keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38181086/single-shot-deterministic-complex-amplitude-imaging-with-a-single-layer-metalens
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liu Li, Shuai Wang, Feng Zhao, Yixin Zhang, Shun Wen, Huichao Chai, Yunhui Gao, Wenhui Wang, Liangcai Cao, Yuanmu Yang
Conventional imaging systems can only capture light intensity. Meanwhile, the lost phase information may be critical for a variety of applications such as label-free microscopy and optical metrology. Existing phase retrieval techniques typically require a bulky setup, multiframe measurements, or prior information of the target scene. Here, we proposed an extremely compact system for complex amplitude imaging, leveraging the extreme versatility of a single-layer metalens to generate spatially multiplexed and polarization phase-shifted point spread functions...
January 5, 2024: Science Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38111275/the-impact-of-sensory-stimuli-on-healthcare-workers-and-outcomes-in-trauma-rooms-a-focus-group-study
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Bayramzadeh, Sahar Ahmadpour
OBJECTIVE: This study investigated issues related to noise, lighting, and temperature in trauma rooms that impact patient care and staff performance. BACKGROUND: Uncontrolled sensory stimuli can hinder healthcare delivery quality in trauma rooms. High noise and temperature levels can increase staff stress and discomfort as well as patient discomfort. Conversely, proper lighting can decrease staff stress levels and reduce burnout. Sensory overload in trauma rooms is a crucial concern, but no studies have been conducted on this issue...
December 18, 2023: HERD
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38109119/seminar-scalable-preprocessing-tools-for-exposomic-data-analysis
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephen K Grady, Levente Dojcsak, Emily W Harville, Maeve E Wallace, Dovile Vilda, Macarius M Donneyong, Darryl B Hood, R Burciaga Valdez, Aramandla Ramesh, Wansoo Im, Patricia Matthews-Juarez, Paul D Juarez, Michael A Langston
BACKGROUND: The exposome serves as a popular framework in which to study exposures from chemical and nonchemical stressors across the life course and the differing roles that these exposures can play in human health. As a result, data relevant to the exposome have been used as a resource in the quest to untangle complicated health trajectories and help connect the dots from exposures to adverse outcome pathways. OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this methods seminar is to clarify and review preprocessing techniques critical for accurate and effective external exposomic data analysis...
December 2023: Environmental Health Perspectives
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38096649/generalized-robust-loss-functions-for-machine-learning
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saiji Fu, Xiaoxiao Wang, Jingjing Tang, Shulin Lan, Yingjie Tian
Loss function is a critical component of machine learning. Some robust loss functions are proposed to mitigate the adverse effects caused by noise. However, they still face many challenges. Firstly, there is currently a lack of unified frameworks for building robust loss functions in machine learning. Secondly, most of them only care about the occurring noise and pay little attention to those normal points. Thirdly, the resulting performance gain is limited. To this end, we put forward a general framework of robust loss functions for machine learning (RML) with rigorous theoretical analyses, which can smoothly and adaptively flatten any unbounded loss function and apply to various machine learning problems...
December 9, 2023: Neural Networks: the Official Journal of the International Neural Network Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38095715/analysis-of-noise-levels-in-the-neonatal-intensive-care-unit-the-impact-of-clinical-microsystems
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gerhard Fusch, Saber Mohamed, Ahmad Bakry, Edward W Li, Sourabh Dutta, Salhab El Helou, Christoph Fusch
Reorganization of neonatal intensive care by introducing clinical microsystems may help to allocate nursing time more appropriately to the needs of patients. However, there is concern that cohorting infants according to acuity may enhance noise levels. This single-center study investigated the impact of reorganization of neonatal intensive care unit by implementing clinical microsystems in a Level III NICU on environmental noise. This prospective study measured 24-h noise levels over a period of 6 months during pre- and post-implementation of microsystems cohorting infants of similar acuity...
December 14, 2023: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38089400/a-self-calibrating-magnetic-sensor-approach-accurately-positions-an-aortic-damage-control-stent-in-a-porcine-model
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dahlia M Kenawy, Yifan Zhang, Moataz Elsisy, Mahmoud Abdel-Rasoul, Youngjae Chun, William C Clark, Bryan W Tillman
OBJECTIVES: Non-compressible torso hemorrhage remains a high mortality injury, with difficulty mobilizing resources before exsanguination. Previous studies reported on a retrievable stent graft for damage control and morphometric algorithms for rapid placement, yet fluoroscopy is impractical for the austere environment. We hypothesized that magnetic sensors could be used to position stents relative to an external magnet placed on an anatomic landmark, whereas an electromagnet would allow self-calibration to account for environmental noise...
2023: Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38083255/statistical-shape-modeling-based-algorithm-for-replacing-missing-beats-in-blood-pressure-signals
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margherita Garagnani, Maximiliano Mollura, Riccardo Barbieri
In clinical environments, such as the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), continuous and uninterrupted monitoring of vital signs is critical for the early detection of patient deterioration and prompt intervention. Since data collected in these settings are often corrupted by noise, artifacts, or recording gaps, it is important to estimate missing data for a more accurate signal assessment.In this study, we propose an automatic algorithm for reconstructing of arterial blood pressure signal waveforms. The methodological core of the algorithm is based on the idea of statistical shape modeling, which basically estimates the shape variation of beat waveforms in order to reconstruct them in noisy segments...
