Background
The performance of the microbiota is observed in several digestive tract diseases. Therefore, reaching the biliary microbiota may suggest ways for studies of biomarkers, diagnoses, tests and therapies in hepatobiliopancreatic diseases.
Methods
Bile samples will be collected in endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography patients (case group) and living liver transplantation donors (control group). We will characterize the microbiome based on two types of sequence data: the V3/V4 regions of the 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene and total shotgun DNA. For 16S sequencing data a standard 16S processing pipeline based on the Amplicon Sequence Variant concept and the qiime2 software package will be employed; for shotgun data, for each sample we will assemble the reads and obtain and analyze metagenome-assembled genomes.
Results
The primary expected results of the study is to characterize the specific composition of the biliary microbiota in situations of disease and health. In addition, it seeks to demonstrate the existence of changes in the case of illness and also possible disease biomarkers, diagnosis, interventions and therapies in hepatobiliopancreatic diseases.
Trial registration
NCT04391426. Registered 18 May 2020, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04391426.
Background
Teaching based on virtual reality simulators in medicine has expanded in recent years due to the limitations of more traditional methods, especially for surgical procedures such as laparoscopy.
Purpose of review
To analyze the effects of using virtual reality simulations on the development of laparoscopic skills in medical students and physicians.
Data sources
The literature screening was done in April 2020 through Medline (PubMed), EMBASE and Database of the National Institute of Health.
Eligibility criteria
Randomized clinical trials that subjected medical students and physicians to training in laparoscopic skills in virtual reality simulators.
Study appraisal
Paired reviewers independently identified 1529 articles and included 7 trials that met the eligibility criteria.
Findings
In all studies, participants that trained in virtual simulators showed improvements in laparoscopic skills, although the articles that also had a physical model training group did not show better performance of one model compared to the other.
Limitations
No article beyond 2015 met the eligibility criteria, and the analyzed simulators have different versions and models, which might impact the results.
Conclusion
Virtual reality simulators are useful educational tools, but do not show proven significant advantages over traditional models. The lack of standardization and a scarcity of articles makes comparative analysis between simulators difficult, requiring more research in the area, according to the model suggested in this review.
Systematic review registration number
Registered by the Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO), identification code CRD42020176479.
Background: The performance of the microbiota is observed in several digestive tract diseases. Therefore, reaching the biliary microbiota may suggest ways for studies of biomarkers, diagnoses, tests and therapies in hepatobiliopancreatic diseases.Methods: Bile samples will be collected in endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography patients (case group) and living liver transplantation donors (control group). From the DNA extracted from the samples, the microbiomes will be sequenced by 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) pyrosequencing methods. Student’s t-test will be performed with SPSS version 20 for Windows and the Mann-Whitney test will be performed using R software and Python scripts. A principal component analysis signals will be developed as discriminative analysis.Results: The primary expected results of the study is to characterize the specific composition of the biliary microbiota in situations of disease and health. In addition, it seeks to demonstrate the existence of changes in the case of illness and also possible disease biomarkers, diagnosis, interventions and therapies in hepatobiliopancreatic diseases.Conclusions: We believe that the investigation of the biliary tract microbiota will provide benefits such as early diagnosis and new treatments. This should improve quality of life and survival, specially in malignant diseases. Thus, this research will give expectations to further investigation in the biliary microbiota.Trial registration: NCT04391426. Registered 18 May 2020, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04391426
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