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Dive into the research topics where Michael Craig Steele is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Craig Steele.


Nephrology | 2011

Exercise training in haemodialysis patients: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Neil A. Smart; Michael Craig Steele

Background  We quantified baseline and observed change in peak VO2, quality of life, cardiac function, strength and energy intake following exercise training in haemodialysis patients and optimal exercise delivery for producing greatest adherence, safety and patient improvements.


BMC Medical Education | 2013

A survey of resilience, burnout, and tolerance of uncertainty in Australian general practice registrars

Georga Cooke; Jenny Doust; Michael Craig Steele

BackgroundBurnout and intolerance of uncertainty have been linked to low job satisfaction and lower quality patient care. While resilience is related to these concepts, no study has examined these three concepts in a cohort of doctors. The objective of this study was to measure resilience, burnout, compassion satisfaction, personal meaning in patient care and intolerance of uncertainty in Australian general practice (GP) registrars.MethodsWe conducted a paper-based cross-sectional survey of GP registrars in Australia from June to July 2010, recruited from a newsletter item or registrar education events. Survey measures included the Resilience Scale-14, a single-item scale for burnout, Professional Quality of Life (ProQOL) scale, Personal Meaning in Patient Care scale, Intolerance of Uncertainty-12 scale, and Physician Response to Uncertainty scale.Results128 GP registrars responded (response rate 90%). Fourteen percent of registrars were found to be at risk of burnout using the single-item scale for burnout, but none met the criteria for burnout using the ProQOL scale. Secondary traumatic stress, general intolerance of uncertainty, anxiety due to clinical uncertainty and reluctance to disclose uncertainty to patients were associated with being at higher risk of burnout, but sex, age, practice location, training duration, years since graduation, and reluctance to disclose uncertainty to physicians were not.Only ten percent of registrars had high resilience scores. Resilience was positively associated with compassion satisfaction and personal meaning in patient care. Resilience was negatively associated with burnout, secondary traumatic stress, inhibitory anxiety, general intolerance to uncertainty, concern about bad outcomes and reluctance to disclose uncertainty to patients.ConclusionsGP registrars in this survey showed a lower level of burnout than in other recent surveys of the broader junior doctor population in both Australia and overseas. Resilience was also lower than might be expected of a satisfied and professionally successful cohort.


Age and Ageing | 2014

The effects of multimodal exercise on cognitive and physical functioning and brain-derived neurotrophic factor in older women: a randomised controlled trial

Sue Vaughan; Marianne Wallis; Denise F. Polit; Michael Craig Steele; David Shum; Norman Morris

OBJECTIVE to test the effect of a 16-week multimodal exercise program on neurocognitive and physical functioning and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). DESIGN a single-blinded, parallel-group randomised controlled trial. SETTINGS university campus and community-based halls. SUBJECTS forty-nine women aged 65 to 75 years, with no cognitive impairment and not undertaking more than 1 h of formal exercise training per week. METHODS the intervention group attended a 60-min multimodal class twice each week which included cardiovascular, strength and motor fitness training. The primary outcome was neurocognitive functioning and secondary outcomes were physical functioning and plasma levels of BDNF. RESULTS twenty-five participants were randomised to the intervention group and 24 to the control group. One control participant withdrew before follow-up data collection. The intervention group performed significantly better than the control group at follow-up (when controlled for baseline) in the Trail Making test A and B, the California Older Adult Stroop test (Word, Interference and Total scores), Controlled Oral Word Association test and the Timed Up-and-Go test, Six-Minute Walk test, One-Legged Stance test and plasma BDNF. CONCLUSION this multimodal exercise program resulted in neurocognitive and physical performance improvements and increased levels of plasma BDNF, in older women, when compared with controls. This RCT provides evidence that a multimodal exercise intervention can achieve larger effect sizes than those generally resulting from single modality interventions. Increases in BDNF levels imply neurogenesis may be a component of the mechanism underpinning the cognitive improvements associated with multimodal exercise. TRIAL REGISTRATION Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registration Number: ANZCTR12612000451808.


