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1.
J Transp Health ; 322023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38196814

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Bicycling has individual and collective health benefits. Safety concerns are a deterrent to bicycling. Incomplete data on bicycling volumes has limited epidemiologic research investigating safety impacts of bicycle infrastructure, such as protected bike lanes. Methods: In this case-control study, set in Atlanta, Georgia, USA between 2016-10-01 and 2018-08-31, we estimated the incidence rate of police-reported crashes between bicyclists and motor vehicles (n = 124) on several types of infrastructure (off-street paved trails, protected bike lanes, buffered bike lanes, conventional bike lanes, and sharrows) per distance ridden and per intersection entered. To estimate underlying bicycling (the control series), we used a sample of high-resolution bicycling data from Strava, an app, combined with data from 15 on-the-ground bicycle counters to adjust for possible selection bias in the Strava data. We used model-based standardization to estimate effects of treatment on the treated. Results: After adjustment for selection bias and confounding, estimated ratio effects on segments (excluding intersections) with protected bike lanes (incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 0.5 [95% confidence interval: 0.0, 2.5]) and buffered bike lanes (IRR = 0 [0,0]) were below 1, but were above 1 on conventional bike lanes (IRR = 2.8 [1.2, 6.0]) and near null on sharrows (IRR = 1.1 [0.2, 2.9]). Per intersection entry, estimated ratio effects were above 1 for entries originating from protected bike lanes (incidence proportion ratio [IPR] = 3.0 [0.0, 10.8]), buffered bike lanes (IPR = 16.2 [0.0, 53.1]), and conventional bike lanes (IPR = 3.2 [1.8, 6.0]), and were near 1 and below 1, respectively, for those originating from sharrows (IPR = 0.9 [0.2, 2.1]) and off-street paved trails (IPR = 0.7 [0.0, 2.9]). Conclusions: Protected bike lanes and buffered bike lanes had estimated protective effects on segments between intersections but estimated harmful effects at intersections. Conventional bike lanes had estimated harmful effects along segments and at intersections.

2.
Epidemiology ; 32(1): 101-110, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33093327

ABSTRACT

Transient exposures are difficult to measure in epidemiologic studies, especially when both the status of being at risk for an outcome and the exposure change over time and space, as when measuring built-environment risk on transportation injury. Contemporary "big data" generated by mobile sensors can improve measurement of transient exposures. Exposure information generated by these devices typically only samples the experience of the target cohort, so a case-control framework may be useful. However, for anonymity, the data may not be available by individual, precluding a case-crossover approach. We present a method called at-risk-measure sampling. Its goal is to estimate the denominator of an incidence rate ratio (exposed to unexposed measure of the at-risk experience) given an aggregated summary of the at-risk measure from a cohort. Rather than sampling individuals or locations, the method samples the measure of the at-risk experience. Specifically, the method as presented samples person-distance and person-events summarized by location. It is illustrated with data from a mobile app used to record bicycling. The method extends an established case-control sampling principle: sample the at-risk experience of a cohort study such that the sampled exposure distribution approximates that of the cohort. It is distinct from density sampling in that the sample remains in the form of the at-risk measure, which may be continuous, such as person-time or person-distance. This aspect may be both logistically and statistically efficient if such a sample is already available, for example from big-data sources like aggregated mobile-sensor data.


Subject(s)
Cohort Studies , Case-Control Studies , Humans , Incidence
3.
Transplant Proc ; 38(9): 3132-4, 2006 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17112918

