7,037 results on '"Karin, M."'
Search Results
2. Characteristics of Special Education Field Placements: An Exploratory Study
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Fisher, Karin M. and Norris, Angela
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Research and policy in the field of teacher education recommend that special education (SPED) programs include opportunities for candidates to practice in supervised field experiences. Such field experiences (a) engage candidates in professional practice, (b) reduce their anxiety, (c) gain confidence, and (d) allow them to view themselves as educators. However, there is a lack of research on the characteristics of field placements in SPED. As a result of the dearth in the literature, the researchers discussed the results of an exploratory single survey study of 42 faculty members from institutes of higher education (IHE) from across the United States (US). Results found variability of data from institutions in 18 different states. The characteristics of field placements and the responsibilities of the teacher candidate (TC), university supervisor (US), and clinical supervisor (CS) are described. Lastly, the mean number of hours in each placement was calculated and described for Bachelor of Science in Education (BSED) programs, along with implications and future research.
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- 2023
3. Integrated Safety Update of Abrocitinib in 3802 Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Atopic Dermatitis: Data from More than 5200 Patient-Years with Up to 4 Years of Exposure
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Simpson, Eric L., Silverberg, Jonathan I., Nosbaum, Audrey, Winthrop, Kevin, Guttman-Yassky, Emma, Hoffmeister, Karin M., Egeberg, Alexander, Valdez, Hernan, Fan, Haiyun, Farooqui, Saleem A., Chan, Gary, Alderfer, Justine, Romero, William, and Chittuluru, Kanti
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- 2024
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4. Long-term periodic management of Phragmites australis maintains native brackish wetland plant communities
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Brooks, Hope, Jacobson, Sylvia, Baldwin, Andrew H., McCormick, Melissa K., Kettenring, Karin M., Buehl, Eric, and Whigham, Dennis F.
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- 2024
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5. The yield of routine laboratory examination in osteoporosis evaluation in primary care
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Merlijn, Thomas, Swart, Karin M. A., Niemeijer, Christy, van der Horst, Henriëtte E., Netelenbos, Coen. J., and Elders, Petra J. M.
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- 2024
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6. Bivalent chromatin accommodates survivin and BRG1/SWI complex to activate DNA damage response in CD4+ cells
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Venkataragavan Chandrasekaran, Karin M. E. Andersson, Malin Erlandsson, Shuxiang Li, Torbjörn Nur Olsson, Maria-Jose Garcia-Bonete, Eric Malmhäll-Bah, Pegah Johansson, Gergely Katona, and Maria I. Bokarewa
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Bivalent chromatin ,DNA damage ,BRG1 ,Survivin ,Autoimmunity ,Medicine ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
Abstract Background Bivalent regions of chromatin (BvCR) are characterized by trimethylated lysine 4 (H3K4me3) and lysine 27 on histone H3 (H3K27me3) deposition which aid gene expression control during cell differentiation. The role of BvCR in post-transcriptional DNA damage response remains unidentified. Oncoprotein survivin binds chromatin and mediates IFNγ effects in CD4+ cells. In this study, we explored the role of BvCR in DNA damage response of autoimmune CD4+ cells in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods We performed deep sequencing of the chromatin bound to survivin, H3K4me3, H3K27me3, and H3K27ac, in human CD4+ cells and identified BvCR, which possessed all three histone H3 modifications. Protein partners of survivin on chromatin were predicted by integration of motif enrichment analysis, computational machine-learning, and structural modeling, and validated experimentally by mass spectrometry and peptide binding array. Survivin-dependent change in BvCR and transcription of genes controlled by the BvCR was studied in CD4+ cells treated with survivin inhibitor, which revealed survivin-dependent biological processes. Finally, the survivin-dependent processes were mapped to the transcriptome of CD4+ cells in blood and in synovial tissue of RA patients and the effect of modern immunomodulating drugs on these processes was explored. Results We identified that BvCR dominated by H3K4me3 (H3K4me3-BvCR) accommodated survivin within cis-regulatory elements of the genes controlling DNA damage. Inhibition of survivin or JAK-STAT signaling enhanced H3K4me3-BvCR dominance, which improved DNA damage recognition and arrested cell cycle progression in cultured CD4+ cells. Specifically, BvCR accommodating survivin aided sequence-specific anchoring of the BRG1/SWI chromatin-remodeling complex coordinating DNA damage response. Mapping survivin interactome to BRG1/SWI complex demonstrated interaction of survivin with the subunits anchoring the complex to chromatin. Co-expression of BRG1, survivin and IFNγ in CD4+ cells rendered complete deregulation of DNA damage response in RA. Such cells possessed strong ability of homing to RA joints. Immunomodulating drugs inhibited the anchoring subunits of BRG1/SWI complex, which affected arthritogenic profile of CD4+ cells. Conclusions BvCR execute DNA damage control to maintain genome fidelity in IFN-activated CD4+ cells. Survivin anchors the BRG1/SWI complex to BvCR to repress DNA damage response. These results offer a platform for therapeutic interventions targeting survivin and BRG1/SWI complex in autoimmunity.
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- 2024
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7. A complete year of urology residency training under COVID-19: impact on education and health
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João Victor T. Henriques, José A. Prezotti, Karin M. Anzolch, Gustavo Ruschi, Gilberto Almeida, Leonardo Seligra, Luciano A. Favorito, Alfredo F. Canalini, Roni de C. Fernandes, Fransber R. A. Rodrigues, Caroline Santos Silva, Anna Sophia Candiotto Pereira, José de Bessa Jr., and Cristiano M. Gomes
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COVID-19 ,Education, Medical ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Brazil ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objectives: To evaluate the impact of COVID-19 pandemics on clinical and surgical practice, educational activities, health and lifestyle behavior of Brazilian urology residents after 1 year of socio-economic restrictions. Materials and Methods: An electronic survey was e-mailed to all postgraduate (PG) students registered by the Brazilian Society of Urology. The survey included an assessment of socio-demographic, clinical practice, educational, health-related and behavior parameters. We also evaluated which subareas of urology were predominantly affected. A similar survey was adapted and sent to the directors of all urology residency programs. Results: COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted the clinical, surgical, and educational activities of urology residents in Brazil. Urology residents reported >50% decrease in multiple surgical modalities. We highlight kidney transplantation surgeries (66.2%), minor surgeries (62.3%), endoscopic surgeries (42.6%) and reconstructive surgeries (38.8%). This could represent a critical skills gap that residents may face beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, PG students faced stressful situations that caused worsening of mental and physical health, such as getting redirected to assistance of COVID-19 patients (66.9%), and high rate of infection by SARS-CoV-2 (58.2%). Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic has severely impacted the clinical, surgical, and educational activities of urology residents in Brazil. This could represent a critical skills gap that residents may face beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. PG students faced stressful situations that caused worsening of mental and physical health such as redirection to assistance of COVID-19 patients, concern about their own contamination and of family members.
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- 2024
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8. Safety effects of horizontal curve and grade combinations on rural two-lane highways
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Bauer, Karin M.
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Rural roads -- Safety measures. -- United States ,Grading (Earthwork) - Published
- 2014
9. Performance of ICD-10-AM codes for quality improvement monitoring of hospital-acquired pneumonia in a haematology-oncology casemix in Victoria, Australia
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Valentine, Jake C, Gillespie, Elizabeth, Verspoor, Karin M, Hall, Lisa, and Worth, Leon J
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- 2024
10. Bivalent chromatin accommodates survivin and BRG1/SWI complex to activate DNA damage response in CD4+ cells
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Chandrasekaran, Venkataragavan, Andersson, Karin M. E., Erlandsson, Malin, Li, Shuxiang, Olsson, Torbjörn Nur, Garcia-Bonete, Maria-Jose, Malmhäll-Bah, Eric, Johansson, Pegah, Katona, Gergely, and Bokarewa, Maria I.
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- 2024
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11. Hydrogen-induced tunable remanent polarization in a perovskite nickelate
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Yuan, Yifan, Kotiuga, Michele, Park, Tae Joon, Patel, Ranjan Kumar, Ni, Yuanyuan, Saha, Arnob, Zhou, Hua, Sadowski, Jerzy T., Al-Mahboob, Abdullah, Yu, Haoming, Du, Kai, Zhu, Minning, Deng, Sunbin, Bisht, Ravindra S., Lyu, Xiao, Wu, Chung-Tse Michael, Ye, Peide D., Sengupta, Abhronil, Cheong, Sang-Wook, Xu, Xiaoshan, Rabe, Karin M., and Ramanathan, Shriram
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- 2024
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12. Author Correction: Epitaxy, exfoliation, and strain-induced magnetism in rippled Heusler membranes
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Du, Dongxue, Manzo, Sebastian, Zhang, Chenyu, Saraswat, Vivek, Genser, Konrad T., Rabe, Karin M., Voyles, Paul M., Arnold, Michael S., and Kawasaki, Jason K.
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- 2024
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13. Outcome assessment methods of bioactive and biodegradable materials as pulpotomy agents in primary and permanent teeth: a scoping review
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Elhamouly, Yasmine, Adham, May M., Dowidar, Karin M L, and El Backly, Rania M.
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- 2024
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14. Reliability, costs, and radiation dose of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in diagnosis of radiologic sarcopenia in surgically menopausal women
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Stuursma, Annechien, Stroot, Iris A. S., Vermeulen, Karin M., Slart, Riemer H. J. A., Greuter, Marcel J. W., Mourits, Marian J. E., and de Bock, Geertruida H.
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- 2024
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15. Prediction of BiS2-type pnictogen dichalcogenide monolayers for optoelectronics
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Mella, José D., Nalabothula, Muralidhar, Muñoz, Francisco, Rabe, Karin M., Wirtz, Ludger, Singh, Sobhit, and Romero, Aldo H.
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- 2024
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16. Order effects in stimulus discrimination challenge established models of comparative judgement: A meta-analytic review of the Type B effect
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Ellinghaus, Ruben, Bausenhart, Karin M., Koc, Dilara, Ulrich, Rolf, and Liepelt, Roman
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- 2024
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17. A meta-analysis of previous falls and subsequent fracture risk in cohort studies
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Vandenput, Liesbeth, Johansson, Helena, McCloskey, Eugene V., Liu, Enwu, Schini, Marian, Åkesson, Kristina E., Anderson, Fred A., Azagra, Rafael, Bager, Cecilie L., Beaudart, Charlotte, Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A., Biver, Emmanuel, Bruyère, Olivier, Cauley, Jane A., Center, Jacqueline R., Chapurlat, Roland, Christiansen, Claus, Cooper, Cyrus, Crandall, Carolyn J., Cummings, Steven R., da Silva, José A. P., Dawson-Hughes, Bess, Diez-Perez, Adolfo, Dufour, Alyssa B., Eisman, John A., Elders, Petra J. M., Ferrari, Serge, Fujita, Yuki, Fujiwara, Saeko, Glüer, Claus-Christian, Goldshtein, Inbal, Goltzman, David, Gudnason, Vilmundur, Hall, Jill, Hans, Didier, Hoff, Mari, Hollick, Rosemary J., Huisman, Martijn, Iki, Masayuki, Ish-Shalom, Sophia, Jones, Graeme, Karlsson, Magnus K., Khosla, Sundeep, Kiel, Douglas P., Koh, Woon-Puay, Koromani, Fjorda, Kotowicz, Mark A., Kröger, Heikki, Kwok, Timothy, Lamy, Olivier, Langhammer, Arnulf, Larijani, Bagher, Lippuner, Kurt, McGuigan, Fiona E. A., Mellström, Dan, Merlijn, Thomas, Nguyen, Tuan V., Nordström, Anna, Nordström, Peter, O’Neill, Terence W., Obermayer-Pietsch, Barbara, Ohlsson, Claes, Orwoll, Eric S., Pasco, Julie A., Rivadeneira, Fernando, Schott, Anne-Marie, Shiroma, Eric J., Siggeirsdottir, Kristin, Simonsick, Eleanor M., Sornay-Rendu, Elisabeth, Sund, Reijo, Swart, Karin M. A., Szulc, Pawel, Tamaki, Junko, Torgerson, David J., van Schoor, Natasja M., van Staa, Tjeerd P., Vila, Joan, Wareham, Nicholas J., Wright, Nicole C., Yoshimura, Noriko, Zillikens, MCarola, Zwart, Marta, Harvey, Nicholas C., Lorentzon, Mattias, Leslie, William D., and Kanis, John A.
