic stroke patients. Whole brain echo-planar spectroscopic imaging scans were obtained before and after cooling. Brain temperature was estimated using the Metabolite Imaging and Data Analysis System software package, which allows voxel-level temperature calculations using the chemical shift difference between metabolite (N-acetylaspartate, creatine, choline) and water resonances. Eleven participants (six healthy volunteers, five post-stroke) underwent 80 ± 5 minutes of cooling. The average temperature of the coolant was 1.3 ± 0.5°C below zero. Significant reductions in brain temperature (ΔT = –0.9 ± 0.7°C, P = 0.002), and to a lesser extent, rectal temperature (ΔT = –0.3 ± 0.1°C, P = 0.03) were observed. Exploratory analysis showed that the occipital lobes had the greatest reduction in temperature (ΔT = –1.5 ± 1.2°C, P = 0.002). Regions of infarction had similar temperature reductions to the contralateral normal brain. Future research could investigate the feasibility of head cooling as a potential neuroprotective strategy in patients being considered for acute stroke therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. Letter to the editor regarding "Incidence, severity and detection of blood pressure and heart rate perturbations in postoperative ward patients after noncardiac surgery".
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Wells, Cameron I., Xu, William, Varghese, Chris, Sayer, Catherine, Campbell, Doug, Misur, Martin, Bissett, Ian P., and O'Grady, Greg
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BLOOD pressure , *HEART beat , *HOSPITAL patients , *SURGERY - Published
- 2024
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16. The prevalence, variety and impact of wrist problems in elite professional golfers on the European Tour.
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Hawkes, Roger, O'Connor, Phil, and Campbell, Doug
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GOLFERS , *GOLF , *PROFESSIONAL sports , *TOURS - Abstract
Objectives Golf is a popular sport played by an estimated 57 million people. Previous studies on wrist injuries in elite golfers have been of simple design and have demonstrated such injuries to be frequent, although no studies report the incidence, variety, severity or impact on the activity of wrist injuries in detail. This prospective cross-sectional study assesses these factors in a cohort of elite professional golfers. Methods European Tour golfers eligible to compete at the 2009 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth were studied. Study design involved the completion of a structured questionnaire supplemented by interview and examination when required, with performance statistics provided by the European Tour. The severity of injury was assessed by the number of missed tournaments and the amount of time of missed practice. Results 128 of 153 eligible golfers, (84%) completed the study with 38 golfers (30%) reporting 43 problems. The majority of injuries (67%) occurred in the leading wrist at the most common location, the ulnar side of the wrist (35%). 87% of all ulnar-sided and 100% of radial-sided problems were in the leading wrist. Conclusions There were clear side differences reported by the players with the lead wrist demonstrating much higher injury rates in all areas. The most significant injury, in terms of absence from competition, was extensor carpi ulnaris tendon subluxation. Specific injuries are explained in relation to the biomechanics of the golf swing. Most structural injuries have a specific treatment and rehabilitation plan, which can involve significant periods of time away from the sport, while the management of many of the more minor problems is through alterations in technique or practice regimes, aiming to keep a golfer playing during recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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17. Deep anaesthesia - Authors' reply.
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Short, Timothy G, Leslie, Kate, Campbell, Doug, Frampton, Chris, Chan, Matthew T V, Myles, Paul S, and Balanced Anaesthesia Study Group
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ANESTHESIA , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *NEUROMUSCULAR blockade - Published
- 2020
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18. Corrigendum to ""We can't just have a casual conversation": An institutional ethnography-informed study of work in labour and birth" [Soc. Sci. Med. 279 (2021) 113975].
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Brydges, Ryan, Nemoy, Lori, Campbell, Doug M., Meffe, Filomena, Moscovitch, Linda, Fella, Sabina, Chandrasekaran, Nirmala, Bishop, Catherine, Khodadoust, Nazanin, and Ng, Stella L.
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CHILDBIRTH , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *LABOR (Obstetrics) - Published
- 2021
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19. "We can't just have a casual conversation": An institutional ethnography-informed study of work in labour and birth.
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Brydges, Ryan, Nemoy, Lori, Campbell, Doug M., Meffe, Filomena, Moscovitch, Linda, Fella, Sabina, Chandrasekaran, Nirmala, Bishop, Catherine, Khodadoust, Nazanin, and Ng, Stella L.
