15 results on '"Thomas White"'
Search Results
2. Incidence and Symptom Profiling of Vaginitis Containing Aerobic and Anaerobic Pathogens.
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K, Thomas-White, F, Wever, and P, Navarro
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- 2024
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3. Gardnerella Species Variations Show Pathogenic and Metabolic Differences.
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G, Olmschenk, K, Thomas-White, F, Weaver, and P, Navarro
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- 2024
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4. Microorganisms Identified in the Maternal Bladder: Discovery of the Maternal Bladder Microbiota
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Jacobs, Kristin M., Thomas-White, Krystal J., Hilt, Evann E., Wolfe, Alan J., and Waters, Thaddeus P.
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- 2017
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5. The Clinical Urine Culture: Enhanced Techniques Improve Detection of Clinically Relevant Microorganisms
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Price, Travis K., Dune, Tanaka, Hilt, Evann E., Thomas-White, Krystal J., Kliethermes, Stephanie, Brincat, Cynthia, Brubaker, Linda, Wolfe, Alan J., Mueller, Elizabeth R., and Schreckenberger, Paul C.
- Abstract
ABSTRACTEnhanced quantitative urine culture (EQUC) detects live microorganisms in the vast majority of urine specimens reported as “no growth” by the standard urine culture protocol. Here, we evaluated an expanded set of EQUC conditions (expanded-spectrum EQUC) to identify an optimal version that provides a more complete description of uropathogens in women experiencing urinary tract infection (UTI)-like symptoms. One hundred fifty adult urogynecology patient-participants were characterized using a self-completed validated UTI symptom assessment (UTISA) questionnaire and asked “Do you feel you have a UTI?” Women responding negatively were recruited into the no-UTI cohort, while women responding affirmatively were recruited into the UTI cohort; the latter cohort was reassessed with the UTISA questionnaire 3 to 7 days later. Baseline catheterized urine samples were plated using both standard urine culture and expanded-spectrum EQUC protocols: standard urine culture inoculated at 1 µl onto 2 agars incubated aerobically; expanded-spectrum EQUC inoculated at three different volumes of urine onto 7 combinations of agars and environments. Compared to expanded-spectrum EQUC, standard urine culture missed 67% of uropathogens overall and 50% in participants with severe urinary symptoms. Thirty-six percent of participants with missed uropathogens reported no symptom resolution after treatment by standard urine culture results. Optimal detection of uropathogens could be achieved using the following: 100 µl of urine plated onto blood (blood agar plate [BAP]), colistin-nalidixic acid (CNA), and MacConkey agars in 5% CO2for 48 h. This streamlined EQUC protocol achieved 84% uropathogen detection relative to 33% detection by standard urine culture. The streamlined EQUC protocol improves detection of uropathogens that are likely relevant for symptomatic women, giving clinicians the opportunity to receive additional information not currently reported using standard urine culture techniques.
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- 2016
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6. Vaginal estrogen therapy is associated with increased Lactobacillus in the urine of postmenopausal women with overactive bladder symptoms.
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Thomas-White, Krystal, Taege, Susanne, Limeira, Roberto, Brincat, Cynthia, Joyce, Cara, Hilt, Evann E., Mac-Daniel, Laura, Radek, Katherine A., Brubaker, Linda, Mueller, Elizabeth R., and Wolfe, Alan J.
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POSTMENOPAUSE ,BACTERIAL vaginitis ,OVERACTIVE bladder ,SYMPTOMS ,VAGINAL contraceptives ,LACTOBACILLUS ,ESTROGEN ,PELVIC floor ,URINE ,URINE microbiology ,ESTROGEN replacement therapy ,URINARY urge incontinence ,RESEARCH ,BLADDER ,HIGH performance liquid chromatography ,CORYNEBACTERIUM ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,STREPTOCOCCUS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,VAGINAL medication ,RESEARCH funding ,PEPTIDES ,BIOTIC communities ,GRAM-positive bacteria - Abstract
Background: Previous work has shown that the vaginal microbiome decreases in Lactobacillus predominance and becomes more diverse after menopause. It has also been shown that estrogen therapy restores Lactobacillus dominance in the vagina and that topical estrogen is associated with overactive bladder symptom improvement. We now know that the bladder contains a unique microbiome and that increased bladder microbiome diversity is associated with overactive bladder. However, there is no understanding of how quickly each pelvic floor microbiome responds to estrogen or if those changes are associated with symptom improvement.Objective: This study aimed to determine if estrogen treatment of postmenopausal women with overactive bladder decreases urobiome diversity.Study Design: We analyzed data from postmenopausal participants in 2 trials (NCT02524769 and NCT02835846) who chose vaginal estrogen as the primary overactive bladder treatment and used 0.5 g of conjugated estrogen (Premarin cream; Pfizer, New York City, NY) twice weekly for 12 weeks. Baseline and 12-week follow-up data included the Overactive Bladder questionnaire, and participants provided urine samples via catheter, vaginal swabs, perineal swabs, and voided urine samples. Microbes were detected by an enhanced culture protocol. Linear mixed models were used to estimate microbiome changes over time. Urinary antimicrobial peptide activity was assessed by a bacterial growth inhibition assay and correlated with relative abundance of members of the urobiome.Results: In this study, 12 weeks of estrogen treatment resulted in decreased microbial diversity within the vagina (Shannon, P=.047; Richness, P=.043) but not in the other niches. A significant increase in Lactobacillus was detected in the bladder (P=.037) but not in the vagina (P=.33), perineum (P=.56), or voided urine (P=.28). The change in Lactobacillus levels in the bladder was associated with modest changes in urgency incontinence symptoms (P=.02). The relative abundance of the genus Corynebacterium correlated positively with urinary antimicrobial peptide activity after estrogen treatment.Conclusion: Estrogen therapy may change the microbiome of different pelvic floor niches. The vagina begins to decrease in diversity, and the bladder experiences a significant increase in Lactobacillus levels; the latter is correlated with a modest improvement in the symptom severity subscale of the Overactive Bladder questionnaire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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7. Bladder bacterial diversity differs in continent and incontinent women: a cross-sectional study.