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- 2024
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18. Modal and amodal cognition: an overarching principle in various domains of psychology
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Kaup, Barbara, Ulrich, Rolf, Bausenhart, Karin M., Bryce, Donna, Butz, Martin V., Dignath, David, Dudschig, Carolin, Franz, Volker H., Friedrich, Claudia, Gawrilow, Caterina, Heller, Jürgen, Huff, Markus, Hütter, Mandy, Janczyk, Markus, Leuthold, Hartmut, Mallot, Hanspeter, Nürk, Hans-Christoph, Ramscar, Michael, Said, Nadia, Svaldi, Jennifer, and Wong, Hong Yu
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- 2024
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19. Different Frameworks, Similar Results? Head-to-Head Comparison of the Generic Preference-Based Health-Outcome Measures CS-Base and EQ-5D-5L
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Zhang, Xin, Vermeulen, Karin M., and Krabbe, Paul F. M.
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- 2024
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20. Hydrogen-induced tunable remanent polarization in a perovskite nickelate
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Yifan Yuan, Michele Kotiuga, Tae Joon Park, Ranjan Kumar Patel, Yuanyuan Ni, Arnob Saha, Hua Zhou, Jerzy T. Sadowski, Abdullah Al-Mahboob, Haoming Yu, Kai Du, Minning Zhu, Sunbin Deng, Ravindra S. Bisht, Xiao Lyu, Chung-Tse Michael Wu, Peide D. Ye, Abhronil Sengupta, Sang-Wook Cheong, Xiaoshan Xu, Karin M. Rabe, and Shriram Ramanathan
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Materials with field-tunable polarization are of broad interest to condensed matter sciences and solid-state device technologies. Here, using hydrogen (H) donor doping, we modify the room temperature metallic phase of a perovskite nickelate NdNiO3 into an insulating phase with both metastable dipolar polarization and space-charge polarization. We then demonstrate transient negative differential capacitance in thin film capacitors. The space-charge polarization caused by long-range movement and trapping of protons dominates when the electric field exceeds the threshold value. First-principles calculations suggest the polarization originates from the polar structure created by H doping. We find that polarization decays within ~1 second which is an interesting temporal regime for neuromorphic computing hardware design, and we implement the transient characteristics in a neural network to demonstrate unsupervised learning. These discoveries open new avenues for designing ferroelectric materials and electrets using light-ion doping.
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- 2024
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21. Supporting Independently Living People with Intellectual Disabilities: A Qualitative Study into Professional Remote Support Practices
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Zaagsma, Miriam, Koning, Mark H. M., Volkers, Karin M., Schippers, Alice P., and van Hove, Geert
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Background: Professional support for people with intellectual disabilities is increasingly delivered remotely. Understanding what support workers do to support people with intellectual disabilities remotely, and how they do this, is therefore important. The purpose of this study was to gain insight into the remote support practice of the support staff of the Dutch service DigiContact. Methods: A qualitative study was performed in which we followed an inductive-iterative process and used different sources of information: documents, interviews with people who are supported by DigiContact and their caseworkers, and interviews with DigiContact support workers. Findings: Seven themes were constructed and described. Four themes reflected the support activities of DigiContact support workers, and three themes reflected qualities that guide how the support is provided. Conclusions: A remote support context can bring both challenges and opportunities to the practice of supporting people with intellectual disabilities. The findings can be useful for service organisations who are contemplating the adoption of remote support initiatives for people with intellectual disabilities.
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- 2023
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22. Outcome assessment methods of bioactive and biodegradable materials as pulpotomy agents in primary and permanent teeth: a scoping review
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Yasmine Elhamouly, May M. Adham, Karin M L Dowidar, and Rania M. El Backly
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Histological outcome ,Clinical outcome ,Pulpotomy ,Bioactive agents ,Biodegradable scaffolds ,Primary teeth ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Background Pulpotomy procedures aiming to preserve and regenerate the dentin-pulp complex have recently increased exponentially due to developments in the field of biomaterials and tissue engineering in primary and permanent teeth. Although the number of studies in this domain has increased, there is still scarcity of evidence in the current literature. Objectives (1) Report the methods of outcome assessment of pulpotomy clinical trials in both primary and permanent teeth; (2) Identify the various bioactive agents and biodegradable scaffolds used in pulpotomy clinical trials in both primary and permanent teeth. Materials and methods A scoping review of the literature was performed, including a search of primary studies on PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, ProQuest and Clinicaltrials.gov. A search for controlled trials or randomized controlled trials published between 2012 and 2023 involving primary or permanent teeth receiving partial or full pulpotomy procedures using bioactive/regenerative capping materials was performed. Results 127 studies out of 1038 articles fulfilled all the inclusion criteria and were included in the current scoping review. More than 90% of the studies assessed clinical and radiographic outcomes. Histological, microbiological, or inflammatory outcomes were measured in only 9.4% of all included studies. Majority of the studies (67.7%) involved primary teeth. 119 studies used non-degradable bioactive cements, while biodegradable scaffolds were used by 32 studies, natural derivates and plant extracts studies were used in only 7 studies. Between 2012 (4 studies) and 2023 (11 studies), there was a general increase in the number of articles published. India, Egypt, Turkey, and Iran were found to have the highest total number of articles published (28, 28,16 and 10 respectively). Conclusions Pulpotomy studies in both primary and permanent teeth relied mainly on subjective clinical and radiographic outcome assessment methods and seldom analyzed pulpal inflammatory status objectively. The use of biodegradable scaffolds for pulpotomy treatments has been increasing with an apparent global distribution of most of these studies in low- to middle-income countries. However, the development of a set of predictable outcome measures as well as long-term evidence from well conducted clinical trials for novel pulpotomy dressing materials are still required.
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- 2024
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23. Reliability, costs, and radiation dose of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in diagnosis of radiologic sarcopenia in surgically menopausal women
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Annechien Stuursma, Iris A. S. Stroot, Karin M. Vermeulen, Riemer H. J. A. Slart, Marcel J. W. Greuter, Marian J. E. Mourits, and Geertruida H. de Bock
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Costs ,DXA ,Observer variation ,Reliability ,Sarcopenia ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 - Abstract
Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare reliability, costs, and radiation dose of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) to MRI and CT in measuring muscle mass for the diagnosis of sarcopenia. Methods Thirty-four consecutive DXA scans performed in surgically menopausal women from November 2019 until March 2020 were analyzed by two observers. Observers analyzed muscle mass of the lower limbs in every scan twice. Reliability was assessed by calculating inter- and intra-observer variability. Reliability from CT and MRI as well as radiation dose from CT and DXA were collected from literature. Costs for each type of scan were calculated according to the guidelines for economic evaluation of the Dutch National Health Care Institute. Results The 34 participants had a median age of 58 years (IQR 53–65) and a median body mass index of 24.6 (IQR 21.7–29.7). Inter-observer variability had an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.997 (95% CI 0.994–0.998) with a relative variability of 0.037 ± 0.022%. Regarding intra-observer variability, observer 1 had an ICC of 0.998 (95% CI 0.996–0.999) with a relative variability of 0.019 ± 0.016% and observer 2 had an ICC of 0.997 (95% CI 0.993–0.998) with a relative variability of 0.016 ± 0.011%. DXA costs were €62, CT €77, and MRI €195. The estimated radiation dose of CT was 2.5–3.0 mSv, for DXA this was 2–4 µSv. Conclusions DXA has lower costs and a lower radiation dose, with low inter- and intra-observer variability, compared to CT and MRI for assessing lower limb muscle mass. Trial registration Netherlands Trial Register; NL8068. Critical relevance statement DXA is a good alternative for CT and MRI in assessing lower limb muscle mass, with lower costs and lower radiation dose, while inter-observer and intra-observer variability are low. Key points • Screening for sarcopenia should be optimized as the population ages. • DXA outperformed CT and MRI in the measured metrics. • DXA validity should be further evaluated as an alternative to CT and MRI for sarcopenia evaluation. Graphical Abstract
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- 2024
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24. Outcomes with the Adjustable Transobturator Male System (ATOMS) for the Treatment of Male Stress Urinary Incontinence After Prostate Surgery and the Impact of Previous Radiotherapy
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Ingunn Roth, Patrick Juliebø-Jones, Christian Arvei Moen, Christian Beisland, and Karin M. Hjelle
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Incontinence ,Adjustable transobturator male system continence device ,Efficacy ,Male stress urinary incontinence ,Radiotherapy ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and objective: The adjustable transobturator male system (ATOMS) is an established treatment for patients with urinary incontinence after prostate surgery. Our objective was to evaluate the efficacy and the complication burdens associated with ATOMS with a focus on exploring the potential impact on previous radiotherapy (RT). Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis for consecutive patients who underwent ATOMS implantation procedure at a tertiary center over an 11-yr study period. Outcomes of interest were dryness at 3-mo follow up, postoperative complications (≤30 d), and late treatment failures (>30 d). Key findings and limitations: A total of 118 patients underwent ATOMS surgery performed by five different surgeons. Median follow-up was 67 mo (interquartile range 41–95). The mean 24-h pad count after surgery was 1.1 (range 0–8) and the mean reduction in pad weight was 179 g (range 0–1080). There was no significant difference in the reduction in pad use between groups with and without RT (−1.7 vs −2.4; p = 0.13). Multivariable analysis revealed that RT, degree of incontinence, and age were not risk factors for reoperation. Conclusions and clinical implications: ATOMS implantation is feasible in patients who have undergone prostate RT and patients with severe stress urinary incontinence after prostate surgery. We found that RT was not a risk factor for reoperation and there was no significant difference in pad weight reduction by RT status. This study offers new insight into potential incontinence surgery for male patients with stress urinary incontinence and previous RT. Patient summary: We assessed outcomes for patients who had an ATOMS (adjustable transobturator male system) device implanted to control stress urinary incontinence after prostate surgery. After implantation, 52.5% of the patients reported zero leakage and 39.9% reported only mild incontinence. Our results show that this device can improve continence after prostate surgery and is also suitable in patients who underwent radiotherapy.
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- 2024
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25. Support Needs of Older People with Intellectual Disabilities: An Exploratory Study among Psychologists in the Netherlands
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Thalen, Marloes, van Oorsouw, Wietske M.W.J, Volkers, Karin M., and Embregts, Petri J.C.M
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Background: Information regarding the common-daily support needs of older people with intellectual disabilities remains scarce, despite the necessity of such knowledge to the provision of adequate support. This exploratory study aims to identify the most important support needs. Method: A mixed-method design was conducted, in which 11 semi-structured interviews were held with psychologists to gain insight into the support needs of older people with intellectual disabilities. Results: The data provide an overview of the support needs of older people with intellectual disabilities in all quality-of-life (QoL) domains. Physical well-being, emotional well-being, interpersonal relationships and self-determination were identified as the most important domains for older people with intellectual disabilities. Conclusions: The findings of this study may guide the development of a specific training for support staff and constitute a valuable contribution to raising awareness among support staff concerning the broad range of support needs existing among older people with intellectual disabilities.
