1.Beta Blockers in Contemporary Cardiology: Is It Better to Cast Them Out?
Javaid Ahmad DAR ; John Roshan JACOB
Korean Circulation Journal 2024;54(4):165-171
Beta blockers are one of the commonest prescription drugs in medicine and they have been thought to revolutionize the treatment of heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) in the last century. In addition to HFrEF, they are prescribed for a variety of diseases in cardiology from hypertension to HF, angina, and stable coronary artery disease (CAD). The increased prescription of beta blockers in conditions like HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), and stable CAD may be doing more harm than good as per the data we have so far. The available data shows that beta blockers are associated with increased stroke risk and atrial fibrillation (AF) in hypertension and in patients with HFpEF, they have been associated with decreased exercise capacity. In patients with stable CAD and patients with myocardial infarction with normal systolic functions, beta blockers don’t offer any mortality benefit. In this article, we critically review the common indications and the uses of beta blockers in patients with HFpEF, CAD, hypertension and AF and we propose that beta blockers are overprescribed under the shadow of their beneficial effects in patients with HFrEF.
2.Use of abdominal compression device in colonoscopy: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Yousaf ZAFAR ; Ahmed Mustafa RASHID ; Syed Sarmad JAVAID ; Ahmed Kamal SIDDIQI ; Adnan ZAFAR ; Arsalan Zafar IQBAL ; Jagpal Singh KLAIR ; Rajesh KRISHNAMOORTHI
Clinical Endoscopy 2023;56(4):446-452
Background/Aims:
Colonoscopy for screening is associated with unpleasant experiences for patients, and abdominal compression devices have been developed to minimize these problems. However, there is a paucity of data supporting the therapeutic benefits of this strategy. This study examined the effects of using an abdominal compression device during colonoscopy on the cecal intubation time (CIT), abdominal compression, patient comfort, and postural changes.
Methods:
We searched PubMed and Scopus (from inception to November 2021) for randomized controlled trials that assessed the effects of an abdominal compression device during colonoscopy on CIT, abdominal compression, patient comfort, and postural change. A random-effects meta-analysis was performed. Weighted mean differences (WMDs) and Mantel-Haenszel odds ratios (ORs) were calculated.
Results:
Our pooled analysis of seven randomized controlled trials revealed that abdominal compression devices significantly reduced CIT (WMD, –0.76 [–1.49 to –0.03] minutes; p=0.04), abdominal compression (OR, 0.52; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.28–0.94; p=0.03), and postural changes (OR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.27–0.78; p=0.004) during colonoscopy. However, our results did not show a significant change in patient comfort (WMD, –0.48; 95% CI, –1.05 to 0.08; p=0.09) when using an abdominal compression device.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrate that employing an abdominal compression device may reduce CIT, abdominal compression, and postural change but have no impact on patient comfort.
3.Determinants of emergency department utilisation by older adults in Singapore: A systematic review.
Xuan Rong TANG ; Pin Pin PEK ; Fahad Javaid SIDDIQUI ; Rahul MALHOTRA ; Yu Heng KWAN ; Ling TIAH ; Andrew Fu Wah HO ; Marcus Eng Hock ONG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2022;51(3):170-179
INTRODUCTION:
Adults aged ≥60 years contribute to disproportionately higher visits to the emergency departments (ED). We performed a systematic review to examine the reasons why older persons visit the ED in Singapore.
METHODS:
We searched Medline, Embase and Scopus from January 2000 to December 2021 for studies reporting on ED utilisation by older adults in Singapore, and included studies that investigated determinants of ED utilisation. Statistically significant determinants and their effect sizes were extracted. Determinants of ED utilisation were organised using Andersen and Newman's model. Quality of studies was evaluated using Newcastle Ottawa Scale and Critical Appraisal Skills Programme.
RESULTS:
The search yielded 138 articles, of which 7 were used for analysis. Among the significant individual determinants were predisposing (staying in public rental housing, religiosity, loneliness, poorer coping), enabling (caregiver distress from behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia) and health factors (multimorbidity in patients with dementia, frailty, primary care visit in last 6 months, better treatment adherence). The 7 included studies are of moderate quality and none of them employed conceptual frameworks to organise determinants of ED utilisation.