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Price, Travis K., Lin, Huaiying, Gao, Xiang, Thomas-White, Krystal J., Hilt, Evann E., Mueller, Elizabeth R., Wolfe, Alan J., Dong, Qunfeng, and Brubaker, Linda
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BACTERIAL diversity ,DESORPTION ionization mass spectrometry ,INSTITUTIONAL review boards ,URINARY urge incontinence ,URINARY incontinence ,BACTERIAL vaginitis ,URINARY incontinence in women ,RESEARCH ,BLADDER ,GARDNERELLA ,CROSS-sectional method ,CORYNEBACTERIUM ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,STREPTOCOCCUS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,URINARY stress incontinence ,STAPHYLOCOCCUS ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LACTOBACILLUS ,BIOTIC communities ,GRAM-positive bacteria - Abstract
Background: Since the discovery of the bladder microbiome (urobiome), interest has grown in learning whether urobiome characteristics have a role in clinical phenotyping and provide opportunities for novel therapeutic approaches for women with common forms of urinary incontinence.Objective: This study aimed to test the hypothesis that the bladder urobiome differs among women in the control cohort and women affected by urinary incontinence by assessing associations between urinary incontinence status and the cultured urobiome.Study Design: With institutional review board oversight, urine specimens from 309 adult women were collected through transurethral catheterization. These women were categorized into 3 cohorts (continent control, stress urinary incontinence [SUI], and urgency urinary incontinence [UUI]) based on their responses to the validated Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory (PFDI) questionnaire. Among 309 women, 150 were in the continent control cohort, 50 were in the SUI cohort, and 109 were in the UUI cohort. Symptom severity was assessed by subscale scoring with the Urinary Distress Inventory (UDI), subscale of the Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory. Microbes were assessed by expanded quantitative urine culture protocol, which detects the most common bladder microbes (bacteria and yeast). Microbes were identified to the species level by matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Alpha diversity indices were calculated for culture-positive samples and compared across the 3 cohorts. The correlations of UDI scores, alpha diversity indices, and species abundance were estimated.Results: Participants had a mean age of 53 years (range 22-90); most were whites (65%). Women with urinary incontinence were slightly older (control, 47; SUI, 54; UUI, 61). By design, UDI symptom scores differed (control, 8.43 [10.1]; SUI, 97.95 [55.36]; UUI, 93.71 [49.12]; P<.001). Among 309 participants, 216 (70%) had expanded quantitative urine culture-detected bacteria; furthermore, the urinary incontinence cohorts had a higher detection frequency than the control cohort (control, 57%; SUI, 86%; UUI, 81%; P<.001). In addition, the most frequently detected species among the cohorts were as follows: continent control, Lactobacillus iners (12.7%), Streptococcus anginosus (12.7%), L crispatus (10.7%), and L gasseri (10%); SUI, S anginosus (26%), L iners (18%), Staphylococcus epidermidis (18%), and L jensenii (16%); and UUI, S anginosus (30.3%), L gasseri (22%), Aerococcus urinae (18.3%), and Gardnerella vaginalis (17.4%). However, only Actinotignum schaalii (formerly Actinobaculum schaalii), A urinae, A sanguinicola, and Corynebacterium lipophile group were found at significantly higher mean abundances in 1 of the urinary incontinence cohorts when compared with the control cohort (Wilcoxon rank sum test; P<.02), and no individual genus differed significantly between the 2 urinary incontinence cohorts. Both urinary incontinence cohorts had increased alpha diversity similar to continent control cohort with indices of species richness, but not evenness, strongly associated with urinary incontinence.Conclusion: In adult women, the composition of the culturable bladder urobiome is associated with urinary incontinence, regardless of common incontinence subtype. Detection of more unique living microbes was associated with worsening incontinence symptom severity. Culturable species richness was significantly greater in the urinary incontinence cohorts than in the continent control cohort. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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8. The fatty acids of ox blood
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Parry, Thomas White and Smith, James Andrew Buchan
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- 1936
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9. Incontinence Medication Response Relates to the Female Urinary Microbiota
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Thomas-White, Krystal J., Hilt, Evann E., Fok, Cynthia, Pearce, Meghan M., Mueller, Elizabeth R., Kliethermes, Stephanie, Jacobs, Kristin, Zilliox, Michael J., Brincat, Cynthia, Price, Travis K., Kuffel, Gina, Schreckenberger, Paul, Gai, Xiaowu, Brubaker, Linda, and Wolfe, Alan J.