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- 2023
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26. Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccination to prevent febrile and respiratory illness in adults (BRACE): secondary outcomes of a randomised controlled phase 3 trialResearch in context
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Laure F. Pittet, Nicole L. Messina, Ellie McDonald, Francesca Orsini, Simone Barry, Marc Bonten, John Campbell, Julio Croda, Mariana G. Croda, Margareth Dalcolmo, Kaya Gardiner, Amanda Gwee, Bruno Jardim, Marcus V.G. Lacerda, Michaela Lucas, David J. Lynn, Laurens Manning, Kirsten P. Perrett, Jeffrey J. Post, Cristina Prat-Aymerich, Peter C. Richmond, Jorge L. Rocha, Jesus Rodriguez-Baño, Adilia Warris, Nicholas J. Wood, Andrew Davidson, Nigel Curtis, Tenaya Jamieson, Nicole Messina, Thilanka Morawakage, Susan Perlen, Kirsten Perrett, Laure Pittet, Amber Sastry, Jia Wei Teo, Katherine Lee, Cecilia Moore, Suzanna Vidmar, Rashida Ali, Ross Dunn, Peta Edler, Grace Gell, Casey Goodall, Richard Hall, Ann Krastev, Nathan La, Nick McPhate, Thao Nguyen, Jack Ren, Luke Stevens, Ahmed Alamrousi, Rhian Bonnici, Thanh Dang, Susie Germano, Jenny Hua, Rebecca McElroy, Monica Razmovska, Scott Reddiex, Xiaofang Wang, Jeremy Anderson, Kristy Azzopardi, Vicki Bennett-Wood, Anna Czajko, Nadia Mazarakis, Conor McCafferty, Frances Oppedisano, Belinda Ortika, Casey Pell, Leena Spry, Ryan Toh, Sunitha Velagapudi, Amanda Vlahos, Ashleigh Wee-Hee, Pedro Ramos, Karina De La Cruz, Dinusha Gamage, Anushka Karunanayake, Isabella Mezzetti, Benjamin Ong, Ronita Singh, Enoshini Sooriyarachchi, Suellen Nicholson, Natalie Cain, Rianne Brizuela, Han Huang, Veronica Abruzzo, Morgan Bealing, Patricia Bimboese, Kirsty Bowes, Emma Burrell, Joyce Chan, Jac Cushnahan, Hannah Elborough, Olivia Elkington, Kieran Fahey, Monique Fernandez, Catherine Flynn, Sarah Fowler, Marie Gentile Andrit, Bojana Gladanac, Catherine Hammond, Norine Ma, Sam Macalister, Emmah Milojevic, Jesutofunmi Mojeed, Jill Nguyen, Liz O'Donnell, Nadia Olivier, Isabelle Ooi, Stephanie Reynolds, Lisa Shen, Barb Sherry, Judith Spotswood, Jamie Wedderburn, Angela Younes, Donna Legge, Jason Bell, Jo Cheah, Annie Cobbledick, Kee Lim, Sonja Elia, Lynne Addlem, Anna Bourke, Clare Brophy, Nadine Henare, Narelle Jenkins, Francesca Machingaifa, Skye Miller, Kirsten Mitchell, Sigrid Pitkin, Kate Wall, Paola Villanueva, Nigel Crawford, Wendy Norton, Niki Tan, Thilakavathi Chengodu, Diane Dawson, Victoria Gordon, Tony Korman, Jess O'Bryan, Sophie Agius, Samantha Bannister, Jess Bucholc, Alison Burns, Beatriz Camesella, John Carlin, Marianna Ciaverella, Maxwell Curtis, Stephanie Firth, Christina Guo, Matthew Hannan, Erin Hill, Sri Joshi, Katherine Lieschke, Megan Mathers, Sasha Odoi, Ashleigh Rak, Chris Richards, Leah Steve, Carolyn Stewart, Eva Sudbury, Helen Thomson, Emma Watts, Fiona Williams, Angela Young, Penny Glenn, Andrew Kaynes, Amandine Philippart De Floy, Sandy Buchanan, Thijs Sondag, Ivy Xie, Harriet Edmund, Bridie Byrne, Tom Keeble, Belle Ngien, Fran Noonan, Michelle Wearing-Smith, Alison Clarke, Pemma Davies, Oliver Eastwood, Alric Ellinghaus, Rachid Ghieh, Zahra Hilton, Emma Jennings, Athina Kakkos, Iris Liang, Katie Nicol, Sally O'Callaghan, Helen Osman, Gowri Rajaram, Sophia Ratcliffe, Victoria Rayner, Ashleigh Salmon, Angela Scheppokat, Aimee Stevens, Rebekah Street, Nicholas Toogood, Nicholas Wood, Twinkle Bahaduri, Therese Baulman, Jennifer Byrne, Candace Carter, Mary Corbett, Aiken Dao, Maria Desylva, Andrew Dunn, Evangeline Gardiner, Rosemary Joyce, Rama Kandasamy, Craig Munns, Lisa Pelayo, Ketaki Sharma, Katrina Sterling, Caitlin Uren, Clinton Colaco, Mark Douglas, Kate Hamilton, Adam Bartlett, Brendan McMullan, Pamela Palasanthiran, Phoebe Williams, Justin Beardsley, Nikki Bergant, Renier Lagunday, Kristen Overton, Jeffrey Post, Yasmeen Al-Hindawi, Sarah Barney, Anthony Byrne, Lee Mead, Marshall Plit, David Lynn, Saoirse Benson, Stephen Blake, Rochelle Botten, Tee Yee Chern, Georgina Eden, Liddy Griffith, Jane James, Miriam Lynn, Angela Markow, Domenic Sacca, Natalie Stevens, Steve Wesselingh, Catriona Doran, Alice Sawka, Sue Evans, Louise Goodchild, Christine Heath, Meredith Krieg, Helen Marshall, Mark McMillan, Mary Walker, Peter Richmond, Nelly Amenyogbe, Christina Anthony, Annabelle Arnold, Beth Arrowsmith, Rym Ben-Othman, Sharon Clark, Jemma Dunnill, Nat Eiffler, Krist Ewe, Carolyn Finucane, Lorraine Flynn, Camille Gibson, Lucy Hartnell, Elysia Hollams, Heidi Hutton, Lance Jarvis, Jane Jones, Jan Jones, Karen Jones, Jennifer Kent, Tobias Kollmann, Debbie Lalich, Wenna Lee, Rachel Lim, Sonia McAlister, Fiona McDonald, Andrea Meehan, Asma Minhaj, Lisa Montgomery, Melissa O'Donnell, Jaslyn Ong, Joanne Ong, Kimberley Parkin, Glady Perez, Catherine Power, Shadie Rezazadeh, Holly Richmond, Sally Rogers, Nikki Schultz, Margaret Shave, Patrycja Skut, Lisa Stiglmayer, Alexandra Truelove, Ushma Wadia, Rachael Wallace, Justin Waring, Michelle England, Erin Latkovic, Susan Herrmann, Marcus Lacerda, Paulo Henrique Andrade, Fabiane Bianca Barbosa, Dayanne Barros, Larissa Brasil, Ana Greyce Capella, Ramon Castro, Erlane Costa, Dilcimar de Souza, Maianne Dias, José Dias, Klenilson Ferreira, Paula Figueiredo, Thamires Freitas, Ana Carolina Furtado, Larissa Gama, Vanessa Godinho, Cintia Gouy, Daniele Hinojosa, Tyane Jardim, Joel Junior, Augustto Lima, Bernardo Maia, Adriana Marins, Kelry Mazurega, Tercilene Medeiros, Rosangela Melo, Marinete Moraes, Elizandra Nascimento, Juliana Neves, Maria Gabriela Oliveira, Thais Oliveira, Ingrid Oliveira, Arthur Otsuka, Rayssa Paes, Handerson Pereira, Gabrielle Pereira, Christiane Prado, Evelyn Queiroz, Laleyska Rodrigues, Bebeto Rodrigues, Vanderson Sampaio, Anna Gabriela Santos, Daniel Santos, Tilza Santos, Evelyn Santos, Ariandra Sartim, Ana Beatriz Silva, Juliana Silva, Emanuelle Silva, Mariana Simão, Caroline Soares, Antonny Sousa, Alexandre Trindade, Fernando Val, Adria Vasconcelos, Heline Vasconcelos, Carolinne Abreu, Katya Martinez Almeida, Camila Bitencourt de Andrade, Jhenyfer Thalyta Campos Angelo, Ghislaine Gonçalvez de Araújo Arcanjo, Bianca Maria Silva Menezes Arruda, Wellyngthon Espindola Ayala, Adelita Agripina Refosco Barbosa, Felipe Zampieri Vieira Batista, Fabiani de Morais Batista, Miriam de Jesus Costa, Mariana Garcia Croda, Lais Alves da Cruz, Roberta Carolina Pereira Diogo, Rodrigo Cezar Dutra Escobar, Iara Rodrigues Fernandes, Leticia Ramires Figueiredo, Leandro Galdino Cavalcanti Gonçalves, Sarita Lahdo, Joyce dos Santos Lencina, Guilherme Teodoro de Lima, Bruna Tayara LEOPOLDINA MEIRELES, Debora Quadros Moreira, Lilian Batista Silva Muranaka, Adriely de Oliveira, Karla Regina Warszawski de Oliveira, Matheus Vieira de Oliveira, Roberto Dias de Oliveira, Andrea Antonia Souza de Almeida dos Reis Pereira, Marco Puga, Caroliny Veron Ramos, Thaynara Haynara Souza da Rosa, Karla Lopes dos Santos, Claudinalva Ribeiro dos Santos, Dyenyffer Stéffany Leopoldina dos Santos, Karina Marques Santos, Paulo César Pereira da Silva, Paulo Victor Rocha da Silva, Débora dos Santos Silva, Patricia Vieira da Silva, Bruno Freitas da Rosa Soares, Mariana Gazzoni Sperotto, Mariana Mayumi Tadokoro, Daniel Tsuha, Hugo Miguel Ramos Vieira, Margareth Maria Pretti Dalcolmo, Cíntia Maria Lopes Alves da Paixão, Gabriela Corrêa E Castro, Simone Silva Collopy, Renato da Costa Silva, Samyra Almeida da Silveira, Alda Maria Da-Cruz, Alessandra Maria da Silva Passos de Carvalho, Rita de Cássia Batista, Maria Luciana Silva De Freitas, Aline Gerhardt de Oliveira Ferreira, Ana Paula Conceição de Souza, Paola Cerbino Doblas, Ayla Alcoforado da Silva dos Santos, Vanessa Cristine de Moraes dos Santos, Dayane Alves dos Santos Gomes, Anderson Lage Fortunato, Adriano Gomes-Silva, Monique Pinto Gonçalves, Paulo Leandro Garcia Meireless Junior, Estela Martins da Costa Carvalho, Fernando do Couto Motta, Ligia Maria Olivo de Mendonça, Girlene dos Santos Pandine, Rosa Maria Plácido Pereira, Ivan Ramos Maia, Jorge Luiz da Rocha, João Victor Paiva Romano, Glauce dos Santos, Erica Fernandes da Silva, Marilda Agudo Mendonça Teixeira de Siqueira, Ágatha Cristinne Prudêncio Soares, Sandra Franch Arroyo, Henny Ophorst-den Besten, Anna Boon, Karin M. Brakke, Axel Janssen, Marijke A.H. Koopmans, Toos Lemmens, Titia Leurink, Engelien Septer-Bijleveld, Kimberly Stadhouders, Darren Troeman, Marije van der Waal, Marjoleine van Opdorp, Nicolette van Sluis, Beatrijs Wolters, Jan Kluytmans, Jannie Romme, Wouter van den Bijllaardt, Linda van Mook, M.M.L (Miranda) van Rijen, P.M.G. Filius, Jet Gisolf, Frances Greven, Danique Huijbens, Robert Jan Hassing, R.C. Pon, Lieke Preijers, J.H. van Leusen, Harald Verheij, Wim Boersma, Evelien Brans, Paul Kloeg, Kitty Molenaar-Groot, Nhat Khanh Nguyen, Nienke Paternotte, Anke Rol, Lida Stooper, Helga Dijkstra, Esther Eggenhuizen, Lucas Huijs, Simone Moorlag, Mihai Netea, Eva Pranger, Esther Taks, Jaap ten Oever, Rob ter Heine, Kitty Blauwendraat, Bob Meek, Isil Erkaya, Houda Harbech, Nienke Roescher, Rifka Peeters, Menno te Riele, Carmen Zhou, Esther Calbo, Cristina Badia Marti, Emma Triviño Palomares, Tomás Perez Porcuna, Anabel Barriocanal, Ana Maria Barriocanal, Irma Casas, Jose Dominguez, Maria Esteve, Alicia Lacoma, Irene Latorre, Gemma Molina, Barbara Molina, Antoni Rosell, Sandra Vidal, Lydia Barrera, Natalia Bustos, Ines Portillo Calderón, David Gutierrez Campos, Jose Manuel Carretero, Angel Dominguez Castellano, Renato Compagnone, Encarnacion Ramirez de Arellano, Almudena de la Serna, Maria Dolores del Toro Lopez, Marie-Alix Clement Espindola, Ana Belen Martin Gutierrez, Alvaro Pascual Hernandez, Virginia Palomo Jiménez, Elisa Moreno, Nicolas Navarrete, Teresa Rodriguez Paño, Jesús Rodríguez-Baño, Enriqueta Tristán, Maria Jose Rios Villegas, Atsegiñe Canga Garces, Erika Castro Amo, Raquel Coya Guerrero, Josune Goikoetxea, Leticia Jorge, Cristina Perez, María Carmen Fariñas Álvarez, Manuel Gutierrez Cuadra, Francisco Arnaiz de las Revillas Almajano, Pilar Bohedo Garcia, Teresa Giménez Poderos, Claudia González Rico, Blanca Sanchez, Olga Valero, Noelia Vega, Anna Barnes, Helen Catterick, Tim Cranston, Phoebe Dawe, Emily Fletcher, Liam Fouracre, Alison Gifford, Neil Gow, John Kirkwood, Christopher Martin, Amy McAnew, Marcus Mitchell, Georgina Newman, Abby O'Connell, Jakob Onysk, Lynne Quinn, Shelley Rhodes, Samuel Stone, Lorrie Symons, Harry Tripp, Darcy Watkins, Bethany Whale, Alex Harding, Gemma Lockhart, Kate Sidaway-Lee, Sam Hilton, Sarah Manton, Daniel Webber-Rookes, Rachel Winder, James Moore, Freya Bateman, Michael Gibbons, Bridget Knight, Julie Moss, Sarah Statton, Josephine Studham, Lydia Hall, Will Moyle, and Tamsin Venton
