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Institution

Bethesda Hospital

HealthcareAmbur, Tamil Nadu, India
About: Bethesda Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Ambur, Tamil Nadu, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Helicobacter pylori. The organization has 386 authors who have published 472 publications receiving 15193 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first, photographically well documented case report of a patient with persistent hypertrophic skin surrounding a percutaneous bone-anchored hearing aid implant, successfully treated with intralesional applied corticosteroids.
Abstract: Objective:We present a patient with persistent hypertrophic skin surrounding the percutaneous implant of a bone-anchored hearing aid system, successfully treated with intralesional applied corticosteroids.Method:Case report and review of the world literature concerning bone-anchored hearing aid implantation and intralesional applied corticosteroids for the treatment of hypertrophic scars and keloids.Results:Eight weeks after revision surgery to reduce surplus skin and subcutaneous scar tissue overgrowing the abutment, skin and subcutaneous scar tissue overgrowth reoccurred. As an alternative to yet another surgical procedure, the hypertrophic skin was treated with intralesional injections of triamcinolone acetonide. Three weeks after the treatment, a satisfying result was seen, and no subsequent relapse was observed.Conclusion:To our knowledge, this is the first, photographically well documented case report of a patient with persistent hypertrophic skin surrounding a percutaneous bone-anchored hearing aid implant, successfully treated with intralesional applied corticosteroids.

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study confirms that the most valuable feature of MIBI is the high NPV, and with the appropriate interpretation method, high sensitivity and specificity, and moderate PPV can be obtained.
Abstract: // Anna Yordanova 1, * , Soha Mahjoob 1, * , Philipp Lingohr 2 , Jorg Kalff 2 , Andreas Turler 3 , Holger Palmedo 4 , Hans-Jurgen Biersack 1 , Glen Kristiansen 5 , Jamshid Farahati 6 , Markus Essler 1 and Hojjat Ahmadzadehfar 1 1 Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany 2 Department of Surgery, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany 3 Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Johanniter-Krankenhaus Bonn, Bonn, Germany 4 Institute of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, PET-CT Center, Bonn, Germany 5 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany 6 Department of Nuclear Medicine, Bethesda Hospital, Duisburg, Germany * These authors have contributed equally to this work Correspondence to: Hojjat Ahmadzadehfar, email: hojjat.ahmadzadehfar@ukbonn.de Keywords: sestamibi, MIBI, thyroid nodules, thyroid cancer, cold nodule Received: June 20, 2017 Accepted: September 16, 2017 Published: October 17, 2017 ABSTRACT [ 99m Tc]Tc-Sestamibi (MIBI) is an increasingly used tool for evaluation of thyroid nodules. However, there is a lack of evidence about the accuracy of this method in the European population. The aim of this study was to assess the utility of MIBI for the differentiation of thyroid nodules in a large cohort. 161 patients underwent MIBI, followed by a thyroidectomy. We used a dual phase MIBI protocol. Interpretation of the images included a scoring system from 0 (absent) to 3 (increased); this was to provide a scale for the uptake of the thyroid nodule in comparison to the paranodular tissue. Additionally, we evaluated the tracer uptake trend in late images compared to early images. We used the final histopathology as the reference standard. Scores 0-1 in early images, scores 0-2 in late images, and an absence of increasing uptake in the thyroid nodule in late images, showed the best predictive values to exclude malignancy, respectively (negative predictive value (NPV) 89%). Highest sensitivity (91%) for malignant nodules was evident in early images with a score 1-3. Highest specificity (91%) was obtained when the negative was defined as an absence of uptake-increase, in the late images. This study confirms that the most valuable feature of MIBI is the high NPV. Thus, with the appropriate interpretation method, high sensitivity and specificity, and moderate PPV can be obtained.

