Pub Date : 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.7
Yury Rosales-Ricardo, José P Ferreira
Introduction: Burnout syndrome has a negative impact on university students' health worldwide. Global prevalence of each dimension of the syndrome is estimated at 55.4% for emotional exhaustion, 31.6% for cynicism and 30.9% for academic inefficacy.
Objective: Evaluate the efficacy of physical exercise in reducing burnout levels in university students.
Methods: We carried out an investigation in students from the Technical University of Ambato, Ecuador. Students were in different career tracks, randomly selected, and were assigned to three different groups with pre-test and post-test measurements: two intervention groups (aerobic and strength exercise) and one control group (no exercise). The evaluation instrument was the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey, whose dimensions are exhaustion, cynicism and academic inefficacy. We also evaluated heart rate variability.
Results: The aerobic exercise group reduced cynicism by 21.1% (d = 0.252), inefficacy 13.1% (d = 0.397) and exhaustion by 31.0% (d = 0.532). The strength exercise group reduced cynicism by 27.4% (d = 0.315), inefficacy by 21.7% (d = 0.704) and exhaustion by 19.6% (d = 0.299). In the control group, exhaustion and inefficacy increased by 10.1% (d = 0.128) and 4.4% (d = 0.129) respectively; instead, cynicism was reduced by 7.3% (d = 0.062).The aerobic exercise group had the greatest increase in heart rate variability (at 16.8%), followed by the strength group (16.6%) and the control group (5.2%).
Conclusions: Physical exercise (both aerobic and strength) was effective in reducing burnout levels in university students.
{"title":"Effects of Physical Exercise on Burnout Syndrome in University Students.","authors":"Yury Rosales-Ricardo, José P Ferreira","doi":"10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.7","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.7","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Burnout syndrome has a negative impact on university students' health worldwide. Global prevalence of each dimension of the syndrome is estimated at 55.4% for emotional exhaustion, 31.6% for cynicism and 30.9% for academic inefficacy.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Evaluate the efficacy of physical exercise in reducing burnout levels in university students.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We carried out an investigation in students from the Technical University of Ambato, Ecuador. Students were in different career tracks, randomly selected, and were assigned to three different groups with pre-test and post-test measurements: two intervention groups (aerobic and strength exercise) and one control group (no exercise). The evaluation instrument was the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey, whose dimensions are exhaustion, cynicism and academic inefficacy. We also evaluated heart rate variability.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The aerobic exercise group reduced cynicism by 21.1% (d = 0.252), inefficacy 13.1% (d = 0.397) and exhaustion by 31.0% (d = 0.532). The strength exercise group reduced cynicism by 27.4% (d = 0.315), inefficacy by 21.7% (d = 0.704) and exhaustion by 19.6% (d = 0.299). In the control group, exhaustion and inefficacy increased by 10.1% (d = 0.128) and 4.4% (d = 0.129) respectively; instead, cynicism was reduced by 7.3% (d = 0.062).The aerobic exercise group had the greatest increase in heart rate variability (at 16.8%), followed by the strength group (16.6%) and the control group (5.2%).</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Physical exercise (both aerobic and strength) was effective in reducing burnout levels in university students.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"36-39"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2022-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39779054","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.3
Anselmo Antonio Abdo-Cuza, Charles Hall-Smith, Juliette Suárez-López, Roberto Castellanos-Gutiérrez, Miguel Ángel Blanco-González, Rafael Machado-Martínez, Jonathan Pi-Ávila, Francisco Gómez-Peire, Namibia Espinosa-Nodarse, Juan C López-González
Introduction: SARS-CoV-2 infection can produce endothelial injury and microvascular damage, one cause of the multiorgan failure associated with COVID-19. Cerebrovascular endothelial damage increases the risk of stroke in COVID-19 patients, which makes prompt diagnosis important. Endothelial dysfunction can be evaluated by using transcranial Doppler ultrasound to study cerebral hemodynamic reserve, but there are few of these studies in patients with COVID-19, and the technique is not included in COVID-19 action and follow-up guidelines nationally or internationally.
Objective: Estimate baseline cerebral hemodynamic patterns, cerebral hemodynamic reserve, and breath-holding index in recovered COVID-19 patients.
Method: We conducted an exploratory study in 51 people; 27 men and 24 women 20-78 years of age, divided into two groups. One group comprised 25 recovered COVID-19 patients, following clinical and epidemiological discharge, who suffered differing degrees of disease severity, and who had no neurological symptoms or disease at the time they were incorporated into the study. The second group comprised 26 people who had not been diagnosed with COVID-19 and who tested negative by RT-PCR at the time of study enrollment. Recovered patients were further divided into two groups: those who had been asymptomatic or had mild disease, and those who had severe or critical disease. We performed transcranial Doppler ultrasounds to obtain baseline and post-apnea tests of cerebral hemodynamic patterns to evaluate cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding indices. We characterized the recovered patient group and the control group through simple descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations).
