Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
1.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 52 Pt 2: 940-4, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10384597

ABSTRACT

In this paper we propose a workflow conceptual model able to represent clinical and managerial activities within healthcare structures, the ATREUS model. This model uses: a) a graphical representation which models the activities and the events that activate them; b) a textual representation of information related to: a set of conditions used for the control of activity execution; the actors who undertake the activity; the resources and tools necessary for its enactment, the clinical and managerial data generated by the activity execution; c) a state diagram which allows the control of the activity execution. The model allows modularity, activity nesting and temporal flexibility using a top-down refinement of processes. This model, unlike others, makes it possible to highlight the different types of decision involved in the performance of an activity.


Subject(s)
Hospital Administration , Models, Organizational , Humans , Patient Care Management
2.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 43 Pt A: 305-8, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10179560

ABSTRACT

In this work we present FENARETE, a software tool to design and distribute clinical protocols in an Inter/IntraNet framework. We consider a medical protocol as a clinical behaviour scheme, formally and clearly defined with sufficient details. Our work allows the knowledge content of any clinical protocol to be fully represented in a symbolic style. A computer based support tool that works as an interface between clinicians and the protocol knowledge base is regarded by the authors as a basic building block developing an integrated environment for medical protocols design and management. The FENARETE application has been developed in Java and it is available for any Internet-linked machine with a Java-compatible browser.


Subject(s)
Clinical Protocols , Computer Communication Networks , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Software , Humans , Rome , Software Design , User-Computer Interface
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 43 Pt A: 343-7, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10179569

ABSTRACT

This paper describes the system SMART whose goal is real-time assistance to physicians who execute diagnostic or therapeutic protocols in a clinical context. SMART is able to retrieve a protocol from its knowledge base and to monitor its execution step by step for a single patient. Different protocols for different patients can be followed at the same time in a health care structure. The prototype realized supports the execution of protocols for evaluating surgical risks. It has been implemented according to the specifications given by the 4th Surgical Clinic of "Policlinico Umberto I" and reflects the activities actually performed in that hospital. However, the protocol model defined is general purpose and we envisage an easy application to other contexts and therefore to the informatization of other protocols.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Clinical Protocols , Decision Making, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Risk Management/methods , Rome , Surgical Procedures, Operative , User-Computer Interface
4.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 43 Pt A: 401-5, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10179582

ABSTRACT

In this paper a system and new methodologies that enable efficient exploration of distributed collections of multimedia reports are described. A conceptual model for the report and a method to semi-automatically create a hypermedia report network have been defined. The main issues addressed in this project were to exploit the textual component of a report to give a more evident semantic meaning to the data produced during the relative exam and to provide users with new interaction paradigms based on Internet technologies.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks , Information Storage and Retrieval , Multimedia , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Semantics
5.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 43 Pt A: 280-4, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10184894

ABSTRACT

We designed a methodology to perform distribute activities on conceptual modelling among cooperating centers. Our methodology assigns responsibilities and tasks and regulates interactions preserving coherence; it passes through the construction of unambiguous paraphrases to make explicit the context within the original sources, and through their compositional representation in an intermediate language. The process is intrinsically iterative, with continuous feedbacks and refinements, alternating analytic view on details and synthetic view on regularities and structures. Our methodology is based on requirements and experience made in the first GALEN project, and was applied in the GALEN-IN-USE project to coordinate modelling activities of three teams of surgeons in Rome with activities of other partners, during the production of an extensive model of surgical procedures.


Subject(s)
International Cooperation , Models, Theoretical , Natural Language Processing , Surgical Procedures, Operative/classification , Terminology as Topic , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Rome
6.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 43 Pt A: 436-40, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10184898

ABSTRACT

Diverse achievements by recent computer-based terminological systems are outlining a new generation of systems (i.e. a "second generation"). We collected the relevant features of various advanced terminological systems and we systematized these features into four components of a unique framework. We review a set of systems according to our framework, and we discuss how standardization activities can support the evolution of computer-based terminological systems towards a complete set of new performances.


Subject(s)
Natural Language Processing , Terminology as Topic , Vocabulary, Controlled , Humans , Reference Standards , Semantics
8.
J Am Soc Echocardiogr ; 7(4): 337-46, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7917341

ABSTRACT

Myocardial opacification after intravenous injection of an echo-contrast agent is a major end point in contrast echocardiography, but it has not yet been obtained in human beings. We propose transesophageal contrast echocardiography as a clinical tool for the study of myocardial perfusion in human beings. Sonicated albumin microbubbles are bright ultrasound reflectors that cross the pulmonary vasculature after intravenous injection and show physiologic transit times through tissues. Transesophageal echocardiography uses ideal transducer frequency and acoustic window for in vivo detection of sonicated albumin microbubbles. We have studied 11 patients receiving peripheral vein bolus injection of sonicated albumin microbubbles during transesophageal echocardiography at baseline and during dipyridamole infusion. Images were recorded on videotape and digitized off-line. Quantitative measurements were made on 11 normally perfused myocardial segments by tracing a region of interest of greater than 100 pixels on frozen end-systolic frames, at baseline, and during dipyridamole infusion. Transpulmonary passage with full left ventricular cavity opacification was obtained in all injections. In 8 of 22 injections there was also transient left ventricular cavity attenuation. In all patients there was a marked opacification of the left ventricular outflow tract and aortic root. At baseline, mean signal intensity in the myocardium increased from 80 +/- 37 to 117 +/- 49 IU (p < 0.05) and during dipyridamole infusion increased from 84 +/- 28 to 146 +/- 36 IU (p < 0.001). The analysis of background-subtracted data showed that mean pixel intensity increased from baseline to dipyridamole contrast injection (from 37 +/- 15 to 62 +/- 19 IU; p < 0.01). The opacification of normally perfused left ventricular myocardium is feasible during transesophageal echocardiography because there is a significant increase in signal intensity versus background intensity. During dipyridamole infusion there is a further increase in signal intensity that probably reflects pharmacologically induced increase in myocardial blood flow.


Subject(s)
Albumins , Contrast Media/administration & dosage , Coronary Circulation/physiology , Dipyridamole , Echocardiography, Transesophageal , Image Enhancement , Coronary Angiography , Coronary Circulation/drug effects , Coronary Disease/diagnostic imaging , Coronary Disease/physiopathology , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Injections, Intravenous , Male , Microspheres , Middle Aged , Safety , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Videotape Recording
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...