Journal/Magazine Articles

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This collection contains original research articles, review articles and case reports published in local and international peer reviewed journals by the staff members of the Faculty of Medicine

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Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
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    Duplication errors due to brand name confusion; It is not always the name-Short case series
    (John Wiley & Sons, 2023) Mamunuwa, N.; Jayamanne, S.; Wijekoon, N.; Coombes, J.; Perera, D.; Shanika, T.; Mohamed, F.; Lynch, C.; de Silva, A.; Dawson, A.
    Confusion of drug names has been identified as a leading cause of medication errors and potential iatrogenic harm. Most of these errors occur because of look-alike or sound-alike drugs. This case series gives examples of duplication errors due to brand confusion, where there are no similarities in the names.
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    Ward-based clinical pharmacists and hospital readmission: a non-randomized controlled trial in Sri Lanka
    (2018) Shanika, L.G.T.; Jayamanne, S.; Wijekoon, C.N.; Coombes, J.; Perera, D.; Mohamed, F.; Coombes, I.; de Silva, H.A.; Dawson, A.H.
    OBJECTIVE: To assess if a ward-based clinical pharmacy service resolving drug-related problems improved medication appropriateness at discharge and prevented drug-related hospital readmissions. METHOD: Between March and September 2013, we recruited patients with noncommunicable diseases in a Sri Lankan tertiary-care hospital, for a non-randomized controlled clinical trial. The intervention group received usual care and clinical pharmacy service. The intervention pharmacist made prospective medication reviews, identified drug-related problems and discussed recommendations with the health-care team and patients. At discharge, the patients received oral and written medication information. The control group received usual care. We used the medication appropriateness index to assess appropriateness of prescribing at discharge. During a six-month follow-up period, a pharmacist interviewed patients to identify drug-related hospital readmissions. RESULTS: Data from 361 patients in the intervention group and 354 patients in the control group were available for analysis. Resolutions of drug-related problems were higher in the intervention group than in the control group (57.6%; 592/1027, versus 13.2%; 161/1217; P < 0.001) and the medication was more appropriate in the intervention group. Mean score of medication appropriateness index per patient was 1.25 versus 4.3 in the control group (P < 0.001). Patients in the intervention group were less likely to be readmitted due to drug-related problems (44 patients of 311 versus 93 of 311 in the control group; P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: A ward-based clinical pharmacy service improved appropriate prescribing, reduced drug-related problems and readmissions for patients with noncommunicable diseases. Implementation of such a service could improve health care in Sri Lanka and similar settings.
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    Mechanism-specific injury biomarkers predict nephrotoxicity early following glyphosate surfactant herbicide (GPSH) poisoning
    (Elsevier, 2016) Mohamed, F.; Endre, Z.H.; Pickering, J.W.; Jayamanne, S.; Palangasinghe, C.; Shahmy, S.; Chathuranga, U.; Wijerathne, T.; Shihana, F.; Gawarammana, I.; Buckley, N.A.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common following glyphosate surfactant herbicide (GPSH) self-poisoning. Serum creatinine (sCr) is the most widely used renal biomarker for diagnosis of AKI although a recent study in rats suggested that urinary kidney injury molecule-1 predicted AKI earlier and better after GPSH-induced nephrotoxicity. We explored the utility of a panel of biomarkers to diagnose GPSH-induced nephrotoxicity in humans. In a prospective multi-centre observational study, serial urine and blood samples were collected until discharge and at follow-up. The diagnostic performance of each biomarker at various time points was assessed. AKI was diagnosed using the Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) definitions. The added value of each biomarker to sCr to diagnose AKI was assessed by the integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) metric. Of 90 symptomatic patients, 51% developed AKI and 5 patients who developed AKIN ≥ 2 died. Increased sCr at 8 and 16 hours predicted moderate to severe AKI and death. None of the 10 urinary biomarkers tested increased above normal range in patients who did not develop AKI or had mild AKI (AKIN1); most of these patients also had only minor clinical toxicity. Absolute concentrations of serum and urinary cystatin C, urinary interleukin-18 (IL-18), Cytochrome C (CytoC) and NGAL increased many fold within 8 hours in patients who developed AKIN ≥ 2. Maximum 8 and 16 hour concentrations of these biomarkers showed an excellent diagnostic performance (AUC-ROC ≥0.8) to diagnose AKIN ≥ 2. However, of these biomarkers only uCytoC added value to sCr to diagnose AKI when assessed by IDI metrics. GPSH-induced nephrotoxicity can be diagnosed within 24 hours by sCr. Increases in uCytoC and uIL-18 confirm GPSH-induces apoptosis and causes mitochondrial toxicity. Use of these biomarkers may help to identify mechanism specific targeted therapies for GPSH nephrotoxicity in clinical trials.