- Abstract
(Abstracted from Int Urogynecol J2016;27:723–733)This article uses a 12-week open-label study of women to show the significance of resident urinary bacterial (microbiome/microbiota) diversity to clinical treatment response in women with urinary urgency incontinence (UUI), thus offering the potential of new ideas for prevention and treatment of this disease affecting the quality of life of so many women. From August 2012 to July 2014, the Loyola University Medical Center, a tertiary healthcare center, recruited 2 cohorts of adult women: women with UUI and normal controls.
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- 2016
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10. Evaluation of the urinary microbiota of women with uncomplicated stress urinary incontinence.
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Thomas-White, Krystal J., Kliethermes, Stephanie, Rickey, Leslie, Lukacz, Emily S., Richter, Holly E., Moalli, Pamela, Zimmern, Philippe, Norton, Peggy, Kusek, John W., Wolfe, Alan J., Brubaker, Linda, and National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases Urinary Incontinence Treatment Network
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URINARY stress incontinence ,MENOPAUSE ,HORMONES ,BACTERIAL DNA ,BACTERIAL diversity ,LACTOBACILLUS ,URINE microbiology ,BACTERIOPHAGE typing ,BIOTIC communities ,CORYNEBACTERIUM ,DNA ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,RESEARCH funding ,RNA ,STREPTOCOCCUS ,BODY mass index ,ACTINOBACTERIA ,CROSS-sectional method ,GRAM-negative anaerobic bacteria - Abstract
Background: Female urinary microbiota are associated with urgency urinary incontinence and response to medication. The urinary microbiota of women with stress urinary incontinence has not been described.Objective: We sought to study the cross-sectional relationships between urinary microbiota features and demographic and clinical characteristics of women undergoing stress urinary incontinence surgery.Study Design: Preoperative urine specimens were collected from women without urinary tract infection and were available from 197 women (174 voided, 23 catheterized) enrolled in a multicenter prospective randomized trial, the Value of Urodynamic Evaluation study. Demographic and clinical variables were obtained including stress and urgency urinary incontinence symptoms, menopausal status, and hormone use. The bacterial composition of the urine was qualitatively assessed by sequencing the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Phylogenetic relatedness and microbial alpha diversity were compared to demographics and symptoms using generalized estimating equation models.Results: The majority of 197 urine samples (86%) had detectable bacterial DNA. Bacterial diversity was significantly associated with higher body mass index (P = .02); increased Medical, Epidemiologic, and Social Aspects of Aging urge index score (P = .04); and hormonal status (P < .001). No associations were detected with stress urinary incontinence symptoms. Increased diversity was also associated with a concomitant lower frequency of Lactobacillus in hormone-negative women.Conclusion: Women undergoing stress urinary incontinence surgery have detectable urinary microbiota. This cross-sectional analysis revealed that increased diversity of the microbiota was associated with urgency urinary incontinence symptoms, hormonal status, and body mass index. In contrast, the female urinary microbiota were not associated with stress urinary incontinence symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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11. The female urinary microbiome in urgency urinary incontinence.
