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Institution

Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón

HealthcareMadrid, Spain
About: Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón is a healthcare organization based out in Madrid, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Transplantation. The organization has 11975 authors who have published 12386 publications receiving 244847 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study is the first to demonstrate that insight into psychotic symptoms is a predictor of violence in inpatients with schizophrenia.
Abstract: Accurate evaluations of the dangers posed by psychiatric inpatients are necessary, although a number of studies have questioned the accuracy of violence prediction. In this prospective study, we evaluated several variables in the prediction of violence in 63 inpatients with a DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Nurses rated violent incidents with the Overt Aggression Scale. During hospitalization, sociodemographic variables, clinical history, neurological soft signs, community alcohol or drug abuse, and electroencephalographic abnormalities did not differ between violent and nonviolent groups. Violent patients had significantly more positive symptoms as measured by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), higher scores on the PANSS general psychopathology scale, and less insight in the different constructs assessed. A logistic regression was performed to discriminate between violent and nonviolent patients. Three variables entered the model: insight into symptoms, PANSS general psychopathology score, and violence in the previous week. The actuarial model correctly classified 84.13 percent of the sample; this result is significantly better than chance for the base rate of violence in this study. At hospital admission, clinical rather than sociodemographic variables were more predictive of violence. This finding has practical importance because clinical symptoms are amenable to therapeutic approaches. This study is the first to demonstrate that insight into psychotic symptoms is a predictor of violence in inpatients with schizophrenia.

213 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Multicenter studies are essential with the aim of developing and disseminating appropriate techniques and protocols to treat this mycosis, which is a truly emerging disease.
Abstract: Scedosporium prolificans is a truly emerging fungal pathogen. It has only been recognized as a human pathogen for 22 years and has been related with numerous infections in immunocompromised and immunocompetent patients. A search for cases in the literature was performed and a database was constructed. Cases were reviewed in order to analyse the epidemiology and outcome of infection. A total of 162 cases were included. The median age of patients was 45 years (ranging from a few months to 81 years), and 102 (63%) infections were diagnosed in males. Risk factors for scedosporiosis were malignancy, 74/162 (45.7%), cystic fibrosis, 19/172 (11.7%), and solid organ transplantation 14/162 (8.6%). The most common clinical presentations were disseminated infection, 72/162 cases (44.4%), pulmonary mycosis, 47/162 (29%), and bone and joint infections, 17/162 (10.4%). All disseminated infections afflicted patents with underlying diseases, primarily haematological malignancies (57/72 [80%]). Blood cultures were positive in 70% of patients suffering from disseminated mycosis. Neutropenia, fever and cerebral symptoms were independently related to the development of disseminated infection whereas recovery from aplasia was associated with a reduced risk. The overall mortality was 46.9% but mortality rate was 87.5% in patients with disseminated disease. Survival was independently associated with surgical excision and recovery from aplasia. Antifungal treatments were not related to a reduced risk of death. Infections caused by S. prolificans are life threatening in susceptible patients, and can be considered a truly emerging disease. Infections are difficult to treat since it is a multi-resistant species. Multicenter studies are essential with the aim of developing and disseminating appropriate techniques and protocols to treat this mycosis.

