MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Dr. Shuhei Miyashita PhD
Lecturer in Intelligent Robotics
Department of Electronics
University of York, Heslington
York, UK
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this device? What are some of the obstacles you and your team face in the development?
Dr. Miyashita: We are developing medical technology that is less invasive and more
autonomous and thus can provide safe and consistent outcomes. The
biggest challenge is how to build a capable medical robot that is
clinically safe. Addressing this challenge requires finding
bio-compatibe materials, safe means of transportation in the body, a
way to reconfigure the robot from pill shape to unfolded shape, and
precise multi-mode control for the location and function of the robot.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Prof. Dr. Paul Wilmes
Associate Professor
Head of the Eco-Systems Biology Research Group
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine
University of Luxembourg
Luxembourg
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this intestinal model?Dr. Wilmes:Changes in the human gastrointestinal microbiome are associated with several diseases. To infer causality, experiments in representative models are essential. Widely used animal models exhibit limitations. Therefore, we set out to develop the HuMiX model which allows co-culture of human and microbial cells under conditions representative of the gastrointestinal interface.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Natalia Trayanova PhD, FHRS, FAHA
Murray B. Sachs Endowed Chair
Professor of Biomedical Engineering
Joint Appointment, Medicine
Johns Hopkins University
Institute for Computational Medicine
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?Dr. Trayanova: The methodology for modeling cardiac electrical function has matured sufficiently that we can now create computational models of the electrical functioning of the entire heart. My research is focused on translating this methodology into the clinic. The goal is to create, if you will, "a virtual heart for every patient", that will enable the physician to play our scenarios that manifest the heart dysfunction in the given patient, and to enable physicians to make personalized decisions about patient treatment. The present paper is the first application of this overall vision.
The motivation for this particular paper was that determining which patients are at risk for sudden cardiac death represents a major unmet clinical need. Patients at risk receive life-saving implantable defibrillators (ICDs), but because of the low sensitivity and specificity of current approach (based on low ejection fraction), risk assessment is inaccurate. Thus, many patients receive ICDs without needing them, while others die of sudden cardiac death because they are not targeted for ICD therapy under the current clinical recommendations. Our goal was to develop a non-invasive personalized virtual-heart risk assessment tool that has the potential to ultimately prevent sudden cardiac death and avoid unnecessary ICD implantations.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Shuichi Takayama, PhD
Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering & Macromolecular Science and Engineering
Associate Director, Michigan Center for Integrative Research...
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Dr. Elodie SollierPhD
Chief Scientific Officer at Vortex Biosciences
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Response: Vortex Biosciences has developed a fast and simple way to isolate and collect intact circulating tumor cells (CTCs) directly from whole blood in less than an hour using a process based on microfluidics. To better understand the utility of the technology for the clinical setting, PCR-based Sanger sequencing was used to profile the mutations of CTCs isolated from blood from metastatic Colorectal cancer patients. The mutations were compared to primary tumor biopsies, secondary tumor biopsies and ctDNA. There are 3 primary take-aways:
The Vortex technology captures CTCs with enough purity to perform sensitive and accurate PCR-based Sanger sequencing.
Mutations present in primary and secondary tumors can be identified in both CTCs and ctDNA making liquid biopsies a valuable alternative to tissue biopsies.
While there is general consistency of mutations identified, some mutations are only identified in CTCs while others only in ctDNA demonstrating how these are indeed complimentary.
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. Nicola Gaibazzi
Department of Cardiology
Parma University Hospital
Parma Italy
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Gaibazzi: As clinical and research cardiologists we have never accepted that cardiac arrests are so frequently deadly throughout the world (sudden cardiac arrest is the world’s leading cause of death) because many of such events could be easily reversed by early defibrillation if only witnessed by a bystander who could quickly call emergency in place of the incapacitated subject.