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Pearce, Meghan M., Zilliox, Michael J., Rosenfeld, Amy B., Thomas-White, Krystal J., Richter, Holly E., Nager, Charles W., Visco, Anthony G., Nygaard, Ingrid E., Barber, Matthew D., Schaffer, Joseph, Moalli, Pamela, Sung, Vivian W., Smith, Ariana L., Rogers, Rebecca, Nolen, Tracy L., Wallace, Dennis, Meikle, Susan F., Gai, Xiaowu, Wolfe, Alan J., and Brubaker, Linda
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HUMAN microbiota ,URINARY incontinence treatment ,ENTEROTYPES ,URINARY organs ,NUCLEOTIDE sequencing - Abstract
Objective The purpose of this study was to characterize the urinary microbiota in women who are planning treatment for urgency urinary incontinence and to describe clinical associations with urinary symptoms, urinary tract infection, and treatment outcomes. Study Design Catheterized urine samples were collected from multisite randomized trial participants who had no clinical evidence of urinary tract infection; 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing was used to dichotomize participants as either DNA sequence-positive or sequence-negative. Associations with demographics, urinary symptoms, urinary tract infection risk, and treatment outcomes were determined. In sequence-positive samples, microbiotas were characterized on the basis of their dominant microorganisms. Results More than one-half (51.1%; 93/182) of the participants’ urine samples were sequence-positive. Sequence-positive participants were younger (55.8 vs 61.3 years old; P = .0007), had a higher body mass index (33.7 vs 30.1 kg/m 2 ; P = .0009), had a higher mean baseline daily urgency urinary incontinence episodes (5.7 vs 4.2 episodes; P < .0001), responded better to treatment (decrease in urgency urinary incontinence episodes, –4.4 vs –3.3; P = .0013), and were less likely to experience urinary tract infection (9% vs 27%; P = .0011). In sequence-positive samples, 8 major bacterial clusters were identified; 7 clusters were dominated not only by a single genus, most commonly Lactobacillus (45%) or Gardnerella (17%), but also by other taxa (25%). The remaining cluster had no dominant genus (13%). Conclusion DNA sequencing confirmed urinary bacterial DNA in many women with urgency urinary incontinence who had no signs of infection. Sequence status was associated with baseline urgency urinary incontinence episodes, treatment response, and posttreatment urinary tract infection risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. The Female Urinary Microbiome: a Comparison of Women with and without Urgency Urinary Incontinence
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Pearce, Meghan M., Hilt, Evann E., Rosenfeld, Amy B., Zilliox, Michael J., Thomas-White, Krystal, Fok, Cynthia, Kliethermes, Stephanie, Schreckenberger, Paul C., Brubaker, Linda, Gai, Xiaowu, and Wolfe, Alan J.
- Abstract
ABSTRACTBacterial DNA and live bacteria have been detected in human urine in the absence of clinical infection, challenging the prevailing dogma that urine is normally sterile. Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) is a poorly understood urinary condition characterized by symptoms that overlap urinary infection, including urinary urgency and increased frequency with urinary incontinence. The recent discovery of the urinary microbiome warrants investigation into whether bacteria contribute to UUI. In this study, we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to classify bacterial DNA and expanded quantitative urine culture (EQUC) techniques to isolate live bacteria in urine collected by using a transurethral catheter from women with UUI and, in comparison, a cohort without UUI. For these cohorts, we demonstrated that the UUI and non-UUI urinary microbiomes differ by group based on both sequence and culture evidences. Compared to the non-UUI microbiome, sequencing experiments revealed that the UUI microbiome was composed of increased Gardnerellaand decreased Lactobacillus. Nine genera (Actinobaculum, Actinomyces, Aerococcus, Arthrobacter, Corynebacterium, Gardnerella, Oligella, Staphylococcus, and Streptococcus) were more frequently cultured from the UUI cohort. Although Lactobacilluswas isolated from both cohorts, distinctions existed at the species level, with Lactobacillus gasseridetected more frequently in the UUI cohort and Lactobacillus crispatusmost frequently detected in controls. Combined, these data suggest that potentially important differences exist in the urinary microbiomes of women with and without UUI, which have strong implications in prevention, diagnosis, or treatment of UUI.IMPORTANCENew evidence indicates that the human urinary tract contains microbial communities; however, the role of these communities in urinary health remains to be elucidated. Urgency urinary incontinence (UUI) is a highly prevalent yet poorly understood urinary condition characterized by urgency, frequency, and urinary incontinence. Given the significant overlap of UUI symptoms with those of urinary tract infections, it is possible that UUI may have a microbial component. We compared the urinary microbiomes of women affected by UUI to those of a comparison group without UUI, using both high-throughput sequencing and extended culture techniques. We identified statistically significant differences in the frequency and abundance of bacteria present. These differences suggest a potential role for the urinary microbiome in female urinary health.
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- 2014
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13. fast FOREWORD.
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Thomas, White
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An introduction to series of articles featuring the honorees of the 25th anniversary of the International Documentary Association (IDA) Awards in 2010 is offered, who include Errol Morris, the Career Achievement Award honoree, Nicolas Noxon, the Pioneer Award honoree, and Michael Donaldson of the Amicus Award honoree.
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- 2010
14. The History of Wisconsin. Volume III. Urbanization and Industrialization, 1873-1893
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W. Thomas, White
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- 1987
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15. The Psychology of Relaxation
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Patrick, George Thomas White and Jelliffe
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- 1917
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