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1.
Tech Coloproctol ; 27(6): 443-451, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36222850

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the long-term efficacy of percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS) for patients with faecal incontinence (FI) refractory to conservative treatment. Secondary aims were to identify predictors of response and validate new treatment pathways for partial responders. METHODS: A prospective, interventional study was carried out in a specialist defecatory disorder unit from a university hospital between January 2010 and June 2017 on patients > 18 years old with FI refractory to conservative treatment. Thirty-minute PTNS sessions were performed in three phases (weekly, biweekly and monthly) up to a year, with clinical reassessment at 3, 6, 12 and 36 months. Patients were classified as optimal responders when their pretreatment Wexner score decreased > 50%; partial responders when it decreased 25-50%; and insufficient responders if it decreased < 25%. Only optimal and partial responders progressed into successive phases. RESULTS: Between 2010 and 2017, 139 patients (110 women, median age 63 years [range 22-82 years]) were recruited. After the first phase, 4 patients were optimal responders, 93 were partial responders and 36 were insufficient responders. At 6 and 12 months, 66 and 89 patients respectively were optimal responders, with an optimal response rate of 64% at the end of treatment. A total of 93.3% patients with a partial response initially finally became optimal responders. Furthermore, at 36 months, 71.9% of patients were still optimal responders without supplementary treatment, although their quality of life did not improve significantly. Baseline Wexner scores ≤ 10 and symptom duration < 1 year were identified as predictive factors for positive responses to PTNS. CONCLUSIONS: Patients undergoing PTNS for 1 year following this protocol had optimal long-term responses. PTNS sessions for up to 1 year in patients who were partial responders prevents a high percentage of them from needing more invasive treatments, and maintains long-term continence in patients who were optimal responders.


Subject(s)
Fecal Incontinence , Humans , Female , Young Adult , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Adolescent , Fecal Incontinence/therapy , Prospective Studies , Quality of Life , Conservative Treatment , Tibial Nerve
2.
Aten Primaria ; 29(6): 348-55, 2002 Apr 15.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11996715

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To know the training need priorities in Spanish physicians in death certification. DESIGN: Study of needs by consensus technique Delphi. SETTING: Health care and medical-legal institutions in Spain. PARTICIPANTS: Physicians who ask for information in death certification, after reading an article in a medical magazine (n=38), and agree to participate (n=33). METHODS: Priorities were established by means of a list of items, based on teaching experience and professional advice. The scores obtained for each priority were hierarchized, and the participants professional profiles were described. An analysis of hierarchical clusters was done to determine profiles of training. RESULTS: The median age of the participants was 42 years, with 18 years experience in general/family, emergency or forensic medicine, which usually certified in median 8 death a year (rank from 0 to 50). The maximum training priorities were how to register a death and which doctor should make out the official documents. Intermediate priorities included the role of doctors in violent or accidental deaths. In the main three grouping needs were, in one, include certification as a degree subject and learn how different documents are made out; although in the others two, were how to register a death, which physician make out the documents, and when it should certify the family doctor and when the coroner. CONCLUSIONS: The priorities in certification training are how to register a death and who should make out the documents, pointing out that the shortcoming continues in medical training in death certification.


Subject(s)
Death Certificates , Education, Medical/standards , Needs Assessment , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Spain
3.
Aten. prim. (Barc., Ed. impr.) ; 29(6): 348-355, abr. 2002.
Article in Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-12688

ABSTRACT

Objetivo. Conocer las necesidades prioritarias en formación de certificación de defunciones en los médicos españoles. Diseño. Estudio de necesidades por la técnica de consenso Delphi. Emplazamiento. Centros sanitarios y de medicina legal en España. Participantes. Médicos lectores de un artículo de divulgación, que solicitan materiales sobre certificación de defunciones (n = 38) y aceptan participar (n = 33).Método. Establecimiento de prioridades mediante una lista de ítems basada en la experiencia docente y la asesoría de expertos. Jerarquizamos las puntuaciones de prioridades, caracterizamos a los participantes y realizamos un análisis de clusters jerárquicos para determinar perfiles de formación. Resultados. Los informantes tienen una mediana de edad de 42 años, con 18 años de ejercicio en medicina general/familiar, urgencias o legal y certifican/informan una mediana de 8 muertes-año (rango, 0-50).Las necesidades más priorizadas son conocer cómo hay que declarar y saber qué médico debe cumplimentar los documentos. En posiciones intermedias se ubica el papel de los médicos en las muertes violentas o accidentales. En los tres principales agrupamientos observamos que las prioridades son, en uno, incluir la certificación como materia docente en la licenciatura, conocer las diferencias de cumplimentación entre los documentos, y en los otros dos conocer cómo declarar la defunción, qué médico debe cumplimentarla y cuándo debe certificar el médico de cabecera y cuándo el médico forense. Conclusión. Las prioridades de formación son conocer cómo declarar una defunción y saber qué médico debe certificarla, señalando que se mantiene el déficit de formación médica en la certificación de defunciones (AU)


Subject(s)
Adult , Male , Female , Humans , Drugs, Generic , Needs Assessment , Death Certificates , Spain , Drug Utilization , Education, Medical
4.
Rev Esp Salud Publica ; 73(2): 215-24, 1999.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10410604

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The problems of air pollution became noticeable in Cartagena in the seventies, high SO2 and particle levels having been reached from time to time. Our aim is to assess, using the EMECAM methodology, the acute impact of SO2 and particle air pollution on the daily death rate of the city of Cartagena in the 1992-1996 period. METHODS: A daily listing is provided of the total number of non-accidental deaths within the population as a whole and for those over age 70, the cardiovascular and the respiratory deaths due to dioxide and particle air pollution for the 1992-1996 period using autoregressive Poisson models which control seasonality, weather, time of year, flu, special events, and time lags. RESULTS: In the period under study, there has been a drop in the SO2 air pollution as compared to previous years, which was not as marked for the particles. The analyses reveal significant relationships in the total non-accidental deaths in those over age 69, with the average particle count and those particles with cardiovascular deaths for the months of May to October. In the six-month period of the year, when the weather is cold, we found a positive statistically significant relationship to exist in the maximum daily hourly value of the particles and the deaths due to cardiocirculatory and respiratory diseases. However, there is no consistency in the between on assessing the reliability of the models.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution/adverse effects , Mortality/trends , Urban Population/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Air Pollutants/adverse effects , Air Pollutants/analysis , Air Pollution/statistics & numerical data , Cause of Death , Humans , Risk Factors , Spain/epidemiology , Sulfur Dioxide/adverse effects , Sulfur Dioxide/analysis , Time Factors
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