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Institution

Glenfield Hospital

HealthcareLeicester, United Kingdom
About: Glenfield Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Leicester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. The organization has 1382 authors who have published 1812 publications receiving 99238 citations. The organization is also known as: Glenfield General Hospital.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This workshop was convened to achieve consensus on the essential components of pulmonary rehabilitation and to identify requirements for successful implementation of emerging program models.
Abstract: Pulmonary rehabilitation is a highly effective treatment for people with chronic lung disease but remains underused across the world. Recent years have seen the emergence of new program models that aim to improve access and uptake, including telerehabilitation and low-cost, home-based models. This workshop was convened to achieve consensus on the essential components of pulmonary rehabilitation and to identify requirements for successful implementation of emerging program models. A Delphi process involving experts from across the world identified 13 essential components of pulmonary rehabilitation that must be delivered in any program model, encompassing patient assessment, program content, method of delivery, and quality assurance, as well as 27 desirable components. Only those models of pulmonary rehabilitation that have been tested in clinical trials are currently considered as ready for implementation. The characteristics of patients most likely to succeed in each program model are not yet known, and research is needed in this area. Health professionals should use clinical judgment to determine those patients who are best served by a center-based, multidisciplinary rehabilitation program. A comprehensive patient assessment is critical for personalization of pulmonary rehabilitation and for effectively addressing individual patient goals. Robust quality-assurance processes are important to ensure that any pulmonary rehabilitation service delivers optimal outcomes for patients and health services. Workforce capacity-building and training should consider the skills necessary for emerging models, many of which are delivered remotely. The success of all pulmonary rehabilitation models will be judged on whether the essential components are delivered and on whether the expected patient outcomes, including improved exercise capacity, reduced dyspnea, enhanced health-related quality of life, and reduced hospital admissions, are achieved.

138 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 1999
TL;DR: This tissue distribution, and the vast array of lipid mediators, proteases, proteoglycans and cytokines identified as potential products of human mast cells, explains how this interesting cell has the potential to contribute to so many diverse biological events.
Abstract: The mast cell is a virtual pharmacopoeia of biological substances. It used to be believed that mast cell activation was all-or-nothing, with IgE cross-linking inducing symptoms of allergy and anaphylaxis. However, the activity of mast cells in health and disease is clearly much more complicated than this. The discovery that human mast cells secrete many pleiotropic cytokines suggested there may be many novel mast cell functions, and many of these are now being realised. The ubiquitous distribution of mast cells throughout connective tissues, along epithelial surfaces, and in close proximity to blood vessels, makes their products available to a large variety of cell types including fibroblasts, glandular epithelial cells, nerves, vascular endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and other cells of the immune system. This tissue distribution, and the vast array of lipid mediators, proteases, proteoglycans and cytokines identified as potential products of human mast cells, explains how this interesting cell has the potential to contribute to so many diverse biological events.

137 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Amigo RCS is found to be safe and effective for positioning a mapping catheter at sites within the right atrium and ventricle.
Abstract: Amigo™ (Catheter Robotics, Inc., Mount Olive, NJ) remote catheter system (RCS) was designed to provide a simple and relatively inexpensive system for remote catheter manipulation. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance and safety of Amigo in mapping the right side of the heart. This non-randomized, prospective clinical trial was conducted at 13 sites (NCT: #01139814). Using the controller, a mapping catheter was moved to eight pre-specified locations in a specific sequence: right ventricular apex, mid-right ventricular septum, right ventricular outflow tract, His-bundle position, coronary sinus ostium, high right atrium, lateral tricuspid annulus, and low lateral right atrium. The pre-specified efficacy endpoint was to achieve 80 % successful navigation to all locations. Time to each location, location accuracy, and quality of contact were confirmed by imaging and specific criteria for electrograms and pacing thresholds. In 181 patients, a total of 1,396 of 1,448 (96 %) locations were successfully mapped with all protocol criteria met (one-sided p value < 0.0001). The median time to move the catheter to a new location was 24 s. The Amigo-related major complication rate was 0 % which was significantly less than the predefined endpoint of 4 % (one-sided p = 0.003). We found the Amigo RCS to be safe and effective for positioning a mapping catheter at sites within the right atrium and ventricle.