Results: There were no measurable differences in baseline cerebral hemodynamics between the groups. However, cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index were lower in those who had COVID-19 than among control participants (19.9% vs. 36.8% and 0.7 vs. 1.2 respectively). These variables were similar for patients who had asymptomatic or mild disease (19.9% vs.19.8%) and for those who had severe or critical disease (0.7 vs. 0.7).
Conclusions: Patients recovered from SARS-CoV-2 infection showed decreased cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index regardless of the disease's clinical severity or presence of neurological symptoms. These abnormalities may be associated with endothelial damage caused by COVID-19. It would be useful to include transcranial Doppler ultrasound in evaluation and follow-up protocols for patients with COVID-19.
SARS-CoV-2感染可导致内皮损伤和微血管损伤,这是导致COVID-19相关多器官衰竭的原因之一。脑血管内皮损伤增加了COVID-19患者中风的风险,因此及时诊断非常重要。经颅多普勒超声可评估内皮功能障碍,研究脑血流动力学储备,但对COVID-19患者的研究较少,且该技术未纳入国内或国际COVID-19行动及随访指南。目的:评估COVID-19康复患者的基线脑血流动力学模式、脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数。方法:我们对51人进行了探索性研究;27名男性和24名女性,年龄在20-78岁之间,分为两组。一组包括25名临床和流行病学出院后康复的COVID-19患者,他们患有不同程度的疾病严重程度,并且在纳入研究时没有神经系统症状或疾病。第二组包括26名未被诊断为COVID-19的人,他们在研究入组时通过RT-PCR检测呈阴性。康复患者进一步分为两组:无症状或轻度疾病患者和严重或危重疾病患者。我们通过经颅多普勒超声获得脑血流动力学模式的基线和呼吸暂停后测试,以评估脑血流动力学储备和呼吸保持指数。我们通过简单的描述性统计(均值和标准差)对康复患者组和对照组进行特征描述。结果:两组间基线脑血流动力学无显著差异。然而,COVID-19患者的脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数低于对照组(分别为19.9%对36.8%和0.7对1.2)。这些变量对于无症状或轻度疾病的患者(19.9% vs.19.8%)和患有严重或危重疾病的患者(0.7 vs. 0.7)相似。结论:无论临床严重程度或有无神经系统症状,SARS-CoV-2感染后康复的患者均表现为脑血流动力学储备和屏气指数下降。这些异常可能与COVID-19引起的内皮损伤有关。将经颅多普勒超声纳入COVID-19患者的评估和随访方案将是有益的。
{"title":"Cerebral Hemodynamic Reserve Abnormalities Detected Via Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound in Recovered COVID-19 Patients.","authors":"Anselmo Antonio Abdo-Cuza, Charles Hall-Smith, Juliette Suárez-López, Roberto Castellanos-Gutiérrez, Miguel Ángel Blanco-González, Rafael Machado-Martínez, Jonathan Pi-Ávila, Francisco Gómez-Peire, Namibia Espinosa-Nodarse, Juan C López-González","doi":"10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.3","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.3","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>SARS-CoV-2 infection can produce endothelial injury and microvascular damage, one cause of the multiorgan failure associated with COVID-19. Cerebrovascular endothelial damage increases the risk of stroke in COVID-19 patients, which makes prompt diagnosis important. Endothelial dysfunction can be evaluated by using transcranial Doppler ultrasound to study cerebral hemodynamic reserve, but there are few of these studies in patients with COVID-19, and the technique is not included in COVID-19 action and follow-up guidelines nationally or internationally.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Estimate baseline cerebral hemodynamic patterns, cerebral hemodynamic reserve, and breath-holding index in recovered COVID-19 patients.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>We conducted an exploratory study in 51 people; 27 men and 24 women 20-78 years of age, divided into two groups. One group comprised 25 recovered COVID-19 patients, following clinical and epidemiological discharge, who suffered differing degrees of disease severity, and who had no neurological symptoms or disease at the time they were incorporated into the study. The second group comprised 26 people who had not been diagnosed with COVID-19 and who tested negative by RT-PCR at the time of study enrollment. Recovered patients were further divided into two groups: those who had been asymptomatic or had mild disease, and those who had severe or critical disease. We performed transcranial Doppler ultrasounds to obtain baseline and post-apnea tests of cerebral hemodynamic patterns to evaluate cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding indices. We characterized the recovered patient group and the control group through simple descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>There were no measurable differences in baseline cerebral hemodynamics between the groups. However, cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index were lower in those who had COVID-19 than among control participants (19.9% vs. 36.8% and 0.7 vs. 1.2 respectively). These variables were similar for patients who had asymptomatic or mild disease (19.9% vs.19.8%) and for those who had severe or critical disease (0.7 vs. 0.7).</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Patients recovered from SARS-CoV-2 infection showed decreased cerebral hemodynamic reserve and breath-holding index regardless of the disease's clinical severity or presence of neurological symptoms. These abnormalities may be associated with endothelial damage caused by COVID-19. It would be useful to include transcranial Doppler ultrasound in evaluation and follow-up protocols for patients with COVID-19.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"28-31"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2022-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39779052","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.13
{"title":"Without Accessible Primary Care, We Are \"Dangerously Unprepared\" for the Next Pandemic.","authors":"","doi":"10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.13","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.13","url":null,"abstract":"","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"4-5"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2022-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39917721","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.4
Elba Cruz-Rodríguez, Waldemar Baldoquín-Rodríguez, Niurka Molina-Águila, Belkys M Galindo-Santana, Manuel Romero-Placeres, Tania M González-Gross, Isabela Morgado-Vega, Yadira Olivera-Nodarse, María Guadalupe-Guzmán
Introduction: The percentage of asymptomatic COVID-19 cases worldwide is estimated at 18-50%; 53% in Cuba specifically, and 58% in Havana, the Cuban capital and the 2020 epicenter of the country's COVID-19 epidemic. These figures, however, do not represent the transmission capacity or behavior of asymptomatic cases. Understanding asymptomatic transmission's contribution to SARS-CoV-2 spread is of great importance to disease control and prevention.
