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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Macroergonomics to Understand Factors Impacting Patient Care During Electronic Health Record Downtime

Larsen, Ethan 18 September 2018 (has links)
Through significant federal investment and incentives, Electronic Health Records have become ubiquitous in modern hospitals. Over the past decade, these computer support systems have provided healthcare operations with new safety nets, and efficiency increases, but also introduce new problems when they suddenly go offline. These downtime events are chaotic and dangerous for patients. With the safety systems clinicians have become accustomed to offline, patients are at risk from errors and delays. This work applies the Macroergonomic methodology to facilitate an exploratory study into the issues related to patient care during downtime events. This work uses data from existing sources within the hospital, such as the electronic health record itself. Data collection mechanisms included interviews, downtime paper reviews, and workplace observations. The triangulation of data collection mechanisms facilitated a thorough exploration of the issues of downtime. The Macroergonomic Analysis and Design (MEAD) methodology was used to guide the analysis of the data, and identify variances and shifts in responsibility due to downtime. The analysis of the data supports and informs developing potential intervention strategies to enable hospitals to better cope with downtime events. Within MEAD, the assembled data is used to inform the creation of a simulation model which was used to test the efficacy of the intervention strategies. The results of the simulation testing are used to determine the specific parameters of the intervention suggestions as they relate to the target hospitals. The primary contributions of this work are an exploratory study of electronic health record downtime and impacts to patient safety, and an adaptation of the Macroergonomic Analysis and Design methodology, employing multiple data collection methods and a high-fidelity simulation model. The methodology is intended to guide future research into the downtime issue, and the direct findings can inform the creation of better downtime contingency strategies for the target hospitals, and possibly to offer some generalizability for all hospitals. / Ph. D. / Hospitals experience periodic outages of their computerized work support systems from a variety of causes. These outages can range from partial communication and or access restrictions to total shutdown of all computer systems. Hospitals operating during a computerized outage or downtime are potentially unable to access computerized records, procedures and conduct patient care activities which are facilitated by computerized systems. Hospitals are in need of a means to cope with the complications of downtime and the loss of computerized support systems without risking patient care. This dissertation assesses downtime preparedness and planning through the application of Macroergonomics which has incorporated discrete event simulation. The results provide a further understanding of downtime risks and deficiencies in current planning approaches. The study enhances the application of Macroergonomics and demonstrates the value of discrete event simulation as a tool to aid in Macroergonomic evaluations. Based on the Macroergonomic Analysis and Design method, downtime improvement strategies are developed and tested, demonstrating their potential efficacy over baseline. Through this dissertation, the deficiencies in current contingency plans are examined and exposed and further the application of Macroergonomics in healthcare.
32

