95 results match your criteria: "University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital[Affiliation]"
Biomaterials
October 2009
University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Inadequate extracellular matrix cues and subsequent apoptotic cell death are among crucial factors currently limiting cell viability and organ retention in cell-based therapeutic strategies for vascular regeneration. Here we describe the use of a single-cell hydrogel capsule to provide enhanced cell survival of adherent cells in transient suspension culture. Human marrow stromal cells (hMSCs) were singularly encapsulated in agarose capsules containing the immobilized matrix molecules, fibronectin and fibrinogen to ameliorate cell-matrix survival signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Infect Control
September 2008
Centre for Research Expertise in Occupational Disease, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada.
Background: Communicable respiratory illness is an important cause of morbidity among nurses. One of the key reasons for occupational transmission of this illness is the failure to implement appropriate barrier precautions, particularly facial protection. The objectives of this study were to describe the factors that influence nurses' decisions to use facial protection and to determine their relative importance in predicting compliance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Obstet Gynaecol Can
January 2008
Department of Pediatrics, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto ON.
Objective: All Canadian jurisdictions have human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing programs requiring that clinicians discuss HIV testing with all pregnant women and seek their consent to be tested. Our goal was to evaluate how the informed consent process was being carried out in Ontario.
Methods: Between November 2002 and February 2004, women in postpartum wards in three Toronto teaching hospitals were invited to participate in the study.
Healthc Q
August 2015
Ontario Safety Association for Community and Healthcare (OSACH); Dalla Lana School of Public Health and Department of Medicine, University of Toronto; University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario.
Even though joint health and safety committees (JHSCs) have been in existence in Ontario workplaces for almost 30 years and healthcare workers are at high risk for workplace injury, there has been little research done related to JHSC functioning in Ontario's healthcare sector. In his recent review of the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Toronto, Justice Archie Campbell found that JHSCs in Ontario hospitals were not fulfilling their intended roles and responsibilities. The objective of this study was to gain a deeper understanding of the role, resources, structure and functioning of JHSCs in Ontario hospitals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealthc Policy
August 2007
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON.
Background: Investigations of socio-economic gradients in mental health services use in Canada have used different measures of socio-economic status and have shown conflicting results. We explored the relationships between education level, income level and mental health services use among people with a mental illness using data from the Canadian Community Health Survey: Cycle 1.2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ther
October 2006
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5B 1W8.
DNA vaccination of autoimmune diabetes-prone NOD mice with unmodified target islet antigens, i.e., preproinsulin (PPIns) or glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), is poorly protective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Clin Pract Gastroenterol Hepatol
April 2006
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Background: A 65-year-old white Mediterranean male with a 10-year history of intermittent anemia, who was otherwise completely asymptomatic, was referred to our hospital in March 2004. He had a medical history of beta thalassemia and fecal occult blood tests had occasionally been positive.
Investigations: Fecal occult blood test, laboratory investigations, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, colonoscopy with retrograde ileoscopy, mesenteric angiography, small-bowel series, CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis, Meckel's scan, and capsule endoscopy.
This article discusses continuing education and the implementation of clinical practice guidelines or best evidence, quality improvement, and patient safety. Continuing education focuses on the perspective of the adult learner and is guided by well-established educational principles. In contrast, guideline implementation and related concepts borrow from the fields of quality improvement and patient safety and from health services research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWomen Health
August 2005
University Health Network, Women's Health Program, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Inner City Health Research, 70 Richmond St East, 4th Floor, 30 Bond St, Toronto, ON, M5G 2N2, Canada.
Purpose: This qualitative research aimed to elicit experiences and beliefs of recent South Asian immigrant women about their major health concerns after immigration.
Methods: Four focus groups were conducted with 24 Hindi-speaking women who had lived less than five years in Canada. The audiotaped data were transcribed, translated, and analyzed by identification of themes and subcategories.
Proc Nutr Soc
August 2001
University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Nutrition support for patients in hospital has become an essential form of therapy. Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) was the preferred way of giving nutrition to hospital patients for many years but enteral nutrition (EN) is now the preferred route. EN is believed to promote gut function and prevent translocation of intestinal bacteria, thus reducing the incidence of sepsis in critically ill patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Soc Gynecol Investig
October 2001
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5B 1W8.
