7,412 results on '"Ewing, A."'
Search Results
2. RGB‐based indices for estimating cover crop biomass, nitrogen content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio.
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Rosen, Lucas, Ewing, Patrick M., and Runck, Bryan C.
- Abstract
Plant cover and biochemical composition are essential parameters for evaluating cover crop management. Destructive sampling or estimates with aerial imagery require substantial labor, time, expertise, or instrumentation cost. Using low‐cost consumer and mobile phone cameras to estimate plant canopy coverage and biochemical composition could broaden the use of high‐throughput technologies in research and crop management. Here, we estimated canopy development, tissue nitrogen, and biomass of medium red clover (Trifolium pratense L.), a perennial forage legume and common cover crop, using red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices collected with standard settings in non‐standardized field conditions. Pixels were classified as plant or background using combinations of four RGB indices with both unsupervised machine learning and preset thresholds. The excess green minus red (ExGR) index with a preset threshold of zero was the best index and threshold combination. It correctly identified pixels as plant or background 86.25% of the time. This combination also provided accurate estimates of crop growth and quality: Canopy coverage correlated with red clover biomass (R2 = 0.554, root mean square error [RMSE] = 219.29 kg ha−1), and ExGR index values of vegetation pixels were highly correlated with clover nitrogen content (R2 = 0.573, RMSE = 3.5 g kg−1) and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2 = 0.574, RMSE = 1.29 g g−1). Data collection were simple to implement and stable across imaging conditions. Pending testing across different sensors, sites, and crop species, this method contributes to a growing and open set of decision support tools for agricultural research and management. Core Ideas: Cover crop managemet has a need for robust sensing methods using low‐cost, readily available indices.Multiple red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices were compared to track the growth and nitrogen concentration of a forage cover crop.The top‐performing index (ExGR) correlated with cover crop biomass, N content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2 > 0.55).These results are useful for cover crop management if embedded in regional systems for annual sampling of biomass and model parameterization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Competing Nonadiabatic Relaxation Pathways for Near-UV Excited ortho-Nitrophenol in Aqueous Solution.
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Greene, Hallam J. M., Ghosh, Deborin, Sazanovich, Igor V., Phelps, Ryan, Curchod, Basile F. E., and Orr-Ewing, Andrew J.
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- 2024
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4. Efficient Ground-State Recovery of UV-Photoexcited p-Nitrophenol in Aqueous Solution by Direct and Multistep Pathways
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Ghosh, Deborin, Spinlove, K. Eryn, Greene, Hallam J. M., Lau, Nicholas, Gómez, Sandra, Kao, Min-Hsien, Whitaker, William, Clark, Ian P., Malakar, Partha, Worth, Graham A., Oliver, Thomas A. A., Fielding, Helen H., and Orr-Ewing, Andrew J.
- Abstract
Nitroaromatic compounds are found in brown carbon aerosols emitted to the Earth’s atmosphere by biomass burning, and are important organic chromophores for the absorption of solar radiation. Here, transient absorption spectroscopy spanning 100 fs–8 μs is used to explore the pH-dependent photochemical pathways for aqueous solutions of p-nitrophenol, chosen as a representative nitroaromatic compound. Broadband ultrafast UV–visible and infrared probes are used to characterize the excited states and intermediate species involved in the multistep photochemistry, and to determine their lifetimes under different pH conditions. The assignment of absorption bands, and the dynamical interpretation of our experimental measurements are supported by computational calculations. After 320 nm photoexcitation to the first bright state, which has 1ππ* character in the Franck–Condon region, and ultrafast (∼200 fs) structural relaxation in the adiabatic S1state to a region with 1nπ* electronic character, the S1p-nitrophenol population decays on a time scale of ∼12 ps. This decay involves competition between direct internal conversion to the S0state (∼40%) and rapid intersystem crossing to the triplet manifold (∼60%). Population in the T1-state decays by excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) to the surrounding water and relaxation of the resulting triplet-state p-nitrophenolate anion to its S0electronic ground state in ∼5 ns. Reprotonation of the S0-state p-nitrophenolate anion recovers p-nitrophenol in its electronic ground state. Overall recovery of the S0state of aqueous p-nitrophenol via these competing pathways is close to 100% efficient. The experimental observations help to explain why nitroaromatic compounds such as p-nitrophenol resist photo-oxidative degradation in the environment.
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- 2024
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5. RGB‐based indices for estimating cover crop biomass, nitrogen content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio
- Author
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Rosen, Lucas, Ewing, Patrick M., and Runck, Bryan C.
- Abstract
Plant cover and biochemical composition are essential parameters for evaluating cover crop management. Destructive sampling or estimates with aerial imagery require substantial labor, time, expertise, or instrumentation cost. Using low‐cost consumer and mobile phone cameras to estimate plant canopy coverage and biochemical composition could broaden the use of high‐throughput technologies in research and crop management. Here, we estimated canopy development, tissue nitrogen, and biomass of medium red clover (Trifolium pratenseL.), a perennial forage legume and common cover crop, using red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices collected with standard settings in non‐standardized field conditions. Pixels were classified as plant or background using combinations of four RGB indices with both unsupervised machine learning and preset thresholds. The excess green minus red (ExGR) index with a preset threshold of zero was the best index and threshold combination. It correctly identified pixels as plant or background 86.25% of the time. This combination also provided accurate estimates of crop growth and quality: Canopy coverage correlated with red clover biomass (R2= 0.554, root mean square error [RMSE] = 219.29 kg ha−1), and ExGR index values of vegetation pixels were highly correlated with clover nitrogen content (R2= 0.573, RMSE = 3.5 g kg−1) and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2= 0.574, RMSE = 1.29 g g−1). Data collection were simple to implement and stable across imaging conditions. Pending testing across different sensors, sites, and crop species, this method contributes to a growing and open set of decision support tools for agricultural research and management. Cover crop managemet has a need for robust sensing methods using low‐cost, readily available indices.Multiple red‐green‐blue (RGB) indices were compared to track the growth and nitrogen concentration of a forage cover crop.The top‐performing index (ExGR) correlated with cover crop biomass, N content, and carbon:nitrogen ratio (R2> 0.55).These results are useful for cover crop management if embedded in regional systems for annual sampling of biomass and model parameterization.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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6. Ferdinand Khittl's Die Parallelstraße: Ecological Thinking and the Implicated Subject
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Ewing, Megan
- Abstract
abstract:Ferdinand Khittl's Die Parallelstraße (The Parallel Street, 1962) is an understudied docufiction from an early moment in the Young German Cinema. It hybridizes industrial film techniques, cross-sectional montage in particular, with experimental prose poetry to achieve an ecological mode of storytelling. These aesthetic strategies make a network of global extraction and exchange sensuously cognizable, facilitating the viewer's self-recognition as an implicated subject. In an early instance of multidirectional memory (Rothberg), representations of particular nodes in this network are shown to take up the project of Vergangenheitsbewältigung and unite it with postcolonial concerns around environmental degradation and exploitation throughout the Global South.
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- 2024
7. To Operate or Not to Operate? Reconstructive Surgical Burden and Quality of Life of Pediatric Patients with Facial Differences
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Modi, Rishi N., Blum, Jessica D., Ataseven, Burçin, Belza, Caitlyn C., Montes, Edna, Leung, Karen L., Zaldana-Flynn, Michelle, Rapoport, Chelsea S., Choi, Alyssa K., Ewing, Emily, Malcarne, Vanessa L., and Gosman, Amanda A.
- Abstract
Objective The Craniofacial Condition Quality of Life Scale (CFC-QoL) was used to evaluate the relationship between surgical burden and quality of life (QoL)Design Patient-parent dyads completed the CFC-QoL which queries the following QoL domains: Bullying, Peer Problems, Psychological Impact, Family Support, Appearance Satisfaction, and Desire for Appearance Change. Stepwise multivariate linear regressions were performed for each QoL domain.Setting Urban tertiary care centerPatients, participants Pediatric patients with facial differences, and their parents.Intervention Survey studyMain Outcome Measure(s) Demographic, diagnostic, and surgical characteristics were collected. Surgical burden was calculated as the standard deviation from the mean number of surgeries per diagnostic cohort.Result Patients (N= 168) were majority female (57.1%) and Hispanic (64.3%). Diagnoses were cleft lip and/or palate (CLP,n= 99) or other craniofacial conditions (CFC,n= 69). Average patient age was 2.3 ± 5.6 years at first reconstructive surgery and 12.3 ± 3.4 years at study enrollment. Patients received an average of 4.3 ± 4.1 reconstructive surgeries. Worse Bullying was associated with higher surgical burden. Worse Peer Problems was associated with higher surgical burden, but only for children with non-CLP CFCs. Worse Family Support was associated with CFC diagnosis, female sex, and higher surgical burden. Worse Psychological Impact was associated with higher surgical burden. Worse Appearance Satisfaction was associated with younger age and with lower surgical burden. Greater Desire for Appearance Change was associated with older age, higher surgical burden, CLP diagnosis, female sex, and non-Hispanic ethnicity. Socioeconomic status did not predict QoL per patient self- or parent-proxy report.Conclusions Higher surgical burden was associated with worse QoL outcomes in multiple domains.
