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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.
11

Complementary, Alternative, and Integrative Medicine, Natural Health Products, and Medical Cannabis: Patient Preference and Prevalence of Use, Quality of Patient Health Information, and Safety and Effectiveness Concerns

Ng, Jeremy Yongwen January 2021 (has links)
The thesis is comprised of three separate studies that each relate to one of the aforementioned therapy types: complementary, alternative, and integrative medicine (CAIM), natural health products (NHPs), and medical cannabis. Parallels can be drawn across these therapy types in general including patient preference and prevalence of use, quality of patient health information, and safety and effectiveness concerns. Knowledge of these parallels both informed the development of these three studies and emerged across findings. Chapter 1 provides a comprehensive introduction to these parallels in the context of CAIM, NHPs, and medical cannabis. Chapter 2 comprises a cross-sectional survey determining NHP use disclosure to primary care physicians among patients attending a Canadian naturopathic clinic. Chapter 3 comprises a qualitative interview study identifying attitudes towards medical cannabis among family physicians practicing in Ontario, Canada. Chapter 4 comprises a sentiment analysis of Twitter data to understand how CAIM is mentioned during the COVID-19 pandemic. Lastly, chapter 5 serves as the conclusion of this thesis, and summarizes the most important findings, addresses study strengths and limitations, and discusses future directions from this work. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
12

Les produits de santé naturels : les perceptions, les pratiques de consultation et les besoins de formation de nutritionnistes du Québec

Dussault, Valérie 12 1900 (has links)
Contexte. Les produits de santé naturels (PSN) suscitent de plus en plus d’intérêt au sein de la population. Les professionnels de la santé, dont les nutritionnistes, doivent être à l’affût de cette tendance afin de conseiller les utilisateurs et de limiter les risques liés à leur utilisation. Objectif. Explorer l’expérience, les perceptions et les besoins de formation des nutritionnistes du Québec à l’égard des PSN. Méthodes. Un sondage électronique a été envoyé à tous les membres de l’Ordre professionnel des diététistes du Québec via Fluid Survey. Les questions visaient à identifier les expériences, les attitudes à l’égard des PSN et de leur clientèle qui en consomme, les sources d’informations utilisées dans leurs consultations et d’identifier les besoins de formations en relation avec les PSN. Résultats. Au total, 295 nutritionnistes ont complété le questionnaire. Parmi ceux-ci, 93 % ont déjà reçu des questions portant sur les PSN. Environ 91 % ont déclaré consommer ou avoir déjà consommé un PSN et, au moins 94 % ont affirmé avoir recommandé un PSN. Aussi, 95 % de l’échantillon désiraient davantage d’informations sur les PSN. Enfin, ils ont une perception positive quant à leur rôle dans ce dossier, puisque 77 % de l’échantillon ont indiqué que le nutritionniste devrait être une source d’informations sur les PSN. Conclusion. Les grands constats de notre étude révèlent que le rôle des nutritionnistes du Québec en relation avec les PSN n’est pas clairement défini. Ils ont besoin de formation sur les PSN afin d’être outillés pour conseiller la population et, ainsi, leur ouvrir un nouveau champ d’expertise. / Background. Natural Health Products (NHPs) are becoming an increasing interest within the population. Health professionals, including nutritionists, must keep up to date with this trend in order to properly advise users and limit the risks associated with their use. Objective. Explore Quebec’s nutritionist’s experiences, perceptions and their training needs about NHPs. Methods. An electronic survey was administered to members of the Professional Order of Dietitians of Quebec through Fluid Survey. The 21 questions were designed to identify personal experiences, attitudes towards NHPs and towards their clientele that consume them, identify which sources of information they rely on and their training needs. Results. A total of 295 nutritionists completed the questionnaire. Among these, 93 % have already received questions on NHPs. Approximately 91 % of nutritionists admitted using or having used NHPs and at least 94 % said they recommended them. Also, 95 % of the sample would like to receive more information on NHPs. Finally, they have a positive perception as to their role regarding this subject, since 77 % indicated that the nutritionist should be a reliable source of information for NHPs. Conclusion. The major findings of our study are that Quebec’s nutritionists’ roles related to NHPs are not clearly defined. They need training on NHPs in order to be able to advise the population and, thus, form a new field of expertise for nutritionists.
13

User-perceived effectiveness and safety of paediatric complementary and alternative medicines : perspectives from international, British and local Scottish outcomes studies

