• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 4
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 12
  • 12
  • 12
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 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.
1

Attention and Functional Connectivity in Survivors of Childhood Brain Tumors

Fox, Michelle E. 12 May 2017 (has links)
To study potential hyperactivity and hyperconnectivity based on the latent resource hypothesis, this study assessed functional connectivity in survivors of childhood brain tumors compared to their healthy peers during an attention task using psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analyses and evaluated for a relationship with performance. Twenty-three survivors and 23 healthy controls completed a letter n-back task in the scanner. An empirically-based seed was placed in the parietal lobe, a theoretical seed was placed in the hippocampus, and a control seed was placed in the occipital lobe. Differences in both performance and functional connectivity networks from each seed emerged between groups, with some findings supporting the latent resource hypothesis and other networks showing compensatory function in survivors. Attention networks, phonological networks, and executive function networks were all found to differ between controls and survivors.
2

Evaluating long term outcomes for students with learning disabilities : does age of first services matter?

Kaye, Alyssa Diane 04 November 2011 (has links)
Within the last few decades there has been a push in the field of learning disabilities to identify students who have or who are at risk for learning disabilities as early as possible. Little to no research has been conducted on the long-term effects of age of first service provision for students with learning disabilities, however. Using multiple regression, this study will analyze data from the National Longitudinal Transition Study-2 (NLTS-2) to investigate the potential effects of age of first service provision on high school educational achievement and educational attainment in order to better understand the longer-term effects of the age of identification and age of intervention for students with learning disabilities. / text
3

Long-term outcomes of immunosuppression - naïve steroid responders following hospitalization for acute severe ulcerative colitis

Vedamurthy, Amar 20 February 2018 (has links)
INTRODUCTION: Acute severe ulcerative colitis (ASUC) is a severe complication of ulcerative colitis (UC) that is associated with significant morbidity, treatment refractoriness and need for colectomy. Patients who do not adequately respond to the initial intravenous steroid therapy receive medical rescue therapy with infliximab or cyclosporine or undergo surgery for their refractory disease. However, there is limited guidance on management of steroid responders in this setting. While it is well established that Crohn’s disease (CD) is progressive and benefits from early institution of immunosuppressive therapy, such a paradigm is less well established in UC and thresholds for therapy escalation remain poorly defined. In immunosuppression-naïve patients, whether a single hospitalization for ASUC is a sufficient threshold to escalate to immunomodulator or biologic therapy is unknown. METHODS: From a single tertiary referral center, we identified all patients with ASUC hospitalized for intravenous steroids who were immunosuppression naïve (new UC diagnosis, no therapy, or 5-aminosalicylate (5-ASA) therapy) at their index hospitalization. We excluded patients who were refractory to steroids and initiated medical rescue therapy or required surgery during the index hospitalization. Our primary exposure of interest was initiation of biologic therapy within 1 month of hospital discharge or immunomodulator therapy (thiopurine, methotrexate) within 3 months. Our primary outcomes were need for colectomy within 12 months following hospitalization. Secondary outcomes include re-hospitalization rate within 12 months and late colectomy ( between 91-365 days). RESULTS: Our study included a total of 133 immunosuppressive-naïve ASUC patients among whom 56 (42%) escalated therapy to thiopurine (93%) or biologic (7%) post-hospitalization. The median age of the cohort was 29 years (range 16 – 88 years) and 46% were male. 82 patients (62%) had pancolitis on disease distribution. 38% and 58% were noted to have moderate to severe disease on sigmoidoscopic evaluation. Thirteen patients (10%) underwent surgery by 1 year. At 12 months, there was no difference in the rate of colectomy among those with therapy escalation (13%) compared to those who did not undergo such escalation (8%, unadjusted OR= 1.69 p=0.53). This lack of difference remained robust on multivariable regression analysis and propensity score adjusted models (OR 0.90, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.18 – 4.45). There was no difference in the rates of hospitalization within 1 year (OR 2.24 95% CI 0.16 – 4.22) or in the time to colectomy between the two groups (log-rank p=0.27). CONCLUSION: Immunosuppression-naïve ASUC patients who respond to intravenous steroids remain at high risk for colectomy with 10% (13/133) receiving such surgery within 1 year. Therapy escalation was not associated with a reduction in this risk. There is an important need for larger prospective studies defining the benefit of early therapy escalation in UC, and appropriate thresholds for the same.
4

