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Dive into the research topics where Christian F. Camm is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian F. Camm.


International Journal of Surgery | 2013

Does playing video games improve laparoscopic skills

Yanwen Ou; Emma Rose McGlone; Christian F. Camm; Omar Khan

A best evidence topic in surgery was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was whether playing video games improves surgical performance in laparoscopic procedures. Altogether 142 papers were found using the reported search, of which seven represented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The details of the papers were tabulated including relevant outcomes and study weaknesses. We conclude that medical students and experienced laparoscopic surgeons with ongoing video game experience have superior laparoscopic skills for simulated tasks in terms of time to completion, improved efficiency and fewer errors when compared to non-gaming counterparts. There is some evidence that this may be due to better psycho-motor skills in gamers, however further research would be useful to demonstrate whether there is a direct transfer of skills from laparoscopic simulators to the operating table.


Heart Rhythm | 2013

Malignant arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy with a normal 12-lead electrocardiogram: a rare but underrecognized clinical entity.

Anneline S.J.M. te Riele; Cynthia A. James; Aditya Bhonsale; Judith A. Groeneweg; Christian F. Camm; Brittney Murray; Crystal Tichnell; Jeroen F. van der Heijden; Dennis Dooijes; Daniel P. Judge; Richard N.W. Hauer; Harikrishna Tandri; Hugh Calkins

BACKGROUND In Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C), a normal electrocardiogram (ECG) is considered reassuring. However, some patients with ARVD/C experiencing ventricular arrhythmias have a normal ECG. OBJECTIVES To estimate how often patients with ARVD/C experiencing ventricular arrhythmias have a normal ECG during sinus rhythm, and to provide a clinical profile of these patients. METHODS We included 145 patients with ARVD/C experiencing a documented sustained ventricular arrhythmia. Conventional 12-lead sinus rhythm ECGs within 6 months of the event were reviewed for diagnostic Task Force Criteria (TFC). ECGs were classified as abnormal (≥1 TFC), nonspecific (abnormal, no TFC), or normal. Cardiologic investigations within 6 months of the event were evaluated as per TFC in those with a nonspecific or normal ECG. RESULTS The ECG was nonspecific or normal in 17 of 145 (12%) subjects. Mean age of these patients was 41.3 ± 12.4 years and 14 (82%) were men, comparable to those with an abnormal ECG. Most patients with a nonspecific or normal ECG showed ≥1 TFC on Holter monitoring (n = 9 of 10) and signal-averaged ECG (n = 4 of 5), and all had nonsustained ventricular tachycardia recorded. Among 15 patients who underwent structural evaluation, 11 (73%) showed structural TFC (9 major and 2 minor). CONCLUSIONS Although most patients with ARVD/C experiencing arrhythmias have an abnormal ECG, a nonspecific or normal ECG does not preclude ARVD/C diagnosis. All patients with a nonspecific or normal ECG had alternative evidence of disease expression. These results alert the physician not to rely exclusively on ECG in ARVD/C, but to assess arrhythmic risk by comprehensive clinical evaluation.


Clinical Cardiology | 2013

A Quality Assessment of Cardiac Auscultation Material on YouTube

Christian F. Camm; Nicholas Sunderland; A. John Camm

YouTube is a highly utilized Web site that contains a large amount of medical educational material. Although some studies have assessed the education material contained on the Web site, little analysis of cardiology content has been made. This study aimed to assess the quality of videos relating to heart sounds and murmurs contained on YouTube.