211 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Kevin P. Kenna1, Perry T.C. van Doormaal2, Annelot M. Dekker2, Nicola Ticozzi3, Brendan J. Kenna1, Frank P. Diekstra2, Wouter van Rheenen2, Kristel R van Eijk2, Ashley R. Jones4, Pamela Keagle1, Aleksey Shatunov4, William Sproviero4, Bradley N. Smith4, Michael A van Es2, Simon Topp4, Aoife Kenna1, Jack W. Miller4, Claudia Fallini1, Cinzia Tiloca3, Russell L. McLaughlin5, Caroline Vance4, Claire Troakes4, Claudia Colombrita3, Gabriele Mora, Andrea Calvo6, Federico Verde3, Safa Al-Sarraj4, Andrew T. King4, Daniela Calini, Jacqueline de Belleroche7, Frank Baas8, Anneke J. van der Kooi8, Marianne de Visser8, Anneloor L.M.A. ten Asbroek8, Peter C. Sapp1, Diane McKenna-Yasek1, Meraida Polak9, Seneshaw Asress9, José Luis Muñoz-Blanco10, Tim M. Strom, Thomas Meitinger11, Karen E. Morrison12, Giuseppe Lauria, Kelly L. Williams13, P. Nigel Leigh14, Garth A. Nicholson15, Garth A. Nicholson13, Ian P. Blair13, Claire S. Leblond16, Patrick A. Dion16, Guy A. Rouleau16, Hardev Pall17, Hardev Pall18, Pamela J. Shaw19, Martin R Turner19, Kevin Talbot19, Franco Taroni, Kevin B. Boylan20, Marka van Blitterswijk20, Rosa Rademakers20, Jesús Esteban-Pérez, Alberto García-Redondo, Phillip Van Damme21, Wim Robberecht21, Adriano Chiò6, Cinzia Gellera, Carsten Drepper22, Michael Sendtner22, Antonia Ratti3, Jonathan D. Glass9, Jesus S. Mora23, Nazli Basak24, Orla Hardiman5, Albert C. Ludolph25, Peter M. Andersen26, Jochen H. Weishaupt25, Robert H. Brown1, Ammar Al-Chalabi4, Vincenzo Silani3, Christopher Shaw4, Leonard H. van den Berg2, Jan H. Veldink2, John Landers1 
TL;DR: In a new screening strategy, gene-burden analyses trained with established ALS genes are performed and a significant association between loss-of-function (LOF) NEK1 variants and FALS risk is identified.
Abstract: To identify genetic factors contributing to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), we conducted whole-exome analyses of 1,022 index familial ALS (FALS) cases and 7,315 controls. In a new screening strategy, we performed gene-burden analyses trained with established ALS genes and identified a significant association between loss-of-function (LOF) NEK1 variants and FALS risk. Independently, autozygosity mapping for an isolated community in the Netherlands identified a NEK1 p.Arg261His variant as a candidate risk factor. Replication analyses of sporadic ALS (SALS) cases and independent control cohorts confirmed significant disease association for both p.Arg261His (10,589 samples analyzed) and NEK1 LOF variants (3,362 samples analyzed). In total, we observed NEK1 risk variants in nearly 3% of ALS cases. NEK1 has been linked to several cellular functions, including cilia formation, DNA-damage response, microtubule stability, neuronal morphology and axonal polarity. Our results provide new and important insights into ALS etiopathogenesis and genetic etiology.

208 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Medical therapy was less effective than TIPS in preventing rebleeding, however, it caused less encephalopathy, identical survival, and more frequent improvement in Child‐Pugh class with lower costs thanTIPS in high‐risk cirrhotic patients.

208 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, self-management interventions are widely implemented in the care for patients with heart failure (HF), however, trials show inconsistent results, and whether specific patient groups res...
Abstract: Background- Self-management interventions are widely implemented in the care for patients with heart failure (HF). However, trials show inconsistent results, and whether specific patient groups res ...

207 citations


Authors

Showing all 12014 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David H. Adams1551613117783
Stefanie Dimmeler14757481658
Stuart J. Pocock145684143547
M. I. Martínez134125179885
Guy A. Rouleau12988465892
Jose L. Jimenez12465464226
Antoni Torres120123865049
Paul P. Tak11259157689
Luis A. Diaz11159675036
Frans Van de Werf10974763537
José Luis Zamorano105695133396
Francisco Sánchez-Madrid10252743418
Francesco Locatelli9982042454
Roberto M. Lang9682356638
Carlos Simón9558931147
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202317
202246
20211,186
20201,045
2019898
2018637