This would be lifesaving for most of them, gaining quick access to defibrillation within the golden 8-10 minutes (in the Oregon state study 6.5 minutes is the average time from call to defibrillation). While this issue of early defibrillation access is not easy to be solved for cardiac arrest in the general population, it was surprising to us that there was no available tool to date to automatically alert emergency contacts for people who regularly practice outdoor sports alone, such as running or cycling, and may undergo sudden and unexpected sports-associated cardiac arrest. It is a rare event, but it may happen during exercise, when cardiac arrest is actually several times more frequent than during resting condition, both in sedentary and active subjects. It was surprising to us seeing all people practicing with their earbuds, listening to music from their last-generation smartphone, often used only as if it were an old music cassette “walkman”, while it is a powerful and wireless-connected portable computer with an incredible potential for emergency rescue.
Consequently, in 2015 we founded a startup company (www.parachute-app.com or temporary new site http://nicolagaibazzi.wix.com/mysite) and started building an app that could take advantage of the capabilities of modern smartphones to automatically detect sports-associated cardiac arrest, specifically aiming at recognizing ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation. This was not an easy task, since we wanted to use simple, cheap and commercially-available hardware, possibly already at hand for sportspeople; otherwise too few subjects would use it and you would not impact such infrequent disease with only few sportsmen using it, since sports-associated cardiac arrest is rare (2/100000 athletes/year) but not negligible, with 2450 deaths in US only each year.
We finally chose to use as the only additional required hardware a BT+ heart rate monitor chest strap (a chest strap can be bought if not already owned at 40$), which is cheap, reliable, able to transmit heart rate with trivial battery drainage detected through cardiac electrical signal with trivial battery drainage, and much more reliable than pulse-plethysmographic methods which fully depend on the device contact with the arm or wrist skin to collect a correct signal. We could not afford in our lifesaving app that a wrong wrist or arm device contact would cause absence of pulse signal detection erroneouslytriggering a cardiac arrest alert or not doing so when a cardiac arrest is truly present. Chest straps on the contrary send heart rate sensed from electrical heart activity and are almost impossible to displace even in case of an unconscious subject falling down.
We built and tested our Parachute app for the iPhone during 2015, through long testing in the outdoor field and with arrhythmia simulators and at the ACC congress we present just part of the data collected from such tests in athletes running and cycling and with advanced arrhythmia simulators. Parachute was incredibly accurate both to avoid false positives and false negatives, thanks to continuously combined chest strap heart rate data and motion or, better, detection of “no motion”, corresponding to a possible incapacitated subject. These two mechanisms act together and complete each other, they are synergic, since while our patent-pending algorithm using heart rate data is very sensitive for serious arrhythmias, motion detection can easily exclude false positives during outdoor sports, where motion is by definition almost continuous.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
[caption id="attachment_22938" align="alignleft" width="150"] Dr. Gang Han[/caption]
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main...
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. David Wong D.M.D, D.M.S.C
Professor
Associate Dean for Research
Director for UCLA Center for Oral/Head & Neck Oncology Research (COOR)
Felix and Mildred Yip Endowed Chair in Dentistry
UCLA
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Wong: The EFIRM technology is an electrochemical technology developed for the optimal detection of saliva targets for molecular diagnostics.
It is a multiplexible platform (nucleic acid and proteins) that has sensitivity and specificity that comparable with PCR and luminex-based assays. It permits direct target detection in bio-samples without processing.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. Clara Chow PhD
Director of the Cardiovascular division
The George Institute,
Westmead Hospital
Sydney, Australia
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Chow: Text messaging has immense potential in healthcare. Not only for supporting medication adherence, but we have shown in the “TEXT ME” study its ability to simultaneously influence multiple lifestyle domains like increasing physical activity, embarking on healthier diets and reducing smoking rates. With increasing penetration of mobile phone use in developed as well as developing countries, there is a potential for wider reach, however there remains a need to evaluate the value of text messaging programs in various patient populations to establish the generalizability of these research findings.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. Deirdre Murray
Senior Lecturer/Consultant Paediatrician
Dept of Paediatrics and Child Health
University College Cork
Clinical Investigations Unit Cork University Hospital
Principal Investigator
Irish Centre for Fetal and Neonatal Translational ResearchMedical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Murray: Everyday in clinic, and in waiting rooms and in restaurants we see parents are handing over their smart phones and iPads to occupy young children. The nature of childhood play is changing rapidly. The exact frequency and the effect of this change in unknown. We wanted to first measure how young children 12-36 months are using touchscreen devices. We asked parents who attended our paediatric unit, both outpatients and short stay inpatients to answer a study specific questionnaire.
