15 results on '"Lévy PP"'
Search Results
2. Evaluating OPTISAS, a visual method to analyse sleep apnea syndromes
- Author
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Pierre Levy, Jean-Gabriel Ganascia, Jean-Yves Boire, Carole Philippe, Dominique Rakotonanahary, Adrien Ugon, Hélène Amiel, Agents Cognitifs et Apprentissage Symbolique Automatique (ACASA), Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6 (LIP6), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Equipe de Recherche en Signal et Imagerie Medicale (ERIM-ERI 14), Université d'Auvergne - Clermont-Ferrand I (UdA)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Epidémiologie des maladies infectieuses et modélisation (ESIM), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Ugon A, Philippe C, Ganascia JG, Rakotonanahary D, Amiel H, Boire JY, and Lévy PP.
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,Standardization ,Polysomnography ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,MESH: Algorithms ,02 engineering and technology ,MESH: Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Computer Graphics ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,media_common ,MESH: Humans ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Sleep apnea ,medicine.disease ,MESH: Male ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,030228 respiratory system ,MESH: Polysomnography ,Physical therapy ,Female ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Sleep (system call) ,MESH: Computer Graphics ,business ,MESH: Female ,Algorithms - Abstract
International audience; The sleep apnea syndrome is a real public health problem. Improving its diagnosis using the polysomnography is of huge importance. Optisas was a visual method allowing translating the polysomnographic data into a meaningful image. In a previous paper, it was shown to bring extra information in 62% of cases. Here its capacity for displaying information of the same relevance as the one got using the classical report of the polysomnography is studied. The main result is that this capacity is weak and seems to be present only to identify the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Moreover this study suggests to improve the standardization of the classical report in the framework of a quality insurance process.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Toward unsupervised outbreak detection through visual perception of new patterns
- Author
-
Pierre Levy, Alain-Jacques Valleron, Epidémiologie des maladies infectieuses et modélisation (ESIM), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), CHU Saint-Antoine [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Lévy PP, Valleron AJ, Pôle de Pharmacie - Santé Publique - Information médicale [Saint-Antoine], and Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,Visual perception ,Databases, Factual ,Disease ,Disease Outbreaks ,MESH: Natural Language Processing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,MESH: Disease ,030212 general & internal medicine ,MESH: Disease Outbreaks ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,MESH: Vocabulary, Controlled ,3. Good health ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Vocabulary, Controlled ,MESH: Emergency Service, Hospital ,Population Surveillance ,Global Positioning System ,MESH: Sentinel Surveillance ,Female ,France ,Medical emergency ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Family Practice ,0305 other medical science ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MESH: Pattern Recognition, Visual ,MESH: Population Surveillance ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,MESH: Family Practice ,Natural Language Processing ,Retrospective Studies ,030505 public health ,MESH: Humans ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,MESH: Retrospective Studies ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,MESH: Databases, Factual ,MESH: Male ,MESH: France ,International Classification of Primary Care ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Biostatistics ,business ,Sentinel Surveillance ,MESH: Female - Abstract
Background Statistical algorithms are routinely used to detect outbreaks of well-defined syndromes, such as influenza-like illness. These methods cannot be applied to the detection of emerging diseases for which no preexisting information is available. This paper presents a method aimed at facilitating the detection of outbreaks, when there is no a priori knowledge of the clinical presentation of cases. Methods The method uses a visual representation of the symptoms and diseases coded during a patient consultation according to the International Classification of Primary Care 2nd version (ICPC-2). The surveillance data are transformed into color-coded cells, ranging from white to red, reflecting the increasing frequency of observed signs. They are placed in a graphic reference frame mimicking body anatomy. Simple visual observation of color-change patterns over time, concerning a single code or a combination of codes, enables detection in the setting of interest. Results The method is demonstrated through retrospective analyses of two data sets: description of the patients referred to the hospital by their general practitioners (GPs) participating in the French Sentinel Network and description of patients directly consulting at a hospital