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    Kidney damage biomarkers detect acute kidney injury but only functional markers predict mortality after paraquat ingestion
    (Amsterdam, Elsevier/North Holland, 2015) Mohamed, F.; Buckley, N.A.; Jayamanne, S.; Pickering, J.W.; Peake, P.; Palangasinghe, C.; Wijerathna, T.; Ratnayake, I.; Shihana, F.; Endre, Z.H.
    Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common following paraquat ingestion. The diagnostic performance of injury biomarkers was investigated in serial blood and urine samples from patients from 5 Sri Lankan hospitals. Functional AKI was diagnosed using serum creatinine (sCr) or serum cystatin C (sCysC). The 95th centile in healthy subjects defined the urinary biomarker cutoffs for diagnosing structural AKI. 50 poisoned patients provided 2 or more specimens, 76% developed functional AKI [AKIN stage 1 (n=12), 2 (n=7) or 3 (n=19)]; 19/26 patients with AKIN stage 2/3 also had functional AKI by sCysC criteria (≥50% increase). Urinary cystatin C (uCysC), clusterin (uClu) and NGAL (uNGAL) increased within 24h of ingestion compared with NoAKI patients and healthy controls. Each biomarker demonstrated moderate diagnostic utility [AUC-ROC: uCysC 0.79, uNGAL 0.79, uClu 0.68] for diagnosis of functional AKI at 16h. Death occurred only in subjects with functional AKI. Structural biomarker-based definitions detected more AKI than did sCr or sCysC, but did not independently predict death. Renal injury biomarkers did not add clinical value to patients who died rapidly due to multi-organ failure. Use of injury biomarkers within 16-24h may guide early intervention for reno-protection in less severe paraquat poisoning.
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    Community-based cluster randomised trial of safe storage to reduce pesticide self-poisoning in rural Sri Lanka: study protocol
    (BioMed Central, 2011) Pearson, M.; Konradsen, F.; Gunnell, D.; Dawson, A.H.; Pieris, R.; Weerasinghe, M.; Knipe, D.W.; Jayamanne, S.; Metcalfe, C.; Hawton, K.; Wickremasinghe, A.R.; Atapattu, W.; Bandara, P.; de Silva, D.; Ranasinghe, A.; Mohamed, F.; Buckley, N.A.; Gawarammana, I.; Eddleston, M.A.
    BACKGROUND: The WHO recognises pesticide poisoning to be the single most important means of suicide globally. Pesticide self-poisoning is a major public health and clinical problem in rural Asia, where it has led to case fatality ratios 20-30 times higher than self-poisoning in the developed world. One approach to reducing access to pesticides is for households to store pesticides in lockable "safe-storage" containers. However, before this approach can be promoted, evidence is required on its effectiveness and safety. METHODS/DESIGN: A community-based cluster randomised controlled trial has been set up in 44,000 households in the North Central Province, Sri Lanka. A census is being performed, collecting baseline demographic data, socio-economic status, pesticide usage, self-harm and alcohol. Participating villages are then randomised and eligible households in the intervention arm given a lockable safe storage container for agrochemicals. The primary outcome will be incidence of pesticide self-poisoning over three years amongst individuals aged 14 years and over. 217,944 person years of follow-up are required in each arm to detect a 33% reduction in pesticide self-poisoning with 80% power at the 5% significance level. Secondary outcomes will include the incidence of all pesticide poisoning and total self-harm. DISCUSSION: This paper describes a large effectiveness study of a community intervention to reduce the burden of intentional poisoning in rural Sri Lanka. The study builds on a strong partnership between provincial health services, local and international researchers, and local communities. We discuss issues in relation to randomisation and contamination, engaging control villages, the intervention, and strategies to improve adherence.
