8 results match your criteria: "IWK Health Care Centre[Affiliation]"

(1) Background: Meniscal tears are amongst the most common knee injuries. Dislocated bucket handle meniscal tears in particular should receive early intervention. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic performance of CT in detecting dislocated bucket handle meniscal tears compared with the gold-standard MRI and arthroscopy.

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Importance: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) can inform health care decisions, regulatory decisions, and health care policy. They also can be used for audit/benchmarking and monitoring symptoms to provide timely care tailored to individual needs. However, several ethical issues have been raised in relation to PRO use.

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Objective: To identify barriers and facilitators to the uptake of information from research by parents of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).

Methods: Parents of children with JIA participated in focus group and telephone interviews at four Canadian pediatric rheumatology centers. The semistructured interviews focused on perceptions about JIA research, how new information about JIA was obtained and used, and what information was of most interest.

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This study was conducted to determine if nasolabial appearance is rated with comparable results and reliability on 3-dimensional stereophotogrammetric facial images versus standard clinical photographs (2-dimensional). Twenty-seven consecutively treated patients with repaired complete unilateral cleft lip and palate were selected. Six trained and calibrated raters assessed cropped 2- and 3-dimensional facial images.

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Limbic system activation is affected by prenatal predator exposure and postnatal environmental enrichment and further moderated by dam and sex.

Behav Brain Res

February 2014

Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada; Departments of Pediatrics and Pharmacology, IWK Health Care Centre, Halifax, NS, Canada.

Epilepsy is a relatively common and chronic neurological condition, affecting 1-2% of the population. However, understanding of the underlying pathophysiology remains incomplete. To identify potential factors in the early environment that may increase the risk for experiencing seizures, maternal stress and environmental enrichment (EE) were utilized.

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Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is a widely recognized presumed genetic, electroclinical idiopathic generalized epilepsy syndrome. The prevalence of JME in large cohorts has been estimated to be 5% to 10% of all epilepsies and around 18% of idiopathic generalized epilepsies but may be lower in some settings. There is a marked female predominance.

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Misleading clinical stereoacuity levels in pediatric maculopathy.

J AAPOS

October 2009

Clinical Vision Science, Dalhousie University and Eye Care Team, IWK Health Care Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Because visual acuity and stereoacuity are assumed to be almost directly related, pediatric ophthalmologists and orthoptists may be inclined to compare them in cases of suspected functional visual acuity loss; good stereoacuity in the presence of reduced visual acuity frequently suggests a functional component. We report 3 cases involving pediatric maculopathy in which stereoacuity was relatively unaffected by reduced visual acuity. Along with the initial normal fundus appearance, which is frequently observed in pediatric maculopathy, good stereoacuity suggested functional visual acuity loss and delayed proper diagnosis in the first 2 cases.

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