Archive for the ‘pharmacoepidemiological info’ Category

How to control emotions


2011
06.24

How to control emotionsItalian researchers are experimenting with one named “dream machine” which, if revealed effective, could be the solution for the 12 million Italians who have insomnia. The announcement of the test launch took place during the Congress of the European Society of Clinical Neurophysiology, at the Catholic University of Rome.

This is a portable device that emits electrical stimulation (low doses and painless) able to act on the frontal and parietal areas of the brain or those for the emotional control and the level of care.

The device tested by Italian researchers, consists of moving plates, able to move about the patient’s head, connected to a battery-powered stimulator.

The current sent to the brain plaques of low intensity “with various doses to test what we know in theory: we know the circuits involved in the process of numbness and know that these electric currents are capable of inhibit or excite neurons,” explained Paolo Maria Rossini, the experiment coordinator and professor of neurology at the Catholic University.

“Our experiment will evaluate both possibilities, inhibition and excitation and try to position the electrodes also on mastoid bone behind the ear.
In this position, you will create a flow of current through the brain stem, where are located the brain centers that regulate sleep, “he added.

About 20 young people between 22 and 28 years, agreed to undergo the study, which is weekly, consisting of a stimulation of 15-20 minutes. Then spend the night at the Sleep Laboratory of Psychophysiology of the University Sapienza, controlled by an electroencephalogram.

This stage of the test is conducted on healthy subjects and only then may proceed with the analysis of sleepless individuals.

Why Polycystic ovary syndrome is very dangerous for women


2010
10.08

Why Polycystic ovary syndrome is very dangerous for womenPolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a condition in which women have cysts on your ovaries, which are a kind of fluid-filled sacs.

These cysts because reproductive organs not work as expected and in turn, the entire reproductive system is disturbed, which is reflected in irregular menstruation, infertility, spontaneous abortions, among other things. Women with PCOS have ovaries 1.5 to 3 times larger than those of healthy women.

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a disorder that occurs in many women of childbearing age and is retained throughout life. This is a major cause of infertility, affecting 5 to 10% of the women in the world.

Women with PCOS often need fertility treatments to get pregnant, this is because their hormone levels are abnormal, not the insulin and glucose, which can interfere with the implantation of a fertilized egg as a baby’s development.

The elevated insulin causes the eggs are of good quality, which worsens the conception of a child. That is why fertility treatments in women with PCOS are based on hormonal levels stabilize and the prescribing of drugs to improve ovulation.

For a woman with PCOS to become pregnant is problematic, but in turn is not an impossible task, indeed, many females with the disorder found that their menstrual cycles become more regular after a pregnancy.

One thing to note is that although women with PCOS can get pregnant, their pregnancies are high risk because the rate of spontaneous abortions is extremely high. It is estimated that 45% of women with PCOS have abortions, which still do not know the specific cause of fires.

How the results of the Spanish Agency of Medicines Research and Health Products


2010
08.09

results of the Spanish Agency of Medicines Research and Health ProductsThe Database for pharmacoepidemiological Research in Primary Care (BIFAP) is a project of the Spanish Agency of Medicines and Health Products (AEMPS). It has the support of the autonomous regions and major scientific societies involved.

It is a computerized database of medical records of Primary Health Care for pharmacoepidemiological studies. Today anonym zed information is available over 3 million patients from medical staff to 1,236 (1,029 GPs and 207 pediatricians) in Spain. BIFAP is the largest and most detailed public information source for pharmacoepidemiological studies in Spain and one of the most important in Europe. BIFAP is called to be a benchmark for epidemiological research in our country in the coming years.

The pilot phase BIFAP Project was developed over the period 2000-2003. BIFAP Project formally began in 2003 and its first phase ended in 2006, achieving the following objectives:

- Creation of the Data Processing Centre (DPC) of BIFAP, which has involved provided human resources and materials, including high-capacity computer to be used to host the database.
- Develop an application – export module – for primary care programs whose structure is compatible with BIFAP.
- To obtain prior authorization from the agencies that constitutes the National Health System, the collaboration of a sufficient number of physicians and primary care pediatricians.
- Validate the information using other sources of information and original medical records.

In 2008, a team of researchers at the Navarre Health Service (SNS-O) BIFAP requested the possibility of a research project with the base. It was the first experience BIFAP collaboration with an independent team. BIFAP accepted the challenge and began to develop the project.

The SNS-O team consisted of three primary care pharmacists and a medical epidemiologist. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that the use of long-term bisphosphonates might increase the incidence of hip fractures and atypical fractures in women over 65 years. The protocol design was made by the independent team and then discussed with the team BIFAP two-face meetings to qualify some aspects of it and reach a final protocol. Was considered, a case-control study nested in the cohort BIFAP.

BIFAP then extracted 100 cases of hip fracture to proceed with the validation of a small sample as a pilot. Four researchers from the team and two BIFAP Navarre evaluated the 100 cases independently. The results of this pilot the BIFAP evaluated and held a conference call to discuss the data.

Having resolved the doubts and little disagreement about the definition of “case”, BIFAP proceeded to extract all the cases in the base between 2005 and 2008. Independent team, about, evaluated 3,200 cases.

Later BIFAP cases reassessed as a criterion for quality control.
Validation was provided to investigators by enabling independent team of access to the Internet through the stories contained in BIFAP. It is important to note that the evaluation was blind in two respects. First, in the stories was omitted any reference to the medication used by patients. This avoided the potential bias that researchers consider as “probable case” to “doubtful cases” or “no case” by the fact that the patient was treated with any of the medications under study. In addition, names were omitted, so that one could not identify the physicians involved in the process of each patient, hospitals and cities of residence of the patients. This is impossible for researchers to identify or reach to track patients.

Once the validation has extracted BIFAP controls matched for different variables. Then generated the variables of the study and data sheet (data sheet). BIFAP provided the “data sheet” to separate computer for statistical processing of information and interpretation of results.

As a summary of this first experience of cooperation, we can say that BIFAP is a breakthrough in the investigation pharmacoepidemiological in Spain. Provides information on medical records of proven quality ensures the quality of the process of extracting information, monitors the work of independent investigative team and ensures the blind researchers, ensure that the project is of sufficient quality.

On the other hand, freedom of approach to the research questions that provided the independent team makes it possible, in practice, those researchers in the public system to respond to the existing therapeutic shortcomings.

It is desirable that the NHS there be any further research team that worked with BIFAP pharmacoepidemiology and that in the near future; establish partnerships with national groups and international research.