RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To determine the influence of self-directed learning, peer feedback, or expert feedback on suturing technique of novice veterinary student surgeons. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, blinded, video feedback study. SAMPLE POPULATION: Three groups of surgery naïve veterinary students, two groups of 37 students and one group with 36 students. METHODS: Each student completed three cruciate sutures in SynDaver skin. Student performance was video recorded and scored with a validated pro forma. Students were randomly divided into three groups: (1) students critically evaluated their own performance, (2) students critically evaluated peer's performance, and (3) students received a peer's evaluation. Each student repeated the surgical task and assessed his or her own performance, guided by the pro forma. Each student received a video with individualized feedback from an expert prior to repeating the task. Scores and times were analyzed. Student and expert evaluations were compared. RESULTS: Task composite score, time to completion, and completion rate did not differ between groups. Student self-assessed scores did not correlate with expert scores. Forty-three percent and 62% of students stated that self-feedback and peer feedback, respectively, were acceptable forms of learning, and 96% of students felt expert feedback was superior to both. CONCLUSION: Video-based self-evaluation and peer-assisted learning were as effective as expert feedback after didactic lecture in teaching suturing technique to novice veterinary surgeons. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Video-based self-evaluation and peer feedback were viable alternative teaching strategies to didactic lecture and expert feedback alone for instructing novice veterinary surgeons.
Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Educação em Veterinária , Estudantes , Técnicas de Sutura , Gravação em Vídeo , Humanos , Educação em Veterinária/métodos , Estudos Prospectivos , Cirurgia Veterinária , Técnicas de Sutura/educação , Técnicas de Sutura/veterinária , SuturasRESUMO
Background. Recently, the importance of the gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of several disorders has gained clinical interests. Among exogenous factors affecting gut microbiome, diet appears to have the largest effect. Fatty acids, especially omega-3 polyunsaturated, ameliorate a range of several diseases, including cardiometabolic and inflammatory and cancer. Fatty acids associated beneficial effects may be mediated, to an important extent, through changes in gut microbiota composition. We sought to understand the changes of the gut microbiota in response to an omega-3 rich diet. Case Presentation. This case study investigated changes of gut microbiota with an omega-3 rich diet. Fecal samples were collected from a 45-year-old male who consumed 600 mg of omega-3 daily for 14 days. After the intervention, species diversity was decreased, but several butyrate-producing bacteria increased. There was an important decrease in Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Akkermansia spp. Gut microbiota changes were reverted after the 14-day washout. Conclusion. Some of the health-related benefits of omega-3 may be due, in part, to increases in butyrate-producing bacteria. These findings may shed light on the mechanisms explaining the effects of omega-3 in several chronic diseases and may also serve as an existing foundation for tailoring personalized medical treatments.
RESUMO
A method was developed to assess human telomere lengths at the individual cell level in tissue sections from standard formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues. We coupled this method with immunofluorescence to allow the simultaneous identification of specific cell types. Validation of this in situ quantification method showed excellent agreement with the commonly used telomere repeat fragment-Southern blot method. The assay requires very few cells ( approximately 10 to 15). Thus, small tissue samples, including clinical biopsies, can be easily accommodated. In addition, the cells under study need not be actively cycling and there is no requirement for tissue disaggregation or cell culture. This method provides a more accurate assessment of telomere lengths than Southern blotting because confounding contributions from undesired cell types within tissue samples are avoided. Using this technique, we were able to perform the first comparison of relative telomere lengths in matched tumor versus normal epithelial cells within archival human prostate tissues.