12 results match your criteria: "King's and St. Thomas's Medical School[Affiliation]"

Qualitative studies examining gender differences of eating disorder prevention programmes are scarce. We aimed to evaluate gender differences in adolescents who participated in a larger study on effectiveness of a disordered eating prevention programme. Perceptions of eating, female and male aesthetic models, media influences, prevention programmes and emerging topics from 12 school-going boys who received a media-literacy programme (n = 4), media-literacy plus nutrition-awareness programme (n = 4) or neither (n = 4) were explored using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis and compared with previous results in girls.

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Children represent 30% of all burn cases seen by accident and emergency physicians in the UK every year, with toddlers being most at risk within this age group. With the emergence of walking autonomy, the need for constant supervision is sometimes not enough to prevent this type of injury from happening. However, in remembering the importance of children's health and safety, non-accidental injury is always to remain a differential diagnosis.

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Routine dissection of the left upper limb of an 86-year-old male cadaver showed a superficial ulnar artery that anastomosed with the ulnar artery. The superficial ulnar artery arose from the third part of the axillary artery, coursed distally over the flexor muscles of the forearm, and terminated by anastomosing with the ulnar artery in the distal third of the forearm. Arterial and neural variations were also observed on the contralateral side.

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Organ transplantation--how much of the promise has been realized?

Nat Med

June 2005

Guy's King's and St. Thomas's Medical School, King's College London, Hodgkin Building, Guy's Campus, London SE1 9RT, UK.

Since the introduction of organ transplantation into medical practice, progress and optimism have been abundant. Improvements in immunosuppressive drugs and ancillary care have led to outstanding short-term (1--3-year) patient and graft survival rates. This success is mitigated by several problems, including poor long-term (>5-year) graft survival rates, the need for continual immunosuppressive medication and the discrepancy between the demand for organs and the supply.

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Pathways to HIV testing and care by black African and white patients in London.

Sex Transm Infect

February 2002

Academic Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, Harrison Wing, St Thomas's Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK.

Objective: To examine factors associated with uptake of HIV clinic services by black African HIV positive people living in London.

Design: Questionnaire survey of patients attending study clinic.

Setting: HIV outpatient clinic in south London, UK.

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A cognitive model of the positive symptoms of psychosis.

Psychol Med

February 2001

Academic Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, King's College London.

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Knowledge and communication difficulties for patients with chronic heart failure: qualitative study.

BMJ

September 2000

Department of Palliative Care and Policy, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School and St Christopher's Hospice, New Medical School Building, London SE5 6PJ.

Objectives: To explore patients' understanding of chronic heart failure; to investigate their need for information and issues concerning communication.

Design: Qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews by a constant comparative approach.

Participants: 27 patients identified by cardiology and care of the elderly physicians as having symptomatic heart failure (New York Heart Association functional class of II, III, or IV) and who had been admitted to hospital with heart failure in the past 20 months.

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Ethnic and demographic variations in HIV/AIDS presentation at two London referral centres 1995-9.

Sex Transm Infect

June 2000

Academic Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, St Thomas's Hospital, London.

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CD5 is expressed by most T cells and a subset of B cells. Human CD5 positive B cells are present in fetal lymphoid tissue, their frequency decreasing with fetal age. In adult human tissues, CD5 positive B cells have been reported to be present in the germinal centre and mantle zone.

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Real partnerships need trust.

Addiction

February 2000

Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, University of London, UK.

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Oxidants, antioxidants and alcohol: implications for skeletal and cardiac muscle.

Front Biosci

August 1999

Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, King's College London, Bessemer Road, London SE5 9PJ, United Kingdom.

The chronic form of alcoholic skeletal myopathy is characterized by selective atrophy of Type II fibers and affects up to two thirds of all alcohol misusers. Plasma selenium and alpha-tocopherol are reduced in myopathic alcoholics compared to alcoholic patients without myopathy. Plasma carnosinase is also reduced in myopathic alcoholics, implicating a mechanism related to reduced intramuscular carnosine, an imidazole dipeptide with putative antioxidant properties.

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Paraneoplastic painful ulnar neuropathy.

Muscle Nerve

July 1999

Department of Neurology, Guy's, King's and St. Thomas's Medical School, Guy's Hospital, London SE1 9RT, U.K.

A 58-year-old woman developed painful, bilateral ulnar neuropathy in conjunction with small cell lung carcinoma and high serum titer of anti-Hu antibody. An incidental stage I plasma cell dyscrasia, with immunoglobulin G kappa monoclonal protein, was also present. Electropysiological assessment excluded a generalized neuropathy, and nerve biopsy showed marked loss of myelinated and small unmyelinated fibers, without inflammatory changes or amyloid deposition.

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