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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Corrected Percentile Curves to Track Myopisation-The Anyang Childhood Eye Study

Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2026 May;46(2):355-365. doi: 10.1007/s44402-026-00038-y. Epub 2026 Mar 2.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Many reports in the literature have proposed the use of percentile curves for tracking ocular growth and monitoring myopic development. Recently, this practice has been criticised, particularly its inability to accurately track myopia onset and progression due to the inclusion of multiple refractive groups. This work assesses the validity of this criticism and proposes corrected curves tailored to specific refractive development trajectories.

METHODS: The longitudinal biometric data of 1999 Chinese schoolchildren (10,766 measurements) in the Anyang Childhood Eye Study were analysed. Children were categorised into emmetropic and myopic subgroups based on the progression of their cycloplegic spherical equivalent (SE) refractive error. Percentile curves were generated for the axial length (AL), axial growth (dAL), axial length/corneal radius (AL/CR) ratio and cycloplegic SE using the Lambda-Mu-Sigma (LMS) method, stratified by sex and refractive group.

RESULTS: Distinct percentile curves for emmetropic and myopising eyes revealed significant differences compared with traditional population-based curves, confirming that whole-population curves underestimate myopia risk and overestimate treatment effects. Girls demonstrated greater myopic progression and axial elongation than boys. SE percentile curves, stratified by age of myopia onset, were presented to estimate progression trajectories.

CONCLUSION: This study presents percentile curves for ocular biometry and refractive error to enhance the ability to detect early myopic changes and monitor myopia control interventions. Recommendations include using SE curves based on cycloplegic refraction as the primary reference, developing sex- and region-specific models and avoiding reliance on AL alone.

PMID:42313375 | DOI:10.1007/s44402-026-00038-y

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Psychometric Validation of a Short-Form Spanish Low Vision Quality of Life Questionnaire (SF-SLVQOL) Using Rasch Analysis: From 25 to 6 Items

Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2026 May;46(2):252-260. doi: 10.1007/s44402-026-00033-3. Epub 2026 Feb 27.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Spanish Low Vision Quality of Life Questionnaire (SLVQOL) assesses vision-related quality of life effectively but requires significant administration time. This study aimed to develop and validate a psychometrically robust short-form version (SF-SLVQOL) using Rasch analysis to reduce respondent burden while maintaining measurement precision in Spanish-speaking populations with visual impairment.

METHODS: Data from the original SLVQOL validation study (n = 365; 170 visually impaired, 195 controls) were reanalysed using Partial Credit Model analysis in WINSTEPS. Items were systematically reduced through iterative removal based on point-biserial correlations (< 0.4) and misfit statistics (infit/outfit outside 0.7-1.3). The resulting SF-SLVQOL was evaluated for structural validity (unidimensionality, local independence, monotonicity), internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha), criterion validity (correlation with original SLVQOL), construct validity (convergent validity with NEI VFQ-25, known-groups validity across ICD-11 visual impairment categories), differential item functioning by gender and test-retest reliability.

RESULTS: The 6-item SF-SLVQOL demonstrated excellent unidimensionality (essential unidimensionality = 93.6%, variance explained = 79.3%), optimal internal consistency (α = 1.00) and high criterion validity (r = 0.95 with original SLVQOL). Convergent validity with the NEI VFQ-25 was confirmed (r = 0.69). The known-groups analysis showed significant discrimination between visual impairment levels (H = 132.67, p < 0.001). Person reliability (0.91) indicated the ability to distinguish 4.3 performance levels. Test-retest reliability was acceptable (ICC = 0.753; 95% CI: 0.569-0.864) with a repeatability limit of 4.89 points.

CONCLUSION: The SF-SLVQOL successfully reduces administration time by 76% while maintaining robust psychometric properties, offering clinicians and researchers an efficient tool for assessing vision-related quality of life in Spanish-speaking populations.

