Revistas
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A.; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
2
Págs.:
435 - 438
Introduction. Awareness of organ donation among Spanish doctors and medical students is very positive. However, the emerging group of professionals of non-Spanish nationality studying in Spain has not been analyzed. Objective. To analyze the differences in the attitudes toward the different types of donation among medical students, according to their nationality. Methods. The population under study is medical students in Spanish universities using the database of the International Collaborative Donor Project, stratified by geographic area and academic year. Groups under study include students of non-Spanish nationality as group 1 (n = 1570) and students of Spanish nationality as Group 2 (n = 7705). Instruments are validated questionnaires of attitude toward donation "PCID-DTO-Rios," "PCID-DVR-Rios," "PCID-DVH-Rios," and "PCID-XenoTx-Rios." Results. The attitude toward the donation of own organs after death is similar in both groups (P = .703). Non-Spaniards are 79.2% in favor compared to 79.6% of Spaniards. Living kidney donation, both unrelated (33.3% vs 29.3% in favor; P = .001) and related (91.2% vs 89, 6% in favor; P = .047), is more favorable among non-Spanish students. There are no differences regarding non-related living liver donation (29.7% vs 29.3% in favor; P = .063), but there are differences in the results for related living liver donation (94.1% vs 88%; P < .001). The attitude toward xenotransplantation of organs is similar (80.8% vs 80.8%; P = .999). Conclusions. Awareness of the donation of organs among Spanish medical students is similar to non-Spanish students studying in Spain, except the attitude toward living donation.
Autores:
Martinez-Alarcon, L. (Autor de correspondencia); Rios, A.; Gutierrez, P. R.; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
2
Págs.:
491 - 495
A primary care physician (PCP) not only accompanies the patient in the process of an illness, but throughout his or her life. The confidence we have in these health professionals is fundamental, and their favorable attitude toward organ donation and transplantation (ODT) has a significant influence on the population. Objective. To analyze trust in PCPs among Spanish medical and nursing students, the relationship with their attitude toward ODT, and the factors that condition it. Methods and Design. A sociologic, multicenter, and observational study. Population: medical and nursing students in Spanish universities. Database: Collaborative International Donor Project, stratified by geographic area and academic course. A validated questionnaire (PCID-DTO-RIOS) was self-administered and completed anonymously. A sample of 9598 medical and 10,566 nursing students (99% confidence and precision of +/- 1%), stratified by geographic area and year of study. Results. Completion rate: 90%. With respect to students' trust in their physician, 18% (n = 3267) of them totally trust (completely), 45% (n = 8101) trust enough, 30% (n = 5478) of them have not enough trust, and 7% not at all. Comparing groups, medical students totally trust more in PCPs than nursing students (55% vs 45%; P < .000), however, nursing students have less than enough trust in their PCP than medical students (53% vs 47%; P < .000). Students that totally trust in their PCP were more in favor toward ODT than students with not enough trust (83% vs 77%; P < .000). Conclusion. Only 18% of Spanish medical and nursing students totally trust in their PCP. Attitude toward ODT is related to a higher level of trust in PCPs among these students.
Autores:
Martinez-Alarcon, L. ; Rios, A. ; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
5
Págs.:
1428 - 1431
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A. ; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
2
Págs.:
446 - 448
Introduction. Health professionals are asked to promote health, especially organ transplantation; however, they do not always have specific training. Objective. To analyze information about donation and organ transplantation among Spanish medical students. Method. The population under study is medical students in Spanish universities using the database of the International Donor Collaborative Project, stratified by geographic area and academic year (n = 9275). The instrument used is the attitude questionnaire for organ donation for "PCID-DTO-Rios" transplantation, validated with an explained variance of 63.203% and alpha = 0.834. The Student t test was applied together with the chi(2) test, complemented by an analysis of the remainders, and Fisher's exact test was applied. Results. Of the students, 74% indicate that they have received information from university professors about organ transplant. Concerning specific issues with the donation, it is notable that only 66.7% (n = 6190) know and accept the concept of brain death as the death of a person. However, only 22% consider themselves as having good information, and 35.3% indicate that their information is scarce or void. Students indicate having received information about transplant from other extra-university sources, such as television and Internet (80.9%), books and magazines (73.2%), and the press (66.9%). From the information obtained in the sociofamilial field, 60.7% have obtained information from the family and 58.1% from friends. Of this information, 9% has been negative from friends, 7.5% from family, 6% from the Internet and television, and 4% from university professors. Conclusion. Spanish medical students believe they have little information about organ transplantation and have received negative information.