ABSTRACT

Malaria is an exotic complication in liver transplants patients. It can be acquired either by transfusion of blood products or through the transplanted organ. Infections caused by Plasmodium spp are unusual in liver transplants; to date, only four cases have been reported in the literature. Herein we have presented a case of Plasmodium vivax in a liver transplant patient. This diagnosis must be excluded in febrile transplant patients in endemic areas, especially during the first 2 months. An epidemiological history relevant for malaria both in the donor and in the recipient must be routinely included with screening tests.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/therapeutic use , Liver Transplantation/adverse effects , Malaria, Vivax/diagnosis , Adult , Animals , Blood Transfusion , Colombia , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Humans , Immunosuppressive Agents/therapeutic use , Intraoperative Period , Liver Failure/surgery , Malaria, Vivax/drug therapy , Male , Middle Aged , Plasmodium vivax/isolation & purification , Treatment Outcome
4.
Chest ; 119(2): 442-50, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11171721

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The use of nasal prongs connected to a pressure transducer is a noninvasive, sensitive method to detect respiratory events, and can be easily implemented in routine sleep studies. Moreover, its good time response allows the detection of several flow-related phenomena of high interest, in addition to apnea and hypopnea. The aims of the study were to examine the quality and performance of the nasal prong flow signal, and to describe other flow-related events during full-night polysomnography studies. METHODS: Twenty-seven subjects were studied (16 male subjects; mean +/- SD age, 49 +/- 14 years; mean body mass index, 27 +/- 4 kg/m(2)): 15 subjects recruited from the general population and 12 consecutive patients with suspected sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (SAHS). RESULTS: A blind analysis of the respiratory events detected both by nasal prongs and thermistor was done. The quality of the nasal prong signal recordings was considered optimal for scoring purposes in 78% of cases, and no recording was considered uninterpretable. The nasal prong signal detected additional flow-related events not observed by the thermistor: (1) short and long (> 2 min) periods of inspiratory flow limitation morphology without decrease in the amplitude of the signal; (2) periods of mouth expiration; and (3) snoring. The apnea/hypopnea index was significantly higher with the nasal prong scoring (18 vs 11 [p < 0.05] in the general population and 37 vs 27 [p < 0.001] in the group with suspected SAHS). CONCLUSIONS: The incorporation of nasal prongs in routine full-night studies is an attainable technical option that provides adequate recordings in most cases. Additionally, relevant information not scored by thermistors is obtained on flow-related respiratory events, thus increasing diagnostic accuracy.


Subject(s)
Polysomnography/instrumentation , Respiration , Sleep/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Male , Middle Aged , Sleep Apnea Syndromes/diagnosis , Sleep Apnea Syndromes/physiopathology
5.
Rev Esp Cardiol ; 53(10): 1347-55, 2000 Oct.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11060253

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: The influence on the size of radiofrequency lesions by cooling of the tip of the electrode remains unclear. Moreover, the possible effects of two different cooling systems, closed and open, have not been well differentiated. We designed this study to compare both systems of irrigated-tip catheters and the lesions produced with standard 4 mm catheters and also to evaluate the pathological and biochemical marker release correlation (cardiac troponin I) in an experimental model. METHODS: The study was performed in 20 pigs. Applying between 1-8 radiofrequency pulses, at a power of 15, 25 or 50 watts, for 15-60 seconds to each animal. After 7 days, the pigs were sacrificed for anatomopathological study. RESULTS: A total of 54 lesions were produced, 25 with standard catheters and 29 with irrigated catheters. The mean volume of the lesions produced with standard catheters was 146 +/- 110 microl and with irrigated-tip catheters 856 +/- 864 microl (p < 0.001). Peak values of cardiac troponin I were also higher for irrigated catheters (18 +/- 15 ng/ml) than for standard (6.5 +/- 3 ng/ml). The correlation between the size of the lesion and the levels of cardiac troponin I were 0.86 and 0.79 with the standard and irrigated-tip catheters, respectively. The incidence of cratering was higher with standard catheters (60%) than with irrigated (27%). CONCLUSIONS: The lesions produced with an irrigated catheter are greater than those observed with standard catheters. The mean peak value of postablation cardiac troponin demonstrate a good correlation with the real size of the necrosis.


Subject(s)
Catheter Ablation , Animals , Myocardium/pathology , Swine
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