The role of CCL25 and CCR9 in intestinal inflammation

Wendt, Emily Rose January 2013 (has links)
Leukocyte extravasation is mediated in part by tissue specific chemotactic cytokines (chemokines) and specific chemokine receptors expressed on the surface of circulating cells. C-C chemokine ligand CCL25 is expressed exclusively in the intestine and thymus and mediates chemotaxis by cells expressing receptor CCR9. This chemokine and receptor pair may be relevant in the pathogenesis of intestinal inflammation, in diseases such as Crohn’s disease (CD) and coeliac disease. In this thesis I investigated CCR9 expression in situ, in tissues affected by intestinal inflammation, and also examined the effects of CCR9 antagonist treatment in patients. In vitro I investigated CCR9 function using human peripheral blood T cells enriched for CCR9 by cell sorting or all-trans retinoic acid treatment. Using tissues collected as part of a clinical trial in CD testing CCR9 antagonist, CCX282-B, I investigated ways of measuring if treatment reduced the number of CCR9 expressing cells in the intestinal mucosa. However, in situ staining for CCR9 by immunohistochemistry was unsuccessful, and in this thesis, I explored reasons why this might be the case. Treatment with CCX282-B did however, show a tendency to reduce T cell density in the intestinal mucosa, although results were highly variable between individuals. In an examination of human CCR9 function in vitro I demonstrate for the first time that CCL25 stimulates CCR9 surface internalization. These data clarify the observation that CCR9 staining by IHC produces poor results in tissues where ligand is abundant, such as the intestine and thymus. I describe a novel technique for measuring calcium flux in two populations simultaneously by flow cytometry, which confirmed that in a heterogeneous population of cells, only CCR9 expressing cells respond to CCL25 by calcium flux. Variability in clinical trials is partly created by the use of concomitant medications, and in CD, corticosteroids are widely used. For the first time I show that glucocorticoids (GC) impair CCR9 mediated chemotaxis, calcium flux and intracellular signalling without changes to CCR9 mRNA and surface protein expression. Reduced CCR9 mediated signalling was accompanied by an enhanced expression and function of co-expressed CXCR4, demonstrating that the effects of GC were receptor-specific and not mediated by non-specific toxicity or inhibition of cell signalling. In a second study CCX282-B was tested in patients with coeliac disease, and in this trial, there was no reported concomitant use of GCs. It was confirmed that dietary gluten stimulates significant T cell recruitment to the intestinal mucosa with a pronounced accumulation of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) and a rise in the frequency of FoxP3 expressing cells. Patients on CCX282-B had lower IEL counts, and an equivalent proportion of FoxP3 expressing T cells, suggesting that CCR9 blockade restricted the recruitment of effector T cell subsets. This thesis confirms that the accumulation of T cells is central to inflammation in the intestine and that modulating chemokine receptor function may affect this. Furthermore, this thesis demonstrates that the function of CCR9 is suppressed by GCs, which are widely used therapeutically and therefore could identify a novel mechanistic basis for their activity in CD.
33

Pathogen identification in lower respiratory tract infection

Wrightson, John M. January 2014 (has links)
Treatment of lower respiratory tract infection (pneumonia and pleural infection) relies on the use of empirical broad spectrum antibiotics, primarily because reliable pathogen identification occurs infrequently. Another consequence of poor rates of pathogen identification is that our understanding of the microbiology of these infections is incomplete. This thesis addresses some of these issues by combining the acquisition of high quality lower respiratory tract samples, free from nasooropharyngeal contamination, with novel molecular microbiological techniques in an attempt to increase rates of pathogen identification. Four main areas are examined: (i) The role of so-called ‘atypical pneumonia’ bacteria in causing pleural infection. These pathogens have been previously identified in the pleural space infrequently and routine culture usually fails to isolate such bacteria. High sensitivity nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a culture-independent technique which is used to undertake a systematic evaluation for these pathogens in pleural infection samples. (ii) The role of Pneumocystis jirovecii in pleural infection, either as a co-infecting pathogen or in monomicrobial infection. This fungus causes severe pneumonia, particularly in the immunosuppressed, but is increasingly recognised as a co-pathogen in community-acquired pneumonia, and is frequently isolated in the upper and lower respiratory tract in health. A high sensitivity real-time PCR assay is used to examine for this fungus. (iii) Ultra-deep sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene is used to perform a comprehensive microbial survey in samples taken from the multi-centre MIST2 study of pleural infection. The techniques employed allow analysis of polymicrobial samples and give very high taxonomic resolution, whilst incorporating methods to control for potential contamination. Further, these techniques provide confirmation of the results from the ‘atypical’ bacteria nested PCR study. (iv) Bedside ultrasound-guided percutaneous transthoracic needle aspiration (TNA) of consolidated lung is undertaken in patients with pneumonia, as part of the PIPAP study. An evaluation is undertaken of the efficacy and acceptability of TNA. Aspirate samples acquired are also processed using ultra-deep sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. Other samples obtained as part of the PIPAP study, such as ‘control’ lung aspirates and ‘control’ pleural fluid samples, are similarly processed to enable calculation of sensitivity and specificity of the sequencing methodology.
34

Staging and tumor biological mechanisms of lymph node metastasis in invasive urinary bladder cancer