We found that of the 82 parents surveyed, 82% of parents owned a touchscreen device, and of these 87% gave their device to their toddler to play with. Thus 71% of toddlers had access to a touchscreen device. This rate was similar across the age range studied (12-36 months). By parental report, 24 months was the median age of ability to swipe (IQR: 19.5–30.5), unlock (IQR: 20.5–31.5) and active looking for touch-screen features (IQR: 22–30.5), while 25 months (IQR: 21–31.25) was the median age of ability to identify and use specific touch-screen features. Overall, 32.8% of toddlers could perform all four skills.
Touchscreen usage was common at a very young age and from 2 years of age toddlers have the ability to interact purposefully with touch-screen technology.(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Leo McHugh, Ph.D.
Director, Bioinformatics
Immunexpress
Seattle, WashingtonMedical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. McHugh: Sepsis is the leading cause of child mortality in the world, and in developing countries kills more adults than breast cancer, prostate cancer and HIV combined. Approximately 30% of people admitted to ICU have sepsis, and up to 50% of these patients die. It’s a major cost burden also, costing the US health system $17 billion per year. The best way to reduce costs and improve patient outcomes is to detect sepsis early and with confidence, so that appropriate treatments can be applied. Each hour delay in the detection of sepsis has been reported to correspond to an 8% increase in mortality. So the need for a rapid and accurate diagnostic is recognized. Traditional methods rely on detection of the specific pathogen causing the infection, and these methods often take more than 24 hours, and find a pathogen in only 30% of clinically confirmed cases because they’re trying to detect a minuscule amount of pathogen or pathogenic product in the blood. Our approach was to use the host’s own immune system, which is highly tuned to respond to the presence of pathogens. Around 30% of all genes are dysregulated in sepsis, so there is a huge signal base to draw from. The trick with using multi marker host response is to pick out the specific combination of gene expression patterns that cover the broad range of patients that present with sepsis and who may present either early or late in the episode, thus with different gene activation patterns.
This paper describes a simple combination of such genes that can be used to detect sepsis and performs over the full range of patients irrespective of stage of infection or severity of infection. In it’s current format, the test is manual and takes 4-6 hours, and is a great advance on the current tools, however the methods we’ve used are specifically designed to meet requirements to port this assay onto a fully automated Point of Care platform that could deliver a result in under 90 minutes.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Kutluk Oktay, MD, PhD.
Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Medicine, and Cell Biology & Anatomy
Director, Division of Reproductive Medicine & Institute for Fertility Preservation
Innovation Institute for Fertility and In Vitro Fertilization
New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr.Oktay: Cancer treatments cause infertility and early menopause in a growing number of young women around the world and US. One of the strategies to preserve fertility, which was developed by our team, is to cryopreserve ovarian tissue before chemotherapy and later transplant it back to the patient when they are cured of the cancer and ready to have children. However, success of ovarian transplantation has been limited due to limitation in blood flow to grafts. In this study we described a new approach which seems to improve graft function. The utility of an extracellular tissue matrix and robotic surgery seems to enhance graft function. With this approach both patients conceived with frozen embryos to spare and one has already delivered.(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Professor John McDonald PhD
Director of its Integrated Cancer Research Center
School of Biology at the Georgia Institute of Technology
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Response: Ovarian cancer is a deadly disease because it cannot be diagnosed at early stages when it can be most effectively effectively treated.
It has long been recognized that there is a great need for an accurate diagnostic test for early stage ovarian cancer.
Until now, efforts to develop a highly accurate way to detect early stage ovarian cancer have been unsuccessful.