PMID:42313373 | DOI:10.1007/s44402-026-00033-3

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Evidence Map of Cochrane Reviews on Nutrition and Physical Activity in Healthy and At-Risk Populations: A Scoping Review

J Prev (2022). 2026 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s10935-026-00924-8. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Cochrane reviews provide high-quality evidence syntheses. To guide the production and dissemination of new Cochrane reviews, an evidence map based on the characteristics of existing reviews is necessary. This study is a scoping review that aimed to create an evidence map of Cochrane reviews on nutrition and physical activity (PA) in healthy and at-risk populations, describe stakeholder involvement in review production and assess the dissemination of these reviews. This scoping review follows a registered protocol and adheres to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA ScR) guideline. Eligible studies were Cochrane reviews on nutrition and PA for healthy and at-risk populations that were identified in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews through to 22 January 2026 and selected independently by two researchers from 2043 search hits. Extracted data included bibliographic, population, and intervention or concept characteristics, information on stakeholder involvement in review production and open-access Altmetric data on the online and scientific attention towards Cochrane reviews. Data were processed into meaningful categories and synthesised using descriptive statistics. The included Cochrane reviews (n = 260) were published between 1999 and 2026. Review focus was on nutrition (n = 193, 74%), PA (n = 39, 15%), and nutrition + PA (n = 28, 11%). Most reviews included any populations by age and sex (n = 52, 20%) or specific populations by age (adults: n = 62, 24%; children: n = 54, 21%; and child-caregiver dyads: n = 50, 19%). The interventions or concepts were predominantly non-digital (n = 230, 88%), included mainly nutrition components (e.g. supplementation: n = 104, 40%; diet: n = 68, 26%), and were conducted in any unspecified settings (e.g. community, population; n = 226, 87%). The outcomes were mainly disease-related (e.g. disease prevention and risk factor reduction; n = 129, 50%) and reproductive (e.g. maternal and child health promotion; n = 56, 22%). There were less or no reviews with the following characteristics: (1) populations of older adults and males, (2) interventions or concepts with digital modality and with components targeting PA promotion, behaviour change, and other factors (e.g. policy), (3) specific settings (e.g. vulnerable, organisational), (4) outcomes targeting general health promotion and psychosocial (e.g. behavioural, cognitive, and mental) functioning. Involvement of various stakeholders (e.g. consumers, clinicians, and advisory boards) was reported in the production of 32% of Cochrane reviews. Online attention was highest for reviews with nutrition components (i.e. supplementation and diet) while scientific attention was highest for reviews with mixed components (i.e. PA and supplementation). New Cochrane reviews on nutrition and PA need to target specific populations (especially older adults and males) and settings, assess digital interventions or concepts, and focus on components and outcomes targeting physical and mental health promotion. Stakeholder involvement in review production and online and scientific attention could be further promoted to potentially improve review uptake in practice.

PMID:42313345 | DOI:10.1007/s10935-026-00924-8

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Correlation between tissue temperature and ablation interval time under ultra-high-power short-duration ablation: Ex vivo porcine model

J Interv Card Electrophysiol. 2026 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s10840-026-02361-3. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Esophageal injury following radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation is closely associated with esophageal temperature. Studies suggest that discontinuous ablation may prevent excessive esophageal temperature rise; however, the temperature characteristics of discontinuous ablation strategy during ultra-high-power short-duration ablation remain unexplored.

METHODS: Fresh porcine cardiac tissue was used. A 15-mm deep vertical hole was drilled from the endocardial surface, and a temperature probe was inserted. The QDOT catheter (Biosense Webster) was positioned at the endocardial site of probe insertion, and the lesion was created using a 90 W, 4-s ablation strategy. After a predefined interval, a second lesion was created.Based on the inter-lesion time interval, samples were divided into four groups: 10 s (group 1), 20 s (group 2), 40 s (group 3), and 60 s (group 4). Temperature was recorded every 10 s.

