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Showing papers by "Wishaw General Hospital published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed a chrX-wide association study, including genotype data from five genome-wide associations (from Italy, United Kingdom, Canada, China, and Japan; 5244 case patients and 11,875 control individuals).

19 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
P.R. Harvey, S.C. McKay, R.J.W. Wilkin, G.R. Layton  +442 moreInstitutions (64)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess variation in PERT prescribing, determine factors associated with its use and identify potential actions to improve prescription rates in non-surgical units of pancreatic cancer patients.

8 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective, electronic survey of clinicians within managed clinical networks in Scotland was undertaken between 2013 and 2019 to determine the prevalence of atypical genitalia and its initial management.
Abstract: Provision of optimum healthcare for infants with atypical genitalia requires a clear understanding of the occurrence of this condition. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of atypical genitalia and its initial management. A prospective, electronic survey of clinicians within managed clinical networks in Scotland was undertaken between 2013 and 2019. Notification from clinicians was sought for term neonates requiring specialist input for atypical genitalia. Additional information was also sought from the 4 regional genetics laboratories that provided details for neonates who had an urgent karyotype performed for atypical genitalia or sex determination. In total, the study identified 171 term infants who required some investigation for atypical genitalia in the neonatal period, providing a birth prevalence of 1:1,881 term births. Of the 171 infants, 97 (57%) had specialist input over the first 3 months of life, providing a birth prevalence of 1:3,318 term births that received specialist input for atypical genitalia. A total of 92 of these 97 cases had complete 3-month follow-up data, 62 (67%) presented within 24 h of birth, and age at presentation ranged from birth to 28 days. Age at sex assignment ranged from birth to 14 days, and in 63 cases (68%), sex assignment occurred at birth. Thus, the birth prevalence of a case of atypical genitalia where sex assignment was reported to be delayed beyond birth was estimated at 1:11,097 births. In 1 case sex was re-assigned at 3 months. Atypical genitalia requiring specialist input within the first month of life are rare in term newborns, and in only a third of these cases, sex assignment is delayed beyond birth. This study provides new clinical benchmarks for comparing and improving the delivery of care in centres that manage these conditions.

6 citations


Posted ContentDOI
TL;DR: A diet consisting of cereals and meat products was predictive of higher faecal calprotectin levels after food reintroduction, and potential dietary triggers of gut inflammation in children with Crohn’s disease were identified.
Abstract: BACKGROUND The anti-inflammatory effect of exclusive enteral nutrition on the gut of children with Crohn's disease is rapidly lost after food reintroduction. This study assessed disease dietary triggers following successful treatment with exclusive enteral nutrition. METHODS Nutrient intake, dietary patterns and dietary biomarkers in faeces (gluten immunogenic peptides, undigestible starch, short chain fatty acids) were assessed in 14 children with Crohn's disease during early food reintroduction, following exclusive enteral nutrition. Groups above (Group A) and below (Group B) the median levels of faecal calprotectin after food reintroduction were assigned for comparative analysis. RESULTS Intakes of fibre, gluten-containing cereals and red and processed meat were significantly higher in Group A than Group B; (median [Q1, Q3], g/day; Fibre: 12.1 [11.2, 19.9] vs. 9.9 [7.6, 12.1], p = 0.03; Red and processed meat: 151 [66.7, 190] vs. 63.3 [21.7, 67], p = 0.02; gluten-containing cereals: 289 [207, 402] vs. 203 [61, 232], p = 0.035). A diet consisting of cereals and meat products was predictive (92% accuracy) of higher faecal calprotectin levels after food reintroduction. In faeces, butyrate levels, expressed as absolute concentration and relative abundance, were higher in Group A than Group B by 28.4 µmol/g (p = 0.015) and 6.4% (p = 0.008), respectively. Levels of gluten immunogenic peptide and starch in faeces did not differ between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS This pilot study identified potential dietary triggers of gut inflammation in children with Crohn's disease after food reintroduction following treatment with exclusive enteral nutrition. TRIAL REGISTRATION Clinical trials.gov registration number: NCT02341248; Clinical trials.gov URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02341248 (retrospectively registered).