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- 2024
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8. Emerging from the shadows: Trends in HIV ambulatory care, viral load testing, and viral suppression in a U.S. HIV cohort, 2019–2022: Impact of COVID-19 pandemic
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Tedaldi, Ellen, Hou, Qingjiang, Armon, Carl, Mahnken, Jonathan D, Palella F, Frank J, Simoncini, Gina, Fuhrer, Jack, Mayer, Cynthia, Ewing, Alexander, Chagaris, Kalliope, Carlson, Kimberly J, Li, Jun, and Buchacz, Kate
- Abstract
This article aimed at analyzing the acute impact and the longer-term recovery of COVID-19 pandemic effects on clinical encounter types, HIV viral load (VL) testing, and suppression (HIV VL < 200 copies/mL). This study was a longitudinal cohort study of participants seen during 2019–2022 at nine HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS) sites. Generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) estimated monthly rates of all encounters, office and telemedicine visits, and HIV VL tests using 2010–2022 data. We examined factors associated with nonsuppressed VL (VL ≥ 200 copies/mL) and not having ambulatory care visits during the pandemic using GLMM for logistic regression with 2017–2022 and 2019–2022 data, respectively. Of 2351 active participants, 76.0% were male, 57.6% aged ≥ 50 years, 40.7% non-Hispanic White, 38.2% non-Hispanic Black, 17.3% Hispanic/Latino, and 51.0% publicly insured. The monthly rates of in-person and telemedicine visits varied during 2020 through mid-year 2022. Multivariable logistic regression showed that persons with no encounters were more likely to be male or have VL ≥ 200 copies/mL. For participants with ≥1 VL test, the prevalence rate of HIV VL ≥ 200 copies/mL during 2020 was close to the rates from 2014 to 2019. The change in probability of viral suppression was not associated with participant’s age, sex, race/ethnicity, or insurance type. In the HOPS, overall patient encounters declined over 2 years during the pandemic with variations in telemedicine and in-person events, with relative maintenance of viral suppression. Ongoing recovery from the impact of COVID-19 on ambulatory care will require continued efforts to improve retention and patient access to medical services.
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- 2024
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9. Does “One Size Fits All”? Rethinking FIGO Depth of Invasion Measurements in Vulvar Cancer
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Bleeker, Maaike C.G., Bosse, Tjalling, van de Vijver, Koen K., Bart, Joost, Horlings, Hugo, Jonges, Trudy G.N., Visser, Nicole C.M., Kooreman, Loes F.S., Bulten, Johan, and Ewing-Graham, Patricia C.
- Abstract
Depth of invasion (DOI) is an important diagnostic parameter in patients with vulvar carcinoma, where a cutoff value of 1 mm largely determines the tumor stage and the need for groin surgery. DOI measurement should be reproducible and straightforward. In light of the new recommendation on how to measure DOI in the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) staging system 2021, an exploratory study was conducted on the current practice of DOI measurement in vulvar cancer. In this study of 26 selected cases, 10 pathologists with high exposure to vulvar cancer cases in daily practice assessed both the conventional (FIGO 2009) and alternative (FIGO 2021) DOI methods for applicability and preference. In this set of cases, the DOI measurement according to FIGO 2009 was generally considered easier to apply than the measurement according to FIGO 2021, with applicability being rated as “easy to reasonable” in 76.9% versus 38.5% of cases, respectively (P=0.005). The preferred method was FIGO 2009 or tumor thickness in 14 cases and FIGO 2021 in 6 cases. No invasion was preferred in 1 case. For the remaining 5 cases, half of the pathologists opted for the FIGO 2009 method and half for the FIGO 2021 method. Although the FIGO 2009 method proved to be more readily applicable in most of the cases studied, the method may differ for each case. There may not be a “one size fits all” solution for all cases of vulvar cancer.
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- 2024
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10. Development of an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Program in Ventral Hernia
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Ewing, John K., Cassling, Kyle E., Hanneman, Michael A., Broucek, Joseph R., Raymond, Britany L., Pierce, Richard A., Geiger, Timothy M., and Bradley, Joel F.
- Abstract
Background Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) programs have spread after initial success in colorectal surgery decreasing length of stay (LOS) and decreasing opioid consumption. Adoption of ERAS specifically for ventral hernia patients remains in evolution. This study presents the development and implementation of an ERAS pathway for ventral hernia.Methods A multidisciplinary team met weekly over 6 months to develop an ERAS pathway specific to ventral hernia patients. 75 process components and outcome measures were included, spanning multiple phases of care: Preoperative-Clinic, Preoperative Day of Surgery (DOS), Intraoperative, and Postoperative. Preoperative components included education and physiologic optimization. Pain control across phases of care focuses on nonopioid, multimodal analgesia. Postoperatively, the pathway emphasizes early diet advancement, early mobilization, and minimization of IV fluids. We compared compliance and outcome measures between a Pre Go-Live (PGL) period (9/1/2020-8/30/2021) and After Go-live (AGL) period (5/12/2022-5/19/2023).Results There were 125 patients in the PGL group and 169 patients in the AGL group. Overall, ERAS compliance increased from 73.9% to 82.9% after implementation. Length of stay decreased from an average of 2.27 days PGL to 1.92 days AGL. Finally, the average daily postoperative opioid usage decreased from 25.4 to 13.5 MME after the implementation.Discussion Enhanced Recovery After Surgery can be successfully applied to the care of hernia patients with improvements in LOS and decreased opioid consumption. Institutional support and multidisciplinary cooperation were key for the development of such a program.
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- 2024
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11. Fabrication and Demonstration of an IR-Transmitting, Sulfur-Rich Optical Polymer Waveguide.
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Boyd, Darryl A., Nguyen, Vinh Q., Rhonehouse, Daniel L., Chin, Geoffrey D., Kung, Frederic H., Gibson, Daniel J., Nicol, Robert R., Ewing, Kenneth J., Kim, Woohong, and Sanghera, Jasbinder S.
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- 2024
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12. Perspective on Theoretical and Experimental Advances in Atmospheric Photochemistry.
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Curchod, Basile F. E. and Orr-Ewing, Andrew J.
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- 2024
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13. Femtosecond to Microsecond Observation of Photochemical Pathways in Nitroaromatic Phototriggers Using Transient Absorption Spectroscopy.
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Whitaker, William, Ghosh, Deborin, Malakar, Partha, Karras, Gabriel, and Orr-Ewing, Andrew J.
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- 2024
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14. A Preterm Infant with Petechial Rash.
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Ewing, Anne, Larsen, Nicole, Chiquoine, Elizabeth, Lee, Esther, and Fricchione, Marielle
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- 2024
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15. Viral infections and inborn errors of immunity
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Ewing, Anne and Madan, Rebecca Pellett
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- 2024
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16. Conceptualization, design, and construction of a novel insect mass trapping device: the USDA Biomass Harvest Trap (USDA-BHT)
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Cohnstaedt, Lee W, Lado, Paula, Ewing, Robert, Cherico, Jason, Brabec, Daniel, Shults, Phillip, Wagner, Roy, and Chaskopoulou, Alexandra
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The use of insects as animal feed has the potential to be a green revolution for animal agriculture as insects are a rich source of high-quality protein. Insect farming must overcome challenges such as product affordability and scalability before it can be widely incorporated as animal feed. An alternative is to harvest insect pests from the environment using mass trapping devices and use them as animal feed. For example, intensive agricultural environments generate large quantities of pestiferous insects and with the right harvest technologies, these insects can be used as a protein supplement in traditional animal daily rations. Most insect trapping devices are limited by the biomass they can collect. In that context, and with the goal of using wild collected insects as animal feed, the United States Department of Agriculture-Biomass Harvest Trap (USDA-BHT) was designed and built. The USDA-BHT is a valuable mass trapping device developed to efficiently attract, harvest, and store flying insects from naturally abundant agricultural settings. The trap offers a modular design with adjustable capabilities, and it is an inexpensive device that can easily be built with commonly available parts and tools. The USDA-BHT is also user-friendly and has customizable attractants to target various pest species.
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- 2024
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17. Harvesting insect pests for animal feed: potential to capture an unexploited resource
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Cohnstaedt, Lee W, Lado, Paula, Ewing, Robert, Cherico, Jason, Brabec, Daniel, Shults, Phillip, Arsi, Komala, Donoghue, Ann M, Wagner, Roy, and Chaskopoulou, Alexandra
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The demand for animal protein grows as the human population increases. Technological and genetic advances in traditional animal agriculture will not produce enough protein to meet future needs without significant innovations such as the use of insects as protein sources. Insect farming is growing insects, whereas insect harvesting is collecting insects from their natural habitats to produce high-quality protein for animal feed or human food. Intensive agricultural environments produce tremendous quantities of pestiferous insects and with the right harvest technologies these insects can be used as a protein supplement in traditional animal daily rations. An avenue to exploit these insects is to use traps such as the United States Department of Agriculture-Biomass Harvest Trap (USDA-BHT) to efficiently attract, harvest, and store insects from naturally abundant agricultural settings. The modular design allows for a low cost, easy to build and fix device that is user friendly and has customizable attractants to target various pest species. Although insect harvesting faces substantial challenges, including insect biomass quantity, seasonal abundance and preservation, food safety, and economic and nutritional evaluation, the potential for utilizing these pests for protein shows tremendous promise. In this forum, insect harvesting is discussed, including its potential, limitations, challenges, and research needs. In addition, the use of a mass trapping device is discussed as a tool to increase the biomass of insects collected from the environment.
