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Comparison of 6 handheld ultrasound devices by point-of-care ultrasound experts: a cross-sectional study
Perez-Sanchez, Ariadna; Johnson, Gordon; Pucks, Neysan; Soni, Riya N; Lund, Terry J S; Andrade, Anthony J; Le, Minh-Phuong T; Solis-McCarthy, Jessica; Wong, Tanping; Ashraf, Arsal; Kumar, Andre D; Banauch, Gisela I; Verner, James R; Sodhi, Amik; Thomas, Meghan K; LoPresti, Charles; Schmitz, Hannah; Koratala, Abhilash; Hunninghake, John; Manninen, Erik; Candotti, Carolina; Minami, Taro; Mathews, Benji K; Bandak, Ghassan; Sauthoff, Harald; Mayo-Malasky, Henry; Cho, Joel; Villalobos, Nick; Proud, Kevin C; Boesch, Brandon; Fenton Portillo, Federico; Reierson, Kreegan; Malik, Manpreet; Abbas, Firas; Johnson, Tim; Haro, Elizabeth K; Mader, Michael J; Mayo, Paul; Franco-Sadud, Ricardo; Soni, Nilam J
BACKGROUND:by Philips Healthcare). A multi-specialty group of physician POCUS experts (n = 35) acquired three standard ultrasound views (abdominal right upper quadrant, cardiac apical 4-chamber, and superficial neck and lung views) in random order on the same standardized patients and rated the image quality. Afterward, a final survey of the overall ease of use, image quality, and satisfaction of each handheld was completed. RESULTS:. The 5 most desirable characteristics of handhelds were image quality, ease of use, portability, probe size, and battery life. Ultimately, all 6 handhelds had notable advantages and disadvantages, with no single device having all desired qualities or features. CONCLUSIONS:was rated highest for overall ease of use and was the most preferred handheld for purchase by POCUS experts.
PMCID:11447175
PMID: 39356371
ISSN: 2524-8987
CID: 5803262
Reporting Quality of Endoscopic Colorectal Cancer Screening Randomized Controlled Trials: Adherence to Recommendations and Interventions
Jaber, Fouad; Ahmed, Khalid; Hamid, Osama; Johnson, Willie Mohammed; Alsakarneh, Saqr; Abdalla, Abubaker O; Abboud, Yazan; Mohamed, Mouhand; Dahiya, Dushyant Singh; Umar, Shifa; Abdallah, Mohamed; Bilal, Mohammad; Shaukat, Aasma
BACKGROUND AND AIMS/UNASSIGNED:In 2013, the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) steering group published recommendations to standardize reporting quality in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). We aim to assess adherence to SPIRIT reporting guidelines in RCTs on endoscopic colorectal cancer (CRC) screening and participants' adherence to trial protocols. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:We searched databases for RCTs evaluating flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy for CRC screening published in English language through September 2023. Each eligible study was evaluated using the 8 core SPIRIT statement areas, totaling 51 points. Each item received 1 point if it met the criteria and 0 points if it did not. Adherence to SPIRIT items was calculated, and participant adherence to RCT protocols was assessed as the proportion of participants screened compared to those invited. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Five RCTs, including 4 on flexible sigmoidoscopy and 1 on colonoscopy, were analyzed. Adherence to SPIRIT guidance ranged from 82.4% to 92.2%. The most missed recommendation was item 2b (trial registrations), scored 0 across all studies. Additionally, item 32 (informed consent materials) scored 20%, and items 17a & b (blinding) scored 40% each. In total, 587,572 participants were randomized across the 5 RCTs. Of these, 37% (200,610) underwent CRC screening, with 69.8% (139,983/200,610) adhering to the protocol. The Nordic-European Initiative on Colorectal Cancer (NordICC) trial, employing a unique invitation method, had a lower adherence rate of 42%. Excluding this trial would raise the adherence rate to 74.3% (128,050/172,390). CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:The published CRC screening trials have acceptable adherence to the SPIRIT reporting guidelines. However, reporting appended consent form materials and disclosing all WHO trial registration data can be improved.