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Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine ,Immunity ,Heterologous ,Health personnel ,Randomised controlled trial ,Primary prevention ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination has off-target (non-specific) effects that are associated with protection against unrelated infections and decreased all-cause mortality in infants. We aimed to determine whether BCG vaccination prevents febrile and respiratory infections in adults. Methods: This randomised controlled phase 3 trial was done in 36 healthcare centres in Australia, Brazil, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Healthcare workers were randomised to receive BCG-Denmark (single 0.1 ml intradermal injection) or no BCG in a 1:1 ratio using a web-based procedure, stratified by stage, site, age, and presence of co-morbidity. The difference in occurrence of febrile or respiratory illness were measured over 12 months (prespecified secondary outcome) using the intention-to-treat (ITT) population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04327206. Findings: Between March 30, 2020, and April 1, 2021, 6828 healthcare workers were randomised to BCG-Denmark (n = 3417) or control (n = 3411; no intervention or placebo) groups. The 12-month adjusted estimated risk of ≥1 episode of febrile or respiratory illness was 66.8% in the BCG group (95% CI 65.3%–68.2%), compared with 63.4% in the control group (95% CI 61.8%–65.0%), a difference of +3.4 percentage points (95% CI +1.3% to +5.5%; p 0.002). The adjusted estimated risk of a severe episode (defined as being incapacitated for ≥3 consecutive days or hospitalised) was 19.4% in the BCG group (95% CI 18.0%–20.7%), compared with 18.8% in the control group (95% CI 17.4%–20.2%) a difference of +0.6 percentage points (95% CI −1.3% to +2.5%; p 0.6). Both groups had a similar number of episodes of illness, pneumonia, and hospitalisation. There were three deaths, all in the control group. There were no safety concerns following BCG vaccination. Interpretation: In contrast to the beneficial off-target effects reported following neonatal BCG in infants, a small increased risk of symptomatic febrile or respiratory illness was observed in the 12 months following BCG vaccination in adults. There was no evidence of a difference in the risk of severe disease. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Minderoo Foundation, Sarah and Lachlan Murdoch, the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation, Health Services Union NSW, the Peter Sowerby Foundation, SA Health, the Insurance Advisernet Foundation, the NAB Foundation, the Calvert-Jones Foundation, the Modara Pines Charitable Foundation, the UHG Foundation Pty Ltd, Epworth Healthcare, the National Health and Medical Research Council, the Swiss National Science Foundation and individual donors.
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- 2024
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27. The effects of native seed mix composition and sowing density on plant community reassembly in wetlands
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Rae Robinson, Laura Beck, and Karin M. Kettenring
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native seed mix composition ,Phragmites australis ,plant community assembly ,revegetation ,seed addition ,sowing density ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Seed‐based restoration of wetlands is often necessary to improve important ecosystem functions (e.g., invasion resistance and habitat provisioning) and meet society's need for wetland ecosystem services such as supporting recreational activities and improving water quality. However, persistent questions remain about the composition and sowing density of seed mixes needed to restore robust native wetland plant communities. In Great Salt Lake wetlands (Utah, USA), the revegetation of native species is crucial to recovering critical habitat and preventing reinvasion of the invasive, non‐native grass Phragmites australis and other invasive species (e.g., Typha spp.). In greenhouse and field experiments, we investigated the effects of seed mix composition and sowing density on plant community reassembly. We predicted that seed mixes containing native forb species with resource‐preempting traits (e.g., rapid seedling emergence and high aboveground growth rate) and high sowing densities (>5500 pure live seed m−2), would increase native plant light acquisition and establishment, thereby limiting invasive species. To our surprise, the effect of seed mix composition on native plant performance (cover and biomass) varied among the experiments, with distinct differences between plant functional groups arising. Native forb species had the highest performance in the greenhouse, but native grasses performed better in the field. Although multiple seed mix compositions show promise for establishing high native cover and biomass, these mixes may not always suppress invasive species. Interestingly, seed mix composition most often affected plant performance independent of sowing density. However, in one greenhouse experiment, we found that only slow‐growing mixes required a high sowing density to maximize native cover, an indication that the ideal sowing density may depend on the seed mix composition. Our research also supports the idea that in addition to reducing propagules of invasive species via appropriate management strategies, the application of higher sowing densities (>5500 pure live seed m−2) may lead to more favorable outcomes when a high density of invasive plant seeds remains or stressful field conditions are present. This research contributes to knowledge of plant community reestablishment in wetlands and demonstrates how seed‐based restoration strategies can catalyze native species revegetation and, in some situations, reduce the cover of invasive species.
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- 2024
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28. Specific and off-target immune responses following COVID-19 vaccination with ChAdOx1-S and BNT162b2 vaccines—an exploratory sub-study of the BRACE trialResearch in context
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Nicole L. Messina, Susie Germano, Rebecca McElroy, Rhian Bonnici, Branka Grubor-Bauk, David J. Lynn, Ellie McDonald, Suellen Nicholson, Kirsten P. Perrett, Laure F. Pittet, Rajeev Rudraraju, Natalie E. Stevens, Kanta Subbarao, Nigel Curtis, Andrew Davidson, Kaya Gardiner, Amanda Gwee, Tenaya Jamieson, Nicole Messina, Thilanka Morawakage, Susan Perlen, Kirsten Perrett, Laure Pittet, Amber Sastry, Jia Wei Teo, Francesca Orsini, Katherine Lee, Cecilia Moore, Suzanna Vidmar, Rashida Ali, Ross Dunn, Peta Edler, Grace Gell, Casey Goodall, Richard Hall, Ann Krastev, Nathan La, Nick McPhate, Thao Nguyen, Jack Ren, Luke Stevens, Ahmed Alamrousi, Thanh Dang, Jenny Hua, Monica Razmovska, Scott Reddiex, Xiaofang Wang, Jeremy Anderson, Kristy Azzopardi, Vicki Bennett-Wood, Anna Czajko, Nadia Mazarakis, Conor McCafferty, Frances Oppedisano, Belinda Ortika, Casey Pell, Leena Spry, Ryan Toh, Sunitha Velagapudi, Amanda Vlahos, Ashleigh Wee-Hee, Pedro Ramos, Karina De La Cruz, Dinusha Gamage, Anushka Karunanayake, Isabella Mezzetti, Benjamin Ong, Ronita Singh, Enoshini Sooriyarachchi, Natalie Cain, Rianne Brizuela, Han Huang, Veronica Abruzzo, Morgan Bealing, Patricia Bimboese, Kirsty Bowes, Emma Burrell, Joyce Chan, Jac Cushnahan, Hannah Elborough, Olivia Elkington, Kieran Fahey, Monique Fernandez, Catherine Flynn, Sarah Fowler, Marie Gentile Andrit, Bojana Gladanac, Catherine Hammond, Norine Ma, Sam Macalister, Emmah Milojevic, Jesutofunmi Mojeed, Jill Nguyen, Liz O’Donnell, Nadia Olivier, Isabelle Ooi, Stephanie Reynolds, Lisa Shen, Barb Sherry, Judith Spotswood, Jamie Wedderburn, Angela Younes, Donna Legge, Jason Bell, Jo Cheah, Annie Cobbledick, Kee Lim, Sonja Elia, Lynne Addlem, Anna Bourke, Clare Brophy, Nadine Henare, Narelle Jenkins, Francesca Machingaifa, Skye Miller, Kirsten Mitchell, Sigrid Pitkin, Kate Wall, Paola Villanueva, Nigel Crawford, Wendy Norton, Niki Tan, Thilakavathi Chengodu, Diane Dawson, Victoria Gordon, Tony Korman, Jess O’Bryan, Sophie Agius, Samantha Bannister, Jess Bucholc, Alison Burns, Beatriz Camesella, John Carlin, Marianna Ciaverella, Maxwell Curtis, Stephanie Firth, Christina Guo, Matthew Hannan, Erin Hill, Sri Joshi, Katherine Lieschke, Megan Mathers, Sasha Odoi, Ashleigh Rak, Chris Richards, Leah Steve, Carolyn Stewart, Eva Sudbury, Helen Thomson, Emma Watts, Fiona Williams, Angela Young, Penny Glenn, Andrew Kaynes, Amandine Philippart De Floy, Sandy Buchanan, Thijs Sondag, Ivy Xie, Harriet Edmund, Bridie Byrne, Tom Keeble, Belle Ngien, Fran Noonan, Michelle Wearing-Smith, Alison Clarke, Pemma Davies, Oliver Eastwood, Alric Ellinghaus, Rachid Ghieh, Zahra Hilton, Emma