Articles: injury.
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Boxing is a sport well-known for the risk of injury. However, the epidemiology of boxing-associated fractures has not been well studied. This study aims to report the characteristics of boxing fractures that lead to presentation to the emergency room and evaluate the demographics and practices of the patients to prevent these injuries. ⋯ Hand fractures were the most common type of BAF. Males had significantly more BAFs, although the incidence of BAFs in females increased significantly since 2013. Fractures mainly occurred in recreational places, but from 2020-2022, most occurred at home. This shift coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, suggesting increased home sparring. These findings emphasize the need for further research into protective measures and injury prevention in boxing.
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Multicenter Study
Paediatric falls: An analysis of patterns of injury and associated mortality in urban India.
Falls are some of the most common childhood injuries. However, for vulnerable children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) such as India, mortality from a fall is nearly three times that of high-income countries. Despite fall being a leading cause of paediatric injury, detailed data from LMICs remain sparse. This study aims to assess fall-related patterns of injury and mortality in children in urban India. ⋯ The majority of paediatric patients admitted to urban hospitals in India after a fall were between the ages of two-to-five years, with isolated TBI and male sex associated with greater mortality. These findings have the potential to aid age-specific fall prevention strategies and resource allocation towards targeted initiatives to improve access to care, and consequently, mortality from fall in urban India.
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Over the past 2 decades, the microbiome has received increasing attention for the role that it plays in health and disease. Historically, the gut microbiome was of particular interest to pain scientists studying nociplastic visceral pain conditions given the anatomical juxtaposition of these microorganisms and the neuroimmune networks that drive pain in such diseases. More recently, microbiomes both inside and across the surface of the body have been recognized for driving sensory symptoms in a broader set of diseases. ⋯ This review specifically details the animal species, injury models, behavior measures, and microbiome manipulations used in preclinical pain research. From this analysis, we were also able to conclude how manipulations of the microbiome alter pain thresholds in naïve animals and persistent pain intensity and duration in cutaneous and visceral pain models. This review summarizes by identifying existing gaps in the literature and providing recommendations for how to best plan, implement, and interpret data collected in preclinical microbiome pain experiments.
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Case Reports
A Speech Neuroprosthesis in the Frontal Lobe and Hippocampus: Decoding High-Frequency Activity into Phonemes.
Loss of speech due to injury or disease is devastating. Here, we report a novel speech neuroprosthesis that artificially articulates building blocks of speech based on high-frequency activity in brain areas never harnessed for a neuroprosthesis before: anterior cingulate and orbitofrontal cortices, and hippocampus. ⋯ This may open the way for a novel strategy of neuroprosthesis implantation at earlier disease stages (eg, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), while speech is intact, for improved training that still allows silent control at later stages. The results demonstrate clinical feasibility of direct decoding of high-frequency activity that includes spiking activity in the aforementioned areas for silent production of phonemes that may serve as a part of a neuroprosthesis for replacing lost speech control pathways.
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The "July Effect" hypothesizes increased morbidity and mortality after the addition of inexperienced physicians at the beginning of an academic year. However, the impact of newer members on neurosurgical teams managing patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) has yet to be examined. This study conducted a nationwide analysis to evaluate the existence of the "July Effect" in the setting of patients with TBI. ⋯ The findings suggested that there is no "July Effect" on patients with TBI treated at teaching hospitals in the United States.