We have used a novel approach that integrates advanced methods in analytical chemistry with advanced machine learning algorithms to identify 16 metabolites that collectively can detect ovarian cancer with extremely high accuracy (100% in the samples tested in our study)
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dustin T. Duncan, ScD
Assistant Professor
Department of Population Health and
Dr. Paul Krebs PhD
Assistant Professor in the Department of Population Health
New York University School of MedicineMedical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Krebs: Everyone seems to be talking about health apps, but there was no quality research on what was actually happening in the US with regard to these apps. Knowing why people use and don’t use health-related apps is critical for advancing this area of healthcare. In terms of main findings, we found that a little over half of Americans are using a health-related app, primarily in the domains of fitness and nutrition. We also found greater use among minority populations, younger persons, among people who were obese, and those with higher incomes. Surprisingly we found that about 40% of people would not pay anything for a health app. Hidden costs and difficulty of data entry were main reasons people stopped using them.
Dr. Duncan: Little is know about health app use, which was surprising to us—especially because many people have smartphones so downloading a health app can easy. We wanted to understand the landscape of health app use and patterns in the US to ultimately improve the population’s health.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Anuradha Godavarty PhD
and
Dr. Sarah J Erickson-Bhatt PhD
Dept of Biomedical Engineering,
Florida International University
Miami, FL
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Response: It is well known that early detection and staging of breast cancer is crucial in order to save lives. While the current gold standard for breast cancer screening is x-ray mammography, this method still misses many cancers especially in younger women with denser tissue. Our group and others have explored diffuse optical tomography using near-infrared light to image breast tumors. We have developed a unique optical imager with a hand-held probe that can contour to breast curvature in order to image the tissue without painful compression and without ionizing radiation (like x-rays). This study demonstrated the ability of the device to detect lesions in breast cancer patients due to elevated levels of total hemoglobin concentration in tumor vasculature. The hand-held has a potential to not only image the breast contours, but the probe was flexible to image the surrounding chest wall regions, thus expanding its application to image lymphatic spread as well.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dr. Carmine SimoneMD, FRCSC
Chief, Department of Surgery, Toronto East General Hospital
Co-Program Medical Director, Surgery HealthService, Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer, University of Toronto, Division of Thoracic Surgery
Courtesy Staff, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre & Royal Victoria Hospital, Barrie
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Simone: Patients preparing for surgery are often overwhelmed with information. Most of the time patients are given written instructions regarding preoperative preparation as well as written information at discharge. Our own institutional experience is that only 2/3 of patients read the information we provide and less than half of these patients can understand or retain the information they read.
We have found that providing patients SMS alerts or reminders leading up to their surgery increases the likelihood that they will follow instructions and keep their appointments. Furthermore having patients log their progress after discharged from hospital allows patients to track their progress and report complications earlier and avoid coming to the ER. Educational modules enable patients to better gauge their symptoms and make more informed decisions about calling the surgeon’s office or proceeding to the emergency department. We found a significant reduction in the number of ER visits and cancelled procedures after implementing the mobile device reminders and post-discharge daily log.
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[wysija_form id="5"]MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Professor Philip Breedon
Professor of smart technologies
Nottingham Trent University
Design for Health and Wellbeing Research GroupMedical Research: What is the background for this study?
Prof. Breedon: This report presented an innovative approach of enhancing the efficiency of spinal surgery by utilizing the technological capabilities and design functionalities of wearable headsets, in this case Google Glass. The overall aim was to improve the efficiency of the Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy ( SDR) neurosurgical procedure through the use of Google Glass via an innovative approach to information design for the intraoperative monitoring display.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Ashley K. Day, Ph.D., M. Psych (Hlth)
Post-Doctoral Associate
Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Day: Skin cancer is one of the most common cancers in the US, and it is estimated that more than 9,000 Americans will die of melanoma this year. Melanoma patients have a 9-times greater risk for a diagnosis of another melanoma compared to the general population. Because of this, it is important that melanoma patients practice regular sun protection and skin self-examination behaviors. There is potential opportunity to use the Internet to deliver information and interventions to help melanoma patients engage in these behaviors. However, it is important to understand patients’ preferences. Our research explored factors associated with the receptivity of patients with melanoma to such Internet-delivered behavioral interventions.
