Publications by authors named "Cruickshank N"

Background: Capsule sponge testing, using an oesophageal cell collection device with biomarkers, was implemented nationally across Scotland in 2020 for symptomatic reflux patients referred to secondary care for non-urgent endoscopy. The aim was to use capsule sponge testing as a triage tool to reduce pressures on the endoscopy service during COVID-19, focus endoscopy resources on those most likely to have pathology and streamline the patient pathway. This prospective cohort study presents the first real-world results and evaluates the clinical application of capsule sponge testing in symptomatic reflux disease based on endoscopic biopsy results.

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Objectives: Pressured healthcare resources make risk stratification and patient prioritisation fundamental issues for the investigation of colorectal cancer (CRC) in symptomatic patients. The present study uses machine learning algorithms and decision strategies to improve the appropriate use of colonoscopy.

Design: All symptomatic patients in a single health board (2018-2021) proceeding to colonoscopy to investigate for CRC were included.

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Background: Barrett's oesophagus surveillance places significant burden on endoscopy services yet is vital to detect early cancerous change. Oesophageal cell collection device (OCCD) testing was introduced across Scotland for Barrett's surveillance in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This national pragmatic retrospective study presents the CytoSCOT programme results and evaluates whether OCCD testing is successfully identifying high-risk Barrett's patients requiring urgent endoscopy.

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High quality Barrett's esophagus surveillance is crucial to detect early neoplastic changes. An esophageal cell collection device (OCCD) was introduced as a triage tool for Barrett's surveillance. This study aims to evaluate whether the Scottish OCCD program (CytoSCOT) has reduced delays to Barrett's surveillance, and whether delayed surveillance negatively impacts endoscopic pathology.

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Article Synopsis
  • Lower gastrointestinal symptoms are not very effective in predicting colorectal cancer (CRC), so this study evaluated how well faecal haemoglobin (f-Hb) levels predict CRC during colonoscopy for symptomatic patients.
  • The study involved 4,841 patients in three Scottish NHS Boards, finding that only 0.6% of those with low f-Hb (<10 µg/g) were diagnosed with CRC, compared to 9.4% of those with f-Hb ≥10 µg/g and 22.4% with f-Hb ≥400 µg/g.
  • The results suggest that patients with f-Hb ≥10 µg/g should be further investigated for CRC, while those with f-Hb <10 µ
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Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is upregulated in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) in response to hypertensive stimuli such as stress and hyperosmolality, and BDNF acting in the PVN plays a key role in elevating sympathetic activity and blood pressure. However, downstream mechanisms mediating these effects remain unclear. We tested the hypothesis that BDNF increases blood pressure, in part by diminishing inhibitory hypotensive input from nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) catecholaminergic neurons projecting to the PVN.

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Currently, clinical determination of pathologic fracture risk in the hip is conducted using measures of defect size and shape in the stance loading condition. However, these measures often do not consider how changing lesion locations or how various loading conditions impact bone strength. The goal of this study was to determine the impact of defect location on bone strength parameters in both the sideways fall and stance-loading conditions.

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In older adults, we examined the effect of chronic muscle disuse on skeletal muscle structure at the tissue, cellular, organellar, and molecular levels and its relationship to muscle function. Volunteers with advanced-stage knee osteoarthritis (OA, n = 16) were recruited to reflect the effects of chronic lower extremity muscle disuse and compared with recreationally active controls (n = 15) without knee OA but similar in age, sex, and health status. In the OA group, quadriceps muscle and single-fiber cross-sectional area were reduced, with the largest reduction in myosin heavy chain IIA fibers.

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Researchers worldwide with information about the Kirsten ras (Ki-ras) tumour genotype and outcome of patients with colorectal cancer were invited to provide that data in a schematized format for inclusion in a collaborative database called RASCAL (The Kirsten ras in-colorectal-cancer collaborative group). Our results from 2721 such patients have been presented previously and for the first time in any common cancer, showed conclusively that different gene mutations have different impacts on outcome, even when the mutations occur at the same site on the genome. To explore the effect of Ki-ras mutations at different stages of colorectal cancer, more patients were recruited to the database, which was reanalysed when information on 4268 patients from 42 centres in 21 countries had been entered.

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Hollywood Private Hospital recognized that the use of quality management processes can achieve numerous benefits; however, for this to occur quality must be regarded as normal business practice rather than a separate programme. Therefore, the means of ensuring a quality service must be embedded in the strategic plans of both the organization and individual departments. The Hollywood Private Hospital Executive committed the organization to this approach further building on the 'core values' of the hospital by: integrating quality into the Strategic Planning of the organization; integrating risk management into the existing quality system; further embedding of the core values into the culture of the organisation; introducing systems thinking into the organization; taking a process improvement approach to improving quality; involving staff in Quality Action Teams and utilizing the Evaluation and Quality Improvement Programme as the management framework to co-ordinate all the above.

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Aims: Accurate staging of gastric, oesophageal and oesophagogastric cancer is essential to avoid unnecessary laparotomies in patients where only palliation is appropriate. This requires a multimodal approach utilizing endoscopy, computed tomography and laparoscopy. Previous authors have found that the presence of free peritoneal tumour cells (FPTCs) detected at laparoscopy or laparotomy confers a poorer prognosis.

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Age and sex differences in the incidence of colonic cancer, together with epidemiological data on patients taking hormone replacement therapy, suggest the involvement of estrogens. Analogous to the role of aromatase in breast cancer, we postulated that steroid metabolism within the colon itself may be a crucial mechanism in regulating tissue exposure to estrogens. We have characterized expression of aromatase (responsible for converting C19 androgens to C18 estrogens) and 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) [responsible for interconversion of active estradiol (E2) to less potent estrone (E1)] in normal and neoplastic human colon from 24 patients undergoing tumor resection.

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We have investigated interstitial deletions of chromosome 8 in 70 colorectal carcinomas and 11 colonic adenomas using 11 microsatellite markers, including eight spanning the centromeric region of chromosome 8p (p11.2-p12). Allelic loss or imbalance was observed in 38 (54%) cancers and four (36%) adenomas.

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Human colitis is a condition associated with a spectrum of altered morphologic changes and cellular adhesion. The role of cadherins, which are powerful morphoregulatory cell adhesion molecules, in colitis is provocative and as yet unknown. Herein, we present results that suggest a strong correlation between the deregulation of two cadherin molecules, E- and P-cadherins, and the progression of human colitis.

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This study was designed as an assessment of the clinical value of total estriol, placental lactogen (hPL), pregnancy specific glycoprotein (SP1), pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) and placental protein 5 (PP5), measured in a single sample of maternal serum, in the detection of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) in a large series of high risk pregnancies. Our results show the highest detection rate with SP1 (51%) and second highest with hPL (35%); estriol was less useful while PAPP-A and PP5 were of no value. However, there was 31% of false positives with SP1 compared with 14% for hPL.

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Pregnancy-associated alpha2-glycoprotein (alpha2-PAG) was identified by immunofluorescence on the surface membrane of mononuclear cells from normal individuals with an extensive range of plasma concentrations of the glycoprotein. The incidence of positive cells did not correlate with plasma levels but was significantly raised in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. Anti-alpha2-PAG antibody interfered with E and Fc rosette formation but not with production of C3 rosettes.

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