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2011
2011
This publication reports the proceedings of the preliminary meeting of the working party that met at Gastro 2009 during the World Congress in London. The purpose of the preliminary meeting was to consider the areas that require attention, to discuss some of the findings that have already been published and to agree on the way forward. Our reason for publishing these proceedings is to stimulate interest in this venture and to provide the opportunity for input from the endoscopy community worldwide. The next meeting of the working party will be at the JGES Society meeting in Aomori in April 2011 when we hope to prepare a preliminary classification. This will be presented for general discussion and debate at the International Congress of Endoscopy (ICE) in Los Angeles in September 2011.
View on PubMed2011
2011
2011
PURPOSE OF REVIEW
To present an updated summary of the relationship between inflammation and localized and generalized bone loss in the rheumatic diseases.
RECENT FINDINGS
In addition to the well established role of inflammatory cytokines in promoting enhanced osteoclast function and bone loss, recent work has discovered the cytokine milieu may also inhibit osteoblast function and bone repair. The WNT and bone morphogenetic protein pathways provide molecular links between inflammation and altered bone homeostasis in chronic inflammatory states. These pathways and others have been the targets of emerging therapies for the management of inflammatory bone loss.
SUMMARY
Inflammation and bone loss are linked through a number of molecular pathways. Both of these processes need to be addressed when designing an effective treatment strategy for the rheumatic diseases.
View on PubMed2011
2011
2011
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
Quality of care delivered in the inpatient and ambulatory settings may be correlated within an integrated health system such as the Veterans Health Administration. We examined the correlation between stroke care quality at hospital discharge and within 6 months postdischarge.
METHODS
We conducted a cross-sectional hospital-level correlation analyses of chart-abstracted data for 3467 veterans discharged alive after an acute ischemic stroke from 108 Veterans Health Administration medical centers and 2380 veterans with postdischarge follow-up within 6 months in fiscal year 2007. Four risk-standardized processes of care represented discharge care quality: prescription of antithrombotic and antilipidmic therapy, anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, and tobacco cessation counseling along with a composite measure of defect-free care. Five risk-standardized intermediate outcomes represented postdischarge care quality: achievement of blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein, international normalized ratio, and glycosylated hemoglobin target levels, and delivery of appropriate treatment for poststroke depression along with a composite measure of achieved outcomes.
RESULTS
Median risk-standardized composite rate of defect-free care at discharge was 79%. Median risk-standardized postdischarge rates of achieving goal were 56% for blood pressure, 36% for low-density lipoprotein, 41% for international normalized ratio, 40% for glycosylated hemoglobin, and 39% for depression management and the median risk-standardized composite 6-month outcome rate was 44%. The hospital composite rate of defect-free care at discharge was correlated with meeting the low-density lipoprotein goal (r=0.31; P=0.007) and depression management (r=0.27; P=0.03) goal but was not correlated with blood pressure, international normalized ratio, glycosylated hemoglobin goals, nor with the composite measure of achieved postdischarge outcomes (probability values >0.13).
CONCLUSIONS
Hospital discharge care quality was not consistently correlated with ambulatory care quality.
View on PubMed2011
2011