11 results match your criteria: "Catholic University of Chile School of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Reliability and Validity of the Spanish Adaptation of the Stanford Proxy Test for Delirium in Two Clinical Spanish-Speaking Communities.

J Acad Consult Liaison Psychiatry

April 2024

Division of Medical Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA. Electronic address:

Background: Delirium is the most prevalent neuropsychiatric syndrome experienced by patients admitted to inpatient clinical units, occurring in at least 20% of medically hospitalized patients and up to 85% of those admitted to critical care units. Although current guidelines recommend the implementation of universal prevention strategies, the use of management strategies largely depends on constant surveillance and screening. This allows for the timely diagnosis and correction of its underlying causes and implementation of management strategies.

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Purpose: Pathologic stage II melanoma patients have variable outcomes when divided by substage. We hypothesized that an understanding of the patterns of initial relapse by substage will better inform follow-up guidelines.

Methods: We performed a retrospective review of 738 adult patients with pathologic stage II cutaneous melanoma treated at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center between 1993 and 2013.

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An MRI biomarker for Parkinsonism has long been sought, but almost all attempts at conventional field strengths have proved unsatisfactory, since patients and controls are not separated. The exception is Spin-Lattice Distribution MRI (SLD-MRI), a technique which detects changes in the substantia nigra (SN) due to changes in the spin-lattice relaxation time, T1. This easily separates patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) from control subjects at 1.

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Two cases of an unusual cutaneous lesion characterized by a dermal nodule with apocrine gland cysts surrounded by a hemosiderotic dermatofibroma-like proliferating stroma are reported. The first case was a 52-year-old female who presented with a nodule on the back of several years of evolution and with the clinical diagnosis of lipoma; the second case was a 41-year-old male who presented with a forehead nodule of several years of evolution with a clinical diagnosis of epidermal cyst. Histologically, an ill-delimited non-encapsulated nodule composed of cystic spaces and solid areas was found.

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Transport of endogenous and exogenous substances from blood to bile is an essential function of the liver. In the last decade a still growing number of specific transport proteins present at the sinusoidal and canalicular membrane domains of hepatocytes and cholangiocytes have been cloned and functionally characterized. Studies assessing the molecular expression and function of these hepatobiliary transport proteins under different experimental conditions has helped to define the adaptive responses of hepatocytes to certain physiological states and to cholestatic liver injury and to a better understanding of the physiology of bile formation and of the pathophysiology of certain cholestatic diseases.

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Cardiac mechanical energy and effects on the arterial tree.

J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth

May 1997

Department of Anesthesiology, Catholic University of Chile School of Medicine, Santiago, Chile.

Blood flow pulsatility is the result of the heart's activity as a pump unable to develop steady flow, and its interaction with the arterial tree. Thus, the heart is a cyclic energy generator whose adequate function requires the two phases of this cycle to be normal. Diastolic properties determine the degree of filling of the ventricles and the strength of the following systole.

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We determined the arterial pressure-flow relationship experimentally by means of step changes of blood flow in 30 adult patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Anesthesia technique was uniform. CPB was nonpulsatile; hypothermia to 25-28 degrees C, and hemodilution to 18%-25% hematocrit were used.

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Controversy continues as to whether hypotension during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) impairs intraoperative and postoperative renal function. Therefore, 21 patients with normal renal function (plasma creatinine less than 1.2 mg/dL, creatinine clearance greater than 70 mL/min), aged 50 to 70 years, without associated pathology, scheduled for elective coronary surgery were studied prospectively.

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