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Medical imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI), electronic health records, clinical trials, ECG/EEG, pathology
13,078 datasets
An observational cohort study analyzed 302 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) to predict delayed hydrocephalus. The research developed a clinical nomogram using serial serum calcium measurements and admission variables, achieving an AUC of 0.898 in external validation. It was authored by Di Wu and published in 2026.
302 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage were monitored for 90 days, with 24.2% developing delayed hydrocephalus. Serial serum calcium measurements at admission, 72 hours, and 7 days post-ictus were analyzed to develop and validate a predictive nomogram. The 72-hour calcium level showed the highest predictive accuracy with an AUC of 0.854.
A clinical study of 302 spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) patients monitored for 90 days, where 24.2% developed delayed hydrocephalus. It analyzes serial serum calcium measurements at admission, 72 hours, and 7 days post-ictus to predict hydrocephalus risk, with a 72-hour calcium cutoff of ≤7.65 mg/dL achieving an AUC of 0.854. The research developed and validated an admission-based nomogram incorporating variables like hypertension and Hunt-Hess grade for early risk stratification.
A clinical study analyzed 302 patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage to predict delayed hydrocephalus. It developed a nomogram using serial serum calcium measurements and admission variables, validated across two hospitals. The model demonstrated strong predictive accuracy with an AUC of 0.898 in external validation.
An observational cohort of 302 spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage patients monitored for 90 days, with serial serum calcium measurements at admission, 72 hours, and 7 days post-ictus. The data was used to develop and validate a clinical nomogram for predicting delayed hydrocephalus, which occurred in 24.2% of patients.
Delayed transfers of care from hospital, per 100,000 population, using a definition introduced in 2017/18. This indicator has been discontinued. The dataset is provided by the Government Digital Service under an Open Government Licence.
EU open data on Potential Years of Life Lost (PYLL) from causes amenable to healthcare, standardized per 100,000 population. The dataset was published by the Government Digital Service under an Open Government Licence. This indicator has been discontinued.
Admitted to hospital episodes with alcohol-related conditions (Narrow): Persons, all ages (per 100,000 population) is a dataset from the Government Digital Service via the eu_open_data platform. The dataset is provided in CSV format under the UK Open Government Licence. This indicator has been discontinued.
Hospital admissions data for dental caries in children aged 1 to 4 years, with records up to 2016. The dataset was published by the Government Digital Service under an Open Government Licence. This indicator has been discontinued.
European Union open data on hospital episodes where alcohol was a factor, measured per 100,000 population for all ages. The dataset is provided by the Government Digital Service under an Open Government Licence. The indicator has been discontinued, meaning it is no longer actively updated.
Records of gifts and hospitality received by ministers over a 45-month period from January 2020 to September 2023. The dataset is provided by the Government Digital Service and is published under the UK Open Government Licence.
Delayed transfers of care from hospital, measured per 100,000 population using a definition introduced in 2017/18, presented as a year-to-date average. The dataset is provided by the Government Digital Service under the UK's Open Government Licence. This indicator has been discontinued.
Gifts and hospitality records for the Northern Ireland Civil Service Permanent Secretary for a three-month period in 2020. The dataset was published by the Government Digital Service under the UK Open Government Licence. It likely contains details of accepted or offered items, their value, and the involved parties.
Government Digital Service provides a record of gifts and hospitality received by the Northern Ireland Civil Service (NICS) Permanent Secretary. The dataset covers the three-month period from April to June 2019. It is published under the UK Open Government Licence.
Hospital inpatient discharges from every hospital in New York State, aggregated by patient county of residence. The Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS) provides this data, which is de-identified to preserve confidentiality. Data is available from 2009 onward, with a last update recorded for March 2026.
Supplementary material for a multicenter cross-sectional study assesses the psychological impact of frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA) on men. The dataset likely contains survey results from 81 male participants, including responses from the Hair Specific Skindex-29, Women's AGA Quality of Life Questionnaire, and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Analysis focuses on correlations between clinical features and quality-of-life metrics.
A dataset on hysterectomy procedures performed via transluminal endoscopic surgery from vaginal natural orifices under regional anesthesia. The data is provided in an XLSX file sized 10.3 KB and was last updated on May 3, 2026. It was authored by Yusuf Ziya Kızıldemır and is shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Monthly state sales tax revenue data for medical and retail marijuana, broken down by Colorado county. The dataset tracks multiple tax categories and fund distributions, sourced from data.colorado.gov and last updated in April 2026. Some county-level data is marked as not reported.
Office of the Auditor General of Canada travel, hospitality, and conference expenditures for the fiscal year ended 31 March 2025. The report is published under the OGL-CA-2.0 license on the open_canada platform, with some information withheld under the Access to Information Act or the Privacy Act.
Olga Diana Ramos-Morro's systematic review synthesizes evidence from 10 clinical studies published between 2016 and 2024. The review compares conventional and digital dental impression techniques, focusing on accuracy, chairside time, and patient comfort.