Autores:
Martinez-Alarcon, L. (Autor de correspondencia); Rios, A.; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
2
Págs.:
439 - 442
Introduction. Information provided by health care professionals is crucial to create a climate of social opinion. This is important in organ donation and transplantation (ODT), where the participation of the general public is essential to obtain organs. Objective. To determine the attitude toward the Law of Presumed Consent (LPC) among Spanish university students and to analyze their relation with attitude toward ODT. Methods. and design. The type of study was a sociologic, multicenter, observational study. The population included medical and nursing students in Spanish universities. Database of Collaborative International Donor Project was used stratified by geographic area and academic course. A validated questionnaire (Collaborative International Donor Project, organ donation and transplantation questionnaire in Spanish [PCID-DTO-RIOS]) was self-administered and completed anonymously. A sample of 9598 medical and 10,566 nursing students was analyzed (99% confidence and precision of +/- 1%) and stratified by geographic area and year of study. Results. Completion rate was 90%. Regarding attitude toward LPC, 66% of the students were against the law, whereas 34% accepted it. Of the students surveyed, 9% considered the law as a gesture of solidarity, 25% as an effective way of not wasting organs, 48% as an abuse of power, and 18% as offenses against the family. Those students who were in favor of LPC also had a more favorable attitude toward ODT (86% vs 76%; P < .001). Comparing groups, nursing students were less in favor of LPC than medical students (32% vs 36%; P < .000). Conclusion. Sixty-six percent of Spanish university medical and nursing students were against the LPC. The favorable attitude toward ODT is associated with considering the law as a gesture of solidarity or as an effective way of not wasting organs.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A.; Gutierrez, P. R.; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2020
Vol.:
52
N°:
2
Págs.:
443 - 445
Introduction. Despite sensitization of medical students toward the donation of organs, a non-negligible percentage of students are not in favor of donation. Objective. To analyze the reasons of Spanish medical students who do not have a favorable attitude toward the donation of their own organs after death. Method. The population under study is medical students in Spanish universities, using the database of the International Donor Collaborative Project, stratified by geographic area and academic year. The questionnaire completion was anonymous and self-administered. The study group is medical students with an unfavorable attitude toward organ donation. The assessment instrument used is a validated questionnaire of attitude toward the donation of organs for transplant, "PCID-DTO-Rios." The reasons against the donation are valued in the questionnaire through a question. Results. Of the participants included in the PCID, students who are not in favor of organ donation were selected (n = 1899). Of them, 8.1% (n = 154) are against and 91.1% (n = 1745) are doubtful. The main reasons indicated are the fear of apparent death in 11.4% of respondents, fear of possible mutilation after donation in 11.1%, and religious reasons in 2.6%. Of those, 6.9% indicate other reasons but do not clearly specify the reasons, using words such as "fear" (2.5%) or "doubts about the process" (4.1%); 66.2% (n = 1257) indicated an "assertive refusal" ("I don't want to express my reasons"). Conclusion. Twenty percent of Spanish medical students are not in favor of donating their organs and are not in favor of showing their reasons.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A. ; Lopez-Lopez, A. ; et al.
Revista:
ETHNICITY AND HEALTH
ISSN:
1355-7858
Año:
2019
Vol.:
24
N°:
4
Págs.:
443 - 461
Introduction: Medical students represent a new generation of medical thought, and if they have a favourable attitude towards organ donation this will greatly encourage its promotion. Objective: To analyse the attitude of medical students in Spanish universities towards the donation of their own organs and to determine the factors affecting this attitude. Material and Methods: Type of study: A sociological, interdisciplinary, multicentre, and observational study in Spain. Study population: Students studying a degree in medicine enrolled in Spain (n = 34,000). Sample size: A sample of 9598 students (confidence of 99% and precision of +/- 1%), stratified by geographical area and academic year. Instrument of measurement: A validated questionnaire of attitude towards organ donation and transplantation (PCID-DTO RIOS) was self-administered and completed anonymously. Results: The questionnaire completion rate was 95.7% (n = 9.275). 80% were in favour of donation, 2% against and 18% were undecided. The following main variables were related to a favourable attitude: being of the female sex (Odds Ratio = 1.739); being in the sixth year of the degree (OR = 2.506); knowing a donor (OR = 1.346); having spoken about the subject with one's family (OR = 2.132) and friends (OR = 1.333); having a family circle that is in favour, more specifically, having a father (OR = 1.841), mother (OR = 2.538) or partner in favour (OR = 2.192); being a blood donor (OR = 2.824); acceptance of the mutilation of the body if it were necessary (OR = 2.958); and being an atheist or an agnostic (OR = 1.766). Conclusions: Spanish medical students generally have a favourable attitude towards organ donation, although 20% are not in favour.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A.; Gutierrez, P. R.; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2019
Vol.:
51
N°:
2
Págs.:
253 - 257
The involvement of health professionals from their training period is important for the promotion of living liver donation. There are data that indicate that the awareness of living donation is lower in areas with high rates of deceased donation. Objective. To analyze the attitude toward living liver donation among Spanish medical students, according to donation rates of their regions. Method. Population under study: Medical students in Spanish universities. Database of the Collaborative International Donor Project, stratified by geographic area and academic course. The completion was anonymous and self-administered. Groups under study: group 1 (n = 1136): students in universities of regions with >50 donors per million population (pmp); group 2 (n = 2018): students in region universities with <40 donors pmp. Assessment instrument: the attitude questionnaire for living liver donation Proyecto Colaborativo Internacional Donante sobre Donacion de Vivo Hepatico-Rios (PCID-DVH Rios). Results. The attitude toward related liver donation is more favorable among the students of regions with <40 donors pmp than among those of >50 donors pmp. Thus, in group 1, a total of 88% (n = 1002) of students are in favor compared with 91% (n = 1831) of group 2 (P=.02). The psychosocial profile of each study group about their attitude toward living related liver donation is analyzed. There is a similar profile between the 2 groups, although there are differences in some variables such as age, a belief that one might need a transplant, family discussion about donation and transplantation, discussion with friends about donation and transplantation, and knowing about a donor. Conclusions. The awareness of living related donation among Spanish medical students is greater among the regions with lower organ donation rates.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A. ; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2019
Vol.:
51
N°:
2
Págs.:
250 - 252
Introduction. Religious factors have conditioned the attitude toward organ donation and transplantation (ODT) since the beginning of transplantation, despite the fact that most religions are in favor of transplantation. Objective. To assess the impact of religious beliefs of medical students on their attitude toward ODT. Method. Population under study: Medical students in Spanish universities. Study sample: Stratified by geographical area and academic course. Assessment instrument: Attitude ODT questionnaire PCID-DTO-Rios, anonymous and self-administered. Results. Of all students, 42% (n = 3907) declare themselves atheists or agnostics. The remaining 58% (n = 5368) declare themselves to be religious, the majority being Catholic (55%, n = 5102). Of the rest, 0.2% are Muslims (n = 8), 0.1% Protestants (n = 1), and the remaining 2.7% (n = 257) indicate other religious doctrines but do not want to specify it. Regarding their attitude toward ODT, those who consider themselves atheists or agnostics have a more favorable attitude than those who consider themselves religious (84% versus 76%; P < .001). Among those who follow some kind of religion, Catholics are more in favor of ODT than non-Catholics (77% vs 64%, P < .001). Note that among the religious, only 57% (n = 3050) know which religion is in favor of transplantation, while 22% (n = 1,152) consider that it has not been pronounced on the matter, 13% (n = 723) think the religion is against donation, and the remaining 8% (n = 443) do not know. Conclusion. The religion professed by medical students conditions their attitude toward donation, with the atheists and agnostics being more in favor of donation.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A.; Gutierrez, P. R. ; et al.
Revista:
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
ISSN:
0041-1345
Año:
2019
Vol.:
51
N°:
2
Págs.:
261 - 264
The awareness of organ donation among health professionals is important at the time of transplant promotion. In this sense, the training and awareness of the professionals in training is fundamental. Objective. To analyze the differences in the attitude toward organ donation and the factors that condition it among medical students of regions with donation rates >50 donors per million population (pmp) with respect to those with rates <40 donor pmp. Method. Population under study: medical students in Spanish universities. Database of the Collaborative International Donor Project, stratified by geographic area and academic course. The completion was anonymous and self-administered. Groups under study: Group 1 (n = 1136): students in universities of regions with >50 donors pmp. Group 2 (n = 2018): university students in regions with <40 donors pmp. Assessment instrument: attitude questionnaire for organ donation for transplant PCID-DTO-Rios. Results. The attitude toward organ donation for transplantation is similar among students from the autonomous communities with >50 donors pmp and with <40 donors pmp. In group 1, 79% (n = 897) of students are in favor compared with 81% (n = 1625) of group 2 (P=.29). The psychosocial profile toward donation is similar in both groups relating to the following variables (P < .05): sex, having discussed transplantation with family and as a couple, considering the possibility of needing a transplant, involvement in prosocial activities, attitude toward the manipulation of corpses, knowledge of the brain death concept, and religion. Conclusions. The awareness of organ donation in Spanish medical students is quite homogeneous and is not related to the local donation rates of each region.
Autores:
Rios, A. (Autor de correspondencia); Lopez-Navas, A.; Lopez-Lopez, A. ; et al.
Revista:
PROGRESS IN TRANSPLANTATION
ISSN:
1526-9248
Año:
2018
Vol.:
28
N°:
1
Págs.:
77 - 82
Objective: To analyze the level of understanding of the brain death concept among medical students in universities in Spain. Methods: This cross-sectional sociological, interdisciplinary, and multicenter study was performed on 9598 medical students in Spain. The sample was stratified by geographical area and academic year. A previously validated self-reported measure of brain death knowledge (questionnaire Proyecto Colaborativo Internacional Donante sobre la Donaciony Transplante de Organos) was completed anonymously by students. Results: Respondents completed 9275 surveys for a completion rate of 95.7%. Of those, 67% (n = 6190) of the respondents understood the brain death concept. Of the rest, 28% (n = 2652) did not know what it meant, and the remaining 5% (n = 433) believed that it did not mean that the patient was dead. The variables related to a correct understanding of the concept were: (1) being older (P < .001), (2) studying at a public university (P < .001), (3) year of medical school (P < .001), (4) studying at one of the universities in the south of Spain (P = .003), (5) having discussed donation and transplantation with the family (P < .001), (6) having spoken to friends about the matter (P < .001), (7) a partner's favorable attitude toward donation and transplantation (P < .001), and (8) religious beliefs (P < .001). Conclusions: Sixty-seven percent of medical students know the concept of brain death, and knowledge improved as they advanced in their degree.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
ISSN:
1932-6203
Año:
2017
Vol.:
12
N°:
9
Págs.:
e0184044
Idiopathic epilepsy is characterized by generalized seizures with no apparent cause. One of its main problems is the lack of biomarkers to monitor the evolution of patients. The only tools they can use are limited to inspecting the amount of seizures during previous periods of time and assessing the existence of interictal discharges. As a result, there is a need for improving the tools to assist the diagnosis and follow up of these patients. The goal of the present study is to compare and find a way to differentiate between two groups of patients suffering from idiopathic epilepsy, one group that could be followed-up by means of specific electroencephalographic (EEG) signatures (intercritical activity present), and another one that could not due to the absence of these markers. To do that, we analyzed the background EEG activity of each in the absence of seizures and epileptic intercritical activity. We used the Shannon spectral entropy (SSE) as a metric to discriminate between the two groups and performed permutation-based statistical tests to detect the set of frequencies that show significant differences. By constraining the spectral entropy estimation to the [6.25-12.89) Hz range, we detect statistical differences (at below 0.05 alpha-level) between both types of epileptic patients at all available recording channels. Interestingly, entropy values follow a trend that is inversely related to the elapsed time from the last seizure. Indeed, this trend shows asymptotical convergence to the SSE values measured in a group of healthy subjects, which present SSE values lower than any of the two groups of patients. All these results suggest that the SSE, measured in a specific range of frequencies, could serve to follow up the evolution of patients suffering from idiopathic epilepsy. Future studies remain to be conducted in order to assess the predictive value of this approach for the anticipation of seizures.
