11 September 2011

Free Access to some Wiley Journals



Free Access to some Wiley Journals
Several Wiley-Blackwell journals offer free access to their backfiles on Wiley Online Library. All content prior to a given date is made free online to all.

JOURNAL TITLE        FREE ACCESS CONTENT AVAILABLE TO ALL USERS
Academic Emergency Medicine: Content older than 12 months back to Jan 1st 1997
Acta Crystallographica Section E (Electronic): Full Open Access
Acta Ophthalmologica: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Aging Cell: Content older than 2 years
Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics: Content older than 18 months back to Jan 1st 1997
Allergy: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
American Anthropologist: Content older than 35 years
American Journal of Hematology: Content older than 1 year back to 1996
American Journal of Transplantation: Content older than 1 year
Annals of Human Genetics: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Anthropology News: Content older than 35 years
Archives of Drug Information: Full Open Access
Australian Journal of Entomology: Content older than 1998
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education: Content older than 2 years back to 2002
BJU International: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology: Content older than 1 year
Cancer: Content older than 1 year back to Vol 1, 1948 (Vol 81, 1997 for Cancer Cyotpathology)
Cancer Cytopathology: Content older than 12 months
Cancer Science: Content older than 2 years
Cardiovascular Therapeutics: Open Access after 1 year
Cellular Microbiology: Content older than 2 years
Clinical & Experimental Immunology: Content older than 1 year
Clinical and Experimental Optometry: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Clinical Microbiology and Infection: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry: Content older than 1 year back to Vol 18, 1994 (started as section in 1994)
Development Growth & Differentiation: Content older than 2000
Developmental Dynamics: Content older than 1 year back to 1992
Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
ENT Today: Open Access Journal
Epilepsia: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
Ethos: Content older than 35 years
Experimental Physiology: Content older than 1 year
FEBS Journal: Content older than 1 year
Fems Yeast Research: Content older than 2 years
Functional Ecology: Content older than 2 years
Genes To Cells: Content older than 6 months
Genes, Brain and Behavior: Content older than 2 years
Geographical Analysis: All Content prior to 2001
Health Information & Libraries Journal: Content older than 3 years
Hepatology: Content older than 1 year back to 1996
Hereditas (Electronic): Full Open Access
HIV Medicine: Content older than 2 years
Immunology: Content older than 1 year
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases: Content older than 1 year back to 1995
IUBMB Life: Content older than 12 months
Journal of Anatomy: Content older than 2 years
Journal of Animal Ecology: Content older than 2 years
Journal of Applied Ecology: Content older than 2 years
Journal of Applied Microbiology: Content older than 3 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Journal of Ecology: Content older than 2 years
Journal of Evolutionary Biology: Content older than 2 years
Journal of Family Therapy: Content older than 2000 back to 1979
Journal of General Internal Medicine: Content older than 12 months
Journal of Internal Medicine: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Journal of Neurochemistry: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
Journal of Sleep Research: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis: Content older than 1 year
Journal of Travel Medicine: Content older than 1 year
Letters In Applied Microbiology: Content older than 3 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Liver Transplantation: Content older than 1 year back to Vol 1, 1995
Molecular Microbiology: Content older than 18 months back to Jan 1st 1997
New Phytologist: Content older than 1 year
Palaeontology: Content older than 7 years
Parasite Immunology: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
Plant Cell & Environment: Content older than 3 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Plant Pathology: Content older than 3 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Protein Science: Content older than 12 months
Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences: Content older than 2 years back to Jan 1st 1997
Scandinavian Journal of Immunology: Content older than 1 year back to Jan 1st 1997
Sociology of Health & Illness: Content older than 4 years
Stem Cells: Content older than 12 months back to Jan 1st 1996
Swiss Political Science Review: Content older than 3 years not including the current year volume
The Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology: Content older than 1 year back to 1996
The Developing Economies: Content older than 2005
The Journal of Physiology: Content older than 1 year
The Obstetrician & Gynaecologist: Content older than 2 years
The Plant Journal: Content older than 1 year
Traffic: Content older than 6 months
Tropical Medicine & International Health: Content older than 1 year
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynaecology: Content older than 12 months
Value In Health: Content older than 12 months

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01 September 2011

Female Genital Cutting



Female Genital Cutting
By:Safa Magid

Female Genital Cutting(FGC)
* Also known as: female circumcision & female genital mutilation
* Female circumcision is the term preferred by cultures who practice this custom

FGC -Definition
* Procedure involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs whether for cultural, religious, or other non-therapeutic reasons.

