Scale Values (scale + value)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Neurolytic phenol blockade of the obturator nerve for severe adductor spasticity

ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 1 2010
T. AKKAYA
Background: In this study, we present the 3-month follow-up results of a retrospective analysis of obturator nerve (ON) phenol neurolysis performed between 2000 and 2007 in patients with adductor spasticity. Methods: The study was performed by retrospective investigation of the clinical follow-up results of 80 ON phenol treatments in 62 patients. Neurolysis using 5,10 ml 6% phenol was applied with the guidance of fluoroscopy and a peripheral nerve stimulator. Pain, spasticity and hygiene were evaluated and the hip abduction range of motion (ROM) was measured at the end of the first week and in the first, second and third months following the intervention. Results: The visual analogue scale scores decreased significantly in the first week, first month and the second month, but reached their initial values in the third month. A drastic increase in the ROM values was shown in hip abduction in the first week, first month and second month. An increase in the Ashworth Scale values was observed in the second and third months, but they did not reach their initial values. The hygiene score decreased drastically in the first week and the first and second months, but worsened in the third month. The success rate in nerve localization during ON neurolysis was 100%. Conclusion: ON phenol blockade with fluoroscopy and peripheral nerve stimulator guidance in patients with adductor spasticity led to a decrease in spasticity and pain with an increase in the ROM of the hip and better hygiene with an efficacy lasting for about 3 months. [source]


Cerebrospinal fluid of brain trauma patients inhibits in vitro neuronal network function via NMDA receptors,

ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 4 2009
Frauke Otto MD
Neurological diseases frequently induce pathological changes of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that might secondarily influence brain activity, as the CSF,brain barrier is partially permeable. However, functional effects of CSF on neuronal network activity have not been specified to date. Here, we report that CSF specimens from patients with reduced Glasgow Coma Scale values caused by severe traumatic brain injury suppress synchronous activity of in vitro-generated neuronal networks in comparison with controls. We present evidence that underlying mechanisms include increased N -methyl- D- aspartate receptor activity mediated by a CSF fraction containing elevated amino acid concentrations. These proof-of-principle data suggest that determining effects of CSF specimens on neuronal network activity might be of diagnostic value. Ann Neurol 2009;66:546,555 [source]


Expression and subcellular location of COX-2 in human gastric cancer cells

JOURNAL OF DIGESTIVE DISEASES, Issue 2 2001
Li Ling
OBJECTIVE: To detect the expression of cyclooxygenase (COX) in human gastric cancer cell lines and determine the subcellular location of its isoforms. METHODS: Immunohistochemistry, reverse transcription,polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) were used to investigate the expression and distribution of COX. RESULTS: Positive staining for COX-2 and COX-1 protein was seen in human gastric cancer cell lines MKN45, SGC7901 and AGS. However, COX-2 staining was absent and COX-1 staining was weak in the MGC803 cell line, although COX-2 mRNA was present in all four cell lines. When compared with COX-1, COX-2 was more strongly expressed at both protein and mRNA levels in the gastric cancer cell lines, which was confirmed by double labeling and LSCM. A quantitative analysis of fluorescein intensity indicated that the pixel intensity peak of COX-2 had a gray scale value of 50,70, while COX-1 was only 10. The LSCM technique also revealed the presence of COX-2 in the cytoplasm and nuclear envelope and COX-1 in the cytoplasm only. CONCLUSIONS: In human gastric cancer cells, COX-2 is expressed at higher levels than COX-1 and the different distributions of the two isoforms suggest that their roles in cell function are distinct. [source]


Brief scale measuring patient preparedness for hospital discharge to home: Psychometric properties,

JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, Issue 6 2008
James F. Graumlich MD
Abstract BACKGROUND: Adverse events occur when patients transition from the hospital to outpatient care. For quality improvement and research purposes, clinicians need appropriate, reliable, and valid survey instruments to measure and improve the discharge processes. OBJECTIVE: The object was to describe psychometric properties of the Brief PREPARED (B-PREPARED) instrument to measure preparedness for hospital discharge from the patient's perspective. METHODS: The study was a prospective cohort of 460 patient or proxy telephone interviews following hospital discharge home. We administered the Satisfaction with Information about Medicines Scale and the PREPARED instrument 1 week after discharge. PREPARED measured patients' perceptions of quality and outcome of the discharge-planning processes. Four weeks after discharge, interviewers elicited emergency department visits. The main outcome was the B-PREPARED scale value: the sum of scores from 11 items. Internal consistency, construct, and predictive validity were assessed. RESULTS: The mean B-PREPARED scale value was 17.3 ± 4.2 (SD) with a range of 3 to 22. High scores reflected high preparedness. Principal component analysis identified 3 domains: self-care information, equipment/services, and confidence. The B-PREPARED had acceptable internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha 0.76) and construct validity. The B-PREPARED correlated with medication information satisfaction (P < 0.001). Higher median B-PREPARED scores appropriately discriminated patients with no worry about managing at home from worriers (P < 0.001) and predicted patients without emergency department visits after discharge from those who had visits (P = 0.011). CONCLUSIONS: The B-PREPARED scale measured patients' perceptions of their preparedness for hospital discharge home with acceptable internal consistency and construct and predictive validity. Brevity may potentiate use by patients and proxies. Clinicians and researchers may use B-PREPARED to evaluate discharge interventions. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2008;3(6):446,454. © 2008 Society of Hospital Medicine. [source]


An investigation of the role of scale values in the DS/AHP method of multi-criteria decision making

JOURNAL OF MULTI CRITERIA DECISION ANALYSIS, Issue 6 2002
Malcolm J. Beynon
Abstract DS/AHP is a method of multi-criteria decision making based on the Dempster,Shafer theory of evidence and the analytic hierarchy process. Central to the utilization of DS/AHP is the composing of preference judgements on identified groups of decision alternatives (DA) across a number of criteria against all the DA present in the problem in question. This paper exposits a series of results whose objectives are to aid in the development of an effective set of preference scale values for use within DS/AHP. These results relate directly to the concomitant level of ignorance (uncertainty) with the judgements made on a single criterion. Two particular directions of investigation are undertaken, firstly in determining the necessary number of scale values available and secondly finding the necessary differences between scale values, dependent on whether an arithmetic or geometric progression is the basis for the scale values. Through an example, the implications and utilization of these results within DS/AHP are illustrated. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Echogenic liposome compositions for increased retention of ultrasound reflectivity at physiologic temperature

JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 6 2008
Kyle D. Buchanan
Abstract Targetable echogenic liposomes (ELIP) for ultrasound enhancement of atheroma have recently been developed; however, their retention of echogenicity at physiological temperature is less than desirable. The purpose of this study was to improve ELIP stability and increase clinical potential. The approach utilized the original procedures but involved manipulation of the lipid composition by reducing the level of unsaturation of the phospholipids components to minimize the rate of loss of echogenicity. Echogenicity was measured using a 20 MHz intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) catheter and quantified (as mean gray scale values) using computer-assisted videodensitometry. The optimal preparation for retention of echogenicity stability at physiologic temperature was egg phosphatidylcholine/dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/dipalmitoylphos-phatidylethanolamine/dipalmitoylphosphatidylglycerol/cholesterol (27:42:8:8:15, molar percent). This preparation retained 51,±,3.5% of its echogenicity after 1 h at 37°C, more than 5× that retained by the previously descried preparation. In this composition nearly 2/3 of the phosphosphatidylcholine is fully saturated. Such an increase in saturation is anticipated to stiffen the lipid acyl chains. The air pockets that are responsible for reflection of ultrasound waves can be assumed to be stabilized by a lipid monolayer at the interface between the air and bulk water. The increased rigidity of that monolayer is presumed to be responsible for reducing the loss of air and extending the duration of echogenic activity. The stability of this improved formulation now appears to be more than adequate for clinical applications. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 97:2241,2248, 2008 [source]


Evaluation of foliar resistance in potato to Phytophthora infestans based on an international field trial network

