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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas S. Hopkinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas S. Hopkinson.


Thorax | 2007

Quadriceps strength predicts mortality in patients with moderate to severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Elisabeth B. Swallow; Diana Reyes; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; W D C Man; Raphael Porcher; Edward J. Cetti; Alastair J Moore; John Moxham; Michael I. Polkey

Background: Prognosis in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is poorly predicted by indices of air flow obstruction, because other factors that reflect the systemic nature of the disease also influence prognosis. Objective: To test the hypothesis that a reduction in quadriceps maximal voluntary contraction force (QMVC) is a useful predictor of mortality in patients with COPD. Methods: A mortality questionnaire was sent to the primary care physician of 184 patients with COPD who had undergone quadriceps strength measurement over the past 5 years. QMVC was expressed as a percentage of the patient’s body mass index. The end point measured was death or lung transplantation, and median (range) follow-up was 38 (1–54) months. Results: Data were obtained for 162 patients (108 men and 54 women) with a mean (SD) percentage of forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) predicted of 35.6 (16.2), giving a response rate of 88%. Transplant-free survival of the cohort was 93.5% at 1 year and 87.1% at 2 years. Cox regression models showed that the mortality risk increased with increasing age and with reducing QMVC. Only age (HR 1.72 (95% CI 1.14 to 2.6); p = 0.01) and QMVC (HR 0.91 (95% CI 0.83 to 0.99); p = 0.036) continued to be significant predictors of mortality when controlled for other variables in the multivariate analysis. Conclusion: QMVC is simple and provides more powerful prognostic information on COPD than that provided by age, body mass index and forced expiratory volume in 1 s.


The Lancet | 2003

Bronchoscopic volume reduction with valve implants in patients with severe emphysema.

Tudor P. Toma; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; James Hillier; David M. Hansell; Clifford Morgan; Peter Goldstraw; Michael I. Polkey; Duncan M. Geddes

Eight patients with severe emphysema entered a pilot study of unilateral volume reduction by endobronchial valve insertion. Five patients had emphysema judged too severe for volume reduction surgery and three refused the operation. After valve insertions, the median forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) increased from 0.79 L (range 0.61-1.07) to 1.06 L (0.75-1.22) (difference 34%, p=0.028) and the median diffusing capacity (TL(CO)) increased from 3.05 mL/min/mm Hg (2.35-4.71) to 3.92 mL/min/mm Hg (2.89-5.40) (difference 29%, p=0.017). CT scans showed a substantial reduction in regional volume in four of the eight patients. Two patients developed a transient pneumothorax (one requiring drainage) but we recorded no other important adverse effects during follow-up. Lung-volume reduction can be achieved with unilateral bronchoscopically placed valve implants in patients with severe emphysema with acceptable short-term safety and worthwhile functional benefits.


Brain Pathology | 2004

The neuropathology of septic shock.

Tarek Sharshar; Djillali Annane; Geoffroy Lorin de la Gradmaison; Jean Philippe Brouland; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Françoise Gray

The neuropathological correlates of encephalopathy and autonomic dysfuction in septic shock are unclear. We performed post mortem analysis of 5 brain areas susceptible to ischemia and 5 autonomic nuclei (AN) in 23 pqtients who had died in our intensive care unit (ICU) from septic shock and 8 dying from non‐septic shock as well as 5 controls who had died suddenly from extracranial injury. Proinflammatory cytokine (IL1‐β and TNF‐α) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expressin was assessed by immunocytochemistry. Abnormalities in septic shock were: hemorrhages (26%), hypercoagulability syndrome (9%), micro‐abscessed (9%), multifocal necrotizing leukoencephalopathy (9%) and ischemia (100%). The incidence of cerebral hemorrhage or hypercoagulability syndrome was not related to clotting distrurbances. The intensity of ischemia within susceptible areas was the same on both ICU groups, but more pronounced in the autonomic centers of septic patients (P<0.0001). Neuronal apoptosis assessed using anti‐caspase 3 immunocytochemistry and in situ end labeling was more pronounced in the autonomic nuclei septic patients. (P<0.0001). INF‐alpha expression did not differ between groups but vascular iNOS expression assessed by immunocytochemistry was higher in sepsis (p<0.0001) and correlated with autonomic center neuronal apoptosis (P<0.02). We conclude that septic shock is associated with diffuse cerebral damage and specific autonomic neuronal apoptosis which may be due to circulating factors particularly iNOS.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Validity of Six Activity Monitors in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Comparison with Indirect Calorimetry