RESULTS: Temperature curves in groups 1 and 2 exhibited a unimodal pattern, whereas groups 3 and 4 showed a bimodal pattern. Mean peak temperatures differed among groups: group 1, 39.1 °C (38.6-39.5 °C); group 2, 38.4 °C (38.0-38.7 °C); group 3, peak 38.0 °C (37.5-38.2 °C) with a sub-peak of 37.3 °C (37.1-37.5 °C); group 4, peak 37.8 °C (37.5-38.0 °C) with a sub-peak of 37.3 °C (36.9-37.6 °C). Peak temperatures differed significantly among groups (P < 0.0001). Analysis of repeated temperature measurements revealed a statistically significant between-groups effect (F = 7.2, P < 0.002). Using < 38.5 °C as a safety threshold for peak temperature, 8 cases (73.3%) in group 1 exceeded the threshold, 4 cases (27%) in group 2 reached the threshold, whereas neither group 3 nor group 4 exceeded it.

CONCLUSION: Tissue temperature demonstrates significant delayed and cumulative effects during ultra-high-power short-duration ablation. In our ex vivo model, longer inter-lesion intervals were associated with a more gradual temperature rise.

PMID:42313340 | DOI:10.1007/s10840-026-02361-3

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Distribution of mrk genes among uopathogenic Klebsiella pneumoniae

J Appl Genet. 2026 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s13353-026-01079-2. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

The mrk operon gene clusters encode type 3 fimbriae, involving in biofilm formation. Hence, we aimed to find out the distribution of mrk genes among uropathogenic Klebsiella pneumoniae (UPKP) strains. Moreover, mrk genes, hypermucoviscosity (HMV) characteristic and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) patterns and profiles were successfully, provided. From August 2023 to January 2024, 104 positive urine samples were collected. Standard microbiological and biochemical tests were employed to confirm the UPKP strains. Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion method was recruited to conduct antimicrobial susceptibility test (AST). The HMV characteristic in UPKP isolates was assessed using the string test. Finally, multiplex polymerase chain reaction (mPCR) was used to identify mrk genes distribution. Chi-square (χ2) and Fisher’s exact tests were utilized for statistical analysis. The mrk gene distribution varied among the UPKP isolates comprising mrkA (1.92%), mrkB (0.00%), mrkC (5.77%), mrkD (23.08%), mrkE (37.50%), and mrkF (83.65%). No mrk genes were detected among 13.46% (14/104) of UPKP isolates. The most common mrk gene patterns involved mrkF (32.70%), mrkE-mrkF (25.00%), and mrkD-mrkF (11.54%). In addition, the isolates exhibited diverse AMR profiles and phenotypes including: 65 multi-drug resistant (MDR) strains (nine groups, 42 patterns), 13 extensively drug-resistant (XDR) strains (nine patterns), nine pan drug-resistant (PDR) strains, 23 ESBL producers, and nine HMV isolates. None of the HMV strains displayed XDR, PDR, or ESBL phenotypes, suggesting limited horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Detailed analysis of mrk genes and AMR characteristics in UPKP, provides essential information for selecting effective prevention protocols and treatments for urinary tract infections (UTIs) and combating AMR.

PMID:42313334 | DOI:10.1007/s13353-026-01079-2

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Neuroaxis involvement in Chikungunya virus infection: a retrospective case series

Wien Med Wochenschr. 2026 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s10354-026-01165-4. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an arthropod-borne virus belonging to the genus Alphavirus; it has been increasingly linked to neurological complications. This study aimed to highlight the neurological manifestations of chikungunya virus infection.

METHODS: This retrospective case series was conducted at the Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan. Adult patients (aged 18 years and above) with typical arboviral prodrome (fever, arthralgias, myalgias) who tested positive for chikungunya IgM antibodies in serum and demonstrated new-onset neurological symptoms were included in the study. The sample size consisted of 18 patients. Descriptive statistics were used to demonstrate demographics and the clinical, radiological, and electrodiagnostic details of participants. Patients with neuro-chikungunya were trichotomized based on the extent of neuroaxis involvement into those with central nervous system (CNS) involvement, those with CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement, and those with isolated PNS involvement.