Autores:
Rios, A.; Lopez-Navas, A.; Lopez-Lopez, A.; et al.
Revista:
WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY
ISSN:
0724-4983
Año:
2016
Vol.:
34
N°:
12
Págs.:
1673 - 1684
Introduction The attitude of medical students towards living kidney donation (LKD) is of great interest given that they will become promoters of this technique in the near future. Objective To analyse the attitude of Spanish medical students towards related and unrelated LKD and to determine the factors affecting this attitude. Materials and methods Type of study: A sociological, interdisciplinary, multicentre, and observational study. Study population: Medical students enrolled in Spain (n = 34.000). Sample size: A sample of 9598 students (99 % confidence and precision of +/- 1 %), stratified by geographical area and academic year. Measurement instrument: A validated questionnaire (PCID-DVR RIOS) was administered and completed anonymously. Results There was a completion rate of 95.7 % (n = 9275); 93 % (n = 8630) were in favour of related LKD, and 30 % (n = 2784) were in favour of unrelated LKD. The following factors were associated with this attitude: (1) age (p = 0.008); (2) sex (p < 0.001); (3) year of university degree (p < 0.001); (4) a belief that a transplant might be necessary in the future (p < 0.001); (5) attitude towards deceased organ donation (p < 0.001); (6) a willingness to accept a kidney from a living donor (p < 0.001); (7) attitude towards living liver donation (p < 0.001); (8) a partner's attitude towards donation (p < 0.001); (9) having spoken about the subject with one's family (p < 0.001), or friends (p < 0.001); (10) pro-social behaviour (p < 0.001); (11) the respondent's religious attitude (p < 0.001); and (12) fear of possible mutilation of the body after donation (p < 0.001). Conclusions The attitude of medical students towards LKD is very favourable when it is the related kind of donation, and it is associated with factors of general knowledge about organ donation and transplantation and social interaction and religion.
Revista:
CLINICAL AUTONOMIC RESEARCH
ISSN:
0959-9851
Año:
2015
Vol.:
25
N°:
4
Págs.:
225 - 232
BACKGROUND:
Cardiac autonomic tone after long-term continuous positive airway pressure therapy in patients with obstructive sleep apnea remains unexplored.
METHODS:
Thirty patients with obstructive sleep apnea (14 with moderate and 16 with severe obstructive sleep apnea) were studied during a baseline polysomnographic study, after a full night of acute continuous positive airway pressure treatment, and after long-term (~2 years) chronic continuous positive airway pressure therapy. Twenty age- and gender-matched controls with baseline sleep study were selected for comparison purposes. Cross-spectral analysis and the low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) components of the heart rate variability were computed separately over 10-min ECG epochs during rapid eye movement sleep, non-rapid eye movement sleep, and wakefulness.
RESULTS:
During the baseline study, obstructive sleep apnea patients exhibited increased LF, decreased HF, and increased LF/HF ratio during sleep when compared to controls. In a multiple regression model, the mean oxygen saturation explained the increased LF during rapid and non-rapid eye movement sleep in obstructive sleep apnea patients. Acute continuous positive airway pressure therapy decreased the LF modulations and the LF/HF ratio and increased the HF modulations during sleep in patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea. Long-term continuous positive airway pressure therapy decreased LF modulations and LF/HF ratio with increased HF modulations during sleep in patients with moderate and severe obstructive sleep apnea.
CONCLUSIONS:
Long-term continuous positive airway pressure reduces the sympathovagal imbalance in patients with moderate and severe obstructive sleep apnea, both during rapid and non-rapid eye movement sleep. Continuous positive airway pressure seems to exert its changes in cardiac autonomic modulation by decreasing the burden of nocturnal hypoxia.