Heart Rhythm | 2013

Prevalence of atrial arrhythmias in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy

Christian F. Camm; Cynthia A. James; Crystal Tichnell; Brittney Murray; Aditya Bhonsale; Anneline S.J.M. te Riele; Daniel P. Judge; Harikrishna Tandri; Hugh Calkins

BACKGROUND Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) is an inherited cardiomyopathy, characterized by right ventricular dysfunction and ventricular arrhythmias. Limited information is available concerning atrial arrhythmias in ARVD/C. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to characterize spontaneous atrial arrhythmias in a large registry population of ARVD/C patients. METHODS Patients (n = 248) from the Johns Hopkins ARVD/C registry who met the diagnostic criteria and had undertaken genotype analysis were included. Medical records of each were reviewed to ascertain incidence and characteristics of atrial arrhythmia episodes. Detailed demographic, phenotypic, and structural information was obtained from registry data. RESULTS Thirty-five patients with ARVD/C (14%) experienced one or more types of atrial arrhythmia during median follow-up of 5.78 (interquartile range 8.52) years. Atrial fibrillation was the most common atrial arrhythmia, occurring in 80% of ARVD/C patients with atrial arrhythmias. Patients developed atrial arrhythmias at a mean age of 43.0 ± 14.0 years. Atrial arrhythmia patients obtained a total of 22 inappropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shocks during follow-up. Older age at last follow-up (P <.001) and male gender (P = .044) were associated with atrial arrhythmia development. Patients with atrial arrhythmias had a higher occurrence of death (P = .028), heart failure (P <.001), and left atrial enlargement on echocardiography (P = .004). CONCLUSION Atrial arrhythmias are common in ARVD/C and present at a younger age than in the general population. They are associated with male gender, increasing age, and left atrial enlargement. Atrial arrhythmias are clinically important as they are associated with inappropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shocks and increased risk of both death and heart failure.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2013

Compliance of randomized controlled trials in trauma surgery with the CONSORT statement.

Seon-Young Lee; Penelope Teoh; Christian F. Camm; Riaz A. Agha

BACKGROUND Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are the criterion standard for assessing new interventions. However, bias can result from poor reporting, which also makes critical appraisal and systematic review challenging. The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) criteria for nonpharmacological trials published in 2008 provided a set of 23 mandatory items that should be reported in an RCT. This is the first study to assess the compliance of RCTs in trauma with the CONSORT criteria for nonpharmacological trials. METHODS The MEDLINE database was searched using the MeSH term wounds and injuries for English-language articles published between January 2009 and December 2011. Relevant articles were scored by two reviewers and compared against surrogate markers of article quality (such as journal impact factor). RESULTS Eighty-three articles were deemed suitable for inclusion. The mean CONSORT score was 11.2 of 23 items (49%; range, 3.38–18.17). Compliance was poorest for items relating to the adherence of care providers (0%), abstract (5%), and implementation of randomization (6%). Only 40% declared conflicts of interest, 73% declared permission from an ethics review committee, 43% declared sources of funding, and 10% stated a trial registry number. There was a significant correlation between the CONSORT score and the impact factor of the publishing journal (&rgr; = 0.37, p = 0.0006) but not for the number of patients or authors or single versus multicentre trials CONCLUSION The reporting quality of RCTs in trauma surgery needs improvement. We suggest ways by which this could be improved including the following: better education, awareness, and a cohesive strategy among all stakeholders and the hard wiring of compliance through electronic journal submission systems.


Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine | 2012

Medical treatment of atrial fibrillation.

A. John Camm; Christian F. Camm; Irina Savelieva

Atrial fibrillation is an increasingly common arrhythmia which is associated with a substantial burden of cardiovascular disease. The arrhythmia is mostly treated with pharmacological therapy, although some interventional techniques such as left atrial ablation, atrioventricular nodal ablation plus pacemaker implantation, and left atrial appendage occlusion or excision are gaining popularity. The concept of primary prevention of atrial fibrillation with therapies targeting the formation and progression of atrial substrate has also recently evolved. Medical treatment is directed at either rate control (slowing the ventricular rate and allowing atrial fibrillation to continue) or rhythm control (restoring and maintaining sinus rhythm). There are different types of therapy for each purpose. Antiarrhythmic drug therapy, however, is difficult and inadequate with the agents that are now available. Treatment may be ineffective or complicated by cardiac or extracardiac adverse effects. Guidelines exist to help physicians choose appropriate therapies, but they have required and continue to need revision to cope with the rapid development and accumulating experience with new treatments. This review provides a contemporary evidence-based insight into the medical management of atrial fibrillation in the modern era.


