Paris Vogazianos
Nicosia General Hospital
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Featured researches published by Paris Vogazianos.
Respiratory Care | 2014
Ilias Porfyridis; Georgios Georgiadis; Paris Vogazianos; Georgios Mitis; Andreas Georgiou
BACKGROUND: Patients with nursing home acquired pneumonia (NHAP) present a distinct group of lower respiratory track infections with different risk factors, clinical presentation, and mortality rates. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the diagnostic value of clinical pulmonary infection score (CPIS), C-reactive protein, and procalcitonin and to compare the accuracy of pneumonia severity scores (confusion, urea nitrogen, breathing frequency, blood pressure, ≥ 65 y of age [CURB-65]; pneumonia severity index; NHAP index; systolic blood pressure, multilobar involvement, albumin, breathing frequency, tachycardia, confusion, oxygen, arterial pH [SMART-COP]; and systolic blood pressure, oxygen, age > 65 y, breathing frequency [SOAR]) in predicting in-patient mortality from NHAP. METHODS: Nursing home residents admitted to the hospital with acute respiratory illness were enrolled in the study. Subjects were classified as having NHAP (Group A) or other pulmonary disorders (Group B). Clinical, imaging, and laboratory data were assessed to compute CPIS and severity scores. C-reactive protein and procalcitonin were measured by immunonephelometry and immunoassay, respectively. RESULTS: Fifty-eight subjects were diagnosed with NHAP (Group A) and 29 with other pulmonary disorders (Group B). The mean C-reactive protein ± SD was 16.38 ± 8.6 mg/dL in Group A and 5.2 ± 5.6 mg/dL in Group B (P < .001). The mean procalcitonin ± SD was 1.52 ± 2.75 ng/mL in Group A and 0.24 ± 0.21 ng/mL in Group B (P = .001). The mean CPIS ± SD was 5.4 ± 1.2 in Group A and 2.3 ± 1.5 in Group B (P < .001). At a cutoff value of 0.475 ng/mL, procalcitonin had a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 72%. At a cutoff value of 8.05 mg/dL, C-reactive protein had a sensitivity of 81% and a specificity of 79%. Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein levels were significantly higher in Gram-positive NHAP. The in-patient mortality was 17.2% in Group A. Procalcitonin levels were 4.67 ± 5.4 ng/mL in non-survivors and 0.86 ± 0.9 ng/mL in survivors (P < .001). The area under the curve for procalcitonin in predicting in-patient mortality was 0.84 (95% CI 0.70–0.98, P = .001). A procalcitonin level upon admission > 1.1 ng/mL was an independent predictor of in-patient mortality. Of the pneumonia severity scores, CURB-65 showed greater accuracy in predicting in-patient mortality (area under the curve of 0.68, 95% CI 0.53–0.84, P = .06). CONCLUSIONS: CPIS, procalcitonin, and C-reactive protein are reliable for the diagnosis of NHAP. Procalcitonin and CURB-65 are accurate in predicting in-patient mortality in NHAP.
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2016
Kostas Konstantopoulos; Paris Vogazianos; T. Doskas
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is a brief cognitive instrument for the measurement of dementia. The aim of the present study is to provide normative data for the MoCA test in the Greek speaking population and to measure its validity in a clinical group of parkinsonian dementia participants. A total of 710 healthy Greek speaking participants and 19 parkinsonian dementia participants took part in the study. Both, the MoCA test and a neuropsychological test battery (digit span, semantic verbal fluency, phonemic verbal fluency, Color Trails Test) were administered to the normative and clinical samples. The test was found to correlate with all neuropsychological tests used in the test battery and it showed high discriminant validity (optimal screening cutoff point = 21, sensitivity = 0.82, specificity = 0.90) in the parkinsonian dementia participants. Further research is needed to use it in larger clinical samples and in different neurological diseases.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2017
Kostas Konstantopoulos; Yiolanda-Panayiota Christou; Paris Vogazianos; Eleni Zamba-Papanicolaou; Kleopas A. Kleopa
Speech and voice symptomatology (dysarthrophonia) are often reported by patients with myasthenia gravis (MG). However, they have been poorly investigated despite their significant impact on quality of life. Quantitative methods for the assessment of dysarthrοphonia could facilitate the evaluation of these common MG symptoms. The goal of this study was to investigate the phonatory (sustained phonation and reading) and speech (diadochokinesis) function in MG patients using quantitative measures. The voice/speech of 12 MG patients (7 with anti-AchR and 5 with anti-MuSK antibodies) and 24 age-matched healthy controls was recorded and analyzed using electroglottography (EGG) and speech acoustics. For the analysis of voice, the variables that were found to distinguish MG patients compared to healthy controls were a higher average fundamental frequency (P<0.05), a higher standard deviation of the average fundamental frequency (P<0.001), a higher mean fundamental frequency of the vibrating vocal folds (P<0.005) and a higher fundamental frequency range (P<0.005). The analysis of diadochokinesis showed that MG patients had a higher mean duration of the silent interval between a series of repetitive /pa/ syllables (P<0.05), of the sound /t/ (P=0.05) and of the silent interval between a series of repetitive /ka/syllables (P<0.05). No statistical differences were found in any of these variables between the MG subgroups with anti-AchR or anti-MuSK antibodies. This study demonstrates that non-invasive physiological methods (EGG and speech acoustics) offer essential tools for the assessment of dysarthrophonia in MG patients.