Objective: Identify the epidemiological implications of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection in Havana, Cuba, during the first wave of the epidemic in 2020.
Methods: We carried out a cross-sectional study of all confirmed COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Havana, Cuba, from March 16 through June 30, 2020. The information was obtained through review of the standardized form for investigation of suspected and confirmed cases. Examined variables included age, sex, occupation, case type and source of infection. Cases were divided into asymptomatic and symptomatic groups, and transmission was characterized through the creation of a contact matrix. Analysis was carried out in Epidat and R.
Results: We studied 1287 confirmed cases, of which 57.7% (743) were asymptomatic, and 42.3% (544) were symptomatic. Symptomatic presentation was the most common for both imported and introduced cases, while asymptomatic presentation was more common in autochthonic cases and infections from an undetermined source. Asymptomatic infection was more common in groups aged ⟨20 and 20-59 years, while symptomatic infection was more common in those aged ⟩60 years. In the contact matrix, 34.6% of cases (445/1287) were not tied to other cases, and 65.4% (842/1287) were infectious-infected dyads, with symptomatic-symptomatic being the most common combination. The majority of primary cases (78.5%; 1002/1276) did not generate secondary cases, and 85.6% (658/743) of asymptomatic cases did not lead to other cases (although one asymptomatic superspreader led to 90 cases in a single event). However, 63.2% (344/544) of symptomatic primary cases generated secondary cases, and 11 symptomatic superspreaders spawned 100 secondary cases in different events.
Conclusions: Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection was the most common form of COVID-19 in Havana during the study period, but its capacity for contagion was lower than that of symptomatic individuals. Superspreader events under specific conditions played an important role in sustaining the epidemic.
{"title":"Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Havana, Cuba, March-June 2020: Epidemiological Implications.","authors":"Elba Cruz-Rodríguez, Waldemar Baldoquín-Rodríguez, Niurka Molina-Águila, Belkys M Galindo-Santana, Manuel Romero-Placeres, Tania M González-Gross, Isabela Morgado-Vega, Yadira Olivera-Nodarse, María Guadalupe-Guzmán","doi":"10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.4","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.4","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>The percentage of asymptomatic COVID-19 cases worldwide is estimated at 18-50%; 53% in Cuba specifically, and 58% in Havana, the Cuban capital and the 2020 epicenter of the country's COVID-19 epidemic. These figures, however, do not represent the transmission capacity or behavior of asymptomatic cases. Understanding asymptomatic transmission's contribution to SARS-CoV-2 spread is of great importance to disease control and prevention.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Identify the epidemiological implications of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection in Havana, Cuba, during the first wave of the epidemic in 2020.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We carried out a cross-sectional study of all confirmed COVID-19 cases diagnosed in Havana, Cuba, from March 16 through June 30, 2020. The information was obtained through review of the standardized form for investigation of suspected and confirmed cases. Examined variables included age, sex, occupation, case type and source of infection. Cases were divided into asymptomatic and symptomatic groups, and transmission was characterized through the creation of a contact matrix. Analysis was carried out in Epidat and R.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We studied 1287 confirmed cases, of which 57.7% (743) were asymptomatic, and 42.3% (544) were symptomatic. Symptomatic presentation was the most common for both imported and introduced cases, while asymptomatic presentation was more common in autochthonic cases and infections from an undetermined source. Asymptomatic infection was more common in groups aged ⟨20 and 20-59 years, while symptomatic infection was more common in those aged ⟩60 years. In the contact matrix, 34.6% of cases (445/1287) were not tied to other cases, and 65.4% (842/1287) were infectious-infected dyads, with symptomatic-symptomatic being the most common combination. The majority of primary cases (78.5%; 1002/1276) did not generate secondary cases, and 85.6% (658/743) of asymptomatic cases did not lead to other cases (although one asymptomatic superspreader led to 90 cases in a single event). However, 63.2% (344/544) of symptomatic primary cases generated secondary cases, and 11 symptomatic superspreaders spawned 100 secondary cases in different events.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection was the most common form of COVID-19 in Havana during the study period, but its capacity for contagion was lower than that of symptomatic individuals. Superspreader events under specific conditions played an important role in sustaining the epidemic.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"21-27"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2022-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39779051","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2021-09-17eCollection Date: 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.8
Nadia Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Indira Martínez-Jiménez, Ariana García-Ojalvo, Yssel Mendoza-Mari, Gerardo Guillén-Nieto, David George Armstrong, Jorge Berlanga-Acosta
Background: Diabetic foot ulcers are a common diabetic complication leading to alarming figures of amputation, disability, and early mortality. The diabetic glucooxidative environment impairs the healing response, promoting the onset of a 'wound chronicity phenotype'. In 50% of ulcers, these non-healing wounds act as an open door for developing infections, a process facilitated by diabetic patients' dysimmunity. Infection can elicit biofilm formation that worsens wound prognosis. How this microorganism community is able to take advantage of underlying diabetic conditions and thrive both within the wound and the diabetic host is an expanding research field.