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- 2024
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18. Assessment of the USDA Biomass Harvest Trap (USDA-BHT) device as an insect harvest and mosquito surveillance tool
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Lado, Paula, Rogers, D Christopher, Cernicchiaro, Natalia, Swistek, Sabrina, Van Nest, Kortnee, Shults, Phillip, Ewing, Robert D, Okeson, Danelle, Brabec, Daniel, and Cohnstaedt, Lee W
- Abstract
Insects are a promising source of high-quality protein, and the insect farming industry will lead to higher sustainability when it overcomes scaling up, cost effectiveness, and automation. In contrast to insect farming (raising and breeding insects as livestock), wild insect harvesting (collecting agricultural insect pests), may constitute a simple sustainable animal protein supplementation strategy. For wild harvest to be successful sufficient insect biomass needs to be collected while simultaneously avoiding the collection of nontarget insects. We assessed the performance of the USDA Biomass Harvest Trap (USDA-BHT) device to collect flying insect biomass and as a mosquito surveillance tool. The USDA-BHT device was compared to other suction traps commonly used for mosquito surveillance (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) light traps, Encephalitis virus surveillance traps, and Biogents Sentinel traps). The insect biomass harvested in the USDA-BHT was statistically higher than the one harvested in the other traps, however the mosquito collections between traps were not statistically significantly different. The USDA-BHT collected some beneficial insects, although it was observed that their collection was minimized at night. These findings coupled with the fact that sorting time to separate the mosquitoes from the other collected insects was significantly longer for the USDA-BHT, indicate that the use of this device for insect biomass collection conflicts with its use as an efficient mosquito surveillance tool. Nevertheless, the device efficiently collected insect biomass, and thus can be used to generate an alternative protein source for animal feed.
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- 2024
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19. Assessing the feasibility, safety, and nutritional quality of using wild-caught pest flies in animal feed
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Van Nest, Kortnee, Swistek, Sabrina E, Olmstead, Morgan L, De La Mota-Peynado, Alina, Ewing, Robert D, Brabec, Daniel, Mitzel, Dana, Oppert, Brenda, Cohnstaedt, Lee W, and Shults, Phillip
- Abstract
Studies have investigated the potential of using farmed insects in animal feeds; however, little research has been done using wild-caught insects for this purpose. Concerns about inadequate quantities collected, environmental impacts, and the spread of pathogens contribute to the preferred utilization of farmed insects. Nevertheless, by harvesting certain pest species from intensified agricultural operations, producers could provide their animals with affordable and sustainable protein sources while also reducing pest populations. This study explores the possibility of collecting large quantities of pest flies from livestock operations and analyzes the flies’ nutritional content, potential pathogen load, and various disinfection methods. Using a newly designed mass collection-trapping device, we collected 5 kg of biomass over 13 wk, primarily house flies, from a poultry facility. While a substantial number of pests were removed from the environment, there was no reduction in the fly population. Short-read sequencing was used to compare the bacterial communities carried by flies from differing source populations, and the bacterial species present in the fly samples varied based on farm type and collection time. Drying and milling the wild-caught flies as well as applying an additional heat treatment significantly reduced the number of culturable bacteria present in or on the flies, though their pathogenicity remains unknown. Importantly, these disinfection methods did not affect the nutritional value of the processed flies. Further research is necessary to fully assess the safety and viability of integrating wild-caught insects into livestock feed; however, these data show promising results in favor of such a system.
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- 2024
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20. Proximal humerus open reduction internal fixation with and without biceps tenodesis: assessment of early clinical outcomes
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Stone, Michael A., Parikh, Harin, Foster, Lukas, Wright-Chisem, Adam, Ewing, Brett, Karimi, Amir H., and Langberg, Joshua
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The role of biceps tenodesis (BT) during open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) of proximal humerus fractures (PHFs) remains unclear. A subset of patients undergoing ORIF have persistent pain with unclear etiology. The purpose of our study was to compare outcomes of ORIF of PHFs with and without concomitant BT. We hypothesize patients undergoing BT at the time of ORIF will have improved patient-reported outcome scores with fewer secondary procedures related to treatment of the biceps.
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- 2024
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21. Humanity Has Two Choices: Unification or Mass Suicide.
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EWING, SOVAIDA MAANI
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The article discusses the global crises facing humanity, such as wars, human rights abuses, climate change, and inequality. It references Arnold Toynbee, who argued that humanity must choose between political unification and mass suicide. Toynbee believed that the main obstacle to unification was the habit of "divisive feeling" in the West, which could be replaced with a habit of "world-mindedness." He recommended the creation of a limited world-state to address global issues, such as atomic energy control, food distribution, and now climate change. Toynbee acknowledged concerns about a centralized world government but argued for a minimal and voluntary approach. He also emphasized the need for a shared set of moral values to achieve political unification. The article concludes by urging humanity to collaborate and voluntarily consent to political unification to address global challenges. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
22. Tenecteplase versus standard of care for minor ischaemic stroke with proven occlusion (TEMPO-2): a randomised, open label, phase 3 superiority trial
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Coutts, Shelagh B, Ankolekar, Sandeep, Appireddy, Ramana, Arenillas, Juan F, Assis, Zarina, Bailey, Peter, Barber, Philip A, Bazan, Rodrigo, Buck, Brian H, Butcher, Ken S, Camden, Marie-Christine, Campbell, Bruce C V, Casaubon, Leanne K, Catanese, Luciana, Chatterjee, Kausik, Choi, Philip M C, Clarke, Brian, Dowlatshahi, Dar, Ferrari, Julia, Field, Thalia S, Ganesh, Aravind, Ghia, Darshan, Goyal, Mayank, Greisenegger, Stefan, Halse, Omid, Horn, Mackenzie, Hunter, Gary, Imoukhuede, Oje, Kelly, Peter J, Kennedy, James, Kenney, Carol, Kleinig, Timothy J, Krishnan, Kailash, Lima, Fabricio, Mandzia, Jennifer L, Marko, Martha, Martins, Sheila O, Medvedev, George, Menon, Bijoy K, Mishra, Sachin M, Molina, Carlos, Moussaddy, Aimen, Muir, Keith W, Parsons, Mark W, Penn, Andrew M W, Pille, Arthur, Pontes-Neto, Octávio M, Roffe, Christine, Serena, Joaquin, Simister, Robert, Singh, Nishita, Spratt, Neil, Strbian, Daniel, Tham, Carol H, Wiggam, M Ivan, Williams, David J, Willmot, Mark R, Wu, Teddy, Yu, Amy Y X, Zachariah, George, Zafar, Atif, Zerna, Charlotte, Hill, Michael D, Salluzzi, Marina, Blenkin, Nicole, Dueck, Ashley, Doram, Craig, Zhang, Qiao, Kenney, Carol, Ryckborst, Karla, Bohn, Shelly, Collier, Quentin, Taylor, Frances, Lethebe, B. Cord, Jambula, Anitha, Sage, Kayla, Toussaint, Lana, Save, Supryia, Lee, Jaclyn, Laham, N, Sultan, A.A., Deepak, A., Sitaram, A., Demchuk, Andrew