905 resultados para identification and validation of knowledge


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BACKGROUND & Aims: Standardized instruments are needed to assess the activity of eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), to provide endpoints for clinical trials and observational studies. We aimed to develop and validate a patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument and score, based on items that could account for variations in patients' assessments of disease severity. We also evaluated relationships between patients' assessment of disease severity and EoE-associated endoscopic, histologic, and laboratory findings. METHODS We collected information from 186 patients with EoE in Switzerland and the US (69.4% male; median age, 43 years) via surveys (n = 135), focus groups (n = 27), and semi-structured interviews (n = 24). Items were generated for the instruments to assess biologic activity based on physician input. Linear regression was used to quantify the extent to which variations in patient-reported disease characteristics could account for variations in patients' assessment of EoE severity. The PRO instrument was prospectively used in 153 adult patients with EoE (72.5% male; median age, 38 years), and validated in an independent group of 120 patients with EoE (60.8% male; median age, 40.5 years). RESULTS Seven PRO factors that are used to assess characteristics of dysphagia, behavioral adaptations to living with dysphagia, and pain while swallowing accounted for 67% of the variation in patients' assessment of disease severity. Based on statistical consideration and patient input, a 7-day recall period was selected. Highly active EoE, based on endoscopic and histologic findings, was associated with an increase in patient-assessed disease severity. In the validation study, the mean difference between patient assessment of EoE severity and PRO score was 0.13 (on a scale from 0 to 10). CONCLUSIONS We developed and validated an EoE scoring system based on 7 PRO items that assesses symptoms over a 7-day recall period. Clinicaltrials.gov number: NCT00939263.

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Careers today increasingly require engagement in proactive career behaviors; however, there is a lack of validated measures assessing the general degree to which somebody is engaged in such career behaviors. We describe the results of six studies with six independent samples of German university students (total N = 2,854), working professionals (total N = 561), and university graduates (N = 141) that report the development and validation of the Career Engagement Scale - a measure of the degree of which somebody is proactively developing her or his career as expressed by diverse career behaviors. The studies provide supprt for measurement invariance across gender and time. In support of convergent and discriminant validity, we find that career engagement is more prevalent among working professionals than among university students and that this scale has incremental validity above several specific career behaviors regarding its relation to vocational identity clarity and career self-efficacy beliefs among students and to job and career satisfaction among employees. In support of incremental predictive validity, beyond the effects of several more specific careeer behaviors, career engagement while at university predicts higher job and career satisfaction several months later after beginning work.

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RATIONALE Not all patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) have a high risk of an adverse short-term outcome. OBJECTIVES This prospective cohort study aimed to develop a multimarker prognostic model that accurately classifies normotensive patients with PE into low and high categories of risk of adverse medical outcomes. METHODS The study enrolled 848 outpatients from the PROTECT (PROgnosTic valuE of Computed Tomography) study (derivation cohort) and 529 patients from the Prognostic Factors for Pulmonary Embolism (PREP) study (validation cohort). Investigators assessed study participants for a 30-day complicated course, defined as death from any cause, hemodynamic collapse, and/or adjudicated recurrent PE. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS A complicated course occurred in 63 (7.4%) of the 848 normotensive patients with acute symptomatic PE in the derivation cohort and in 24 patients (4.5%) in the validation cohort. The final model included the simplified Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index, cardiac troponin I, brain natriuretic peptide, and lower limb ultrasound testing. The model performed similarly in the derivation (c-index of 0.75) and validation (c-index of 0.85) cohorts. The combination of the simplified Pulmonary Embolism Severity Index and brain natriuretic peptide testing showed a negative predictive value for a complicated course of 99.1 and 100% in the derivation and validation cohorts, respectively. The combination of all modalities had a positive predictive value for the prediction of a complicated course of 25.8% in the derivation cohort and 21.2% in the validation cohort. CONCLUSIONS For normotensive patients who have acute PE, we derived and validated a multimarker model that predicts all-cause mortality, hemodynamic collapse, and/or recurrent PE within the following 30 days.