Aljabery, Firas January 2017 (has links)
Aim: To study the possibility of detecting lymph node metastasis in locally advanced urinary bladder cancer (UBC) treated with radical cystectomy (RC) by using preoperative positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) and peroperative sentinel node biopsy (SNB) technique. We also investigate the clinical significance of macrophage traits expression by cancer cells, M2-macrophage infiltration (MI) in tumor stroma and the immunohistochemical expression of biomarkers in cancer cells in relation to clinicopathologic data. Patients and Methods: We studied prospectively 122 patients with UBC, pathological stage pT1–pT4 treated with RC and pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND) during 2005–2011 at the Department of Urology, Linköping University Hospital. In the first study, we compared the results of preoperative PET/CT and conventional CT with the findings of postoperative histopathological evaluation of lymph nodes (LNs). In the second study we investigated the value of SNB technique for detecting pathological LNs during RC in patients with UBC. W also examined the significance of the primary tumor location in the bladder in predicting the site of LN metastases, and the prognostic significance of lympho-vascular invasion (LVI) and lymph node metastasis density (LNMD) on survival. In the third study, we investigate the clinical significance of macrophage infiltration (MI) in tumor stroma and macrophage-traits expression by tumor cells. In the fourth study, we investigate the cell cycle suppression proteins p53, p21, pRb, p16, p14 ARF as well as tumors proliferative protein Ki67 and DNA repair protein ERCC1 expression in cancer cells. The results were compared with clinical and pathological characteristics and outcome. Results: Prior to RC, PET/CT was used to detect LN metastasis in 54 patients. PET/CT had 41% sensitivity, 86% specificity, 58% PPV, and 76% NPV, whereas the corresponding figures for conventional CT were 41%, 89%, 64%, and 77%. SNB was performed during RC in 103 patients. A median number of 29 (range 7–68) nodes per patient were examined. SNs were detected in 83 out of 103 patients (81%). The sensitivity and specificity for detecting metastatic disease by SNB varied among LN stations, with average values of 67% -90%. LNMD or ≥8% and LVI were significantly related to shorter survival. In 103 patients, MI was high in 33% of cases, while moderate and low infiltration occurred in 42% and 25% of tumors respectively. Patients with tumors containing high and moderate compared to low MI had low rate of LN metastases (P=0.06) and improved survival (P=0.06), although not at significant level. The expression of different tumor suppression proteins was altered in 47-91% of the patients. There were no significant association between cancer specific survival (CSS) and any of the studied biomarkers. In case of altered p14ARF, ERCC1 or p21, CSS was low in case of low p53 immunostaining but increased in case of p53 accumulation, although not at a significant level, indicating a possible protective effect of p53 accumulation in these cases. Conclusion: PET/ CT provided no improvement over conventional CT in detection and localization of regional LN metastases in bladder cancer. It is possible to detect the SN but the technique is not a reliable for perioperative localization of LN metastases; however, LVI and LNMD at a cut-off level of 8% had significant prognostic values. MI in the tumor microenvironment but not CD163 expression in tumor cells seems to be synergistic with the immune response against urinary bladder cancer. Our results further indicate that altered p53 might have protective effect on survival in case of altered p14ARF, p21, or ERCC1 indicating an interaction between these biomarkers.
35