Objectives: 1) Offer an overview of the major cellular and molecular derangements of the diabetic healing process versus physiological cascades in a non-diabetic host. 2) Describe the main immunopathological aspects of diabetics' immune response and explore how these contribute to wound infection susceptibility. 3) Conceptualize infection and biofilim in diabetic foot ulcers and analyze their dynamic interactions with wound bed cells and matrices, and their systemic effects at the organism level. 4) Offer an integrative conceptual framework of wound-dysimmunity-infection-organism damage.
Evidence aquisition: We retrieved 683 articles indexed in Medline/PubMed, SciELO, Bioline International and Google Scholar. 280 articles were selected for discussion under four major subheadings: 1) normal healing processes, 2) impaired healing processes in the diabetic population, 3) diabetic dysimmunity and 4) diabetic foot infection and its interaction with the host.
Development: The diabetic healing response is heterogeneous, torpid and asynchronous, leading to wound chronicity. The accumulation of senescent cells and a protracted inflammatory profile with a pro-catabolic balance hinder the proliferative response and delay re-epithelialization. Diabetes reduces the immune system's abilities to orchestrate an appropriate antimicrobial response and offers ideal conditions for microbiota establishment and biofilm formation. Biofilm-microbial entrenchment hinders antimicrobial therapy effectiveness, amplifies the host's pre-existing immunodepression, arrests the wound's proliferative phase, increases localized catabolism, prolongs pathogenic inflammation and perpetuates wound chronicity. In such circumstances the infected wound may act as a proinflammatory and pro-oxidant organ superimposed onto the host, which eventually intensifies peripheral insulin resistance and disrupts homeostasis.
Conclusions: The number of lower-limb amputations remains high worldwide despite continued research efforts on diabetic foot ulcers. Identifying and manipulating the molecular drivers underlying diabetic wound healing failure, and dysimmunity-driven susceptibility to infection will offer more effective therapeutic to
背景:糖尿病足溃疡是一种常见的糖尿病并发症,导致惊人的截肢、残疾和早期死亡数字。糖尿病的糖代谢环境损害了伤口的愈合反应,促进了 "伤口慢性化表型 "的出现。在 50%的溃疡中,这些无法愈合的伤口成为感染的温床,而糖尿病患者的免疫力低下又助长了这一过程。感染会导致生物膜的形成,使伤口预后恶化。这种微生物群落如何利用潜在的糖尿病条件,在伤口和糖尿病宿主体内繁衍生息,是一个不断扩展的研究领域:1) 概述糖尿病愈合过程与非糖尿病宿主生理级联的主要细胞和分子变化。2) 描述糖尿病患者免疫反应的主要免疫病理方面,并探讨这些方面如何导致伤口易感染。3) 构建糖尿病足溃疡中感染和生物膜的概念,分析它们与伤口床细胞和基质的动态相互作用,以及它们在机体层面的系统影响。4) 提供一个伤口-免疫力低下-感染-机体损伤的综合概念框架:我们检索了 Medline/PubMed、SciELO、Bioline International 和 Google Scholar 中收录的 683 篇文章。我们选择了 280 篇文章,按照四个主要小标题进行讨论:1)正常的愈合过程;2)糖尿病患者受损的愈合过程;3)糖尿病免疫功能障碍;4)糖尿病足感染及其与宿主的相互作用:发展:糖尿病的愈合反应是异质性的、迟缓的和不同步的,导致伤口慢性化。衰老细胞的积累和长期的炎症反应以及促代谢平衡阻碍了增殖反应,延迟了伤口的再上皮化。糖尿病降低了免疫系统协调适当的抗微生物反应的能力,为微生物群的建立和生物膜的形成提供了理想的条件。生物膜-微生物的固着阻碍了抗菌治疗的效果,加剧了宿主原有的免疫抑制,抑制了伤口的增殖期,增加了局部分解代谢,延长了致病性炎症的时间,并使伤口长期慢性化。在这种情况下,受感染的伤口可能成为叠加在宿主身上的促炎症和促氧化器官,最终加剧外周胰岛素抵抗,破坏体内平衡:尽管对糖尿病足溃疡的研究仍在继续,但全世界下肢截肢的人数仍然居高不下。识别和控制糖尿病伤口愈合失败以及免疫功能紊乱导致的易感染性的分子驱动因素,将为糖尿病患者提供更有效的治疗工具。
{"title":"Wound Chronicity, Impaired Immunity and Infection in Diabetic Patients.","authors":"Nadia Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Indira Martínez-Jiménez, Ariana García-Ojalvo, Yssel Mendoza-Mari, Gerardo Guillén-Nieto, David George Armstrong, Jorge Berlanga-Acosta","doi":"10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.8","DOIUrl":"10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.8","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Diabetic foot ulcers are a common diabetic complication leading to alarming figures of amputation, disability, and early mortality. The diabetic glucooxidative environment impairs the healing response, promoting the onset of a 'wound chronicity phenotype'. In 50% of ulcers, these non-healing wounds act as an open door for developing infections, a process facilitated by diabetic patients' dysimmunity. Infection can elicit biofilm formation that worsens wound prognosis. How this microorganism community is able to take advantage of underlying diabetic conditions and thrive both within the wound and the diabetic host is an expanding research field.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>1) Offer an overview of the major cellular and molecular derangements of the diabetic healing process versus physiological cascades in a non-diabetic host. 2) Describe the main immunopathological aspects of diabetics' immune response and explore how these contribute to wound infection susceptibility. 