PMCID:11415794
PMID: 39309370
ISSN: 2772-5723
CID: 5802812
B-cell and plasma cell activation in a mouse model of chronic muscle pain
Lenert, Melissa E; Green, Audrey R; Merriwether, Ericka N; Burton, Michael D
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a complex chronic musculoskeletal pain disorder with an elusive pathogenesis, with a strong implication of immune interactions. We recently found that IL-5 and the adaptive immune system mediates pain outcomes in fibromyalgia (FM) patients and preclinical models of FM-like chronic widespread pain (CWP). However, there is an active debate if FM/CWP has an autoimmune etiology. Preclinical models of CWP utilize a repeated insult paradigm, which resembles a primary, then secondary response similarly observed in the antibody response, in which the subsequent event causes a potentiated pain response. Recent translational studies have implicated immunoglobulins (Ig) and B-cells in FM/CWP pathophysiology. To understand if these are involved in preclinical models of CWP, we performed comprehensive B-cell phenotyping in the bone marrow, circulation, and popliteal (draining) lymph nodes in the two-hit acidic saline model of CWP. We found increased MHC class II-expressing B-cells in peripheral blood, increased activated plasma cells in peripheral blood, and increased memory B-cells in the bone marrow. Interestingly, acidic pH (4.0) injected mice have reduced levels of IgG1, independent of treatment with IL-5. We have demonstrated that the acidic saline model of CWP induces T-cell mediated activation of B-cells, increased active plasma cells, and increased memory B-cells in female mice.
PMCID:11539501
PMID: 39507010
ISSN: 2452-073x
CID: 5803712
The ADHD Assessment Quality Assurance Standard for Children and Teenagers (CAAQAS)
Young, Susan; Absoud, Michael; Al-Attar, Zainab; Ani, Cornelius; Colley, William; Cortese, Samuele; Crame, Jo; Gudjonsson, Gisli; Hill, Peter; Hollingdale, Jack; Mukherjee, Raja A S; Ozer, Susan; Partridge, Gavin; Smith, Jade; Woodhouse, Emma Louise; Lewis, Alexandra
Around 5% of the children and teenagers worldwide are affected by Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder [ADHD], making it a major public health concern. Recently, demand for assessments has substantially increased, putting strain on healthcare and waiting lists. There is concern that pressure to clear service bottlenecks is leading to variable quality and reliability of ADHD assessments in this population. The ADHD Assessment Quality Assurance Standard for Children and Teenagers [CAAQAS] aims to address this by proposing a quality framework for ADHD assessments in this population. CAAQAS is intended to complement formal training, provide support to clinicians, inform commissioners, and empower children, teenagers, and caregivers on what to expect from an assessment and assessment report. Our goal is to promote evidence-based high-quality assessments, improve diagnostic accuracy, and reduce the risks of overdiagnosis, misdiagnosis, and underdiagnosis. Seven key topics were identified by authors which guided the development of this expert consensus statement. It was agreed that a high-quality diagnostic assessment of ADHD in this population commences with advance preparation to facilitate engagement of the child or teenager and caregivers. The consensus agreed that the minimum/essential standards for assessing and diagnosing ADHD adopt a systematic approach from pre-assessment through assessment to post-diagnostic stage, enabling ADHD to be disentangled from differential diagnoses. The process applies multi-source information to inform an assessment of development history and early risk factors, history of physical, mental health and other neurodevelopmental conditions, family, educational, and social histories. Assessment of core ADHD symptoms should include specific developmentally appropriate examples of associated difficulties and impairments. Neuropsychiatric and physical comorbidities should be assessed and identified. Recommendations for report writing are intended to facilitate effective communication between ADHD specialists and other services, and we highlight the importance of linking the diagnosis to an appropriate post-diagnostic discussion. Further, we discuss core competencies required to conduct a diagnostic assessment of ADHD in children and teenagers.