Jennings, Athina Kakkos, Iris Liang, Katie Nicol, Sally O’Callaghan, Helen Osman, Gowri Rajaram, Sophia Ratcliffe, Victoria Rayner, Ashleigh Salmon, Angela Scheppokat, Aimee Stevens, Rebekah Street, Nicholas Toogood, Nicholas Wood, Twinkle Bahaduri, Therese Baulman, Jennifer Byrne, Candace Carter, Mary Corbett, Aiken Dao, Maria Desylva, Andrew Dunn, Evangeline Gardiner, Rosemary Joyce, Rama Kandasamy, Craig Munns, Lisa Pelayo, Ketaki Sharma, Katrina Sterling, Caitlin Uren, Clinton Colaco, Mark Douglas, Kate Hamilton, Adam Bartlett, Brendan McMullan, Pamela Palasanthiran, Phoebe Williams, Justin Beardsley, Nikki Bergant, Renier Lagunday, Kristen Overton, Jeffrey Post, Yasmeen Al-Hindawi, Sarah Barney, Anthony Byrne, Lee Mead, Marshall Plit, David Lynn, Saoirse Benson, Stephen Blake, Rochelle Botten, Tee Yee Chern, Georgina Eden, Liddy Griffith, Jane James, Miriam Lynn, Angela Markow, Domenic Sacca, Natalie Stevens, Steve Wesselingh, Catriona Doran, Simone Barry, Alice Sawka, Sue Evans, Louise Goodchild, Christine Heath, Meredith Krieg, Helen Marshall, Mark McMillan, Mary Walker, Peter Richmond, Nelly Amenyogbe, Christina Anthony, Annabelle Arnold, Beth Arrowsmith, Rym Ben-Othman, Sharon Clark, Jemma Dunnill, Nat Eiffler, Krist Ewe, Carolyn Finucane, Lorraine Flynn, Camille Gibson, Lucy Hartnell, Elysia Hollams, Heidi Hutton, Lance Jarvis, Jane Jones, Jan Jones, Karen Jones, Jennifer Kent, Tobias Kollmann, Debbie Lalich, Wenna Lee, Rachel Lim, Sonia McAlister, Fiona McDonald, Andrea Meehan, Asma Minhaj, Lisa Montgomery, Melissa O’Donnell, Jaslyn Ong, Joanne Ong, Kimberley Parkin, Glady Perez, Catherine Power, Shadie Rezazadeh, Holly Richmond, Sally Rogers, Nikki Schultz, Margaret Shave, Patrycja Skut, Lisa Stiglmayer, Alexandra Truelove, Ushma Wadia, Rachael Wallace, Justin Waring, Michelle England, Erin Latkovic, Laurens Manning, Susan Herrmann, Michaela Lucas, Marcus Lacerda, Paulo Henrique Andrade, Fabiane Bianca Barbosa, Dayanne Barros, Larissa Brasil, Ana Greyce Capella, Ramon Castro, Erlane Costa, Dilcimar de Souza, Maianne Dias, José Dias, Klenilson Ferreira, Paula Figueiredo, Thamires Freitas, Ana Carolina Furtado, Larissa Gama, Vanessa Godinho, Cintia Gouy, Daniele Hinojosa, Bruno Jardim, Tyane Jardim, Joel Junior, Augustto Lima, Bernardo Maia, Adriana Marins, Kelry Mazurega, Tercilene Medeiros, Rosangela Melo, Marinete Moraes, Elizandra Nascimento, Juliana Neves, Maria Gabriela Oliveira, Thais Oliveira, Ingrid Oliveira, Arthur Otsuka, Rayssa Paes, Handerson Pereira, Gabrielle Pereira, Christiane Prado, Evelyn Queiroz, Laleyska Rodrigues, Bebeto Rodrigues, Vanderson Sampaio, Anna Gabriela Santos, Daniel Santos, Tilza Santos, Evelyn Santos, Ariandra Sartim, Ana Beatriz Silva, Juliana Silva, Emanuelle Silva, Mariana Simão, Caroline Soares, Antonny Sousa, Alexandre Trindade, Fernando Val, Adria Vasconcelos, Heline Vasconcelos, Julio Croda, Carolinne Abreu, Katya Martinez Almeida, Camila Bitencourt de Andrade, Jhenyfer Thalyta Campos Angelo, Ghislaine Gonçalvez de Araújo Arcanjo, Bianca Maria Silva Menezes Arruda, Wellyngthon Espindola Ayala, Adelita Agripina Refosco Barbosa, Felipe Zampieri Vieira Batista, Fabiani de Morais Batista, Miriam de Jesus Costa, Mariana Garcia Croda, Lais Alves da Cruz, Roberta Carolina Pereira Diogo, Rodrigo Cezar Dutra Escobar, Iara Rodrigues Fernandes, Leticia Ramires Figueiredo, Leandro Galdino Cavalcanti Gonçalves, Sarita Lahdo, Joyce dos Santos Lencina, Guilherme Teodoro de Lima, Larissa Santos Matos, Bruna Tayara Leopoldina Meireles, Debora Quadros Moreira, Lilian Batista Silva Muranaka, Adriely de Oliveira, Karla Regina Warszawski de Oliveira, Matheus Vieira de Oliveira, Roberto Dias de Oliveira, Andrea Antonia Souza de Almeida dos Reis Pereira, Marco Puga, Caroliny Veron Ramos, Thaynara Haynara Souza da Rosa, Karla Lopes dos Santos, Claudinalva Ribeiro dos Santos, Dyenyffer Stéffany Leopoldina dos Santos, Karina Marques Santos, Paulo César Pereira da Silva, Paulo Victor Rocha da Silva, Débora dos Santos Silva, Patricia Vieira da Silva, Bruno Freitas da Rosa Soares, Mariana Gazzoni Sperotto, Mariana Mayumi Tadokoro, Daniel Tsuha, Hugo Miguel Ramos Vieira, Margareth Maria Pretti Dalcolmo, Cíntia Maria Lopes Alves da Paixão, Gabriela Corrêa E Castro, Simone Silva Collopy, Renato da Costa Silva, Samyra Almeida da Silveira, Alda Maria Da-Cruz, Alessandra Maria da Silva Passos de Carvalho, Rita de Cássia Batista, Maria Luciana Silva De Freitas, Aline Gerhardt de Oliveira Ferreira, Ana Paula Conceição de Souza, Paola Cerbino Doblas, Ayla Alcoforado da Silva dos Santos, Vanessa Cristine de Moraes dos Santos, Dayane Alves dos Santos Gomes, Anderson Lage Fortunato, Adriano Gomes-Silva, Monique Pinto Gonçalves, Paulo Leandro Garcia Meireless Junior, Estela Martins da Costa Carvalho, Fernando do Couto Motta, Ligia Maria Olivo de Mendonça, Girlene dos Santos Pandine, Rosa Maria Plácido Pereira, Ivan Ramos Maia, Jorge Luiz da Rocha, João Victor Paiva Romano, Glauce dos Santos, Erica Fernandes da Silva, Marilda Agudo Mendonça Teixeira de Siqueira, Ágatha Cristinne Prudêncio Soares, Marc Bonten, Sandra Franch Arroyo, Henny Ophorst-den Besten, Anna Boon, Karin M. Brakke, Axel Janssen, Marijke A.H. Koopmans, Toos Lemmens, Titia Leurink, Cristina Prat-Aymerich, Engelien Septer-Bijleveld, Kimberly Stadhouders, Darren Troeman, Marije van der Waal, Marjoleine van Opdorp, Nicolette van Sluis, Beatrijs Wolters, Jan Kluytmans, Jannie Romme, Wouter van den Bijllaardt, Linda van Mook, M.M.L (Miranda) van Rijen, Margreet Filius, Jet Gisolf, Frances Greven, Danique Huijbens, Robert Jan Hassing, Roos Pon, Lieke Preijers, Joke van Leusen, Harald Verheij, Wim Boersma, Evelien Brans, Paul Kloeg, Kitty Molenaar-Groot, Nhat Khanh Nguyen, Nienke Paternotte, Anke Rol, Lida Stooper, Helga Dijkstra, Esther Eggenhuizen, Lucas Huijs, Simone Moorlag, Mihai Netea, Eva Pranger, Esther Taks, Jaap ten Oever, Rob ter Heine, Kitty Blauwendraat, Bob Meek, Isil Erkaya, Houda Harbech, Nienke Roescher, Rifka Peeters, Menno te Riele, Carmen Zhou, Esther Calbo, Cristina Badia Marti, Emma Triviño Palomares, Tomás Perez Porcuna, Anabel Barriocanal, Ana Maria Barriocanal, Irma Casas, Jose Dominguez, Maria Esteve, Alicia Lacoma, Irene Latorre, Gemma Molina, Barbara Molina, Antoni Rosell, Sandra Vidal, Lydia Barrera, Natalia Bustos, Ines Portillo Calderón, David Gutierrez Campos, Jose Manuel Carretero, Angel Dominguez Castellano, Renato Compagnone, Encarnacion Ramirez de Arellano, Almudena de la Serna, Maria Dolores del Toro Lopez, Marie-Alix Clement Espindola, Ana Belen Martin Gutierrez, Alvaro Pascual Hernandez, Virginia Palomo Jiménez, Elisa Moreno, Nicolas Navarrete, Teresa Rodriguez Paño, Jesús Rodríguez-Baño, Enriqueta Tristán, Maria Jose Rios Villegas, Atsegiñe Canga Garces, Erika Castro Amo, Raquel Coya Guerrero, Josune Goikoetxea, Leticia Jorge, Cristina Perez, María Carmen Fariñas Álvarez, Manuel Gutierrez Cuadra, Francisco Arnaiz de las Revillas Almajano, Pilar Bohedo Garcia, Teresa Giménez Poderos, Claudia González Rico, Blanca Sanchez, Olga Valero, Noelia Vega, John Campbell, Anna Barnes, Helen Catterick, Tim Cranston, Phoebe Dawe, Emily Fletcher, Liam Fouracre, Alison Gifford, John Kirkwood, Christopher Martin, Amy McAnew, Marcus Mitchell, Georgina Newman, Abby O’Connell, Jakob Onysk, Lynne Quinn, Shelley Rhodes, Samuel Stone, Lorrie Symons, Harry Tripp, Adilia Warris, Darcy Watkins, Bethany Whale, Alex Harding, Gemma Lockhart, Kate Sidaway-Lee, Sam Hilton, Sarah Manton, Daniel Webber-Rookes, Rachel Winder, James Moore, Freya Bateman, Michael Gibbons, Bridget Knight, Julie Moss, Sarah Statton, Josephine Studham, Lydia Hall, Will Moyle, and Tamsin Venton
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Vaccine ,Off-target ,Immunoregulation ,Cytokine ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Heterologous immunity ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: The COVID-19 pandemic led to the rapid development and deployment of several highly effective vaccines against SARS-CoV-2. Recent studies suggest that these vaccines may also have off-target effects on the immune system. We sought to determine and compare the off-target effects of the adenovirus vector ChAdOx1-S (Oxford-AstraZeneca) and modified mRNA BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) vaccines on immune responses to unrelated pathogens. Methods: Prospective sub-study within the BRACE trial. Blood samples were collected from 284 healthcare workers before and 28 days after ChAdOx1-S or BNT162b2 vaccination. SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies were measured using ELISA, and whole blood cytokine responses to specific (SARS-CoV-2) and unrelated pathogen stimulation were measured by multiplex bead array. Findings: Both vaccines induced robust SARS-CoV-2 specific antibody and cytokine responses. ChAdOx1-S vaccination increased cytokine responses to heat-killed (HK) Candida albicans and HK Staphylococcus aureus and decreased cytokine responses to HK Escherichia coli and BCG. BNT162b2 vaccination decreased cytokine response to HK E. coli and had variable effects on cytokine responses to BCG and resiquimod (R848). After the second vaccine dose, BNT162b2 recipients had greater specific and off-target cytokine responses than ChAdOx1-S recipients. Interpretation: ChAdOx1-S and BNT162b2 vaccines alter cytokine responses to unrelated pathogens, indicative of potential off-target effects. The specific and off-target effects of these vaccines differ in their magnitude and breadth. The clinical relevance of these findings is uncertain and needs further study. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Health and Medical Research Council, Swiss National Science Foundation and the Melbourne Children’s. BRACE trial funding is detailed in acknowledgements.
