Interventional studies

Interventional (experimental) studies see if an intervention that purposefully changes some aspect of a subject’s status (e.g. ingesting a drug) affects an outcome (e.g. recovery from disease). To ensure interventional studies are valid, randomization and blinding is often utilised, with randomized control trials (RCTs) being the gold-standard of clinical trials: Random allocation: Subjects are randomly allocated to different treatment groups so that baseline characteristics of … Continue reading Interventional studies

Study designs

Evidence-based medicine aims to base clinical decisions on sound research findings. Different types of study design can be ranked in a pyramid based on the quality of evidence they provide. At the top, secondary studies, including clinical practice guidelines and meta-analyses provide the highest quality evidence after filtering and synthesizing the results of primary (emprical) studies. Near the bottom, animal and laboratory studies have flaws … Continue reading Study designs

Facial muscles

The facial muscles control facial expression and are innervated by the facial nerve (CN VII). The main muscles include: Occipitofrontalis: the occipitalis and frontalis muscles are sometimes collectively referred to as the occipitofrontalis as they are joined by an aponeurosis across the skull. They draw back the scalp and lift the eyebrows. Orbicularis oculi: wraps around the orbit and mediates blinking. Orbicularis oris: wraps around … Continue reading Facial muscles