emergency department (HED). Informative image color-change alert patterns emerged in both cases: the health consequences of the August 2003 heat wave were visualized with GPs' data (but passed unnoticed with conventional surveillance systems), and the flu epidemics, which are routinely detected by standard statistical techniques, were recognized visually with HED data. Conclusion Using human visual pattern-recognition capacities to detect the onset of unexpected health events implies a convenient image representation of epidemiological surveillance and well-trained "epidemiology watchers". Once these two conditions are met, one could imagine that the epidemiology watchers could signal epidemiological alerts, based on "image walls" presenting the local, regional and/or national surveillance patterns, with specialized field epidemiologists assigned to validate the signals detected.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Sickle cell leg ulcers: a frequently disabling complication and a marker of severity
- Author
-
Halabi-Tawil, M., Lionnet, F., Girot, R., Bachmeyer, C., Lévy, P. P., Aractingi, S., CHU Tenon [AP-HP], Sorbonne Université (SU)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Halabi-Tawil M, Lionnet F, Girot R, Bachmeyer C, Lévy PP, and Aractingi S.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,MESH: Leg Ulcer ,MESH: Mood Disorders ,Adolescent ,Dermatitis ,Anemia, Sickle Cell ,Infections ,Risk Factors ,MESH: Risk Factors ,MESH: Ankle Joint ,MESH: Child ,Humans ,MESH: Dermatitis ,Child ,MESH: Adolescent ,MESH: Humans ,Mood Disorders ,Leg Ulcer ,MESH: Quality of Life ,MESH: Adult ,MESH: Male ,MESH: France ,Quality of Life ,Female ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,France ,MESH: Anemia, Sickle Cell ,MESH: Female ,MESH: Infection ,Ankle Joint - Abstract
International audience; BACKGROUND: Leg ulcers are a poorly known and underestimated complication of sickle cell disease (SCD), but in our experience they often appear as a severely disabling condition, associated with the most severe forms of the disease. OBJECTIVES: To assess the characteristics, complications, repercussion on quality of life and associations of SCD ulcers. METHODS: Case series of 20 patients followed in a French referral centre for SCD and who had previous/present leg ulcers. RESULTS: Median ulcerated area was 12 cm2 and median time spent with ulcers was 29.5 months. Locoregional infections developed in 85%, ankle stiffness in 50% and mood disorders in 85%. Ninety per cent of patients needed analgesics, 20% being opioids. Median loss of time from work was 12.5 months. The Short Form 36 Health Survey showed physical and mental component summary scores of 41.5 and 40.7, respectively, indicating severe alteration close to that found in lung cancer or haemodialysis. Two categories of SCD leg ulcers were distinguished, defined by a 1-year duration cut off. The 'prolonged' ulcers had larger surfaces, tended to recur more frequently and led to more infection and depression. Several SCD complications were associated with leg ulcers, notably priapism, pulmonary hypertension, stroke and acute chest syndrome. CONCLUSIONS: Leg ulcers are a major complication of SCD, given their severe consequences and frequent association with other specific organ damage, and they constitute in their 'prolonged' form a severely disabling condition that remains an important therapeutic challenge.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. ICPCview: visualizing the International Classification of Primary Care
- Author
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Lévy, Pierre P, Duché, Laetitia, Darago, Laszlo, Dorléans, Yves, Toubiana, Laurent, Vibert, Jean-François, Flahault, Antoine, Laboratoire d'Informatique Médicale et Ingénierie des Connaissances en e-Santé (LIMICS), Université Paris 13 (UP13)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Epidémiologie des maladies infectieuses et modélisation (ESIM), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Lévy PP, Duché L, Darago L, Dorléans Y, Toubiana L, Vibert JF, and Flahault A.
- Subjects
Databases, Factual ,Primary Health Care ,Humans ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,[INFO.INFO-BI]Computer Science [cs]/Bioinformatics [q-bio.QM] - Abstract
International audience; This paper proposes a method to visualize the semantic content of data bases where the medical information is coded with the International Classification of Primary Care. The main idea is the identification of a pixel with a code and the conversion of all the data associated with these into an image the ICPCview. The method proceeds in two step, defining the reference frame and using this reference frame to visualize data. The reference frame is built by using a sign/diagnosis binary criterion, a seventeen category nosological criterion and an age ordinal criterion. The results are visualization of the signs and diagnosis of the ICPC according to gender, age and time period of the year. A limitation of the method lies in the fact that the result depends on the chosen reference frame. Further work has to be done with various reference frames and data. However the main point is that, when both the reference set of the image and of the mind of the user are built, the method is powerful at extracting the hidden content of a very large amount of data.