Child Neuropsychology | 2015
Kostas Konstantopoulos; Paris Vogazianos; C. Thodi; Panagiota Nikopoulou-Smyrni
Background: The Children’s Color Trails Test (CCTT) is a neuropsychological test that measures attention, divided attention, and speed of mental processing. It has been increasingly used in the assessment of children in cross-cultural environments for neurological and psychiatric disorders such as seizures and closed head injuries, learning and/or language disabilities, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, children with manganese exposure, and children diagnosed with HIV virus. However, there is a paucity of studies presenting normative data. The aim of the present study was to provide normative data for the CCTT in the Cypriot population. Methods: A total of 709 native Cypriot children aged 7–16 years, recruited from various public schools across the island, took part in the study. Exclusion criteria involved the existence of neurological, psychiatric, cardiological, and metabolic diseases, premature birth, history of maternal alcohol and drug abuse during pregnancy, low birth weight, hearing loss, visual problems, native language other than Greek, and abnormality in fine-motor movements. Results: Age and gender were found to be important factors for the interpretation of scores in all CCTT variables. Older children required less time and exhibited fewer errors, near misses, and prompts compared to younger children. There was a consistent pattern of a 3–4 seconds improvement (less time in seconds) in the CCTT completion time as age increased. Conclusions: CCTT is a promising tool for the measurement of attention in the native Cypriot population. Further research is needed in children diagnosed with various neurological and psychiatric diseases in order to estimate validity of the CCTT in clinical populations.
Journal of Communication Disorders, Deaf Studies & Hearing Aids | 2014
Kostas Konstantopoulos; Paris Vogazianos; Vayanos E
Objective: The Children’s Verbal Fluency test (VF) is a neuropsychological test that measures executive function, vocabulary storage, and speed of mental processing. It has been increasingly used in the assessment of children in neurological and psychiatric disorders such as Batten disease, frontal lobe epilepsy, cerebellar tumor, Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and dyslexia. However, there is a paucity of studies presenting normative data. The aim of the present study was to provide normative data for the children’s verbal fluency test in the Cypriot population and to test the criterion validity of the children’s VF in children with ADHD. Method: A total of 749 native Cypriot children aged 7-16 years, recruited from various public schools across the island, took part in the study. Exclusion criteria involved the existence of neurological, psychiatric, cardiological and metabolic diseases and native language other than Greek. Results: Age but not gender was found to be an important factor for the interpretation of scores in the verbal fluency variables. Older children produced more words in both, semantic and phonemic fluency test compared to younger children. Also, the test seemed to discriminate the clinical group of children exhibiting ADHD in semantic verbal fluency as compared to pair-matched controls. Conclusions: Children’s verbal fluency test is a promising tool for the measurement of executive function in the Cypriot population. Further research is needed in children diagnosed with various neurological and psychiatric diseases in order to estimate the validity of the children’s verbal fluency in other clinical populations.
Central European Journal of Public Health | 2007
Ermis Vogazianos; Paris Vogazianos; Jindřich Fiala; Dalibor Janeček; Ivo Šlapák
Central European Journal of Public Health | 2005
Paris Vogazianos; Jindřich Fiala; M Vogazianos
Respirology | 2016
Ilias Porfyridis; Georgios Georgiadis; Michalis Michael; Frangiskos Frangopoulos; Paris Vogazianos; Alexis Papadopoulos; Panayiota Kara; Charis Charalampous; Andreas Georgiou
Scripta Medica | 2005
Paris Vogazianos; Jindřich Fiala; M Vogazianos
Herz | 2015
M. Karakyriou; Stavros Hadjimiltiades; Soultana Meditskou; Nenopoulou E; George Efthimiadis; Paris Vogazianos; Charalambos Karvounis; Ioannis H. Styliadis