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- 2024
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29. ST6GAL1 is associated with poor response to chemoradiation in rectal cancer
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Mary Smithson, Sameer Al Diffalha, Regina K. Irwin, Gregory Williams, M. Chandler McLeod, Vivek Somasundaram, Susan L. Bellis, and Karin M. Hardiman
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ST6GAL1 ,Radiation resistance ,Sialylation ,Rectal cancer ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Introduction: Colorectal cancer is the third most common cause of cancer death. Rectal cancer makes up a third of all colorectal cases. Treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer includes chemoradiation followed by surgery. We have previously identified ST6GAL1 as a cause of resistance to chemoradiation in vitro and hypothesized that it would be correlated with poor response in human derived models and human tissues. Methods: Five organoid models were created from primary human rectal cancers and ST6GAL1 was knocked down via lentivirus transduction in one model. ST6GAL1 and Cleaved Caspase-3 (CC3) were assessed after chemoradiation via immunostaining. A tissue microarray (TMA) was created from twenty-six patients who underwent chemoradiation and had pre- and post-treatment specimens of rectal adenocarcinoma available at our institution. Immunohistochemistry was performed for ST6GAL1 and percent positive cancer cell staining was assessed and correlation with pathological grade of response was measured. Results: Organoid models were treated with chemoradiation and both ST6GAL1 mRNA and protein significantly increased after treatment. The organoid model targeted with ST6GAL1 knockdown was found to have increased CC3 after treatment. In the tissue microarray, 42 percent of patient samples had an increase in percent tumor cell staining for ST6GAL1 after treatment. Post-treatment percent staining was associated with a worse grade of treatment response (p = 0.01) and increased staining post-treatment compared to pre-treatment was also associated with a worse response (p = 0.01). Conclusion: ST6GAL1 is associated with resistance to treatment in human rectal cancer and knockdown in an organoid model abrogated resistance to apoptosis caused by chemoradiation.
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- 2024
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30. Generating Utilities for the Château-Santé Base: A Novel, Generic, and Patient-Centered Health-Outcome Measure
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Zhang, Xin, Vermeulen, Karin M., Veeger, Nic J.G.M., Jabrayilov, Ruslan, and Krabbe, Paul F.M.
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- 2024
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31. Normal hip strength and range of motion values in youth and adult female national football teams: Data from 504 assessments
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Heijboer, Willem M.P., Thijs, Karin M., Weir, Adam, Serner, Andreas, Tol, Johannes L., Goedhart, Edwin A., and Groot, Floor P.
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- 2024
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32. Methylation Analysis to Detect CIN3+ in High-Risk Human Papillomavirus-Positive Self-Samples From the Population-Based Cervical Cancer Screening Program
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de Waard, Jolien, Bhattacharya, Arkajyoti, de Boer, Martine T., van Hemel, Bettien M., Esajas, Martha D., Vermeulen, Karin M., de Bock, Geertruida H., Schuuring, Ed, and Wisman, G. Bea A.
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- 2024
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33. Optimised production of technetium-94m for PET imaging by proton-irradiation of phosphomolybdic acid in cyclotron liquid target
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Harper, Ross, Morim, Derek R., Mehta, Dhyey, Rosecker, Veronika, Archibald, Stephen J., Southworth, Richard, Blower, Philip J., Stephenson, Karin A., and Nielsen, Karin M.
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- 2024
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34. Evaluating the design of the first marine protected area network in Pacific Canada under a changing climate
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Emily M. Rubidge, Carrie K. Robb, Patrick L. Thompson, Chris McDougall, Karin M. Bodtker, Katie S.P. Gale, Stephen Ban, Kil Hltaanuwaay Tayler Brown, Vicki Sahanatien, Sachiko Ouchi, Sarah K. Friesen, Natalie C. Ban, Karen L. Hunter, Angelica Pena, Amber Holdsworth, and Rebecca Martone
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climate change ,Marine Protected Area network ,demersal fish ,MPA design ,ecological representation ,replication ,Education ,Science - Abstract
Marine protected area (MPAs) networks can buffer marine ecosystems from the impacts of climate change by allowing species to redistribute as conditions change and by reducing other stressors. There are, however, few examples where climate change has been considered in MPA network design. In this paper, we assess how climate change considerations were integrated into the design of a newly released MPA network in the Northern Shelf Bioregion in British Columbia, Canada, and then evaluate the resulting network against projected physical and biogeochemical changes and biological responses. We found that representation, replication, and size and spacing recommendations integrated into the design phase were met in most cases. Furthermore, despite varying degrees of projected changes in temperature, dissolved oxygen, and aragonite saturation across the MPA network, suitable habitat for demersal fish species is projected to remain in the network despite some redistribution among sites. We also found that mid-depth MPAs are particularly important for persistence, as fish are projected to move deeper to avoid warming in shallower areas. Our results highlight that a representative MPA network with adequate replication, that incorporates areas of varying climate change trajectory, should buffer against the impacts of climate change.
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- 2024
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35. Prediction of BiS2-type pnictogen dichalcogenide monolayers for optoelectronics
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José D. Mella, Muralidhar Nalabothula, Francisco Muñoz, Karin M. Rabe, Ludger Wirtz, Sobhit Singh, and Aldo H. Romero
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Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract In this work, we introduce a 2D materials family with chemical formula MX2 (M={As, Sb, Bi} and X={S, Se, Te}) having a rectangular 2D lattice. This materials family has been predicted by systematic ab-initio structure search calculations in two dimensions. Using density-functional theory and many-body perturbation theory, we study the structural, vibrational, electronic, optical, and excitonic properties of the predicted MX2 family. Our calculations reveal that the predicted SbX2 and BiX2 monolayers are stable while the AsX 2 layers exhibit an in-plane ferroelectric instability. All materials display strong excitonic effects and good optical absorption within the infrared-to-visible range. Hence, these monolayers can harvest solar energy and serve in optoelectronics applications. Furthermore, our results indicate that exfoliation of the predicted MX2 monolayers from their bulk counterparts is experimentally viable.
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- 2024
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36. Associations Between Primary Care Providers and Staff-Reported Access Management Challenges and Patient Perceptions of Access
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Rose, Danielle E., Leung, Lucinda B., McClean, Michael, Nelson, Karin M., Curtis, Idamay, Yano, Elizabeth M., Rubenstein, Lisa V., and Stockdale, Susan E.
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- 2023
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37. Three institutional pathways to envision the future of the IPCC
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Asayama, Shinichiro, De Pryck, Kari, Beck, Silke, Cointe, Béatrice, Edwards, Paul N., Guillemot, Hélène, Gustafsson, Karin M., Hartz, Friederike, Hughes, Hannah, Lahn, Bård, Leclerc, Olivier, Lidskog, Rolf, Livingston, Jasmine E., Lorenzoni, Irene, MacDonald, Joanna Petrasek, Mahony, Martin, Miguel, Jean Carlos Hochsprung, Monteiro, Marko, O’Reilly, Jessica, Pearce, Warren, Petersen, Arthur, Siebenhüner, Bernd, Skodvin, Tora, Standring, Adam, Sundqvist, Göran, Taddei, Renzo, van Bavel, Bianca, Vardy, Mark, Yamineva, Yulia, and Hulme, Mike
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- 2023
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38. Hypofibrinolysis in pediatric patients with veno-occlusive disease in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
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Schneider, Veronika, Cabanillas Stanchi, Karin M., Althaus, Karina, Schober, Sarah, Michaelis, Sebastian, Seitz, Christian, Lang, Peter, Handgretinger, Rupert, Bakchoul, Tamam, Hammer, Stefanie, and Döring, Michaela
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- 2023
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39. Burnout, employee engagement, and changing organizational contexts in VA primary care during the early COVID-19 pandemic
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Eric A. Apaydin, Danielle E. Rose, Michael R. McClean, David C. Mohr, Elizabeth M. Yano, Paul G. Shekelle, Karin M. Nelson, Rong Guo, Caroline K. Yoo, and Susan E. Stockdale
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Burnout ,Primary care ,Healthcare workforce ,Employee engagement ,COVID-19 ,Virtual care ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The COVID-19 pandemic involved a rapid change to the working conditions of all healthcare workers (HCW), including those in primary care. Organizational responses to the pandemic, including a shift to virtual care, changes in staffing, and reassignments to testing-related work, may have shifted more burden to these HCWs, increasing their burnout and turnover intent, despite their engagement to their organization. Our objectives were (1) to examine changes in burnout and intent to leave rates in VA primary care from 2017–2020 (before and during the pandemic), and (2) to analyze how individual protective factors and organizational context affected burnout and turnover intent among VA primary care HCWs during the early months of the pandemic. Methods We analyzed individual- and healthcare system-level data from 19,894 primary care HCWs in 139 healthcare systems in 2020. We modeled potential relationships between individual-level burnout and turnover intent as outcomes, and individual-level employee engagement, perceptions of workload, leadership, and workgroups. At healthcare system-level, we assessed prior-year levels of burnout and turnover intent, COVID-19 burden (number of tests and deaths), and the extent of virtual care use as potential determinants. We conducted multivariable analyses using logistic regression with standard errors clustered by healthcare system controlled for individual-level demographics and healthcare system complexity. Results In 2020, 37% of primary care HCWs reported burnout, and 31% reported turnover intent. Highly engaged employees were less burned out (OR = 0.57; 95% CI 0.52–0.63) and had lower turnover intent (OR = 0.62; 95% CI 0.57–0.68). Pre-pandemic healthcare system-level burnout was a major predictor of individual-level pandemic burnout (p = 0.014). Perceptions of reasonable workload, trustworthy leadership, and strong workgroups were also related to lower burnout and turnover intent (p
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- 2023
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40. Impact of health-related behavioral factors on participation in a cervical cancer screening program: the lifelines population-based cohort
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Kelly M. Castañeda, Grigory Sidorenkov, Marian J. E. Mourits, Bert van der Vegt, Albert G. Siebers, Karin M. Vermeulen, Ed Schuuring, G. Bea A. Wisman, and Geertruida H. de Bock
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Uterine cervical neoplasms ,Early detection of cancer ,Patient compliance ,Lifestyle ,Reproductive history ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Regular participation in cervical cancer screening is critical to reducing mortality. Although certain sociodemographic factors are known to be associated with one-time participation in screening, little is known about other factors that could be related to regular participation. Therefore, this study evaluated the association between health-related behavioral factors and regular participation in cervical cancer screening. Methods The Lifelines population-based cohort was linked to data for cervical cancer screening from the Dutch Nationwide Pathology Databank. We included women eligible for all four screening rounds between 2000 and 2019, classifying them as regular (4 attendances), irregular (1–3 attendances), and never participants. Multinomial logistic regression was performed to evaluate the association between behavioral factors and participation regularity, with adjustment made for sociodemographic factors. Results Of the 48,325 included women, 55.9%, 35.1%, and 9% were regular, irregular, and never screening participants. After adjustment for sociodemographic factors, the likelihood of irregular or never screening participation was increased by smoking, obesity, marginal or inadequate sleep duration, alcohol consumption and low physical activity, while it was decreased by hormonal contraception use. Conclusion An association exists between unhealthy behavioral factors and never or irregular participation in cervical cancer screening.