Investigating the Long-Term Outcomes of Service-Learning

Schmalz, Naomi Alexandra 10 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Anatomy Academy (AA) is a service-learning program in which pre- and current health professional students (Mentors) work in pairs to teach anatomy, physiology, and nutrition to children in the community. The purpose of this study was to investigate the short- and long-term Mentor outcomes in personal, social, civic, academic, and professional domains. Former Mentors were invited to complete a survey of Likert-style and free response questions evaluating the perceived impact of their AA experience on: teaching skills, personal and interpersonal development, civic engagement, and academic and professional development. Follow-up interviews with a subset of survey respondents were performed. The survey was completed by 219 Mentors and 17 survey respondents were interviewed. Over 50% of former Mentors reported moderate or major impact of AA participation on elements of personal and interpersonal development (e.g., selfesteem [57.6%], altruism [67.9%], communication skills [60.1%], and ability to work with others [72.6%]) and community service participation (54.2%) that endures in the years after the program. Mentors who worked with low-income or Special needs populations reported unique impacts in personal, interpersonal, and civic domains. A majority of former Mentors agreed that AA participation helped them learn practical skills (76.3%) and factual knowledge (65.4%) relevant to the their careers, with several current health professionals reported that they regularly employ teaching and interpersonal skills learned while Mentors in their roles as physicians, nurses, or physician’s assistants. A majority of former Mentors reported that AA validated their choice to either pursue a healthcare career or not (59.7%), increased their confidence in performing professional tasks (64.7%), and helped shape their professional identity (58.9%). These results indicate that a health education-based service-learning program offers undergraduate, graduate, and professional students interested in or actively pursuing a healthcare career benefits across personal, interpersonal, civic, and professional domains that support their academic progress and preparation for professional practice. This study contributes much-needed evidence of the long-term student outcomes of service-learning to the literature, with a particular focus on how the pedagogy can supplement the education and professional development of pre- and current health professional students.
5

Application outsourcing in the banking industry : ITO model

Kronawitter, Karin January 2014 (has links)
Information Technology Outsourcing (ITO) in terms of the replacement of the in-house production of IT activities by the use of third party suppliers had already started in the 1960s and has increased considerably. For 2013, the Gartner Group expected that the global ITO market would reach a volume of 288 bn US dollars. Until 2017, the market should grow on average about 5.4% yearly. Despite the rich set of experiences companies have already had with ITO, the chances of success are seen as at best 50:50. Currently, the dramatic growth of ITO is accompanied by backsourcing of formerly outsourced IT functions or reports about dissatisfaction and problems with ITO. Scientists put ITO failures or problems down to a lack of modelling of all the possible factors affecting ITO success and demand a specific ITO theory as a basis for better explaining and predicting successes and failures in an IT sourcing context. This thesis takes up this research gap. The aim of this thesis is to develop a novel ITO Model which aids organisations in planning and implementing ITO solutions by guiding them through the ITO process steps of preparation, selection, contract, transition, execution, and post-deal comprising a comprehensive picture of the weighted aspects relevant to ITO success and their interdependencies. In order to achieve this aim, the following objectives were established for this thesis: raising the topical level of scientific knowledge of the last decades about successinfluencing factors in the ITO field based on an extensive literature survey of 48 scientific articles deriving ITO success factors from empirical research work; structuring of this success factor knowledge by the development of two ITO taxonomies (taxonomy of success factors and taxonomy of success factor interdependencies); testing its practical applicability on the basis of 8 real long-running application outsourcing cases in the banking industry; further development of the success factor knowledge by identification of weightings and the temporal relevance of relevant success factors / success factor interdependencies within the ITO process. Design of the novel ITO Model based on the empirical knowledge gained by development of rules for relevant success factors and success factor interdependencies, by arrangement of these rules in temporal order within the ITO process and by assignment of these rules to four levels of environment.
6

Hippocampal Volume and its Association with Verbal Memory in Adult Survivors of Pediatric Brain Tumor