WHO Classification of FGC
* Type 1: Excision of prepuce w/ or w/o excision of all of the clitoris
* Type 2: Clitoridectomy and partial or total excision of labia minora
* Type 3: Infibulation, includes removing all or part of ext. genitalia and re-approximation of remnant labia majora, leaving a small interoitus for passage of urine and menstrual blood

* Type 1 and Type 2 are the most common forms
* Type 1 and Type 2 account for 80% of the cases
* Infibulation accounts for 15% of the cases

FGC
* Currently ~ 130 million women and girls have had the procedure
* An estimated 2 million girls worldwide are at risk per year

FGC in the US

* Data from 2000 census suggests:
228,000 women and girls are with or at risk for FGC in the United States
* CA, NY, and MD have the most female immigrants and refugees from countries where FGC is prevalent.
* Occurs mostly in 28 sub-Saharan African countries
* FGC is practiced by Christians, Muslims, and adherents to traditional African religions
* Also practiced in Middle East and Asia

Origins and History
* Origins remain unclear
* FGC practiced in Pre-Islamic Arabia, ancient Rome, and Tsarist Russia
* Female circumcision was discovered in ancient Egyptian mummies in 200 B.C.
* Practiced in the United States until the 1970’s to tx hysteria, lesbianism, and erotomania

FGC and Religion
* Christianity:
FGC is not an obligatory religious requirement
* Islam:
FGC is not an obligatory religious requirement

FGC-Procedure
* Performed between the ages of 5-10, or prior to marriage
* Performed by a member of community who is not a healthcare worker
* Often performed w/o anesthesia
* However in metropolitan areas the use of anesthesia is more common

FGC Procedure
* Performed w/o surgical instruments. Razor blades or other instruments which may or may not be sterile are used
* Depending on socio-economic factors FGC may also be performed in a health care facility by qualified health personnel
* WHO is opposed to medicalization of all types of female genital mutilation.
* Reasons currently practiced:
o Rite of passage to womanhood
o Maintains chastity
o Ensure marriageablity
o Belief that it improves hygiene
o Social pressure to adhere to custom
o Belief that it is a religious requirement

Complications
* Prevalence of complications is unknown
* Rate of complications increase with severity of procedure( i.e. women with type III have > complications that women w/type I)
* A study of 120 Somalian women suggests rate of complications are inversely proportional to the age of the child when FGC was performed
* Women who had FGC btwn the ages of 5-8, had more complications than their 9-12 y.o counterparts
* Long and short term complications
* Some women with FGC do not experience complications

Short term complications
* Hemorrhage
* Severe pain
* Shock
* Infection
* Urine retention
* Ulceration of genital region injury to adjacent tissue
* HIV?-Possibly transmitted due to use of unsterilized equipment

Long Term Complications
* Cysts and abscesses
* Post-partum fistulaes: vesico-vaginal
* Keloid scar formation
* Damage to the urethra resulting in urinary incontinence
* Dyspareunia and sexual dysfunction
* Infertility
* Difficulties with labor.

