2.Life satisfaction and self-efficacy of undergraduate occupational therapy students in a university in Metro Manila: A cross-sectional study
Kim Gerald Medallon ; Charles Bermejo ; Cesar Joseph Lim ; Miria Olivia Isabel Alvior ; Daniel Miguel Batain ; Chasid Bautista ; Karissa Anne Lee ; Maria Louise Abigail Morales ; Quincy Aaliyah Torre
Philippine Journal of Allied Health Sciences 2023;7(1):29-42
Background:
The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly disrupted students' lives and daily routines, resulting in increased stress and mental health
issues that impact their perceived life satisfaction and self-efficacy. While life satisfaction and self-efficacy may influence student academic
performance and success, current data on life satisfaction and self-efficacy in Filipino occupational therapy students is limited. Objectives: This
study aims to describe the life satisfaction and self-efficacy level of occupational therapy students at a university in Metro Manila, Philippines, during
the COVID-19 pandemic and explore the relationship between these two variables.
Methods:
The study adopted an analytic cross-sectional study
design and records review methodology utilizing the Student Life Survey 2021 database. Data from the survey participants who fit the study's
inclusion criteria were extracted to determine their life satisfaction and self-efficacy based on their responses on the Satisfaction with Life Scale and
Self-Efficacy Formative Questionnaire. Descriptive statistics using measures of central tendency and dispersion were used to analyze data.
Spearman-Rho correlation analysis was performed to examine the correlation between participants’ life satisfaction and self-efficacy.
Results:
A total of 205 occupational therapy students completed the survey. Results reveal that the participants were slightly dissatisfied with their lives
(M=18.45; SD=1.52) and that they had satisfactory or adequate self-efficacy (M=64.66; SD=1.37). An analysis of their self-efficacy scores reveals that
participants had a poor belief in their personal ability (M=37.71; SD=1.33) and a satisfactory or adequate belief that their ability can grow with
effort (M=26.92; SD=1.32). Life satisfaction and self-efficacy were found to decrease as the participants’ year level increased. Furthermore,
correlation analysis revealed a statistically significant moderate correlation between participants’ life satisfaction and self-efficacy (⍴=0.40, p<0.05).
Conclusion
The participants have a slightly dissatisfied level of life satisfaction and a satisfactory or adequate level of self-efficacy during the
COVID-19 pandemic. Life satisfaction and self-efficacy were found to have moderate correlation. Online learning adjustments, pandemic
restrictions, and societal expectations are factors that may have influenced these findings, as emphasized in existing studies. This study may inform
the academe in modifying existing learning environments and providing enhancement programs to deliberately target these constructs influencing
overall academic performance.
Self Efficacy
3.Biomechanical Characterization of a New Locking Loop Stitch for Graft Fixation versus Krackow Stitch
Yasuo ITAMI ; Orr LIMPISVASTI ; Michelle H. MCGARRY ; Nilay A. PATEL ; Charles C. LIN ; Thomas DOONEY ; Teruhisa MIHATA ; Masashi NEO ; Thay Q. LEE
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2023;15(3):508-515
Background:
The purpose of this study was to quantify and compare the biomechanical characteristics of a new locking loop stitch (LLS), developed utilizing the concepts of both running locking stitch and needleless stitch, to the traditional Krackow stitch.
Methods:
The Krackow stitch with No.2 braided suture and the LLS with 1.3-mm augmented polyblend suture tape were compared biomechanically. The LLS was performed with single strand locking loops and wrapping suture around the tendon, resulting in half the needle penetrations through the graft compared to the Krackow stitch. Twenty bovine extensor tendons were divided randomly into two groups. The tendons were prepared to match equal thickness and cross-sectional area. Each suture-tendon was stitched and preloaded to 5 N for 60 seconds, cyclically loaded to 20 N, 40 N, and 60 N for 10 cycles each, and then loaded to failure. The deformation of the suture-tendon construct, stiffness, yield load, and ultimate load were measured.
Results:
The LLS had significantly less deformation of the suture-tendon construct at 100 N, 200 N, 300 N, and at ultimate load compared to the Krackow stitch (Krackow stitch and LLS at 100 N: 1.3 ± 0.1 mm and 1.0 ± 0.2 mm, p < 0.001; 200 N: 3.0 ± 0.3 mm and 1.9 ± 0.2 mm, p < 0.001; 300 N: 5.1 ± 0.6 mm and 2.9 ± 0.4 mm, p < 0.001; ultimate load: 12.8 ± 2.8 mm and 5.0 ± 1.2 mm, p < 0.001).The LLS had significantly greater stiffness (Krackow stitch and LLS: 97.5 ± 6.9 N/mm and 117.2 ± 13.9 N/mm, p < 0.001) and yield load (Krackow stitch and LLS: 66.2 ± 15.9 N and 237.9 ± 93.6 N, p < 0.001) compared to the Krackow stitch. There was no significant difference in ultimate load (Krackow stitch: 450.2 ± 49.4 N; LLS: 472.6 ± 59.8 N; p = 0.290).