Response to neoadjuvant treatment in rectal cancer surgery

Loftås, Per January 2016 (has links)
Rectal cancer is one of the three most common malignancies in Sweden with an annual incidence of about 2000 cases. Current treatment consists of surgical resection of the rectum including the loco-regional lymph nodes in the mesorectum. In advanced cases, neoadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy (CRT) prior to the operative treatment reduces local recurrences and enables surgery. The neoadjuvant treatment can also eradicate the tumour completely, i.e. complete response. This research project was designed to investigate the effects of preoperative radiotherapy/ CRT and analyze methods to predict response to CRT. Study I investigated the expression of the FXYD-3 protein with immunohistochemistry in rectal cancer, with or without preoperative radiotherapy. The results from the total cohort showed that, strong FXYD-3 expression was correlated to infiltrative tumour growth (p = 0.02). In the radiotherapy group, strong FXYD-3 expression was related to an unfavourable prognosis (p = 0.02). Tumours with strong FXYD-3 expression had less tumour necrosis (p = 0.02) after radiotherapy. FXYD-3 expression in the primary tumour was increased compared to normal mucosa (p=0.008). We concluded that FXYD-3 expression was a prognostic factor in patients receiving preoperative radiotherapy for rectal cancer. Study II investigated FXYD-3 expression in tumours that developed local recurrences following surgery and compared this with expression in tumours that did not develop local recurrences. There was no difference in the expression of FXYD-3 between the group that developed local recurrences and the group that did not develop local recurrences. There was no difference in survival between those with strong or weak FXYD-3 expression. We concluded that this study could not confirm the findings from study 1 i.e. that FXYD-3 expression has prognostic significance in rectal cancer. Study III was a register-based study on the incidence and effects of complete response to neoadjuvant treatment. Eight per cent of the patients with adequate CRT to achieve complete response also had a complete histological response of the luminal tumor in the resected bowel. Sixteen per cent of that group had remaining lymph node metastases in the operative specimen. Chemotherapy together with radiotherapy doubled the chance of complete response in the luminal tumour. Patients with remaining lymph node metastases had a lower survival rate compared to those without. We concluded that residual nodal involvement after neoadjuvant treatment was an important factor for reduced survival after complete response in the luminal tumour. Study IV followed up the results from the previous study by re-evaluating magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)- images in patients with complete tumour response. Two experienced MRI radiologists performed blinded re-staging of post CRT MR- images from patients with complete response in the luminal tumour. One group with lymph node metastases and another one without were studied and the results compared with the pathology reports. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predicted values for correct staging of positive lymph nodes was 37%, 84%, 70% and 57%. The size of the largest lymph node (4.5 mm, p=0.04) seemed to indicate presence of a tumour positive lymph node. We concluded that MRI couldn’t correctly stage patients for lymph node metastases in patients with complete response to CRT in the luminal tumour.
36

Evaluation of strain circulation and the epidemiology of enteric fever caused

Karkey, Abhilasha January 2012 (has links)
Enteric fever caused by Salmonella enterica serovars Typhi and Paratyphi A are a major public health concern in Kathmandu. The aim of this thesis was to identify and assess the population most at risk by investigating epidemiologic trends of enteric fever within a subset population of Kathmandu. Therefore,the burden and incidence of enteric fever within the study population and the seasonal and gender distribution of enteric fever was assessed. Considerable burden of enteric fever, unrelated to population density, correlating with the seasonal fluctuations in rainfall was observed. This thesis also aimed to improve the understanding of enteric fever transmission by identifying probable transmission routes,hence various water and food samples were analysed and the extent of faecal contamination in them was determined. S. Typhi isolates were sequenced and genotyped and combined with GPS data to longitudinally study the local distribution and infer transmission of this human restricted bacterial pathogen. Extensive clustering of typhoid independent of population size and density and existence of an extensive range of genotypes within typhoid clusters including individual households with multiple cases was observed. These observations predict that indirect transmission had an overwhelming contribution for disease persistence, potentially through contaminated water. Consistent with this hypothesis, S. Typhi and S. Paratyphi A were detected in water supplies and it was observed that typhoid was spatially associated with public water sources and low elevation. A concurrent case-control study was also conducted which allowed for the determination of risk factors in the population at risk. These studies imply that resources should be allocated toward controlling the most important vectors of enteric fever, including food sold by vendors, chlorination of drinking water, construction of proper water distribution and sewage networks,vaccination campaigns and hygiene education.
37

Study of Platelet-mediated clumping adhesion phenotypes in Plasmodium falciparum malaria

