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blished in English will be considered due to feasibility limitations. The JBI System for the Unified Management, Assessment and Review of Information (JBI SUMARI) will be used. Two independent reviewers will screen the retrieved papers by title and abstract, and the selected papers by full-text review. Any disagreements will be resolved by an objective arbitrator. Data to be extracted and analyzed from included papers will include details of participants, concept, context, and the study design. Results will be presented narratively and in tabular format.

The objectives of this review are to describe the serious adverse events reported in the literature following lumbopelvic mobilization and manipulation, and identify patient, provider and/or treatment factors that may be associated with serious adverse events after these interventions.

Spinal mobilization and manipulation are types of conservative care commonly used to treat people with low back pain and other musculoskeletal conditions of the lumbar spine and pelvis. Although most adverse events following these interventions are benign and transient, serious adverse events have been reported mostly following spinal manipulative therapy. Given the significant impact serious adverse events can have on patients' lives, identifying factors that may be associated with serious adverse events following spinal mobilization and manipulation of the low back and pelvis would allow for a more specific pre-treatment screening, potentially reducing the occurrence of serious adverse events following these popular interventions and contributing to a safer treatment delivery.

This review will consider interventional and observational studies that report serious adverse events following lumbopelvic spinal mobilization or manipulation experienced by people of any age. Examples of serious adverse events include disc herniation, cauda equina syndrome, and vertebral fracture.

MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Pubmed, The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews/Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Index to Chiropractic Literature (ICL) databases will be searched as well as OpenGrey and ProQuest. Two independent reviewers will screen titles and abstracts of identified references as well as the full-text of identified studies, and extract data following a standardized data extraction form. Data will be summarized, categorized, and a comprehensive narrative summary will be presented.

PROSPERO (CRD42019122339).

PROSPERO (CRD42019122339).

This review aims to identify support delivered to informal carers of older people making the transition into residential aged care, and to examine which specific outcome measures were used in the evaluation of the support provided.

Little support is provided to informal carers of newly admitted aged care residents, both during the admission process and in the subsequent months. Mapping of the support delivered to informal carers of those admitted to a residential aged care facility is needed.

We will include any form of support (eg, financial, psychological, social) provided to informal carers of people making the transition to residential aged care, from the time a decision is made to proceed with admission, up to 12 months post-admission.

We will search peer-reviewed literature in English from 2000 to the present from key databases (ie, MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, JBI Evidence Synthesis, PsycINFO, Embase, and Scopus). Additionally, gray literature will be searched through databases (eg, Googlach.

This systematic scoping review will describe the use of qualitative methods in implementation research in health.

Implementation science is an expanding field of study that investigates the integration of evidence-based practices into real world settings. Qualitative methods are useful for providing an in-depth understanding of implementation strategies and outcomes from the perspectives of stakeholders such as policy makers, health practitioners, and individuals targeted by health interventions. Qualitative research methods are increasingly used in implementation research. A synthesis of the applications of qualitative methods is lacking, although it is critical for understanding how qualitative methods have been used to date and identifying areas for improvement.

The review will include implementation research studies that collect primary data using one or more qualitative methods, alone or with quantitative methods. Studies must assess implementation research issues in health but will not be restrictuctured and systematic method with categories for descriptive characteristics of studies, health topics, qualitative methods for data collection and analysis, implementation science outcomes and issues explored, and implementation science frameworks applied.

We aim to identify relevant studies from 2000 to 2020 regarding methanol poisoning outbreaks and map the existing literature with a focus on the epidemiology and global burden of disease.

Methanol poisoning occurs in individuals or as an outbreak. Illicit productions are responsible for most methanol poisoning outbreaks; however, there are some occupational, suicidal, and homicidal incidences as well. In methanol poisoning outbreaks, medical facilities get overwhelmed quickly. The current WHO fact sheet dates back to 2014 and there have been no updates since. Based on our preliminary search, it seems that the course of methanol outbreaks has changed.

The study will include peer-reviewed articles and gray papers that focus on epidemiology of methanol poisoning outbreaks. This review will consider all methanol poisoning outbreak victims without any limitation in geographical, social, cultural, or gender-based demographics.

A three-step search strategy will be used. First, an initial search will be done tion. Disagreements will be resolved by a senior author. Extracted data will be tabulated and mapped. Quantitative data will be reported using descriptive numerical summary analysis.

The aim of this review is to critically appraise and summarize the quality of the measurement properties of all versions of the Stroke Specific Quality of Life Scale (SS-QOL) version 2.0.

The Stroke Specific Quality of Life Scale version 2.0 was developed as a comprehensive measure in assessing the quality of life of stroke survivors. The shortened version and cross-culturally translated versions are further developed in different countries. A systematic review will clarify the levels of reliability and validity of all versions.