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CHILDBIRTH , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *FETAL heart rate monitoring , *PROFESSIONS , *MEDICAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *ETHNOLOGY research , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *NURSES , *MEDICAL referrals , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *LABOR (Obstetrics) , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Labour and delivery units often become contested workplaces with tensions between obstetrics, nursing, and midwifery practices. These tensions can impede communication and raise concerns about provider wellness and patient safety. Remedying such tensions requires inquiry into the drivers of recurrent problems in interprofessional practice. We engaged in change-oriented inquiry informed by institutional ethnography (IE) within an academic hospital in Toronto, Canada (2017–2019). Clinicians identified critical incident analysis reports used to document recurrent issues for transfers of care (TOC) and consultations between professionals. We then mapped the everyday/everynight work of midwives, nurses, and obstetricians by observing (75 h) and interviewing them (n = 15). We also traced work processes to local (forms and hospital policies) and external (national policies and evidence-based guidelines) texts. Our IE-informed analysis made visible the otherwise hidden links between the everyday work of practitioners and its social organization. Three intrapartum work processes involving midwives consulting with obstetricians were identified: induction of labour with TOC back to midwife once labour was "active", consultation without TOC, and TOC for various indications. Three points of disjuncture complicated these processes: (i) a local "3 consult rule", linked to medico-legal governance and remuneration structures; (ii) subjective interpretations of the "4-cm dilation rule", a policy meant to standardize practice; and (iii) regulations delaying the timing of consultations. The Electronic Fetal Monitoring system served as a powerful text, materializing issues of professional scope and autonomy for midwives, and medicolegal accountability for obstetricians. Our study extends extant evidence that medicine-driven governance of midwifery practices can perpetuate interprofessional challenges. While practitioners spoke of the three disjunctures as 'laws', most also viewed them as ostensibly modifiable. Interprofessional tensions may be addressed by considering how social organization, materialized in texts detailing medico-legal liability and remuneration, can constrain possible practices through regulatory protocols, local ruling policies, and cultural expectations (e.g., documentation practices). • Medicine-driven governance of midwifery practices can perpetuate challenges. • Electronic Fetal Monitoring acts as a text that materializes professional conflicts. • Intersections of health and law underlie the observed social organization of work. • Making disjunctures explicit can stimulate collaborative change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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20. Developing and validating subjective and objective risk-assessment measures for predicting mortality after major surgery: An international prospective cohort study.
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Wong, Danny J. N., Harris, Steve, Sahni, Arun, Bedford, James R., Cortes, Laura, Shawyer, Richard, Wilson, Andrew M., Lindsay, Helen A., Campbell, Doug, Popham, Scott, Barneto, Lisa M., Myles, Paul S., Moonesinghe, S. Ramani, and SNAP-2: EPICCS collaborators
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RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CLINICAL prediction rules , *COHORT analysis , *HIGH-income countries - Abstract
Background: Preoperative risk prediction is important for guiding clinical decision-making and resource allocation. Clinicians frequently rely solely on their own clinical judgement for risk prediction rather than objective measures. We aimed to compare the accuracy of freely available objective surgical risk tools with subjective clinical assessment in predicting 30-day mortality.Methods and Findings: We conducted a prospective observational study in 274 hospitals in the United Kingdom (UK), Australia, and New Zealand. For 1 week in 2017, prospective risk, surgical, and outcome data were collected on all adults aged 18 years and over undergoing surgery requiring at least a 1-night stay in hospital. Recruitment bias was avoided through an ethical waiver to patient consent; a mixture of rural, urban, district, and university hospitals participated. We compared subjective assessment with 3 previously published, open-access objective risk tools for predicting 30-day mortality: the Portsmouth-Physiology and Operative Severity Score for the enUmeration of Mortality (P-POSSUM), Surgical Risk Scale (SRS), and Surgical Outcome Risk Tool (SORT). We