6 results match your criteria: "Lausanne University - CHUV[Affiliation]"

Background: Women may receive suboptimal pain management compared with men, and this disparity might be related to gender stereotypes.

Objectives: To assess the influence of patient gender on the management of acute low back pain.

Design: We assessed pain management by 231 physicians using an online clinical vignette describing a consultation for acute low back pain in a female or male patient.

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Generating and selecting pain indicators for brain-injured critical care patients.

Pain Manag Nurs

June 2015

Institute of Higher Education and Nursing Research, Lausanne University-CHUV, Lausanne, Switzerland; University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Western Switzerland, Delémont, Switzerland.

Current pain assessment tools for nonverbal critical care patients may not be appropriate for those with brain injury, as these patients demonstrate specific responses to pain. The aim of this study was to generate and select items that could be used to assess pain in brain-injured patients. A sequential mixed-method design was chosen with three consecutive steps: 1.

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Purpose: The primary objective of this study was to describe the frequency of behaviors observed during rest, a non-nociceptive procedure, and a nociceptive procedure in brain-injured intensive care unit (ICU) patients with different levels of consciousness (LOC). Second, it examined the inter-rater reliability and discriminant and concurrent validity of the behavioral checklist used.

Methods: The non-nociceptive procedure involved calling the patient and shaking his/her shoulder.

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Pain indicators in brain-injured critical care adults: an integrative review.

Aust Crit Care

May 2012

Institute of Higher Education and Nursing Research, Lausanne University - CHUV, Avenue César-Roux 19 - 2(e) étage, 1005 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Introduction: Health professionals are confronted with the difficulty of adequately evaluating pain in critically ill, brain-injured patients, as these patients are often unable to self-report. In addition, their confused and stereotyped behaviours may change their responses to pain; the indicators and descriptors generally used to evaluate pain in the critically ill may therefore not be appropriate for brain-injured patients.

Aim: The aim of this integrative review was to identify clinically measurable and observable pain indicators and descriptors for brain-injured, critically ill adults.

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Schizophrenia is associated with a cerebral glutathione deficit, which may leave the brain susceptible to oxidants. To study the consequences of a glutathione deficit, we treated developing rats with L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of glutathione synthesis, and later investigated their behaviour until adulthood. Since rodents may in some occasions compensate for a glutathione deficit by ascorbic acid (AA), we used Osteogenic Disorder Shionogi (ODS) mutant rats, which like humans, cannot synthetize ascorbic acid.

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Low glutathione levels have been observed in the prefrontal cortex and the cerebrospinal fluid of schizophrenic patients, possibly enhancing the cerebral susceptibility to oxidative stress. We used osteogenic disorder Shionogi mutant rats, which constitute an adequate model of the human redox regulation because both are unable to synthesize ascorbic acid. To study the long-term consequences of a glutathione deficit, we treated developing rats with L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of glutathione synthesis, and later investigated their behavior until adulthood.

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