Medicine (RMH) - Research Publications

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    Effect Of Arm Deweighting Using End-Effector Based Robotic Devices On Muscle Activity.
    Fong, J ; Crocher, V ; Haddara, R ; Ackland, D ; Galea, M ; Tan, Y ; Oetomo, D (IEEE, 2018)
    Deweighting of the limb is commonly performed for patients with a neurological injury, such as stroke, as it allows these patients with limited muscle activity to perform movements. Deweighting has been implemented in exoskeletons and other multi-contact devices, but not on an end-effector based device with single contact point between the assisting robot and the human limb being assisted. This study inves-tigates the effects of deweighting using an end-effector based device on healthy subjects. The muscle activity of five subjects was measured in both static postures and dynamic movements. The results indicate a decrease in the activity of muscles which typically act against gravity - such as the anterior deltoid and the biceps brachii - but also suggest an increase in activity in muscles which act with gravity - such as the posterior deltoid and the lateral triceps. This can be explained by both the change in required muscle-generated torques and a conscious change in approach by the participants. These observations have implications for neurorehabilitation, particularly with respect to the muscle activation patterns which are trained through rehabilitation exercises.
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    Designing an App for Pregnancy Care for a Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Community
    Smith, W ; Wadley, G ; Daly, JO ; Webb, M ; Hughson, J ; Hajek, J ; Parker, A ; Woodward-Kron, R ; Story, DA (The Association for Computing Machinery, 2017)
    We report a study to design and evaluate an app to support pregnancy information provided to women through an Australian health service. As part of a larger project to provide prenatal resources for culturally and linguistically diverse groups, this study focused on the design and reception of an app with the local Vietnamese community and health professionals of a particular hospital. Our study had three stages: an initial design workshop with the hospital; prototype design and development; prototype-based interviews with health professionals and focus groups with Vietnamese women. We explore how an app of this sort must be designed for a range of different use scenarios, considering its use by consumers with a multiplicity of differing viewpoints about its nature and purpose in relation to pregnancy care.
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    A Pilot Study on the use of Accelerometer Sensors for Monitoring Post Acute Stroke Patients
    Gubbi, J ; Kumar, D ; Rao, AS ; Yan, B ; Palaniswami, M (IEEE, 2013)
    The high incidence of stroke has raised a major concern among health professionals in recent years. Concerted efforts from medical and engineering communities are being exercised to tackle the problem at its early stage. In this direction, a pilot study to analyze and detect the affected arm of the stroke patient based on hand movements is presented. The premise is that the correlation of magnitude of the activities of the two arms vary significantly for stroke patients from controls. Further, the cross-correlation of right and left arms for three axes are differentiable for patients and controls. A total of 22 subjects (15 patients and 7 controls) were included in this study. An overall accuracy of 95.45% was obtained with sensitivity of 1 and specificity of 0.86 using correlation based method.
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    Classification of Convulsive Psychogenic Non-epileptic Seizures Using Histogram of Oriented Motion of Accelerometry Signals
    Kusmakar, S ; Gubbi, J ; Rao, AS ; Yan, B ; O'Brien, TJ ; PALANISWAMI, M (IEEE, 2015)
    A seizure is caused due to sudden surge of electrical activity within the brain. There is another class of seizures called psychogenic non-epileptic seizure (PNES) that mimics epilepsy, but is caused due to underlying psychology. The diagnosis of PNES is done using video-electroencephalography monitoring (VEM), which is a resource intensive process. Recently, accelerometers have been shown to be effective in classification of epileptic and non-epileptic seizures. In this work, we propose a novel feature called histogram of oriented motion (HOOM) extracted from accelerometer signals for classification of convulsive PNES. An automated algorithm based on HOOM is proposed. The algorithm showed a high sensitivity of (93.33%) and an overall accuracy of (80%) in classifying convulsive PNES.
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    Eosinophilic and Noneosinophilic Asthma: An Expert Consensus Framework to Characterize Phenotypes in a Global Real-Life Severe Asthma Cohort.