then developed a logistic regression model combining subjective assessment and the best objective tool and compared its performance to each constituent method alone. We included 22,631 patients in the study: 52.8% were female, median age was 62 years (interquartile range [IQR] 46 to 73 years), median postoperative length of stay was 3 days (IQR 1 to 6), and inpatient 30-day mortality was 1.4%. Clinicians used subjective assessment alone in 88.7% of cases. All methods overpredicted risk, but visual inspection of plots showed the SORT to have the best calibration. The SORT demonstrated the best discrimination of the objective tools (SORT Area Under Receiver Operating Characteristic curve [AUROC] = 0.90, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.88-0.92; P-POSSUM = 0.89, 95% CI 0.88-0.91; SRS = 0.85, 95% CI 0.82-0.87). Subjective assessment demonstrated good discrimination (AUROC = 0.89, 95% CI: 0.86-0.91) that was not different from the SORT (p = 0.309). Combining subjective assessment and the SORT improved discrimination (bootstrap optimism-corrected AUROC = 0.92, 95% CI: 0.90-0.94) and demonstrated continuous Net Reclassification Improvement (NRI = 0.13, 95% CI: 0.06-0.20, p < 0.001) compared with subjective assessment alone. Decision-curve analysis (DCA) confirmed the superiority of the SORT over other previously published models, and the SORT-clinical judgement model again performed best overall. Our study is limited by the low mortality rate, by the lack of blinding in the 'subjective' risk assessments, and because we only compared the performance of clinical risk scores as opposed to other prediction tools such as exercise testing or frailty assessment.Conclusions: In this study, we observed that the combination of subjective assessment with a parsimonious risk model improved perioperative risk estimation. This may be of value in helping clinicians allocate finite resources such as critical care and to support patient involvement in clinical decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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21. Ketamine improves short-term plasticity in depression by enhancing sensitivity to prediction errors.
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Sumner, Rachael L., McMillan, Rebecca, Spriggs, Meg J., Campbell, Doug, Malpas, Gemma, Maxwell, Elizabeth, Deng, Carolyn, Hay, John, Ponton, Rhys, Sundram, Frederick, and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh D.
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KETAMINE , *FORECASTING , *AUDITORY cortex , *MENTAL depression , *BRAIN-computer interfaces - Abstract
• Prediction error sensitivity is improved by ketamine in patients with depression. • Forward projecting connectivity is correlated with the antidepressant response. • Right inferior temporal cortex activation and connectivity is central to these results. • Aberrant repetition suppression may not be improved by ketamine in the short-term. Major depressive disorder negatively impacts the sensitivity and adaptability of the brain's predictive coding framework. The current electroencephalography study into the antidepressant properties of ketamine investigated the downstream effects of ketamine on predictive coding and short-term plasticity in thirty patients with depression using the auditory roving mismatch negativity (rMMN). The rMMN paradigm was run 3–4 h after a single 0.44 mg/kg intravenous dose of ketamine or active placebo (remifentanil infused to a target plasma concentration of 1.7 ng/mL) in order to measure the neural effects of ketamine in the period when an improvement in depressive symptoms emerges. Depression symptomatology was measured using the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS); 70% of patients demonstrated at least a 50% reduction their MADRS global score. Ketamine significantly increased the MMN and P3a event related potentials, directly contrasting literature demonstrating ketamine's acute attenuation of the MMN. This effect was only reliable when all repetitions of the post-deviant tone were used. Dynamic causal modelling showed greater modulation of forward connectivity in response to a deviant tone between right primary auditory cortex and right inferior temporal cortex, which significantly correlated with antidepressant response to ketamine at 24 h. This is consistent with the hypothesis that ketamine increases sensitivity to unexpected sensory input and restores deficits in sensitivity to prediction error that are hypothesised to underlie depression. However, the lack of repetition suppression evident in the MMN evoked data compared to studies of healthy adults suggests that, at least within the short term, ketamine does not improve deficits in adaptive internal model calibration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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22. A randomised controlled pilot trial of two interventions to manage dry mouth in pre-operative elective surgical patients.
