Publications by authors named "J F Daniell"

Background: Sympathomimetic vasopressors may be administered through a peripheral catheter, but there are limited data available on the safety of peripheral use.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to analyze the safety of peripherally infused sympathomimetic vasopressors.

Methods: A multicenter, retrospective observational study was conducted to evaluate patients who received peripheral vasopressors.

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High-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) is a life-threatening disease state with current guidelines recommending reperfusion therapy with systemic thrombolytics in addition to anticoagulation. This was a prospective observational cohort study with a historical control group comparing tenecteplase to alteplase for the treatment of PE or cardiac arrest with suspected PE. The primary outcome was the incidence of institutional protocol deviations defined as incorrect thrombolytic dose administered or the incorrect product compounded.

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This study presents a new method, the MYRIAD-Hazard Event Sets Algorithm (MYRIAD-HESA), that compiles historically-based multi-hazard event sets. MYRIAD-HESA is a fully open-access method that can create multi-hazard event sets from any hazard events that occur on varying time, space, and intensity scales. In the past, multi-hazards have predominately been studied on a local or continental scale, or have been limited to specific hazard combinations, such as the combination between droughts and heatwaves.

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A male aged in his mid-60s was diagnosed with xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis after a left nephrectomy for a renal mass that was detected during the investigation of weight loss and drenching night sweats. Past medical history includes type 2 diabetes mellitus, transient ischaemic attack, hypertension, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, dyslipidaemia, osteoarthritis and active smoking. Three years after the initial diagnosis, the patient represented with abdominal pain.

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The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of a change in macroscopic/surgical margin width upon histological margins and loco-regional failure in early oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC). In 2009, the surgical margin protocol was increased from 10 mm to 15 mm. A retrospective review was performed of all patients who underwent treatment for early OTSCC between 2009 and 2016 with a 15-mm surgical margin (n = 142), and these patients were compared to those treated between 1999 and 2008 with a 10-mm surgical margin (n = 78).

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