Jayakar, Reema 18 December 2013 (has links)
Verbal memory (VM) has been shown to be impacted in brain tumor (BT) survivors, but the nature of VM problems and underlying neuropathology are poorly understood and a long-term outlook is lacking. Our study examined hippocampus volume (HV) and VM in adult survivors of pediatric BT (n=32) and controls (n=48). Results indicate that disruption to a maturing brain in childhood is detectable 17 years (mean) after diagnosis, as HV is significantly lower in survivors compared to controls. Analysis of the VM scores shows that survivors have significantly lower overall immediate recall compared to controls, but learning slope, retention, and recognition are not different across the groups. Survivors’ memory profile indicates that auditory attention and retrieval difficulties could be contributing to their lower immediate recall. For survivors, HV is significantly correlated with delayed free recall but not with other VM indices. Implications of these findings are discussed.
7

Short and long-term outcomes of children born with abdominal wall defects

Long, Anna-May January 2017 (has links)
Background: Very occasionally, when a fetus is developing in the womb, problems occur with the normal processes controlling closure of the muscles of the abdominal wall and, as a result, some of the abdominal contents develop outside of the body. This is known as an abdominal wall defect. If the pregnancy continues to term, the newborn infant will need specialised surgical care. This situation occurs so infrequently that even a dedicated surgical centre will care for very few of these women and their babies in a year. Many centres have shared their experiences of managing these babies in the published literature but the majority of reports have included only a few infants. The focus of most previous studies has been to describe what happens to these newborn infants between birth and first discharge from hospital from a purely clinical perspective. Aim: To explore methodologies to holistically understand the short and longer-term outcomes of children born with abdominal wall defects and to use the information to improve the care of future affected infants. Methods: The quality of the published literature on short-term outcomes of children born with gastroschisis was scrutinised in a systematic review. The accompanying meta-analysis used published data as a means of identifying population outcome estimates. Two national population-based cohort studies were undertaken, exploring the short-term outcomes of children born with exomphalos and the outcomes at seven to ten years of children born with gastroschisis. The latter study included an assessment of childhood outcomes from the point of view of the children themselves, along with their parents. Further parental perspectives on experiences of care were explored in a qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with parents of children born with exomphalos. Findings: Short-term outcomes of children born with gastroschisis have been published in a large number of small studies. Pooling the published data, where possible allowed the production of population estimates but heterogeneity between studies was marked. One in fourteen children born with gastroschisis died before their first birthday when managed in developed countries. Those who developed bowel complications in utero, had an increased risk of dying before one-year. The assessment of childhood outcomes for this latter group of children, who made up 11% of the population cohort, revealed a bleak outlook for many, of with one in three either dying or requiring complex surgery to gain allow them to be able to be fed via their gut, before their ninth birthday. Due to methodological limitations, the extent of neurological and gastrointestinal morbidity among survivors in the cohort is unclear, but the findings of both the highly selected responses from the parent report and those of the clinical study provide enough concern to suggest that alternative methodologies need to be explored to identify the extent of ongoing sequelae as children grow older. The live-born population of children with exomphalos is highly varied and a large burden of comorbidity was identified, however, two-thirds of infants were able to be have their abdominal wall defect surgically closed with a low-rate of early complications. A variety of techniques are employed by UK surgeons when the defect cannot be easily closed and evidence to guide management choice will be difficult to obtain using standard techniques due to the small number of these infants born annually in the UK. Parental experiences echoed the variability in management approach and in some cases highlighted a lack of respect for parental perspectives on management choice. Conclusion: Children born with abdominal wall defects represent a spectrum from those with severe comorbidity who will need ongoing care, to those who have a straightforward course and a relatively short stay in hospital. Methods of risk-stratifying infants for the purposes of outcome assessment have been explored. This approach is crucial to contextualising the progress of an individual infant and counselling their parents about their likely prognosis.
8