CONCLUSION
The major determinants of ED utilisation by older adults in Singapore were largely individual factors. Evaluation of societal determinants of ED utilisation was lacking in the included studies. There is a need for a more holistic examination of determinants of ED utilisation locally based on conceptual models of health seeking behaviours.
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Frailty
;
Health Behavior
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Singapore
4.Methods of plant growth-promoting fungi application to enhance the growth and yield of wheat var. Ibaa99
Azher Hameed Al-Taie ; Noor Khadhum ; Arshad Javaid
Malaysian Journal of Microbiology 2022;18(6):670-676
Aims:
The main aim of the study was to evaluate some methods of application of Aspergillus niger AD1 and Trichoderma hamatum T-113 for enhancing the growth and yield of wheat var. Ibaa99 in pots and field conditions.
Methodology and results:
Plant growth-promoting fungi (PGPF) loaded with peat moss were used at a rate of 100, 150 and 200 mL pot-1 or m-2 in filed soil; seed treatment (coating) with fungi suspension 19 × 107, soil treatment and combination of all the three methods was employed in the study. Wheat seeds were sown in pots and field plots during 2018-2019, and data regarding various growth and yield attributes were recorded. In both pot and field trials, the results revealed that the best treatments for the desired plant growth and yield attributes were peat moss 150 mL alone or in combination with soil and seed treatments. The soil physicochemical parameters were also improved after inoculation with selected fungal isolates in different application methods compared with un-inoculated control treatment in both pot and field conditions.
Conclusion, significance and impact of study
The PGPF play a vital role represented phytoremediation, phytostimulation and bio-fertilization. The isolates of PGPF, which were applied with peat moss at 150 mL to the pot and in the field alone or combined with seed treatment and soil application, were significantly the best effective method for improving wheat attributes.
Aspergillus niger
;
Trichoderma
;
Plant Growth Regulators
5.3D printing applications for healthcare research and development
Javaid MOHD ; Haleem ABID ; Singh Pratap RAVI ; Suman RAJIV
Global Health Journal 2022;6(4):217-226
There is a growing demand for customised,biocompatible,and sterilisable components in the medical busi-ness.3D Printing is a disruptive technology for healthcare and provides significant research and development avenues.Simple 3D printing service gives patients low-cost individualised prostheses,implants,and gadgets,en-abling surgeons to operate more effectively with customised equipment and models;and assisting medical device manufacturers in developing new and faster goods.3D printed tissue pieces can overcome various challenges and may eventually allow medication companies to streamline research and development.In the long run,it may also assist in lowering prices and making medicines more accessible and effective for everybody.There is a growing corpus of research on the advantages of employing 3D printed anatomic models in teaching and training.The capacity to 3D printing individual anatomical diseases for practical learning is one of the funda-mental contrasts between utilising 3D and regular anatomical models.3D printing is very appealing for producing patient-specific implants.This literature review-based paper explores the role of 3D printing and 3D bioprinting in healthcare.It briefs the need and progressive steps for implementing 3D printing in healthcare and presented various facilities and enablers of 3D printing for the healthcare sector.Finally,this paper identifies and discusses the significant applications of 3D printing for healthcare research and development.3D printing services can be deployed to easily construct complex geometries in plastic or metal with good precision.This results in improved prototypes,lower costs,and lower part processing times.They can now physically create with natural materials,previously unattainable with prior technologies.Every hospital should have 3D printers in the future,allowing new organs/parts to be developed in-house.
6.Prevalence and risk factors of Syphilis among blood donors of Punjab, Pakistan
Nawaz, Z. ; Rasool, M.H. ; Siddique, A.B. ; Zahoor, M.A. ; Muzammil, S. ; Shabbir, M.U. ; Javaid, A. ; Chaudhry, M.
