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Institution

Innlandet Hospital Trust

HealthcareBrumunddal, Norway
About: Innlandet Hospital Trust is a healthcare organization based out in Brumunddal, Norway. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dementia. The organization has 387 authors who have published 1302 publications receiving 37753 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A five-factor solution of the Cornell scale best fitted the data according to both exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis and suggested that the mood and cyclic factors' scores did not vary across dementia severity, and this might suggest that they are the core symptoms of depression that are equally present regardless of dementia severity.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is pronounced pharmacokinetic variability of VPA during pregnancy, and therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) should be used by measurements of both total and unbound concentrations since total concentrations may be misleading for efficacy and fetal exposure of V PA.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A high caloric intake may explain some of the GI symptoms experienced by non-operated obese patients, as satiety increased more after VSG than after RYGB and correlated with an overall reduction in food tolerance.
Abstract: Gastrointestinal (GI) co-morbidity is common in obese patients, but the effect of weight loss surgery on GI symptoms is incompletely elucidated. The aims of the present study were to explore changes in GI symptoms and food tolerance following weight loss surgery and to study whether such changes were associated with dietary modifications and/or the type of surgical procedure [Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) versus Vertical Sleeve Gastrectomy (VSG)]. Participants: Patients with morbid obesity scheduled for weight loss surgery.The patients filled in paper-based questionnaires addressing diet, GI symptoms (bloating, pain, satiety, constipation and diarrhea) and food tolerance/quality of alimentation (satisfaction about current food intake, tolerance to specific foods and frequency of vomiting/regurgitation/reflux) 6 months prior to and 6 months after the surgery. Patients with pre-existing major GI co-morbidity or previous major GI surgery were excluded. Fifty-four patients (RYGB/VSG: 43/11) were included. Constipation and satiety increased and food tolerance decreased significantly after the surgery (all p-values 0.05). Pre-operatively, total energy intake correlated with bloating and abdominal pain (rho = 0.343 and 0.310 respectively, p 0.05 for both). A high caloric intake may explain some of the GI symptoms experienced by non-operated obese patients. The worsening or new-onset of symptoms post-surgery is likely due to anatomical or physiological alterations following surgery. The increase in satiety and the decrease in food tolerance are likely explained by the restrictive nature of the surgeries, as satiety increased more after VSG than after RYGB and correlated with an overall reduction in food tolerance.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Treatment for skin disease contributes considerably to reducing HRQoL: the burden of dermatological treatment should be considered when planning therapy and designing new dermatological therapies.
Abstract: Skin disease and its therapy affect health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The aim of this study was to measure the burden caused by dermatological therapy in 3,846 patients from 13 European countries. Adult outpatients completed questionnaires, including the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), which has a therapy impact question. Therapy issues were reported by a majority of patients with atopic dermatitis (63.4%), psoriasis (60.7%), prurigo (54.4%), hidradenitis suppurativa (54.3%) and blistering conditions (53%). The largest reduction in HRQoL attributable to therapy, as a percentage of total DLQI, adjusted for confounders, was seen in blistering conditions (10.7%), allergic/drug reactions (10.2%), psoriasis (9.9%), vasculitis/immunological ulcers (8.8%), atopic dermatitis (8.7%), and venous leg ulcers (8.5%). In skin cancer, although it had less impact on HRQoL, the reduction due to therapy was 6.8%. Treatment for skin disease contributes considerably to reducing HRQoL: the burden of dermatological treatment should be considered when planning therapy and designing new dermatological therapies.

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Growth measured at one time point in infancy was better correlated with undernutrition at age 2 years than growth velocity.

14 citations


Authors

Showing all 390 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Bjørn Moum6022012824
Knut Engedal5939814223
Per Olav Vandvik5422112488
Trond Markestad542169846
Per Andersen5214213964
Jan Aaseth452306286
Geir Selbæk4224910334
Ola E. Dahl4110513117
Martin A. Walter381115835
Tor A. Strand372035598
Marit S. Jordhøy35643712
Lars Lien351684103
Jørgen G. Bramness322153965
Bettina S. Husebo321203563
Jūratė Šaltytė Benth321493667
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20226
2021145
2020150
2019155
2018163
2017154