RESULTS: This study found heterogenous nervous system involvement in chikungunya virus infection, including the brain, spinal cord, nerve roots, and peripheral nerves in variable combinations. The majority of patients in this cohort had CNS involvement (55%). Patients with widespread neuroaxis involvement tended to have a complicated hospital course leading to intensive care unit admission and even mortality.

CONCLUSION: The widespread neurological involvement seen in this study potentially points towards the possibility that chikungunya virus may affect the entire neuroaxis. Studies focusing on long-term sequelae are needed to ascertain the prognosis of neuro-chikungunya.

PMID:42313329 | DOI:10.1007/s10354-026-01165-4

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Under-recognized, under-referred: a multidisciplinary evaluation of fragility fracture management in the emergency setting

Arch Osteoporos. 2026 Jun 18;21(1):93. doi: 10.1007/s11657-026-01684-y.

ABSTRACT

Fragility fractures are frequently under-recognized in emergency departments. A survey of 34 professionals revealed inconsistent assessment of key risk factors. Relevant gaps emerged between awareness and routine practice across professional roles. These findings highlight opportunities to improve recognition, documentation, and secondary prevention in ED settings.

PURPOSE: Fragility fractures are often under-recognized in the emergency setting, where the absence of standardized procedures leads to missed opportunities for diagnosis and secondary prevention. This project aimed to explore current emergency department (ED) practices regarding the identification and management of fragility fractures.

METHODS: A qualitative, cross-sectional survey was conducted among 34 healthcare professionals (10 emergency physicians, 11 radiologists, and 13 emergency nurses) from various Italian regions. The questionnaire, developed by a multidisciplinary expert panel, investigated propensities and self-reported practices related to fracture assessment, risk factor identification, and diagnosis of fragility fracture. All responses were grouped by role and represented graphically. Findings were then discussed during an expert meeting with the same panel.

RESULTS: Survey data revealed a generally high level of self-reported awareness of fragility risk factors among ED professionals but inconsistent implementation of the necessary diagnostic workup in daily practice. Important indicators, such as prior fractures, history of falls, family history of hip fracture, and use of risky medications, were often under-assessed. The term “fragility fracture” at discharge from the ED was rarely used, and role-based discrepancies emerged in risk assessment practices.

CONCLUSION: This survey highlights relevant gaps between awareness and clinical practice in the identification of fragility fractures in the emergency setting. Improving consistency in risk assessment and documentation may represent a key step toward optimizing secondary prevention and standardizing fragility fracture management in EDs.

PMID:42313315 | DOI:10.1007/s11657-026-01684-y

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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Validation of self‑harm prediction models among formerly incarcerated individuals using health data

Health Justice. 2026 Jun 18. doi: 10.1186/s40352-026-00425-0. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Individuals released from jail die by self‑harm at nearly nine times the rate of the general U.S.

POPULATION: Most jails rely on traditional screening methods, such as brief self-report questionnaires, which are often inconsistently administered and have limited sensitivity and predictive accuracy. This highlights the urgent need for alternative self-harm risk identification methods during and after incarceration.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility of applying an existing self-harm risk prediction model to jail populations.

METHODS: We analyzed data from 4,154 individuals incarcerated in Michigan jails who were enrolled in Medicaid. We applied a prediction model, originally developed by the Mental Health Research Network (MHRN), to identify individuals at elevated risk for self-harm. Predictors included demographics, mental health and substance use diagnoses, medical comorbidities, prior history of self-harm, mental health-related hospitalizations, and dispensing of psychotropic medications.

RESULTS: The study cohort was predominantly male (70%) and racially diverse (50% Black, 43% White), with a median jail stay of just one day. Overall, the model demonstrated good discrimination, achieving a C-statistic of 0.77, with 68% sensitivity and 77% specificity, and a 99% negative predictive value. Notably, among individuals with shorter jail stays, predictive performance was better, with the C-statistic increasing to 0.80.

