Colemanharmon8728

Z Iurium Wiki

To evaluate the use and safety of intravenous (IV) metoprolol in a cohort of patients undergoing coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) at a university hospital, and in particular, to establish if the minimum dose required to achieve the target heart rate (HR) in a given patient can be predicted from the baseline HR.

Patients undergoing CCTA at a tertiary centre between January 2015 and May 2018, with baseline HR ≥60 bpm requiring IV metoprolol, were identified retrospectively from the database. Patients with a contraindication to beta-blockade or an indication for CCTA other than coronary disease were excluded. HR at baseline and at the time of scanning were recorded, together with the total dose of IV metoprolol administered.

Of 625 patients identified, 330 (52.8%) achieved HR ≤60 with IV metoprolol. Patients who achieved target HR had lower baseline HR. They received a lower radiation exposure due to tight prospective gating and a lower tube voltage. The lower quartile dose of metoprolol administered was 5 mg for patients with baseline HR <65 beats per minute (bpm), but 10 mg for HR 65-74 bpm, and ≥20 mg for higher HRs. There were no cases of symptomatic bradycardia/hypotension.

Patients with a resting HR of ≥60 bpm can reasonably be given an initial minimum dose of 5-20 mg metoprolol IV before CCTA, with additional doses as required.

Patients with a resting HR of ≥60 bpm can reasonably be given an initial minimum dose of 5-20 mg metoprolol IV before CCTA, with additional doses as required.

Carcinosarcoma (CS) of the uterus or ovary is a rare, biphasic tumor comprising epithelial and mesenchymal elements, and exhibits more aggressive clinical features than its carcinoma counterpart. Four molecular subtypes of CS were recently established based on genomic aberration profiles (POLE, MSI, CNH, and CNL) and shown to be associated with multiple clinicopathological parameters, including patient outcomes. However, the role of the immune microenvironment in CS remains unclear. Here, we investigated the influence of the immune cells that infiltrate CS to better understand the immunological status of gynecological CS.

Tumor immune microenvironmental analyses on CS samples were performed using immune cell profiling with RNA-seq, transcriptomic subtyping with microenvironmental genes, and T-cell receptor repertoire assay. Carcinoma and sarcoma elements from CS samples were also assessed separately.

Relying on estimations of tumor-infiltrating cell types from RNA-seq data, POLE and MSI (hypermutator) tumors showed an enrichment of M1 macrophages, plasma cells and CD8

T cells, whereas CNH and CNL (non-hypermutator) tumors had high levels of M2 macrophages. Further subclassification by immune-related, non-cancer genes identified a fraction of tumors with distinct patient outcomes, particularly those with the CNH genomic aberration subtype. T-cell heterogeneity was independently correlated with prolonged progression-free survival. Differential analysis of carcinoma and sarcoma elements identified many shared mutations but there was little overlap in the T-cell receptor repertoire between the two elements.

Tumor immune microenvironmental analyses could offer potential clinical utility in the stratification of gynecological CS above classification by genomic aberration subtype alone.

Tumor immune microenvironmental analyses could offer potential clinical utility in the stratification of gynecological CS above classification by genomic aberration subtype alone.

Both intravenous (IV) and oral acetaminophen provide effective opioid-sparing analgesia after surgery when used as part of a multimodal preemptive pain management strategy. The purpose of this study was to compare postoperative opioid consumption in patients undergoing open gynecologic oncology surgery who received preoperative IV vs oral acetaminophen within an enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) program.

Retrospective data were collected on consecutive patients undergoing open gynecologic oncology surgery from May 1, 2016 to February 28, 2018 in patients receiving either 1g IV or oral acetaminophen preoperatively. Patients were given a preoperative multimodal analgesia regimen including acetaminophen, celecoxib, pregabalin and tramadol. The primary outcomes were morphine equivalent daily doses (MEDD) on postoperative days (POD) 0 and 1. Secondary outcomes included highest patient-reported pain score in the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) and intraoperative MEDD. Regression models adjusted by matched pairs were fit to estimate the average treatment effect of IV vs oral acetaminophen on MEDD.

Of 353 patients, 178 (50.4%) received IV acetaminophen and 175 (49.6%) received oral acetaminophen. α-Conotoxin GI price When balancing across the matched samples, there was no difference in postoperative MEDD for POD 0 between the IV and oral acetaminophen groups (Beta=-1.11; 95% CI -4.83 to 2.60; p=0.56). On POD 1, there was no difference between the IV and oral groups (Beta=2.24; 95% CI -2.76 to 7.25; p=0.38).

There was no difference in postoperative opioid consumption between patients receiving preoperative IV or oral acetaminophen within an ERAS program for patients undergoing open gynecologic oncology surgery.

There was no difference in postoperative opioid consumption between patients receiving preoperative IV or oral acetaminophen within an ERAS program for patients undergoing open gynecologic oncology surgery.The majority of justice-involved youth have problems with substance use, but juvenile justice agencies face numerous barriers to providing evidence-based treatments for these youth. Task-shifting is one strategy for increasing access to such treatments. That is, training juvenile probation officers (JPOs) to deliver substance use treatments, such as contingency management (CM) could improve youths' motivation and behavioral outcomes. However, probation traditionally emphasizes sanctions over incentives, so JPOs must alter their perspectives to accept protocols such as CM for substance use. Using mixed focus group and survey methods at baseline and one year later, this randomized study examined heretofore unstudied JPO perceptions during a task-shifting experiment in which JPOs were asked to start delivering CM for youth substance use, compared to a control group of JPOs who did not change their practices. At baseline, JPOs expressed a perception of hopelessness about their work with substance-using youth and their parents, but they generally held positive views toward use of tangible incentives.

Autoři článku: Colemanharmon8728 (Herskind Hejlesen)