We found that, in a sample of 176 melanoma patients, the vast majority (84.1%) had Internet access and had previously sought melanoma information online (77.7%). More than two-thirds of patients (68.4%) reported being at least moderately interested in participating in an Internet-based intervention to promote engagement in sun protection and skin self-examination behaviors. Receptivity to such an intervention was higher among patients who were younger, had greater knowledge of the ABCDE signs of melanoma (looking at the asymmetry, border irregularity, color, diameter, and evolution of the mole or affected area), and were more comfortable using the Internet.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Ichiro Morioka, M.D.
Professor of Pediatrics, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine
Chuo-ku, Kobe, JapanMedical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Morioka: Japan has the highest survival rate for preterm infants due to recent advanced medical treatment and the availability of Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU). Despite this, cases of cerebral palsy and hearing loss caused by neonatal jaundice continue (kernicterus) to occur, with cases reported for at least 2 in every 1000 infants born before the 30th week of gestation. It has also been established that cases of jaundice can worsen even two weeks after birth and thereafter, meaning that there is a need for continuous long-term jaundice monitoring of infants in the NICU. However, jaundice in preterm infants is difficult to detect through physical observations, and monitoring through a daily blood test is not a realistic option.
We focused on transcutaneous jaundice monitoring used in daily health tests for full term infants. The bilirubin levels of 85 infants with a birth weight of under 1500 grams were monitored in NICUs at Kobe University, Kakogawa City Hospital, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe Children’s Hospital, Japanese Red Cross Society Himeji Hospital, and Takatsuki General Hospital, and were taken a total of 383 transcutaneous and blood bilirubin measurements at the same time. Through our results we were able to ascertain that the chest and back areas of preterm infants have the highest levels of sensitivity, and transcutaneous bilirubin levels in those areas were close to bilirubin levels in the blood. In addition to expanding the possibilities for transcutaneous monitoring of jaundice in preterm infants, we discovered the optimum area of skin to monitor it.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Stephanie J. Crowley, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Biological Rhythms Research Laboratory
Department of Behavioral Sciences
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, IL 60612
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? Dr. Crowley: Your readers may have seen recent reports by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the CDC about problems with early morning school bells for teens and the need to push school start times later. These recent calls for later school start times come from data showing that biological processes make it challenging for a teen to get enough sleep and be rested for school when they have to wake up very early for school. One of these biological processes is the circadian timing system, which is the approximate 24-hour brain clock that regulates the timing of sleep and wake. During the teen years, the brain clock is shifted later making it more difficult for many teens to fall asleep early enough to get sufficient sleep on school nights.
Medical Research: What are the main findings?
Dr. Crowley: Melatonin suppression, as tested in this new study, is a good indication of how light affects the circadian system. Our findings show that even a very small amount of light (similar to “romantic mood lighting”) in the evening suppressed melatonin levels in the middle-school-aged adolescents. Because evening light “seen” by the brain clock shifts the clock later in time, the message is that biologically-driven later sleep times starts at this early age and needs to be considered when managing school and sleep schedules.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Adam Friedman, MD, FAAD
Associate Professor of Dermatology
Residency Program Director
Director of Translational Research
Department of Dermatology
George Washington School of Medicine and Health Sciences
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Friedman: Acne vulgaris is one of the most common skin disease that affects approximately 40-50 million people in the United States. Acne’s multifactorial etiology, resulting from a mix of androgen-induced elevations in sebum production, abnormal follicular epithelial desquamation and proliferation, hypercolonization of Propionibacterium acnes and host inflammatory reactions, make treatment often times challenging. In looking at the topical therapeutic armament for Acne Vulgaris, which includes benzoyl peroxide, salicyclic acid, topical antibiotics such as clindamycin, and retinoids, all suffer from various related side effects including irritation, erythema, dryness, peeling and scaling, bacterial resistance, and resulting dyschromia from the associated irritation in patients of darker skin types. These adverse events often serve as major limiting factors