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Morton, Leesa, Siu, Amanda Tsan Yue, Fowler, Samuel, Zhou, Chen, Nixon, Christopher, and Campbell, Doug
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CLINICAL trial registries , *MOUTH , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ARTIFICIAL saliva - Abstract
Background: Dry mouth is a common perioperative patient complaint. There are a number of treatments used for dry mouth in other settings which are effective. None have been tested previously in the perioperative setting. Interventions to Manage Dry mouth (IM DRY) compared the effect of water and a saliva substitute on mouth dryness. The primary objective was to demonstrate the feasibility of conducting a large randomised controlled trial and secondary scientific aims were to assess treatment potential efficacy. Methods: Single blind, pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT) of 101 pre-operative elective surgical patients who were randomised to water or saliva substitute (Biotene oral rinse, GlaxoSmithKline, Australia) at a tertiary, university hospital. Dry mouth was assessed by 100 mm visual analogue scale (VAS) and 5-point Likert score. Results: One hundred participants completed follow-up and comprised the analysis dataset. All feasibility outcomes were achieved (recruitment rate > 5 participants a week, >95% completeness of the dataset, study protocol acceptability to staff, acceptability to participants > 66% and adherence to time limits within the protocol). Mean recruitment rate was 6 participants per week. These data were 99% complete. There were no adverse side effects or complications noted. There were no concerns raised by staff regarding acceptability. Overall, there was a mean of 30 min (± SD 5 min) between delivery of the intervention and the assessment, 30 min being the target time. The difference in VAS post intervention was − 11.2 mm (95% CI − 17.3 to − 5.1 mm) for water and − 12.7 mm (95% CI − 18.7 to − 6.7 mm) for saliva substitute. The proportion of patients who had improved dry mouth increased from 52% for water to 62% for saliva substitute. Conclusions: IM DRY successfully achieved its primary feasibility aims: recruitment rate, completeness of these, acceptability and protocol adherence. Saliva substitutes, used in the perioperative management of dry mouth, may be a simple, inexpensive, and low risk solution to help alleviate this common complaint. A large randomised controlled trial is feasible and is currently recruiting (ANZCTR 12619000132145). Ethics and Trial registration: Northern A New Zealand Health and Disability Ethics Committee (reference 17/NTA/152). Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (Number: 12618001270202). Registered retrospectively 18 October 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Optimizing a woodchip and coal co-firing retrofit for a power utility boiler using CFD.
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Gao, Haining, Runstedtler, Allan, Majeski, Adrian, Boisvert, Patrick, and Campbell, Doug
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WOOD chips , *COAL combustion , *RETROFITTING , *POWER boilers , *COMPUTATIONAL fluid dynamics - Abstract
A computational fluid dynamics (CFD) tool, CFX-TASCflow, with a drag force sub-model for woodchip particles was used to explore the optimization of woodchip co-firing of a Canadian utility boiler, after it was first validated by comparing the model results with field operation data when firing Colombia coal. The CFD model predicted both a small increase in NO emissions and a significant increase in unburned carbon in fly ash for the originally proposed co-firing configuration, with 85% of the unburned carbon originating from the woodchips. Improvement strategies were examined, including intensifying the swirl inside the furnace to improve oxygen availability for woodchip combustion, lowering the woodchip injection level to increase residence time, and reducing woodchip particle size to shorten burnout time. The model results revealed the importance of intensified swirl on the burnout of large woodchip particles and the sensitivity of NO emissions to the air distribution in the combustion zone. Also, the model predicted an increase in large unburned woodchip particles falling into the bottom hopper when lowering woodchip injection level, although there was an overall improvement in predicted woodchip burnout. An improvement in woodchip burnout was also observed with reduced woodchip particle size. Based on these results, a co-firing strategy is suggested that is predicted to give reasonable burnout and NOx emissions at a minimum retrofitting cost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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24. Characterization of a novel adenovirus isolated from a skunk.