BMJ Open | 2013

Poor adherence of randomised trials in surgery to CONSORT guidelines for non-pharmacological treatments (NPT): a cross-sectional study.

Myura Nagendran; Daniel Harding; Wendy Teo; Christian F. Camm; Mahiben Maruthappu; Peter McCulloch; Sally Hopewell

Objective To systematically assess adherence of randomised trials in surgery to Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) guidelines for non-pharmacological treatments (NPT). Surgical trials are considered more difficult to design and execute than pharmacological trials. Furthermore, the original CONSORT statement does not address some aspects that are vital to the transparent reporting of surgical trials. The CONSORT-NPT extension was designed to address these issues but adherence in medical and surgical journals has not been assessed. Design Cross-sectional study. Sample We identified eight general medical and eight surgical journals, indexed in PubMed and published in 2011, with the highest impact factors in their respective categories. Main outcomes Adherence to CONSORT statement and CONSORT-NPT extension items. Results We identified 54 surgical trials (22 published in medical journals and 32 in surgical journals). There were eight items for which there was less than 30% overall compliance (seven were specific to the CONSORT-NPT extension). These seven items are related to: a full description of the care providers, centres and blinding status in the abstract (n=7/54, 13%), eligibility criteria for centres performing the interventions (n=13/54, 24%), how adherence of care providers with the protocol was assessed or enhanced (n=7/54, 13%), how clustering by care providers or centres was addressed as it relates to sample size (n=3/54, 6%), how care providers were allocated to each group (n=9/54, 17%), how clustering by care providers or centres was addressed as it relates to statistical methods (n=2/54, 4%), a description of care providers (case volume, qualification, expertise, etc) and centres (volume) in each group (n=0/54, 0%). Conclusions Adherence of surgical trials to CONSORT-NPT extension items is much poorer than to the standard CONSORT statement. Adherence also appears to be superior in general medical journals compared with surgical journals. Raising awareness and conducting qualitative research to identify areas for specific intervention will be important going forward.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2011

How effective is cryoablation for atrial fibrillation during concomitant cardiac surgery

Christian F. Camm; Myura Nagendran; Phillip Yang Xiu; Mahiben Maruthappu

A best evidence topic in cardiothoracic surgery was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was whether performing cryoablative procedures during concomitant cardiac surgical procedures is effective for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF). Altogether 291 papers were found using the reported search, of which nine represented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The authors, journal, date and country of publication, patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes and results of these papers are tabulated. All studies showed that cryoablation during concomitant surgery had a significant effect on return to sinus rhythm (SR) conversion rate. One study showed that cryoablation was significantly more effective than mitral valve surgery alone at a 12-month follow-up (73.3% vs. 42.9%, respectively, P=0.013). The use of a concomitant cryoablative procedure has also been shown to be far superior to subsequent catheter based cryoablation in returning patients to SR at a 12-month follow-up (82% and 55.2%, respectively, P<0.001). Another study showed a significant return to AF over a three-year period (91.8% and 84.1% at discharge and three years, respectively). Return to SR was significantly decreased in those patients suffering from permanent rather than paroxysmal AF (47% vs. 85%, P<0.001). Paucity of level 1 evidence was a major limitation to this analysis. All nine papers were either small randomised controlled trials or retrospective studies with small sample sizes (57-521) and varied follow-up regimens. Six of nine studies suggested that cryoablation is most successful in patients suffering from paroxysmal rather than permanent AF. A lack of 24-h monitoring in seven of nine studies prevented effective elucidation of the rate of paroxysmal AF following cryoablation. Only one study suggested an increased complication rate from cryoablation, however, none suggested any negative impact on mortality or morbidity. We conclude that cryoablation during concomitant surgery is a safe and acceptable intervention for the treatment of AF with an SR conversion rate of between 60% and 82% at 12-months postsurgery.