NEW INSIGHTS IN THE DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF HIRSCHSPRUNG’S DISEASE

Tran, Quoc Viet 17 January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
Hirschsprung’s disease is a common pathology in pediatric surgery. Besides, long-term outcome of surgically-treated patients remains a crucial issue. The management of Hirschsprung’s disease has remarkably advanced over the years, but difficulties persist particularly in the developing countries (such as Vietnam), where essential diagnostic procedures, such as preoperative histopathological exploration techniques/ facilities (mainly for acetylcholinesterase staining), or adequate postoperative management and follow-up requirements are unavailable.We, therefore, contemplated to work-out a relevant histo-diagnostic approach to overcome these constraints that limit our diagnostic approaches, namely, in Vietnam, and we introduced a “less-demanding” diagnostic approach, namely calretinin immunohistochemical staining which is known to be adequate for formalin-fixed tissues (and thus not necessitating frozen section equipment). We thus used calretinin immunohistochemistry in a prospective study on a large cohort of Vietnamese HD cases. Results showed that rectal suction biopsy using calretinin immunohistochemistry provides an effective histopathological diagnostic tool that can replace AChE and provides a valuable evaluating approach for both preoperative and postoperative management.In addition, we also studied long-term outcome in operated patients and impact of postoperative morbidities on their quality of life. Indeed, a long-term multidisciplinary management with dedicated procedures such as anorectal manometry is essentially required for patients with severe defecation disorders. / Doctorat en Sciences biomédicales et pharmaceutiques (Médecine) / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
9

Assessing the Long-term Patency and Clinical Outcomes of Venous and Arterial Grafts Used in Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting: A Meta-analysis

Waheed, Abdul, Klosterman, Emily, Lee, Joseph, Mishra, Ankita, Narasimha, Vijay, Tuma, Faiz, Bokhari, Faran, Haq, Furqan, Misra, Subhasis 16 September 2019 (has links)
Introduction The long-term patency of the grafts used during the coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is one of the most significant predictors of the clinical outcomes. The gold standard graft used during CABG with the best long-term patency rate and the better clinical outcomes is left internal thoracic artery (LITA) grafted to the left coronary artery (LCA). The controversy lies in choosing the second-best conduit for the non-left coronary artery (NLCA) with similar patency rate as LITA. This meta-analysis examines the long-term patency and clinical outcomes of all arterial grafts versus all venous grafts used during the CABG. Methods A comprehensive literature search of all published randomized control trials (RCTs) assessing long-term patency and clinical outcomes of grafts used in CABG was conducted using PubMed, Cochrane Central Registry of Controlled Trials, and Google Scholar (1966-2018). Keywords searched included combinations of "CABG", "venous grafts in CABG", "arterial grafts in CABG", "radial artery grafts in CABG", "gastroepiploic artery grafts in CABG", "patency and clinical outcomes". Inclusion criteria included: RCTs comparing the long-term patency, and clinical outcomes of radial artery, right internal thoracic artery, gastroduodenal artery, and saphenous vein grafts used in CABG. Long-term patency of the grafts and clinical outcomes were analyzed. Results Eight RCTs involving 2,091 patients with 1,164 patients receiving arterial grafts and 927 patients receiving venous grafts were included. There was no difference between the long-term patency rate (relative risk (RR) = 1.050, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.949 to 1.162, and p = 0.344), overall mortality rate (RR = 1.095, 95% CI = 0.561 to 2.136, and p = 0.790), rate of myocardial infarction (MI) (RR = 0.860, 95% CI = 0.409 to 1.812, and P = 0.692), and re-intervention rate (RR = 0.0768, 95% CI = 0.419 to 1.406, and P = 0.392) between arterial and venous grafts. Conclusion The use of arterial conduits over the venous conduits has no significant superiority regarding the long-term graft patency, the rate of MI, overall mortality, and the rate of revascularization following CABG. Additional adequately powered studies are needed to further evaluate the long-term outcomes of arterial and venous grafts following the CABG.
10

Long-term Outcomes of Neonatal Herpes Simplex Virus Infection and Treatment

Brador, Genesis M 01 January 2019 (has links)
The prevalence of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection globally is high, and although there is no cure for it, the antiviral drug acyclovir is used to alleviate symptoms. There are two types of HSV: HSV-1, which typically infects the oral area, and HSV-2, which is associated with genital infections. A mother who carries the infection may transmit it to a neonate in different ways, most commonly via vaginal delivery in the presence of active lesions. There are three types of HSV disease that affect newborns: skin, eyes or mouth (SEM) disease, central nervous system (CNS) disease, or disseminated disease. The purpose of this study was to examine the long-term effects of the infection and the treatment used in neonates infected with HSV. Data collection consisted of original case reports published in Medline, CINHAL, and Google Scholar. Two case reports were found, and this narrative review compares the cases, which report recurrences and outcomes of HSV infection identified in the three databases. Both cases were consistent with recurrence of CNS disease, and one showed signs of a slight developmental delay that may have been related to the CNS insult.

Page generated in 0.0491 seconds