- Published
- 2005
6. The case view, a generic method of visualization of the case mix
- Author
-
Pierre Levy, Epidémiologie des maladies infectieuses et modélisation (ESIM), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and Lévy PP
- Subjects
Databases, Factual ,Computer science ,Health Informatics ,computer.software_genre ,MESH: Semantics ,Image (mathematics) ,Set (abstract data type) ,Case mix index ,Reference Values ,Histogram ,Computer Graphics ,Humans ,Hospital Costs ,Representation (mathematics) ,Cluster analysis ,Diagnosis-Related Groups ,MESH: Diagnosis-Related Groups ,MESH: Hospital Costs ,Complement (set theory) ,Information retrieval ,MESH: Humans ,MESH: Reference Values ,MESH: Databases, Factual ,Semantics ,Visualization ,MESH: France ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,France ,Data mining ,MESH: Computer Graphics ,computer ,MESH: Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care) - Abstract
International audience; OBJECTIVE: There is a worldwide consensus to use the diagnosis related groups (DRG) to consider hospital activity. This tool leads to the production of tables with numbers (case mix), the interpretation of which is difficult. The issue is to translate these tables of numbers into an image named Case view. METHOD: It assimilates, in a way, each DRG to a "pixel", the set of the DRGs being an image, the case view. The methods consist of two phases: the first one is to define the reference set while the second one is to visualize data through the reference set. The "DRG-pixels" which constitute the reference set should be organized according to three criteria: medical/surgical, nosological and economic. RESULTS: This method is used to answer theoretical questions or to visualize activity at the level of a hospital or at the level of a department. It generates information of synthetic nature and ought to be used as a complement to existing methods. DISCUSSION: An important advantage of this method compared to the existing ones (DRGs listing, DRGs clustering, histograms em leader ) is that it presents data simultaneously at a global level (sets of DRGs) and at a local level (the DRG). CONCLUSION: We hope this method to be a supplementary step toward the creation of tools capable of eliciting the semantic content hidden in the medical data banks. The purpose of this paper is to explain the underlying general principles that define the graphic representation and to illustrate this model with the use of the French reference set.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Caseview: building the reference set
- Author
-
Lévy, Pierre P, Epidémiologie des maladies infectieuses et modélisation (ESIM), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Lévy PP., and Annesi-Maesano, Isabella
- Subjects
MESH: Humans ,MESH: Decision Support Systems, Management ,MESH: France ,MESH: Hospital Information Systems ,[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Computer Graphics ,Hospital Information Systems ,Decision Support Systems, Management ,Humans ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,France ,MESH: Computer Graphics ,Diagnosis-Related Groups ,MESH: Diagnosis-Related Groups - Abstract
International audience; There is a worldwide consensus for using the diagnosis related groups (DRG) when considering hospital activity. This tool leads to the production of tables of numbers (case mix), the interpretation of which is difficult. Therefore, methods aimed at facilitating this interpretation are needed. One of such methods is the case view, i.e. a graphical representation of the case mix. It reduces, in a way, each DRG to a "pixel", the set of the DRGs being an image (the case view). The reference set should be organized according to three criteria: medical/surgical, nosological and economic. This method can be used to answer theoretical questions or to visualize activity at the level of a hospital or at the level of a department. The purpose of this paper is to present important principles inherent in this graphic representation, both at the level of the method and at the level of the user.
- Published
- 2004
8. Erratum to “Blepharospasm, dry eye and extractable nuclear antigen antibodies” [J. Fr. Ophtal. 43 (7) (2020) e221–5. PII: S0181-5512(20)30230-8. doi:10.1016/j.jfo.2020.06.001].