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IS1296, a new insertion sequence belonging to the IS3 family of insertion elements has been identified in Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides (Mmm) biotype small colony (SC), the agent of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP). IS1296 is 1485-bp long and has 30-bp inverted repeats. It contains two open reading frames, ORFA and ORFB, which show significant similarities to the ORFs which encode the transposase function of IS elements of the IS3 family, in particular IS150 of Escherichia coli. IS1296 is present in 19 copies in Mmm SC-type strain PG1 and in 18 copies in a recently isolated field strain L2. It seems to transpose at low frequency in Mmm SC. IS1296 is also present in 5 copies in Mmm biotype large colony (LC)-type strain Y-goat, and in two copies in Mycoplasma sp. 'bovine group 7' reference strain PG50. It is, however, not present in other species of the 'mycoides cluster' or other closely related Mycoplasma sp. of ruminants.

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An autonomous energy source within a human body is of key importance in the development of medical implants. This work deals with the modelling and the validation of an energy harvesting device which converts the myocardial contractions into electrical energy. The mechanism consists of a clockwork from a commercially available wrist watch. We developed a physical model which is able to predict the total amount of energy generated when applying an external excitation. For the validation of the model, a custom-made hexapod robot was used to accelerate the harvesting device along a given trajectory. We applied forward kinematics to determine the actual motion experienced by the harvesting device. The motion provides translational as well as rotational motion information for accurate simulations in three-dimensional space. The physical model could be successfully validated.

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This paper proposes a new estimator for the fixed effects ordered logit model. In contrast to existing methods, the new procedure allows estimating the thresholds. The empirical relevance and simplicity of implementation is illustrated in an application on the effect of unemployment on life satisfaction.

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Behavior is one of the most important indicators for assessing cattle health and well-being. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a novel algorithm to monitor locomotor behavior of loose-housed dairy cows based on the output of the RumiWatch pedometer (ITIN+HOCH GmbH, Fütterungstechnik, Liestal, Switzerland). Data of locomotion were acquired by simultaneous pedometer measurements at a sampling rate of 10 Hz and video recordings for manual observation later. The study consisted of 3 independent experiments. Experiment 1 was carried out to develop and validate the algorithm for lying behavior, experiment 2 for walking and standing behavior, and experiment 3 for stride duration and stride length. The final version was validated, using the raw data, collected from cows not included in the development of the algorithm. Spearman correlation coefficients were calculated between accelerometer variables and respective data derived from the video recordings (gold standard). Dichotomous data were expressed as the proportion of correctly detected events, and the overall difference for continuous data was expressed as the relative measurement error. The proportions for correctly detected events or bouts were 1 for stand ups, lie downs, standing bouts, and lying bouts and 0.99 for walking bouts. The relative measurement error and Spearman correlation coefficient for lying time were 0.09% and 1; for standing time, 4.7% and 0.96; for walking time, 17.12% and 0.96; for number of strides, 6.23% and 0.98; for stride duration, 6.65% and 0.75; and for stride length, 11.92% and 0.81, respectively. The strong to very high correlations of the variables between visual observation and converted pedometer data indicate that the novel RumiWatch algorithm may markedly improve automated livestock management systems for efficient health monitoring of dairy cows.

