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Saint James Hospital[Affiliation] Publications | LitMetric

22 results match your criteria: "Saint James Hospital[Affiliation]"

Meningeal cryptococcosis in a pancreas transplant recipient requiring grafectomy: A case report.

World J Gastrointest Surg

September 2024

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine and Pain Therapy, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb 10000, Croatia.

Background: Through continuous improvement in transplantation medicine, a wider range of solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients is considered suitable for complex procedures. Despite advances in modern transplantation practice, transpiring invasive fungal infections pose a substantial threat for SOT recipients. To our knowledge, cryptococcal infection confined amidst sole pancreas SOT recipients has not been described to date.

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Background Clinical role transition is known to pose a challenge to doctors in training. The intensive care unit (ICU) is noted to be a demanding workplace environment, although relatively little is known about the experience of doctors as they transition to intensive care medicine (ICM) at the postgraduate level. Thus, this study aimed to explore the experience of registrar-grade doctors undergoing this transition and to examine the interplay between personal and professional life at this time.

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Aims: Cognitive impairment has been associated with kidney function and chronic kidney disease. Whether this association is due to accelerated cardiovascular disease (CVD) or an independent specific kidney function effect related to toxins is unclear. We investigated the impact of an array of clinical factors, inflammatory biomarkers, and cardiovascular biomarkers on the association between kidney function, cognitive function, and structural brain abnormalities.

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Room to improve: The diagnostic journey of Spinal Muscular Atrophy.

Eur J Paediatr Neurol

January 2023

Department of Neurology, Children's Health Ireland at Temple Street, Dublin 1, Ireland; School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.

Aims: To highlight the current diagnostic pathway for children with Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) in Ireland. We look to identify points along the diagnostic pathway that may impede a timely diagnosis, and argue that newborn screening for SMA is the single best measure to remediate these delays.

Methods: Through retrospective chart review and an online questionnaire, we gathered SMA patient data outlining clinical characteristics and the route to diagnosis of the SMA cohort attending the National SMA Treatment centre at Children's Health Ireland.

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Nodal peripheral T cell lymphoma (PTCL) with T follicular helper (TFH) cell phenotype is a provisional entity added to the 2016 revised WHO classification of haematological malignancies. These lymphomas have an aggressive clinical course and respond poorly to conventional treatments. Distinct histological features have not been well described.

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The study sought to evaluate the influence of anesthesia on chronic pain after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). : This was a single-center, randomized controlled study, with patients receiving a spinal anesthetic (SP) alone or a general anesthetic (GA) with femoral block, with follow-up at 3 and at 6 months. The primary outcome was the WOMAC score at 6 months.

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The operative and non-technical skills exposure of urology trainees has reduced due to a number of factors, including the European Working Time Directive, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Simulation-based education (SBE) is an innovative addition to clinical experience which can begin to address the skills-based learning deficiency in order to help trainees meet their curriculum requirements and optimise the exposure required for a trainee to become a competent general urology consultant. Surgical simulation is an effective training tool but has a complex implementation process, requiring considerable planning tailored to specific educational targets, to ensure it is sustainable and reproducible.

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Background: Prescribing error represent a significant source of preventable harm to patients. Prescribing errors at discharge, including omission of pre-admission medications (PAM), are particularly harmful as they frequently propagate following discharge. This study assesses the impact of an educational intervention and introduction of an electronic patient record (EPR) in the same centre on omission of PAM at discharge using a pragmatic design.

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Genomics is revolutionizing biomedical research, medicine and healthcare globally in academic, public and industry sectors alike. Concrete examples around the world show that huge benefits for patients, society and economy can be accrued through effective and responsible genomic research and clinical applications. Unfortunately, Ireland has fallen behind and needs to act now in order to catch up.

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Toxic epidermal necrolysis after acute burn injury.

Ann Burns Fire Disasters

December 2018

National Burns Unit, Saint James' Hospital, Dublin, Republic of Ireland.

Toxic epidermal necrolysis is a rare, potentially fatal disorder that involves large areas of skin desquamation. Patients with toxic epidermal necrolysis are frequently referred to burn centres for expert wound management and early comprehensive critical care as this has been shown to improve patient outcome and mortality. The authors describe the first report of medication-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis occurring in a patient during acute burn management in a tertiary burn care facility.

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Acute herpes zoster and its complication post herpetic neuralgia represent a significant challenge to primary care physicians in their care of an ageing population of patients. This was a cross-sectional observational study by means of a quantitative survey of 1,000 general practitioners registered in Ireland exploring the frequency of diagnosis, methods of treatment and cost of AHZ and PHN in primary care. We recorded an 18% response rate (n = 184) with an 83% completion rate (n = 152/184).

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The management of critically ill human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients is challenging; however, intensive care unit-related mortality has declined significantly in recent years. There are 10 case reports in the literature of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) use in HIV-positive patients, of whom seven survived to hospital discharge. We describe a 33-year-old Brazilian man who presented with Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia and severe hypoxic respiratory failure.

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Aim: This article presents key ethical challenges that were encountered when conducting a participatory qualitative research project with a very specific, small group of nurses, in this case with practice development nurses in Malta.

Background: With the small number of nurses employed in practice development roles in Malta, there are numerous difficulties of maintaining confidentiality. Poorly constructed interventions by the researcher could have resulted in detrimental effects to research participants and the overall trustworthiness of the research.

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Aims and Objectives. To review the experience of a nurse-led colorectal cancer follow-up clinic in a tertiary referral colorectal cancer centre. Methodology.

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Detection of a tyrosine phosphatase LAR on intestinal epithelial cells and intraepithelial lymphocytes in the human duodenum.

Mediators Inflamm

February 2005

Department of Clinical medicine, Institute of Molecular medicine, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, Saint James Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland.

Studies of tyrosine phosphorylation in the human duodenum have indicated that proliferating cells in the middle portion of the duodenal crypt were devoid of this feature, suggesting that tyrosine kinase activation is not a dominant factor in crypt cell proliferation, and that consequently tyrosine phosphatase activity may be a more critical factor in crypt cell development. We investigated the expression of the leukocyte common antigen-related receptor (LAR) family of tyrosine phosphatases. A flow cytometry system was used to examine cells from the surface, mid-portion, and lower part of the crypt.

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Saint James' Hospital is a 650-bed tertiary referral hospital. An audit was performed of acute transmural myocardial infarctions for the years 1996 to 1999 inclusive. On average there were 2043 cardiology admissions annually, 9.

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Sleep apnoea of unusual origin.

J Laryngol Otol

February 2002

Departments of Otolaryngology, and Pathology, Saint James Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.

A 72-year-old man presented with a history of progressive sleep apnoea. The cause was a large superior laryngeal nerve schwannoma arising in the left parapharyngeal space. This had a ball-valve effect on the laryngeal inlet.

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