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a pre-selected group of adolescents with likely poor prior adherence to inhaled therapies, a change to Relvar™ (once daily combined ICS/ULABA) led to improvements in asthma control, as assessed by ED attendances and oral steroid burden.
Abstract: A high proportion of children and adolescents who have “difficult” or therapy-resistant asthma, are found to have poor adherence to maintenance therapies. Such individuals are thus difficult asthma...

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review aims to synthesise all the available studies reporting post-operative outcomes of P.E. and its impact on patient quality of life (QoL), when available, which have not previously been summarised.
Abstract: The ileo-anal pouch (IAP) has been the gold standard procedure for maintenance of bowel continuity after panproctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis, familial adenomatous polyposis or hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer. However, the IAP has an estimated failure rate of 13% at 10 years post-procedure (Tulchinsky et al., Ann Surg 238(2):229–34, 2003), which can result in pouch excision (P.E.). This systematic review aims to synthesise all the available studies reporting post-operative outcomes of P.E. and its impact on patient quality of life (QoL), when available, which have not previously been summarised. PubMed, Embase, Medline and the Cochrane library databases were searched with terms ‘Pouch AND excision’ OR ‘Pouch AND removal’ OR ‘Pouch AND remove’ OR ‘IAP AND excision’. All studies reporting post-operative morbidity, mortality or functional outcomes in patients who had P.E. were included. Studies with < 5 patients, non-English studies and conference abstracts were excluded. 14 studies comprising 1601 patients were included. Overall complications varied from 18 to 63% with the most common being persistent perineal sinus (9–40%) or surgical site infection (wound—2 to 30%; intra-abdominal collection—3 to 24%). The mortality rate was between 0.58 and 1.4%. QoL is generally lower in P.E. patients compared to the normal population across various QoL measures and P.E. patients often had urinary and sexual dysfunction post-operatively. There is a substantial incidence of complications after P.E.; however, there is no evidence describing QoL pre- and post-P.E. Further longitudinal research comparing QoL in patients undergoing P.E. and other treatment options such as indefinite diversion is required to definitively assess QoL post-procedure.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of thiopurine therapy in EBV-naive inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients remains controversial due to a risk of EBVassociated complications as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The use of thiopurine therapy in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-naive inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients remains controversial due to a risk of EBV-associated complications. We evaluated EBV status and outcomes within our paediatric IBD population over an 8-year period; finding that 217 of 409 (53%) screened patients were seropositive for EBV at IBD diagnosis; that thiopurines were used in 189 of 217 (87%) seropositive and 159 of 192 (83%) seronegative patients (P = 0.22); and that 7 of 192 (4%) previously seronegative patients subsequently tested positive for EBV with 6 of 7 (86%) patients having concurrently recorded thiopurine use. All six patients continued thiopurine with/without a period of cessation; no EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disorders/serious complications were recorded within our cohort. A significant proportion of our patients would not receive thiopurine therapy should their use be avoided in EBV-negative patients (47%) or seronegative males (30%). The small but significant risks of thiopurine treatment must be balanced against the potential benefits of successful IBD management; further research into this is required.

2 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The British Society for Rheumatology Ultrasound Special Interest Group (BSRUSSIG) as discussed by the authors presented a UK-based consensus of principles and recommendations to guide rheumatologists in the US training and practice.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE The aim of this paper is to present a UK-based consensus of principles and recommendations to guide rheumatology US training and practice. METHOD A Delphi process was conducted involving 19 US experts representing each of the 14 regions of the UK. A working group of experienced British Society for Rheumatology Ultrasound Special Interest Group (BSRUSSIG) members made seven proposals that were presented to the whole group for further discussion. This resulted in minor modifications and seven preliminary recommendations. Members were then asked to anonymously agree or disagree with each recommendation using an electronic ballot. A threshold of 75% was used to determine consensus agreement. Results were collated by an independent chairperson and presented to the BSRUSSIG in a face to face meeting where agreement for each recommendation was ratified and an action plan agreed for dissemination of the results and future development work. RESULTS Using a validated process, experts in rheumatology US have worked through an iterative process and have unanimously agreed seven recommendations for rheumatology training and practice. These cover a hierarchy of practice indications, education and training, including the need for practitioners to demonstrate lifelong learning, as well as a commitment to support mentors and trainers through the BSRUSSIG. CONCLUSION These are the first specific education and practice recommendations for rheumatology US in the UK and have been developed and endorsed by the BSRUSSIG. We intend that these proposals will help to support and validate rheumatology US practice and inform the development of future rheumatology training curricula and education programmes.