- Author
-
Girard BC, Abdellaoui M, de Saint-Sauveur G, Huang A, and Lévy PP
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Underperception of Naps in Older Adults Referred for a Sleep Assessment: An Insomnia Trait and a Cognitive Problem?
- Author
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Nguyen-Michel VH, Lévy PP, Pallanca O, Kinugawa K, Banica-Wolters R, Sebban C, Mariani J, Fournier E, and Arnulf I
- Subjects
- Aged, Fatigue epidemiology, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Male, Polysomnography, Prospective Studies, Referral and Consultation, Severity of Illness Index, Surveys and Questionnaires, Awareness, Cognition Disorders epidemiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Sleep, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine the frequency and determinants of underperception of naps in older adults referred for a sleep assessment., Design: Prospective study., Setting: Outpatient geriatric sleep clinic., Participants: Individuals aged 60 and older referred for insomnia complaints or suspected sleep apnea (N = 135)., Measurements: Tests included clinical interview, sleepiness scale, anxiety and depression scale, Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and overnight polysomnography, followed by multiple sleep latency tests. At the end of each of four nap opportunities, participants answered whether they had slept during the test. Nap underperception was defined as two or more unperceived naps., Results: Of the 105 participants who napped at least twice, 42 (40%) did not perceive at least two naps. These participants had lower MMSE scores (P = .01) and were more likely to be taking benzodiazepines (P = .008) than the 63 participants who did not underperceive their naps but had similar demographic characteristics, sleep diagnoses, depression and anxiety scores, and polysomnography measures. Both groups had similarly short mean daytime sleep latencies (9.7 ± 4.5 minutes and 9.8 ± 3.7 minutes), but participants who underperceived their naps scored lower on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (5.6 ± 4.0, vs 9.6 ± 4.8, P < .001). An ISI of 11 or greater, a MMSE score of 26 or less, and a sleepiness score of 8 or less were each independently associated with underperception of naps. The combination of these three factors yielded a positive predictive value of 93% and a negative predictive value of 71% for nap underperception., Conclusion: Older adults referred for sleep consultation with cognitive impairment and greater insomnia symptoms frequently underperceive naps, leading them to underestimate their level of sleepiness. In such cases, objective measures of daytime sleepiness would be better than the Epworth Sleepiness Scale., (© 2015, Copyright the Authors Journal compilation © 2015, The American Geriatrics Society.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Renal arterial resistive index is associated with severe histological changes and poor renal outcome during chronic kidney disease.
- Author
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Bigé N, Lévy PP, Callard P, Faintuch JM, Chigot V, Jousselin V, Ronco P, and Boffa JJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate physiology, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Kidney Failure, Chronic physiopathology, Kidney Function Tests methods, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Renal Artery physiopathology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic physiopathology, Single-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Kidney blood supply, Kidney pathology, Kidney Failure, Chronic pathology, Renal Artery pathology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic pathology, Severity of Illness Index, Vascular Resistance physiology
- Abstract
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a growing public health problem and end stage renal disease (ESRD) represents a large human and economic burden. It is important to identify patients at high risk of ESRD. In order to determine whether renal Doppler resistive index (RI) may discriminate those patients, we analyzed whether RI was associated with identified prognosis factors of CKD, in particular histological findings, and with renal outcome., Methods: RI was measured in the 48 hours before renal biopsy in 58 CKD patients. Clinical and biological data were collected prospectively at inclusion. Arteriosclerosis, interstitial fibrosis and glomerulosclerosis were quantitatively assessed on renal biopsy in a blinded fashion. MDRD eGFR at 18 months was collected for 35 (60%) patients. Renal function decline was defined as a decrease in eGFR from baseline of at least 5 mL/min/ 1.73 m2/year or need for chronic renal replacement therapy. Pearson's correlation, Mann-Whitney and Chi-square tests were used for analysis of quantitative and qualitative variables respectively. Kaplan Meier analysis was realized to determine renal survival according to RI value using the log-rank test. Multiple logistic regression was performed including variables with p < 0.20 in univariate analysis., Results: Most patients had glomerulonephritis (82%). Median age was 