Hans Van Remoortel; Yogini Raste; Zafeiris Louvaris; Santiago Giavedoni; Chris Burtin; Daniel Langer; Frederick Wilson; Roberto Rabinovich; Ioannis Vogiatzis; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Thierry Troosters

Reduced physical activity is an important feature of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Various activity monitors are available but their validity is poorly established. The aim was to evaluate the validity of six monitors in patients with COPD. We hypothesized triaxial monitors to be more valid compared to uniaxial monitors. Thirty-nine patients (age 68±7years, FEV1 54±18%predicted) performed a one-hour standardized activity protocol. Patients wore 6 monitors (Kenz Lifecorder (Kenz), Actiwatch, RT3, Actigraph GT3X (Actigraph), Dynaport MiniMod (MiniMod), and SenseWear Armband (SenseWear)) as well as a portable metabolic system (Oxycon Mobile). Validity was evaluated by correlation analysis between indirect calorimetry (VO2) and the monitor outputs: Metabolic Equivalent of Task [METs] (SenseWear, MiniMod), activity counts (Actiwatch), vector magnitude units (Actigraph, RT3) and arbitrary units (Kenz) over the whole protocol and slow versus fast walking. Minute-by-minute correlations were highest for the MiniMod (r = 0.82), Actigraph (r = 0.79), SenseWear (r = 0.73) and RT3 (r = 0.73). Over the whole protocol, the mean correlations were best for the SenseWear (r = 0.76), Kenz (r = 0.52), Actigraph (r = 0.49) and MiniMod (r = 0.45). The MiniMod (r = 0.94) and Actigraph (r = 0.88) performed better in detecting different walking speeds. The Dynaport MiniMod, Actigraph GT3X and SenseWear Armband (all triaxial monitors) are the most valid monitors during standardized physical activities. The Dynaport MiniMod and Actigraph GT3X discriminate best between different walking speeds.


European Respiratory Journal | 2012

Quadriceps wasting and physical inactivity in patients with COPD

Dinesh Shrikrishna; Mehul S. Patel; Rebecca Tanner; John Seymour; Bronwen Connolly; Zudin Puthucheary; Simon Walsh; Susannah Bloch; Paul S. Sidhu; Nicholas Hart; Paul R. Kemp; John Moxham; Michael I. Polkey; Nicholas S. Hopkinson

Quadriceps weakness is an important complication of advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) but few data exist concerning muscle bulk in early disease. We hypothesised that quadriceps bulk, measured by ultrasound rectus femoris cross-sectional area (USRFCSA), would be reduced in mild, as well as advanced, COPD compared with controls, and would correlate with physical activity. 161 patients with stable COPD and 40 healthy subjects had a measurement of USRFCSA and wore a multisensor armband to record physical activity. USRFCSA was reduced in Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stage I patients compared with healthy subjects (p=0.0002). Stage II–IV patients had reduced USRFCSA (p<0.0001) compared with controls but were not significantly different from those with stage I disease. Physical activity level was reduced in stage I (p=0.002) and stage II–IV disease compared with controls. Using regression analysis, physical activity level was independently associated with USRFCSA in stage I (p=0.01) but not stage II–IV disease, where residual volume to total lung capacity ratio was the only independent predictor of physical activity level. Quadriceps wasting exists in patients with mild, as well as advanced, COPD, and is independently associated with physical inactivity in GOLD stage I disease. The identification of these patients may guide early lifestyle and therapeutic interventions.


Thorax | 2011

The COPD assessment test (CAT): response to pulmonary rehabilitation. A multicentre, prospective study

James W. Dodd; Lauren Hogg; Jane Nolan; Helen Jefford; Amy Grant; Victoria M. Lord; Christine Falzon; Rachel Garrod; Cassandra Lee; Michael I. Polkey; Paul W. Jones; William D.-C. Man; Nicholas S. Hopkinson

Background The COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) assessment test (CAT) is a recently introduced, simple to use patient-completed quality of life instrument that contains eight questions covering the impact of symptoms in COPD. It is not known how the CAT score performs in the context of clinical pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) programmes or what the minimum clinically important difference is. Methods The introduction of the CAT score as an outcome measure was prospectively studied by PR programmes across London. It was used alongside other measures including the St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire, the Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire, the Clinical COPD Questionnaire, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression score, the Medical Research Council (MRC) dyspnoea score and a range of different walking tests. Patients completed a 5-point anchor question used to assess overall response to PR from ‘I feel much better’ to ‘I feel much worse’. Results Data were available for 261 patients with COPD participating in seven programmes: mean (SD) age 69.0 (9.0) years, forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) 51.1 (18.7) % predicted, MRC score 3.2 (1.0). Mean change in CAT score after PR was 2.9 (5.6) points, improving by 3.8 (6.1) points in those scoring ‘much better’ (n=162), and by 1.3(4.5) in those who felt ‘a little better’ (n=88) (p=0.002). Only eight individuals reported no difference after PR and three reported feeling ‘a little worse’, so comparison with these smaller groups was not possible. Conclusion The CAT score is simple to implement as an outcome measure, it improves in response to PR and can distinguish categories of response.