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Kozak, Robert A., Ackford, James G., Slaine, Patrick, Li, Aimin, Carman, Susy, Campbell, Doug, Welch, M. Katherine, Kropinski, Andrew M., and Nagy, Éva
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ADENOVIRUSES , *SKUNKS , *HOSTS (Biology) , *VIRAL genomes , *HEPATITIS , *GENETIC code , *DISEASES - Abstract
Adenoviruses are a ubiquitous group of viruses that have been found in a wide range of hosts. A novel adenovirus from a skunk suffering from acute hepatitis was isolated and its DNA genome sequenced. The analysis revealed this virus to be a new member of the genus Mastadenovirus , with a genome of 31,848 bp in length containing 30 genes predicted to encode proteins, and with a G+C content of 49.0%. Global genomic organization indicated SkAdV-1 was similar in organization to bat and canine adenoviruses, and phylogenetic comparison suggested these viruses shared a common ancestor. SkAdV-1 demonstrated an ability to replicate in several mammalian liver cell lines suggesting a potential tropism for this virus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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25. Pathology and diagnosis of avian bornavirus infection in wild Canada geese ( Branta canadensis ), trumpeter swans ( Cygnus buccinator ) and mute swans ( Cygnus olor ) in Canada: a retrospective study.
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Delnatte, Pauline, Ojkic, Davor, DeLay, Josepha, Campbell, Doug, Crawshaw, Graham, and Smith, DaleA.
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AVIAN anatomy , *CANADA goose , *TRUMPETER swan , *MUTE swan , *BIRD diseases , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *REVERSE transcriptase , *POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
Nine hundred and fifty-five pathology cases collected in Ontario between 1992 and 2011 from wild free-ranging Canada geese, trumpeter swans and mute swans were retrospectively evaluated for the pathology associated with avian bornavirus (ABV) infection. Cases were selected based on the presence of upper gastrointestinal impaction, central nervous system histopathology or clinical history suggestive of ABV infection. The proportion of birds meeting at least one of these criteria was significantly higher at the Toronto Zoo (30/132) than elsewhere in Ontario (21/823). Central, peripheral and autonomic nervous tissues were examined for the presence of lymphocytes and plasma cells on histopathology. The presence of virus was assessed by immunohistochemistry and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) on frozen brains and on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues. Among selected cases, 86.3% (44/51) were considered positive on histopathology, 56.8% (29/51) were positive by immunohistochemistry, and RT-PCR was positive on 88.2% (15/17) of the frozen brains and 78.4% (40/51) of the formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples. Histopathological lesions included gliosis and lymphoplasmacytic perivascular cuffing in brain (97.7%), spinal cord (50%), peripheral nerves (55.5%) and myenteric ganglia or nerves (62.8%), resembling lesions described in parrots affected with proventricular dilatation disease. Partial amino acid sequences of the nucleocapsid gene from seven geese were 100% identical amongst themselves and 98.1 to 100% identical to the waterfowl sequences recently described in the USA. Although ABV has been identified in apparently healthy geese, our study confirmed that ABV can also be associated with significant disease in wild waterfowl species. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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26. Simultaneous EEG/fMRI recorded during ketamine infusion in patients with major depressive disorder.
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McMillan, Rebecca, Sumner, Rachael, Forsyth, Anna, Campbell, Doug, Malpas, Gemma, Maxwell, Elizabeth, Deng, Carolyn, Hay, John, Ponton, Rhys, Sundram, Frederick, and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh
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MENTAL depression , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *CINGULATE cortex , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *NEUROPLASTICITY , *CROSSOVER trials - Abstract
A single subanaesthetic dose of ketamine rapidly alleviates the symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD). However, few studies have investigated the acute effects of ketamine on the BOLD pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) response and EEG spectra. In a randomised, double-blind, active placebo-controlled crossover trial, resting-state simultaneous EEG/fMRI was collected during infusion of ketamine or active placebo (remifentanil) in 30 participants with MDD. Montgomery-Asberg depression rating scale scores showed a significant antidepressant effect of ketamine compared to placebo (69% response rate). phMRI analyses showed BOLD signal increases in the anterior cingulate and medial prefrontal cortices and sensitivity of the decrease in subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) BOLD signal to noise correction. EEG spectral analysis showed increased theta, high beta, low and high gamma power, and decreased delta, alpha, and low beta power with differing time-courses. Low beta and high gamma power time courses explained significant variance in the BOLD signal. Interestingly, the variance explained by high gamma power was significantly associated with non-response to ketamine, but significant associations were not found for other neurophysiological markers when noise correction was implemented. The results suggest that the decrease in sgACC BOLD signal is potentially noise and unrelated to ketamine's antidepressant effect, highlighting the importance of noise correction and multiple temporal regressors for phMRI analyses. The lack of effects significantly associated with antidepressant response suggests the phMRI methodology employed was unable to detect such effects, the effect sizes are relatively small, or that other processes, e.g. neural plasticity, underlie ketamine's antidepressant effect. • Assessment of ketamine phMRI with physiological noise and motion correction. • Ketamine increases BOLD signal in the ACC and mPFC. • Multiple temporal time courses of ketamine-induced activity identified. • Decrease in sgACC BOLD signal is not associated with antidepressant response. • Effect in sgACC is potentially noise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A single-centre, randomised controlled feasibility pilot trial comparing performance of direct laryngoscopy versus videolaryngoscopy for endotracheal intubation in surgical patients.