Congestive Heart Failure | 2012

A Comparison of 16 Weeks of Continuous vs Intermittent Exercise Training in Chronic Heart Failure Patients

Neil A. Smart; Michael Craig Steele

The authors compared the effects of continuous (CON) and intermittent (INT) exercise training programs on functional capacity, quality of life (QOL), and cardiac function in 23 congestive heart failure patients. Patients were randomized to CON exercise training (n=13; aged 66±7 years; peak oxygen consumption [VO(2)], 12.4±2.5 mL/kg/min; weight, 83±12 kg; left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF], 29.5%±7.2%) or INT exercise training (n=10; aged 59±11 years; VO(2), 12.2±6.5 mL/kg/min; weight, 87±24 kg; LVEF 27%±7.9%). These groups completed 16 weeks of stationary cycling at 70% VO(2) thrice weekly for 30 minutes continuously or 60 minutes (60 seconds work:60 seconds rest) intermittently; both groups completed the same absolute volume of work. Three QOL questionnaire responses, VO(2), LVEF, and regional tissue Doppler were quantified. After exercise training, VO(2) increased by 13% in the CON group (P=.12) and significantly by 21% in the INT group (P=.03), although not significantly between the groups (P=.72). In the CON group, Minnesota Living With Heart Failure score improved at 16 weeks (P=.02), while in the INT group, Hare-Davis scores improved (P=.02). Cardiac volumes, resting and peak LVEF, contractile reserve, and tissue velocities were all unchanged from baseline. Intermittent exercise may improve functional capacity to a greater extent than continuous exercise. QOL changes were variable between groups.


Congestive Heart Failure | 2011

The effect of physical training on systemic proinflammatory cytokine expression in heart failure patients: a systematic review.

Neil A. Smart; Michael Craig Steele

Systemic inflammation is associated with cardiovascular disease, especially the end stages of heart failure (HF). The authors sought to determine by systematic review whether physical therapy reduces serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines in HF patients. Potential studies were identified from a systematic search of Medline (Ovid) (1950-October 2010), Embase.com (1974-current), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL (1981-current), and Web of Science (2000-current). The search strategy included a mix of MeSH and free text terms for key concepts. A total of 11 studies were included, with 4 reporting a post-training reduction in tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), of which 3 used traditional aerobic or resistance exercise and 1 used functional electrical stimulation. Reduced post-training serum levels of interleukin 6 were reported by one exercise study. The one study that employed combined resistance and aerobic training only showed soluble receptors TNF-α1 and TNF-α2 to be lower. The one study of respiratory muscle training and two studies that employed electrical stimulation had limited effect on cytokines and peak maximal oxygen uptake. With the exception of one study, those therapies that employed ≥ 5 sessions per week lowered serum TNF-α. Our review data suggest that physical therapies employing ≥ 5 sessions per week are most likely to reduce serum levels of TNF-α in HF patients. No isolated study of resistance training has yet examined the relationship between muscle wasting, glycogen depletion, and the ability of exercise training to reverse both of these conditions in HF patients.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2010

Systematic review of the effect of aerobic and resistance exercise training on systemic brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and N-terminal BNP expression in heart failure patients

Neil A. Smart; Michael Craig Steele

BACKGROUND BNP and the N-terminal portion (NT-pro-BNP) have emerged as powerful tools in the diagnosis and prognosis of heart failure on acute presentation. The aim of this work was to systematically review the effect of exercise training on BNP and NT-pro-BNP levels in patients with left ventricular dysfunction. METHODS A systematic search was conducted of Medline (Ovid) (1950-July 2008), Embase.com (1974-current), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL (1981-current) and Web of Science (2000-current) to identify randomized controlled trials of aerobic and/or resistance exercise training in heart failure patients that measured BNP and/or pro-BNP. Primary outcome measures were changes in BNP and NT-pro-BNP. Secondary outcomes were changes in functional capacity and energy expenditure, measures of study quality were also recorded. RESULTS Nine randomized controlled studies measuring BNP or NT-pro-BNP met our eligibility criteria. Exercise training had a favourable effect on BNP (mean difference -79 pg/ml 95% C.I. -141 to - 17 pg/ml, P=0.01) and NT-pro-BNP (mean difference -621 pg/ml, 95% C.I. -844 to -398 pg/ml, P=<0.00001). Moreover the trials that showed a significant change in NT-pro-BNP all had a weekly exercise energy expenditure of more than 400 Kcal. CONCLUSION Data from nine published studies, suggest exercise training has a favorable effect on BNP and NT-pro-BNP in heart failure patients.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2012

Prognostic value of semi-quantitative bacteruria counts in the diagnosis of group B streptococcus urinary tract infection: a 4-year retrospective study in adult patients.