Conclusions
The LLS had significantly smaller deformation of the suture-tendon construct compared to the Krackow stitch. The LLS may be a viable surgical alternative to the Krackow stitch for graft fixation when secure fixation is necessary.
4.Canine as a Comparative and Translational Model for Human Mammary Tumor
Jee Young KWON ; Nicholas MOSKWA ; Wonyoung KANG ; Timothy M. FAN ; Charles LEE
Journal of Breast Cancer 2023;26(1):1-13
Despite the advances in research and treatment of human breast cancer, its incidence rate continues to increase by 0.5% per year, and the discovery of novel therapeutic strategies for specific subtypes of human breast cancer remains challenging. Traditional laboratory mouse models have contributed tremendously to human breast cancer research. However, mice do not develop tumors spontaneously; consequently, genetically engineered mouse models or patient-derived xenograft models are often relied upon for more sophisticated human breast cancer studies. Since human breast cancer develops spontaneously, there is a need for alternative, yet complementary, models that can better recapitulate the features of human breast cancer to better understand the molecular and clinical complexities of the disease in developing new therapeutic strategies. Canine mammary tumors are one such alternative model that share features with human breast cancer, including prevalence rate, subtype classification, treatment, and mutational profiles, all of which are described in this review.
6.Nutrition therapy in the older critically ill patients: A scoping review.
Zheng Yii LEE ; Carolyn Tze Ing LOH ; Charles Chin Han LEW ; Lu KE ; Daren K HEYLAND ; M Shahnaz HASAN
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2022;51(10):629-636
INTRODUCTION:
There is a lack of guidelines or formal systematic synthesis of evidence for nutrition therapy in older critically ill patients. This study is a scoping review to explore the state of evidence in this population.
METHOD:
MEDLINE and Embase were searched from inception until 9 February 2022 for studies that enrolled critically ill patients aged ≥60 years and investigated any area of nutrition therapy. No language or study design restrictions were applied.
RESULTS:
Thirty-two studies (5 randomised controlled trials) with 6 topics were identified: (1) nutrition screening and assessments, (2) muscle mass assessment, (3) route or timing of nutrition therapy, (4) determination of energy and protein requirements, (5) energy and protein intake, and (6) pharmaconutrition. Topics (1), (3) and (6) had similar findings among general adult intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Skeletal muscle mass at ICU admission was significantly lower in older versus young patients. Among older ICU patients, low muscularity at ICU admission increased the risk of adverse outcomes. Predicted energy requirements using weight-based equations significantly deviated from indirect calorimetry measurements in older vs younger patients. Older ICU patients required higher protein intake (>1.5g/kg/day) than younger patients to achieve nitrogen balance. However, at similar protein intake, older patients had a higher risk of azotaemia.
CONCLUSION
Based on limited evidence, assessment of muscle mass, indirect calorimetry and careful monitoring of urea level may be important to guide nutrition therapy in older ICU patients. Other nutrition recommendations for general ICU patients may be used for older patients with sound clinical discretion.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Aged
;
Critical Illness/therapy*
;
Enteral Nutrition
;
Nutritional Support
;
Nutritional Requirements
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Energy Intake
7.Mako:A Graph-based Pattern Growth Approach to Detect Complex Structural Variants
Lin JIADONG ; Yang XIAOFEI ; Kosters WALTER ; Xu TUN ; Jia YANYAN ; Wang SONGBO ; Zhu QIHUI ; Ryan MALLORY ; Guo LI ; Zhang CHENGSHENG ; The Human Genome Structural Variation Consortium ; Lee CHARLES ; E.Devine SCOTT ; E.Eichler EVAN ; Ye KAI
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2022;20(1):205-218
Complex structural variants(CSVs)are genomic alterations that have more than two breakpoints and are considered as the simultaneous occurrence of simple structural variants.How-ever,detecting the compounded mutational signals of CSVs is challenging through a commonly used model-match strategy.As a result,there has been limited progress for CSV discovery com-pared with simple structural variants.Here,we systematically analyzed the multi-breakpoint con-nection feature of CSVs,and proposed Mako,utilizing a bottom-up guided model-free strategy,to detect CSVs from paired-end short-read sequencing.Specifically,we implemented a graph-based pattern growth approach,where the graph depicts potential breakpoint connections,and pattern growth enables CSV detection without pre-defined models.Comprehensive evaluations on both simulated and real datasets revealed that Mako outperformed other algorithms.Notably,validation rates of CSVs on real data based on experimental and computational validations as well as manual inspections are around 70%,where the medians of experimental and computational breakpoint shift are 13 bp and 26 bp,respectively.Moreover,the Mako CSV subgraph effectively characterized the breakpoint connections of a CSV event and uncovered a total of 15 CSV types,including two novel types of adjacent segment swap and tandem dispersed duplication.Further analysis of these CSVs also revealed the impact of sequence homology on the formation of CSVs.Mako is publicly available at https://github.com/xjtu-omics/Mako.
