our results demonstrate for the first time the complexity of the dissecting process on a molecular level. The ultimate dissection seems to be the dramatic endpoint of a long-lasting process of degradation and insufficient remodelling of the aortic wall. Altered patterns of gene expression suggest a pre-existing structural failure of the aortic wall, resulting in dissection.
These data show that patients without apparent infection or inflammation, who had elevated CRP-values preoperatively, face an increased risk of septic complications after extracorporeal circulation. As microbiology tests are negative in most cases, it may be speculated that the majority of septic complications are due to a SIRS.
Although secondary data analyses have been established in recent years in health research, explicit recommendations for standardized, transparent and complete reporting of secondary data analyses do not exist as yet. Therefore, between 2009 and 2014, a first proposal for a specific reporting standard for secondary data analysis was developed (STROSA 1). Parallel to this national process in Germany, an international reporting standard for routine data analysis was initiated in 2013 (RECORD). Nevertheless, because of the specific characteristics of the German health care system as well as specific data protection requirements, the need for a specific German reporting standard for secondary data analyses became evident. Therefore, STROSA was revised and tested by a task force of 15 experts from the working group Collection and Use of Secondary Data (AGENS) of the German Society for Social Medicine and Prevention (DGSMP) and the German Society for Epidemiology (DGEpi) as well as from the working group Validation and Linkage of Secondary Data of the German Network for Health Services Research (DNVF). The consensus STROSA-2 checklist includes 27 criteria, which should be met in the reporting of secondary data analysis from Germany. The criteria have been illustrated and clarified with specific explanations and examples of good practice. The STROSA reporting standard aims at stimulating a wider scientific discussion on the practicability and completeness of the checklist. After further discussions and possibly resulting modifications, STROSA shall be implemented as a reporting standard for secondary data analyses from Germany. This will guarantee standardized and complete information on secondary data analyses enabling assessment of their internal and external validity.
BackgroundClose, continuous and efficient collaboration between different professions and sectors of care is necessary to provide patient-centered care for individuals with mental disorders. The lack of structured collaboration between in- and outpatient care constitutes a limitation of the German health care system. Since 2012, a new law in Germany (§64b Social code book (SGB) V) has enabled the establishment of cross-sectoral and patient-centered treatment models in psychiatry. Such model projects follow a capitation budget, i.e. a total per patient budget of inpatient and outpatient care in psychiatric clinics. Providers are able to choose the treatment form and adapt the treatment to the needs of the patients. The present study (EVA64) will investigate the effectiveness, costs and efficiency of almost all model projects established in Germany between 2013 and 2016.Methods/designA health insurance data-based controlled cohort study is used. Data from up to 89 statutory health insurance (SHI) funds, i.e. 79% of all SHI funds in Germany (May 2017), on inpatient and outpatient care, pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical treatments and sick leave for a period of 7 years will be analyzed. All patients insured by any of the participating SHI funds and treated in one of the model hospitals for any of 16 pre-defined mental disorders will be compared with patients in routine care. Sick leave (primary outcome), utilization of inpatient care (primary outcome), utilization of outpatient care, continuity of contacts in (psychiatric) care, physician and hospital hopping, re-admission rate, comorbidity, mortality, disease progression, and guideline adherence will be analyzed. Cost and effectivity of model and routine care will be estimated using cost-effectiveness analyses. Up to 10 control hospitals for each of the 18 model hospitals will be selected according to a pre-defined algorithm.DiscussionThe evaluation of complex interventions is an important main task of health services research and constitutes the basis of evidence-guided advancement in health care. The study will yield important new evidence to guide the future provision of routine care for mentally ill patients in Germany and possibly beyond.Trial registrationThis study was registered in the database “Health Services Research Germany” (trial number: VVfD_EVA64_15_003713).
T cells are considered to play a major indirect role in the pathogenesis of xenograft vascular rejection, by promoting the induction of anti-donor antibodies that trigger complement-and antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity. However, how vigorous the T cell xenoresponse is in vivo, and whether, besides their helper function, T cells are capable of directly affecting the graft is still unclear. We have previously shown that cyclosporine A (CsA) withdrawal in accommodated cardiac xenograft recipient allows for a rapid and dense T-cell infiltration, concomitant to an acute graft rejection. In this paper we further characterize the role of T cells in this rejection process and we demonstrate that adoptive transfer of CD4 π T cells in irradiated recipients of long-term cardiac xenografts is sufficient to trigger acute rejection, in the absence of any detectable induced anti-hamster antibody response. Therefore, our data suggest that unusually strong T-cell response will be another major barrier to xenotransplantation, even if antibody-mediated vascular rejection is controlled.
We study a model for induction hardening of steel. The related differential system consists of a time domain vector potential formulation of the Maxwell's equations coupled with an internal energy balance and an ODE for the volume fraction of austenite, the high temperature phase in steel. We first solve the initial boundary value problem associated by means of a Schauder fixed point argument coupled with suitable a-priori estimates and regularity results. Moreover, we prove a stability estimate entailing, in particular, uniqueness of solutions for our Cauchy problem. We conclude with some finite element simulations for the coupled system.
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