influencing patient compliance and ultimately impacting efficacy. Therefore new treatments which target all of the complexities of acne are needed, especially given we have not had anything really new brought to market in years. Here, we looked to biology for the answer. Our bodies generate Nitric Oxide, a diatomic lipid loving gaseous molecule, to perform a broad range of biological activities, including but not limited to killing bacteria/fungi/viruses and inhibiting inflammation - key elements in Acne. Its action however is very short lived and therefore using Nitric Oxide as a treatment is difficult as one would need a delivery system that would allow for continued and controlled release. Enter nanotechnology. We designed exceedingly small particles (of note, 1 nanometer = 1 billionth of a meter) which allow for the generation of nitric oxide gas from nitrite salt, and will only release the gas when exposed to moisture over time. The size of the particles also enables them to better interact with their environment, i.e. cells, pathogens, improving their activity as compared to large sized treatments
In this study, we showed that the nitric oxide generating/releasing nano particles effectively killed the organism, P. acnes but was not toxic to both human skin cells and a live vertebrae model (embryonic zebra fish). More importantly, we found that the nano particles inhibits the activation of a newly recognized but exceedingly important inflammatory pathway that is directly tied to the formation of an acne lesion, called the NLRP3 inflammasome. Research has shown that our bodies already regulate this pathway with nitric oxide, and therefore once again, we are looking to biology for answers. As opposed to a drug that may only have one target, the nanoparticles inhibited multiple components/elements of the inflammasome pathway, giving some insight into its potential as a treatment for acne as well as other inflammatory diseases.(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Mehdi Ardavan
Concordia University/Université Concordia
Medical Research: What is the background for this study?Response: That thousands patients die each year in US hospitals due to medical errors that could be prevented if medical staff were provided with instant access to patient records. Wireless technology (such as portable tablets) is one way of providing this instant access. But using such devices can cause electromagnetic interference (EMI) with electronic medical devices and can lead to dangerous consequences for patients. Hospitals may have a policy of minimum separation distance (MSD) which means that the staff members carrying wireless devices cannot approach sensitive medical devices closer than the specified MSD. The problem was that the recommend values of the minimum separation distance were not based on a quantitative and thorough analysis of the problem. We wanted to see what is the correct value of MSD, and how it's determined.
Medical Research: What are the main findings?Response: We developed new and fast methods for estimating the electromagnetic field distribution. We also mathematically modeled the roaming nature of the staff members carrying the wireless transmitters. Then we modeled the minimum separation distance policy and added an option to account for a possibility of non-compliance with the policy.
First, we assumed a full compliance with MSD policy and found that the risk of interference decreased constantly as the minimum separation distance was increased. Quantitative recommendations are made for the value of the MSD. But once we considered a small non-compliance probability, an interesting and unexpected phenomenon was observed: the EMI risk does not decrease beyond a certain value and remains almost constant for all MSDs bigger than a value we call the optimal MSD. If we increase the minimum separation distance beyond its optimal value, the risk of EMI does not decrease but more restrictions and thus more inconvenience is put on the staff members. So larger values of MSD are not necessarily safer and are not recommended. We also find that the risk and the optimal minimum separation distance are both sensitive to the rate of compliance with the MSD policy.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Neetika Garg, MD
Fellow in Nephrology
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine
Boston, MA 02215
MedicalResearch: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?Dr. Garg: One in every three Americans suffers from hypertension. Since high blood pressure (BP) frequently does not cause any symptoms, self-blood pressure monitoring at home and patient education are critical components of patient management. With more than 58% of the US adults owning a smartphone, mobile-based health technologies (most commonly in the form of applications or “apps”) can serve as useful adjuncts in diagnosis and management of hypertension. At the same time, several smartphone-based applications are advertised as having blood pressure measurement functionality, which have not been validated against a gold standard. In this cross-sectional study, we analyzed the top 107 hypertension related apps available on the most popular smartphone platforms (Google Android and Apple iPhone) to analyze the functional characteristics and consumer interaction metrics of various hypertension related apps.