Onyambu, Frank Gekara January 2015 (has links)
Platelet-mediated clumping of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes (IEs) is a common property of field isolates associated with severe disease (Pain, Ferguson et al. 2001). Platelet receptors CD36 (Pain, Ferguson et al. 2001), P-Selectin (Wassmer, Taylor et al. 2008) and gC1qR (Biswas, Hafiz et al. 2007) mediate clumping. To characterize the molecular specificities of the clumping phenotype, I cloned clumping parasite line IT/C10 by limiting dilution. I characterized var gene expression in the IT/C10 clones using generic primers for the DBL tag region (Bull, Berriman et al. 2005). Clumping assays were conducted in the presence of specific reagents to delineate host factors hypothesized to contribute to development of the clumping phenotype. Finally, I conducted a clinical study with isolates from children with malaria in Kilifi, Kenya. This study shows that in parasite line IT/C10, platelet-mediated clumping is associated with Itvar30 suggesting a prominent role for the PfEMP-1 encoded by this var gene in development of platelet-mediated clumping. For IT/C10 parasites, platelet activation appears to be involved in platelet-mediated clumping. Platelet P-Selectin appears to mediate clumping using lectin-dependent interactions. To further elucidate the mechanisms that mediate clumping by host platelets, I have used a panel of platelet antagonists to delineate specific platelet activation pathways. Our results show that platelet activation plays an important role in platelet-mediated clumping. Finally, in this study, platelet-mediated clumping was associated with parasitaemia, but not with disease severity.
38

The role of Notch and GATA3 in postnatal and adult haematopoiesis

Duarte, Sara January 2011 (has links)
The role of Notch in cell fate determination and lineage restriction in the bone marrow (BM) is controversial in the field. Recent studies have convincingly shown that Notch is dispensable for haematopoietic stem cell (HSC) regulation in adult haematopoiesis (Maillard et al., 2008). In contrast, Notch signaling has been proposed to be of importance in the regulation of BM megakaryocyte progenitor differentiation, based on dominant negative genetic approaches, identifying a potentially distinct role for Notch in adult BM haematopoiesis (Mercher et al., 2008). Here, I found that by selectively ablating the gene coding the transcription factor recombination signal-binding protein J kappa (RBP-Jk), to which all canonical Notch signaling converges, canonical Notch signaling does not mediate HSC maintenance, neither in steady state nor in conditions of stress. Furthermore, I propose, in contrast with previous studies (Mercher et al., 2008), that canonical Notch signaling plays no role in myeloerythropoiesis cell lineage commitment in the BM. My data also show that key Notch target genes are suppressed by RBP-Jk, as their expression is unaffected in Notch1-deficient BM progenitors, while target genes are upregulated in Rbp-Jk-deleted megakaryocyte and erythroid progenitors. This establishes for the first time in mammalian cells in vivo, that Notch target genes are kept in a suppressed state by RBP-Jk, potentially restricting T cell commitment to the thymus and not to the BM, at the expense of myeloerythropoiesis. Notch signaling and GATA3 are two master regulators in T cell commitment (Han et al., 2002; Ho et al., 2009; Pui et al., 1999; Radtke et al., 1999; Zhu et al., 2004). However, although very well established as being involved in the thymic stages of T cell restriction, there is little evidence of Notch and GATA3 being involved in the migration of a thymus settling progenitor (TSP) from the BM to the thymus or in the establishment of the earliest thymic progenitor (ETP) in the thymus. From this thesis work, I conclude that Notch signaling is essential for the emergence of ETPs in the thymus in a NOTCH1-independent manner. Moreover, I demonstrate, as supported by a very recent published study (Hosoya et al., 2009), that GATA3 is important for the development of the earliest T cell progenitor. GATA1 and GATA2 mediate haematopoietic stem cell maintenance in the BM. GATA1 is required for erythropoiesis, megakaryocytes and eosinophils while GATA2 is important for the proliferation and survival of HSCs. In contrast, a role for GATA3 in the BM has never been established. By using a Gata3-conditional knockout mouse model, I demonstrate that GATA3 is dispensable for HSC maintenance in steady state and following active haematopoietic regeneration as well as for HSC self-renewal in the BM.
39