46 years [21-87], eGFR 59 mL/min/ 1.73m2 [5-130], percentage of interstitial fibrosis 10% [0-90], glomerulosclerosis 13% [0-96] and RI 0.63 [0.31-1.00]. RI increased with age (r = 0.435, p = 0.0063), pulse pressure (r = 0.303, p = 0.022), renal atrophy (r = -0.275, p = 0.038) and renal dysfunction (r = -0.402, p = 0.0018). Patients with arterial intima/media ratio ≥ 1 (p = 0.032), interstitial fibrosis > 20% (p = 0.014) and renal function decline (p = 0.0023) had higher RI. Patients with baseline RI ≥ 0.65 had a poorer renal outcome than those with baseline RI < 0.65 (p = 0.0005). In multiple logistic regression, RI≥0.65 was associated with accelerated renal function decline independently of baseline eGFR and proteinuria/creatininuria ratio (OR=13.04 [1.984-85.727], p = 0.0075). Sensitivity, specificity, predictive positive and predictive negative values of RI ≥ 0.65 for renal function decline at 18 months were respectively 77%, 86%, 71% and 82%., Conclusions: Our results suggest that RI ≥ 0.65 is associated with severe interstitial fibrosis and arteriosclerosis and renal function decline. Thus, RI may contribute to identify patients at high risk of ESRD who may benefit from nephroprotective treatments.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Toward unsupervised outbreak detection through visual perception of new patterns.
- Author
-
Lévy PP and Valleron AJ
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, Disease classification, Emergency Service, Hospital, Family Practice, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Male, Natural Language Processing, Retrospective Studies, Sentinel Surveillance, Vocabulary, Controlled, Disease Outbreaks, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Population Surveillance methods
- Abstract
Background: Statistical algorithms are routinely used to detect outbreaks of well-defined syndromes, such as influenza-like illness. These methods cannot be applied to the detection of emerging diseases for which no preexisting information is available.This paper presents a method aimed at facilitating the detection of outbreaks, when there is no a priori knowledge of the clinical presentation of cases., Methods: The method uses a visual representation of the symptoms and diseases coded during a patient consultation according to the International Classification of Primary Care 2nd version (ICPC-2). The surveillance data are transformed into color-coded cells, ranging from white to red, reflecting the increasing frequency of observed signs. They are placed in a graphic reference frame mimicking body anatomy. Simple visual observation of color-change patterns over time, concerning a single code or a combination of codes, enables detection in the setting of interest., Results: The method is demonstrated through retrospective analyses of two data sets: description of the patients referred to the hospital by their general practitioners (GPs) participating in the French Sentinel Network and description of patients directly consulting at a hospital emergency department (HED).Informative image color-change alert patterns emerged in both cases: the health consequences of the August 2003 heat wave were visualized with GPs' data (but passed unnoticed with conventional surveillance systems), and the flu epidemics, which are routinely detected by standard statistical techniques, were recognized visually with HED data., Conclusion: Using human visual pattern-recognition capacities to detect the onset of unexpected health events implies a convenient image representation of epidemiological surveillance and well-trained "epidemiology watchers". Once these two conditions are met, one could imagine that the epidemiology watchers could signal epidemiological alerts, based on "image walls" presenting the local, regional and/or national surveillance patterns, with specialized field epidemiologists assigned to validate the signals detected.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Evaluating OPTISAS, a visual method to analyse sleep apnea syndromes.
- Author
-
Ugon A, Philippe C, Ganascia JG, Rakotonanahary D, Amiel H, Boire JY, and Lévy PP
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Female, Humans, Male, Computer Graphics, Polysomnography methods, Sleep Apnea Syndromes diagnosis
- Abstract
The sleep apnea syndrome is a real public health problem. Improving its diagnosis using the polysomnography is of huge importance. Optisas was a visual method allowing translating the polysomnographic data into a meaningful image. In a previous paper, it was shown to bring extra information in 62% of cases. Here its capacity for displaying information of the same relevance as the one got using the classical report of the polysomnography is studied. The main result is that this capacity is weak and seems to be present only to identify the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. Moreover this study suggests to improve the standardization of the classical report in the framework of a quality insurance process.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Sickle cell leg ulcers: a frequently disabling complication and a marker of severity.