Ndu, Okechukwu January 2015 (has links)
In the light of the current patient-centred approach to healthcare delivery, this research investigated the effectiveness and safety of paediatric complementary and alternative medicines (CAMs) from the users' perspective in order to generate suitable data to inform healthcare policy and planning. The research was in three parts: a systematic review (SR), a database analysis and a survey. The SR of papers published on the topic from 2000 to July 2011 identified 46 eligible studies conducted predominantly in the USA (14; 30%); with only 5 UK studies (11%), of which 2 were Scottish. Generally, their findings indicated a high report of positive health outcomes by CAM users, and a low report of adverse outcomes. Critical appraisal, however, highlighted the low methodological quality of most studies; with an overall quality rating of 45%, and only 9 studies (20%) possessing up to 8 of 12 quality indices. A tendency towards selective outcome reporting bias was also observed. The database research explored the suspected adverse reactions (ADRs) associated with paediatric use of natural health products (NHPs) as reported on the Yellow Card Scheme (YCS) from its inception until July 2012. The YCS data was mined to estimate the frequency and seriousness of the ADRs reported. NHPs were found to have contributed < 1% of ADR reports within the period, with paediatric subjects contributing 8.6% of NHP reports (192 reports). These profiled 332 specific ADRs, 30% of which were described as serious. Female subjects contributed marginally more ADRs than males (51.5%). Rash and other skin and subcutaneous disorders were the most common ADRs. Herb-drug combination products were found to generate the most ADRs, with the senna-piperazine combination being the most frequently reported (89 ADRs). The product most associated with fatalities was soybean oil (5 reports). Generally, however, NHP-related ADRs reported for paediatric subjects in the YCS were found to be relatively few, and of low severity (6%) and fatality (2%); with over 75% resolution, and mostly within 3 days (68%). The survey component of the research was a bi-modal analytic cross-sectional survey of parents in Aberdeen, and aimed to determine the nature and demography of the use and user-reported outcomes of CAM among children in Aberdeen. Consenting parents recruited from the general population were invited to complete online or paper versions of a validated questionnaire. 212 parents of 391 children completed the survey, of which 143 reported CAM use in their children (67.5%). Participants were mainly mothers (73.6%); Caucasian (84.4%); aged 30-44 years (59.7%); and educated beyond secondary level (85.3%). 213 children had ever used CAM, 64.3% of which had always used CAM; while 21.1% had only used CAM within the last 12 months, and 14.6% had used it only previously. 53.1% of child CAM users were female. Parental self CAM use was found to be the strongest predictor of paediatric CAM use. 102 of the 123 parents that rated their children's CAM use (82.9%) perceived them as helpful; 76 of which said they helped 'a lot'. Finding personal CAM use helpful was the only factor found to significantly predict perceived effectiveness for paediatric CAM use. 9 parents reported adverse outcomes, mainly allergic skin reactions. In all, this research featured the first SR of user-perceived effectiveness and safety outcomes of paediatric CAMs; the first analysis of NHP-associated ADR reports on the YCS; and the first population-based Scottish study of paediatric CAM use. A triangulation of the results from these three strands validated the key finding that CAM is used widely among children, with high perceived effectiveness and safety outcomes. The implications of this finding for healthcare policy and planning were highlighted.
14

Effects of Selected Natural Health Products on Drug Metabolism: Implications for Pharmacovigilance

Liu, Rui 10 March 2011 (has links)
Seventeen Cree anti-diabetic herbal medicines and eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been examined for their potential to cause interactions with drugs, which is considered as a major reason for adverse drug effects. Specifically, the effect of these natural health products was examined on major Phase I drug metabolism enzymes including cytochrome P450, human carboxylesterase-1 and flavin-containing monooxygenases. Several of these natural health products have the potential to cause adverse drug effect through the inhibition of major drug metabolism enzymes. The results indicated that 7 Cree medicines plant extracts inhibited CYP3A4 activity, and 3 of them have been proven to cause potent mechanism-based inactivation of CYP3A4. Seven of eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been identified as strong CYP3A4 inhibitors; the ethanol extract of Goji has identified as a potent inhibitor for CYP2C9 and 2C19. Goji juice showed universal inhibitory effects on most of the tested enzymes except flavin-containing monooxygenases 3.
15

Effects of Selected Natural Health Products on Drug Metabolism: Implications for Pharmacovigilance

Liu, Rui 10 March 2011 (has links)
Seventeen Cree anti-diabetic herbal medicines and eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been examined for their potential to cause interactions with drugs, which is considered as a major reason for adverse drug effects. Specifically, the effect of these natural health products was examined on major Phase I drug metabolism enzymes including cytochrome P450, human carboxylesterase-1 and flavin-containing monooxygenases. Several of these natural health products have the potential to cause adverse drug effect through the inhibition of major drug metabolism enzymes. The results indicated that 7 Cree medicines plant extracts inhibited CYP3A4 activity, and 3 of them have been proven to cause potent mechanism-based inactivation of CYP3A4. Seven of eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been identified as strong CYP3A4 inhibitors; the ethanol extract of Goji has identified as a potent inhibitor for CYP2C9 and 2C19. Goji juice showed universal inhibitory effects on most of the tested enzymes except flavin-containing monooxygenases 3.
16

