• Title/Summary/Keyword: Colics

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Face Feature Extraction for Child Ocular Inspection and Diagnosis of Colics by Crying Analysis (소아 망진을 위한 얼굴 특징 추출 및 영아 산통 진단을 위한 울음소리 분석)

  • Cho Dong-Uk;Kim Bong-Hyun
    • The KIPS Transactions:PartB
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    • v.13B no.2 s.105
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    • pp.97-104
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    • 2006
  • There is no method to control for the child efficiently when disease happens who cannot be able to express his symptoms. Therefore, doctor's diagnosis depends on inquiring from child's patients, that leads to wrong diagnosis result. For this, in this paper, we would like to develop child ocular inspection, auscultation diagnosis instruments, using Oriental medicine principle that living body signal of five organs and six hallow organs which reflects patients face and voice We would like to get more accurate diagnosis result for child's symptoms from doctor's intuition on the basis of diagnostic sight visualization, objectification, quantization itself. This paper develops color revision, YCbCr application, and face color selection and five sensory organs and nose or apex extraction method etc, in child ocular inspection by first work achievement sequence among the whole development systems. Also, in occasion of child auscultation, crying characteristics of colics through pitch, intensity and formant analysis is numerized and objectifies doctor's intuition through this. Finally, experiments are performed to verify the effectiveness of the proposed methods.

Prognostic factors and predictive models in hot gallbladder surgery: A prospective observational study in a high-volume center

  • Giovanni Domenico Tebala;Amanda Shabana;Mahul Patel;Benjamin Samra;Alan Chetwynd;Mickaela Nixon;Siddhee Pradhan;Bara'a Elhag;Gabriel Mok;Alexandra Mighiu;Diandra Antunes;Zoe Slack;Roberto Cirocchi;Giles Bond-Smith
    • Annals of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.203-213
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    • 2024
  • Backgrounds/Aims: The standard treatment for acute cholecystitis, biliary pancreatitis and intractable biliary colics ("hot gallbladder") is emergency laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). This paper aims to identify the prognostic factors and create statistical models to predict the outcomes of emergency LC for "hot gallbladder." Methods: A prospective observational cohort study was conducted on 466 patients having an emergency LC in 17 months. Primary endpoint was "suboptimal treatment," defined as the use of escape strategies due to the impossibility to complete the LC. Secondary endpoints were postoperative morbidity and length of postoperative stay. Results: About 10% of patients had a "suboptimal treatment" predicted by age and low albumin. Postop morbidity was 17.2%, predicted by age, admission day, and male sex. Postoperative length of stay was correlated to age, low albumin, and delayed surgery. Conclusions: Several predictive prognostic factors were found to be related to poor emergency LC outcomes. These can be useful in the decision-making process and to inform patients of risks and benefits of an emergency vs. delayed LC for hot gallbladder.