Publications by authors named "P I Gil"

Unlabelled: Hyponatremia is the most common hydroelectrolyte disorder in hospitalized patients. It is unclear whether there are differences between severe hyponatremia (<125 mEq/L) and very severe hyponatremia (<115 mEq/L) in terms of etiology, response to therapy, and mortality.

Aim: Describe the etiology, symptoms, response to treatment and mortality of hospitalized adults with severe and very severe hyponatremia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Intestinal tuberculosis accounts for 10% of extrapulmonary TB cases and is often confused with other gastrointestinal diseases like Crohn's Disease due to similar symptoms.
  • Diagnosing this infection is challenging because it has few bacteria present, making it hard to identify.
  • A case study of a 57-year-old patient initially diagnosed with Crohn's Disease showed no improvement with treatment, leading to a later diagnosis of Intestinal Tuberculosis, which improved with the right therapy.
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Introduction: Parkinson's disease can contribute to the loss of muscle strength, and physical exercise such as Mat Pilates can be effective in improving this, core stability, flexibility, and muscle control.

Objective: To analyze the effects of a 12-week intervention with Mat Pilates in the short and long term, on lower limb and hand grip strength in people with Parkinson's.

Methods: The study included 23 people (61.

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Accurate estimation of crop evapotranspiration (ET) is essential for effective agricultural water resource planning. To determine ET it is common multiplying the reference evapotranspiration (ET) by an appropriate crop coefficient (K). Forecasting ET could be particularly beneficial for irrigation scheduling.

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Objective: Investigate the effectiveness of dance intervention to provide evidence of its effects on cognition in people with Parkinson's.

Methods: A study registered in PROSPERO (CRD42023474696), with searches carried out electronically in five databases (PubMed Central®, Embase, Web of Science, ScienceDirect, and Scopus Elsevier), over the last 10 years. The risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane collaboration scale (RoB2 and ROBINS-I).

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