Revista:
CLINICAL AUTONOMIC RESEARCH
ISSN:
1619-1560
Año:
2015
Vol.:
25
N°:
1
Págs.:
69 - 75
Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a parasomnia frequently affecting patients with synucleinopathies, but its exact prevalence in multiple system atrophy (MSA) is unclear. Whether questionnaires alone are sufficient to diagnose RBD is also unknown.
We performed a cross-sectional study of patients with probable MSA from six academic centers in the US and Europe. RBD was ascertained clinically and with polysomnography; we also performed a meta-analysis according to PRISMA guidelines for studies published before September 2014 that reported the prevalence of RBD in MSA. A random-effects model was constructed using weighted prevalence proportions. Only articles in English were included. Studies were classified into those that ascertained the presence of RBD in MSA clinically and with polysomnography. Case reports or case series (a parts per thousand currency sign5 patients) were not included.
Forty-two patients completed questionnaires and underwent polysomnography. Of those, 32 (76.1 %) had clinically suspected RBD and 34 (81 %) had polysomnography-confirmed RBD. Two patients reported no symptoms of RBD but had polysomnography-confirmed RBD. The primary search strategy yielded 374 articles of which 12 met the inclusion criteria. The summary prevalence of clinically suspected RBD was 73 % (95 % CI, 62-84 %) in a combined sample of 324 MSA patients. The summary prevalence of polysomnography-confirmed RBD was 88 % (95 % CI, 79-94 %) in a combined sample of 217 MSA patients.
Polysomnography-confirmed RBD is present in up to 88 % of patients with MSA. RBD was present in some patients that reported no symptoms. More than half of MSA patients report symptoms of RBD before the onset of motor deficits.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF NEURAL TRANSMISSION
Año:
2014
Vol.:
121
N°:
4
Págs.:
385 - 390
Revista:
CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY: OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
ISSN:
1872-8952
Año:
2014
Vol.:
125
N°:
1
Págs.:
208 - 210
Revista:
CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
ISSN:
1388-2457
Año:
2014
Vol.:
125
N°:
9
Págs.:
1783 - 1791
OBJECTIVE:
The pathophysiological basis of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is not completely understood and likely varies among patients. In this regard, some patients with OSA do not exhibit hypoxemia. We aimed to analyze the clinical, sleep, and autonomic features of a group of patients with severe OSA without hypoxia (OSA-h) and compare to OSA patients with hypoxia (OSA+h) and controls.
METHODS:
Fifty-six patients with OSA-h, 64 patients with OSA+h, and 44 control subjects were studied. Clinical and sleep features were analyzed. Besides, time- and frequency-domain heart rate variability (HRV) measures comprising the mean R-R interval, the standard deviation of the RR intervals (SDNN), the low frequency (LF) oscillations, the high frequency (HF) oscillations, and the LF/HF ratio, were calculated across sleep stages during a one-night polysomnography.
RESULTS:
OSA-h patients had a lower body mass index, a lower waist circumference, lower apnea duration, and a higher frequency of previous naso-pharyngeal surgery when compared to OSA+h patients. In terms of heart rate variability, OSA+h had increased LF oscillations (i.e., baroreflex function) during N1-N2 and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep when compared to OSA-h and controls. Both OSA+h and OSA-h groups had decreased HF oscillations (i.e., vagal inputs) during N1-N2, N3 and REM sleep when compared to controls. The LF/HF ratio was increased during N1-N2 and REM sleep, only in patients with OSA+h.
CONCLUSIONS:
Patients with OSA-h exhibit distinctive clinical, sleep, and autonomic features when compared to OSA with hypoxia.
SIGNIFICANCE:
OSA is a heterogeneous entity. These differences must be taken into account in future studies when analyzing therapeutic approaches for sleep apnea patients.
Revista:
CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
ISSN:
1388-2457
Año:
2013
Vol.:
124
N°:
6
Págs.:
1163 - 1168
OBJECTIVE:
Cardiac physiology during sleep in Parkinson's disease (PD) remains poorly explored. We studied heart rate variability (HRV) across sleep stages in PD patients and correlated the results with clinical features.
METHODS:
Cross-sectional study comprising 33 patients with PD and 29 controls matched for age, gender, and number of apneas/hypopneas per hour. HRV measures, (mean R-R interval, SDNN, ULF, VLF, LF, HF and LF/HF) were calculated separately for all sleep stages as well as wakefulness just before and after sleep during one-night polysomnography. Correlation analysis was performed between HRV values and PD patients' characteristics.
RESULTS:
The mean R-R interval was lower in all sleep stages in PD patients when compared with controls. VLF and LF were lower during REM sleep in PD patients. HF during N1-N2 stage was higher in PD. We found inverse correlations between VLF and LF during REM sleep and UPDRS-ON and UPDRS-OFF.
CONCLUSION:
VLF and LF during REM sleep might constitute surrogate markers of disease severity.
SIGNIFICANCE:
These findings provide additional clinical evidence of the autonomic impairment commonly observed in PD, and prove that cardiac autonomic dysfunction during REM sleep is correlated with disease severity.