PMCID:11682937
PMID: 39737064
ISSN: 1176-6328
CID: 5805472
From Pain Medicine to Pain Surgery: How Our Specialty Lost Its Way [Editorial]
Pritzlaff, Scott G; Schatman, Michael E
PMCID:11438455
PMID: 39346517
ISSN: 1178-7090
CID: 5803152
Characteristics of Patients with Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection Presenting with Sudden Cardiac Arrest in the United States and the Potential Role of Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator Therapy
Krittanawong, Chayakrit; Qadeer, Yusuf Kamran; Ang, Song Peng; Wang, Zhen; Alam, Mahboob; Sharma, Samin; Jneid, Hani
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is a disease entity that often occurs in young, healthy women and can cause life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac arrest. However, the characteristics and outcomes of SCAD with cardiac arrest are not well characterized. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:This study investigated the baseline characteristics of SCAD patients with cardiac arrest using the National Inpatient Sample (NIS) database between 2016 and 2020. In addition, we also sought to determine the potential impact that implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) therapy had on morbidity and mortality in SCAD patients presenting with cardiac arrest. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Our findings showed that the SCAD with cardiac arrest population had significantly higher comorbidities, including cardiac arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, pulmonary circulation disorders, liver diseases, solid tumors, coagulopathy, fluid disorders, chronic kidney disease (CKD), anemia secondary to deficiency, psychosis, neurological disorders, carotid artery disease, atrial fibrillation, ventricular arrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia (VT), ventricular fibrillation (VF)), and acute myocardial infarction (AMI), compared to the SCAD without cardiac arrest population. Likewise, for SCAD patients who did not have an ICD in place, we found increasing age, fluid and electrolyte disorders, uncomplicated diabetes, neurological disorders, peripheral vascular disease, pulmonary circulatory disorders, cardiac arrhythmias, and congestive heart failure to be associated with greater mortality. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:SCAD patients with certain comorbidities (e.g., pulmonary diseases, liver diseases, cancers, coagulopathy, and CKD) who presented with AMI or congestive heart failure should be monitored closely for ventricular arrhythmias as they have a higher chance of progressing to cardiac arrest. ICD therapy can be considered for these patients, but data on the success of this treatment option are limited, and more research needs to be performed to determine whether the benefits of this outweigh the risks.
PMCID:11440423
PMID: 39355574
ISSN: 2153-8174
CID: 5803242
Bridging Implementation Science and Human-Centered Design: Developing Tailored Interventions for Healthier Eating in Restaurants
Fuster, Melissa; Hipol, Shelby; Huang, Terry Tk; Colón-Ramos, Uriyoán; Conaboy, Cara; Abreu, Rosa; Mortillaro, Lourdes Castro; Handley, Margaret A
Restaurants are important institutions in the communities' economy with the potential to promote healthier foods but have been under-engaged in public health nutrition efforts. In particular, independently owned, minority-serving and minority-owned restaurants, remain under-represented in nutrition promotion efforts despite disproportionate burdens of diet-related health outcomes among minority populations. Addressing this gap in engagement, we undertook a process of co-designing and implementing healthy eating-focused interventions in two Latin American restaurants in New York City, combining the Behavior Change Wheel intervention development framework with a Human-Centered Design approach. Restaurant owners and chefs were involved in the research synthesis and solution development processes, resulting in two tailored interventions. This paper describes this co-development process and offers reflections and lessons regarding: (1) implementation research in community settings, (2) the application of Human-Centered Design to promote the uptake of community-based interventions on food and health equity, and (3) the combined use of Human-Centered Design and Implementation science in these complex community settings.
PMCID:11573827
PMID: 39568618
ISSN: 2662-9275
CID: 5803752
Top stories on advances in understanding ventricular conduction system development, physiology, arrhythmogenesis, and therapeutics
Fishman, Glenn I; Uzoigwe, Nina
PMCID:11611069
PMID: 39613382
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 5804092
Describing cardiac anatomy: The truth is staring us in the face [Editorial]
Richardson, Travis D; Attia, Zachi Itzhak; Chorin, Ehud; Delmar, Mario; Di Biase, Luigi; Ellenbogen, Kenneth A; Ernst, Sabine; Gollob, Michael H; Indik, Julia H; Kannankeril, Prince J; Rosso, Raphael; Santangeli, Pasquale; Soejima, Kyoko; Stevenson, William G; Swerdlow, Charles D; Tung, Roderick; Vijayaraman, Pugazhendhi; Wilde, Arthur A M; Zipes, Douglas P; Viskin, Sami
PMID: 39613379
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 5804082
Photon-Counting CT in Musculoskeletal Imaging-10 Key Questions Answered
Vosshenrich, Jan; O'Donnell, Thomas; Fritz, Jan
PMID: 39490034
ISSN: 1558-4658
CID: 5803372