BackgroundCardiac surgery infection is a life-threatening complication associated with high morbidity and mortality. One of the main types of these infections, surgical site infections (SSIs), also called postoperative wound infections basically delayed the post-surgical recovery in many patients. These infections rarely happen within 30 days after surgery due to different risk factors. ObjectivesThe purpose of this study is to determine the risk factors that are involved in causing post-cardiac surgical infections. MethodsThis study was a retrospective study. The data of postoperative cardiac patients was obtained from the Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery Center in King Fahad Armed Force Hospital, Jeddah. Data on the patients were collected from 2016 to 2021. Eligible patients were those of age 18 and greater. These patients were evaluated on basis of the pre and postoperative risk factors and were analyzed for 30 days after discharge and those that developed SSIs were identified. ResultsOut of the total number of 2366 patients, 151 patients (6.4%) were identified with post-surgery infections out of which 107 (4.5%) had developed superficial wound infections (SSWIs) and 44 (1.9%) had developed deep wound infections (DSWIs). Infection mainly occurs in the male population (n=88, 58.3%). Major risk factors that were the main cause of post-cardiac surgery infections were diabetes (61.5%), hypertension (56.9%), smoking (38.4%), renal failure (27.1%), and re-do operation (25.1%). ConclusionOur study has demonstrated major risk factors that are involved in the occurrence of post-cardiac surgery infections like smoking, diabetes mellitus, sex, more than one operation during a single stay, etc. In the future, the contribution of various other factors involved in the occurrence of surgical site infections and best practices and methods should be studied and implemented to prevent the occurrence of post-cardiac surgery infections. Various simple techniques can still be utilized to prevent these sorts of infections, which will decrease the mortality rate.
Background: Virtual patients are a valuable tool that can be used besides clinical teaching for medical students' education. The purpose of this study was to assess the educational benefit of using virtual patients in the orthopedic field for the clinical teaching of medical students. Methods: One hundred eighty-seven undergraduate medical students, 99 male, and 88 female from the college of medicine in Al-Qunfudhah, university of Umm Al-Qura, from level 3 till level 6, who finished the orthopedic course, were recruited in this cross-sectional study after their acceptance to participate.Each student had the same validated virtual patient questionnaire to assess their learning and clinical reasoning experiences with virtual patients. Results:Regarding the items of the questionnaire regarding the virtual case teaching: in the 1st item, 80% of students agree with the "Authenticity of the patient encounters and the consultation" while 5.8% of students disagree. In the 2nd item, 79.1% of students agree with the "Professional approach in the consultation" and 5.8% disagree. In the 3rd item, 83.9% of students agree with the "Coaching during the consultation" and 2.1% disagree. In the 4th item, 54.5% agree with the "Learning effect of consultation" while 5.8% disagree and 36.8% are neutral. Finally, there is no significance between the different student levels in their response. Conclusions: Virtual patients had a favorable effect on medical students and can be carried out as a supportive tool in clinical teaching to achieve maximum educational benefit.
Background: Coronary artery disease (CAD) is responsible for significant mortality and morbidity among patients. Many factors are associated with the increasing prevalence of CAD in a population, including diet and lifestyle, physical inactivity, high cholesterol levels, and others.Objectives: The purpose of this study is to assess the awareness level and knowledge about CAD risk factors and its prevalence among the general population in Taif city, Saudi Arabia.Methods: This study was a community-based cross-sectional descriptive study carried out from August 2022 to September 2022 by an online questionnaire previously validated in published studies and then distributed via different social media platforms to assess participants' knowledge of risk factors for CAD. The survey included questions about socio-demographic data and risk factors of cardiovascular diseases and their prevalence.Results: A total of 2439 participants met the inclusion criteria and finally enrolled in the current study. About 1671 (68.5%) were found to have good awareness levels, 718 (29.4%) of the participants were considered to be having fair awareness levels, and only 50 (2.1%) of the participants were with poor awareness levels.Conclusion: Most participants have a good level of knowledge and awareness about CAD. Few knowledge gaps were regarding certain factors, including age, gender, and family history of CAD. High educational level and age were found to be linked with a higher level of knowledge regarding CAD.
Our research work examined the potential protection of Stevia rebaudiana extract against monosodium urate crystals (MSU)-induced acute gouty arthritis in a rat model and its possible underlying mechanism. Forty rats were allocated into four groups (n = 10); a control group; an MSU group, whose rats received 0.1 of MSU single intra-articular injection in the ankle joint on the fifth day of the experiment; an MSU + Stevia group, which received 250 mg/kg/day of Stevia extract orally for seven days and MSU crystals on the fifth day; and an MSU + colchicine group, which was administered colchicine at 0.28 mg/kg daily for seven days and MSU crystals on the fifth day. Pretreatment with Stevia extract mitigated MSU-induced inflammation as evidenced by a decrease of the ankle edema and inflammatory cell infiltration and a significant downregulation of the protein level of NFκB, TNFα, IL-1β, IL6, and IL18 as well as NLRP3 gene expression. Additionally, there was a markedly increased PPARγ gene expression (p < 0.001) compared with the MSU group (p < 0.001) and alleviated oxidative stress via significant upregulating of Nrf2/HO-1. Moreover, the pretreatment attenuated apoptosis by significantly decreasing cytochrome c, Bax, Caspase-3, and by increasing Bcl-2 protein. In conclusion, Stevia extract exhibited strong anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antiapoptotic effects against MSU-induced gouty arthritis similar to the standard anti-inflammatory colchicine drugs.
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