12 results match your criteria: "Phyathai 1 Hospital[Affiliation]"

Introduction: Plasma phosphorylated tau (p-tau)217 is a promising biomarker for Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnosis, but its clinical implementation remains challenging. We propose a strategy based on Bayes' theorem and test it in real-life memory clinics.

Methods: Memory clinic patients were evaluated by neurocognitive specialists for prespecified diagnosis and subsequently underwent blood collection for p-tau217, cerebrospinal fluid, or amyloid positron emission tomography.

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Aim: Liver transplantation (LT) is essential due to its curative efficacy, but liver-graft shortages have limited its widespread application. Bridging locoregional therapy (LRT) before LT has been performed to prevent tumor progression, and a recent literature review revealed that it is associated with a nonsignificant trend toward better survival outcomes. However, much more information on bridging therapy has become available since then.

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Background: The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) assessment of global disability is the most common primary endpoint in acute stroke trials but lacks granularity (7 broad levels) and is ordinal (scale levels unknown distances apart), which constrains study power. Disability scales that are linear and continuous may better discriminate outcomes, but computerized administration in stroke patients is challenging. We, therefore, undertook to develop a staged use of an ordinal followed by a linear scale practical to use in multicenter trials.

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Introduction: Acute ischemic stroke is a medical emergency caused by decreased blood flow to the brain, leading cause of long-term disability. Recanalization, one of the most concerning difficulties linked with intracranial arterial occlusion, has been used to reduce mortality in ischemic stroke treatment. The mismatch concepts MR PWI-DWI or DWI-FLAIR can help identify patients for thrombolysis.

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Introduction: Long-term cardiac monitoring studies have unveiled low-burden, occult atrial fibrillation (AF) in some patients with otherwise cryptogenic stroke (CS), but occult AF is also found in some individuals without a stroke history and in patients with stroke of a known cause (KS). Clinical management would be aided by estimates of how often occult AF in a patient with CS is causal vs. incidental.

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Objective: This study aims to validate the Thai translation of the Movement Disorder Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS).

Methods: The English version was translated into Thai and then back-translated into English. The translated version underwent 2 rounds of cognitive pretesting to assess the ease of comprehension, ease of use and comfort with the scale.

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The modified Rankin Scale (mRS), a 7-level, clinician-reported, measure of global disability, is the most widely employed outcome scale in acute stroke trials. The scale's original development preceded the advent of modern clinimetrics, but substantial subsequent work has been performed to enable the mRS to meet robust contemporary scale standards. Prior research and consensus recommendations have focused on modernizing 2 aspects of the mRS: operationalized assignment of scale scores and statistical analysis of scale distributions.

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Background: Short-term peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infection rates have not been systematically studied in Asian countries, and data on peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections incidence by number of short-term peripheral venous catheter days are not available.

Methods: Prospective, surveillance study on peripheral venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections conducted from 1 September 2013 to 31 May 2019 in 262 intensive care units, members of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium, from 78 hospitals in 32 cities of 8 countries in the South-East Asia Region: China, India, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. For this research, we applied definition and criteria of the CDC NHSN, methodology of the INICC, and software named INICC Surveillance Online System.

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Background: Short-term peripheral venous catheter-related bloodstream infection (PVCR-BSI) rates have not been systematically studied in resource-limited countries, and data on their incidence by number of device days are not available.

Methods: Prospective, surveillance study on PVCR-BSI conducted from September 1, 2013, to May 31, 2019, in 727 intensive care units (ICUs), by members of the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC), from 268 hospitals in 141 cities of 42 countries of Africa, the Americas, Eastern Mediterranean, Europe, South East Asia, and Western Pacific regions. For this research, we applied definition and criteria of the CDC NHSN, methodology of the INICC, and software named INICC Surveillance Online System.

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Adopting a Patient-Centered Approach to Primary Outcome Analysis of Acute Stroke Trials Using a Utility-Weighted Modified Rankin Scale.

Stroke

August 2015

From the Department of Neurology and Comprehensive Stroke Center, University of California, Los Angeles (N.C., J.L.S.); Phyathai Stroke Center, Department of Neurology, Phyathai 1 Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand (N.C.); Departments of Emergency Medicine and Neurosurgery, Neuroscience Institute (O.A.) and Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine (J.B.), University of Cincinnati, OH; Department of Emergency Medicine at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Berry Consultants, LLC, Austin, TX (R.J.L.); Clinical Innovation & Research Institute, Memorial Hermann Hospital-Texas Medical Center, Houston (J.C.G.); Department of Neurology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, PA (T.G.J.); Department of Neurology, Marcus Stroke and Neuroscience Center, Grady Memorial Hospital, Emory University, Atlanta, GA (R.G.N.); Department of Public Health Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston (J.J.E.); Berry Consultants, LLC, Austin, TX (T.G., S.B.); Department of Stroke Research, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom (K.R.L.); and Department of Neurology, Stroke Division, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (A.D.B.).

Background And Purpose: Although the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) is the most commonly used primary end point in acute stroke trials, its power is limited when analyzed in dichotomized fashion and its indication of effect size challenging to interpret when analyzed ordinally. Weighting the 7 Rankin levels by utilities may improve scale interpretability while preserving statistical power.

Methods: A utility-weighted mRS (UW-mRS) was derived by averaging values from time-tradeoff (patient centered) and person-tradeoff (clinician centered) studies.

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