Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 14 de 14
Filtrar
1.
Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed ; 108(6): 429-438, 2023 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37280089

RESUMEN

The article covers the following elements: practical and technological considerations for optimising data collection and output; reference ranges for oximetry parameters across the ages; things to consider when interpreting a pulse oximetry study (eg, sleep/wake times); the ability of pulse oximetry to predict obstructive sleep apnoea; using oximetry as a screening tool for sleep disordered breathing in children with Down syndrome; things to consider when setting up a home oximetry service; and a case of an infant being weaned from oxygen using pulse oximetry studies.


Asunto(s)
Síndromes de la Apnea del Sueño , Apnea Obstructiva del Sueño , Niño , Lactante , Humanos , Oximetría , Sueño , Síndromes de la Apnea del Sueño/diagnóstico , Apnea Obstructiva del Sueño/diagnóstico , Estudios Retrospectivos
2.
Trials ; 23(1): 249, 2022 Apr 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35379305

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Women pregnant with a breech-presenting foetus at term are at increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes. The most common intervention used to improve neonatal outcomes is planned delivery by caesarean section. But this is not always possible, and some women prefer to plan a vaginal birth. A number of providers have proposed alternative interventions, such as delivery protocols or specialist teams, but heterogeneity in reported outcomes and their measurements prevents meaningful comparisons. The aim of this paper is to present a protocol for a study to develop a Breech Core Outcome Set (Breech-COS) for studies evaluating the effectiveness of interventions to improve outcomes associated with term breech birth. METHODS: The development of a Breech-COS includes three phases. First, a systematic literature review will be conducted to identify outcomes previously used in effectiveness studies of breech birth at term. A focus group discussion will be conducted with the study's pre-established Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) group, to enable service user perspectives on the results of the literature review to influence the design of the Delphi survey instrument. Second, an international Delphi survey will be conducted to prioritise outcomes for inclusion in the Breech-COS from the point of view of key stakeholders, including perinatal care providers and families who have experienced a term breech pregnancy. Finally, a consensus meeting will be held with stakeholders to ratify the Breech-COS and disseminate findings for application in future effectiveness studies. DISCUSSION: The expectation is that the Breech-COS will always be collected in all clinical trials, audits of practice and other forms of observation research that concern breech birth at term, along with other outcomes of interest. This will facilitate comparing, contrasting and combining studies with the ultimate goal of improved maternal and neonatal outcomes. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Core Outcome Measures in Effectiveness Trials (COMET) #1749.


Asunto(s)
Cesárea , Proyectos de Investigación , Técnica Delphi , Femenino , Humanos , Recién Nacido , Evaluación de Resultado en la Atención de Salud , Parto , Embarazo , Revisiones Sistemáticas como Asunto
3.
Early Interv Psychiatry ; 12(5): 947-950, 2018 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29116669

RESUMEN

AIM: To improve public understanding of the subjective experience of auditory hallucinations and increase empathy towards individuals who hear voices and have other unusual sensory experiences. METHODS: This pilot study developed a new immersive art exhibition, Altered States of Consciousness, which gave members of the public an individualized voice-hearing simulation experience in 2 real-world settings-an art gallery and the London Underground. A total of 150 visitors completed visual analogue scales immediately before and after their experience of the exhibition. RESULTS: Post-exhibition, there were significant increases in understanding what it feels like to hear voices, compassion towards voice hearers, and comfort in talking about these experiences. Participants enjoyed the simulation, felt they learned from their involvement, and did not find it stressful. CONCLUSIONS: The exhibition and voice-hearing simulation has further potential for public engagement and stigma reduction.


Asunto(s)
Arte , Alucinaciones/psicología , Educación en Salud/métodos , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Proyectos Piloto , Adulto Joven
4.
Arts Health ; : 1-19, 2018 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31038445

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The arts can increase public awareness of mental health. Stigma about psychosis remains high despite common occurrences of psychotic experiences in the general population (e.g. hearing voices, seeing visions, and other unusual sensory experiences). Targeted approaches may therefore benefit stigma reduction. This project aimed to produce an immersive art installation that increased public understanding of psychotic experiences. METHODS: Development stages included workshops with people with lived experience, training actors to perform "voices", sourcing artworks, and producing a voice hearing simulation and video installation. RESULTS: The exhibition was implemented as intended, gained positive visitor feedback (N = 150), felt immersive, enhanced subjective understanding of voice hearing, increased compassion and was not unduly stressful. A production team meeting (N = 10) identified exhibition strengths, challenges, and potential modifications. CONCLUSIONS: This successful, large-scale pilot of an immersive art exhibition combined creative, academic, and experiential perspectives. It enabled visitors to "hear voices" and increased their understanding of psychotic experiences.