Objective: In the present study, the neurotoxic effect of oxidized low density lipoprotein on PC-12 neuronal cells maintained in culture was used to test the neuroprotective effect of several equine estrogens, such as estrone (E(1)), 17beta-estradiol (17beta-E(2)), 17alpha-estradiol (17alpha-E(2)), equilin (Eq), 17beta-dihydroequilin (17beta-Eq), 17alpha-dihydroequilin (17alpha-Eq), equilenin (Eqn), 17beta-dihydroequilenin (17beta-Eqn), 17alpha-dihydroequilenin (17alpha-Eqn), Delta(8)-estrone (Delta(8)-E(1)), and Delta(8),17beta-estradiol (Delta(8),17beta-E(2)).
Methods: The PC-12 cells (10,000 cells/well) were grown on collagen-coated 96-well plates in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium supplemented with 10% horse serum, 5% fetal bovine serum, and 10 mM HEPES. In culture, the cells displayed normal PC-12 morphology and behavior, exhibiting increased dendritic growth and cessation of cell division upon exposure to nerve growth factor.
Am J Clin Nutr
August 2001
University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The role of nutritional support in clinical care has burgeoned over the past 40 y. Initially, total parenteral nutri-tion (TPN) was considered to be the standard of care. Later, the concept that enteral nutrition (EN) promoted gut function and prevented the translocation of intestinal bacteria resulted in EN becoming the standard of care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
June 2001
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1A8 Canada.
Folate status is inversely related to the risk of colorectal cancer. Whether conventional blood measurements of folate status accurately reflect folate concentrations in the colorectal mucosa has been a controversial topic. This is an important issue because accurate measures of folate status in the colorectal mucosa are important for ascertaining the risk of colorectal cancer in epidemiological studies and for determining the effects of folate supplementation in clinical trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEuropace
July 2000
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Antiarrhythmic agents are broadly classified according to their mode of action in order to provide a basis for rational drug choice when managing particular rhythm disturbances. However, a great deal of variability exists within each drug class and treatment decisions require a greater understanding of the pharmacological characteristics of individual drugs in order to tailor treatment to a specific clinical presentation. Class III drugs in particular form a heterogeneous group of agents, some of which selectively block ion channels while others have multi-channel blocking properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Gastroenterol
January 2001
Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Objectives: Dietary folate intake is inversely associated with the risk of colorectal cancer. This study investigated the effect of folate supplementation on genomic DNA methylation and DNA strand breaks in exons 5-8 of the p53 gene of the colonic mucosa, two provisional biomarkers of colon cancer.
Methods: Twenty subjects with adenomas were randomized to receive either folate (5 mg/day) or placebo for 1 yr after polypectomy.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol
October 1998
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Recently a tenth equine estrogen, identified as the sulfate ester of delta8-estrone has been reported to be present in Premarin (a conjugated equine estrogen preparation), and because of its unique ring B unsaturated structure (conjugated double bond in the B ring), we have, in the present study, determined its pharmacokinetics in postmenopausal women and men, its interaction with uterine estrogen receptors and its uterotropic activity. After the administration of [14C]delta8-estrone, blood was drawn at various time intervals, and the plasma fractionated into the unconjugated sulfate and glucuronide fractions. The disappearance of radioactivity as delta8-estrone from plasma can be described as a function of two exponentials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet
October 1998
Department of Neurology, University of Toronto and St Michael's Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Abdom Imaging
March 1998
Department of Radiology, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario M5B 1W8, Canada.
Purpose: To identify the clinical and radiologic findings in patients with diaphragm-like strictures in the small bowel.
Patients And Methods: We reviewed the histories, radiologic findings, and pathologic findings in two men and two women, all in their sixties, with a history of long-term nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) or aspirin (ASA) usage and one or more radiologically demonstrated diaphragm-like strictures in the small bowel.
Results: Two patients had long histories of NSAID usage, and two of ASA usage.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
October 1993
Department of Radiology, University of Toronto and St. Michael's Hospital, Ontario, Canada.
Portal venous barium and air intravasation occurred during an air contrast enema in a man with ulcerative colitis. Abdominal plain radiography and CT subsequently showed increased hepatic density. Computed tomography also showed colonic intramural and pericolic nodal or venous barium, increased splenic density, and pulmonary arterial barium.
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