To assess the presence of perfusion abnormalities in the deep gray matter of patients with relapsingremitting and primary progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) in comparison with healthy controls and to investigate the impact of perfusion impairment on clinical disability and fatigue. Design: Survey. Setting: Research-oriented hospital. Patients: Twenty-two patients with MS and 11 age-and sex-matched healthy volunteers. Intervention: Absolute cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, and mean transit time were measured in the thalamus, putamen, and caudate nuclei. Main Outcome Measures: Decrease of cerebral blood flow in the deep gray matter of patients with MS and correlation between perfusion impairment and the severity of fatigue.
Results:The cerebral blood flow value averaged over the thalamus, putamen, and caudate nuclei was significantly lower in patients with primary progressive MS (PϽ.001) and in patients with relapsing-remitting MS (P=.01) compared with controls, and there was a trend for patients with primary progressive MS to have lower average cerebral blood flow than patients with relapsingremitting MS (P=.06). With respect to cerebral blood volume, there was a significant difference between patients with primary progressive MS and controls (PϽ.001) and between the 2 groups of patients (P = .03) but not between patients with relapsing-remitting MS and controls (PϾ.30). The fatigue score was significantly correlated with cerebral blood flow (r = 0.4; PϽ.001) and cerebral blood volume (r=0.5; P=.004).
Conclusion:The decrease of tissue perfusion in the deep gray matter of patients with MS is associated with the severity of fatigue.
Pre-treatment of porcine pulmonary xenograft with desmopressin: a novel strategy to attenuate platelet activation and systemic intravascular coagulation in an ex-vivo model of swine-to-human pulmonary xenotransplantation. Xenotransplantation 2008; 15: 27-35. Ó 2008 Blackwell Munksgaard Abstract: Background: Von Willebrand factor (vWF) has been proposed as a major contributor to the development of coagulopathy in pulmonary xenotransplantation. Pretreatment of donor swine with 1-deamino-8-d-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP), an analog of vasopressin, can reduce the content of vWF in pulmonary xenografts. Here, we investigate the effects of DDAVP pre-treatment in an ex-vivo perfusion model of pulmonary xenotransplantation. Methods: We set up and performed the ex-vivo perfusion using porcine pulmonary accessory lobes and fresh human whole blood (n = 12). Half of the donor swine were given 3 lg/kg DDAVP intravenously for 3 days before ex-vivo perfusion (DDAVP group) and half of them were left untreated (control group). The porcine lung was perfused with fresh blood for 1 h and changes in the following parameters were monitored: pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, blood cell counts, fibrinogen, antithrombin, platelet factor 4, D-dimer, C3a, C4d, and xenoreactive IgM. The release of Gala1-3Gal xenoantigen (aGal) from porcine lung which had been perfused and retained for 30 min with human blood was assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using aGal-binding lectin. Results: Both DDAVP and control groups showed typical findings of immediate pulmonary dysfunction: an increase of pulmonary vascular resistance and sequestration of leukocytes and platelets after ex-vivo perfusion. However, in the DDAVP group, the increase of platelet factor 4, C3a, and C4d after perfusion was attenuated compared to that in the control group. The release of aGal after blood retention was significantly lower in the DDAVP group than that of the control group. Conclusion: Pre-infusion of DDAVP to the donor swine was beneficial in attenuating platelet activation as well as complement/coagulation activation. These effects of DDAVP are likely to relate to the reduction of porcine vWF content in the xenograft. Therefore, the modulation of vWF secretion in donor lungs could be an additional therapeutic way to reduce systemic coagulopathy in pulmonary xenotransplantation.
Educational outcomes, such as knowledge, confidence in performance, ability in nursing practice, and satisfaction with learning methods in caring for children with croup, were compared between groups of students that received education through simulation combined with pre‐education, simulation only, and pre‐education only. In this quasi‐experimental design, the educational intervention for the experimental group was the pre‐education modality. Data from a convenience sample of 127 senior nursing students were drawn from three nursing schools in South Korea. There were significant differences in the mean scores of knowledge, confidence in performance, satisfaction with the learning method, and ability in nursing practice between the three groups. Pre‐education with simulation significantly enhanced students' knowledge, confidence in performance, ability in nursing practice, and satisfaction with learning methods compared with pre‐education or simulation alone. Simulation strategies should focus more on enhancing nursing students' learning outcomes.
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