PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Standard nursing assessments improve ability to predict survival in cirrhosis patients

May help improve outcomes

2015-04-08
(Press-News.org) BOSTON - Patients hospitalized with advanced cirrhosis, a chronic and degenerative disease of the liver, are at increased risk of death. The tools currently used to assess that risk are limited in predicting which patients will need a liver transplant and which will be healthy enough to survive transplantation. A new study from the Liver Center at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) suggests that standard assessments that nurses already use to care for patients can be mined for data that significantly improve the ability to predict survival following transplantation and may help improve patient outcomes.

The study appears online April 8 in the journal Hepatology.

"Liver specialists currently use blood tests to assess risk, and while these are powerful tools, they only capture a small portion of the patient's risk. There's a sense that there are things outside of those blood tests that are meaningful," says lead author Elliot Tapper, MD, Clinical Fellow in Gastroenterology and Hepatology at BIDMC and Harvard Medical School. "We hypothesized that frailty, or decreased functional reserve, may be one of those factors, and it turns out that our nurses have been calculating that frailty all along, and we just haven't noticed."

Tapper and his colleagues looked at data from 734 patients admitted a collective 1,348 times to BIDMC's liver unit between 2010 and 2013. They had access to the patients' MELD (model for end-stage liver disease) scores, an algorithm based on blood tests that is used for transplant planning. The higher the MELD score, the more likely the patient will die without a liver transplant.

The researchers also had access to data collected by nurses and used for general care of the patients but not specifically related to liver disease, including assessments used to determine a patient's risk for skin ulcers or whether the patient needs help transferring out of bed or getting to the bathroom.

"These data points help determine a patient's level of frailty and inform very important nursing activities, but until now no one has actually looked at whether those metrics speak to a patient's overall risk," says Tapper.

When the researchers combined traditional assessment tools like MELD with the data from the nurses' assessments, they were able to predict the 90-day mortality rate with 83 percent accuracy and the rate at which patients were discharged to a rehabilitation facility at 85 percent accuracy.

"This is a very significant improvement in our power to provide prognosis, be it 90-day survival, discharge to a rehabilitation hospital or length of stay in the hospital based on a simple inexpensive clinical tool that is readily available in all hospitals across the country," says senior author Michelle Lai, MD, MPH, a liver specialist in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at BIDMC and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

And that's where the hope comes in. In harnessing the information in the nursing assessments, they have landed on something that can be acted on.

"Many of the things identified in the nursing assessments are modifiable," says Tapper. "By intensifying their nutritional support, utilizing physical therapy, by identifying the patients who will benefit from rehabilitation, we may be able to improve their frailty and therefore their ability to survive, for example, the liver transplant or at least to stay healthier after discharge, at home and away from the hospital."

INFORMATION:

In addition to Tapper and Lai, study authors include Murray A. Mittleman, MD and Gail Piatkowski of BIDMC and Daniel Finkelstein, MD of Massachusetts General Hospital.

This research is supported by a grant from the Carl J. Shapiro Institute for Education and Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and support from Harvard Catalyst | The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center (National Center for Research Resources and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health Award UL1 TR001102) and financial contributions from Harvard University and its affiliated academic healthcare centers.

About Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC)

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center is a patient care, teaching and research affiliate of Harvard Medical School and consistently ranks as a national leader among independent hospitals in National Institutes of Health funding.

BIDMC is in the community with Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Milton, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Needham, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth, Anna Jaques Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, Lawrence General Hospital, Signature Healthcare, Beth Israel Deaconess HealthCare, Community Care Alliance and Atrius Health. BIDMC is also clinically affiliated with the Joslin Diabetes Center and Hebrew Senior Life and is a research partner of Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center and The Jackson Laboratory. BIDMC is the official hospital of the Boston Red Sox. For more information, visit http://www.bidmc.org.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study finds IVFpredict one of the most accurate ways of determining chances of IVF success

2015-04-08
Accurately predicting the probability of a live birth after in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment is important for both those undergoing the treatment and their clinicians. Findings from a comparison study that analysed the accuracy of the two most widely-used prediction models are published today [08 April] in the journal PLOS ONE. Researchers at the universities of Bristol and Glasgow compared how well the Templeton method and IVFpredict -- two personalised prediction tools that help couples calculate their chance of a successful birth with IVF treatment - worked ...

Game played in sync increases children's perceived similarity, closeness

2015-04-08
What helps children who have just met form a connection? A new study shows that a simple game played together in sync on a computer led 8-year-olds to report a greater sense of similarity and closeness immediately after the activity. Children who played the same game but not in a synchronous way did not report the same increase in connection. The findings, published April 8 by PLOS ONE, give an example of how a physical activity performed in unison helps children feel more positively toward each other and could perhaps increase their empathy. "Synchrony is like a ...

Ornaments shed light on human transition from hunter gatherer to farmer

2015-04-08
The first Northern European agriculturalists used the same ornamental beads for centuries after the introduction of farming, which may indicate their resistance to the spread of farming, according to a study published April 8, 2015 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Solange Rigaud from New York University and colleagues. Farming and herding were introduced 8000 years ago in Europe by populations from the Near East. Unfortunately, interactions, including cultural exchanges, between agricultural and indigenous foraging societies during this transition are poorly documented. ...