The population of interest for this review will include adult stroke survivors of either sex diagnosed with a stroke (ischemic or hemorrhagic) who have no other comorbidities affecting their quality of life. The SS-QOL version 2.0 will be the specific instrument of interest, and the quality of life of stroke survivors will be the construct of interest in this review. The measures of reliability, validity, and responsiveness will be assessed as outcomes. Only the studies evaluating the reliability, validity, and responsiveness of all versions of the SS-QOL 2.0 will be included in the review.

A literature search will be conducted for published studies in MEDLINE and Embase, and unpublished data in Google Scholar and ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. After a three-step search strategy, study selection will be done by two reviewers independently. Then, the COnsensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) methodology will be applied for assessment of methodological quality, data extraction, and synthesis.

PROSPERO CRD42020211727.

PROSPERO CRD42020211727.

Heart transplantation (HTx) surgically transects all connections to the heart, including the autonomic nerves. We prospectively examined signs, timing and consequences of early sympathetic and parasympathetic sinoatrial reinnervation, as well as explored indirect evidence of afferent cardiopulmonary reinnervation.

Fifty HTx recipients were assessed at 2.5, 6 and 12 months after HTx. For comparison, 50 healthy controls were examined once. Continuous, noninvasive recordings of hemodynamic variables and heart rate variability indices were carried out at supine rest, 0.2 Hz controlled breathing, 60 degrees head-up-tilt, during the Valsalva maneuver and during handgrip isometric exercise.

In HTx recipients, supine low-frequency heart rate variability gradually increased; supine high-frequency variability did not change; heart rate variability indices during controlled breathing remained unaltered; heart rate responses during tilt and isometric exercise gradually increased; the tachycardia response during Val reinnervation of cardiopulmonary low-pressure baroreceptors emerged at 12 months. Better sympathetic sinoatrial control improved heart rate responsiveness to orthostatic challenge and isometric exercise, as well as heart rate buffering of blood pressure fluctuations.

There is no consensus guidance on when to reinitiate Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) prophylaxis in solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients at increased risk. The 2019 American Society of Transplantation Infectious Diseases Community of Practice (AST IDCOP) guidelines suggested to continue or reinstitute PJP prophylaxis in those receiving intensified immunosuppression for graft rejection, CMV infection, higher dose of corticosteroids, or prolonged neutropenia.

A literature search was conducted evaluating all literature from existence through April 22, 2020 using MEDLINE and EMBASE. (PROSPERO CRD42019134204) RESULTS A total of 30 studies with 413 276 SOT recipients were included. The following factors were associated with PJP development acute rejection (pooled odds ratio (pOR) = 2.35 (1.69, 3.26), study heterogeneity index (I)= 23.4%), cytomegalovirus (CMV)-related illnesses (pOR = 3.14 (2.30, 4.29), I=48%), absolute lymphocyte count < 500 cells/mm (pOR = 6.29[3.56, 11.13], I 0%), BK-related diseases (pOR = 2.59[1.22, 5.49], I 0%), HLA mismatch ≥ 3 (pOR = 1.83 [1.06, 3.17], I= 0%), rituximab use (pOR =3.03 (1.82, 5.04); I =0%) and polyclonal antibodies use for rejection (pOR = 3.92 [1.87, 8.19], I= 0%). On the other hand, sex, CMV mismatch, interleukin-2 inhibitors, corticosteroids for rejection, and plasmapheresis were not associated with developing PJP.

PJP prophylaxis should be considered in SOT recipients with lymphopenia, BK-related infections and rituximab exposure in addition to the previously mentioned risk factors in the AST IDCOP guidelines.

PJP prophylaxis should be considered in SOT recipients with lymphopenia, BK-related infections and rituximab exposure in addition to the previously mentioned risk factors in the AST IDCOP guidelines.

Intraoperative fluid management may affect outcome after kidney transplantation. However, the amount and type of fluid administered, and monitoring techniques vary greatly between institutions and there are limited prospective randomized trials and meta-analyses to guide fluid management in kidney transplant recipients.

Members of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) committee on transplantation reviewed the current literature on the amount and type of fluids (albumin, starches, 0.9% saline and balanced crystalloid solutions) administered and the different monitors used to assess fluid status, resulting in this consensus statement with recommendations based on the best available evidence.

Review of the current literature suggests that starch solutions are associated with increased risk of renal injury in randomized trials and should be avoided in kidney donors and recipients. There is no evidence supporting the routine use of albumin solutions in kidney transplants. Balanced crystalloid solutions such as Lactated Ringer are associated with less acidosis and may lead to less hyperkalemia than 0.

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