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New Cohort (new + cohort)
Selected AbstractsWidespread resistance of Mediterranean island ecosystems to the establishment of three alien speciesDIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, Issue 5 2008Montserrat Vilà ABSTRACT Although some invasive plants are cosmopolitan, not all ecosystems are invaded to the same degree. Yet there is little experimental work on how ecosystem resistance to invasion at the establishment phase differs among ecosystems. We conducted two field sowing experiments in two consecutive years to examine establishment of the deciduous tree Ailanthus altissima, the succulent subshrub Carpobrotus spp. and the annual geophyte Oxalis pes-caprae in coastal dunes, shrublands and oldfields in more than 200 sites across six Mediterranean Basin islands differing in climatic conditions and local species richness. Establishment success (i.e. percentage of plots with at least one seedling) and rates (i.e. seedling to sown seed ratio) were low, especially for Ailanthus even when accounting for differences in seed viability. Oxalis was capable of producing a new cohort of seedlings the year following planting. By contrast, all Ailanthus seedlings and half the Carpobrotus seedlings died following the first summer. Differences in establishment success and rates among ecosystems were species-, island- and year-dependent. Differences in precipitation and mean temperature were associated with differences in establishment rates across sites. Establishment rates tended to be positively correlated with cumulative precipitation and negatively with mean Ta. Unexpectedly, native species richness was not a good predictor of seedling establishment, except for higher Oxalis establishment success in species rich habitats. By conducting field sowing tests at multiple sites across a region we found that except for Oxalis, Mediterranean island ecosystems are quite resistant to invader establishment. These results suggest that differences in the degree of invasion between ecosystems and islands might be more dependent upon the influence of invasion event factors (e.g. propagule pressure) or factors acting at a later life-history stages rather than differences in the resistance imposed by ecosystems to invader recruitment. Moreover, our results support the notion that in Mediterranean ecosystems invasions are highly idiosyncratic events and strongly dependent on water availability conditions. [source] FinEsS-Stockholm and the Stockholm adult asthma studyTHE CLINICAL RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, Issue 2008L. Ekerljung Abstract Two major studies on asthma and respiratory symptoms are presently in progress in Stockholm. The FinEsS-studies has been ongoing since 1996, with a follow-up study preformed in 2006 and a new cohort selected in 2007. The FinEsS studies focus on prevalence and incidence of asthma and respiratory symptoms in a general population. Clinical follow-up surveys will also target COPD. Further aims include remission and relapse of disease and symptoms and their determinants. The Stockholm adult Asthma Study (SaAS) began in the spring of 2007 and data is being collected presently. The SaAS study focus on the medical care and medication given to asthmatics in Stockholm, and the study population consists of asthmatics found in the two Swedish cohort studies. Please cite this paper as: Ekerljung L and Lundbäck B. FinEsS-Stockholm and the Stockholm adult asthma study. The Clinical Respiratory Journal 2008; 2: 127,128. [source] Injection versus medialization laryngoplasty for the treatment of unilateral vocal fold paralysis,THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 9 2010Follow-Up at Six Months Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis: To determine whether injection laryngoplasty or medialization laryngoplasty is more effective in the long-term treatment of unilateral vocal fold paralysis (UVFP). Study Design: A retrospective study of patients with UFVP who underwent either injection or medialization laryngoplasty at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences between July 29, 2003 and November 18, 2005. Methods: The data analyzed included patient characteristics and type of intervention, along with the pretreatment and post-treatment parameters of videostrobolaryngoscopy, perceptual voice analysis, and patients' subjective assessment of voice handicap. Results: Thirty-four patients were evaluated, 15 new and 19 from a previous study. The average time from intervention to post-treatment evaluation in the new cohort was 4.8 months (range, 1.5,10.5 months). The average time from intervention to post-treatment in the combined cohort was 6.4 months (range, 1,24 months). Improvements were demonstrated in each of the measured voice parameters in both the injection and the medialization groups, and no significant differences were found in the degree of improvement between the two groups. Limited data on aerodynamic and acoustic voice measurements showed a trend toward improvement in each treatment group. Conclusions: Injection and medialization laryngoplasty were comparable in achieving voice improvement at the average long-term follow-up of 6 months. Laryngoscope, 2010 [source] The Family Dermatology Life Quality Index: measuring the secondary impact of skin diseaseBRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 3 2007M.K.A. Basra Summary, Background, Skin diseases are known to have a major impact on the lives of patients and their families. Many instruments are available to measure the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients but no measure has been developed so far to quantify the secondary impact on family members of the patients. Objectives, To develop and validate a dermatology-specific instrument to measure the adverse impact on the HRQoL of family members of patients with skin disease. Methods, Detailed semi-structured interviews were conducted with family members of patients to identify different aspects of HRQoL affected. An initial draft version of the questionnaire based on the main topic areas was pilot tested to assess the face and content validity. A 10-item questionnaire, the Family Dermatology Life Quality Index (FDLQI), was finalized after modifications to the draft questionnaire based on feedback from families and dermatology professionals and on item reduction. Psychometric evaluation was conducted on a new cohort of family members (n = 132) who completed the FDLQI and the patients (n = 109) who completed the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI). Results, Fifty-nine different aspects of family members' HRQoL were identified from the analysis of the interviews, which were categorized into main topic areas. Factor analysis of 10 items of the final questionnaire revealed two factors and together these explained 60% of the common variance. The FDLQI demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbach's , = 0·88) and test,retest (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0·94) reliabilities. The responsiveness of the instrument to change was shown by significant change in the family members' FDLQI scores in cases where patients' clinical condition either improved or worsened. Construct validity was assessed by testing a number of a priori hypotheses. A strong correlation was seen between the family members' FDLQI scores and patients' DLQI scores (r = 0·69), a significantly higher FDLQI score was seen for inflammatory skin diseases compared with noninflammatory diseases/isolated lesions (P < 0·0001), and there was a positive relationship between the family members' FDLQI scores and patients' disease severity (r = 0·49). Conclusions, The FDLQI is simple and practical and seems to have the potential to be used as an additional outcome measure in clinical practice and evaluation research. [source] Diabetic mothers and their newborn infants , rooming-in and neonatal morbidityACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 7 2010E Stage Abstract Aim:, As a result of increased neonatal morbidity, the infants of diabetic mothers have routinely been admitted to a neonatal special care unit (NSCU). We therefore investigated whether the offer of rooming-in diabetic mothers and their newborn infants has an effect on neonatal morbidity. Methods:, The records of an old cohort of 103 infants routinely admitted to the NSCU, and a new cohort (N = 102), offered rooming-in were assessed for neonatal morbidity. Results:, Eighty-four (82%) of the new cohort infants followed their mothers to the maternity ward; whereas 19 (18%) were transferred to the NSCU chiefly because of prematurity. Ten infants were later transferred to the NSCU for minor problems. Neonatal morbidity and neonatal hypoglycaemia were significantly less common in the new cohort than in the old cohort [27 (26%) vs. 55 (54%), p < 0.001 and 42 (41%) vs. 64 (63%), p = 0.0027 respectively]. Maternal HbA1c in late pregnancy was significantly lower in the new cohort, but the only independent predictors of neonatal morbidity were belonging to the old cohort and preterm delivery. Conclusion:, Neonatal care with rooming-in mothers with type 1 diabetes and their newborn infants seems safe and is associated with reduced neonatal morbidity, when compared with routine separation of infants from their mothers. [source] |