Case Report

* 16 y.o female presents w/severe dysmenorrhea
* PE revealed the absence of a clitoris and fused labia majora with a 1cm opening
* Physicians initially thought pt had corrective surgery for ambiguous genitalia
* Later determined that while visiting Africa with her mother she had FGC performed
* Perinealography revealed:
o Filling of the vagina,urethra, and bladder simulating a urogenital sinus.
o Dilated vagina suggested obstruction
Perinealography

Case Report
* Defibulation procedure was performed
* The patients symptoms of dysmenorrhea eventually resolved

FGC and Obstetric outcomes
* WHO Study

FGC & Length of maternal hospital stay
* FGC and length of maternal hospital stay
o FGC Type I- RR: 1.15
o FGC Type II-RR:1.51
o FGC Type III-RR:1.98

FGC and Mental Health
* Anxiety
* Depression
* PTSD
* Feeling of incompleteness

Defibulation
* Corrective procedure
* Involves division of the fused labia majora with suturing of each labia for hemostasis
* Thus the infibulated scar, which is a flap obstructing the introitus and urethra, is removed
* WHO Indications for defibulation:
* Urinary retention
* Recurrent UTI’s or kidney infections
* Dysmenorrhea
* Dyspareunia or apareunia
* Prior to coitus
* Prior to labor
* It is also reasonable that defibulation can be performed to alleviate any mental health consequences for women who do not meet the WHO indications

Approach to patients with FGC
* Some physicians remain unfamiliar w/FGC & have expressed their shock during PE
* Some women report being reprimanded by physicians for having the procedure done
* Despite the fact the majority had FGC while they were children and were not given a choice

Patients perspective of FGC
* Many pts w/FGC who have immigrated to the West do not feel as if they abused
* Some feel that FGC was done “for them” and not an attack against them

Patients perspective of FGC
* 1st generation pts born in the West who had FGC while traveling abroad often have very different views than their foreign born counterparts
* HC workers may need to modify their approach depending on the pts perspective

Legality of FGC
* U. S. passed a law in March 1997:
* Made performing any medically unnecessary surgery on the genitalia of a girl younger than 18 years of age a federal crime.
* Reinfibulation was not included as a federal crime, so it may be performed with absorbable sutures in a running fashion if a woman chooses the procedure


Resources for pts and HC providers
* African’s Women’s Health Center
o Established in 1999 by Dr. Nawal Nour a Sudanese-American OB/GYN
o Goal of clinic is to provide culturally appropriate holistic care to African women who are refugees who may or may not have undergone FGC
o Defibulation is performed at this clinic

Resources for pts and HC providers
* WHO
* Website with information about FGC
* Includes fact sheet about FGC and guidelines for healthcare workers
* http://www.who.int/topics/female_genital_mutilation/en/
* http://www.who.int/reproductive-health/publications/rhr_01_18_fgm_policy_guidelines/index.html

Dedicated to all of my sisters who have had FGC.
To those who have suffered physical or mental consequences, I am inspired by your courage and strength.

References
Female Genital Cutting.ppt

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Maple syrup urine disease Presentations



Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is a metabolism disorder passed down through families in which the body cannot break down certain parts of proteins. Urine in persons with this condition can smell like maple syrup.

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is caused by a gene defect. Persons with this condition cannot break down the amino acids leucine, isoleucine, and valine. This leads to a buildup of these chemicals in the blood.

In the most severe form, MSUD can damage the brain during times of physical stress (such as infection, fever, or not eating for a long time).

Some types of MSUD are mild or come and go. Even in the mildest form, repeated periods of physical stress can cause mental retardation and high levels of leucine.

Metabolism
by Eric Niederhoffer
http://www.siumed.edu/~eniederhoffer/som_pbl/SSB/powerpoint/metabolism%20in%20muscle_nerves.ppt

Newborn Screening in Washington
by Cristine M Trahms, MS, RD, FADA
http://courses.washington.edu/nutr526/lectures/NBS_05.ppt

Clinical Chemistry Amino Acids & Proteins
by Keri Brophy-Martinez
http://www.austincc.edu/mlt/chem/proteins_overview_2011_STUDENT.ppt

Urinalysis
http://www.austincc.edu/mlt/ua/uaUrinalyisisReview.ppt

Infant Nutrition: Conditions & Interventions
http://www.cwu.edu/~bergmane/nutr545/Powerpoint/Infant%20Nutrition(ch9%20brown).ppt

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