1.Model Determination of Delayed Causes of Analgesics Prescription in the Emergency Ward in Arak, Iran.
Ali CYRUS ; Mehrdad MOGHIMI ; Abolfazle JOKAR ; Mohammad RAFEIE ; Ali MORADI ; Parisa GHASEMI ; Hanieh SHAHAMAT ; Ali KABIR
The Korean Journal of Pain 2014;27(2):152-161
BACKGROUND: According to the reports of the World Health Organization 20% of world population suffer from pain and 33% of them suffer to some extent that they cannot live independently. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study which was conducted in the emergency department (ED) of Valiasr Hospital of Arak, Iran, in order to determine the causes of delay in prescription of analgesics and to construct a model for prediction of circumstances that aggravate oligoanalgesia. Data were collected during a period of 7 days. RESULTS: Totally, 952 patients participated in this study. In order to reduce their pain intensity, 392 patients (42%) were treated. Physicians and nurses recorded the intensity of pain for 66.3% and 41.37% of patients, respectively. The mean (SD) of pain intensity according to visual analogue scale (VAS) was 8.7 (1.5) which reached to 4.4 (2.3) thirty minutes after analgesics prescription. Median and mean (SD) of delay time in injection of analgesics after the physician's order were 60.0 and 45.6 (63.35) minutes, respectively. The linear regression model suggested that when the attending physician was male or intern and patient was from rural areas the delay was longer. CONCLUSIONS: We propose further studies about analgesics administration based on medical guidelines in the shortest possible time and also to train physicians and nurses about pain assessment methods and analgesic prescription.
Analgesics*
;
Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Medicine
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Humans
;
Iran*
;
Linear Models
;
Male
;
Narcotics
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Pain Measurement
;
Physician's Practice Patterns
;
Prescriptions*
;
World Health Organization
2.Upregulation of the RNF8 gene can predict the presence of sperm in azoospermic individuals
Majid NAZARI ; Emad BABAKHANZADEH ; S. MOHSEN AGHAEI ZARCH ; Mehrdad TALEBI ; Nima NARIMANI ; Mandana DARGAHI ; Marjan SABBAGHIAN ; Nasrin GHASEMI
Clinical and Experimental Reproductive Medicine 2020;47(1):61-67
Objective:
In this study, specimens from testicular biopsies of men with nonobstructive azoospermia (NOA) were used to investigate whether RNF8 gene could serve as a biomarker to predict the presence of sperm in these patients.
Methods:
Testicular biopsy specimens from 47 patients were classified according to the presence of sperm (positive vs. negative groups) and investigated for the expression of RNF8. The level of RNF8 gene expression in the testes was compared between these groups using reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction.
Results:
The expression level of RNF8 was significantly higher in testicular samples from the positive group than in those from the negative group. Moreover, the area under the curve of RNF8 expression for the entire study population was 0.84, showing the discriminatory power of RNF8 expression in differentiating between the positive and negative groups of men with NOA. A receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed that RNF8 expression had a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 84%, with a cutoff level of 1.76.
Conclusion
This study points out a significant association between the expression of RNF8 and the presence of sperm in NOA patients, which suggests that quantified RNF8 expression in testicular biopsy samples may be a valuable biomarker for predicting the presence of spermatozoa in biopsy samples.
3.Condition medium of cerebrospinal fluid and retinoic acid induces the transdifferentiation of human dental pulp stem cells into neuroglia and neural like cells.
Sara HARATIZADEH ; Maryam NAZM BOJNORDI ; Shahram DARABI ; Narges KARIMI ; Mehrdad NAGHIKHANI ; Hatef GHASEMI HAMIDABADI ; Morteza SEIFI
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2017;50(2):107-114
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contains several molecules which are essential for neurogenesis. Human dental pulp stem cells (hDPSCs) are putatively neural crest cell-derived that can differentiate into neurons and glial cells under appropriate neurotrophic factors. The aim of this study was to induce differentiation of hDPSCs into neuroglial phenotypes using retinoic acid (RA) and CSF. The hDPSCs from an impacted third molar were isolated by mechanical and digestion and cultured. The cells have treated by 10⁻⁷µM RA (RA group) for 8 days, 10% CSF (CSF group) for 8 days and RA with CSF for 8 days (RA/CSF group). Nestin, microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2), and glial fibrillary acidic protein immunostaining were used to examine the differentiated cells. Axonal outgrowth was detected using Bielschowsky's silver impregnation method and Nissl bodies were stained in differentiated cells by Cresyl violet. The morphology of differentiated cells in treated groups was significantly changed after 3–5 days. The results of immunocytochemistry showed the presence of neuroprogenitor marker nestin was seen in all groups. However, the high percentage of nestin positive cells and MAP2, as mature neural markers, were observed at the pre-induction and induction stage, respectively. Nissl bodies were detected as dark-blue particles in the cytoplasm of treated cells. Our findings showed the RA as pre-inducer and CSF as inducer for using in vitro differentiation of neuron-like cells and neuroglial cells from hDPSCs.
Axons
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Cerebrospinal Fluid*
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Cytoplasm
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Dental Pulp*
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Digestion
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Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein
;
Humans*
;
Immunohistochemistry
;
In Vitro Techniques
;
Methods
;
Microtubule-Associated Proteins
;
Molar, Third
;
Nerve Growth Factors
;
Nestin
;
Neural Crest
;
Neurogenesis
;
Neuroglia*
;
Neurons
;
Nissl Bodies
;
Phenotype
;
Silver
;
Stem Cells*
;
Tretinoin*
;
Viola