1.Evaluating the clinical teaching of medical imaging students at Curtin University of Technology, Australia
Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal 2011;7(3):1-5
Purpose: To ascertain the effectiveness of the clinical, tutorial-based component of teaching and the clinical
assessment method in the Bachelor of Medical Imaging Science at Curtin University of Technology (CUT), Perth,
Western Australia.
Materials and Methods: In mid-2006, second- and third-year students enrolled in CUT’s Medical Imaging Science
degree were asked to complete a questionnaire assessing the Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE)
evaluation program and clinical teaching. Thirty-three of 57 students answered questions about demographics and their
opinions of the laboratory sessions, clinical placements and the OSCEs.
Results: Seventy-six per cent of students were satisfied with their laboratory sessions and clinical placements.
Sixty-four per cent of respondents indicated that the OSCE was not an objective evaluation, but 82% of students felt the OSCE was an effective test of their radiography skills and knowledge, and believed that they were able to evaluate and care for a patient during the OSCE.
Conclusion: Overall, the surveyed students believed that the practical skills explored in laboratory sessions helped
improve clinical training outcomes; however, only 33% of the students were satisfied that the OSCE was an appropriate assessment of their clinical training in hospitals.
2.Bending 30-gauge needles using a needle guide: fatigue life evaluation
Jared Joseph TUTTLE ; Andrew Doran DAVIDSON ; Gregory Kent TUTTLE
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2023;23(5):281-285
Background:
Dentists bend needles prior to certain injections; however, there are concerns regarding needle fracture, lumen occlusion, and sharps handling. A previous study found that a 30-gauge needle fractures after four to nine 90° bends. This fatigue life study evaluated how many 90° bends a 30-gauge dental needle will sustain before fracture when bent using a needle guide.
Methods:
Two operators at Element Materials Technology, an independent testing, inspection, and certification company tested 48 30-gauge needles. After applying the needle guide, the operators bent the needle to a 90° angle and expressed the anesthetic from the tip. The needle was then bent back to a 0° angle, and the functionality was tested again. This process was repeated until the anesthetic failed to pass through the end of the needle due to fracture or obstruction. Each operator tested 24 needles (12 needles from each lot), and the number of sustained bends before the needle fracture was recorded.
Results:
The average number of sustained bends before needle failure was 40.33 (95% confidence interval = 37.41–43.26), with a minimum of 20, median of 40, and a maximum of 54. In each trial, the lumen remained patent until the needle fractured. The difference between the operators was statistically significant (P < 0.001).No significant differences in performance between needle lots were observed (P = 0.504).
Conclusion
Our results suggest that using a needle guide increases the number of sustained bends before needle fracture (P < 0.000001) than those reported in previous studies. Future studies should further evaluate the use of needle guides with other needle types across a variety of operators. Furthermore, additional opportunities lie in exploring workplace safety considerations and clinical applications of anesthetic delivery using a bent needle.
3.The Link between Fusobacteria and Colon Cancer: a Fulminant Example and Review of the Evidence
Martina KING ; Hermione HURLEY ; Kevin R. DAVIDSON ; Edward C. DEMPSEY ; Michelle A. BARRON ; Edward D. CHAN ; Am FREYY
Immune Network 2020;20(4):e30-
Systemic infections due to Fusobacterium may originate in the tonsillar/internal jugular veins or from the abdomen. We encountered a patient who presented with bacteremia, fulminant septic shock, and extensive soft tissue pyogenic infection due to Fusobacterium necrophorum.In addition, there was widespread metastatic colon cancer with the unique finding of premortem co-localization of F. necrophorum and cancer cells at a site distant from the colon. We reviewed the literature of the association of F. necrophorum and colon cancer, and discuss the evidence of how each of these 2 distinct entities may mutually augment the development or progression of the other.
4.Antioxidant and Antiaging Assays of Hibiscus sabdariffa Extract and Its Compounds.