Enhancing the efficacy of viral vector blood-stage malaria vaccines

Forbes, Emily K. January 2011 (has links)
Replication-deficient adenovirus (Ad) and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) vectors expressing single Plasmodium falciparum antigens can induce potent T cell and antibody responses and have entered clinical testing using a heterologous prime-boost immunisation approach (Ad_MVA). This thesis describes a number of pre-clinical approaches aimed at enhancing the efficacy of these viral vectored vaccines targeting the blood-stage of malaria. First, the development of a highly efficacious malaria vaccine is likely to require a multi-antigen and/or multi-stage subunit vaccine. The utility of an Ad_MVA immunisation regime combining vaccines expressing the 42kDa C-terminus of the blood- stage antigen merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP142) and the pre-erythrocytic antigen circumsporozoite protein (CSP) in the P. yoelii mouse model was investigated. It was found that vaccine co- administration leads to maintained antibody responses and efficacy against blood-stage infection, but reduced secondary CD8+ T cell responses and efficacy against liver-stage infection. CD8+ T cell interference can be minimised by co-administering the MVA vaccines at separate sites, resulting in enhanced liver-stage efficacy. The mechanisms of CD8+ T cell interference were explored. Second, Ad_MVA regimes expressing blood-stage antigens that can protect against P. chabaudi and P. yoelii blood-stage infection were tested against P. berghei, but did not confer protection. Similarly, IgG from rabbits immunised against P. falciparum MSP1 (PfMSP1) could not protect mice from a chimeric P. berghei parasite expressing PfMSP1. Third, two molecular adjuvants, the C4bp α-chain oligomerisation domain (IMX108/313) and the Fc fragment of murine IgG2a, were tested for their ability to enhance immunogenicity of recombinant adenoviruses when fused at the C-terminus of a blood-stage antigen. IMX108/313 was found to adjuvant T cell responses of small (< 80kDa) antigens and this was associated with antigen oligomerisation. However, the Fc fragment did not adjuvant responses. Finally, it was found that using a strong early promoter to drive antigen expression enhances the immunogenicity of single administration MVA vaccines, but that this did not enhance post-boost immunogenicity in an Ad_MVA regime.
40

Probing the molecular basis of melanopsin induced light sensitivity

Vachtsevanos, Athanasios January 2012 (has links)
It has been demonstrated that retinal photoreception among mammals extends beyond rods and cones to include a small number of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (pRGCs), which are capable of responding to light due to expression of the melanopsin (OPN4) photopigment. OPN4 may have therapeutic potential if ectopically expressed in the degenerate retina in cases where photoreceptors are lost, but the other molecules involved in this light induced transduction cascade are less well characterized. Therefore I sought to probe further the mechanism of OPN4 mediated light sensitivity by siRNA mediated knock down of specific molecules in two mice models in which complete loss of rods and cones renders them almost exclusively dependent on the OPN4 pathway for light sensitivity. I generated siRNA probes against the long transcript variant of murine Opn4 mRNA and first tested these probes on the murine Neuro2A (N2a) cell line, before assessing effects in C3H/HeN rd and rodless/coneless rd/rd cl mice. siRNA was injected intravitreally into one eye and pupillometry was assessed, combined with molecular analyses at various timepoints. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis in N2a cells confirmed Opn4 knockdown and immunolabelling techniques identified >85% silencing with siRNA. Pupil responses in the rd and rd/rd cl mice were inhibited by the siRNA injections in vivo which confirmed the functional effect of Opn4 silencing detected by molecular analysis. I therefore present a novel reproducible in vivo model in which siRNA induced silencing of the melanopsin pathway can be assessed by pupillometry and compared to levels of mRNA and protein at specific timepoints. Probes against other putative candidate genes, such as TRPC3, may unravel the molecular interactions of this pathway. This may help in future to induce light sensitivity in other retinal neurons in patients who are completely blind from photoreceptor loss.

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