17 results match your criteria: "University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital.[Affiliation]"

Diversity in medical PhD curricula: a call for harmonisation.

Intern Med J

October 2023

Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, The University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Background: Globalisation has increased human movements around the world, spurring greater connectiveness and opportunities to collaborate. In an increasingly connected world, quality assurance among professionals is paramount, particularly in medical research where PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) degree holders are expected to be at the peak of their field and play advanced-level research, education and leadership roles. While some regional efforts have been made to ensure comparability in the standards of advanced degree training, no previous study has compared these standards for a PhD in medicine across the globe.

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Background: Survival rates for lymphoma are highest amongst hematological malignancies. In 2019, it was estimated that over 6400 Australians were diagnosed with lymphoma, a group of hematological malignancies with a high 5-year survival rate of ~ 76%. There is an increased focus on the promotion of wellness in survivorship and active approaches to reducing morbidity related to treatment; however, current models of follow-up care heavily rely on hospital-based specialist-led care.

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Cellular immunotherapeutics targeting the human papillomavirus (HPV)-16 E6 and E7 proteins have achieved limited success in HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancer (OPC). Here we have conducted proteome-wide profiling of HPV-16-specific T cell responses in a cohort of 66 patients with HPV-associated OPC and 22 healthy individuals. Unexpectedly, HPV-specific T cell responses from OPC patients were not constrained to the E6 and E7 antigens; they also recognized E1, E2, E4, E5, and L1 proteins as dominant targets for virus-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells.

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In several issues of the during June-July of 1837 there was an interchange of letters between Robert Graves, Regius Professor of the Institutes of Medicine at Trinity College, Dublin, and the London physician and experimental physiologist Marshall Hall, often considered the discoverer of the phenomenon of reflex activity. Graves asserted that he, rather than Hall, was the originator of the idea of reflex action as a disease mechanism. Hall rejected that assertion and, after exchange of some verbal "pleasantries," began a tirade about a somewhat different, although not unrelated issue into which the journal editor interjected some not exactly dispassionate comments.

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Background: Patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) generally have a high symptom burden and poor health-related quality of life, often requiring recurring systemic corticosteroid use and repeated sinus surgery. Dupilumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody that inhibits signalling of interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13, key drivers of type 2 inflammation, and has been approved for use in atopic dermatitis and asthma. In these two studies, we aimed to assess efficacy and safety of dupilumab in patients with CRSwNP despite previous treatment with systemic corticosteroids, surgery, or both.

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Cost-Effectiveness of Erythropoietin in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Multinational Trial-Based Economic Analysis.

J Neurotrauma

September 2019

Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Research Centre, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

The EPO-TBI multi-national randomized controlled trial found that erythropoietin (EPO), when compared to placebo, did not affect 6-month neurological outcome, but reduced illness severity-adjusted mortality in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), making the cost-effectiveness of EPO in TBI uncertain. The current study uses patient-level data from the EPO-TBI trial to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of EPO in patients with moderate or severe TBI from the healthcare payers' perspective. We addressed the issue of transferability in multi-national trials by estimating costs and effects for specific geographical regions of the study (Australia/New Zealand, Europe, and Saudi Arabia).

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Preventive parenting interventions can experience challenges in maximizing dosage, or the amount of intervention received by parents. This study examined the associations of baseline mother, father, and very preterm infant (VPT; <32 weeks) characteristics with satisfactory intervention attendance of the family within a randomized controlled trial of Baby Triple P for Preterm Infants (Colditz et al., 2015).

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Background And Objective: The mechanism of reported benefits of delayed cord clamping (DCC) are unclear. We aimed to determine whether DCC compared to immediate cord clamping (ICC) in very preterm infants improves cerebral oxygenation in the first 24 h.

Study Design: This is a prospective study of a subset of infants at < 30 weeks of gestation who were randomised to DCC (≥60 s) or ICC (< 10 s) and required an indwelling arterial catheter.

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Reply to Dr Riley.