M., Lockey, A., Micielli, A., Wadhwa, A., Arabambi, B., Graham, B., Bogiatzi, Chrysi, Doshi, Darshan, Chakraborty, D., Kim, Diana, Vasquez, D, Singh, D, Tse, Dominic, Harrison, E., Smith, E.E., Teleg, E., Klourfeld, E., Klein, G., Sebastian, I.A., Evans, J, Hegedus, J, Kromm, J, Lin, K, Ignacio, K, Ghavami, Kimia, Ismail, M., Moores, M., Panzini, M.A., Boyko, M., Almekhlafi, M.A., Newcommon, Nancy, Maraj, N., Imoukhuede, O., Volny, O., Stys, Peter, Couillard, Phillipe, Ojha, P., Eswaradass, P., Joundi, Raed, Singh, R., Asuncion, R.M., Muir, R.T., Dey, S., Mansoor, S., Wasyliw, S., Nagendra, S., Hu, Sherry, Althubait, S., Chen, S., Bal, S., Van Gaal, Stephen, Peters, Steven, Ray, Sucharita, Chaturvedi, S., Subramaniam, Suresh, Fu, Vivian, Villaluna, K., Maclean, G., King-Azote, P., Ma, C., Plecash, A., Murphy, C., Gorman, J., Wilson, L., Zhou, L., Benevente, O., Teal, P., Yip, S., Mann, S., Dewar, B., Demetroff, M., Shamloul, R., Beardshaw, R., Roberts, S., Blaquiere, D., Stotts, G., Shamy, M., Bereznyakova, O., Fahed, R., Alesefir, W., Lavoie, Suzy, Hache, A., Collard, K, Mackey, A., Gosselin-Lefebvre, S., Verreault, S., Beauchamp, B., Lambourn, L., Khaw, A., Mai, L., Sposato, L., Bres Bullrich, M., Azarpazhooh, R., Fridman, S., Kapoor, A., Southwell, A., Bardi, E., Fatakdawala, I., Kamra, M, Lopes, K., Popel, N., Norouzi, V., Liu, A., Liddy, A.M., Ghoari, B., Hawkes, C., Enriquez, C.A., Gladstone, D.J., Manosalva Alzate, H.A., Khosravani, H., Hopyan, J.J., Sivakumar, K., Son, M., Boulos, M.I., Hamind, M.A., Swartz, R.H., Murphy, R., Reiter, S., Fitzpatrick, T., Bhandari, V., Good, J., Penn, M., Naylor, M., Frost, S., Cayley, A., Akthar, F., Williams, J., Kalman, L., Crellin, L., Wiegner, R., Singh, R.S., Stewart, T., To, W., Singh, S., Pikula, A., Jaigobin, C., Carpani, F., Silver, F., Janssen, H., Schaafsma, J., del Campo, M., Alskaini, M., Rajendram, P., Fairall, P., Granfield, B., Crawford, D., Jabs, J., White, L., Sivakumar, L., Piquette, L., Nguyen, T., Nomani, A., Wagner, A., Alrohimi, A., Butt, A., D'Souza, A., Gajurel, B., Vekhande, C., Kamble, H., Kalashyan, H., Lloret, M., Benguzzi, M., Arsalan, N., Ishaque, N., Ashayeriahmadabad, R., Samiento, R., Hosseini, S., Kazi, S., Das, S., Sugumar, T., Selchen, D., Kostyrko, P., Muccilli, A., Saposnik, A.G., Vandervelde, C., Ratnayake, K., McMillan, S., Katsanos, A., Shoamanesh, A., Sahlas, D.J., Naidoo, V., Todorov, V., Toma, H., Brar, J., Lee, J., Horton, M., Chen, S., Shand, E., Weatherby, S., Jin, A., Durafourt, B., Jalini, S., Gardner, A., Tyson, C., Junk, E., Foster, K., Bolt, K., Sylvain, N., Maley, S., Urroz, L., Peeling, L., Kelly, M., Whelan, R., Cooley, R., Teitelbaum, J., Boutayeb, A., Moore, A., Cole, E., Waxman, L., Ben-Amor, N., Sanchez, R., Khalil, S., Nehme, A., Legault, C., Tampieri, D., Ehrensperger, E., Vieira, L., Cortes, M., Angle, M., Hannouche, M., Badawy, M., Werner, K., Wieszmuellner, S., Langer, A., Gisold, A., Zach, H., Rommer, P., Macher, S., Blechinger, S., Marik, W., Series, W., Baumgartinger, M., Krebs, S., Koski, J., Eirola, S., Ivanoff, T., Erakanto, A., Kupari, L., Sibolt, G., Panula, J., Tomppo, L., Tiainen, M., Ahlstrom, M., Martinez Majander, N., Suomalainen, O., Raty, S., Levi, C., Kerr, E., Allen, J., Kaauwai, L.P., Belevski, L., Russell, M., Ormond, S., Chew, A., Loiselle, A., Royan, A., Hughes, B., Garcia Esperon, C., Pepper, E., Miteff, F., He, J., Lycett, M., Min, M., Murray, N., Pavey, N., Starling de Barros, R., Gangadharan, S., Dunkerton, S., Waller, S., Canento Sanchez, T., Wellings, T., Edmonds, G., Whittaker, K.A., Ewing, M., Lee, P., Singkang, R., McDonald, A., Dos Santos, A., Shin, C., Jackson, D., Tsoleridis, J., Fisicchia, L., Parsons, N., Shenoy, N., Smith, S., Sharobeam, A., Balabanski, A., Park, A., Williams, C., Pavlin-Premri, D., Rodrigues, E., Alemseged, F., Ng, F., Zhao, H., Beharry, J., Ng, J.L., Williamson, J., Wong, J.Z.W., Li, K., Kwan, M.K., Valente, M., Yassi, N., Cooley, R., Yogendrakumar, V., McNamara, B., Buchanan, C., McCarthy, C., Thomas, G., Stephens, K., Chung, M., Chung, M.F., Tang, M., Busch, T., Frost, T., Lee, R., Stuart, N., Pachani, N., Menon, A., Borojevic, B., Linton, C.M., Garcia, G., Callaly, E.P., Dewey, H., Liu, J., Chen, J., Wong, J., Nowak, K., To, K., Lizak, N.S., Bhalala, O., Park, P., Tan, P., Martins, R., Cody, R., Forbes, R., Chen, S.K., Ooi, S., Tu, S., Dang, Y.L., Ling, Z., Cranefield, J., Drew, R., Tan, A., Kurunawai, C., Harvey, J., Mahadevan, J.J., Cagi, L., Palanikumar, L., Chia, L.N., Goh, R., El-Masri, S., Urbi, B., Rapier, C., Berrill, H., McEvoy, H., Dunning, R., Kuriakose, S., Chad, T., Sapaen, V., Sabet, A., Shah, D., Yeow, D., Lilley, K., Ward, K., Mozhy Mahizhnan, M., Tan, M., Lynch, C., Coveney, S., Tobin, K., McCabe, J., Marnane, M., Murphy, S., Large, M., Moynihan, B., Boyle, K., Sanjuan, E., Sanchis, M., Boned, S., Pancorbo, O., Sala, V., Garcia, L., Garcia-Tornel, A., Juega, J., Pagola, J., Santana, K., Requena, M., Muchada, M., Olive, M., Lozano, P.J., Rubiera, M., Deck, M., Rodriguez, N., Gomez, B., Reyes Munoz, F.J., Gomez, A.S., Sanz, A.C., Garcia, E.C., Penacoba, G., Ramos, M.E., de Lera Alfonso, M., Feliu, A, Pardo, L., Ramirez, P., Murillo, A., Lopez Dominguez, D., Rodriguez, J., Terceno Izaga, M., Reina, M., Viturro, S.B., Bojaryn, U., Vera Monge, V.A., Silva Blas, Y., R Siew, R., Agustin, S J, Seet, C., Tianming, T., d'Emden, A., Murray, A., Welch, A., Hatherley, K., Day, N., Smith, W., MacRae, E., Mitchell, E.S., Mahmood, A., Elliot, J., Neilson, S., Biswas, V., Brown, C., Lewis, A., Ashton, A., Werring, D., Perry, R., Muhammad, R., Lee, Y.C., Black, A., Robinson, A., Williams, A., Banaras, A., Cahoy, C., Raingold, G., Marinescu, M., Atang, N., Bason, N., Francia, N., Obarey, S., Feerick, S., Joseph, J., Schulz, U., Irons, R., Benjamin, J., Quinn, L., Jhoots, M., Teal, R., Ford, G., Harston, G., Bains, H., Gbinigie, I., Mathieson, P., Irons, R., Sim, C.H., Hayter, E., Kennedy, K., Binnie, L., Priestley, N., Williams, R., Ghatala, R., Stratton, S., Blight, A., Zhang, L., Davies, A., Duffy, H., Roberts, J., Homer, J., Roberts, K., Dodd, K., Cawley, K., Martin, M., Leason, S., Cotgreave, S., Taylor, T., Nallasivan, A., Haider, S., Chakraborty, T., Webster, T., Gil, A., Martin, B., Joseph, B., Cabrera, C., Jose, D., Man, J., Aquino, J., Sebastian, S., Osterdahl, M., Kwan, M., Matthew, M., Ike, N., Bello, P., Wilding, P., Fuentes, R., Shah, R., Mashate, S., Patel, T., Nwanguma, U., Dave, V., Haber, A., Lee, A., O'Sullivan, A., Drumm, B., Dawson, A.C., Matar, T., Biswas, V., Roberts, D., Taylor, E., Rounis, E., El-Masry, A., O'Hare, C., Kalladka, D., Jamil, S., Auger, S., Raha, O., Evans, M., Vonberg, F., Kalam, S., Ali Sheikh, A., Jenkins, I.H., George, J., Kwan, J., Blagojevic, J., Saeed, M., Haji-Coll, M., Tsuda, M., Sayed, M., Winterkron, N., Thanbirajah, N., Vittay, O., Karim, R., Smail, R.C., Gauhar, S., Elmamoun, S., Malani, S., Pralhad Kelavkar, S., Hiden, J., Ferdinand, P., Sanyal, R., Varquez, R., Smith, B., Okechukwu, C., Fox, E., Collins, E., Courtney, K., Tauro, S., Patterson, C., McShane, D., Kerr, E., Roberts, G., McIImoyle, J., McGuire, K., Fearon, P., Gordon, P., Isaacs, K., Lucas, K., Smith, L., Dews, L., Bates, M., Lawrence, S., Heeley, S., Patel, V., Chin, Y.M., Sims, D., Littleton, E., Khaira, J., Nadar, K., Kieliszkowska, A., Sari, B., Domingos Belo, C., Smith, E., Manolo, E.Y., Aeron-Thomas, J., Doheny, M., Garcia Pardo, M., Recaman, M., Tibajia, M.C., Aissa, M., Mah, Y., Yu, T., Patel, V., Meenakshisundaram, S., Heller, S., Alsukhni, R., Williams, O., Farag, M., Benger, M., Engineer, A., Aissa, M., Bayhonan, S., Conway, S., Bhalla, A., Nouvakis, D., Theochari, E., Boyle, F., Teo, J., King-Robson, J., Law, K.Y., Sztriha, L., Ismail, M., McGovern, A., Day, D., Mitchell-Douglas, J., Francis, J., Iqbal, A., Punjabivaryani, P., Anonuevo Reyes, J., Anonuevo Reyes, M., Pauls, M., Buch, A., Hedstrom, A., Hutchinson, C., Kirkland, C., Newham, J., Wilkes, G., Fleming, L., Fleck, N., Franca, A., Chwal, B., Oldoni, C., Mantovani, G., Noll, G., Zanella, L., Soma, M., Secchi, T., Borelli, W., Rimoli, B.P., da Cunha Silva, G.H., Machado Galvao Mondin, L.A., Barbosa Cerantola, R., Imthon, A.K., Esaki, A.S., Camilo, M., Vincenzi, O.C., ds Cruz, R.R., Morillos, M.B., Riccioppa Rodrigues, G.G., Santos Ferreira, K., Pazini, A.M., Pena Pereira, M.A., de Albuquerque, A.L.A., Massote Fontanini, C.E., Matinez Rubio, C.F., dos Santos, D.T., Dias, F.A., Alves, F.F.A., Milani, C., Pegorer Santos, B., Winckler, F., De Souza, J.T., Bonome, L.A.M., Cury Silva, V.A., Teodoro, R.S., Modolo, G.P., Ferreira, N.C., Barbosa dos Santos, D.F., dos Santos Moreira, J.C., Cruz Guedes de Morais, A.B., Vieira, J., Mendes, G., and de Queiroz, J.P.