Nearly three-quarters of the apps record and track blood pressure, heart rate, salt intake, caloric intake and weight/body mass index. These app features can facilitate patient participation in hypertension management, medication adherence and patient-physician communication. However, it was concerning to find that 6.5% of the apps analyzed could transform the smartphone into a cuffless BP measuring device. None of these had any documentations of validation against a gold standard. Furthermore, number of downloads and favorable user ratings were significantly higher for these apps compared to apps without blood pressure measurement function. This highlights the need for greater oversight and regulation in medical device development.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Jacob Hollenberg M.D., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Cardiologist
Head of Research, Centre for Resuscitation Science
Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
Editor’s note: Dr. Hollenberg and colleagues published two articles in the NEJM this week discussing CPR performed by bystanders in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests.MedicalResearch: What is the background for the first study?Dr. Hollenberg: There are 10,000 cases of cardiac arrest annually in Sweden. Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) has been taught to almost a third of Sweden’s population of 9.7 million. In recent years the value of bystander CPR has been debated, largely due to a lack of a randomized trial demonstrating that bystander CPR is lifesaving.
In this study, which included all cases of emergency medical services (EMS) treated and bystander-witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrests recorded in the Swedish Cardiac Arrest Registry from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2011, our primary aim was to assess whether CPR initiated before the arrival of EMS was associated with an increase in the 30-day survival rate.
MedicalResearch: What were the main findings?Dr. Hollenberg: Early CPR prior to arrival of an ambulance more than doubled the chance of survival. (30-day survival rate was 10.5% among patients who underwent CPR before EMS arrival, as compared with 4.0% among those who did not (P<0.001).)
This association held up in all subgroups regardless of sex, age, cause of cardiac arrest, place of arrest, EKG findings or time period (year analyzed).
MedicalResearch: How did the patients who survived cardiac arrest do from a disability standpoint?Dr. Hollenberg: We had cerebral performance scores from 474 patients who survived for 30 days after cardiac arrest. (higher scores indicate greater disability).
At the time of discharge from the hospital, 81% of these patients had a score of category of 1. Less than 2% had category scores of 4 or 5.
MedicalResearch: What should patients and providers take away from this report?Dr. Hollenberg:
For patients with an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, CPR performed by bystanders before the arrival of emergency medical personnel, saves lives. This has been validated by both the size of this study and the consistency of the results over three decades.
CPR education needs to continue and to increase. In Sweden about one-third of the population has been taught CPR. Legislation has recently been passed that mandates CPR be taught to all teenagers in school which should allow an entire generation to become familiar with this lifesaving technique.
The willingness of the public to become involved also needs to increase. We need new ways of educating lay people to recognize cardiac arrest and to motivate them to perform it. The knowledge that bystander CPR saves lives may enhance that motivation.
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
R. Kenneth Marcus, FRSC & FAAAS
Professor of Chemistry
Clemson University
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Prof. Marcus: We had previously shown that chromatographic columns formed from aligned capillary-channeled polymer (C-CP) fibers were highly effective in analytical scale and preparative separations of proteins from diverse media. The C-CP fibers are extracted from commodity fibers such as polyester, nylon, and polypropylene. The key aspects in using the C-CP fibers are very high bed porosity and rapid protein-surface mass transfer, this allows for very rapid separations. Packing of the fibers in narrow-bore polymer tubing (0.8 mm id x 1 cm long) allows them to be fixed to the end of a micropipette tip. Urine samples of 10 microliter-to-milliliter volumes can be spun through on a microcentrifuge, washed with DI-water, and then eluted with a solvent. Thus the proteins are isolated and pre-concentrated on the fiber surface. The elution solvent can be chosen based on the analytical method employed (e.g., MALDI- or ESI-MS). (more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Gabriel Popescu PhD Associate Professor and
Shamira Sridharan, Ph.D. candidate
Quantitative Light Imaging Laboratory, Department of Bioengineering, Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology University of Illinois at Urbana
Champaign Urbana, IL
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Popescu: We developed a new optical tool that can identify patients at high risk for recurrence of prostate cancer after undergoing radical prostatectomy as treatment. Early identification of risk for recurrence can allow early treatment of disease.
Our main finding was that among individuals with worse disease outcomes, the tissue is more disorganized. This manifests as a decrease in anisotropy, or light scattering angle, which reports on nano-scale differences in tissue architecture.