Reg Anesth Pain Med

April 2018

Department of Clinical Medical Sciences School of Medicine CEU San Pablo University and Department of Anesthesiology Madrid-Montepríncipe University Hospital Madrid, Spain Department of Anesthesia Royal Hospital for Women andPrince of Wales and Sydney Children's Hospitals, Randwick and University of New South Wales Kensington, Sydney New South Wales, Australia Laboratory of Surgical NeuroAnatomy Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit Faculty of Medicine Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona and Antón Borja Primary Care Centre Terrassa Health Consortium Rubí, Spain Department of Anesthesiology University General Hospital Valencia University School of Medicine Valencia, Spain Laboratory of Surgical NeuroAnatomy Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit Faculty of Medicine Universitat de Barcelona Barcelona, Spain Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine The University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

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Purpose: This report describes the views of front-line health professionals who participated in a randomised controlled trial examining a model of care in which depressed cancer patients received a brief psychosocial intervention. Health professionals from four cancer centres received focused training, skill development and clinical supervision in order to deliver the intervention.

Methods: We interviewed 20 health professionals asking them about their perceptions of participation in the study and their views about more widespread implementation of this model of care.

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Purpose: A stepped-wedge cluster-randomised controlled trial was conducted to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a brief psychosocial intervention for depressed cancer patients, delivered by trained front-line health professionals in routine clinical care.

Methods: Nine hundred two patients were assessed across four treatment centres which were allocated in random order from control epoch to intervention epoch. Eligible patients had Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) scores of 8 or greater.

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Pioneers of laryngoscopy: indirect, direct and video laryngoscopy.

Anaesth Intensive Care

July 2015

Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Herston Campus, Brisbane, Queensland.

Airway management is one of the core skills of the anaesthetist and various techniques of airway management have developed over many years. Initially, the only view of the glottis that could be obtained was an indirect view (indirect laryngoscopy). Late in the 19th century, a direct view of the glottis was obtained via various direct laryngoscopes.

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Maturation of corpus callosum anterior midbody is associated with neonatal motor function in eight preterm-born infants.

Neural Plast

October 2013

Perinatal Research Centre and UQ Centre for Clinical Research, The University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, QLD 4029, Australia ; School of Psychology and Psychiatry, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3806, Australia.

Background: The etiology of motor impairments in preterm infants is multifactorial and incompletely understood. Whether corpus callosum development is related to impaired motor function is unclear. Potential associations between motor-related measures and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) of the corpus callosum in preterm infants were explored.

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Background: There is conflicting information on the effects of oestrogen on the heart in women, especially those using postmenopausal hormone therapy. Whilst some studies reported a beneficial effect, others showed adverse outcomes. The interplay of lifestyle factors and type/timing of therapy remains to be clarified.

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Role of statins in diabetes complications.

Curr Diabetes Rev

August 2009

Diamantina Institute, The University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Department of Internal Medicine and Aged Care, Queensland 4029, Australia.

Diabetes is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality in the Western world and it currently affects 35 million people in the US alone. Cardiovascular and renal complications of diabetes, Type I and II, account for much of this morbidity, and are now known to be the end result of a complex interplay of pathophysiological processes. These include haemodynamic and metabolic abnormalities such as endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, vasoconstriction, oxidation and fibrosis.

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The future of vascular surgery: an Australasian perspective.

J Vasc Surg

December 2008

Department of Surgery and Department of Vascular Surgery, University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Herston, Queensland, Australia.

This article briefly outlines the current status of vascular surgery in Australia and New Zealand, reports on the future practice and research challenges as perceived by vascular surgeons in our two countries, and finally, explores how the current vascular surgical research efforts in Australasia map to those challenges.

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Complex regional pain syndrome type 1 (CRPS1) involves cortical abnormalities similar to those observed in phantom pain and after stroke. In those groups, treatment is aimed at activation of cortical networks that subserve the affected limb, for example mirror therapy. However, mirror therapy is not effective for chronic CRPS1, possibly because movement of the limb evokes intolerable pain.

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