    Heaney, LG ; Perez de Llano, L ; Al-Ahmad, M ; Backer, V ; Busby, J ; Canonica, GW ; Christoff, GC ; Cosio, BG ; FitzGerald, JM ; Heffler, E ; Iwanaga, T ; Jackson, DJ ; Menzies-Gow, AN ; Papadopoulos, NG ; Papaioannou, AI ; Pfeffer, PE ; Popov, TA ; Porsbjerg, CM ; Rhee, CK ; Sadatsafavi, M ; Tohda, Y ; Wang, E ; Wechsler, ME ; Alacqua, M ; Altraja, A ; Bjermer, L ; Björnsdóttir, US ; Bourdin, A ; Brusselle, GG ; Buhl, R ; Costello, RW ; Hew, M ; Koh, MS ; Lehmann, S ; Lehtimäki, L ; Peters, M ; Taillé, C ; Taube, C ; Tran, TN ; Zangrilli, J ; Bulathsinhala, L ; Carter, VA ; Chaudhry, I ; Eleangovan, N ; Hosseini, N ; Kerkhof, M ; Murray, RB ; Price, CA ; Price, DB (Elsevier BV, 2021-09)
    BACKGROUND: Phenotypic characteristics of patients with eosinophilic and noneosinophilic asthma are not well characterized in global, real-life severe asthma cohorts. RESEARCH QUESTION: What is the prevalence of eosinophilic and noneosinophilic phenotypes in the population with severe asthma, and can these phenotypes be differentiated by clinical and biomarker variables? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: This was an historical registry study. Adult patients with severe asthma and available blood eosinophil count (BEC) from 11 countries enrolled in the International Severe Asthma Registry (January 1, 2015-September 30, 2019) were categorized according to likelihood of eosinophilic phenotype using a predefined gradient eosinophilic algorithm based on highest BEC, long-term oral corticosteroid use, elevated fractional exhaled nitric oxide, nasal polyps, and adult-onset asthma. Demographic and clinical characteristics were defined at baseline (ie, 1 year before or closest to date of BEC). RESULTS: One thousand seven hundred sixteen patients with prospective data were included; 83.8% were identified as most likely (grade 3), 8.3% were identified as likely (grade 2), and 6.3% identified as least likely (grade 1) to have an eosinophilic phenotype, and 1.6% of patients showed a noneosinophilic phenotype (grade 0). Eosinophilic phenotype patients (ie, grades 2 or 3) showed later asthma onset (29.1 years vs 6.7 years; P < .001) and worse lung function (postbronchodilator % predicted FEV1, 76.1% vs 89.3%; P = .027) than those with a noneosinophilic phenotype. Patients with noneosinophilic phenotypes were more likely to be women (81.5% vs 62.9%; P = .047), to have eczema (20.8% vs 8.5%; P = .003), and to use anti-IgE (32.1% vs 13.4%; P = .004) and leukotriene receptor antagonists (50.0% vs 28.0%; P = .011) add-on therapy. INTERPRETATION: According to this multicomponent, consensus-driven, and evidence-based eosinophil gradient algorithm (using variables readily accessible in real life), the severe asthma eosinophilic phenotype was more prevalent than previously identified and was phenotypically distinct. This pragmatic gradient algorithm uses variables readily accessible in primary and specialist care, addressing inherent issues of phenotype heterogeneity and phenotype instability. Identification of treatable traits across phenotypes should improve therapeutic precision.
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    1 Carer perspectives of trust and authority during COVID-19
    Aker, N ; West, E ; Davies, N ; Moore, K ; Sampson, L ; Nair, P ; Kupeli, N (British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2021-03)
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    Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation for Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma Can Achieve Durable Remissions: An Australasian Bone Marrow Transplant Recipient Registry Study
    Di Ciaccio, PR ; Greenwood, M ; Kennedy, G ; Milliken, S ; Gottlieb, D ; Ritchie, DS ; Purtill, D ; Larsen, SR ; Spencer, A ; Perera, T ; Yeung, DT ; Durrant, S ; Butler, A ; Watson, A-M ; Lai, HC ; Doocey, RT ; Goodman, HJ ; Kerridge, IH ; Arthur, C ; Curley, C ; Stewart, C ; Micklethwaite, K ; Collins, J ; Cooney, JP ; Hamad, N (Elsevier BV, 2021-03)
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    Hydropluviometric variability in non-Sahelian West Africa: Case of the Koliba/Corubal River Basin (Guinea and Guinea-Bissau)
    Sambou, S ; Dacosta, H ; DIouf, RN ; DIouf, I ; Kane, A (Copernicus GmbH, 2020-09-15)
    Abstract. The Koliba/Corubal River watershed is poorly documented due to the hydrometric measurements shutdown and gaps in the very short hydropluviometric timeseries. The purpose of this study is to analyze the variability of rainfall in the Basin, by simulating flows using the GR2M rain-flow model and extending the discharge timeseries. From the regional vector method, the rainfall timeseries were homogenized, and the gaps filled by the estimated values. The rank correlation and Pettitt test on annual rainfall amounts (1924–2015) indicate breaks in 1958, 1967 and 1969, leading to rainfall deficits ranging from 9.7 % to 20.2 %. For some stations, the segmentation method shows a recovery of rainfall towards the end of the 1980s (Gaoual, Mali) and the early 2000s (Gabu). The analysis of the temporal distribution of the Monthly Rainfall Coefficients shows an improvement of the contributions of a few months during the period after rupture. From a hydrological point of view, the correlation between the mean annual rainfall and the runoff has allowed to extend the flow timeseries. The mean monthly rainfall calculated using the inverse square of distance method, the Potential Evapotranspiration, and the flow rates were used to calibrate and validate the model to determine the parameters that better transform rainfall in flow. The values of the Nash criteria close to 100 have made it possible to extend the monthly flow data from Koliba/Corubal to Gaoual, Cade and Tche-Tche until 2015.