- Abstract
Individuals with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion are at increased risk of poor outcomes. Intravenous thrombolysis with tenecteplase might improve outcomes in this population. We aimed to test the superiority of intravenous tenecteplase over non-thrombolytic standard of care in patients with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion or focal perfusion abnormality.
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- 2024
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23. The Role of Momentum Partitioning in Covariance Ion Imaging Analysis
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Walmsley, Tiffany, McManus, Joseph W., Kumagai, Yoshiaki, Nagaya, Kiyonobu, Harries, James, Iwayama, Hiroshi, Ashfold, Michael N. R., Britton, Mathew, Bucksbaum, Philip H., Downes-Ward, Briony, Driver, Taran, Heathcote, David, Hockett, Paul, Howard, Andrew J., Lee, Jason W. L., Liu, Yusong, Kukk, Edwin, Milesevic, Dennis, Minns, Russell S., Niozu, Akinobu, Niskanen, Johannes, Orr-Ewing, Andrew J., Owada, Shigeki, Robertson, Patrick A., Rolles, Daniel, Rudenko, Artem, Ueda, Kiyoshi, Unwin, James, Vallance, Claire, Brouard, Mark, Burt, Michael, Allum, Felix, and Forbes, Ruaridh
- Abstract
We present results from a covariance ion imaging study, which employs extensive filtering, on the relationship between fragment momenta to gain deeper insight into photofragmentation dynamics. A new data analysis approach is introduced that considers the momentum partitioning between the fragments of the breakup of a molecular polycation to disentangle concurrent fragmentation channels, which yield the same ion species. We exploit this approach to examine the momentum exchange relationship between the products, which provides direct insight into the dynamics of molecular fragmentation. We apply these techniques to extensively characterize the dissociation of 1-iodopropane and 2-iodopropane dications prepared by site-selective ionization of the iodine atom using extreme ultraviolet intense femtosecond laser pulses with a photon energy of 95 eV. Our assignments are supported by classical simulations, using parameters largely obtained directly from the experimental data.
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- 2024
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24. Sulfur-rich infrared transmitting polymer fibers
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Vizgaitis, Jay N., Marasco, Peter L., Sanghera, Jasbinder S., Boyd, Darryl A., Nguyen, Vinh Q., Rhonehouse, Daniel L., Chin, Geoffrey D., Kung, Frederic H., Ewing, Kenneth J., Gibson, Daniel J., Kim, Woohong, and Sanghera, Jasbinder S.
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- 2024
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25. Fixing Our Broken International System of Justice.
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EWING, SOVAIDA MAANI
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- 2024
26. Systematic Implementation of Effective Quality Assurance Processes for the Assessment of Radiation Target Volumes in Head and Neck Cancer.
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Gogineni, E., Schaefer, D., Ewing, A., Andraos, T., DiCostanzo, D., Weldon, M., Christ, D., Baliga, S., Jhawar, S., Mitchell, D., Grecula, J., Konieczkowski, D.J., Palmer, J., Jahraus, T., Dibs, K., Chakravarti, A., Martin, D., Gamez, M.E., and Blakaj, D.
- Abstract
Significant heterogeneity exists in clinical quality assurance (QA) practices within radiation oncology departments, with most chart rounds lacking prospective peer-reviewed contour evaluation. This has the potential to significantly affect patient outcomes, particularly for head and neck cancers (HNC) given the large variance in target volume delineation. With this understanding, we incorporated a prospective systematic peer contour-review process into our workflow for all patients with HNC. This study aims to assess the effectiveness of implementing prospective peer review into practice for our National Cancer Institute Designated Cancer Center and to report factors associated with contour modifications. Starting in November 2020, our department adopted a systematic QA process with real-time metrics, in which contours for all patients with HNC treated with radiation therapy were prospectively peer reviewed and graded. Contours were graded with green (unnecessary), yellow (minor), or red (major) colors based on the degree of peer-recommended modifications. Contours from November 2020 through September 2021 were included for analysis. Three hundred sixty contours were included. Contour grades were made up of 89.7% green, 8.9% yellow, and 1.4% red grades. Physicians with >12 months of clinical experience were less likely to have contour changes requested than those with <12 months (8.3% vs 40.9%; P <.001). Contour grades were significantly associated with physician case load, with physicians presenting more than the median number of 50 cases having significantly less modifications requested than those presenting <50 (6.7% vs 13.3%; P =.013). Physicians working with a resident or fellow were less likely to have contour changes requested than those without a trainee (5.2% vs 12.6%; P =.039). Frequency of major modification requests significantly decreased over time after adoption of prospective peer contour review, with no red grades occurring >6 months after adoption. This study highlights the importance of prospective peer contour-review implementation into systematic clinical QA processes for HNC. Physician experience proved to be the highest predictor of approved contours. A growth curve was demonstrated, with major modifications declining after prospective contour review implementation. Even within a high-volume academic practice with subspecialist attendings, >10% of patients had contour changes made as a direct result of prospective peer review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Unraveling the Ultrafast Photochemical Dynamics of Nitrobenzene in Aqueous Solution.
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Lau, Nicholas A., Ghosh, Deborin, Bourne-Worster, Susannah, Kumar, Rhea, Whitaker, William A., Heitland, Jonas, Davies, Julia A., Karras, Gabriel, Clark, Ian P., Greetham, Gregory M., Worth, Graham A., Orr-Ewing, Andrew J., and Fielding, Helen H.
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- 2024
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28. Placentae of small appropriately-grown-for-gestational-age neonates exhibit sexually dimorphic transcriptomic changes representative of placental insufficiency.
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Ewing, Adam, O'Callaghan, Jessica L., McCracken, Sharon, Ellery, Stacy, Lappas, Martha, Holland, Olivia J., Perkins, Anthony, Saif, Zarqa, and Clifton, Vicki L.
- Abstract
Previous studies have reported that neonates less than the 25th BWC especially if they were male, were more likely to be associated with birth complications suggesting small neonates often identified as appropriately grown are at risk of adverse outcomes. We have questioned whether smaller neonates not typically categorized as "small for gestational age" may not reach their genetically determined growth due to placental insufficiency. RNA-Seq was performed on the Illumina NovaSeq 600 using term placentae from neonates that were less than the 10th birthweight centile (BWC) (n = 39), between the 10th and the 30th BWC (n = 15) or greater than the 30th BWC (n = 23). Bioinformatic analyses were conducted and statistical significance was assessed at a level of P < 0.05 for single comparisons or FDR <0.05 unless otherwise noted. Gene set enrichment analysis revealed differences between BWC groups and in relation to the sex of the placenta. Genes associated with hypoxia, inflammatory responses, estrogen responsive genes, and androgen responsive genes were enriched (FDR <0.1) for in placentae of neonates <10th BWC regardless of sex and also in male placentae of neonates between the 10th-30th BWC. Female placenta of neonates between the 10th-30th BWC were comparable to placentae of neonates >30th BWC. These findings provide evidence that small male neonates may be at a greater risk of an adverse outcome than females due to changes in gene expression that are associated with placental dysfunction. The current data raises questions of whether placental pathology for smaller appropriately grown neonates should be scientifically and clinically examined in more depth. • Placentae of small (10
th -30th BWC) male neonates classified as appropriately grown exhibit changes reflecting placental insufficiency. • Placentae of small males had increased expression of hypoxia and inflammation gene pathways with few additional changes at SGA birthweights. • Placentae of small female neonates had minimal pathway changes to their transcriptomic profile but pathway alterations at SGA birthweights. • Placental pathology for smaller appropriately grown neonates should be examined in more depth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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29. Efficacy and safety of apixaban compared to warfarin for nonvalvular atrial fibrillation in end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis.