3) Conceptualize infection and biofilim in diabetic foot ulcers and analyze their dynamic interactions with wound bed cells and matrices, and their systemic effects at the organism level. 4) Offer an integrative conceptual framework of wound-dysimmunity-infection-organism damage.</p><p><strong>Evidence aquisition: </strong>We retrieved 683 articles indexed in Medline/PubMed, SciELO, Bioline International and Google Scholar. 280 articles were selected for discussion under four major subheadings: 1) normal healing processes, 2) impaired healing processes in the diabetic population, 3) diabetic dysimmunity and 4) diabetic foot infection and its interaction with the host.</p><p><strong>Development: </strong>The diabetic healing response is heterogeneous, torpid and asynchronous, leading to wound chronicity. The accumulation of senescent cells and a protracted inflammatory profile with a pro-catabolic balance hinder the proliferative response and delay re-epithelialization. Diabetes reduces the immune system's abilities to orchestrate an appropriate antimicrobial response and offers ideal conditions for microbiota establishment and biofilm formation. Biofilm-microbial entrenchment hinders antimicrobial therapy effectiveness, amplifies the host's pre-existing immunodepression, arrests the wound's proliferative phase, increases localized catabolism, prolongs pathogenic inflammation and perpetuates wound chronicity. In such circumstances the infected wound may act as a proinflammatory and pro-oxidant organ superimposed onto the host, which eventually intensifies peripheral insulin resistance and disrupts homeostasis.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The number of lower-limb amputations remains high worldwide despite continued research efforts on diabetic foot ulcers. Identifying and manipulating the molecular drivers underlying diabetic wound healing failure, and dysimmunity-driven susceptibility to infection will offer more effective therapeutic to","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"44-58"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2021-09-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39523740","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2021-08-21eCollection Date: 2022-01-31DOI: 10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.1
Conner Gorry
Soaring summer temperatures, systematic urban and political violence, unreliable infrastructure-power outages, water shortages, sporadic transportation and interruption of other basic services-plus the illness, death and economic straits wrought by COVID-19, are what Haitians awake to every day. On the morning of August 14, 2021, they also woke to the earth in the throes of violent, lethal convulsions caused by a 7.2-magnitude earthquake, along the same fault line responsible for the devastating 2010 disaster and stronger still. As if this weren't enough, Tropical Storm Grace was bearing down on the nation, about to dump biblical amounts of rain on the heels of Tropical Storm Fred. When the Haitian President was assassinated on July 7, Haiti still had not received a single dose of any COVID-19 vaccine-indeed, it was the last country in the Americas to receive vaccines. Later that month, 500,000 doses arrived in the country, donated by the United States via COVAX, the WHO-led initiative to assure at least some vaccines reached low- and middle-income countries. In Haiti, getting those vaccines into the arms of the population is beset by cold chain, distribution and bureaucratic problems, and compounded by widespread vaccine hesitancy; when the earthquake struck, only 14,074 of those doses had been administered.[1,2] Suddenly there was a new, more urgent tragedy, the earthquake leaving thousands of dead, injured and displaced-perhaps hundreds of thousands once the real tally emerges. As in the 2010 quake, the doctors, nurses and technicians comprising Cuba's medical team in Haiti-a commitment Cuba has maintained with its Caribbean neighbor since 1998-were among the first responders. The 2010 relief effort included an additional 1500 health professionals and specialists from Cuba's Henry Reeve Emergency Medical Contingent. Just 24 hours after the August 14th quake, MEDICC Review spoke by phone with Dr Luis Orlando Oliveros-Serrano in Port-au-Prince, where he coordinates Cuba's medical team in Haiti. His disaster response experience had already taken him to Haiti twice before and to Pakistan, Bolivia and beyond.