- Author
-
Halabi-Tawil M, Lionnet F, Girot R, Bachmeyer C, Lévy PP, and Aractingi S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anemia, Sickle Cell epidemiology, Ankle Joint physiopathology, Child, Dermatitis epidemiology, Dermatitis etiology, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Infections epidemiology, Infections etiology, Leg Ulcer epidemiology, Male, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Mood Disorders etiology, Quality of Life, Risk Factors, Anemia, Sickle Cell complications, Leg Ulcer etiology
- Abstract
Background: Leg ulcers are a poorly known and underestimated complication of sickle cell disease (SCD), but in our experience they often appear as a severely disabling condition, associated with the most severe forms of the disease., Objectives: To assess the characteristics, complications, repercussion on quality of life and associations of SCD ulcers., Methods: Case series of 20 patients followed in a French referral centre for SCD and who had previous/present leg ulcers., Results: Median ulcerated area was 12 cm2 and median time spent with ulcers was 29.5 months. Locoregional infections developed in 85%, ankle stiffness in 50% and mood disorders in 85%. Ninety per cent of patients needed analgesics, 20% being opioids. Median loss of time from work was 12.5 months. The Short Form 36 Health Survey showed physical and mental component summary scores of 41.5 and 40.7, respectively, indicating severe alteration close to that found in lung cancer or haemodialysis. Two categories of SCD leg ulcers were distinguished, defined by a 1-year duration cut off. The 'prolonged' ulcers had larger surfaces, tended to recur more frequently and led to more infection and depression. Several SCD complications were associated with leg ulcers, notably priapism, pulmonary hypertension, stroke and acute chest syndrome., Conclusions: Leg ulcers are a major complication of SCD, given their severe consequences and frequent association with other specific organ damage, and they constitute in their 'prolonged' form a severely disabling condition that remains an important therapeutic challenge.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The case view, a generic method of visualization of the case mix.
- Author
-
Lévy PP
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, France, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Reference Values, Semantics, Computer Graphics, Diagnosis-Related Groups
- Abstract
Objective: There is a worldwide consensus to use the diagnosis related groups (DRG) to consider hospital activity. This tool leads to the production of tables with numbers (case mix), the interpretation of which is difficult. The issue is to translate these tables of numbers into an image named Case view., Method: It assimilates, in a way, each DRG to a "pixel", the set of the DRGs being an image, the case view. The methods consist of two phases: the first one is to define the reference set while the second one is to visualize data through the reference set. The "DRG-pixels" which constitute the reference set should be organized according to three criteria: medical/surgical, nosological and economic., Results: This method is used to answer theoretical questions or to visualize activity at the level of a hospital or at the level of a department. It generates information of synthetic nature and ought to be used as a complement to existing methods., Discussion: An important advantage of this method compared to the existing ones (DRGs listing, DRGs clustering, histograms em leader ) is that it presents data simultaneously at a global level (sets of DRGs) and at a local level (the DRG)., Conclusion: We hope this method to be a supplementary step toward the creation of tools capable of eliciting the semantic content hidden in the medical data banks. The purpose of this paper is to explain the underlying general principles that define the graphic representation and to illustrate this model with the use of the French reference set.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Caseview: building the reference set.
- Author
-
Lévy PP
- Subjects
- France, Humans, Computer Graphics, Decision Support Systems, Management, Diagnosis-Related Groups, Hospital Information Systems
- Abstract
There is a worldwide consensus for using the diagnosis related groups (DRG) when considering hospital activity. This tool leads to the production of tables of numbers (case mix), the interpretation of which is difficult. Therefore, methods aimed at facilitating this interpretation are needed. One of such methods is the case view, i.e. a graphical representation of the case mix. It reduces, in a way, each DRG to a "pixel", the set of the DRGs being an image (the case view). The reference set should be organized according to three criteria: medical/surgical, nosological and economic. This method can be used to answer theoretical questions or to visualize activity at the level of a hospital or at the level of a department. The purpose of this paper is to present important principles inherent in this graphic representation, both at the level of the method and at the level of the user.
- Published
- 2004
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