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- 2023
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41. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic in The Netherlands on Primary Healthcare Use and Clinical Outcomes in Persons with Type 2 Diabetes
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Jesse M. van den Berg, Marieke T. Blom, Karin M. A. Swart, Jetty A. Overbeek, S. Remmelzwaal, Petra J. M. Elders, and Ron M. C. Herings
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COVID-19 ,diabetes mellitus ,type 2 diabetes ,glycemic control ,HbA1c ,healthcare use ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on healthcare systems worldwide, including the postponing or canceling of appointments and procedures for type 2 diabetes (T2D) care by general practitioners (GPs) in the Netherlands. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on primary healthcare use and clinical measurements for people with T2D. Additionally, we aimed to determine if changes were observed among specific risk groups: (1) persons 70 years or older, or below 70 years, (2) patients who were meeting their HbA1c targets and those who were not, and (3) patients with high-risk and non-high-risk T2D. This retrospective cohort study among persons with T2D was conducted using data from the DIAbetes MANagement and Treatment (DIAMANT) data infrastructure, deriving data from electronic medical records of Dutch GPs. The study assessed GP visit counts, and counts and values of clinical measurements, including hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), body mass index (BMI), low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and systolic blood pressure (SBP). Adjusted negative binomial (NB) regression and generalized estimating equations (GEE) models were used to estimate GP visit counts and population averages of clinical measurements, respectively, comparing 2019 (pre-pandemic) with 2020 (during the pandemic). Changes in specific groups were examined by stratifying outcomes for the aforementioned subgroups. The cohort consisted of 182,048 patients with T2D (47% female, mean age 69 ± 13 years) on 1 March 2019, of which 168,097 persons (92%) still contributed follow-up data in 2020. We observed an increase in total GP visits in 2020, with an adjusted rate ratio (RR) of 1.09 (95% CI 1.08–1.09). The frequency increased for office visits (RR 1.06; 1.06–1.07) and phone calls (RR 1.33; 1.31–1.35) but remained stable for home visits (RR 1.02; 0.99–1.04). On both population and individual levels, HbA1c values increased in 2020 by 1.65 (1.59–1.70) mmol/mol compared to 2019. Observed changes in 2020 for BMI, LDL, and SBP values were also statistically significant but small. Subgroup stratifications showed higher scores of all clinical measurements in younger persons (
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- 2023
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42. Risk of cardiovascular events after an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: results from the EXACOS-CV cohort study using the PHARMO Data Network in the Netherlands
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Karin M. A. Swart, Brenda N. Baak, Louise Lemmens, Fernie J. A. Penning-van Beest, Camilla Bengtsson, Muriel Lobier, Fabian Hoti, Dina Vojinovic, Lindy van Burk, Kirsty Rhodes, Edeltraut Garbe, Ron M. C. Herings, Clementine Nordon, and Sami O. Simons
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COPD ,Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Cardiopulmonary risk ,Exacerbation ,Retrospective cohort study ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background People living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have an increased risk of experiencing cardiovascular (CV) events, particularly after an exacerbation. Such CV burden is not yet known for incident COPD patients. We examined the risk of severe CV events in incident COPD patients in periods following either moderate and/or severe exacerbations. Methods Persons aged ≥ 40 years with an incident COPD diagnosis from the PHARMO Data Network were included. Exposed time periods included 1–7, 8–14, 15–30, 31–180 and 181–365 days following an exacerbation. Moderate exacerbations were defined as those managed in outpatient settings; severe exacerbations as those requiring hospitalisation. The outcome was a composite of time to first severe CV event (acute coronary syndrome, heart failure decompensation, cerebral ischaemia, or arrhythmia) or death. Hazard ratios (HR) were estimated for association between each exposed period and outcome. Results 8020 patients with newly diagnosed COPD were identified. 2234 patients (28%) had ≥ 1 exacerbation, 631 patients (8%) had a non-fatal CV event, and 461 patients (5%) died during a median follow-up of 36 months. The risk of experiencing the composite outcome was increased following a moderate/severe exacerbation as compared to time periods of stable disease [range of HR: from 15.3 (95% confidence interval 11.8–20.0) in days 1–7 to 1.3 (1.0–1.8) in days 181–365]. After a moderate exacerbation, the risk was increased over the first 180 days [HR 2.5 (1.3–4.8) in days 1–7 to 1.6 (1.3–2.1) in days 31–180]. After a severe exacerbation, the risk increased substantially and remained higher over the year following the exacerbation [HR 48.6 (36.9–64.0) in days 1–7 down to 1.6 (1.0–2.6) in days 181–365]. Increase in risk concerned all categories of severe CV events. Conclusions Among incident COPD patients, we observed a substantial risk increase of severe CV events or all-cause death following either a moderate or severe exacerbation of COPD. Increase in risk was highest in the initial period following an exacerbation. These findings highlight the significant cardiopulmonary burden among people living with COPD even with a new diagnosis.
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- 2023
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43. The National Sexually Transmitted Disease Curriculum Podcast as a Method to Increase Sexually Transmitted Infection Education for Health Care Professionals
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Ramchandani, Meena S., Bauer, Karin M., Freimund, Julia S., Johnston, Christine M., and Spach, David H.
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- 2024
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44. “Veteran to Veteran, There's Automatically a Trust”: A Qualitative Study of Veterans’ Experiences in a Peer Health-Coaching Program for Hypertension
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Kramer, C. Bradley, Nelson, Karin M., Sayre, George, Williams, Jennifer L., Spruill, Leon, Fennell, Tiffanie, Gray, Kristen E., Weiner, Bryan J., Fan, Vincent, Jones-Smith, Jessica, and Rao, Mayuree
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- 2024
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45. Providing Person-Centred Care to Older People with Intellectual Disabilities during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Experiences of Direct Support Workers
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Thalen, Marloes, van Oorsouw, Wietske M. W. J., Volkers, Karin M., Frielink, Noud, and Embregts, Petri J. C. M.
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Background: Although the current preventive measures relating to COVID-19 can lead to challenges in the daily work of direct support workers (e.g. keeping 1.5 m distance), it remains vital to uphold the principles of person-centred care when working with older people with intellectual disabilities. The current study explores the extent to which direct support workers have been able to apply a specific form of person-centred care (i.e. integrated emotion-oriented care, or IEOC) when working with older people with intellectual disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Six direct support workers from five facilities serving older people with intellectual disabilities in the Netherlands participated in this qualitative study. They participated in a two-hour focus group, which was transcribed verbatim, and the transcript was analysed thematically. Results: Three themes emerged: (i) the negative impact of changes due to the COVID-19 measures on service users; (ii) the adaptation of direct support workers to changes due to the COVID-19 measures; and (iii) putting the needs and wishes of service users first. Conclusion: This study provides first impressions into the experiences of direct support workers providing person-centred care to older people with intellectual disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- 2023
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46. Parent Knowledge of the Definition of FAPE in Light of the Endrew vs. Douglas County School Board Decision
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Fisher, Karin M., Willis, Cassandra B., and Ransom, Barbara E.
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In 2017, the Supreme Court of the United States redefined Free and Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) for students with disabilities (SWD) in "Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District." The Court's new standard for FAPE was more demanding than previous rulings. Parents of SWD are expected to participate in the special education program process and a more robust Individualized Education Program (IEP) should be implemented to ensure sufficient student progress. However, it is unknown how much parents know about the "Endrew F." Case and what, if any, impact the case had on IEP meetings since the ruling. To determine knowledge and impact of the case, a national survey was distributed through social media and listservs to parents of SWD. Over 100 participants from across the United States (U.S.) responded to the anonymous survey. Demographic data analysis indicated most participants were highly educated, wealthy, white women. Using an exploratory mixed methods approach, the results of the research suggested most parents, specifically upper-class women, have little knowledge about "Endrew F.," and have not seen changes in their child's IEP. Respondents indicated a desire for more information about "Endrew F.," FAPE, and negotiating for their child. Implications for parents of SWD, advocacy organizations, and schools are discussed along with implications of the unique demographics of the participants.
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- 2020
47. Chaos and COSMOS—Considerations on QSM methods with multiple and single orientations and effects from local anisotropy
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Gkotsoulias, Dimitrios G., Jäger, Carsten, Müller, Roland, Gräßle, Tobias, Olofsson, Karin M., Møller, Torsten, Unwin, Steve, Crockford, Catherine, Wittig, Roman M., Bilgic, Berkin, and Möller, Harald E.
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- 2024
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48. Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccination to prevent febrile and respiratory illness in adults (BRACE): secondary outcomes of a randomised controlled phase 3 trial