Worms and germs lead to better immune function

2015-04-08
DURHAM, N.C. - A growing body of evidence in the medical community holds that greater diversity of bacteria and even worms in the digestive tract offers protection against a variety of allergic and autoimmune problems. Germs from healthy people can be used to heal people with digestive disorders and other conditions caused by the loss of their own germs, and worms that live in the gut, called helminths, have shown success in quelling inflammatory diseases. With this in mind, researches at Duke Medicine hypothesized that enhancing biodiversity in laboratory rats, including ...

Allergy drug inhibits hepatitis C in mice

2015-04-08
An over-the-counter drug indicated to treat allergy symptoms limited hepatitis C virus activity in infected mice, according to a National Institutes of Health study. The results suggest that the drug, chlorcyclizine HCl (CCZ), potentially could be used to treat the virus in people. Results were published April 8 in Science Translational Medicine. The hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes liver inflammation and often leads to serious complications such as cirrhosis. Early diagnosis and treatment of HCV can prevent liver damage. Drugs are available to treat HCV, but costs can ...

Male offspring get the most benefit from pregnant mother's exercise

2015-04-08
Male offspring appear to benefit more than females from the positive effects of exercise during pregnancy, an animal study by UNSW medical researchers has found. The study in rats also found mothers who exercised moderately while pregnant reduced their offspring's body weight, insulin and blood glucose levels, potentially lessening their risk of developing metabolic disorders such type-2 diabetes later in life. The findings were published today in the journal PLOS ONE. The UNSW team led by Professor Margaret Morris, Head of Pharmacology from the School of Medical ...

Alternating antibiotics render resistant bacteria beatable

2015-04-08
Given the alarming rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and the long lead-in time for developing novel drugs, the discovery of new ways to use the antibiotics already available and approved for use in humans is paramount. It is generally believed that to eliminate a bacterial infection before the onset of drug resistance one must treat with large doses of antibiotics, but recent research has indicated that this type of treatment might actually be driving the emergence of drug-resistant pathogens. New research publishing April 8th in the Open Access journal PLOS Biology ...

Research shows alternating antibiotics could make resistant bacteria beatable

2015-04-08
Pioneering new research has unlocked a new technique to help combat the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, that cause debilitating and often life-threatening human illness. Researchers from the University of Exeter has shown that the use of 'sequential treatments' - using alternating doses of antibiotics - might offer effective treatment against bacterial infection. Crucially, the research also demonstrates this technique for administering treatment also reduces the risk of the bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics, and so maintaining the long-term effectiveness ...

Muscles matter in baseball injuries

Muscles matter in baseball injuries
2015-04-08
EVANSTON, Ill. --- A new approach to analyzing baseball-pitching biomechanics may one day give players more personalized feedback and help prevent elbow injuries. In a computer simulation study of baseball pitching, Northwestern University biomedical engineers found that the strength of the elbow muscles of a baseball pitcher likely play a bigger role in injury risk and prevention than previously thought. The motion analysis approach currently used in the baseball industry to provide athletes with injury-risk feedback is not sophisticated enough to estimate what an ...

Poor nutrition for honey bee larvae compromises pollination capabilities as adults

2015-04-08
WELLESLEY, Mass. - A new study by Heather Mattila, a leading honey bee ecologist and Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences at Wellesley College, published on April 8 in PLOS ONE, reveals that inadequate access to pollen during larval development has lifelong consequences for honey bees, leading not only to smaller workers and shorter lifespans, but also to impaired performance and productivity later in life. For the first time, this study demonstrates a crucial link between poor nutrition at a young age, and foraging and waggle dancing, the two most important activities ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Early adoption of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor in patients hospitalized with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction

New study finds atrial fibrillation common in newly diagnosed heart failure patients, and makes prognosis significantly worse

Chitnis receives funding for study of wearable ultrasound systems

Weisburd receives funding for safer stronger together initiative

Kaya advancing AI literacy

Wang studying effects of micronutrient supplementation

Quandela, the CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay and Université Paris Cité join forces to accelerate research and innovation in quantum photonics

Pulmonary vein isolation with optimized linear ablation vs pulmonary vein isolation alone for persistent AF

New study finds prognostic value of coronary calcium scores effective in predicting risk of heart attack and overall mortality in both women and men

New fossil reveals the evolution of flying reptiles

Redefining net zero will not stop global warming – scientists say

Prevalence of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome stages by social determinants of health

Tiny worm makes for big evolutionary discovery

Cause of the yo-yo effect deciphered

Suicide rates for young male cancer survivors triple in recent years

Achalasia and esophageal cancer: A case report and literature review

Authoritative review makes connections between electron density topology, future of materials modeling and how we understand mechanisms of phenomena in familiar devices at the atomistic level

Understanding neonatal infectious diseases in low- and middle-income countries: New insights from a 30-year study

This year’s dazzling aurora produced a spectacular display… of citizen science

New oral drug to calm abdominal pain

New framework champions equity in AI for health care

We finally know where black holes get their magnetic fields: Their parents

Multiple sclerosis drug may help with poor working memory

The MIT Press releases workshop report on the future of open access publishing and policy

Why substitute sugar with maple syrup?

New study investigates insecticide contamination in Minnesota’s water

The Einstein Foundation Berlin awards €500,000 prize to advance research quality

Mitochondrial encephalopathy caused by a new biallelic repeat expansion

Nanoplastics can impair the effect of antibiotics

Be humble: Pitt studies reveal how to increase perceived trustworthiness of scientists

[Press-News.org] Standard nursing assessments improve ability to predict survival in cirrhosis patients
May help improve outcomes