Chee K. Tan; Kimberly B. Ulett; Michael Craig Steele; William H. Benjamin; Glen C. Ulett

BackgroundSemi-quantitative bacteruria counts (s-QBC) are important in the diagnosis of urinary tract infection (UTI) due to most uropathogens. The prognostic value of s-QBC for diagnosis of UTI due to group B streptococcus (GBS) is unknown. In this study, we assessed the value of s-QBC for differentiating acute GBS UTI from asymptomatic bacteruria (ABU), independent of other potential prognostic indicators.MethodsMedical record review and urinalysis (UA) values for 1593 patients who had urinary GBS isolated (103 to ≥105 CFU/ml) during a four-year period were analyzed using binary logistic regression to determine the predictive values of s-QBC, age, and gender for infection category (acute UTI, ABU) based on the clinical diagnosis.Resultss-QBC alone had a strong predictive value for infection category but only for ABU. Multivariate logistic regression showed similar predictive power of s-QBC for infection category using age as a co-predictor, which was also independently associated with infection category. Typical s-QBC cut-off values that are commonly used in diagnostic settings had no significant power in predicting infection category. Among other UA measures, proteinuria and hematuria were significantly associated with acute infection.ConclusionsTogether, these data show that s-QBC is not useful in the differential diagnosis of GBS UTI. Among the patients in this study, age was an equally effective prognostic indicator compared to s-QBC for identifying high- and low-risk patients for acute GBS UTI. Collectively, these findings indicate that age-based associations may be equally as useful as s-QBC for predicting infection category in the setting of adult patients with GBS-positive urine cultures.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2013

Seasonal variation in health care-associated bloodstream infection: Increase in the incidence of gram-negative bacteremia in nonhospitalized patients during summer

Kylie Alcorn; John Gerrard; Deborough MacBeth; Michael Craig Steele

OBJECTIVE Recent research has suggested that episodes of gram-negative (GN) bloodstream infection (BSI) are more common in the population during summer months. Our objective was to determine if the same phenomenon could be observed in patients with health care-associated (HCA) BSI, and if so, whether a summer peak was less apparent in patients accommodated in a climate-controlled hospital environment. METHODS Data from episodes of HCA BSI spanning an 11-year period were analyzed. To test for seasonal variation in HCA BSI among hospitalized and nonhospitalized patients, and between GN and gram-positive organisms, the χ(2) goodness-of-fit test was used. RESULTS There were 440 episodes of HCA GN BSI of which 259 (59%) occurred in inpatients and 181 (41%) occurred in noninpatients. A significant increase in the frequency of HCA GN BSI was observed in nonhospitalized patients during the summer months (P = .03) but not in climate-controlled hospitalized patients. The most common source of infection in these patents was an intravascular device (38%). CONCLUSIONS We found an increased incidence of GN HCA BSI during summer that was not apparent in our inpatient cohort. The cause is unknown. It might be prudent to advise patients at risk of BSI (eg, those receiving intravascular infusions) to minimize exposure to high environmental temperature and to educate on possible behavioral factors that may increase risk.


Emergency Medicine Journal | 2015

Does a single dose of intravenous dexamethasone reduce Symptoms in Emergency department patients with low Back pain and RAdiculopathy (SEBRA)? A double-blind randomised controlled trial

Ravichandra Balakrishnamoorthy; Isabelle Horgan; Siegfried Perez; Michael Craig Steele; Gerben Keijzers

Objective To assess the effect of a single dose of intravenous dexamethasone in addition to routine treatment on visual analogue scale (VAS) pain scores at 24 h in emergency department (ED) patients with low back pain with radiculopathy (LBPR). Methods Double-blind randomised controlled trial of 58 adult ED patients with LBPR, conducted in one tertiary and one urban ED. The intervention was 8 mg of intravenous dexamethasone (or placebo) in addition to current routine care. The primary outcome was the change in VAS pain scores between presentation and 24 h. Secondary outcomes included VAS pain scores at 6 weeks, ED length of stay (EDLOS), straight leg raise (SLR) angles and Oswestry functional scores. Results Patients treated with dexamethasone had a 1.86 point (95% CI 0.31 to 3.42, p=0.019) greater reduction in VAS pain scores at 24 h than placebo (dexamethasone: −2.63 (95% CI −3.63 to −1.63) versus placebo: −0.77 (95% CI −2.04 to 0.51)). At 6 weeks, both groups had similar significant and sustained decrease in VAS scores compared with baseline. Patients receiving dexamethasone had a significantly shorter EDLOS (median: 3.5 h vs 18.8 h, p=0.049) and improved SLR angle at discharge (14.7°, p=0.040). There was no difference in functional scores. Conclusions In patients with LBPR, a single dose of intravenous dexamethasone in addition to routine management improved VAS pain scores at 24 h, but this effect was not statistically significant at 6 weeks. Dexamethasone may reduce EDLOS and can be considered as a safe adjunct to standard treatment. Trial registration number ACTRN12611001020976.


Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health | 2014

The effectiveness of quarter turn from prone in maintaining respiratory function in premature infants

Karly Montgomery; Nancy Low Choy; Michael Craig Steele; Judith Hough

The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of quarter turn from prone compared with supine and prone positioning in maintaining respiratory function in premature infants managed in a neonatal intensive care unit.

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