5.
Nat Genet ; 46(6): 543-550, 2014 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24816252

RESUMEN

Genome-wide association scans with high-throughput metabolic profiling provide unprecedented insights into how genetic variation influences metabolism and complex disease. Here we report the most comprehensive exploration of genetic loci influencing human metabolism thus far, comprising 7,824 adult individuals from 2 European population studies. We report genome-wide significant associations at 145 metabolic loci and their biochemical connectivity with more than 400 metabolites in human blood. We extensively characterize the resulting in vivo blueprint of metabolism in human blood by integrating it with information on gene expression, heritability and overlap with known loci for complex disorders, inborn errors of metabolism and pharmacological targets. We further developed a database and web-based resources for data mining and results visualization. Our findings provide new insights into the role of inherited variation in blood metabolic diversity and identify potential new opportunities for drug development and for understanding disease.


Asunto(s)
Sangre/metabolismo , Sitios Genéticos/genética , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Análisis Químico de la Sangre , Estudios de Cohortes , Biología Computacional , Minería de Datos , Europa (Continente) , Femenino , Perfilación de la Expresión Génica , Variación Genética , Genotipo , Alemania , Humanos , Internet , Masculino , Errores Innatos del Metabolismo/genética , Metabolómica , Persona de Mediana Edad , Reino Unido , Adulto Joven
6.
Database (Oxford) ; 2013: bat080, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24288140

RESUMEN

Improving the prediction of chemical toxicity is a goal common to both environmental health research and pharmaceutical drug development. To improve safety detection assays, it is critical to have a reference set of molecules with well-defined toxicity annotations for training and validation purposes. Here, we describe a collaboration between safety researchers at Pfizer and the research team at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) to text mine and manually review a collection of 88,629 articles relating over 1,200 pharmaceutical drugs to their potential involvement in cardiovascular, neurological, renal and hepatic toxicity. In 1 year, CTD biocurators curated 254,173 toxicogenomic interactions (152,173 chemical-disease, 58,572 chemical-gene, 5,345 gene-disease and 38,083 phenotype interactions). All chemical-gene-disease interactions are fully integrated with public CTD, and phenotype interactions can be downloaded. We describe Pfizer's text-mining process to collate the articles, and CTD's curation strategy, performance metrics, enhanced data content and new module to curate phenotype information. As well, we show how data integration can connect phenotypes to diseases. This curation can be leveraged for information about toxic endpoints important to drug safety and help develop testable hypotheses for drug-disease events. The availability of these detailed, contextualized, high-quality annotations curated from seven decades' worth of the scientific literature should help facilitate new mechanistic screening assays for pharmaceutical compound survival. This unique partnership demonstrates the importance of resource sharing and collaboration between public and private entities and underscores the complementary needs of the environmental health science and pharmaceutical communities. Database URL: http://ctdbase.org/


Asunto(s)
Conducta Cooperativa , Minería de Datos , Bases de Datos Factuales , Industria Farmacéutica , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas/metabolismo , Publicaciones , Toxicogenética , Enfermedad , Humanos , Fenotipo
7.
Database (Oxford) ; 2013: bat033, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23707966

RESUMEN

The vast collection of biomedical literature and its continued expansion has presented a number of challenges to researchers who require structured findings to stay abreast of and analyze molecular mechanisms relevant to their domain of interest. By structuring literature content into topic-specific machine-readable databases, the aggregate data from multiple articles can be used to infer trends that can be compared and contrasted with similar findings from topic-independent resources. Our study presents a generalized procedure for semi-automatically creating a custom topic-specific molecular interaction database through the use of text mining to assist manual curation. We apply the procedure to capture molecular events that underlie 'pain', a complex phenomenon with a large societal burden and unmet medical need. We describe how existing text mining solutions are used to build a pain-specific corpus, extract molecular events from it, add context to the extracted events and assess their relevance. The pain-specific corpus contains 765 692 documents from Medline and PubMed Central, from which we extracted 356 499 unique normalized molecular events, with 261 438 single protein events and 93 271 molecular interactions supplied by BioContext. Event chains are annotated with negation, speculation, anatomy, Gene Ontology terms, mutations, pain and disease relevance, which collectively provide detailed insight into how that event chain is associated with pain. The extracted relations are visualized in a wiki platform (wiki-pain.org) that enables efficient manual curation and exploration of the molecular mechanisms that underlie pain. Curation of 1500 grouped event chains ranked by pain relevance revealed 613 accurately extracted unique molecular interactions that in the future can be used to study the underlying mechanisms involved in pain. Our approach demonstrates that combining existing text mining tools with domain-specific terms and wiki-based visualization can facilitate rapid curation of molecular interactions to create a custom database. Database URL: •••