Revista:
SCIENTOMETRICS
ISSN:
0138-9130
Año:
2013
Vol.:
95
N°:
3
Págs.:
941-952
During the period 2000¿2009 there was a significant increase in Clinical Neurology publications. Most of the publications and citations comprised 14 countries, with the USA in the first position. Interestingly, most of the publications and citations originated from only 14 countries, with European countries with relatively low population, such as Switzerland, Austria, Sweden, Belgium, and the Netherlands, in this top group.
Revista:
SLEEP
ISSN:
0161-8105
Año:
2013
Vol.:
36
N°:
6
Págs.:
933 - 940
OBJECTIVE:
To assess autonomic function by heart rate variability (HRV) during sleep in patients with sleep related alveolar hypoventilation (SRAH) and to compare it with that of patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and control patients.
DESIGN:
Cross-sectional study.
SETTING:
Sleep Unit, University Hospital of University of Navarra.
PATIENTS:
Fifteen idiopathic and obesity related-SRAH patients were studied. For each patient with SRAH, a patient with OSA, matched in age, sex, body mass index (BMI), minimal oxygen saturation (SatO2), and mean SatO2 was selected. Control patients were also matched in age, sex, and BMI with patients with OSA and those with SRAH, and in apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) with patients with SRAH.
INTERVENTIONS:
N/A.
MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:
Time- and frequency-domain HRV measures (R-R, standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR interval [SDNN], very low frequency [VLF], low frequency [LF], high frequency [HF], LF/HF ratio) were calculated across all sleep stages as well as during wakefulness just before and after sleep during a 1-night polysomnography. In patients with SRAH and OSA, LF was increased during rapid eye movement (REM) when compared with control patients, whereas HF was decreased during REM and N1-N2 sleep stages. The LF/HF ratio was equally increased in patients with SRAH and OSA during REM and N1-N2. Correlation analysis showed that LF and HF values during REM sleep were correlated with minimal SatO2 and mean SatO2.
CONCLUSIONS:
Patients with SRAH exhibited an abnormal cardiac tone during sleep. This fact appears to be related to the severity of nocturnal oxygen desaturation. Moreover, there were no differences between OSA and SRAH, supporting the hypothesis that autonomic changes in OSA are primarily related to a reduced nocturnal oxygen saturation, rather than a consequence of other factors such as nocturnal respiratory events.
Revista:
SLEEP MEDICINE
ISSN:
1389-9457
Año:
2013
Vol.:
14
N°:
2
Págs.:
217 - 219
Objectives
This is a video case report of a 58-year-old male patient with severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) who underwent a pharyngo-laryngoscopy during non-drug-induced sleep.
Methods
The pharyngo-laryngoscopy was performed transnasally during a 30-minute nap, in the afternoon, with a flexible endoscope in supine position. During the procedure, the patient was monitored with polysomnography.
Results
The patient slept for 20 minutes in supine position, reaching N2 sleep stage. During the sleep, 15 respiratory events (apneas or hypopneas) were recorded. The video-recording showed that, during apneas, the obstruction at the pharyngeal level was never complete, although the nasal sensor showed a total stop in the nasal airflow.
Conclusions
This case highlights that OSA could not be as obstructive as generally thought, at least during N2 sleep; moreover, it suggests that apneic episodes are not a totally passive and monomorphic phenomenon, but a rather complex event.
Revista:
SLEEP MEDICINE
ISSN:
1389-9457
Año:
2013
Vol.:
14
N°:
3
Págs.:
229-36
Sleep loss refers to sleep of shorter duration than the average baseline need of seven to eight hours per night. Sleep loss and sleep deprivation have severe effects on human health. In this article, we review the main aspects of sleep loss, taking into account its effects on the central nervous system. The neurocognitive and behavioral effects of sleep loss are well known. However, there is an increasing amount of research pointing to sleep deprivation as a risk factor for neurologic diseases, namely stroke, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, headache, epilepsy, pain, and somnambulism. Conversely, sleep loss has been reported to be a potential protective factor against Parkinson's disease. The pathophysiology involved in this relationship is multiple, comprising immune, neuroendocrine, autonomic, and vascular mechanisms. It is extremely important to identify the individuals at risk, since recognition and adequate treatment of their sleep problems may reduce the risk of certain neurologic disorders
Revista:
REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA
ISSN:
0210-0010
Año:
2012
Vol.:
54
N°:
9
Págs.:
575
Revista:
NEUROLOGIA
ISSN:
0213-4853
Año:
2012
Vol.:
27
N°:
1
Págs.:
16-21
Introduction: Brain death is generally accepted as a concept to indicate death. It was introduced about 40 years ago, and it was considered the ideal situation for donation of organs. Methods: During this time, however, there have been problems in the understanding of this concept both in the medical profession and in the general population. University students from medical and non-medical schools were tested for their understanding of this concept. Results: Our results show that less than one third of the non-medical students identified brain death as death. The data from the medical students changed as they progressed through their studies, but only 2/3 of the graduating medical class believed that brain death is death. Conclusion: Similar results have been seen in other universities around the world, and a renewed effort on the re-education of the concept of brain death may be worthwhile. Although we cannot extrapolate these results to the general population, the confusion is probably similar; hence an effort should be made to solve this problem. (C) 2010 Sociedad Espanola de Neurologia. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L. All rights reserved.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
ISSN:
1932-6203
Año:
2012
Vol.:
7
N°:
3
Págs.:
e33769
Introduction: Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The goal of this study was to demonstrate whether the use of CPAP produces significant changes in the heart rate or in the heart rate variability of patients with OSA in the first night of treatment and whether gender and obesity play a role in these differences. Methods: Single-center transversal study including patients with severe OSA corrected with CPAP. Only patients with total correction after CPAP were included. Patients underwent two sleep studies on consecutive nights: the first night a basal study, and the second with CPAP. We also analyzed the heart rate changes and their relationship with CPAP treatment, sleep stages, sex and body mass index. Twenty-minute segments of the ECG were selected from the sleep periods of REM, no-REM and awake. Heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) were studied by comparing the R-R interval in the different conditions. We also compared samples from the basal study and CPAP nights. Results: 39 patients (15 females, 24 males) were studied. The mean age was 50.67 years old, the mean AHI was 48.54, and mean body mass index was 33.41 kg/m(2) (31.83 males, 35.95 females). Our results showed that HRV (SDNN) decreased after the use of CPAP during the first night of treatment, especially in non-REM sleep. Gender and obesity did not have any influence on our results. Conclusions: These findings support that cardiac variability improves as an acute effect, independently of gender or weight, in the first night of CPAP use in severe OSA patients, supporting the idea of continuous use and emphasizing that noncompliance of CPAP treatment should be avoided even if it is just once.