{"title":"In Haiti, Cubans Among First Responders, Again: Luis Orlando Oliveros-Serrano MD Coordinator, Cuban Medical Team in Haiti.","authors":"Conner Gorry","doi":"10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.1","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2022.V24.N1.1","url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Soaring summer temperatures, systematic urban and political violence, unreliable infrastructure-power outages, water shortages, sporadic transportation and interruption of other basic services-plus the illness, death and economic straits wrought by COVID-19, are what Haitians awake to every day. On the morning of August 14, 2021, they also woke to the earth in the throes of violent, lethal convulsions caused by a 7.2-magnitude earthquake, along the same fault line responsible for the devastating 2010 disaster and stronger still. As if this weren't enough, Tropical Storm Grace was bearing down on the nation, about to dump biblical amounts of rain on the heels of Tropical Storm Fred. When the Haitian President was assassinated on July 7, Haiti still had not received a single dose of any COVID-19 vaccine-indeed, it was the last country in the Americas to receive vaccines. Later that month, 500,000 doses arrived in the country, donated by the United States via COVAX, the WHO-led initiative to assure at least some vaccines reached low- and middle-income countries. In Haiti, getting those vaccines into the arms of the population is beset by cold chain, distribution and bureaucratic problems, and compounded by widespread vaccine hesitancy; when the earthquake struck, only 14,074 of those doses had been administered.[1,2] Suddenly there was a new, more urgent tragedy, the earthquake leaving thousands of dead, injured and displaced-perhaps hundreds of thousands once the real tally emerges. As in the 2010 quake, the doctors, nurses and technicians comprising Cuba's medical team in Haiti-a commitment Cuba has maintained with its Caribbean neighbor since 1998-were among the first responders. The 2010 relief effort included an additional 1500 health professionals and specialists from Cuba's Henry Reeve Emergency Medical Contingent. Just 24 hours after the August 14th quake, MEDICC Review spoke by phone with Dr Luis Orlando Oliveros-Serrano in Port-au-Prince, where he coordinates Cuba's medical team in Haiti. His disaster response experience had already taken him to Haiti twice before and to Pakistan, Bolivia and beyond.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"24 1","pages":"19-20"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2021-08-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39520816","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2021-07-01Epub Date: 2021-08-22DOI: 10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.13
Luis Carlos Silva-Ayçaguer, Jacqueline Ponzo-Gómez
Introduction: One year after WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic, we found it useful to carry out a diagnosis of the situation in Latin America.
Objective: Examine the prevailing epidemiological panorama in mid-March 2021 in 16 countries in Latin America and the performance, over time, in the two countries with the best responses to their respective epidemics.
Methods: Using morbidity and mortality data, we compared the relative performance of each country under review and identified the two countries with the most successful responses to the pandemic. We used five indicators to analyze the course of each country's performance during the pandemic throughout 2020: prevalence of active cases per million population; cumulative incidence rate in 7 days per 100,000 population; positivity rate over a 7-day period; percentage of recovered patients and crude mortality rate per 1,000,000 population.
Results: According to the performance indicators, Cuba was ranked highest, followed by Uruguay. Although figures remained within acceptable margins, both nations experienced notable setbacks in the first weeks of 2021, especially sharp in Uruguay.
Conclusions: Any characterization of the situation is condemned to be short-lived due to the emergence of mutational variants; however, this analysis identified favorable sociodemographic characteristics in both nations, and in their health systems, which may offer possible explanations for the results we obtained.
