Publications by authors named "Faiza Boughrassa"

Ordering certain laboratory tests in a routine medical practice context may be inappropriate because they a) have been replaced with a better test; b) are not indicated for initial testing; c) are part of a panel of tests, or d) cover a broad range of diseases in a nonspecific clinical context. On the other hand, these tests may be useful in the presence of specific clinical indications or in specialty medicine. To improve the appropriateness of ordering laboratory tests, INESSS, in collaboration with an expert committee, has developed a practical tool for the judicious use of 14 laboratory tests, whose inappropriateness for the given indications is raised in the scientific literature.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study reviews literature on the impacts of four intrapartum obstetric interventions (EFM, epidural analgesia, labor induction, and labor acceleration) on two delivery types (instrumental and cesarean section).
  • Out of 306 documents screened, 8 studies met criteria, revealing that EFM and epidurals correlate with higher cesarean and instrumental delivery rates in low-risk pregnancies.
  • Findings suggest that using intermittent auscultation and nonpharmacological pain control could significantly lower cesarean section rates during labor.
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Public health authorities have been alarmed by the progressive rise in rates of Caesarean section in Canada, approaching one birth in three in several provinces. We aimed therefore to consider what were preventable obstetrical interventions in women with a low-risk pregnancy and to propose an analytic framework for the reduction of the rate of CS. We obtained statistical variations of CS rates over time, across regions, and within professional practices from MED-ÉCHO, the Quebec hospitalization database, from 1969 to 2009.

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The study investigated the clinical usefulness of a new method to evaluate platelet activation and the variability of platelet response to anti-platelet therapy in patients undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA). Platelet activation was assessed in parallel by a new method for platelet density measurements (MPC, Mean Platelet Component Concentration), on the automated ADVIA 120 Hematology System and by the classic measurement of P-selectin (CD62P) expression, on a fluorescence flow cytometer. Patients received a loading dose of clopidogrel (300 mg; n = 29) or a bolus of abciximab (0.

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In vivo platelet activation results are often confounded by activation induced in vitro during the preparative procedures. We measured ex vivo (basal) and in vitro (thrombin-induced) platelet activation in sodium citrate, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and Citrate Theophylline Dipyridamole Adenosine (CTAD) whole blood specimens. Determinations were made by measurements of platelet density (mean platelet component: MPC concentration) on the Advia 120 Hematology System.

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