Publications by authors named "Moorhouse D"

Fashion is a growing industry, but the demand for cheap, fast fashion has a high environmental footprint. Some brands lead the way by innovating to reduce waste, improve recycling, and encourage upcycling. But if we are to make fashion more sustainable, consumers and industry must work together.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pork and pork products are a major source of human salmonellosis in the United Kingdom (UK). Despite a number of surveillance programmes, the prevalence of Salmonella in the UK slaughter pig population remains over 20%. Here, we present the results of a Cost-Benefit Analysis comparing five on-farm control strategies (where the cost is the cost of implementation and the benefits are the financial savings for both the human health and pig industries).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Home Video Telemetry (HVT) combines ambulatory EEG with simultaneous video recording. No previous reports have compared HVT and inpatient video telemetry (IVT) in a purely paediatric population. This study compares HVT and IVT in this group in terms of diagnostic efficacy, recording quality and acceptability to parents/carers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite improvements in surgical approaches to radical prostatectomy, many patients experience moderate to severe urinary incontinence during the first few postoperative weeks. For some patients, leakage continues for several months or years. Urinary incontinence has a significant impact on quality of life in these typically active patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 40-year-old man presented with a major nondominant hemisphere stroke syndrome after a road traffic accident. Cranial computed tomography scan revealed an extensive right hemisphere infarction involving the entire anterior and middle cerebral artery territories. Duplex Doppler ultrasound and cerebral angiography revealed bilateral internal carotid artery dissection with evidence of underlying fibromuscular dysplasia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Reports of gabapentin use in diabetic peripheral neuropathy pain stimulate a need for controlled trials to determine its comparative efficacy to the therapeutic standard of amitriptyline hydrochloride.

Objective: To determine the efficacy of gabapentin compared with amitriptyline in treating diabetic peripheral neuropathy pain.

Design: Prospective, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, crossover study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glial tumors in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) are rare. Four histologically distinct types of glial tumors of the CPA have been described in the literature as ependymoma, medulloblastoma, mixed glial tumor, and fibrillary astrocytoma. This case report describes a pilocytic astrocytoma of the CPA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasma cell granulomas of the central nervous system are exceedingly rare. Of the six well-documented cases that have been published to date, five plasma cell granulomas were intracranial and one was located in the spinal meninges. Multiple plasma cell granulomas of the central nervous system have not previously been reported.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study examined the effect of Tolrestat, an inhibitor of aldose reductase, on the regenerative capacity and macrophage chemotactic property of crush-injured sciatic nerve in normal and galactose-fed rats. Galactose intoxication reduced the incidence of regeneration but did not alter the regeneration distance or the injury-induced increase in vasoactive intestinal polypeptide content of dorsal root ganglia. Tolrestat improved the incidence of regeneration in galactose-fed rats but significantly (P < 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In rat sciatic nerve, relative neural toxicity and relative motor nerve conduction blockade were assessed for two amide-linked local anesthetics (etidocaine and lidocaine) and two ester-linked local anesthetics (chloroprocaine and procaine). As measures of neural toxicity, nerve fiber injury and edema were assayed by light microscopic examination of nerve tissue sampled 2 days after perineural (next to the sciatic nerve) injection of various concentrations of the local anesthetics. Both nerve injury and edema increased with concentration of local anesthetics, but injury was frequently present in nerve fascicles with little or no edema.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Peripheral nerve dysfunction (PND) was found in as many as 43% of our patients with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I)-associated myelopathy (HAM/TSP). To evaluate the PND further we biopsied the sural nerve in 6 patients. The histological features were varying degrees of demyelination, remyelination, axonal atrophy and degeneration, and perineurial fibrosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cartilaginous embolization of spinal vessels is a rare cause of spinal cord infarction. A 63-year-old woman developed sudden onset of painful, fatal paraparesis following a valsalva-like maneuver. Autopsy demonstrated recent nonhemorrhagic infarction of the caudal thoracic spinal cord secondary to complete occlusion of the anterior spinal artery by cartilage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a solitary haemangioblastoma arising from a pedicle in the wall of the fourth ventricle of the brain, which we believe to be the first report of haemangioblastoma occurring in this location. Computed tomography (CT), angiography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) made possible accurate pre-operative tumour identification and localization which facilitated a minimally invasive surgical resection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An 85-year-old man with a 2-year history of progressive lower limb weakness and paresthesia was found to have an IgG kappa monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (mgus). Clinical and electrophysiological studies revealed a severe distal bilateral symmetrical polyneuropathy. A sural nerve biopsy showed extensive nerve fibre loss with the deposition of large amounts of amorphous material throughout the endoneurium.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To attribute a cause and quantify allergic-like symptoms observed among island residents.

Design: Skin prick tests and intradermal injections with ultraviolet-irradiated, filtered (0.22 microns) whole-body homogenates of the soft tick, Ornithodoros capensis, were used to reproduce experimentally the symptoms observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

After the suggestion was made that the "Palm Island mystery disease" might have been an epidemic of visceral larva migrans that was caused by the flying fox parasite, Toxocara pteropodis, work was undertaken to elucidate this nematode's life-cycle and pathogenicity. Studies of infections in various laboratory animals have shown unexpectedly variable susceptibility patterns, with mice harbouring most larvae for the longest time period. However, in all susceptible animals (which include mice, guinea-pigs and suckling rats), the larvae demonstrated marked hepatotropism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ctenocephalides felis felis larvae were infected with Dipylidium caninum at a range of temperatures from 20 degrees - 35 degrees C at 3 mm Hg saturation deficit (SD) and 30 degrees C at 8 mm Hg SD. Hosts were subsequently dissected at 6, 9 and 12 days after infection. Four replicate experiments were performed and results of development, and host reactions analysed by the Genstat computer programme.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Investigations were conducted on the taxonomy, distribution in the carcase, pathology and transmission of Onchocerca spp. in equids from Queensland and the Northern Territory. Examination of small groups of horses and ponies revealed high infection rates with O.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF