Publications by authors named "K Salmon"

Introduction: A lack of national consensus on the roles and responsibilities of Australian memory and cognition clinics contributes to the large variability seen across services. The introduction of guidelines and a quality assessment framework could facilitate greater harmonization and quality improvements.

Methods: We used a modified Delphi process to develop the guidelines.

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Genetic testing practices are rapidly evolving for people living with, or at-risk for, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), due to emerging genotype-driven therapies. This study explored how individuals at-risk for familial ALS (fALS) perceive the opportunity to participate in a clinical trial, and to better understand how that may influence the decision-making process for predictive genetic testing. This study used both quantitative and qualitative data analyses.

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Background: MecROX is a mechanistic sub-study of the UK-ROX trial which was designed to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of a conservative approach to oxygen therapy for invasively ventilated adults in intensive care. This is based on the scientific rationale that excess oxygen is harmful. Epithelial cell damage with alveolar surfactant deficiency is characteristic of hyperoxic acute lung injury.

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Introduction: Motor dysfunction is an important feature of early-stage dementia. Gait provides a non-invasive biomarker across the dementia continuum. Gait speed and rhythm aid risk stratification of incident dementia in subjective cognitive impairment (SCI) and are associated with cognitive domains in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined the characteristics of women with diagnosed and probable polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) among 557 participants from clinics in eastern Massachusetts.* -
  • About 9.7% of the women had diagnosed PCOS, while 9.2% were classified as having probable PCOS based on specific hormonal criteria, showing similarities in irregular menstrual cycles between both groups.* -
  • While diagnosed PCOS women had a higher obesity rate (43.9%), both groups showed similar glycemic traits, suggesting it's crucial to evaluate hormonal profiles in women experiencing irregular cycles regardless of body weight.*
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