Revista:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN:
0027-8424
Año:
2012
Vol.:
109
N°:
17
Págs.:
6473-8
The nature and scale of pre-Columbian land use and the consequences of the 1492 "Columbian Encounter" (CE) on Amazonia are among the more debated topics in New World archaeology and paleoecology. However, pre-Columbian human impact in Amazonian savannas remains poorly understood. Most paleoecological studies have been conducted in neotropical forest contexts. Of studies done in Amazonian savannas, none has the temporal resolution needed to detect changes induced by either climate or humans before and after A.D. 1492, and only a few closely integrate paleoecological and archaeological data. We report a high-resolution 2,150-y paleoecological record from a French Guianan coastal savanna that forces reconsideration of how pre-Columbian savanna peoples practiced raised-field agriculture and how the CE impacted these societies and environments. Our combined pollen, phytolith, and charcoal analyses reveal unexpectedly low levels of biomass burning associated with pre-A.D. 1492 savanna raised-field agriculture and a sharp increase in fires following the arrival of Europeans. We show that pre-Columbian raised-field farmers limited burning to improve agricultural production, contrasting with extensive use of fire in pre-Columbian tropical forest and Central American savanna environments, as well as in present-day savannas. The charcoal record indicates that extensive fires in the seasonally flooded savannas of French Guiana are a post-Columbian phenomenon, postdating the collapse.
Revista:
REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA
ISSN:
0210-0010
Año:
2012
Vol.:
55
N°:
4
Págs.:
253 - 254
Autores:
Grobman A; Bonavia D; Dillehay TD; et al.
Revista:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN:
0027-8424
Año:
2012
Vol.:
109
N°:
5
Págs.:
1755-9
Maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) is among the world's most important and ancient domesticated crops. Although the chronology of its domestication and initial dispersals out of Mexico into Central and South America has become more clear due to molecular and multiproxy archaeobotanical research, important problems remain. Among them is the paucity of information on maize's early morphological evolution and racial diversification brought about in part by the poor preservation of macrofossils dating to the pre-5000 calibrated years before the present period from obligate dispersal routes located in the tropical forest. We report newly discovered macrobotanical and microbotanical remains of maize that shed significant light on the chronology, land race evolution, and cultural contexts associated with the crop's early movements into South America and adaptation to new environments. The evidence comes from the coastal Peruvian sites of Paredones and Huaca Prieta, Peru; dates from the middle and late preceramic and early ceramic periods (between ca. 6700 and 3000 calibrated years before the present); and constitutes some of the earliest known cobs, husks, stalks, and tassels. The macrobotanical record indicates that a diversity of racial complexes characteristic of the Andean region emerged during the preceramic era. In addition, accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon determinations carried out directly on different structures of preserved maize plants strongly suggest that assays on bu
Revista:
MEDICINA CLINICA
ISSN:
0025-7753
Año:
2012
Vol.:
139
N°:
2
Págs.:
70-75
El control de la ingesta y del metabolismo energético depende de complejas interacciones entre los sistemas que regulan la homeostasis energética, el control hedonista de la ingesta y las señales que provienen de los sentidos. Gracias a estudios experimentales en animales y a la observación de pacientes con trastornos de la conducta alimentaria, se está avanzando significativamente en el conocimiento de la regulación del apetito. El hipotálamo es la región cerebral clave en el control de la alimentación. Las múltiples regiones hipotalámicas envían y reciben señales procedentes de la ínsula, la corteza orbitofrontal, el núcleo accumbens y el sistema de recompensa dopaminérgico, así como señales químicas, incluyendo péptidos y hormonas gastrointestinales, para regular la conducta alimentaria. Investigaciones recientes muestran la compleja interacción entre los mecanismos homeostáticos y hedonistas de la ingesta, compartiendo mecanismos neurobiológicos con las adicciones. La identificación de dianas terapéuticas hará posible el desarrollo de fármacos eficaces para el tratamiento de los trastornos de la conducta alimentaria, como la obesidad
Revista:
REVISTA DE NEUROLOGIA
ISSN:
0210-0010
Año:
2011
Vol.:
53
N°:
10
Págs.:
549-51
Aunque el número total de publicaciones y el incremento observado son inferiores en España respecto a Italia, Francia o Alemania, las publicaciones españolas en neurología clínica muestran buenos indicadores de tendencia en lo referido a publicaciones en inglés y en colaboración internacional. Esta mejoría se asocia a una mayor visibilidad, que se pone de manifiesto al analizar por quinquenios las citas recibidas por las publicaciones españolas.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