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
03 Dec 2008-Thorax
TL;DR: Breathing training resulted in improvements in asthma-specific health status and other patient-centred measures but not in asthma pathophysiology, and such exercises may help patients whose quality of life is impaired by asthma, but they are unlikely to reduce the need for anti-inflammatory medication.
Abstract: Background: The effect of breathing modification techniques on asthma symptoms and objective disease control is uncertain. Methods: A prospective, parallel group, single-blind, randomised controlled trial comparing breathing training with asthma education (to control for non-specific effects of clinician attention) was performed. Subjects with asthma with impaired health status managed in primary care were randomised to receive three sessions of either physiotherapist-supervised breathing training (n = 94) or asthma nurse-delivered asthma education (n = 89). The main outcome was Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) score, with secondary outcomes including spirometry, bronchial hyper-responsiveness, exhaled nitric oxide, induced sputum eosinophil count and Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ), Hospital Anxiety and Depression (HAD) and hyperventilation (Nijmegen) questionnaire scores. Results: One month after the intervention there were similar improvements in AQLQ scores from baseline in both groups but at 6 months there was a significant between-group difference favouring breathing training (0.38 units, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.68). At the 6-month assessment there were significant between-group differences favouring breathing training in HAD anxiety (1.1, 95% CI 0.2 to 1.9), HAD depression (0.8, 95% CI 0.1 to 1.4) and Nijmegen (3.2, 95% CI 1.0 to 5.4) scores, with trends to improved ACQ (0.2, 95% CI 0.0 to 0.4). No significant between-group differences were seen at 1 month. Breathing training was not associated with significant changes in airways physiology, inflammation or hyper-responsiveness. Conclusion: Breathing training resulted in improvements in asthma-specific health status and other patient-centred measures but not in asthma pathophysiology. Such exercises may help patients whose quality of life is impaired by asthma, but they are unlikely to reduce the need for anti-inflammatory medication.

135 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The incidence of P-PM following TAVI with the CorevalveBioprosthesis is compared favourably with that seen after AVR with conventional open stented bioprostheses and its occurrence is influenced by device positioning.
Abstract: Aims Prosthesis-patient mismatch (P-PM) is an important determinant of morbidity and mortality following open aortic valve replacement. The aims of this study were to report its incidence and determinants following transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) with the Corevalve bioprosthesis, which have—thus far—not been described. Methods and results Patients with severe calcific aortic stenosis received TAVI with the Corevalve bioprosthesis via transfemoral route. Following TAVI, moderate P-PM was defined as indexed aortic valve effective orifice area (AVAi) ≤0.85 cm2/m2 and severe P-PM as AVAi ≤0.65 cm2/m2. Clinical, echocardiographic, and procedural factors relating to P-PM were studied. Optimal device position was defined on fluoroscopy as final position of the proximal aspect of the Corevalve stent frame 5–10 mm below the native aortic annulus. Between January 2007 and January 2009, 50 consecutive patients underwent TAVI in a single centre with the Corevalve bioprosthesis. Mean age was 82.8 years (SD 5.9; 70–93) and 48% were male. P-PM occurred in 16 of 50 cases (32%). Optimal position was achieved in 50% of cases. P-PM was unrelated to age, annulus size, LVOT size, Corevalve size, aortic angulation, ejection fraction, and sex. It was inversely correlated to optimal position (Spearman rho r = −0.34, P = 0.015). Those with optimal positioning had a 16% incidence of P-PM relative to 48% of those with suboptimal positioning (Pearson χ2 P = 0.015). Conclusion The incidence of P-PM following TAVI with the Corevalve bioprosthesis is compared favourably with that seen after AVR with conventional open stented bioprostheses and its occurrence is influenced by device positioning.

134 citations


Authors

Showing all 1385 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nilesh J. Samani149779113545
Daniel I. Chasman13448472180
Massimo Mangino11636984902
Ian D. Pavord10857547691
Christopher E. Brightling10355244358
Ulf Gyllensten10036859219
Pim van der Harst9951742777
Andrew J. Wardlaw9231133721
Kenneth J. O'Byrne8762939193
Paul Burton8541842766
Bryan Williams8245440798
Marylyn D. Ritchie8045932559
John R. Thompson7820250475
Maria G. Belvisi7326916021
Martin D. Tobin7221834028
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20228
2021124
2020104
201996
201891
201789