International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2012

Validity of activity monitors in health and chronic disease: a systematic review

Hans Van Remoortel; Santiago Giavedoni; Yogini Raste; Chris Burtin; Zafeiris Louvaris; Elena Gimeno-Santos; Daniel Langer; Alastair Glendenning; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Ioannis Vogiatzis; Barry T. Peterson; Frederick Wilson; Bridget Mann; Roberto Daniel Rabinovich; Milo A. Puhan; Thierry Troosters

The assessment of physical activity in healthy populations and in those with chronic diseases is challenging. The aim of this systematic review was to identify whether available activity monitors (AM) have been appropriately validated for use in assessing physical activity in these groups. Following a systematic literature search we found 134 papers meeting the inclusion criteria; 40 conducted in a field setting (validation against doubly labelled water), 86 in a laboratory setting (validation against a metabolic cart, metabolic chamber) and 8 in a field and laboratory setting. Correlation coefficients between AM outcomes and energy expenditure (EE) by the criterion method (doubly labelled water and metabolic cart/chamber) and percentage mean differences between EE estimation from the monitor and EE measurement by the criterion method were extracted. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed to pool the results across studies where possible. Types of devices were compared using meta-regression analyses. Most validation studies had been performed in healthy adults (n = 118), with few carried out in patients with chronic diseases (n = 16). For total EE, correlation coefficients were statistically significantly lower in uniaxial compared to multisensor devices. For active EE, correlations were slightly but not significantly lower in uniaxial compared to triaxial and multisensor devices. Uniaxial devices tended to underestimate TEE (−12.07 (95%CI; -18.28 to −5.85) %) compared to triaxial (−6.85 (95%CI; -18.20 to 4.49) %, p = 0.37) and were statistically significantly less accurate than multisensor devices (−3.64 (95%CI; -8.97 to 1.70) %, p<0.001). TEE was underestimated during slow walking speeds in 69% of the lab validation studies compared to 37%, 30% and 37% of the studies during intermediate, fast walking speed and running, respectively. The high level of heterogeneity in the validation studies is only partly explained by the type of activity monitor and the activity monitor outcome. Triaxial and multisensor devices tend to be more valid monitors. Since activity monitors are less accurate at slow walking speeds and information about validated activity monitors in chronic disease populations is lacking, proper validation studies in these populations are needed prior to their inclusion in clinical trials.


Respiratory Research | 2007

A prospective study of decline in fat free mass and skeletal muscle strength in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Rachel C. Tennant; Mark Dayer; Elisabeth B. Swallow; Trevor T. Hansel; John Moxham; Michael I. Polkey

BackgroundSkeletal muscle depletion is an important complication of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) but little prospective data exists about the rate at which it occurs and the factors that promote its development. We therefore prospectively investigated the impact of disease severity, exacerbation frequency and treatment with corticosteroids on change in body composition and maximum isometric quadriceps strength (QMVC) over one year.Methods64 patients with stable COPD (FEV1 mean (SD) 35.8(18.4) %predicted) were recruited from clinic and studied on two occasions one year apart. Fat free mass was determined using bioelectrical impedance analysis and a disease specific regression equation.ResultsQMVC fell from 34.8(1.5) kg to 33.3(1.5) kg (p = 0.04). The decline in quadriceps strength was greatest in those with the highest strength at baseline (R -0.28 p = 0.02) and was not correlated with lung function, exacerbation frequency or steroid treatment. Decline in fat free mass was similarly higher in those with largest FFM at baseline (R = -0.31 p = 0.01) but was more strongly correlated with greater gas trapping (R = -0.4 p = 0.001). Patients with frequent exacerbations (>1 per year) (n = 36) experienced a greater decline in fat free mass compared to infrequent exacerbators (n = 28) -1.3(3.7)kg vs. +1.2(3.1)kg (p = 0.005), as did patients on maintenance oral steroids (n = 8) -2.8(3.3) kg vs. +0.2(3.5) kg (p = 0.024) whereas in those who stopped smoking (n = 7) fat free mass increased; +2.7(3.1) kg vs. -0.51(3.5) kg (p = 0.026).ConclusionDecline in fat free mass in COPD is associated with worse lung function, continued cigarette consumption and frequent exacerbations. Factors predicting progression of quadriceps weakness could not be identified from the present cohort.