Tropical Biomedicine 2021;38(No.1):106-110
Syphilis is a sexually transmitted disease and its actual prevalence among Pakistani blood
donors is currently unknown. A cross sectional study was conducted at different district
healthcare hospitals of Punjab, Pakistan with an aim to evaluate the prevalence and risk
factors associated with syphilis in blood donors using immunochromatographic test (ICT)
and enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A total (n=1200) blood samples were
collected from donors aged 18–65 years. All the information regarding personal data,
demographic data and risk factors was collected via structured questionnaire. On the basis
of ICT and ELISA, the overall prevalence of syphilis was 3.91% among blood donors. The
demographic factors positively linked with syphilis were age (P= 0.000; Odds ratio, OR= 7.18;
95% confidence interval CI= 2.816–18.295) and education status (P= 0.000; Odds ratio, OR=
12.33; 95% confidence interval CI= 3.469–43.849) of donors. Similarly among the risk factors
analyzed, marital status (P= 0.012; Odds ratio OR= 2.251; 95% confidence interval CI= 1.206-
4.202) and blood transfusion history (P= 0.030; Odds ratio OR= 1.981; 95% confidence interval
CI= 1.083-3.623) were also strongly associated with syphilis. We emphasized the importance
of promoting preventive measures for syphilis. The syphilis diagnosis should not be based
on a single test. The present study indicates that higher prevalence is alarming for blood
donors in Pakistan. Stringent donor screening is highly recommended to ensure maximum
safe blood transfusion.
7.A randomised controlled trial investigating the analgesic efficacy of transversus abdominis plane block for adult laparoscopic appendicectomy.
Darell Alexander TUPPER-CAREY ; Shahridan Mohd FATHIL ; Yin Kiat Glenn TAN ; Yuk Man KAN ; Chern Yuen CHEONG ; Fahad Javaid SIDDIQUI ; Pryseley Nkouibert ASSAM
Singapore medical journal 2017;58(8):481-487
INTRODUCTIONWe conducted a single-centre, prospective randomised clinical trial to investigate the analgesic efficacy of transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block in adult patients undergoing laparoscopic appendicectomy.
METHODSPatients undergoing urgent laparoscopic appendicectomy under general anaesthesia alone (control group) and general anaesthesia supplemented by TAP block (TAP intervention group) were compared. All patients received a multimodal analgesia regime, which included postoperative morphine via a patient-controlled analgesia device. The primary endpoints were morphine consumption at 12 hours and 24 hours postoperatively. Secondary endpoints included pain scores, incidence of nausea and vomiting, and time to hospital discharge. A total of 58 patients were recruited, with 29 patients in each group.
RESULTSMean postoperative morphine consumption at 12 hours (control group: 11.45 ± 7.64 mg, TAP intervention group: 9.79 ± 8.09 mg; p = 0.4264) and 24 hours (control group: 13.38 ± 8.72 mg, TAP intervention group: 11.31 ± 8.66 mg; p = 0.3686) for the control and TAP intervention groups were not statistically different. Secondary outcomes were also not different between the two groups. Length of stay in the post-anaesthesia care unit was significantly shorter for the TAP intervention group, with a trend toward faster hospital discharge being observed.
CONCLUSIONTAP block, a regional anaesthetic procedure performed immediately prior to skin incision for laparoscopic appendicectomy, did not significantly improve postoperative analgesia outcomes.
8. Screening outcomes of household contacts of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients in Peshawar, Pakistan
Arshad JAVAID ; Anila BASIT ; Arshad JAVAID ; Mazhar Ali KHAN ; Sumaira MEHREEN ; Anila BASIT ; Muhammad IHTESHAM ; Irfan ULLAH ; Afsar KHAN ; Ubaid ULLAH ; Mir Azam KHAN ; Raza Ali KHAN
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine 2016;9(9):909-912
Objective To assess the profile of TB/multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) among household contacts of MDR-TB patients. Methods Close contacts of MDR-TB patients were traced in the cross-sectional study. Different clinical, radiological and bacteriological were performed to rule out the evidence of TB/MDR-TB. Results Between January 2012 and December 2012, a total of 200 index MDR-TB patients were initiated on MDR-TB treatment, out of which home visit and contacts screening were conducted for 154 index cases. Of 610 contacts who could be studied, 41 (17.4%) were diagnosed with MDR-TB and 10 (4.2%) had TB. The most common symptoms observed were cough, chest pain and fever. Conclusions The high incidence of MDR-TB among close contacts emphasize the need for effective contact screening programme of index MDR-TB cases in order to cut the chain of transmission of this disease.
9.Medication discrepancies and associated risk factors identified among elderly patients discharged from a tertiary hospital in Singapore.