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Curtis, Nigel, Davidson, Andrew, Gardiner, Kaya, Gwee, Amanda, Jamieson, Tenaya, Messina, Nicole, Morawakage, Thilanka, Perlen, Susan, Perrett, Kirsten, Pittet, Laure, Sastry, Amber, Teo, Jia Wei, Orsini, Francesca, Lee, Katherine, Moore, Cecilia, Vidmar, Suzanna, PITTET, Laure, Ali, Rashida, Dunn, Ross, Edler, Peta, Gell, Grace, Goodall, Casey, Hall, Richard, Krastev, Ann, La, Nathan, McDonald, Ellie, McPhate, Nick, Nguyen, Thao, Ren, Jack, Stevens, Luke, Alamrousi, Ahmed, Bonnici, Rhian, Dang, Thanh, Germano, Susie, Hua, Jenny, McElroy, Rebecca, Razmovska, Monica, Reddiex, Scott, Wang, Xiaofang, Anderson, Jeremy, Azzopardi, Kristy, Bennett-Wood, Vicki, Czajko, Anna, Mazarakis, Nadia, McCafferty, Conor, Oppedisano, Frances, Ortika, Belinda, Pell, Casey, Spry, Leena, Toh, Ryan, Velagapudi, Sunitha, Vlahos, Amanda, Wee-Hee, Ashleigh, Ramos, Pedro, De La Cruz, Karina, Gamage, Dinusha, Karunanayake, Anushka, Mezzetti, Isabella, Ong, Benjamin, Singh, Ronita, Sooriyarachchi, Enoshini, Nicholson, Suellen, Cain, Natalie, Brizuela, Rianne, Huang, Han, Abruzzo, Veronica, Bealing, Morgan, Bimboese, Patricia, Bowes, Kirsty, Burrell, Emma, Chan, Joyce, Cushnahan, Jac, Elborough, Hannah, Elkington, Olivia, Fahey, Kieran, Fernandez, Monique, Flynn, Catherine, Fowler, Sarah, Andrit, Marie Gentile, Gladanac, Bojana, Hammond, Catherine, Ma, Norine, Macalister, Sam, Milojevic, Emmah, Mojeed, Jesutofunmi, Nguyen, Jill, O'Donnell, Liz, Olivier, Nadia, Ooi, Isabelle, Reynolds, Stephanie, Shen, Lisa, Sherry, Barb, Spotswood, Judith, Wedderburn, Jamie, Younes, Angela, Legge, Donna, Bell, Jason, Cheah, Jo, Cobbledick, Annie, Lim, Kee, Elia, Sonja, Addlem, Lynne, Bourke, Anna, Brophy, Clare, Henare, Nadine, Jenkins, Narelle, Machingaifa, Francesca, Miller, Skye, Mitchell, Kirsten, Pitkin, Sigrid, Wall, Kate, Villanueva, Paola, Crawford, Nigel, Norton, Wendy, Tan, Niki, Chengodu, Thilakavathi, Dawson, Diane, Gordon, Victoria, Korman, Tony, O'Bryan, Jess, Agius, Sophie, Bannister, Samantha, Bucholc, Jess, Burns, Alison, Camesella, Beatriz, Carlin, John, Ciaverella, Marianna, Curtis, Maxwell, Firth, Stephanie, Guo, Christina, Hannan, Matthew, Hill, Erin, Joshi, Sri, Lieschke, Katherine, Mathers, Megan, Odoi, Sasha, Rak, Ashleigh, Richards, Chris, Steve, Leah, Stewart, Carolyn, Sudbury, Eva, Thomson, Helen, Watts, Emma, Williams, Fiona, Young, Angela, Glenn, Penny, Kaynes, Andrew, De Floy, Amandine Philippart, Buchanan, Sandy, Sondag, Thijs, Xie, Ivy, Edmund, Harriet, Byrne, Bridie, Keeble, Tom, Ngien, Belle, Noonan, Fran, Wearing-Smith, Michelle, Clarke, Alison, Davies, Pemma, Eastwood, Oliver, Ellinghaus, Alric, Ghieh, Rachid, Hilton, Zahra, Jennings, Emma, Kakkos, Athina, Liang, Iris, Nicol, Katie, O'Callaghan, Sally, Osman, Helen, Rajaram, Gowri, Ratcliffe, Sophia, Rayner, Victoria, Salmon, Ashleigh, Scheppokat, Angela, Stevens, Aimee, Street, Rebekah, Toogood, Nicholas, Wood, Nicholas, Bahaduri, Twinkle, Baulman, Therese, Byrne, Jennifer, Carter, Candace, Corbett, Mary, Dao, Aiken, Desylva, Maria, Dunn, Andrew, Gardiner, Evangeline, Joyce, Rosemary, Kandasamy, Rama, Munns, Craig, Pelayo, Lisa, Sharma, Ketaki, Sterling, Katrina, Uren, Caitlin, Colaco, Clinton, Douglas, Mark, Hamilton, Kate, Bartlett, Adam, McMullan, Brendan, Palasanthiran, Pamela, Williams, Phoebe, Beardsley, Justin, Bergant, Nikki, Lagunday, Renier, Overton, Kristen, Post, Jeffrey, Al-Hindawi, Yasmeen, Barney, Sarah, Byrne, Anthony, Mead, Lee, Plit, Marshall, Lynn, David, Benson, Saoirse, Blake, Stephen, Botten, Rochelle, Chern, Tee Yee, Eden, Georgina, Griffith, Liddy, James, Jane, Lynn, Miriam, Markow, Angela, Sacca, Domenic, Stevens, Natalie, Wesselingh, Steve, Doran, Catriona, Barry, Simone, Sawka, Alice, Evans, Sue, Goodchild, Louise, Heath, Christine, Krieg, Meredith, Marshall, Helen, McMillan, Mark, Walker, Mary, Richmond, Peter, Amenyogbe, Nelly, Anthony, Christina, Arnold, Annabelle, Arrowsmith, Beth, Ben-Othman, Rym, Clark, Sharon, Dunnill, Jemma, Eiffler, Nat, Ewe, Krist, Finucane, Carolyn, Flynn, Lorraine, Gibson, Camille, Hartnell, Lucy, Hollams, Elysia, Hutton, Heidi, Jarvis, Lance, Jones, Jane, Jones, Jan, Jones, Karen, Kent, Jennifer, Kollmann, Tobias, Lalich, Debbie, Lee, Wenna, Lim, Rachel, McAlister, Sonia, McDonald, Fiona, Meehan, Andrea, Minhaj, Asma, Montgomery, Lisa, O'Donnell, Melissa, Ong, Jaslyn, Ong, Joanne, Parkin, Kimberley, Perez, Glady, Power, Catherine, Rezazadeh, Shadie, Richmond, Holly, Rogers, Sally, Schultz, Nikki, Shave, Margaret, Skut, Patrycja, Stiglmayer, Lisa, Truelove, Alexandra, Wadia, Ushma, Wallace, Rachael, Waring, Justin, England, Michelle, Latkovic, Erin, Manning, Laurens, Herrmann, Susan, Lucas, Michaela, Lacerda, Marcus, Andrade, Paulo Henrique, Barbosa, Fabiane Bianca, Barros, Dayanne, Brasil, Larissa, Capella, Ana Greyce, Castro, Ramon, Costa, Erlane, de Souza, Dilcimar, Dias, Maianne, Dias, José, Ferreira, Klenilson, Figueiredo, Paula, Freitas, Thamires, Furtado, Ana Carolina, Gama, Larissa, Godinho, Vanessa, Gouy, Cintia, Hinojosa, Daniele, Jardim, Bruno, Jardim, Tyane, Junior, Joel, Lima, Augustto, Maia, Bernardo, Marins, Adriana, Mazurega, Kelry, Medeiros, Tercilene, Melo, Rosangela, Moraes, Marinete, Nascimento, Elizandra, Neves, Juliana, Oliveira, Maria Gabriela, Oliveira, Thais, Oliveira, Ingrid, Otsuka, Arthur, Paes, Rayssa, Pereira, Handerson, Pereira, Gabrielle, Prado, Christiane, Queiroz, Evelyn, Rodrigues, Laleyska, Rodrigues, Bebeto, Sampaio, Vanderson, Santos, Anna Gabriela, Santos, Daniel, Santos, Tilza, Santos, Evelyn, Sartim, Ariandra, Silva, Ana Beatriz, Silva, Juliana, Silva, Emanuelle, Simão, Mariana, Soares, Caroline, Sousa, Antonny, Trindade, Alexandre, Val, Fernando, Vasconcelos, Adria, Vasconcelos, Heline, Croda, Julio, Abreu, Carolinne, Almeida, Katya Martinez, Bitencourt de Andrade, Camila, Campos Angelo, Jhenyfer Thalyta, Gonçalvez de Araújo Arcanjo, Ghislaine, Silva Menezes Arruda, Bianca Maria, Ayala, Wellyngthon Espindola, Refosco Barbosa, Adelita Agripina, Vieira Batista, Felipe Zampieri, de Morais Batista, Fabiani, de Jesus Costa, Miriam, Croda, Mariana Garcia, Alves da Cruz, Lais, Pereira Diogo, Roberta Carolina, Dutra Escobar, Rodrigo Cezar, Fernandes, Iara Rodrigues, Figueiredo, Leticia Ramires, Cavalcanti Gonçalves, Leandro Galdino, Lahdo, Sarita, Lencina, Joyce dos Santos, Teodoro de Lima, Guilherme, LEOPOLDINA MEIRELES, Bruna Tayara, Moreira, Debora Quadros, Silva Muranaka, Lilian Batista, de Oliveira, Adriely, Warszawski de Oliveira, Karla Regina, Vieira de Oliveira, Matheus, Dias de Oliveira, Roberto, Pereira, Andrea Antonia Souza de Almeida dos Reis, Puga, Marco, Ramos, Caroliny Veron, Souza da Rosa, Thaynara Haynara, Lopes dos Santos, Karla, Ribeiro dos Santos, Claudinalva, Leopoldina dos Santos, Dyenyffer Stéffany, Santos, Karina Marques, Pereira da Silva, Paulo César, Rocha da Silva, Paulo Victor, Silva, Débora dos Santos, Vieira da Silva, Patricia, Freitas da Rosa Soares, Bruno, Sperotto, Mariana Gazzoni, Tadokoro, Mariana Mayumi, Tsuha, Daniel, Ramos Vieira, Hugo Miguel, Pretti Dalcolmo, Margareth Maria, Lopes Alves da Paixão, Cíntia Maria, Corrêa E Castro, Gabriela, Collopy, Simone Silva, da Costa Silva, Renato, Almeida da Silveira, Samyra, Da-Cruz, Alda Maria, Maria da Silva Passos de Carvalho, Alessandra, de Cássia Batista, Rita, Silva De Freitas, Maria Luciana, Gerhardt de Oliveira Ferreira, Aline, Conceição de Souza, Ana Paula, Doblas, Paola Cerbino, Alcoforado da Silva dos Santos, Ayla, Cristine de Moraes dos Santos, Vanessa, Alves dos Santos Gomes, Dayane, Fortunato, Anderson Lage, Gomes-Silva, Adriano, Gonçalves, Monique Pinto, Garcia Meireless Junior, Paulo Leandro, Martins da Costa Carvalho, Estela, Motta, Fernando do Couto, Olivo de Mendonça, Ligia Maria, Pandine, Girlene dos Santos, Plácido Pereira, Rosa Maria, Maia, Ivan Ramos, Luiz da Rocha, Jorge, Paiva Romano, João Victor, Santos, Glauce dos, Fernandes da Silva, Erica, Mendonça Teixeira de Siqueira, Marilda Agudo, Prudêncio Soares, Ágatha Cristinne, Bonten, Marc, Arroyo, Sandra Franch, Besten, Henny Ophorst-den, Boon, Anna, Brakke, Karin M., Janssen, Axel, Koopmans, Marijke A.H., Lemmens, Toos, Leurink, Titia, Prat-Aymerich, Cristina, Septer-Bijleveld, Engelien, Stadhouders, Kimberly, Troeman, Darren, van der Waal, Marije, van Opdorp, Marjoleine, van Sluis, Nicolette, Wolters, Beatrijs, Kluytmans, Jan, Romme, Jannie, van den Bijllaardt, Wouter, van Mook, Linda, Rijen, M.M.L (Miranda) van, Filius, P.M.G., Gisolf, Jet, Greven, Frances, Huijbens, Danique, Hassing, Robert Jan, Pon, R.C., Preijers, Lieke, van Leusen, J.H., Verheij, Harald, Boersma, Wim, Brans, Evelien, Kloeg, Paul, Molenaar-Groot, Kitty, Nguyen, Nhat Khanh, Paternotte, Nienke, Rol, Anke, Stooper, Lida, Dijkstra, Helga, Eggenhuizen, Esther, Huijs, Lucas, Moorlag, Simone, Netea, Mihai, Pranger, Eva, Taks, Esther, Oever, Jaap ten, Heine, Rob ter, Blauwendraat, Kitty, Meek, Bob, Erkaya, Isil, Harbech, Houda, Roescher, Nienke, Peeters, Rifka, Riele, Menno te, Zhou, Carmen, Calbo, Esther, Marti, Cristina Badia, Palomares, Emma Triviño, Porcuna, Tomás Perez, Barriocanal, Anabel, Barriocanal, Ana Maria, Casas, Irma, Dominguez, Jose, Esteve, Maria, Lacoma, Alicia, Latorre, Irene, Molina, Gemma, Molina, Barbara, Rosell, Antoni, Vidal, Sandra, Barrera, Lydia, Bustos, Natalia, Calderón, Ines Portillo, Campos, David Gutierrez, Carretero, Jose Manuel, Castellano, Angel Dominguez, Compagnone, Renato, Ramirez de Arellano, Encarnacion, Serna, Almudena de la, del Toro Lopez, Maria Dolores, Clement Espindola, Marie-Alix, Martin Gutierrez, Ana Belen, Hernandez, Alvaro Pascual, Jiménez, Virginia Palomo, Moreno, Elisa, Navarrete, Nicolas, Paño, Teresa Rodriguez, Rodríguez-Baño, Jesús, Tristán, Enriqueta, Rios Villegas, Maria Jose, Garces, Atsegiñe Canga, Amo, Erika Castro, Guerrero, Raquel Coya, Goikoetxea, Josune, Jorge, Leticia, Perez, Cristina, Fariñas Álvarez, María Carmen, Cuadra, Manuel Gutierrez, Arnaiz de las Revillas Almajano, Francisco, Garcia, Pilar Bohedo, Poderos, Teresa Giménez, Rico, Claudia González, Sanchez, Blanca, Valero, Olga, Vega, Noelia, Campbell, John, Barnes, Anna, Catterick, Helen, Cranston, Tim, Dawe, Phoebe, Fletcher, Emily, Fouracre, Liam, Gifford, Alison, Gow, Neil, Kirkwood, John, Martin, Christopher, McAnew, Amy, Mitchell, Marcus, Newman, Georgina, O'Connell, Abby, Onysk, Jakob, Quinn, Lynne, Rhodes, Shelley, Stone, Samuel, Symons, Lorrie, Tripp, Harry, Watkins, Darcy, Whale, Bethany, Harding, Alex, Lockhart, Gemma, Sidaway-Lee, Kate, Hilton, Sam, Manton, Sarah, Webber-Rookes, Daniel, Winder, Rachel, Moore, James, Bateman, Freya, Gibbons, Michael, Knight, Bridget, Moss, Julie, Statton, Sarah, Studham, Josephine, Hall, Lydia, Moyle, Will, Venton, Tamsin, Pittet, Laure F., Messina, Nicole L., Croda, Mariana G., Dalcolmo, Margareth, Lacerda, Marcus V.G., Lynn, David J., Perrett, Kirsten P., Post, Jeffrey J., Richmond, Peter C., Rocha, Jorge L., Rodriguez-Baño, Jesus, Warris, Adilia, and Wood, Nicholas J.
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- 2024
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49. Targeted grazing reduces a widespread wetland plant invader with minimal nutrient impacts, yet native community recovery is limited
- Author
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Rohal, Christine B., Duncan, Brittany, Follstad Shah, Jennifer, Veblen, Kari E., and Kettenring, Karin M.
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- 2024
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50. 2023 Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand Expert Position Statement on Catheter and Surgical Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation
- Author
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Kistler, Peter M., Sanders, Prash, Amarena, John V., Bain, Chris R., Chia, Karin M., Choo, Wai-Kah, Eslick, Adam T., Hall, Tanya, Hopper, Ingrid K., Kotschet, Emily, Lim, Han S., Ling, Liang-Han, Mahajan, Rajiv, Marasco, Silvana F., McGuire, Mark A., McLellan, Alex J., Pathak, Rajeev K., Phillips, Karen P., Prabhu, Sandeep, Stiles, Martin K., Sy, Raymond W., Thomas, Stuart P., Toy, Tracey, Watts, Troy W., Weerasooriya, Rukshen, Wilsmore, Bradley R., Wilson, Lauren, and Kalman, Jonathan M.
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- 2024
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