ISSN:
1932-6203
Año:
2011
Vol.:
6
N°:
7
Págs.:
e21814-
Revista:
SLEEP AND BREATHING
ISSN:
1520-9512
Año:
2011
Vol.:
15
N°:
2
Págs.:
229 - 235
Purpose: Catathrenia (nocturnal groaning) is a rare and relatively little-understood parasomnia. The characteristics of the sound and the recordings are not similar in all the relevant research papers. Indeed, there is currently some discussion regarding whether or not this is a single entity. For some authors, catathrenia is a particular form of parasomnia; for others, it may be a variant of snoring or a respiratory problem. The goal is to establish whether or not catathrenia may be regarded as an expiratory vocal sound. An attempt was made to classify the origin of this sound according to its sound structure. Methods: We present the sound analysis of two patients, a man and a woman, with clinically diagnosed catathrenia and we compared them with the analysis of snoring. We use the spectrogram and the oscillogram. We classified the sounds according to the Yanagihara criteria. Results: The vocal nature of the sound was confirmed, and several significant differences to some snoring sounds were discovered. The analysis of the catathrenia samples demonstrated that these signals are type II according to Yanagihara classification; these signals had a very short jitter, and had formants and harmonics. However, snoring is a type III, very irregular and had formants but not harmonics. Conclusions: The oscillogram and the spectrogram in these patients show that the origins of the sounds are clearly different: catathrenia is laryngeal, while snoring is guttural. Catathrenia cannot be considered as expiratory snoring.
Revista:
BRAIN RESEARCH
ISSN:
1872-6240
Año:
2010
Vol.:
1310
Págs.:
58 - 67
Revista:
THE JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
ISSN:
1529-2401
Año:
2010
Vol.:
30
N°:
19
Págs.:
6667 - 6677
Revista:
NEUROLOGÍA (BARCELONA. ED. IMPRESA)
ISSN:
0213-4853
Año:
2010
Vol.:
27
N°:
1
Págs.:
16-21
Similar results have been seen in other universities around the world, and a renewed effort on the re-education of the concept of brain death may be worthwhile. Although we cannot extrapolate these results to the general population, the confusion is probably similar; hence an effort should be made to solve this problem.
Autores:
Guerrero Mosquera, C.; A. Navia-Vázquez; Iriarte, Jorge; et al.
Revista:
MEDICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTING
ISSN:
0140-0118
Año:
2010
Vol.:
48
N°:
1
Págs.:
321-330
This paper describes a new method to identify seizures in electroencephalogram (EEG) signals using feature extraction in time-frequency distributions (TFDs). Particularly, the method extracts features from the Smoothed Pseudo Wigner-Ville distribution using tracks estimated from the McAulay-Quatieri sinusoidal model. The proposed features are the length, frequency, and energy of the principal track. We evaluate the proposed scheme using several datasets and we compute sensitivity, specificity, F-score, receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve, and percentile bootstrap confidence to conclude that the proposed scheme generalizes well and is a suitable approach for automatic seizure detection at a moderate cost, also opening the possibility of formulating new criteria to detect, classify or analyze abnormal EEGs.
Revista:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN:
0027-8424
Año:
2010
Vol.:
107
N°:
17
Págs.:
7823-8
The scale and nature of pre-Columbian human impacts in Amazonia are currently hotly debated. Whereas pre-Columbian people dramatically changed the distribution and abundance of species and habitats in some parts of Amazonia, their impact in other parts is less clear. Pioneer research asked whether their effects reached even further, changing how ecosystems function, but few in-depth studies have examined mechanisms underpinning the resilience of these modifications. Combining archeology, archeobotany, paleoecology, soil science, ecology, and aerial imagery, we show that pre-Columbian farmers of the Guianas coast constructed large raised-field complexes, growing on them crops including maize, manioc, and squash. Farmers created physical and biogeochemical heterogeneity in flat, marshy environments by constructing raised fields. When these fields were later abandoned, the mosaic of well-drained islands in the flooded matrix set in motion self-organizing processes driven by ecosystem engineers (ants, termites, earthworms, and woody plants) that occur preferentially on abandoned raised fields. Today, feedbacks generated by these ecosystem engineers maintain the human-initiated concentration of resources in these structures. Engineer organisms transport materials to abandoned raised fields and modify the structure and composition of their soils, reducing erodibility. The profound alteration of ecosystem functioning in these landscapes coconstructed by humans and nature has importa