Effects of Selected Natural Health Products on Drug Metabolism: Implications for Pharmacovigilance

Liu, Rui 10 March 2011 (has links)
Seventeen Cree anti-diabetic herbal medicines and eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been examined for their potential to cause interactions with drugs, which is considered as a major reason for adverse drug effects. Specifically, the effect of these natural health products was examined on major Phase I drug metabolism enzymes including cytochrome P450, human carboxylesterase-1 and flavin-containing monooxygenases. Several of these natural health products have the potential to cause adverse drug effect through the inhibition of major drug metabolism enzymes. The results indicated that 7 Cree medicines plant extracts inhibited CYP3A4 activity, and 3 of them have been proven to cause potent mechanism-based inactivation of CYP3A4. Seven of eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been identified as strong CYP3A4 inhibitors; the ethanol extract of Goji has identified as a potent inhibitor for CYP2C9 and 2C19. Goji juice showed universal inhibitory effects on most of the tested enzymes except flavin-containing monooxygenases 3.
17

Effects of Selected Natural Health Products on Drug Metabolism: Implications for Pharmacovigilance

Liu, Rui January 2011 (has links)
Seventeen Cree anti-diabetic herbal medicines and eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been examined for their potential to cause interactions with drugs, which is considered as a major reason for adverse drug effects. Specifically, the effect of these natural health products was examined on major Phase I drug metabolism enzymes including cytochrome P450, human carboxylesterase-1 and flavin-containing monooxygenases. Several of these natural health products have the potential to cause adverse drug effect through the inhibition of major drug metabolism enzymes. The results indicated that 7 Cree medicines plant extracts inhibited CYP3A4 activity, and 3 of them have been proven to cause potent mechanism-based inactivation of CYP3A4. Seven of eight Traditional Chinese Medicines have been identified as strong CYP3A4 inhibitors; the ethanol extract of Goji has identified as a potent inhibitor for CYP2C9 and 2C19. Goji juice showed universal inhibitory effects on most of the tested enzymes except flavin-containing monooxygenases 3.
18

Bioassay-guided antidiabetic potentials of Devil’s club (Oplopanax horridus) preparations from the traditional pharmacopeia of the Squamish and other first nations of British Columbia.

Elahmer, Nyruz 02 1900 (has links)
No description available.
19

Nutrition enrichie et nutraceutiques dans l’arthrose canine et féline : une revue systématique et méta-analyse en 2022

Barbeau-Grégoire, Maude 12 1900 (has links)
L'arthrose (OA) est l’atteinte la plus répandue chez les animaux de compagnie et se manifeste par l'apparition de douleurs chroniques et d'incapacités fonctionnelles. En l’absence de remède, des composés comme les produits de santé naturels (PSN) ont gagné en popularité. Cette revue systématique, enregistrée sur PROSPERO (CRD42021279368), avait pour objectif d'examiner les preuves d’efficacité analgésique des PSN et de diffuser correctement les conclusions sur leur potentiel thérapeutique. Quatre bases de données bibliographiques ont été consultées pour identifier les études testant leur efficacité sur l'OA canine et féline, naturelle ou induite. Après sélection des résultats de recherche, les données de qualité et d’efficacité ont été extraites à l’aide d’une grille d’évaluation originale basée sur les directives ARRIVE, CONSORT et l’outil d’évaluation CAMARADES. Ces grilles ont été préalablement validées : validation apparente, de contenu (interne / externe) et de construit (reproductibilité, répétabilité, sensibilité). Un consensus de 3 évaluateurs, de niveau d’expertise différent, était obligatoire pour chaque score attribué aux données extraites. La méta-analyse montre des preuves solides d’efficacité des suppléments et des diètes thérapeutiques enrichies d’acides gras en oméga-3 dans le traitement de l’OA, et le cannabidiol présente des preuves prometteuses. Les formulations de sulfate de glucosamine/chondroïtine ne présentent toutefois aucun intérêt et ne doivent plus être recommandées dans la prise en charge thérapeutique de cette maladie articulaire dégénérative des animaux de compagnie. Les résultats obtenus soulignent un manque évident de preuves pour supporter la recommandation d’utilisation de nombreux nutraceutiques et dénotent la nécessité de mettre en place des procédures normalisées de bonne pratique clinique pour de futurs essais. / Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common disease in pets and manifests itself as chronic pain and functional disability. In the absence of a cure, compounds such as natural health products (NHPs) have gained popularity. This systematic review, registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021279368), aimed to examine the evidence for analgesic efficacy of NHPs and to properly disseminate findings on their therapeutic potential. Four bibliographic databases were searched to identify studies testing their efficacy in natural and induced canine and feline osteoarthritis. After selection of the search results, quality and efficacy data were extracted using an original evaluation grid based on the ARRIVE and CONSORT guidelines and the CAMARADES evaluation tool. The grids were previously validated: face, content (internal/external) and construct (reproducibility, repeatability, sensitivity) validation. A consensus of three evaluators, with different levels of expertise, was required for each score assigned to the extracted data. The meta-analysis shows strong evidence of efficacy in OA for omega-3 enriched supplements and therapeutic diets, while cannabidiol shows promising evidence. Glucosamine/chondroitin sulphate formulations are of no value and should no longer be recommended for the therapeutic management of OA in pets. The results highlight a clear lack of evidence to support the recommendation for use of many nutraceuticals and indicate the need for standardised good clinical practice procedures for future trials.
20