Asunto(s)
Catálogos como Asunto , Minería de Datos/métodos , Dolor/genética , Transducción de Señal , Animales , Automatización , Diccionarios como Asunto , Humanos , Almacenamiento y Recuperación de la Información , Ratones , Ratas , Transducción de Señal/genética , Programas Informáticos
8.
Database (Oxford) ; 2013: bas056, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23327936

RESUMEN

In many databases, biocuration primarily involves literature curation, which usually involves retrieving relevant articles, extracting information that will translate into annotations and identifying new incoming literature. As the volume of biological literature increases, the use of text mining to assist in biocuration becomes increasingly relevant. A number of groups have developed tools for text mining from a computer science/linguistics perspective, and there are many initiatives to curate some aspect of biology from the literature. Some biocuration efforts already make use of a text mining tool, but there have not been many broad-based systematic efforts to study which aspects of a text mining tool contribute to its usefulness for a curation task. Here, we report on an effort to bring together text mining tool developers and database biocurators to test the utility and usability of tools. Six text mining systems presenting diverse biocuration tasks participated in a formal evaluation, and appropriate biocurators were recruited for testing. The performance results from this evaluation indicate that some of the systems were able to improve efficiency of curation by speeding up the curation task significantly (∼1.7- to 2.5-fold) over manual curation. In addition, some of the systems were able to improve annotation accuracy when compared with the performance on the manually curated set. In terms of inter-annotator agreement, the factors that contributed to significant differences for some of the systems included the expertise of the biocurator on the given curation task, the inherent difficulty of the curation and attention to annotation guidelines. After the task, annotators were asked to complete a survey to help identify strengths and weaknesses of the various systems. The analysis of this survey highlights how important task completion is to the biocurators' overall experience of a system, regardless of the system's high score on design, learnability and usability. In addition, strategies to refine the annotation guidelines and systems documentation, to adapt the tools to the needs and query types the end user might have and to evaluate performance in terms of efficiency, user interface, result export and traditional evaluation metrics have been analyzed during this task. This analysis will help to plan for a more intense study in BioCreative IV.


Asunto(s)
Minería de Datos , Educación , Bases de Datos como Asunto , Documentación , Humanos , Programas Informáticos , Factores de Tiempo
9.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 12 Suppl 8: S4, 2011 Oct 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22151968

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The BioCreative challenge evaluation is a community-wide effort for evaluating text mining and information extraction systems applied to the biological domain. The biocurator community, as an active user of biomedical literature, provides a diverse and engaged end user group for text mining tools. Earlier BioCreative challenges involved many text mining teams in developing basic capabilities relevant to biological curation, but they did not address the issues of system usage, insertion into the workflow and adoption by curators. Thus in BioCreative III (BC-III), the InterActive Task (IAT) was introduced to address the utility and usability of text mining tools for real-life biocuration tasks. To support the aims of the IAT in BC-III, involvement of both developers and end users was solicited, and the development of a user interface to address the tasks interactively was requested. RESULTS: A User Advisory Group (UAG) actively participated in the IAT design and assessment. The task focused on gene normalization (identifying gene mentions in the article and linking these genes to standard database identifiers), gene ranking based on the overall importance of each gene mentioned in the article, and gene-oriented document retrieval (identifying full text papers relevant to a selected gene). Six systems participated and all processed and displayed the same set of articles. The articles were selected based on content known to be problematic for curation, such as ambiguity of gene names, coverage of multiple genes and species, or introduction of a new gene name. Members of the UAG curated three articles for training and assessment purposes, and each member was assigned a system to review. A questionnaire related to the interface usability and task performance (as measured by precision and recall) was answered after systems were used to curate articles. Although the limited number of articles analyzed and users involved in the IAT experiment precluded rigorous quantitative analysis of the results, a qualitative analysis provided valuable insight into some of the problems encountered by users when using the systems. The overall assessment indicates that the system usability features appealed to most users, but the system performance was suboptimal (mainly due to low accuracy in gene normalization). Some of the issues included failure of species identification and gene name ambiguity in the gene normalization task leading to an extensive list of gene identifiers to review, which, in some cases, did not contain the relevant genes. The document retrieval suffered from the same shortfalls. The UAG favored achieving high performance (measured by precision and recall), but strongly recommended the addition of features that facilitate the identification of correct gene and its identifier, such as contextual information to assist in disambiguation. DISCUSSION: The IAT was an informative exercise that advanced the dialog between curators and developers and increased the appreciation of challenges faced by each group. A major conclusion was that the intended users should be actively involved in every phase of software development, and this will be strongly encouraged in future tasks. The IAT Task provides the first steps toward the definition of metrics and functional requirements that are necessary for designing a formal evaluation of interactive curation systems in the BioCreative IV challenge.