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In women with GH or PE at term, it is difficult to predict neonatal complications, possibly since they are rare in the term pregnancy, but the identified individual predictors may guide physicians to anticipate requirements for neonatal care.
Abstract: Background: There is little knowledge about neonatal complications in GH and PE and induction at term, we aim to assess whether they can be predicted from clinical data.Methods: We used data of the HYPITAT trial and evaluated whether adverse neonatal outcome (Apgar score < 7, pH < 7.05, NICU admission) could be predicted from clinical data. Logistic regression, ROC analysis and calibration were used to identify predictors and evaluate the predictive capacity in an antepartum and intrapartum model.Results: We included 1153 pregnancies, of whom 76 (6.6%) had adverse neonatal outcome. Parity (primipara OR 2.75), BMI (OR 1.06), proteinuria (dipstick +++ OR 2.5), uric acid (OR 1.4) and creatinine (OR 1.02) were independent antepartum predictors; In the intrapartum model, meconium stained amniotic fluid (OR 2.2), temperature (OR 1.8), duration of first stage of labour (OR 1.15), proteinuria (dipstick +++ OR 2.7), creatinine (OR 1.02) and uric acid (OR 1.5) were predictors of adverse neonatal outcome. Bo...

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In contrast to healthy controls, REM sleep imposes a vascular load in COPD patients independent of sleep apnea indices, intermittent and sustained hypoxia and REM sleep modulate arterial stiffness.
Abstract: Arterial stiffness, a marker for cardiovascular risk, is increased in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA). The specific influence of both on arterial stiffness during sleep is unknown. Nocturnal arterial stiffness (Pulse Propagation Time (PPT) of the finger pulse wave) was calculated in 142 individuals evaluated for sleep apnea: 27 COPD patients (64.7 ± 11y, 31.2 ± 8 kg/m2), 72 patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD group, 58.7 ± 13y, 33.6 ± 6 kg/m2) and 43 healthy controls (HC group 49.3 ± 12y, 27.6 ± 3 kg/m2). Sleep stage related PPT changes were assessed in a subsample of COPD patients and matched controls (n = 12/12). Arterial stiffness during sleep was increased in COPD patients (i.e. shortened PPT) compared to healthy controls (158.2 ± 31 vs. 173.2 ± 38 ms, p = 0.075) and to patients with CVD (161.4 ± 41 ms). Arterial stiffening was particular strong during REM sleep (145.9 ± 28 vs. 172.4 ± 43 ms, COPD vs. HC, p = 0.003). In COPD, time SaO2 < 90% was associated with reduced arterial stiffness (Beta +1.7 ms (1.1-2.3)/10 min, p < 0.001). Sleep apnea did not affect PPT. In COPD, but not in matched controls, arterial stiffness increased from wakefulness to REM-sleep (ΔPPT-8.9 ± 10% in COPD and 3.7 ± 12% in matched controls, p = 0.021). Moreover, REM-sleep related arterial stiffening was correlated with elevated daytime blood pressure (r = -0.92, p < 0.001) and increased myocardial oxygen consumption (r = -0.88, p < 0.01). Hypoxia and REM sleep modulate arterial stiffness. In contrast to healthy controls, REM sleep imposes a vascular load in COPD patients independent of sleep apnea indices, intermittent and sustained hypoxia. The link between REM-sleep, vascular stiffness and daytime cardiovascular function suggests that REM-sleep plays a role for increased cardiovascular morbidity of COPD patients.

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In women stimulated with hMG for IUI or IVF, the serum P:E2 ratio on the day of hCG administration is not associated with diminished ovarian reserve, as demonstrated by the CCCT, or pregnancy outcome.

9 citations


Authors

Showing all 387 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jennie Ponsford7339318379
Peter J. Stern532358622
Roger Hart461547065
Glynda J. Kinsella401205752
Jacinta Douglas391804737
Gabriela Möslein361126057
Pamela Claire Snow361424496
Michael Denkinger341473214
Thomas Daikeler301413309
John Olver251033189
J. C. Thijs24462194
Daniel Navot24562705
Bernd Sanner231022652
Ulrike Nitz22984068
Dries Testelmans22922100
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20223
202148
202039
201927
201819
201723