Seeing the visual articulatory movements of a speaker, while hearing their voice, helps with understanding what is said. This multisensory enhancement is particularly evident in noisy listening conditions. Multisensory enhancement also occurs even in auditory-only conditions: auditory-only speech and voice-identity recognition are superior for speakers previously learned with their face, compared to control learning; an effect termed the "face-benefit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As of 2014, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) mandates initiating a Program Evaluation Committee (PEC) to guide ongoing program improvement. However, little guidance nor published reports exist about how individual PECs have undertaken this mandate.
Objective: To explore how four primary care residency PECs configure their committees, review program goals and undertake program evaluation and improvement.
Vitamin toxicity represents an increasingly frequent clinical diagnosis and can be difficult to initially recognize given the plethora of over-the-counter supplements available. The young, active, and heavily male population of the military is especially susceptible to such supplementation pitfalls. Here we present the case of acute renal failure with hypercalcemia that was found to be secondary to unrecognized high-dose over-the-counter vitamin supplementation and subsequent vitamin D hypervitaminosis initiated by the patient in the hope of boosting testosterone production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Program Requirements require residents to participate in real or simulated interprofessional patient safety activities. Root cause analysis (RCA) is widely used to respond to patient safety events; however, residents may lack knowledge about the process.
Objective: To improve clinicians' knowledge of the tools used to conduct an RCA and the science behind them, and to describe this course and discuss outcomes and feasibility.
bacteremia is a rare clinical entity described in only five case reports. Difficulties in the identification and intrinsic multidrug resistance (MDR) of the organism make diagnosis and treatment challenging. We present a case of bacteremia which highlights the diagnostic and treatment challenges posed by this organism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Control Hosp Epidemiol
September 2020
Aims: A self-management oriented education programme (MEDIAS 2 BSC) for people with Type 2 diabetes who are on a non-intensive insulin treatment regimen was developed. In a randomized, multi-centre trial, the effect of MEDIAS 2 BSC was compared with an established education programme that acted as a control group.
Methods: The primary outcome was the impact of MEDIAS 2 BSC on glycaemic control.
Aim: To appraise the Diabetes Self-Management Questionnaire (DSMQ)'s measurement of diabetes self-management as a statistical predictor of glycaemic control relative to the widely used SDSCA.
Methods: 248 patients with type 1 diabetes and 182 patients with type 2 diabetes were cross-sectionally assessed using the two self-report measures of diabetes self-management DSMQ and SDSCA; the scales were used as competing predictors of HbA1c. We developed a structural equation model of self-management as measured by the DSMQ and analysed the amount of variation explained in HbA1c; an analogue model was developed for the SDSCA.
The human voice is the primary carrier of speech but also a fingerprint for person identity. Previous neuroimaging studies have revealed that speech and identity recognition is accomplished by partially different neural pathways, despite the perceptual unity of the vocal sound. Importantly, the right STS has been implicated in voice processing, with different contributions of its posterior and anterior parts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been proposed that internal simulation of the talking face of visually-known speakers facilitates auditory speech recognition. One prediction of this view is that brain areas involved in auditory-only speech comprehension interact with visual face-movement sensitive areas, even under auditory-only listening conditions. Here, we test this hypothesis using connectivity analyses of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow do we recognize people that are familiar to us? There is overwhelming evidence that our brains process voice and face in a combined fashion to optimally recognize both who is speaking and what is said. Surprisingly, this combined processing of voice and face seems to occur even if one stream of information is missing. For example, if subjects only hear someone who is familiar to them talking, without seeing their face, visual face-processing areas are active.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisparate sensory streams originating from a common underlying event share similar dynamics, and this plays an important part in multisensory integration. Here we investigate audiovisual binding by presenting continuously changing, temporally congruent and incongruent stimuli. Recorded EEG signals are used to quantify spectrotemporal and waveform locking of neural activity to stimulus dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To determine patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) closure rates, and indomethacin (INDO) toxicity rates in neonates dosed with INDO using an individualized pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) dosing approach. In addition, develop PD curves evaluating dose-response and concentration-response relationships for closure and renal toxicity, especially in select subgroups historically known as "poor responders" (<1000 g and > or = 10 days postnatal age).
Design: Prospective, cohort study.
Objectives: To determine the effect of patent ductus arteriosus on the pharmacokinetics of gentamicin in neonates and to examine whether any particular pharmacokinetic parameter is of value as a marker of patent ductus arteriosus.
Design: Cohort study of neonates treated with gentamicin, according to a standard dosing protocol.
Setting: A 24-bed, Level III, neonatal intensive care unit.
We determined the haemodynamic, electrocardiographic and electrophysiologic effects, and the pharmacokinetic properties of 4'-hydroxypropranolol (4'-OHP) by conducting three different experiments in dogs. In experiment 1 the plasma concentrations of 4'-OHP (mg/kg, i.v.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA PC-based ultrasound data acquisition system has been developed which uses compound scanning techniques to image a residual limb in a water tank. From the received ultrasonic eco data, the system produces cross-sectional images and reconstructs a three-dimensional (3-D) model of the limb. A commercial software for computer-aided prosthetic socket design was modified so that it can display both the external shape and cross-sectional image of the limb and allow the prosthetist to perform socket design with the help of a visualization of the limb's internal structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Pediatr (Phila)
October 1991
We report a case of an 18-month-old male, born to a woman with third trimester febrile illness, who had a history of congestive heart failure and respiratory distress, cardiomegaly, and electrocardiographic (ECG) findings suggestive of cardiomyopathy and myocarditis. After gradual improvement in heart size and function with pharmacologic therapy, he developed a terminal episode of respiratory distress and cardiogenic shock, with ECG findings of an anterolateral infarct. At autopsy it was found that endocardial fibroelastosis with mural thrombi in the left ventricle had been complicated by thromboembolism to the left anterior descending coronary artery, resulting in transmural infarction of the anteroseptal region of the left ventricle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe population pharmacokinetics of intravenous indomethacin were investigated with 665 indomethacin serum concentrations from 83 neonates (mean +/- SD: gestational age, 28.8 +/- 2.5 weeks; postnatal age, 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndomethacin (INDO) pharmacokinetics were examined in 18 neonates on 19 occasions, before and after patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) closure. Patients received INDO as an initial dose of 0.25 mg/kg intravenously, and INDO serum concentrations were measured 2 and 8 h after the dose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndomethacin dosing for patent ductus arteriosus closure has been standardized despite wide interpatient variability in indomethacin pharmacokinetics. We compared a novel indomethacin dosing approach using individual pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic information (group A) with a control group from our institution (group B) and a level 3 university-based intensive care nursery (group C) who were dosed using current dosing guidelines. Permanent patent ductus arteriosus closure was achieved in 27 of 28 (96.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of right ventricular aneurysm due to coronary artery disease in a 69-year-old male with no prior history of surgery or chest trauma is reported. The presence of the aneurysm was diagnosed by gated radionuclide angiography and confirmed by contrast angiography. This is the first description of an isolated right ventricular aneurysm on the basis of ischemic disease.
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