Asunto(s)
Minería de Datos/métodos , Genes , Animales , Biología Computacional/métodos , Publicaciones Periódicas como Asunto , Plantas/genética , Plantas/metabolismo
10.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 37(3): 771-7, 2009 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19074486

RESUMEN

Molecular perturbations provide a powerful toolset for biomedical researchers to scrutinize the contributions of individual molecules in biological systems. Perturbations qualify the context of experimental results and, despite their diversity, share properties in different dimensions in ways that can be formalized. We propose a formal framework to describe and classify perturbations that allows accumulation of knowledge in order to inform the process of biomedical scientific experimentation and target analysis. We apply this framework to develop a novel algorithm for automatic detection and characterization of perturbations in text and show its relevance in the study of gene-phenotype associations and protein-protein interactions in diabetes and cancer. Analyzing perturbations introduces a novel view of the multivariate landscape of biological systems.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Enfermedad/genética , Clasificación/métodos , Diabetes Mellitus/genética , Diabetes Mellitus/metabolismo , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Humanos , MEDLINE , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Fenotipo , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas
11.
Pac Symp Biocomput ; : 592-603, 2008.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18229718

RESUMEN

Drug development generates information needs from groups throughout a company. Knowing where to look for high-quality information is essential for minimizing costs and remaining competitive. Using 1131 research requests that came to our library between 2001 and 2007, we show that drugs, diseases, and genes/proteins are the most frequently searched subjects, and journal articles, patents, and competitive intelligence literature are the most frequently consulted textual resources.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional , Diseño de Fármacos , Almacenamiento y Recuperación de la Información , Biotecnología , Bases de Datos Factuales , Industria Farmacéutica , Bibliotecas Médicas
12.
Brief Bioinform ; 7(4): 399-406, 2006 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17032698

RESUMEN

Currently, literature is integrated in systems biology studies in three ways. Hand-curated pathways have been sufficient for assembling models in numerous studies. Second, literature is frequently accessed in a derived form, such as the concepts represented by the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) and Gene Ontologies (GO), or functional relationships captured in protein-protein interaction (PPI) databases; both of these are convenient, consistent reductions of more complex concepts expressed as free text in the literature. Moreover, their contents are easily integrated into computational processes required for dealing with large data sets. Last, mining text directly for specific types of information is on the rise as text analytics methods become more accurate and accessible. These uses of literature, specifically manual curation, derived concepts captured in ontologies and databases, and indirect and direct application of text mining, will be discussed as they pertain to systems biology.


Asunto(s)
Bases de Datos como Asunto , Almacenamiento y Recuperación de la Información , Biología de Sistemas , Animales , Bases de Datos Genéticas , Humanos , Medical Subject Headings , Publicaciones Periódicas como Asunto , Vocabulario Controlado
13.
J Biomed Discov Collab ; 1: 3, 2006 Mar 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16722581

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The goal of the TREC Genomics Track is to improve information retrieval in the area of genomics by creating test collections that will allow researchers to improve and better understand failures of their systems. The 2004 track included an ad hoc retrieval task, simulating use of a search engine to obtain documents about biomedical topics. This paper describes the Genomics Track of the Text Retrieval Conference (TREC) 2004, a forum for evaluation of IR research systems, where retrieval in the genomics domain has recently begun to be assessed. RESULTS: A total of 27 research groups submitted 47 different runs. The most effective runs, as measured by the primary evaluation measure of mean average precision (MAP), used a combination of domain-specific and general techniques. The best MAP obtained by any run was 0.4075. Techniques that expanded queries with gene name lists as well as words from related articles had the best efficacy. However, many runs performed more poorly than a simple baseline run, indicating that careful selection of system features is essential. CONCLUSION: Various approaches to ad hoc retrieval provide a diversity of efficacy. The TREC Genomics Track and its test collection resources provide tools that allow improvement in information retrieval systems.

14.
Curr Opin Drug Discov Devel ; 8(3): 323-8, 2005 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15892247

RESUMEN

The automated extraction of biological and chemical information has improved over the past year, with advances in access to content, entity extraction of genes, chemicals, kinetic data and relationships, and algorithms for generating and testing hypotheses. As the systems for reading and understanding scientific literature grow more powerful, so must the infrastructure in which to assemble information. Advances in infrastructure systems are discussed in this review. Research efforts have flourished as a result of text analytics competitions that attract participants from various disciplines, from computer science to bioinformatics.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional , Diseño de Fármacos , Almacenamiento y Recuperación de la Información , Animales , Humanos , Procesamiento de Lenguaje Natural , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas , Relación Estructura-Actividad Cuantitativa
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...