Inhibition de l’absorption intestinale du glucose par les produits naturels issus de la pharmacopée traditionnelle des Cris de la Baie James

Nistor, Lidia Anca 08 1900 (has links)
Le diabète de type 2 et l'obésité sont des problèmes de santé majeurs et les peuples autochtones sont particulièrement à risque. Pour remédier à ce problème largement répandu dans les populations autochtones canadiennes pour qui la médication moderne n’est pas culturellement adaptée, notre équipe s’est donné comme objectif d’étudier les activités potentielles antidiabétique et anti-obésité de la pharmacopée traditionnelle des Cris de la Baie James. Le but de cette étude est de tester l’hypothèse selon laquelle certaines plantes médicinales pourraient inhiber l'absorption intestinale du glucose, une activité anti-hyperglycémique qui, par la même occasion, contribuerait à combattre l’obésité. Les extraits éthanoliques de dix-sept plantes médicinales de la forêt boréale ont été testés dans des cellules intestinales Caco-2 et comparés à l’effet d’inhibiteurs compétitifs connus, tels que la phlorizine et la phlorétine. Ces inhibiteurs sont des composés polyphénoliques qui partagent de nombreuses caractéristiques structurelles avec des constituants moléculaires de plusieurs plantes Cri. Les résultats démontrent que treize des dix-sept extraits de plantes ont inhibé de façon significative l'absorption intestinale du 3H-D-glucose. Pour valider ces effets in vivo, quatre extraits ont été administrés à des rats Wistar par gavage intragastrique (250 mg/kg) en même temps qu’un bolus de glucose (3 g/kg). Suite à ce gavage, deux de ces extraits ont restreint l’augmentation de la glycémie d'environ 40% par rapport à un contrôle sans extrait. Ces résultats indiquent qu’une inhibition compétitive de l'absorption intestinale du glucose peut être atteinte par des extraits bruts de plantes médicinales. La prise de ces plantes durant les repas aiderait à un meilleur contrôle post-prandial de la glycémie, particulièrement chez les personnes à risque. / Type II diabetes and obesity are major health problems worldwide and aboriginal peoples are particularly at risk. To address this problem in Canadian native populations for whom modern pharmaceuticals are culturally misadapted, our team is testing the traditional pharmacopeia of the James Bay Cree for anti-diabetic and anti-obesity activities. More specifically, the aim of the present study was to define the effects of traditional plants on intestinal glucose absorption, an under-appreciated anti-hyperglycaemic and anti-obesity activity. Crude ethanol extracts of seventeen Boreal forest medicinal plants were examined in the Caco-2 human enterocytic cell line and compared to the competitive classical inhibitors phlorizin and phloretin. It is worth noting that the latter compounds are polyphenols that share many structural characteristics with components of several Cree plants. Thirteen of seventeen extracts were observed to significantly inhibit uptake when administered simultaneously with 3H-deoxyglucose. Inhibition was dose-dependent and, in a few cases, even surpassed that induced by a combination of the positive controls. To validate these effects in-vivo, four plant extracts were administered by intragastric gavage at 250 mg/kg to normal rats simultaneously with a 3 g/kg bolus of glucose. This resulted in a decrease in peak glycaemia by approximately 40% for two of them. These findings indicate that competitive inhibition of facilitative intestinal glucose uptake can be achieved by crude extracts of medicinal plants. Intake of the latter with meals may help control post-prandial glycaemia and reduce caloric intake in high risk populations.

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