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Moore, Mariah, Vizcaino, Kristina, Ewing, Joseph A., and St. Ville, Madeline
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CHRONIC kidney failure ,ATRIAL fibrillation ,EMERGENCY room visits ,MITRAL stenosis ,WARFARIN ,HEPATORENAL syndrome - Abstract
This study compared the efficacy and safety of apixaban and warfarin in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) on hemodialysis (HD). Apixaban decreased incidence of stroke and bleeding compared with warfarin in major clinical trials that excluded patients with severe renal dysfunction. Apixaban is no longer contraindicated in patients with ESRD on HD with NVAF based on pharmacokinetic studies. Limited clinical data exist for patients with ESRD on HD on apixaban. A retrospective chart review was performed on patients with a diagnosis of NVAF and ESRD on HD who were prescribed apixaban or warfarin for stroke prevention in the years 2018 through 2019. Patients' charts were reviewed for up to a 2-year period. Patients on renal replacement therapy other than HD, those using anticoagulation for reasons other than NVAF, patients with Child-Pugh Class C cirrhosis, and those with severe mitral valve stenosis were excluded. The primary outcome was emergency department visits or hospital admissions for ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack. Secondary outcomes included major or minor bleeding and adverse effects. A total of 181 patients were screened; 110 patients met eligibility criteria and were included in the analysis. Four patients (7.5%) in the apixaban group and 6 patients (10.5%) in the warfarin group met the primary outcome of hospitalization or emergency department visit for stroke (P = 0.742). Symptomatic bleeding occurred in 39.6% of patients in the apixaban group and 36.8% in the warfarin group (P = 0.918). A trend in major bleeding occurred more often in the warfarin group, 52.4% versus 49.2% (P = 0.758). There were no statistically significant differences in efficacy and safety outcomes between apixaban and warfarin in patients with NVAF and ESRD on HD in the intention-to-treat analysis of our study. Larger trials are needed to further analyze this patient population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Antimicrobial resistance at a crossroads: the cost of inaction
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Craig, Michael, Jernigan, Daniel, Laserson, Kayla, McBride, Stefanie, Fairbanks, Jessica, Sievert, Dawn, Armstrong, Paige A, Ewing Ogle, Heather, and Zucker, Howard
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- 2024
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31. A precision functional atlas of personalized network topography and probabilities
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Hermosillo, Robert J. M., Moore, Lucille A., Feczko, Eric, Miranda-Domínguez, Óscar, Pines, Adam, Dworetsky, Ally, Conan, Gregory, Mooney, Michael A., Randolph, Anita, Graham, Alice, Adeyemo, Babatunde, Earl, Eric, Perrone, Anders, Carrasco, Cristian Morales, Uriarte-Lopez, Johnny, Snider, Kathy, Doyle, Olivia, Cordova, Michaela, Koirala, Sanju, Grimsrud, Gracie J., Byington, Nora, Nelson, Steven M., Gratton, Caterina, Petersen, Steven, Feldstein Ewing, Sarah W., Nagel, Bonnie J., Dosenbach, Nico U. F., Satterthwaite, Theodore D., and Fair, Damien A.
- Abstract
Although the general location of functional neural networks is similar across individuals, there is vast person-to-person topographic variability. To capture this, we implemented precision brain mapping functional magnetic resonance imaging methods to establish an open-source, method-flexible set of precision functional network atlases—the Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain (MIDB) Precision Brain Atlas. This atlas is an evolving resource comprising 53,273 individual-specific network maps, from more than 9,900 individuals, across ages and cohorts, including the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study, the Developmental Human Connectome Project and others. We also generated probabilistic network maps across multiple ages and integration zones (using a new overlapping mapping technique, Overlapping MultiNetwork Imaging). Using regions of high network invariance improved the reproducibility of executive function statistical maps in brain-wide associations compared to group average-based parcellations. Finally, we provide a potential use case for probabilistic maps for targeted neuromodulation. The atlas is expandable to alternative datasets with an online interface encouraging the scientific community to explore and contribute to understanding the human brain function more precisely.
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- 2024
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32. Environmental impacts of underground nuclear weapons testing
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Park, Sulgiye and Ewing, Rodney C.
- Abstract
ABSTRACTEach nuclear weapon test contributes to a global burden of released radioactivity. Between 1945 and 1996, more than 2,000 nuclear tests were conducted, three-quarters of which were underground. Underground nuclear tests involved placing the nuclear device in a cavity drilled or excavated beneath the surface. The goal was to contain the explosion and its effects to the immediate vicinity of the detonation point, ultimately minimizing the release of radioactive materials into the atmosphere. While these tests successfully curtailed the atmospheric release and radioactive fallout, they created dynamic responses within crustal formations caused by local shock waves from the explosion. This paper discusses the legacy of underground nuclear testing, addressing issues from containment failure to the phenomenological effects after underground detonations and the pathways of subsequent dispersal of radionuclides to the environment.
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- 2024
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33. Comparison of Patient Satisfaction Between Face-to-Face and Telehealth Modalities in Nephrolithiasis Nutritional Counseling
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Graham, Kayla, Wilson, Robert R. A., Ewing, Alex, Smith, Joseph, Dalkin, Benjamin H., Woods, Brian C., Loftis, Gregory M., and Springhart, W. Patrick
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- 2024
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34. Role of the exercise professional in metabolic and bariatric surgery.
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Stults-Kolehmainen, Matthew A., Bond, Dale S., Richardson, Laura A., Herring, Louisa Y., Mulone, Bethany, Garber, Carol Ewing, Morton, John, Ghiassi, Saber, Duffy, Andrew J., Balk, Ethan, Abolt, Charles J., Howard, Matt C., Ash, Garrett I., Williamson, Susannah, Marcon, Emilian Rejane, De Los Santos, Melissa, Bond, Samantha, Huehls, Janet, Alowaish, Osama, and Heyman, Nina Brojan
- Abstract
Physical activity (PA) is important for the long-term health and weight management of patients who undergo metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS). However, the roles of exercise professionals in MBS settings have not been systematically determined. To investigate: (1) who are the professionals implementing PA programming in MBS clinical settings; and (2) what patient-centric tasks do they perform? Clinical and academic exercise settings worldwide. This multimethod study included a scoping review of PA programs in MBS described in the research literature. Data about job tasks were extracted and provided to 10 experts to sort into categories. Cluster analysis was utilized to find the hierarchical structure of tasks. A Delphi process was used to agree on a final model. The majority of PA professionals were exercise physiologists in the USA and physiotherapists or other types of exercise professionals elsewhere. Forty-three tasks were identified, the most reported being supervision of exercise, fitness testing, and exercise prescription. Seven higher-order categories were determined: (1) Exercise-related health assessment, (2) Body composition and physical fitness assessment, (3) Lifestyle physical activity and sedentary behavior assessment, (4) Education, instruction, and prescription, (5) Exercise monitoring, (6) Behavioral counseling and psychosocial support, and (7) Dietary support. The following statements were rated an average of 9.0, classifying them as "imperative": 1) "Pre- and postoperative PA/exercise guidelines for MBS patients are needed", 2) "MBS programs need to include PA/exercise as part of multidisciplinary care". The expert group reached a consensus on 7 major classifications of job tasks for the exercise professional. It is important for governing medical associations across the world to formally recognize experienced exercise professionals as playing pivotal roles in continuing, multidisciplinary care for MBS patients. These findings also provide evidence-based information in the effort to solidify these positions within the greater context of healthcare. • Results identified 43 patient-centered job tasks, which were divided into 7 major categories. • The most common tasks were exercise prescription, supervision, and fitness testing. • Job tasks performed varied marginally by the type of exercise professional. • Including exercise in MBS patient care was deemed "imperative" by the Expert Group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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35. Characterization of the Reversible Intersystem Crossing Dynamics of Organic Photocatalysts Using Transient Absorption Spectroscopy and Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy.
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Whitaker, William, Sazanovich, Igor V., Kwon, Yonghwan, Jeon, Woojin, Kwon, Min Sang, and Orr-Ewing, Andrew J.
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- 2023
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36. Advancing Health Equity in Gastroenterology Training Programs: Moving Beyond Training Modules to Meaningful Integration.
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Reid, Andrea Ewing
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- 2023
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37. Twin Study of Caffeine Use, ADHD, and Disrupted Sleep in ABCD Youth.