July 2023: Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38044046/-expert-consensus-on-management-of-pain-agitation-and-related-issues-in-adult-patients-with-critical-respiratory-diseases
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
As patients with critical respiratory diseases suffer from the discomfort of disease, frequent medical and nursing procedures, and the noise disturbance of the ICU environment, it is necessary to implement analgesia and sedation to reduce their negative stress and oxygen consumption. Special emphasis will be placed on the clinical practice of analgesia, sedation and rehabilitation in critically ill patients with respiratory diseases, as different pathophysiological features of the respective pulmonary diseases are presented, such as severe asthma and acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, as well as the exclusive situations during respiratory therapy, such as recruitment maneuvers, bedside bronchoscopy and operation of extracorporeal membrane oxygenators...
December 12, 2023: Chinese Journal of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38012768/evaluation-of-the-sensory-environment-in-a-large-tertiary-icu
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oystein Tronstad, Dylan Flaws, Sue Patterson, Robert Holdsworth, Veronica Garcia-Hansen, Francisca Rodriguez Leonard, Ruth Ong, Stephanie Yerkovich, John F Fraser
BACKGROUND: ICU survival is improving. However, many patients leave ICU with ongoing cognitive, physical, and/or psychological impairments and reduced quality of life. Many of the reasons for these ongoing problems are unmodifiable; however, some are linked with the ICU environment. Suboptimal lighting and excessive noise contribute to a loss of circadian rhythms and sleep disruptions, leading to increased mortality and morbidity. Despite long-standing awareness of these problems, meaningful ICU redesign is yet to be realised, and the 'ideal' ICU design is likely to be unique to local context and patient cohorts...
November 27, 2023: Critical Care: the Official Journal of the Critical Care Forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37989878/-handover-protocols-in-the-emergency-department
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felix Patricius Hans, Julian Krehl, Matthias Kühn, Matthias Wilhelm Fuchs, Gerda Weiser, Hans-Jörg Busch, Leo Benning
Patient handovers are a vital juncture in the flow of medical information, and regardless of the mode of handover-oral, written, or combined-it often poses a risk of information loss. This could potentially jeopardize patient safety and influences subsequent treatment. The exchange of information in emergency care settings between paramedics and emergency personnel is particularly prone to errors due to situational specifics such as high ambient noise, the involvement of multiple disciplines, and the need for urgent decision-making in life-threatening situations...
November 21, 2023: Medizinische Klinik, Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37957651/experience-of-early-life-pain-in-premature-infants-is-associated-with-atypical-cerebellar-development-and-later-neurodevelopmental-deficits
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kevin M Cook, Josepheen De Asis-Cruz, Jung-Hoon Kim, Sudeepta K Basu, Nickie Andescavage, Jonathan Murnick, Emma Spoehr, Melissa Liggett, Adré J du Plessis, Catherine Limperopoulos
BACKGROUND: Infants born very and extremely premature (V/EPT) are at a significantly elevated risk for neurodevelopmental disorders and delays even in the absence of structural brain injuries. These risks may be due to earlier-than-typical exposure to the extrauterine environment, and its bright lights, loud noises, and exposures to painful procedures. Given the relative underdeveloped pain modulatory responses in these infants, frequent pain exposures may confer risk for later deficits...
November 14, 2023: BMC Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37948257/efficacy-of-medical-device-alarm-integration-into-a-simulated-h-60-integrated-communication-system
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura R Kroening, Rachel E Kinsler, Jeffrey J Molles, Amy L Lloyd
INTRODUCTION: This study sought to examine the efficacy of integrating medical device alarms into the intercommunication set of a simulated HH-60, allowing medics to hear the alarms over the ambient noise of the aeromedical environment. MATERIALS AND METHODS: U.S. Army critical care flight paramedics were recruited as subjects for this study. Subjects participated in two testing scenarios: One with patient monitor alarms integrated into their communication lines and one without integrated alarms (the control condition)...
November 8, 2023: Military Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37948124/a-challenge-to-the-evidence-behind-noise-guidelines-for-uk-hospitals
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
T Hampton, S Everett, E Goldsmith, P J Lee
BACKGROUND: Teams assessing hospital noise against international guidelines regularly find that noise exceeds perceived safe levels in clinical settings. The care of sick people may be inherently noisy but recent efforts to tackle the problem propose a wider scope to identify sources and qualities of noise as well as more precision with noise recording. AIMS: We sought to challenge the scientific evidence cited in the four major documents pertaining to hospital noise in the UK to clarify if evidence of harm from noise included in guidelines is available, contemporary and of high quality...