PLANT PATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
J. G. Hansen
During the period 2000,03, local potato cultivars in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Denmark were tested for foliar resistance to Phytophthora infestans (late blight) in an international field trial network. Four standard cultivars were included in the trials: Sava, Oleva, Danva and Kuras. Primary disease-assessment data were entered into a common database, and parameters from the disease progress curves were calculated and made available on interactive web pages. A regression model, using relative area under disease progress curve (RAUDPC) values for cv. Oleva as a reference, was developed for the estimation of 1,9 scale values, where 1 = most susceptible. Standard deviations for the estimated 1,9 scale values and a nonparametric rank stability analysis of RAUDPC were used to evaluate the stability of resistance of the cultivars. Overall, the results showed stability of resistance for cvs Sava, Oleva and Danva, but not for Kuras. Use of the Internet-based Web-Blight service in this study facilitated comparison of results among countries for the level and stability of resistance. The estimated 1,9 scale values were similar to, or slightly lower than, those from official cultivar lists or from the European Cultivated Potato Database, especially for the more resistant cultivars. Possible reasons for discrepancies from different sources and locations are discussed. It is concluded that RAUPDC and the derived 1,9 scale values are useful for ranking cultivars for resistance to P. infestans, but this information is not detailed enough for use in a decision support system for late blight control. [source]


An amino acid "transmembrane tendency" scale that approaches the theoretical limit to accuracy for prediction of transmembrane helices: Relationship to biological hydrophobicity

PROTEIN SCIENCE, Issue 8 2006
Gang Zhao
Abstract Hydrophobicity analyses applied to databases of soluble and transmembrane (TM) proteins of known structure were used to resolve total genomic hydrophobicity profiles into (helical) TM sequences and mainly "subhydrophobic" soluble components. This information was used to define a refined "hydrophobicity"-type TM sequence prediction scale that should approach the theoretical limit of accuracy. The refinement procedure involved adjusting scale values to eliminate differences between the average amino acid composition of populations TM and soluble sequences of equal hydrophobicity, a required property of a scale having maximum accuracy. Application of this procedure to different hydrophobicity scales caused them to collapse to essentially a single TM tendency scale. As expected, when different scales were compared, the TM tendency scale was the most accurate at predicting TM sequences. It was especially highly correlated (r = 0.95) to the biological hydrophobicity scale, derived experimentally from the percent TM conformation formed by artificial sequences passing though the translocon. It was also found that resolution of total genomic sequence data into TM and soluble components could be used to define the percent probability that a sequence with a specific hydrophobicity value forms a TM segment. Application of the TM tendency scale to whole genomic data revealed an overlap of TM and soluble sequences in the "semihydrophobic" range. This raises the possibility that a significant number of proteins have sequences that can switch between TM and non-TM states. Such proteins may exist in moonlighting forms having properties very different from those of the predominant conformation. [source]


Comparison between impairment and disability scales in immune-mediated polyneuropathies

MUSCLE AND NERVE, Issue 1 2003
Ingemar S.J. Merkies MD
Abstract The ability of a scale to detect clinical relevant changes over time, i.e., its "responsiveness," may help clinicians to choose among valid and reliable measures. Therefore, we investigated the responsiveness' rank ordering (best to worse) of six selected valid and reliable scales, namely the Medical Research Council (MRC)-sumscore, sensory-sumscore, grip-strength (Vigorimeter), nine-hole peg, ten-meters walking, and a disability-sumscore, in immune-mediated polyneuropathies. Patients with newly diagnosed Guillain,Barré syndrome (n = 7) or chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (n = 13) were examined over 52 weeks. Responsiveness of each scale was measured using different methods (effect-size, standardized response mean score, Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank, and a newly devised Schmitz's distribution-free responsiveness score), and the obtained scores in each method were plotted against the follow-up period, thus allowing area-under-the-curve calculations (higher area-under-the-curve indicating better responsiveness). Also, longitudinal correlations were performed between the scales' values and patients' own clinical judgments (deteriorated, unchanged, improved) (higher correlation = better responsiveness). A consistent rank ordering was observed in each technique with the disability-sumscore, MRC-sumscore, and Vigorimeter being among the best responsive scales. Hence, the primary use of these measures is suggested in studies of immune-mediated polyneuropathies. Muscle Nerve 28: 93,100, 2003 [source]