Institution
University of Iceland
Education•Reykjavik, Suðurnes, Iceland•
About: University of Iceland is a education organization based out in Reykjavik, Suðurnes, Iceland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Genome-wide association study. The organization has 5423 authors who have published 16199 publications receiving 694762 citations. The organization is also known as: Háskóli Íslands.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
•
TL;DR: In a study that involved all adult patients with bacterial meningitis in a single country for 2 decades, meningococci and pneumococci were the most frequent causative agents, however, meners were responsible for only one fourth of the cases among adult patients aged 45 years or older, most of these cases were caused by pneumococCI and Listeria.
Abstract: INTRODUCTION Although acute bacterial meningitis is most common among children, the disease nevertheless poses serious problems in the adult population. However, most clinical overviews of the disease have either focused on children or all age groups combined. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Information on all patients 5=16 years of age diagnosed in Iceland during the years 1975-1994 was collected from patient records from 10 hospitals and the records of the Dept. of Microbiology at the University Hospital which processes all bacterial isolates from the CSF identified in the country. RESULTS One hundred thirty six patients were identified, but complete records were found for 123 patients. Yearly incidence ranged from 1.7-7.2/100,000 inhabitants with a mean of 3.8/100,000. The most common causative organisms were Neisseria meningitidis (54%), Streptococcus pneumoniae (20%), Listeria monocytogenes (6%) and Haemophilus influenzae (5%). The relative incidence of N. meningitidis was dependent on age, the organism caused 93% of infections in the 16-20 year age group, whereas only 25% of infections in subjects 3=45 years of age were due to meningococci. On the other hand, the relative incidence of S. pneumoniae did increase from 2% in the younger age group to 37% in the older subjects. L. monocytogenes caused 14% of cases among patients 3=45 years of age. The mean mortality was 19.1% and did not change significantly during the study period. A significant underlying illness or condition was present in 39% of the patients. During the first third of the study period penicillin or ampicillin alone or in combination with chloramphenicol were used as initial empiric therapy in 76% of cases, wheras during the last third of the period these agents were used initially in 24% of patients. The third generation cephalosporins either alone or in combination were instead employed for empiric treatment in almost two-thirds of the patients. CONCLUSIONS Meningococci were the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in adults in Iceland during the study period, albeit age dependent, and causing only a fourth of infections in patients 3=45 years of age. Mortality did not change during the period. The third generation cephalosporins are now the most commonly used agents for empiric therapy.
169 citations
••
University of Massachusetts Amherst1, University of Paris2, University of Iceland3, Northern Arizona University4, Brandon University5, National Scientific and Technical Research Council6, University of Colorado Boulder7, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research8, University of Bergen9, University of Innsbruck10, University of Cincinnati11, Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory12, University of Maine13, Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research14, College of Wooster15, Chinese Academy of Sciences16
TL;DR: A global compilation of glacier advances and retreats for the past two millennia grouped by 17 regions (excluding Antarctica) highlights the nature of glacier fluctuations during the late Holocene as mentioned in this paper.
169 citations
••
TL;DR: The test of targeting the NHP indicates that relocation inaccuracy exists in patients with neck pain with a trend to suggest that the deficit may be greater in whiplash patients.
Abstract: Objective: To compare head relocation accuracy in traumatic (whiplash), insidious onset neck pain patients and asymptomatic subjects when targeting a natural head posture (NHP) and complex predetermined positions.Design: A case–control study.Setting: University-based musculoskeletal research clinic.Participants: Sixty-three volunteers divided into three groups of similar gender and age: Group 1 (n = 21) an asymptomatic group; group 2 (n = 20) insidious onset neck pain; group 3 (n = 22) a history of whiplash injury.Intervention: Five randomly ordered tests designed to detect relocation accuracy of the head.Outcome measures: A 3-Space Fastrak system measured the mean absolute relocation error of three trials of each relocation test.Results: A significant difference was found between groups in one of the tests targeting the NHP (p = 0.001). Post-hoc pairwise comparisons revealed a significant difference (p £ 0.05) between the asymptomatic group and each symptomatic group. The difference between the symptomat...
168 citations
••
TL;DR: A description of venom metalloproteinase structure will be outlined in this review, along with the similarities and differences among the venom proteins and the ADAMs family of proteins.
168 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, multiproxy climate records from Iceland reveal complex changes in terrestrial climate and glacier fluctuations through the Holocene, revealing some coherent patterns of change as well as significant spatial variability.
168 citations
Authors
Showing all 5561 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Albert Hofman | 267 | 2530 | 321405 |
Kari Stefansson | 206 | 794 | 174819 |
Ronald Klein | 194 | 1305 | 149140 |
Eric Boerwinkle | 183 | 1321 | 170971 |
Unnur Thorsteinsdottir | 167 | 444 | 121009 |
Vilmundur Gudnason | 159 | 837 | 123802 |
Hakon Hakonarson | 152 | 968 | 101604 |
Bernhard O. Palsson | 147 | 831 | 85051 |
Andrew T. Hattersley | 146 | 768 | 106949 |
Fernando Rivadeneira | 146 | 628 | 86582 |
Rattan Lal | 140 | 1383 | 87691 |
Jonathan G. Seidman | 137 | 563 | 89782 |
Christine E. Seidman | 134 | 519 | 67895 |
Augustine Kong | 134 | 237 | 89818 |
Timothy M. Frayling | 133 | 500 | 100344 |