Wahyu WIDOWATI ; Andani Puspita RANI ; R Amir HAMZAH ; Seila ARUMWARDANA ; Ervi AFIFAH ; Hanna Sari W KUSUMA ; Dwi Davidson RIHIBIHA ; Hayatun NUFUS ; Annisa AMALIA
Natural Product Sciences 2017;23(3):192-200
Skin aging is a complex biological process due to intrinsic and extrinsic factors. Free radical oxidative is one of extrinsic factors that induce activation of collagenase, elastase and hyaluronidase. Natural product from plants has been used as antioxidant and antiaging. This study aimed to evaluate antioxidant and antiaging properties of Hibiscus sabdariffa extract (HSE) and its compounds including myricetin, ascorbic acid, and β carotene. The phytochemical of H. sabdariffa was determined using modified Farnsworth method and presence of phenols, flavonoids and tannins were in moderate content, whereas triterpenoids and alkaloids were in low content. Total phenolic content performed using Folin-Ciocalteu method, was 23.85 µg GAE/mg. Quantitative analysis of myricetin, β-carotene, and ascorbic acid of HSE was performed with Ultra-High Performance Liquid Chromatography (UHPLC) that shows 78.23 µg/mg myricetin, 0.034 µg/mg β-carotene, whilst ascorbic acid was not detected. HSE has lower activity on DPPH (IC₅₀ = 195.73 µg/mL) compared to β-carotene, the lowest in ABTS assay (IC50 = 74.58 µg/mL) and low activity in FRAP assay (46.24 µM Fe(II)/µg) compared to myricetin, β-carotene. Antiaging was measured through inhibitory activity of collagenase, elastase, and hyaluronidase. HSE had weakest collagenase inhibitory activity (IC₅₀= 750.33 µg/mL), elastase inhibitory activity (103.83 µg/mL), hyaluronidase inhibitory activity (IC₅₀ = 619.43 µg/mL) compared to myricetin, β-carotene, and ascorbic acid. HSE contain higher myricetin compared to β-carotene. HSE has moderate antioxidants and lowest antiaging activities. Myricetin is the most active both antioxidant and antiaging activities.
Alkaloids
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Antioxidants
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Ascorbic Acid
;
Biological Processes
;
Carotenoids
;
Chromatography, Liquid
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Collagenases
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Flavonoids
;
Hibiscus*
;
Hyaluronoglucosaminidase
;
Methods
;
Pancreatic Elastase
;
Phenol
;
Phenols
;
Skin Aging
;
Tannins
5.Lack of methylation changes in GJB2 and RB1 non-coding regions of cochlear implant patients with sensorineural hearing loss
Angelo Augusto M. Sumalde ; Ivana V. Yang ; Talitha Karisse L. Yarza ; Celina Ann M. Tobias-Grasso ; Ma. Leah C. Tantoco ; Elizabeth Davidson ; Abner L. Chan ; Mahshid S. Azamian ; Teresa Luisa G. Cruz ; Seema R. Lalani ; Maria Rina T. Reyes-Quintos ; Eva Maria Cutiongco-de la Paz ; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez ; Charlotte M. Chiong
Acta Medica Philippina 2023;57(9):116-120
Objective:
Recent advances in epigenetic studies continue to reveal novel mechanisms of gene regulation and control, however little is known on the role of epigenetics in sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in humans. We aimed to investigate the methylation patterns of two regions, one in RB1 and another in GJB2 in Filipino patients with SNHL compared to hearing control individuals.
Methods:
We investigated an RB1 promoter region that was previously identified as differentially methylated in children with SNHL and lead exposure. Additionally, we investigated a sequence in an enhancer-like region within GJB2 that contains four CpGs in close proximity. Bisulfite conversion was performed on salivary DNA samples from 15 children with SNHL and 45 unrelated ethnically-matched individuals. We then performed methylation-specific real-time PCR analysis (qMSP) using TaqMan® probes to determine percentage methylation of the two regions.
Results:
Using qMSP, both our cases and controls had zero methylation at the targeted GJB2 and RB1 regions.
Conclusion
Our study showed no changes in methylation at the selected CpG regions in RB1 and GJB2 in the two comparison groups with or without SNHL. This may be due to a lack of environmental exposures to these target regions. Other epigenetic marks may be present around these regions as well as those of other HL-associated genes.
Hearing Loss
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Methylation