Farooq AKRAM ; Paul J HUGGAN ; Valencia LIM ; Yufang HUANG ; Fahad Javaid SIDDIQUI ; Pryseley Nkouibert ASSAM ; Reshma A MERCHANT ;
Singapore medical journal 2015;56(7):379-384
INTRODUCTIONMedication discrepancies and poor documentation of medication changes (e.g. lack of justification for medication change) in physician discharge summaries can lead to preventable medication errors and adverse outcomes. This study aimed to identify and characterise discrepancies between preadmission and discharge medication lists, to identify associated risk factors, and in cases of intentional medication discrepancies, to determine the adequacy of the physician discharge summaries in documenting reasons for the changes.
METHODSA retrospective clinical record review of 150 consecutive elderly patients was done to estimate the number of medication discrepancies between preadmission and discharge medication lists. The two lists were compared for discrepancies (addition, omission or duplication of medications, and/or a change in dosage, frequency or formulation of medication). The patients' clinical records and physician discharge summaries were reviewed to determine whether the discrepancies found were intentional or unintentional. Physician discharge summaries were reviewed to determine if the physicians endorsed and documented reasons for all intentional medication changes.
RESULTSA total of 279 medication discrepancies were identified, of which 42 were unintentional medication discrepancies (35 were related to omission/addition of a medication and seven were related to a change in medication dosage/frequency) and 237 were documented intentional discrepancies. Omission of the baseline medication was the most common unintentional discrepancy. No reasons were provided in the physician discharge summaries for 54 (22.8%) of the intentional discrepancies.
CONCLUSIONUnintentional medication discrepancies are a common occurrence at hospital discharge. Physician discharge summaries often do not have adequate information on the reasons for medication changes.
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Medical Records ; Medication Errors ; prevention & control ; statistics & numerical data ; Medication Reconciliation ; statistics & numerical data ; Patient Admission ; Patient Discharge ; Retrospective Studies ; Risk Factors ; Singapore ; Tertiary Care Centers ; Treatment Outcome
10.Delta Reverse Polarity Shoulder Replacement: Single Surgeon Experience with a Minimum 2-Year Follow-up.
Shah JEHAN ; Magid ELTAYEB ; Mohammad Muddassir Mahmood JAVAID
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2015;7(3):359-364
BACKGROUND: The delta reverse shoulder replacement system was developed for the treatment of rotator cuff arthropathy so that the deltoid can substitute for the deficient rotator cuff. To evaluate the results of delta reverse shoulder replacement for functional improvement and complications in a consecutive series by a single surgeon over a period of six years with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. METHODS: The data were collected retrospectively from electronic theatre records. Over a period of 6 years (2006-2012), 46 cases that fulfilled the inclusion criteria were identified. There were 34 females and 12 males. The average age of patients was 76.2 years (range, 58 to 87 years). A single surgeon performed all procedures using the anterosuperior approach. The mean follow-up time was 49 months (range, 24 to 91 months). All cases had preoperative and postoperative Constant scores. We collected the data on indications, hospital stay, and change in the Constant score, complications, and reoperation rates. RESULTS: The main indication for surgery was rotator cuff arthropathy (52.2%), followed by massive rotator cuff tear (28.3%), osteoarthritis (8.7%), fractures (6.5%), and rheumatoid arthritis (4.3%). Also, 65.2% of the cases were referred by general practitioners, 26% of the cases were referred by other consultants, and 8.8% of the cases were already under the care of a shoulder surgeon. The average preoperative Constant score was 23.5 (range, 8 to 59). The average Constant score at the final follow-up was 56 (range, 22 to 83). On average, there was an improvement of 33 points in the Constant score. The improvement in the Constant score was significant (p < 0.001). We observed complications in four patients (8.6%). Three of four patients (6.5%) needed reoperation. The first complication was pulmonary embolism in the early postoperative period. The other complications included dissociation of the glenosphere from the metaglene, deltoid detachment, and stitch abscess. CONCLUSIONS: This is a single-surgeon, single-approach series of 46 cases with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. At this stage, the results are encouraging with no cases of loosening, dislocation, or nerve injury.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement/*adverse effects/*methods
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Postoperative Complications/epidemiology
;
Reoperation/statistics & numerical data
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Shoulder Joint/*surgery
;
Young Adult


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