Publications by authors named "Kamin B"

Background: Patient safety curricula in undergraduate medical education (UME) are often didactic format with little focus on skills training. Despite recent focus on safety, practical training in residency education is also lacking. Assessments of safety skills in UME and graduate medical education (GME) are generally knowledge, and not application-focused.

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Aims: To evaluate the validity and reliability of the English translation of an interviewer-administered pelvic floor questionnaire, the "Pelvic Floor Inventories Leiden" (PeLFIs) for women, which addresses complaints of prolapse, bladder, and bowel dysfunction, pelvic floor pain and/or sexual dysfunction related to pelvic floor dysfunction.

Methods: The formal forward-backward translation of the PeLFIs was performed by bilingual Dutch/English translators. The final English version was administered to healthy volunteers (N = 94) and patients (N = 180) in Canada and the United States.

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Objective: To investigate whether sympathetic blockade by means of thoracic epidural anaesthesia (TEA) increases intestinal perfusion during normotensive endotoxaemia.

Design: A prospective, randomised and controlled animal study.

Setting: Animal laboratory in a university hospital.

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We have studied dodecylmaltoside-induced echinocyte-spheroechincyte-spherocyte shape transformation and membrane vesiculation using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) on freeze-fracture replicas. It is indicated that spherical erythrocyte shape at higher dodecylmaltoside concentration is formed due to loss of membrane in the process where small, mostly tubular nanovesicles are released predominantly from the top of echinocyte and spheroechinocyte spicules.

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Background: During hemorrhagic hypotension, sympathetic vasoconstriction crucially contributes to gut mucosal damage. Sympathetic blockade by thoracic epidural anesthesia has been shown to increase mucosal microvascular perfusion and to improve survival after severe hemorrhage in laboratory animals. This study investigates the effects of thoracic epidural anesthesia on intestinal microvascular perfusion during hemorrhagic hypotension in rats.

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Methotrexate (MTX) and 6-mercaptopurine (6MP), the two drugs most commonly used for maintenance treatment of childhood leukemia, are both potent hepatotoxins. In order to assess MTX-6MP-induced damage, we obtained biopsies from 11 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) for light microscopic and transmission electron microscopic study. Prednisone, vincristine, and L-asparaginase were used for induction of remission in all patients.

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