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Loughnan, Alice, Deng, Carolyn, Dominick, Felicity, Pencheva, Lora, and Campbell, Doug
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TRACHEA intubation , *LARYNGOSCOPES , *LARYNGOSCOPY , *BRONCHOSCOPES , *CLINICAL trial registries , *URBAN hospitals - Abstract
Introduction: Most trials comparing effectiveness of laryngoscopy technique use surrogate endpoints. Intubation success is a more appropriate endpoint for comparing effectiveness of techniques or devices. A large pragmatic clinical trial powered for intubation success has not yet been performed. Methods: We tested the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial to compare the performance of direct laryngoscopy versus videolaryngoscopy for endotracheal intubation. The trial was conducted in the Department of Adult and Emergency Anaesthesia at the Auckland City Hospital, New Zealand. Patients over 18 years who required endotracheal intubation and were not known or predicted to be difficult to bag-mask ventilate were eligible for the study. Patients were excluded if they required rapid sequence induction, fibreoptic intubation or were unable to consent due to language barriers or cognitive impairment. Patients were permuted block randomised in groups of 8 to either direct laryngoscopy (DL) or videolaryngoscopy (VL) for the technique of endotracheal intubation. Patients were blinded to laryngoscopic technique; the duty anaesthetist, outcome assessors and statistician were unblinded. Feasibility was assessed on recruitment rate, adherence to group assignment and data completeness. Primary outcome was first-pass success rate, with secondary outcomes of time to intubation (seconds), Intubation Difficulty Score and complication rate. Results: One hundred and six patients were randomised and 100 patient results were analysed. Completed data from patients randomised to the DL group (n = 49) was compared with those in the VL group (n = 51). Group adherence and data completeness were 100% and 97%, respectively. First-pass success rate was 83.7% in the direct laryngoscopy group and 72.5% in the videolaryngoscopy group (p = 0.18). Median time to intubation was significantly shorter for direct laryngoscopy when compared to videolaryngoscopy (34 s v 43 s, p = 0.038). Complications included mucosal trauma and airway bleeding which are recognised complications of endotracheal intubation. Conclusion: A large, pragmatic, multicentre, randomised controlled trial comparing the relative effectiveness of direct laryngoscopy and indirect videolaryngoscopy is feasible. Trial registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR), ACTRN12615001267549 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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28. New genotype of avian bornavirus in wild geese and trumpeter swans in Canada.
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Delnatte, Pauline, Berkvens, Charlene, Kummrow, Maya, Smith, Dale A., Campbell, Doug, Crawshaw, Graham, Ojkic, Davor, and DeLay, Josepha
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LETTERS to the editor , *VETERINARY virology - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented on the identification of an avian bornavirus (ABV) in a number of wild, free-ranging Canada geese and trumpeter swans in southern Ontario.
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- 2011
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29. Letters.
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Walsh, Jim, Diamessis, Peter, Watson, Win, Campbell, Doug, Sievers, Mark, Hartzler, Dwain, Twardzik, Ed, Krause, Phil, Gilmore, Stephen V., Pinegar, Tad, Salisbury, Jack, Scheuer, Chris, and Scarcelli, Ron
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LETTERS to the editor , *FOOTBALL teams , *BASKETBALL - Abstract
Several letters to the editor are presented regarding articles that appeared in the January 29, 2007 issue of "Sports Illustrated," including "Dealing with Rejection," by Chris Ballard, "How Did They Pull That Off?" by Austin Murphy, and the article "It's Our Time," about the Indianapolis Colts football team.
- Published
- 2007
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