4 results match your criteria: "North Colombo Teaching Hospital Ragama[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to evaluate how Graves' disease (GD) is diagnosed and treated by clinicians across Asia and the Pacific, and to compare these practices with those in North America and Europe.
  • - A survey collected responses from 542 clinicians, revealing that the majority preferred anti-thyroid drugs as the first-line treatment, and there were notable differences in diagnostic methods and treatments used compared to clinicians in Europe and North America.
  • - Findings showed a predominant use of TSH-receptor autoantibody testing and anti-thyroid medications, with less reliance on nuclear medicine scans, highlighting distinct approaches within the APAC region in managing GD.
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Objectives: To construct gestation specific reference limits for fetal umbilical (UA), middle cerebral artery (MCA) pulsatility indices (PI) and the cerebroplacental ratio (CPR) in singleton pregnancies with normal BMI between 16 and 40 weeks of gestation.

Methods: We ultrasonographically examined 596 fetuses from women with normal nutritional and health status and minimal environmental constraints on fetal growth. Each mother was considered only once for measurement of fetal Doppler indices, at gestations between 16 and 40 weeks in a prospective cross-sectional study.

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Neurological manifestations are reported only occasionally in patients with thalassaemia and are given much less prominence than the complications related to anaemia and iron overload. White matter changes (WMCs) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with thalassaemia were first reported two decades ago but the significance of these lesions remains unclear. We studied the neurological and cognitive manifestations in 82 older patients with thalssaemia [25 Thalassaemia major (TM), 24 thalassaemia intermedia (TI) and 33 haemaglobin E β thalassaemia (EBT)] and 80 controls, and found that headaches were more common in thalassaemia patients (50/82, 61%) than in controls (18/80, 22·5%: P < 0·001).

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Background: Feeding during early childhood is important for normal physical and mental growth as well as for health in later life. Currently, Sri Lanka has adopted the WHO recommendation of exclusive breastfeeding for six months, followed by addition of complementary feeds thereafter, with continuation of breastfeeding up to or beyond two years. This study was conducted to evaluate the current feeding practices among Sri Lankan children during early childhood.

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