12 results match your criteria: "University of Oslo Medical School[Affiliation]"

This history page in the series "Leaders in MSK Radiology" is dedicated to the memory and achievements of the Danish radiologist Hans Jessen Panner, whose name is connected to the medical eponym Panner's disease.

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Translating patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) can alter the meaning of items and undermine the PROM's psychometric properties (quantified as cross-cultural differential item functioning [DIF]). The aim of this paper was to present the theoretical background for PROM translation, adaptation, and cross-cultural validation, and assess how PROMs used in sports medicine research have been translated and adapted. We also assessed DIF for the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) across Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish versions.

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Prevalence of primary focal and segmental dystonia in Oslo.

Neurology

November 2003

University of Oslo Medical School, The National Hospital, University of Oslo, Norway.

Article Synopsis
  • A service-based prevalence study in Oslo identified 129 patients with focal and segmental dystonia seeking medical treatment.
  • The overall prevalence of dystonia was found to be 25.4 per 100,000, with rates increasing significantly with age—from 4.1 in those under 30 to 58.7 in those over 70.
  • Patients of European descent had a higher prevalence rate (28.3 per 100,000) compared to first-generation immigrants from Asian and African backgrounds.
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Ethical issues raised by recent rapid advances in genetics are being discussed in many settings. A version of this paper was read by its author, a Norwegian moral philosopher, at a recent symposium celebrating 90 years of the Nobel prize.

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Article Synopsis
  • In patients with severe hypothyroidism, thyroxine treatment can either worsen or improve angina pectoris symptoms.
  • A study using radionuclide ventriculography (RNV) showed that some patients experienced decreased heart function during exercise before and after starting thyroxine, but verapamil helped improve this.
  • After two months of thyroxine therapy, heart function significantly improved during exercise, suggesting the presence of reversible coronary artery dysfunction, leading to the recommendation of using verapamil alongside thyroxine early in treatment.
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Thirty-six, 19-year-old men within the 95th percentile of mean blood pressure (110 mmHg) at a routine medical screening were randomized into two groups and requested to return for a follow-up visit in 2 weeks. One group was sent a neutral letter, while the other was sent a letter conveying the information that their blood pressures were elevated. After 15 min sitting in the laboratory, there was a significantly higher heart rate (P less than 0.

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Plasma levels of catecholamines, beta-thromboglobulin (BTG) and arginine vasopressin (AVP), and degree of pain were examined in 22 patients with suspected uncomplicated myocardial infarction within 24 h following onset of chest pain. Sixteen patients developed infarction with peak creatine phosphokinase at 1280 Ul-1 (range 293-3770 Ul-1). Fifteen healthy men served as controls (C).

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The present study aimed at testing the hypothesis of a link between mental stress and blood platelet function. Twenty-nine 19-year-old men were recruited from the 98th percentile of mean blood pressure (116 mmHg) at a routine medical screening. They were not informed about their elevated blood pressures at the time of the screening.

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A patient who developed localized, granulomatous reactions in a tattoo is described. With the use of scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive x-ray microanalysis, both aluminum and titanium particles were found in the involved skin sections. Intradermal provocation testing with separate suspensions of aluminum and titanium induced a positive response only in the case of aluminum.

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Strategies for dietary and anti-smoking advice. Practical experiences from the Oslo Study.

Drugs

September 1989

Department of Medicine, University of Oslo Medical School, Ulleval Hospital, Norway.

One of the 2 controlled preventive trials within the Oslo Study was a non-drug trial on the effect of diet and smoking intervention on coronary heart disease in 1232 middleaged, normotensive, healthy men. All had elevated serum cholesterol and 4 out of 5 smoked every day. The participants in the intervention group met every 6 months during the 5-year study for clinical examination and for dietary and smoking counselling.

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