8.JAX-CNV:A Whole-genome Sequencing-based Algorithm for Copy Number Detection at Clinical Grade Level
Lee WAN-PING ; Zhu QIHUI ; Yang XIAOFEI ; Liu SILVIA ; Cerveira ELIZA ; Ryan MALLORY ; Mil-Homens ADAM ; Bellfy LAUREN ; Ye KAI ; Lee CHARLES ; Zhang CHENGSHENG
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2022;(6):1197-1206
We aimed to develop a whole-genome sequencing(WGS)-based copy number variant(CNV)calling algorithm with the potential of replacing chromosomal microarray assay(CMA)for clinical diagnosis.JAX-CNV is thus developed for CNV detection from WGS data.The perfor-mance of this CNV calling algorithm was evaluated in a blinded manner on 31 samples and com-pared to the 112 CNVs reported by clinically validated CMAs for these 31 samples.The result showed that JAX-CNV recalled 100%of these CNVs.Besides,JAX-CNV identified an average of 30 CNVs per individual,representing an approximately seven-fold increase compared to calls of clinically validated CMAs.Experimental validation of 24 randomly selected CNVs showed one false positive,i.e.,a false discovery rate(FDR)of 4.17%.A robustness test on lower-coverage data revealed a 100%sensitivity for CNVs larger than 300 kb(the current threshold for College of American Pathologists)down to 10×coverage.For CNVs larger than 50 kb,sensi-tivities were 100%for coverages deeper than 20×,97%for 15×,and 95%for 10×.We developed a WGS-based CNV pipeline,including this newly developed CNV caller JAX-CNV,and found it capable of detecting CMA-reported CNVs at a sensitivity of 100%with about a FDR of 4%.We propose that JAX-CNV could be further examined in a multi-institutional study to justify the transition of first-tier genetic testing from CMAs to WGS.JAX-CNV is available at https://github.com/The J acksonLaboratory/JAX-CNV.
9.Initial experiences of robotic SP cholecystectomy:a comparative analysis with robotic Si single-site cholecystectomy
Charles Jimenez CRUZ ; Frederick HUYNH ; Incheon KANG ; Woo Jung LEE ; Chang Moo KANG
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2021;100(1):1-7
Purpose:
The da Vinci SP robotic surgical system (Intuitive Surgical) offers pure SP with 4 lumens, which accommodates the fully-wristed endoscope and 3 arms with multijoint feature. We herein present our initial experience of the da Vinci SP surgical system in robotic single-site cholecystectomy.
Methods:
Thirty consecutive patients with a preoperative diagnosis of gallstones and/or chronic cholecystitis who underwent robotic SP cholecystectomy (RSPC) using da Vinci SP surgical system from January to May 2019 were reviewed.The perioperative outcomes were assessed and compared with those performed using Si-robotic single-site surgical system.
Results:
Mean docking time was 5.2 minutes. The mean actual dissection time was 14.6 minutes while the mean operation time was 75.1 minutes. Postoperative course was unremarkable and patients were discharged after a mean hospital stay of 1.5 days. In comparative analysis, operation time (109.5 ± 30.0 minutes vs. 75.1 ± 17.5 minutes, P = 0.001), docking time (11.9 ± 4.3 minutes vs. 5.2 ± 1.9 minutes, P = 0.001), actual dissection time (34.6 ± 18.4 minutes vs. 14.6 ± 5.1 minutes, P = 0.001), console time (58.7 ± 23.0 minutes vs. 32.4 ± 11.6 minutes, P = 0.001), immediate postoperative pain (4.6 ± 1.3 vs. 3.2 ± 1.0, P = 0.001), and pain prior to discharge (2.0 ± 0.6 vs. 1.4 ± 0.0, P = 0.002) were significantly improved in RSPC.
Conclusion
RSPC is feasible, safe, and effective. The perioperative outcomes are better compared with Si-robotic singlesite surgical systems.


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