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Dash, Genevieve F., Carter, Emily, Karalunas, Sarah L., Hudson, Karen A., Fair, Damien, and Ewing, Sarah W. Feldstein
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Objective: Evidence suggests that caffeine use disproportionately impacts sleep functioning among youth with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The present study aimed to examine the association of caffeine use with disrupted sleep, and to test moderating effects of ADHD, by leveraging differences within twin pairs to explore potential quasi-causal (i.e., within-pair) effects. Method: N = 765 complete same-sex twin pairs (mean age at baseline = 10.14 [SD = .5]; 49% girls; 73% white) from the ABCD study reported caffeine use and frequency of disrupted sleep; parents reported youth ADHD symptoms. Cotwin control analyses predicted disrupted sleep from caffeine use, ADHD, and their interaction at ages 10 and 12. Results: Neither quasi-causal within-pair effects of caffeine use on disrupted sleep, nor a moderating role of ADHD were identified. Posthoc biometric models indicated that genetic and environmental influences on these phenotypes may change over time, such that genetic influences on disrupted sleep began to emerge more robustly around early adolescence. Additionally, caffeine use and disrupted sleep, but not ADHD, displayed overlapping genetic influences (12-13% of total phenotypic variance) at age 10. Conclusions: In a sample of preadolescent twin pairs from the ABCD Study, we did not observe evidence that caffeine use was quasi-causally associated with disrupted sleep at this early developmental stage. However, caffeine use and disrupted sleep emerged with shared etiologic influences. In sum, this study sets the stage for examining these dynamic patterns in future examinations of this critical and timely ABCD study sample, as genetic and environmental influences on behavior are known to change throughout development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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38. Leveraging the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study to Advance and Promote Adolescent Health: Introduction to the Special Issue.
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Sanchez, Mariana, Ewing, Sarah W. Feldstein, and Luciana, Monica
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- 2023
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39. The Declaration of Philadelphia: 80th Anniversary
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Ewing, Keith D
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- 2024
40. Collection on the Spectroscopy, Structure, and Reactivity of Stabilized Criegee Intermediates.
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Orr-Ewing, Andrew J. and Osborn, David L.
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- 2024
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41. Crystal chemistry and thermodynamic properties of zircon structure-type materials
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Strzelecki, Andrew C., Zhao, Xiaodong, Estevenon, Paul, Xu, Hongwu, Dacheux, Nicolas, Ewing, Rodney C., and Guo, Xiaofeng
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Zircon-class ternary oxide compounds have an ideal chemical formula of ATO4, where A is commonly a lanthanide and an actinide, with T = As, P, Si, or V. Their structure (I41/amd) accommodates a diverse chemistry on both A- and T-sites, giving rise to more than 17 mineral end-members of five different mineral groups, and in excess of 45 synthetic end-members. Because of their diverse chemical and physical properties, the zircon structure-type materials are of interest to a wide variety of fields and may be used as ceramic nuclear waste forms and as aeronautical environmental barrier coatings, to name a couple. To support advancement of their applications, many studies have been dedicated to the understanding of their structural and thermodynamic properties. The emphasis in this review will be on recent advances in the structural and thermodynamic studies of zircon structure-type ceramics, including pure end-members [e.g., zircon (ZrSiO4), xenotime (YPO4)] and solid solutions [e.g., ErxTh1–x(PO4)x(SiO4)1–x]. Specifically, we provide an overview on the crystal structure, its variations and transformations in response to non-ambient stimuli (temperature, pressure, and radiation), and its correlation to thermophysical and thermochemical properties.
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- 2024
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42. Datopotamab–deruxtecan in early-stage breast cancer: the sequential multiple assignment randomized I-SPY2.2 phase 2 trial
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Khoury, Katia, Meisel, Jane L., Yau, Christina, Rugo, Hope S., Nanda, Rita, Davidian, Marie, Tsiatis, Butch, Chien, A. Jo, Wallace, Anne M., Arora, Mili, Rozenblit, Mariya, Hershman, Dawn L., Zimmer, Alexandra, Clark, Amy S., Beckwith, Heather, Elias, Anthony D., Stringer-Reasor, Erica, Boughey, Judy C., Nangia, Chaitali, Vaklavas, Christos, Omene, Coral, Albain, Kathy S., Kalinsky, Kevin M., Isaacs, Claudine, Tseng, Jennifer, Roussos Torres, Evanthia T., Thomas, Brittani, Thomas, Alexandra, Sanford, Amy, Balassanian, Ronald, Ewing, Cheryl, Yeung, Kay, Sauder, Candice, Sanft, Tara, Pusztai, Lajos, Trivedi, Meghna S., Outhaythip, Ashton, Li, Wen, Onishi, Natsuko, Asare, Adam L., Beineke, Philip, Norwood, Peter, Brown-Swigart, Lamorna, Hirst, Gillian L., Matthews, Jeffrey B., Moore, Brian, Fraser Symmans, W., Price, Elissa, Beedle, Carolyn, Perlmutter, Jane, Pohlmann, Paula, Shatsky, Rebecca A., DeMichele, Angela, Yee, Douglas, van ‘t Veer, Laura J., Hylton, Nola M., and Esserman, Laura J.
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Among the goals of patient-centric care are the advancement of effective personalized treatment, while minimizing toxicity. The phase 2 I-SPY2.2 trial uses a neoadjuvant sequential therapy approach in breast cancer to further these goals, testing promising new agents while optimizing individual outcomes. Here we tested datopotamab–deruxtecan (Dato-DXd) in the I-SPY2.2 trial for patients with high-risk stage 2/3 breast cancer. I-SPY2.2 uses a sequential multiple assignment randomization trial design that includes three sequential blocks of biologically targeted neoadjuvant treatment: the experimental agent(s) (block A), a taxane-based regimen tailored to the tumor subtype (block B) and doxorubicin–cyclophosphamide (block C). Patients are randomized into arms consisting of different investigational block A treatments. Algorithms based on magnetic resonance imaging and core biopsy guide treatment redirection after each block, including the option of early surgical resection in patients predicted to have a high likelihood of pathological complete response, the primary endpoint. There are two primary efficacy analyses: after block A and across all blocks for the six prespecified breast cancer subtypes (defined by clinical hormone receptor/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status and/or the response-predictive subtypes). We report results of 103 patients treated with Dato-DXd. While Dato-DXd did not meet the prespecified threshold for success (graduation) after block A in any subtype, the treatment strategy across all blocks graduated in the hormone receptor-negative HER2−Immune−DNA repair deficiency−subtype with an estimated pathological complete response rate of 41%. No new toxicities were observed, with stomatitis and ocular events occurring at low grades. Dato-DXd was particularly active in the hormone receptor-negative/HER2−Immune−DNA repair deficiency−signature, warranting further investigation, and was safe in other subtypes in patients who followed the treatment strategy. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT01042379.
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- 2024
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43. Tree-based learning on amperometric time series data demonstrates high accuracy for classification
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Krishnan, Jeyashree, Lian, Zeyu, Oomen, Pieter E., Amir-Aref, Mohaddeseh, He, Xiulan, Majdi, Soodabeh, Schuppert, Andreas, and Ewing, Andrew
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Elucidating exocytosis processes provides insights into cellular neurotransmission mechanisms and may have potential in research on neurodegenerative diseases. Amperometry is an established electrochemical method for detection of neurotransmitters released from and stored inside cells. An important aspect of the amperometry method is the sub-millisecond temporal resolution of the current recordings which usually leads to several hundreds of gigabytes of high-quality data. In this study, we present a universal method for the classification with respect to diverse amperometric datasets using well-established data-driven approaches in computational science. We demonstrate a very high prediction accuracy (≥95%). This includes an end-to-end systematic machine learning workflow for amperometric time series datasets consisting of pre-processing; feature extraction; model identification; training and testing, followed by feature importance evaluation—all implemented. We tested the method on heterogeneous amperometric time series datasets generated using different experimental approaches, chemical stimulations, electrode types, and varying recording times. We identified a certain overarching set of common features across these datasets which enables accurate predictions. Further, we showed that information relevant for the classification of amperometric traces is neither in the spiky segments alone, nor can it be retrieved from just the temporal structure of spikes. In fact, the transients between spikes and the trace baselines carry essential information for a successful classification, thereby strongly demonstrating that an effective feature representation of amperometric time series requires the full time series. To our knowledge, this is one of the first studies that propose a scheme for machine learning, and in particular, supervised learning on full amperometry time series data.
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- 2024
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44. Open versus robotic retromuscular ventral hernia repair: outcomes of the ORREO prospective randomized controlled trial
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Warren, Jeremy A., Blackhurst, Dawn, Ewing, Joseph A., and Carbonell, Alfredo M.
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Background: Robotic retromuscular ventral hernia repair (rRMVHR) potentially combines the best features of open and minimally invasive VHR: myofascial release with abdominal wall reconstruction (AWR) with the lower wound morbidity of laparoscopic VHR. Proliferation of this technique has outpaced the data supporting this claim. We report 2-year outcomes of the first randomized controlled trial of oRMVHR vs rRMVHR. Methods: Single-center randomized control trial of open vs rRMVHR. 100 patients were randomized (50 open, 50 robotic). We included patients > 18 y/o with hernias 7–15 cm with at least one of the following: diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30, or current smokers. Primary outcome was occurrence of a composite outcome of surgical site infection (SSI), non-seroma surgical site occurrence (SSO), readmission, or hernia recurrence. Secondary outcomes were length of stay, any SSI or SSO, SSI/SSOPI, operative time, patient reported quality of life, and cost. Analysis was performed in an intention-to-treat fashion. Study was funded by a grant from Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons. Results: 90 patients were available for 30-day and 62 for 2-year analysis (rRMVHR = 46 and 32, oRMVHR = 44 and 30). Hernias in the open group were slightly larger (10 vs 8 cm, p= 0.024) and more likely to have prior mesh (36.4 vs 15.2%; p= 0.030), but were similar in length, prior hernia repairs, mesh use, and myofascial release. There was no difference in primary composite outcome between oRMVHR and rRMVHR (20.5 vs 19.6%, p= 1.000). Median length of stay was shorter for rRMVHR (1 vs 2 days; p< 0.001). All patients had significant improvement in quality of life at 1 and 2 years. Other secondary outcomes were similar. Conclusion: There is no difference in a composite outcome including SSI, SSOPI, readmission, and hernia recurrence between open and robotic RMVHR. Graphical abstract:
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- 2024
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45. Judicial Backpedaling on Trade Union Rights in the Gig Economy: Deliverooin the United Kingdom Supreme Court
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Ewing, K.D.