European Respiratory Journal | 2013

Validity of physical activity monitors during daily life in patients with COPD

Roberto Rabinovich; Zafeiris Louvaris; Yogini Raste; Daniel Langer; Hans Van Remoortel; Santiago Giavedoni; Chris Burtin; Eloisa Maria Gatti Regueiro; Ioannis Vogiatzis; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Michael I. Polkey; Frederick Wilson; William MacNee; Klaas R. Westerterp; Thierry Troosters

Symptoms during physical activity and physical inactivity are hallmarks of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Our aim was to evaluate the validity and usability of six activity monitors in patients with COPD against the doubly labelled water (DLW) indirect calorimetry method. 80 COPD patients (mean±sd age 68±6 years and forced expiratory volume in 1 s 57±19% predicted) recruited in four centres each wore simultaneously three or four out of six commercially available monitors validated in chronic conditions for 14 consecutive days. A priori validity criteria were defined. These included the ability to explain total energy expenditure (TEE) variance through multiple regression analysis, using TEE as the dependent variable with total body water (TBW) plus several physical activity monitor outputs as independent variables; and correlation with activity energy expenditure (AEE) measured by DLW. The Actigraph GT3X (Actigraph LLC, Pensacola, FL, USA), and DynaPort MoveMonitor (McRoberts BV, The Hague, the Netherlands) best explained the majority of the TEE variance not explained by TBW (53% and 70%, respectively) and showed the most significant correlations with AEE (r=0.71, p<0.001 and r=0.70, p<0.0001, respectively). The results of this study should guide users in choosing valid activity monitors for research or for clinical use in patients with chronic diseases such as COPD. This study validates six activity monitors in the field against indirect calorimetry (DLW) in patients with COPD http://ow.ly/o9VIE


Thorax | 2012

Volume targeted versus pressure support non-invasive ventilation in patients with super obesity and chronic respiratory failure: a randomised controlled trial

Patrick Murphy; Craig Davidson; Matthew Hind; Adrian J. Williams; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; John Moxham; Michael I. Polkey; Nicholas Hart

Introduction Automatic titration modes of non-invasive ventilation, including average volume assured pressure support (AVAPS), are hybrid technologies that target a set volume by automated adjustment of pressure support (PS). These automated modes could offer potential advantages over fixed level PS, in particular, in patients who are super obese. Methods Consecutive patients with obesity hypoventilation syndrome were enrolled in a two-centre prospective single-blind randomised controlled trial of AVAPS versus fixed-level PS using a strict protocolised setup. Measurements The primary outcome was change in daytime arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) at 3 months. Body composition, physical activity (7-day actigraphy) and health-related quality of life (severe respiratory insufficiency questionnaire, SRI) were secondary outcome measures. Results 50 patients (body mass index 50±7 kg/m2; 55±11 years; 53% men) were enrolled with a mean PaCO2 of 6.9±0.8 kPa and SRI of 53±17. 46 patients (23 AVAPS and 23 PS) completed the trial. At 3 months, improvements in PaCO2 were observed in both groups (AVAPS ∆0.6 kPa, 95% CI 0.2 to 1.1, p<0.01 vs PS ∆0.6 kPa, 95% CI 0.1 to 1.1, p=0.02) but no between-group difference (∆−0.1 kPa, 95% CI −0.7 to 0.6, p=0.87). SRI also improved in both groups (AVAPS ∆11, 95% CI 6 to 17, p<0.001 vs PS ∆7, 95% CI 1 to 12, p=0.02; between groups ∆5, 95% CI −3 to 12, p=0.21). Secondary analysis of both groups combined showed improvements in daytime physical activity that correlated with reduction in fat mass (r=0.48; p=0.01). Conclusion The study demonstrated no differences between automated AVAPS mode and fixed-level PS mode using a strict protocolised setup in patients who were super obese. The data suggest that the management of sleep-disordered breathing may enhance daytime activity and promote weight loss in super-obese patients. Trial registration details available at http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN63940700

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Nicholas Hart

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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Dinesh Shrikrishna

National Institutes of Health

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Paul R. Kemp

National Institutes of Health

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Thierry Troosters

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Zaid Zoumot

National Institute for Health Research

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