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    The Prevalence of previous self-harm amongst self-poisoning patients in Sri Lanka
    (Springer International, 2011) Mohamed, F.; Perera, A.; Wijayaweera, K.; Kularatne, K.; Jayamanne, S.; Eddleston, M.; Dawson, A.; Konradsen, F.; Gunnell, D.
    BACKGROUND: One of the most important components of suicide prevention strategies is to target people who repeat self-harm as they are a high risk group. However, there is some evidence that the incidence of repeat self-harm is lower in Asia than in the West. The objective of this study was to investigate the prevalence of previous self-harm among a consecutive series of self-harm patients presenting to hospitals in rural Sri Lanka. METHOD: Six hundred and ninety-eight self-poisoning patients presenting to medical wards at two hospitals in Sri Lanka were interviewed about their previous episodes of self-harm. RESULTS: Sixty-one (8.7%, 95% CI 6.7-11%) patients reported at least one previous episode of self-harm [37 (10.7%) male, 24 (6.8%) female]; only 19 (2.7%, 95% CI 1.6-4.2%) patients had made more than one previous attempt. CONCLUSION: The low prevalence of previous self-harm is consistent with previous Asian research and is considerably lower than that seen in the West. Explanations for these low levels of repeat self-harm require investigation. Our data indicate that a focus on the aftercare of those who attempt suicide in Sri Lanka may have a smaller impact on suicide incidence than may be possible in the West.
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    Acute human self-poisoning with bispyribac-containing herbicide Nominee: a prospective observational study
    (Informa Healthcare, 2010) Gawarammana, I.B.; Roberts, D.M.; Mohamed, F.; Roberts, M.S.; Medley, G.; Jayamanne, S.; Dawson, A.
    INTRODUCTION: Self-poisoning with herbicides is an important reason for hospital admission and death in Asia. Although some herbicides have a well-described toxicity profile in humans, many of the newer compounds rely on extrapolation from animal results as no published literature on clinical outcomes of human self-poisoning has been described. One example of these compounds is bispyribac, a selective herbicide used in rice and wheat cultivation that is marketed in two containers, one containing bispyribac 400 g/L with a solvent and the other the surfactant, polyethylene glycol. We present the first case series of acute human self-poisoning with an herbicide product containing bispyribac. METHODS: Clinical data for all patients who presented with acute poisoning from a bispyribac-containing herbicide (Nominee) to two general hospitals in Sri Lanka from June 2002 to January 2009 were collected prospectively. Admission and serial blood samples were collected from consenting patients to confirm exposure and to study the toxicokinetics of bispyribac, respectively. RESULTS: One hundred ten patients with a history of bispyribac ingestion presented after a median time of 4 h post-ingestion. There were three deaths at 15, 6, and 5 h post-ingestion because of asystolic cardiac arrest. All three patients had reduced Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) (3, 12, and 13, respectively) of whom the former two had co-ingested ethanol and developed tonic-clonic seizures. Admission blood sample was obtained from the former two of these patients but bispyribac was detected in only one of these patients. The other patient presented 2.5 h post-ingestion with a GCS of 12 but bispyribac was not detected. Excluding the patient with undetectable bispyribac, a conservative estimate of the case fatality ratio at 1.81% (95% confidence interval 0.32-5.8) can be made. The majority of the remaining patients had self-limiting upper gastrointestinal symptoms and eight patients had an abnormal GCS on presentation to hospital. The overall median hospital stay was 3 days. Bispyribac was not detectable on admission in 21 patients; in the remaining patients, the median plasma concentration was 50.55 microg/mL (interquartile range 1.28-116.5; n=32). The peak concentration was noted around 3 h post-ingestion and plasma bispyribac concentration did not predict the severity of poisoning. CONCLUSION: The majority of patients developed self-resolving symptoms and were successfully managed in rural general hospitals without transfer to larger tertiary hospitals. Patients who died developed significant poisoning within 6 h and plasma bispyribac concentrations did not appear to predict mortality. The lack of correlation between bispyribac outcomes and the available plasma concentrations may be because of exposure to nonbispyribac components or other undefined factors. Clinical outcomes from acute self-poisoning with bispyribac-containing herbicides appear to be relatively more favorable than other commonly used herbicides.