{"title":"A Year in the COVID-19 Epidemic: Cuba and Uruguay in the Latin American Context.","authors":"Luis Carlos Silva-Ayçaguer, Jacqueline Ponzo-Gómez","doi":"10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.13","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.13","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>One year after WHO declared COVID-19 a pandemic, we found it useful to carry out a diagnosis of the situation in Latin America.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Examine the prevailing epidemiological panorama in mid-March 2021 in 16 countries in Latin America and the performance, over time, in the two countries with the best responses to their respective epidemics.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Using morbidity and mortality data, we compared the relative performance of each country under review and identified the two countries with the most successful responses to the pandemic. We used five indicators to analyze the course of each country's performance during the pandemic throughout 2020: prevalence of active cases per million population; cumulative incidence rate in 7 days per 100,000 population; positivity rate over a 7-day period; percentage of recovered patients and crude mortality rate per 1,000,000 population.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>According to the performance indicators, Cuba was ranked highest, followed by Uruguay. Although figures remained within acceptable margins, both nations experienced notable setbacks in the first weeks of 2021, especially sharp in Uruguay.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Any characterization of the situation is condemned to be short-lived due to the emergence of mutational variants; however, this analysis identified favorable sociodemographic characteristics in both nations, and in their health systems, which may offer possible explanations for the results we obtained.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":" ","pages":"65-73"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39413266","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2021-07-01DOI: 10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.9
María O Agüero-Martínez, Víctor M Tapia-Figueroa, Tania Hidalgo-Costa
<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Improved recovery protocols were implemented in surgical specialties over the last decade, which decreased anesthetic and surgical stress and the incidence of perioperative complications. However, these recovery protocols were introduced more slowly for cardiac surgeries. The most frequent complications in cardiac surgery are related to patient clinical status and the characteristics of the surgical procedures involved, which are becoming more varied and complex every day. The first version of the enhanced recovery program for cardiac surgery was published in 2019, but its recommendations were based on only a few studies, and scant research has evaluated its implementation. Randomized and controlled clinical trials for these protocols are scarce, so research that summarizes the results of studies with other methodological designs are useful in demonstrating their benefits in cardiovascular surgery services in Cuba and in other limited-resource settings.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Estimate the effectiveness of improved recovery protocols in the perioperative evolution of patients undergoing cardiac surgery.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis according to the guidelines of manual 5.1.0 for reviews of the Cochrane library. We included observational and quasi-experimental studies published from January 2015 through May 2020 that compared enhanced recovery protocols with conventional treatments in patients older than 18 years, and used a quality score to evaluate them. We used the following sources: the Cochrane Library, PubMed, LILACS, SciELO, EBSCO, Google Scholar, Web of Science, Clinical Key, ResearchGate and HINARI. The following keywords were used for the database searches in English: ERAS, protocols and cardiac surgery, enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery, ERACS, clinical pathway recovery and cardiac surgery, perioperative care and cardiac surgery. We used the following search terms for databases in Spanish: protocolos de recuperación precoz and cirugía cardiaca, protocolos de recuperación mejorada and cirugía cardiaca, cuidados perioperatorios and cirugía cardiaca, programas de recuperación precoz and cirugía cardiovascular. Methodological quality of included investigations was evaluated using the surgical research methodology scale. Meta-analyses were performed for perioperative complications, intensive care unit and hospital stays, and hospital readmission within 30 days of surgery. We calculated effect sizes of the interventions and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals. We used mean differences and confidence intervals for continuous variables, and for qualitative variables we calculated relative risk (RR). Random effects analysis was used. Heterogeneity of the studies was assessed using the Q statistic and the I2 statistic.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We selected 15 studies (a total of 5059 patients: study group, n = 1706; control group,
在过去的十年中,外科专业实施了改进的恢复方案,减少了麻醉和手术压力以及围手术期并发症的发生率。然而,这些恢复方案在心脏手术中引入的速度较慢。心脏外科手术中最常见的并发症与患者的临床状况和所涉及的外科手术的特点有关,这些并发症日益多样化和复杂化。心脏手术增强康复计划的第一版于2019年发布,但其建议仅基于少数研究,很少有研究对其实施情况进行评估。这些方案的随机对照临床试验很少,因此总结其他方法学设计的研究结果的研究有助于证明其在古巴心血管外科服务和其他资源有限的环境中的益处。目的:评估改进的康复方案在心脏手术患者围手术期发展中的有效性。方法:我们根据Cochrane图书馆文献手册5.1.0的指南进行系统综述和荟萃分析。我们纳入了2015年1月至2020年5月期间发表的观察性和准实验性研究,这些研究比较了18岁以上患者的增强恢复方案与常规治疗方案,并使用质量评分对其进行评估。我们使用了以下来源:Cochrane Library, PubMed, LILACS, SciELO, EBSCO, Google Scholar, Web of Science, Clinical Key, ResearchGate和HINARI。数据库检索使用英文关键词:ERAS、方案和心脏手术、心脏手术后增强恢复、ERACS、临床路径恢复和心脏手术、围手术期护理和心脏手术。我们在西班牙语数据库中使用以下搜索词:protocolos de recuperación precoz和cirugía cardiaca, protocolos de recuperación mejorada和cirugía cardiaca, guidados perioperorios和cirugía cardiaca, programas de recuperación precoz和cirugía cardiovascular。采用外科研究方法学量表评估纳入调查的方法学质量。对围手术期并发症、重症监护病房和住院时间以及手术30天内再次住院进行meta分析。我们计算了干预措施的效应量和相应的95%置信区间。对于连续变量,我们使用均值差异和置信区间,对于定性变量,我们计算相对风险(RR)。采用随机效应分析。采用Q统计量和I2统计量评估研究的异质性。结果:我们选择了15项研究(共5059例患者:研究组,n = 1706;对照组,n = 3353)。纳入的15篇文章的平均质量得分为18.9分(根据量表最高36分),66.6%的文章得分为18分。随着心脏手术恢复方案的改进,围手术期并发症的发生率降低(RR = 0.73;95% CI 0.52-0.98),术后30天内再入院(RR = 0.51;95% ci 95% ci: 0.31-0.86)。拔管时间、住院时间和重症监护病房住院时间的差异不太明显,但总是有利于实施强化方案的组。结论:改进的心脏手术恢复方案提高了护理质量,围手术期并发症的减少和术后一个月内再入院的发生率降低。
