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1.
J Neurosci Res ; 93(4): 572-83, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25425242

ABSTRACT

Restoration of neuronal functions by outgrowths regenerating at ∼1 mm/day from the proximal stumps of severed peripheral nerves takes many weeks or months, if it occurs at all, especially after ablation of nerve segments. Distal segments of severed axons typically degenerate in 1-3 days. This study shows that Wallerian degeneration can be prevented or retarded, and lost behavioral function can be restored, following ablation of 0.5-1-cm segments of rat sciatic nerves in host animals. This is achieved by using 0.8-1.1-cm microsutured donor allografts treated with bioengineered solutions varying in ionic and polyethylene glycol (PEG) concentrations (modified PEG-fusion procedure), being careful not to stretch any portion of donor or host sciatic nerves. The data show that PEG fusion permanently restores axonal continuity within minutes, as initially assessed by action potential conduction and intracellular diffusion of dye. Behavioral functions mediated by the sciatic nerve are largely restored within 2-4 weeks, as measured by the sciatic functional index. Increased restoration of sciatic behavioral functions after ablating 0.5-1-cm segments is associated with greater numbers of viable myelinated axons within and distal to PEG-fused allografts. Many such viable myelinated axons are almost certainly spared from Wallerian degeneration by PEG fusion. PEG fusion of donor allografts may produce a paradigm shift in the treatment of peripheral nerve injuries.


Subject(s)
Allografts/physiology , Mental Disorders/etiology , Mental Disorders/surgery , Polyethylene Glycols/therapeutic use , Recovery of Function/physiology , Sciatic Neuropathy/complications , Transplantation, Homologous/methods , Action Potentials/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Axons/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Motor Activity , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Statistics as Topic , Time Factors
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 3(2): 168-83, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8653453

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To explore different user-interface designs for structured progress note entry, with a long-term goal of developing design guidelines for user interfaces where users select items from large medical vocabularies. DESIGN: The authors created eight different prototypes of a pen-based progress-note-writing system called PEN-Ivory. Each prototype allows physicians to write patient progress notes using simple pen-based gestures such as circle, line-out, and scratch-out. The result of an interaction with PEN-Ivory is a progress note in English prose. The eight prototypes were designed in a principled way, so that they differ from one another in just one of three different user-interface characteristics. MEASUREMENTS: Five of the eight prototypes were tested by measuring the time it took 15 users, each using a distinct prototype, to document three patient cases consisting of a total of 63 medical findings. RESULTS: The prototype that allowed the fastest data entry had the following three user-interface characteristics: it used a paging rather than a scrolling form, it used a fixed palette of modifiers rather than a dynamic "pop-up" palette, and it made available all findings from the controlled vocabulary at once rather than displaying only a subset of findings generated by analyzing the patient's problem list. CONCLUSION: Even simple design changes to a user interface can make dramatic differences in user performance. The authors discuss possible influences on performance, such as positional constancy, user uncertainty and system anticipation, that may contribute significantly to the effectiveness of systems that display menus of items from large controlled vocabularies of medicine.


Subject(s)
Medical Records , User-Computer Interface , Vocabulary, Controlled
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7949967

ABSTRACT

PEN-Ivory is a pen-based computer system that uses structured data entry for creating patient progress notes. Users make simple gestures such as circles, lines, and scratch-outs to enter medical findings from a controlled vocabulary. The result of an interaction with PEN-Ivory is a computer-generated patient progress note in English prose. We designed PEN-Ivory's user interface in a principled way. We first created multiple working prototypes, each differing in one of three user-interface characteristics. Then we empirically evaluated the prototypes in a controlled, experimental setting for their efficiencies in enabling users to create patient progress notes. The prototype that allowed the fastest data entry had the following three user-interface characteristics: it used a paging form, used a fixed palette of modifiers, and made available all findings from the controlled vocabulary at once.


Subject(s)
Medical Records Systems, Computerized , User-Computer Interface , Handwriting , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/instrumentation
4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1482974

ABSTRACT

Numerous history-taking systems have been built to automate the medical history-taking process. These systems differ in their control methods, input and output modalities, and kinds of questions asked. Thus, there has emerged no standard way of representing interviewing knowledge--the expert knowledge used to govern the sequence of questions asked in an interview. This paper discusses how we use an augmented transition network (ATN) to represent the knowledge of a speech-driven automated history-taking program, Q-MED, and how, more generally, ATNs could be used as a representation for any knowledge-based history-taking system. We identify three characteristics of ATNs that facilitate the use of ATNs in interviewing systems: explicitness, hierarchical structure, and generality.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Medical History Taking , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Software Design
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