BMJ Open | 2013

The UK Freedom of Information Act (2000) in healthcare research: a systematic review.

Alexander J. Fowler; Riaz Agha; Christian F. Camm; Peter Littlejohns

Objectives To assess the use and utility of the Freedom of Information Act (2000) in healthcare research since 2005 and to determine if any particular feature of studies found led to greater data acquisition. Design PRISMA compliant systematic review. Participants An extensive literature search was performed of EMBASE, MEDLINE, CINAHL, psychINFO, BNI, AMED, HMIC and Health business elite databases from January 2005 to January 2013 using terms ‘Freedom of information’, ‘Freedom of information act’ and ‘Freedom of information act 2000’. Papers were considered for publication if they described utilising the UK Freedom of information act to gather data for healthcare research. 16 articles met these criteria. Primary and Secondary outcome measures Primary outcome was the number and characteristics of studies utilising the Freedom of Information Act to collect the data for healthcare research. Secondary outcome measures were any features that improved data acquisition rates (including to whom the request was made, the number of questions asked per request, etc.) Results 16 articles described utilising the Freedom of Information Act for healthcare research, and these investigated a broad range of topics. The median number of requests made was 86 (range 1–172), the total number of requests was 1732. A total of 15 817 pieces of data were retrieved by all studies. The amount of data collected was defined as the number of questions asked multiplied by the number of full responses. A median of five questions were asked per study (range 5–6.5) and the overall response rate was 86%. The National Health Service litigation authority responded to 100% of requests, while Primary Care Trusts had the lowest response rate of 81% for healthcare bodies. A positive correlation between number of requests made and data obtained (0.508, p<0.05) and number of requests made and increased response rate (0.737, p<0.01), both reached the statistical significance. Conclusions Researchers should make greater use of the Act to access the information they need that is not otherwise disclosed. We discuss the issues with the research utilising the Act and how future research of this type could be optimised.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

An assessment of the reporting quality of randomised controlled trials relating to anti-arrhythmic agents (2002-2011).

Christian F. Camm; Yang Chen; Nicholas Sunderland; Myura Nagendran; Mahiben Maruthappu; A. John Camm

BACKGROUND Despite being the gold-standard for investigations, randomised controlled trials can deliver biased results if methodology is flawed. The CONSORT statements are intended to guide the reporting of trials. We assessed the reporting quality of anti-arrhythmic drug trials over the last decade. METHODS Medline and Embase databases were searched for anti-arrhythmic drug trials between 2002 and 2011. Results were searched by two authors and relevant papers selected. Papers were scored according to the 2001 and 2010 CONSORT statements by two reviewers and compared against surrogate markers of paper quality. RESULTS 694 papers were retrieved. 59 papers met the inclusion criteria. The mean CONSORT 2010 score was 15.4 out of 25 (SD 3.05). The least reported items related to abstract content (0%), randomization (6.8%), and protocol referencing (8.5%). There was a significant correlation between the CONSORT 2010 score and the annual and 5-year impact factors of the publishing journal (R=0.44 and R=0.45 respectively; p<0.001 for both). No significant correlation was found between the year of publication or number of authors, and 2010 CONSORT score. CONCLUSIONS Although several papers gained high scores, no paper successfully met all criteria laid out in either the CONSORT 2001 or 2010 statements. Correlation between CONSORT 2010 score and impact factor lends support to this as a marker for paper quality. The lack of reporting clarity found, indicates that application of the CONSORT guidelines remains incomplete within the cardiology literature. Further work is needed collectively by trial groups, funding agencies, authors, and journals to improve reporting.

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Eric Edison

University College London

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Penelope Teoh

University of Southampton

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Riaz A. Agha

Queen Victoria Hospital

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Dennis P. Orgill

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Alexander J. Fowler

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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