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Recent years have led to increasing interest and appreciation of the possible importance of single cell heterogeneity in various biological processes. One of the examples of phenotypic heterogeneity in bacterial populations is antibiotic tolerant persister cells. Such an antibiotic tolerance phenotype is of considerable clinical relevance since dormant bacteria can re-establish infections rapidly after the antibiotic treatment has been terminated. Up to now mechanisms for establishing the persistence phenomenon in bacteria have remained largely enigmatic. Persisters are cells considered to be in a dormant state with down regulated gene expression. Only recently small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) have been appreciated as important regulators of gene expression in response to environmental stimuli and several theoretical studies have suggested a possible involvement of sRNAs in the mechanisms of regulated heterogeneity in bacteria. We have experimentally addressed this potential link between sRNAs and persistence/dormancy in E. coli as an example of heterogeneity. Beside classical sRNAs we are focusing also on sRNAs directly associating with and possibly regulating the ribosome, the central enzyme of gene expression. The persister and dormant cell specific sRNA profile is studied by the comparative analysis of sRNA profile changes of the whole bacterial population after antibiotic killing. From RNA-Seq data ~ 25 000 potentially stable RNA fragments were identified and initial analysis predicted ~300 of them to be dormant/persister cell specific. After further evaluation the most prominent dormant/persister cell specific sRNAs are functionally characterized and their potential role in the persistence/dormancy will be evaluated by applying genetic, molecular and biochemical tools. The potential results of this project will provide a better understanding on the molecular mechanism of bacterial persistence/dormancy and on the role of ribosome-bound sRNA molecules in fine-tuning gene expression.

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Recent years have led to increasing interest and appreciation of the possible importance of single cell heterogeneity in various biological processes. One of the examples of phenotypic heterogeneity in bacterial populations is antibiotic tolerant persister cells. Such an antibiotic tolerance phenotype is of considerable clinical relevance since dormant bacteria can re-establish infections rapidly after the antibiotic treatment has been terminated. Up to now mechanisms for establishing the persistence phenomenon in bacteria have remained largely enigmatic. Persisters are cells considered to be in a dormant state with down regulated gene expression. Only recently small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) have been appreciated as important regulators of gene expression in response to environmental stimuli and several theoretical studies have suggested a possible involvement of sRNAs in the mechanisms of regulated heterogeneity in bacteria. We have experimentally addressed this potential link between sRNAs and persistence/dormancy in E. coli as an example of heterogeneity. Beside classical sRNAs we are focusing also on sRNAs directly associating with and possibly regulating the ribosome, the central enzyme of gene expression. The persister and dormant cell specific sRNA profile is studied by the comparative analysis of sRNA profile changes of the whole bacterial population after antibiotic killing. From RNA-Seq data ~ 25 000 potentially stable RNA fragments were identified and initial analysis predicted ~300 of them to be dormant/persister cell specific. After further evaluation the most prominent dormant/persister cell specific sRNAs are functionally characterized and their potential role in the persistence/dormancy will be evaluated by applying genetic, molecular and biochemical tools. The potential results of this project will provide a better understanding on the molecular mechanism of bacterial persistence/dormancy and on the role of ribosome-bound sRNA molecules in fine-tuning gene expression.

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Recent years have led to increasing interest and appreciation of the possible importance of single cell heterogeneity in various biological processes. One of the examples of phenotypic heterogeneity in bacterial populations is antibiotic tolerant persister cells. Such an antibiotic tolerance phenotype is of considerable clinical relevance since dormant bacteria can re-establish infections rapidly after the antibiotic treatment has been terminated. Up to now mechanisms for establishing the persistence phenomenon in bacteria have remained largely enigmatic. Persisters are cells considered to be in a dormant state with down regulated gene expression. Only recently small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) have been appreciated as important regulators of gene expression in response to environmental stimuli and several theoretical studies have suggested a possible involvement of sRNAs in the mechanisms of regulated heterogeneity in bacteria. We have experimentally addressed this potential link between sRNAs and persistence/dormancy in E. coli as an example of heterogeneity. Beside classical sRNAs we are focusing also on sRNAs directly associating with and possibly regulating the ribosome, the central enzyme of gene expression. The persister and dormant cell specific sRNA profile is studied by the comparative analysis of sRNA profile changes of the whole bacterial population after antibiotic killing. From RNA-Seq data ~ 25 000 potentially stable RNA fragments were identified and initial analysis predicted ~300 of them to be dormant/persister cell specific. After further evaluation the most prominent dormant/persister cell specific sRNAs are functionally characterized and their potential role in the persistence/dormancy will be evaluated by applying genetic, molecular and biochemical tools. The potential results of this project will provide a better understanding on the molecular mechanism of bacterial persistence/dormancy and on the role of ribosome-bound sRNA molecules in fine-tuning gene expression.