CONCLUSIONS: Health records-based models demonstrated good predictive performance and may offer a scalable, data-driven alternative to traditional screening tools in jails. Integrating health records-based risk prediction tools in jails could improve early detection of self-harm risk and support more targeted prevention efforts.

PMID:42313308 | DOI:10.1186/s40352-026-00425-0

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Dynamical Behavior and Control Optimization of a Zoonotic Epidemic Model Incorporating Temperature Effects: Analysis and Simulations

Bull Math Biol. 2026 Jun 18;88(7):120. doi: 10.1007/s11538-026-01681-9.

ABSTRACT

The transmission of numerous zoonotic diseases hinges on the tripartite interactions among humans, animals and the environment. The One Health paradigm underscores the inextricable interconnection between human health, animal health and ecosystem health. This study innovatively develops a multi-host zoonotic disease transmission model incorporating both pathogen compartment and temperature effects. Through rigorous mathematical analysis, we prove the non-negativity and boundedness of solutions and systematically investigate the existence conditions and global asymptotic stability characteristics of equilibrium points. For intervention strategies, we establish an optimal control framework, demonstrating not only the existence of optimal solutions but also deriving explicit analytical expressions. Numerical simulations validate the model’s dynamic characteristics and enable quantitative evaluation of different interventions. Empirical analysis using China’s brucellosis surveillance data reveal: there is a potential correlation between temperature changes and the cases number and the model achieves a goodness-of-fit of 0.98 for cumulative cases, strongly validating its reliability; temperature influence quantification showed each 10 C increase in mean annual temperature reduced peak incidence by 3888 cases (17.91%) and 20-year cumulative cases by 49556 (20.37%). Multi-strategy comparative studies identified pharmaceutical intervention with 40% enhanced treatment efficacy as the optimal strategy, providing scientific evidence for zoonotic disease control.

PMID:42313298 | DOI:10.1007/s11538-026-01681-9

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Spatial variability and environmental controls of trace elements (Co, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Zn) in topsoils of Cao Bang Province, Northern Vietnam

Environ Monit Assess. 2026 Jun 18;198(7):738. doi: 10.1007/s10661-026-15588-4.

ABSTRACT

Understanding the distribution and controlling factors of trace elements in topsoils is essential for evaluating soil quality and potential environmental risks. This study investigated the concentrations, spatial distribution, enrichment characteristics, and environmental controls of trace elements (Co, Cu, Mo, Ni, and Zn) in surface soils of Cao Bang Province, northern Vietnam. Trace element concentrations were determined using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) following acid digestion of soil samples. The concentrations ranged from below detection limit (BDL) to 278.11 mg kg-1 for Co, 0.26-269.32 mg kg-1 for Cu, BDL-15.12 mg kg-1 for Mo, BDL-482.58 mg kg-1 for Ni, and 0.02-947.05 mg kg-1 for Zn. Spatial interpolation revealed considerable variability across the study area, although most soils exhibited low to moderate concentrations. Enrichment factor (EF) values were generally below 3, indicating minimal to moderate enrichment and suggesting that these elements mainly originate from natural lithogenic sources. Principal component analysis showed strong associations among Co, Cu, Ni, and Zn, whereas Mo displayed a distinct behavior due to its sensitivity to oxidation reduction conditions and soil pH, which differs from the other transition metals. Statistical analyses indicated that topography and parent materials had no significant influence (p > 0.05) on trace element concentrations, while elevation showed a weak but significant effect on Ni (p = 0.049). Overall, the distribution of trace elements in Cao Bang topsoils is largely controlled by natural geochemical processes and long-term weathering, with limited evidence of significant anthropogenic contamination. These results provide important baseline information for topsoil environmental assessment and future monitoring in northern Vietnam.

PMID:42313280 | DOI:10.1007/s10661-026-15588-4