60 research outputs found
Authors, authorship order, the moving finger writes
There has been a phenomenal increase in the number of research papers with multiple authors. Increasing academic pressures and halo around individuals with prolific publications have made many aspirants to claim authorship. Increasing number of authors has brought its own issues of author credits, disputes, rivalry, and a degree of unwelcome scramble for credit sharing. Many unresolved issues about authorship and various guidelines and admonitions are more often infringed than adhered to. The position of the first and last author seem to be well recognized in medical and dental journals, but the fate of middle authors is left to guessing and often of inconsequential importance. Most of these issues, as well as fraud, misconduct in medical research publications, have been discussed amply but too of no avail. It is comforting to know that except for small shouts and whispers, dental research has been relatively free from scams and frauds. The complacency, however, needs to be tempered with constant vigil against fraud, falsification and fabrication of research reports. Honest authorship, vigilant editors, robust peer review, and a discerning readership are the sine qua non for a good research paper. Academic institutions and selection committees should be concentrating on the quality of research papers and not enamored of their number
Tele-periodontics - Oral health care at a grass root level
A new concept of tele-periodontics, which merges the innovative technology of telecommunications and the field of periodontics, is proposed. This new field of tele-periodontics will have an infinite potential where access to a specialist will be provided at a grass root level, enhancing effective delivery of therapy and information to the rural and under privileged areas. It would allow the specialist and the patient to interact either by video conferencing (real time) or through supportive information (store and forward) over geographic distances. Different probabilities of tele-periodontics such as tele consultation, tele training, tele education and tele support are also discussed in this paper
Periodontal research: Basics and beyond - Part II (ethical issues, sampling, outcome measures and bias)
A good research beginning refers to formulating a well-defined research question, developing a hypothesis and choosing an appropriate study design. The first part of the review series has discussed these issues in depth and this paper intends to throw light on other issues pertaining to the implementation of research. These include the various ethical norms and standards in human experimentation, the eligibility criteria for the participants, sampling methods and sample size calculation, various outcome measures that need to be defined and the biases that can be introduced in research
What is the role of endotherapy in chronic pancreatitis?
Chronic pancreatitis (CP) can have debilitating clinical course due to chronic abdominal pain, malnutrition and related complications. Medical, endoscopic and surgical treatment of CP should aim at control of symptoms, prevention of progression of the disease and correction of complications. Endoscopic management plays a specific role in carefully selected patients as primary interventional therapy when medical measures fail or in high-risk surgical candidates. Endotherapy for CP is utilized also as a bridge to surgery or to assess potential response to pancreatic surgery. In this review we address the role of endotherapy for the relief of obstruction of the pancreatic duct (PD) and bile duct, closure of PD leaks and drainage of pseudocysts in the setting of CP. In addition, endotherapy for relief of pancreatic pain by endoscopic ultrasound-guided celiac plexus block for CP is discussed
Efficacy of modified minimally invasive surgical technique in the treatment of human intrabony defects with or without use of rhPDGF-BB gel - a randomized controlled trial
Impact of Accelerated Antimicrobial Testing on Clinical Outcomes in Critically Ill Septicaemia Patients: A Prospective Observational Study form a Tertiary Care Centre in Andhra Pradesh, India
Introduction: Bloodstream infection is a major cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Timely reporting of blood culture results is of utmost importance for better patient outcomes. The recently introduced Rapid Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (RAST) method is poised to profoundly influence clinical outcomes.
Aim: To compare the results of RAST with Standard Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (SAST) and evaluate the impact of RAST reporting on the clinical management of septicaemia patients.
Materials and Methods: This prospective, observational study was conducted in the Department of Microbiology, Government Medical College, Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh, India from May 2021 to September 2022. All positive blood culture bottles with only a single morphotype in gram staining were further processed using the RAST method, followed by conventional identification and SAST. Categorical agreement and disagreement between the RAST and SAST results were compared, along with the difference in the time at which results were available.
Results: Out of a total of 1,146 blood cultures received, 228 were flagged as positive. A total of 514 isolate and antimicrobial agent combinations were evaluated, of which 496 (96.5%) showed categorical agreement. Only 18 (3.5%) showed categorical disagreement, with the majority being Major Errors (ME) (1.56%), followed by Very Major Errors (VME) (0.97%) and minor Errors (mE) (0.97%).
Conclusion: RAST results demonstrated strong concurrence with SAST results. RAST is affordable, fast, and flexible and can potentially lead to a considerably shortened time for AST results to reach the bedside of the patient. This enables rapid modifications and adjustments in antibiotic therapy, including both escalation and de-escalation
Novel and often bizarre strategies in the treatment of periodontal disease
Treatment of periodontal disease involves complex mechanical, surgical, and medical modalities. Some of the treatment regimens are patient centered, some involve a great amount of technical expertise and competence from a practitioner, and often involve complex procedures like use of tissue-engineered products. In spite of several advances, treatment of periodontal disease depends on scaling and root planing and various surgical procedures as the mainstay, but results of treatment are not always predictable and are often frustrating. The ultimate aim of periodontal treatment is regeneration of periodontal tissues and more particularly lost alveolar bone support. The treatment options include a myriad of approaches and scientists and researchers have tried various tools and agents to improve alveolar bone status and improve periodontal health. These approaches vary from simple monotherapy with systemic antibiotic usage to exotic and novel procedures like shock wave therapy, photodynamic therapy and application
Orofacial Myiasis of the Gingiva and Nasal Cavity: A Report of Two Cases and General Review
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