{"title":"Improved Recovery Protocols in Cardiac Surgery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational and Quasi-Experimental Studies.","authors":"María O Agüero-Martínez, Víctor M Tapia-Figueroa, Tania Hidalgo-Costa","doi":"10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.9","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.9","url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Improved recovery protocols were implemented in surgical specialties over the last decade, which decreased anesthetic and surgical stress and the incidence of perioperative complications. However, these recovery protocols were introduced more slowly for cardiac surgeries. The most frequent complications in cardiac surgery are related to patient clinical status and the characteristics of the surgical procedures involved, which are becoming more varied and complex every day. The first version of the enhanced recovery program for cardiac surgery was published in 2019, but its recommendations were based on only a few studies, and scant research has evaluated its implementation. Randomized and controlled clinical trials for these protocols are scarce, so research that summarizes the results of studies with other methodological designs are useful in demonstrating their benefits in cardiovascular surgery services in Cuba and in other limited-resource settings.</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>Estimate the effectiveness of improved recovery protocols in the perioperative evolution of patients undergoing cardiac surgery.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis according to the guidelines of manual 5.1.0 for reviews of the Cochrane library. We included observational and quasi-experimental studies published from January 2015 through May 2020 that compared enhanced recovery protocols with conventional treatments in patients older than 18 years, and used a quality score to evaluate them. We used the following sources: the Cochrane Library, PubMed, LILACS, SciELO, EBSCO, Google Scholar, Web of Science, Clinical Key, ResearchGate and HINARI. The following keywords were used for the database searches in English: ERAS, protocols and cardiac surgery, enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery, ERACS, clinical pathway recovery and cardiac surgery, perioperative care and cardiac surgery. We used the following search terms for databases in Spanish: protocolos de recuperación precoz and cirugía cardiaca, protocolos de recuperación mejorada and cirugía cardiaca, cuidados perioperatorios and cirugía cardiaca, programas de recuperación precoz and cirugía cardiovascular. Methodological quality of included investigations was evaluated using the surgical research methodology scale. Meta-analyses were performed for perioperative complications, intensive care unit and hospital stays, and hospital readmission within 30 days of surgery. We calculated effect sizes of the interventions and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals. We used mean differences and confidence intervals for continuous variables, and for qualitative variables we calculated relative risk (RR). Random effects analysis was used. Heterogeneity of the studies was assessed using the Q statistic and the I2 statistic.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>We selected 15 studies (a total of 5059 patients: study group, n = 1706; control group, ","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":"23 3-4","pages":"46-53"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"9939117","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2021-07-01Epub Date: 2021-07-25DOI: 10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.4
Tafadzwa Dzinamarira, Munyaradzi P Mapingure, Gallican N Rwibasira, Solomon Mukwenha, Godfrey Musuka
The COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact worldwide with regions experiencing varying degrees of severity. African countries have mounted different response strategies eliciting varied outcomes. Here, we compare these response strategies in Rwanda, South Africa and Zimbabwe and discuss lessons that could be shared. In particular, Rwanda has a robust and coordinated national health system that has effectively contained the epidemic. South Africa has considerable testing capacity, which has been used productively in a national response largely funded by local resources but affected negatively by corruption. Zimbabwe has an effective point-of-entry approach that utilizes an innovative strategic information system. All three countries would benefit having routine meetings to share experiences and lessons learned during the COVD-19 pandemic.
{"title":"COVID-19: Comparison of the Response in Rwanda, South Africa and Zimbabwe.","authors":"Tafadzwa Dzinamarira, Munyaradzi P Mapingure, Gallican N Rwibasira, Solomon Mukwenha, Godfrey Musuka","doi":"10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.4","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.37757/MR2021.V23.N3.4","url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact worldwide with regions experiencing varying degrees of severity. African countries have mounted different response strategies eliciting varied outcomes. Here, we compare these response strategies in Rwanda, South Africa and Zimbabwe and discuss lessons that could be shared. In particular, Rwanda has a robust and coordinated national health system that has effectively contained the epidemic. South Africa has considerable testing capacity, which has been used productively in a national response largely funded by local resources but affected negatively by corruption. Zimbabwe has an effective point-of-entry approach that utilizes an innovative strategic information system. All three countries would benefit having routine meetings to share experiences and lessons learned during the COVD-19 pandemic.</p>","PeriodicalId":49835,"journal":{"name":"Medicc Review","volume":" ","pages":"15-20"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"39431234","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}