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- 2024
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46. The Australian Curriculum: The Arts. A critical opportunity
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Ewing, Robyn
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There is unequivocal research evidence that quality arts processes and experiences engender a distinctive and critical set of understandings and skills that all young people need to navigate twenty-first century living. Yet the potential for the Arts and arts education to transform the curriculum coupled with the ongoing paucity of Australia’s arts storylines threaten the actualisation of The Australian Curriculum: The Arts.While the document asserts that all Australian children are entitled to a quality arts education in dance, drama, media arts, music and visual arts, realising this aspiration continues to be threatened by a number of issues including the ongoing marginalisation of education in and through the Arts, a dearth of teacher professional learning in the Arts and an emphasis on reductive definitions of what it means to be literate. This article considers what must happen if an arts curriculum with rigour and integrity for all young Australians is to become a reality including an investment in pre-service teacher education, ongoing teacher professional learning and the equitable provision of arts experiences and resources. Changes in thinking by governments, policy makers and educational leaders across all education sectors will be needed to ensure that cultivating imagination and creativity through the Arts become a reality for all Australian children and young people.
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- 2024
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47. Exploration of robust and intelligent navigation algorithms to ensure off-road autonomous vehicle mobility
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Cole, Michael, Kulkarni, Kumar B., Ewing, Jordan, Tau, Seth, Goodin, Chris, and Jayakumar, Paramsothy
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The combat capabilities development command (DEVCOM) ground vehicle systems centre (GVSC) is supporting unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) development. Past experimentations of a military UGV demonstrated that its autonomous mode performed worse than the tele-operated mode. To address this, a systematic investigation into path planners for military vehicles in off-road environments was executed. A UGV simulator was used to evaluate vehicle and planner performance through a range of obstacle avoidance scenarios in deformable soil to capture the effects of vehicle-terrain interactions across multiple soil types. Monte Carlo methods were used to evaluate the robustness of five path planners ranging from classical to state-of-the-art planners, with normally-distributed variability in environmental and vehicle initial conditions. After running thousands of simulations, results show how each algorithm compares to one another in several key metrics including overall success rates. These results will help inform decisions in future military UGV path planner selection.
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- 2024
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48. Tropomyosin1 isoforms underlie epithelial to mesenchymal plasticity, metastatic dissemination, and resistance to chemotherapy in high-grade serous ovarian cancer
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Xu, Tong, Verhagen, Mathijs P., Teeuwssen, Miriam, Sun, Wenjie, Joosten, Rosalie, Sacchetti, Andrea, Ewing-Graham, Patricia C., Jansen, Maurice P. H. M., Boere, Ingrid A., Bryce, Nicole S., Zeng, Jun, Treutlein, Herbert R., Hook, Jeff, Hardeman, Edna C., Gunning, Peter W., and Fodde, Riccardo
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Phenotypic plasticity, defined as the ability of individual cells with stable genotypes to exert different phenotypes upon exposure to specific environmental cues, represent the quintessential hallmark of the cancer cell en route from the primary lesion to distant organ sites where metastatic colonization will occur. Phenotypic plasticity is driven by a broad spectrum of epigenetic mechanisms that allow for the reversibility of epithelial-to-mesenchymal and mesenchymal-to-epithelial transitions (EMT/MET). By taking advantage of the co-existence of epithelial and quasi-mesenchymal cells within immortalized cancer cell lines, we have analyzed the role of EMT-related gene isoforms in the regulation of epithelial mesenchymal plasticity (EMP) in high grade serous ovarian cancer. When compared with colon cancer, a distinct spectrum of downstream targets characterizes quasi-mesenchymal ovarian cancer cells, likely to reflect the different modalities of metastasis formation between these two types of malignancy, i.e. hematogenous in colon and transcoelomic in ovarian cancer. Moreover, upstream RNA-binding proteins differentially expressed between epithelial and quasi-mesenchymal subpopulations of ovarian cancer cells were identified that underlie differential regulation of EMT-related isoforms. In particular, the up- and down-regulation of RBM24 and ESRP1, respectively, represent a main regulator of EMT in ovarian cancer cells. To validate the functional and clinical relevance of our approach, we selected and functionally analyzed the Tropomyosin 1 gene (TPM1), encoding for a protein that specifies the functional characteristics of individual actin filaments in contractile cells, among the ovarian-specific downstream AS targets. The low-molecular weight Tpm1.8/9isoforms are specifically expressed in patient-derived ascites and promote invasion through activation of EMT and Wnt signaling, together with a broad spectrum of inflammation-related pathways. Moreover, Tpm1.8/9expression confers resistance to taxane- and platinum-based chemotherapy. Small molecule inhibitors that target the Tpm1isoforms support targeting Tpm1.8/9 as therapeutic targets for the development of future tailor-made clinical interventions.
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- 2024
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49. Effect of the Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool intervention (CSNAT-I) in the Danish specialised palliative care setting: a stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial
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Lund, Line, Ross, Lone, Petersen, Morten Aagaard, Blach, Annemette, Rosted, Elizabeth, Bollig, Georg, Juhl, Gitte Irene, Farholt, Hanne Bollerup, Winther, Helen, Laursen, Louise, Hasse, Marianne, Weensgaard, Signe, Guldin, Mai-Britt, Ewing, Gail, Grande, Gunn, and Groenvold, Mogens
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BackgroundThe Carer Support Needs Assessment Tool intervention (CSNAT-I) has been shown to improve end-of-life care support for informal caregivers. This study investigated the impact of the CSNAT-I on caregivers of patients recently enrolled in specialised palliative care (SPC) at home in Denmark.MethodsA stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial with nine clusters (ie, SPC teams). Outcome measures were collected using caregiver questionnaires at baseline (T0) and 2-week (T1) and 4-week (T2) follow-up.ResultsA total of 437 caregivers were enrolled (control group, n=255; intervention group, n=182). No intervention effect was found on the primary outcome, caregiver strain at T1 (p=0.1865). However, positive effects were found at T1 and T2 on attention to caregivers’ well-being (p<0.0001), quality of information and communication (p<0.0001), amount of information (T1: p=0.0002; T2: p<0.0001), involvement (T1: p=0.0045; T2: p<0.0001), talking about greatest burdens (p<0.0001) and assistance in managing greatest burdens (p<0.0001). The effect sizes of these differences were medium or large and seemed to increase from T1 to T2. At T1, positive effects were found on distress (p=0.0178) and home care responsibility (p=0.0024). No effect was found on the remaining outcomes.ConclusionAlthough no effect was found on caregiver strain, the CSNAT-I showed positive effects on caregiver distress, home care responsibility and key outcomes regarding caregivers’ experience of the interaction with healthcare professionals.Trial registration numberNCT03466580.
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- 2024
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50. Local adaptation and broad performance are synergistic to productivity in modern barley
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Ewing, Patrick M., Kantar, Michael B., Killian, Erik, Neyhart, Jeffrey L., Sherman, Jamie D., Williams, Jessica L., Lachowiec, Jennifer A., and Eberly, Jed O.
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Crop populations have enormous impacts on agricultural productivity, yet decelerating gains from breeding suggest that selection strategies need to be reconsidered to better align priorities of breeders and growers. Breeders benefit from releasing broadly adapted varieties that perform acceptably well across their target region; growers benefit from selecting a variety that specializes in their specific location. We tested whether these interests are compatible using 182 entries in a mega‐population of malting barley (spring, two‐row, multi‐environment trial [S2MET] population; Hordeum vulgareL.), which was grown across the northern United States. We assessed the strength of genetic–environment interactions (G×E), quantified local adaptation benefits, and tested whether local adaptation and genetic yield potential were correlated. Breeding programs favored broad adaptation (p< 0.001). Still, 63% of entries (114) were among the top 10%, best performing at some locations, and among the worst 10% at others. Some of the best overall entries were specialists, performing especially well in their home locations, and in general, genetic potential and local specialization were positively correlated (p< 0.001). These results suggest that breeding for local performance and broad performance are mutually supporting goals. Releasing broadly excellent, locally exceptional varieties may accelerate genetic gain to meet projected global agricultural demand. Releasing locally adapted varieties can accelerate genetic gain at the cost of breeding efficiency.We test whether locally and broadly adapted strategies are synergistic in the modern barley mega‐population, spring, two‐row, multi‐environment trial malting barley population (S2MET).Specialist lines tended to yield higher overall, indicating a synergy between these strategies.Broad adaptation at the population level indicated that breeders favored generalist lines.Releasing broadly excellent, locally exceptional varieties is feasible and better aligns breeder and grower needs.
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- 2024
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