2 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the UK, there is no agreed minimum standard for training in ultrasound applied to rheumatology patient man... as discussed by the authors, which is variable and there is also no agreed standard for the use of ultrasound for diagnosis of rheumatic diseases.
Abstract: Background and aimsUltrasound training for rheumatology practice in the UK is variable. Currently, there is no agreed minimum standard for training in ultrasound applied to rheumatology patient man...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report minimum 2-year outcomes following inferior labral repair and compare outcomes and risk factors associated with the injury to non-inferior labral tears.
Abstract: Inferior glenoid labral tears are an uncommon but distinct shoulder injury. Only a small number of studies have reported outcomes following arthroscopic repair. The aim of the current study was to report minimum 2-year outcomes following inferior labral repair and to compare outcomes and risk factors associated with the injury to non-inferior labral tears. Whether preoperative MRI or MRA identified inferior labral tears was also assessed. A prospective study of 162 consecutive patients undergoing arthroscopic glenoid labral repair, excluding isolated superior labral tears, was conducted. Of the 130 patients available for follow-up, 18 (13.7%) had an inferior labral tear (“Down Under lesion”), the remainder had anterior, posterior or mixed anterior/posterior lesions that did not include the inferior pole. Mean follow-up time for the Down Under group was 44 months (SD 10, range 27–57), and 30 months (SD 14, range 4–60) for the non-Down Under group. Postoperative outcomes included the Oxford Shoulder Instability Score and recurrent instability. Associations between Down Under lesions and injury mechanism, instability at presentation, recurrent instability and family history were assessed with multivariable logistic regression. Preoperative MRI or MRA reports by radiologists were examined to determine if Down Under lesions were identified. Oxford Shoulder Instability Scores indicated that most patients in both groups had little pain or shoulder problems postoperatively (average Oxford Score 41; 48 = no symptoms). Oxford Scores were not significantly different between the Down Under and non-Down Under groups. Four patients (22.2%) in the Down Under group had recurring symptoms (pain and instability) compared to 12 (10.6%) in the non-Down Under group; this difference was not statistically significant (adjusted OR 1.09, 95% CI 0.19,4.77). Family history of shoulder instability was positively associated with a Down Under lesion (adjusted OR 5.0, 95%CI 1.51,16.7). MRI or MRA identified 52.9% of Down Under lesions. Down Under lesions were an infrequent type of glenoid labral injury, yet postoperative outcomes were similar to other labral tears. Patients with Down Under lesions had a significant risk factor due to family history of shoulder instability. MRI and MRA could not reliably identify Down Under lesions. Level III.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of relevant published literature was conducted to assess the effectiveness of locally administered sodium hyaluronate or ADCON-T/N for the prevention of adhesions after hand flexor tendon repair.
Abstract: Purpose A common complication after digital flexor tendon repair in the hand is postoperative adhesions that can cause loss of motion and compromise hand function. The aim of this review of relevant published literature was to assess the effectiveness of locally administered sodium hyaluronate or ADCON-T/N for the prevention of adhesions after hand flexor tendon repair. Methods A literature search was conducted in June 2020 in multiple databases for randomized controlled trials . Our primary outcome was measurement of active finger motion. Follow-up was defined as short-term ( 6 months). Mean differences (MD) and standardized mean differences (SMD) of total active motion (TAM) of the interphalangeal joints (IPJs) and active motion of the IPJs separately were calculated where results were meta-analyzed. Results Six randomized controlled trials were included. For ADCON-T/N, no benefits were detected for TAM of the IPJs (MD 1.71 [-21.54, 24.96]) or active motion of the IPJs separately (proximal: MD 4.77 [-4.47, 14]; distal: MD 1.17 [-10.33, 12.66]) in the short-/mid-term. The mid-term benefit in TAM of sodium hyaluronate over standard care (placebo/no treatment) did not reach statistical significance (SMD 0.31 [0, 0.63]); however, a subgroup comparison of repeated administration of sodium hyaluronate versus standard care was both statistically and clinically significant (SMD 0.55 [0.11, 0.98]). Conclusions Repeated administration of sodium hyaluronate at the tendon repair site may be effective in improving postoperative active finger motion after primary hand flexor tendon repair in the mid-term. Type of study/level of evidence Therapeutic II.