November 8, 2023: Occupational Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37865760/creating-the-icu-of-the-future-patient-centred-design-to-optimise-recovery
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oystein Tronstad, Dylan Flaws, Sue Patterson, Robert Holdsworth, John F Fraser
BACKGROUND: Intensive Care survival continues to improve, and the number of ICU services is increasing globally. However, there is a growing awareness of the detrimental impact of the ICU environment on patients, families, and staff. Excessive noise and suboptimal lighting especially have been shown to adversely impact physical and mental recovery during and after an ICU admission. Current ICU designs have not kept up with advances in medical technology and models of care, and there is no current 'gold-standard' ICU design...
October 21, 2023: Critical Care: the Official Journal of the Critical Care Forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37864614/advancements-in-rapid-and-affordable-diagnostic-testing-for-respiratory-infectious-diseases-evaluation-of-aptamer-beacon-technology-for-rapid-and-sensitive-detection-of-sar-cov-2-in-breath-condensate
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Asma H Mirza, Moneeb Akhtar, Jerry Aguren, John Marino, John G Bruno
The demand for rapid and efficient diagnostic point-of-care tests for respiratory infectious diseases has become increasingly critical in the current landscape. The emphasis on accessibility has been underscored over the past year, making it crucial to have biological components that exhibit fast and accurate kinetics. The foundation for precise, swift, and effective testing relies on the availability of highly responsive biological agents. Two published aptamer DNA sequences designated Song and MSA52 and their truncated internal stem-loop structures were studied for their potential to serve as aptamer beacons for rapid COVID detection...
October 21, 2023: Journal of Fluorescence
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37860889/noise-level-and-surgeon-stress-during-thyroidectomy-in-an-endocrine-surgery-operating-room
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarrah Idrees, Mayilvaganan Sabaretnam, Gyan Chand, Anjali Mishra, Amit Rastogi, Gaurav Agarwal
INTRODUCTION: Noise in the operating room is an ongoing problem that impacts the outcome of any surgery. Noise as a stressor can produce a startling reaction and activate the fight or flight response of the autonomic and endocrine systems. The psychobiology of stress as assessed by salivary cortisol level is a sensitive measure of allostatic load. This study aims to correlate, both subjectively and objectively, the salivary cortisol levels of the surgeon with noise level measurement in an endocrine surgery operating room (OR)...
October 20, 2023: Head & Neck
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37859854/effects-of-immersive-virtual-reality-on-sensory-overload-in-a-random-sample-of-critically-ill-patients
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aileen C Naef, Stephan M Gerber, Michael Single, René M Müri, Matthias Haenggi, Stephan M Jakob, Marie-Madlen Jeitziner, Tobias Nef
BACKGROUND: Sensory overload and sensory deprivation have both been associated with negative health outcomes in critically ill patients. While there is a lack of any clear treatment or prevention strategies, immersive virtual reality is a promising tool for addressing such problems, but which has not been repetitively tested in random samples. Therefore, this study aimed to determine how critically ill patients react to repeated sessions of immersive virtual reality. METHODS: This exploratory study was conducted in the mixed medical-surgical intermediate care unit of the University Hospital of Bern (Inselspital)...
2023: Frontiers in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37846938/pre-extubation-ultrasound-measurement-of-in-situ-cuffed-endotracheal-tube-laryngeal-air-column-width-difference-single-center-pilot-study-of-relationship-with-post-extubation-stridor-in-under-5-years-old
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luke Burton, Jeremy Loberger, Mark Baker, Priya Prabhakaran, Vidit Bhargava
OBJECTIVES: Post-extubation stridor (PES) is difficult to predict before extubation. We therefore evaluated the potential diagnostic performance of pre-extubation laryngeal air column width difference (LACWD) measurement, as assessed by intensivist-performed point-of-care laryngeal ultrasound, in relation to clinically important PES. DESIGN: Prospective observational cohort study. SETTING: Single quaternary care PICU (July 19, 2021, to October 31, 2022)...
October 10, 2023: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37836606/diabetes-management-by-fourth-generation-glucose-sensors-based-on-lemon-extract-supported-cuo-nanoporous-materials
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Israr U Hassan
Diabetes is a major worldwide health issue, impacting millions of people around the globe and putting pressure on healthcare systems. Accurate detection of glucose is critical for efficient diabetes care, because it allows for prompt action to control blood sugar levels and avoid problems. Reliable glucose-sensing devices provide individuals with real-time information, allowing them to make more educated food, medicine, and lifestyle decisions. The progress of glucose sensing holds the key to increasing the quality of life for diabetics and lowering the burden of this prevalent condition...
September 22, 2023: Molecules: a Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37817812/-white-noise-and-questions-regarding-death-anxiety-forgiveness-and-patient-self-disclosure
#40
EDITORIAL
Edmund Howe
This commentary examines three critical therapeutic questions that arise for all patients, particularly for patients with psychiatric illness. These questions involve fearing death, forgiving oneself for past acts, and disclosing medical and psychiatric conditions to others. These questions, which can be critical to providing optimal medical care in some contexts, are prompted by the movie White Noise , as it might provoke questions regarding death and self-disclosure in patients. Specific responses that might be helpful to patients are offered...
2023: Innovations in Clinical Neuroscience
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