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MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Dr. Shang-Ming Zhou
Senior Lecturer in Statistical Modelling and Analytics for Epidemiology and Public Health,
Public Health Informatics Group,
Health Information Research Unit (HIRU),
UKCRC DECIPHer (Development and Evaluation of Complex Interventions for Public Health Improvement) Centre,
College of Medicine, Swansea University, Swansea, UK
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?Response: In medical and sport science research, body-worn accelerometers are widely used to provide objective measurements of physical activity. However, accelerometers collect data continuously even during periods of nonwear (i.e. periods when participants may not be wearing their monitor, such as during sleeping). It is important to distinguish time of sedentary behaviours (eg. watching television) from time of nonwear. The clinical consequence of misclassification of accelerometer wear and nonwear would overestimate or underestimate physical activity level, and mislead the interpretation of the relationship between physical activity and health outcomes. Automated estimation of accelerometer wear and nonwear time events is particularly desired by large cohort studies, but algorithms for this purpose are not yet standardized and their accuracy needs to be established. This study presents a robust method of classifying wear and nonwear time events under free living conditions for triaxial accelerometers which combines acceleration and surface skin temperature data.
The new findings are: Either acceleration data or skin temperature data alone is inadequate to accurately predict wear and nonwear events in some scenarios under a free living condition; This study provides a simple and efficient algorithm on use of short time periods of consecutive data blocks for accurately predicting triaxial accelerometer wear and nonwear events; Combining both types of acceleration and skin temperature data can significantly improve the accuracy of accelerometer wear and nonwear events classification in monitoring physical activity. (more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Maria L. Wei, M.D., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Dermatology
Director, Melanoma Surveillance Clinic
Multidisciplinary Melanoma Program
University of California, San Francisco
Staff Physician
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco
Medical Research: What is the background for this study?
Dr. Wei: Effective physician-patient communication is essential for optimal medical care. There are now many methods available to notify patients of their biopsy results: a clinic visit (the method traditionally preferred by patients), a telephone call, secure online patient portals to access medical charts, email and texts. In addition, there is variability from state to state in the guidelines regulating the release of biopsy results online. Until recently, some states did not allow the on-line release of biopsy results. There have been few systematic studies on patient preferences for communication of biopsy results. (more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Ryan Jeffrey Shaw, PhD, MS, RN
Assistant Professor School of Nursing
Center for Health Informatics
Center for Precision Medicine
Duke University
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Shaw: Primary care delivery revolves around a series of episodes, rather than functioning as a continuum. When patients come to a clinic data on their health is collected as a single data point. This model neglects potentially meaningful data from patients’ daily lives and results in less informed treatment and scheduling of follow-up visits. Lack of meaningful data further blinds clinicians to patients’ health outside of the clinic and can contribute to unnecessary emergency department visits and hospitalizations.
Personalized care through mobile health technologies inspires the transition from isolated snapshots based on serial visits to real time and trended data. By using technologies from cell phones to wearable sensors, providers have the ability to monitor patients and families outside of the traditional office visit.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Aidan Roche MBBS, PhD, BEng and
Prof Oskar C AszmannMD
Director of the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Restoration of Extremity Function
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Department of Surgery
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Medical Research: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Response: The study was prompted by lack of techniques to restore hand function in patients with global plexopathies with avulsion of the lower roots. In simple terms, this is a tearing injury to parts of the brachial plexus. The brachial plexus is a complex junction of nerves that leaves the spinal cord and supplies the arm. If this junction of nerves is severely damaged, information cannot reach the hand to control it or to receive sensation from it. In some of these cases, traditional reconstructive surgical techniques are only able to restore shoulder and elbow function, not the hand itself. In severe cases, this might leave the patient with a useless hand. In previous clinical studies with existing amputees, advancing research has shown that good prosthetic control can be achieved by selectively transferring nerves. However, our study differs as our patients had intact, but functionless hands. The innovation here was to selectively transfer nerves and muscles to create useable signals for prosthetic control. Together with a comprehensive rehabilitation regime, followed by elective amputation, this formed the bionic reconstruction process. The main finding is that all three patients had excellent hand function restored through bionic reconstruction (as measured by the uniform improvement in all patients in the clinical outcome scores of the Action Research Arm Test, the Disability of Arm, Shoulder and Hand Questionairre, and the Southampton Hand Assessment Procedure and reported in detail in The Lancet).
(more…)
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