21 results on '"Srirangapatanam S"'
Search Results
2. Biomineralization of Dental Tissues Treated with Silver Diamine Fluoride.
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Sulyanto, R.M., Kang, M., Srirangapatanam, S., Berger, M., Candamo, F., Wang, Y., Dickson, J.R., Ng, M.W., and Ho, S.P.
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BIOMINERALIZATION ,DENTAL caries ,METALLOPROTEINASES ,FLUORIDES ,DENTIN ,DECIDUOUS teeth ,TRACE metals - Abstract
Silver diamine fluoride (SDF) is a dental biomaterial used to arrest dental caries. To better understand SDF's mechanism of action, we examined the localization of silver within the tissues of SDF-treated teeth. Carious primary teeth fixed within 2 min of SDF application (SDF-minutes, n = 3), at 3 wk after SDF application in vivo (SDF-weeks, n = 4), and at 2 y after multiple SDF applications in vivo (SDF-multiple, n = 1) were investigated in this study. Carious primary teeth without SDF application (no-SDF, n = 3) served as controls. Mineral density and structural analyses were performed via micro-X-ray computed tomography and scanning electron microscopy. Elemental analyses were performed through X-ray fluorescence microprobe and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopic techniques. SDF-treated teeth revealed higher X-ray-attenuated surface and subsurface regions within carious lesions, and similar regions were not present in no-SDF teeth. Regions of higher mineral density correlated with regions of silver abundance in SDF-treated teeth. The SDF penetration depth was approximated to 0.5 ± 0.02 mm and 0.6 ± 0.05 mm (mean ± SD) for SDF-minutes and SDF-weeks specimens, respectively. A higher percentage of dentin tubular occlusion by silver or calcium phosphate particles was observed in primary teeth treated with SDF-weeks as compared with SDF-minutes. Elemental analysis also revealed zinc abundance in carious lesions and around the pulp chamber. SDF-weeks teeth had significantly increased tertiary dentin than SDF-minutes and no-SDF teeth. These results suggest that SDF treatment on primary teeth affected by caries promotes pathologic biomineralization by altering their physicochemical properties, occluding dentin tubules, and increasing tertiary dentin volume. These seemingly serendipitous effects collectively contribute to the cariostatic activity of SDF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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3. Data on biomechanics and elemental maps of dental implant-bone complexes in rats
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Wang, B., Kim, K., Srirangapatanam, S., Ustriyana, P., Wheelis, S.E., Fakra, S.C., Kang, M., Rodrigues, D.C., and Ho, S.P.
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- 2020
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4. Effect of core preventative screening on kidney stone surgical patterns.
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Srirangapatanam S, Guan L, Baughn C, Swana HS, and Bayne DB
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Adult, Florida epidemiology, Mass Screening methods, Aged, Practice Patterns, Physicians' statistics & numerical data, Urologic Surgical Procedures, Kidney Calculi surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: In the surgical treatment of kidney stones, decreased access to healthcare has been shown to exacerbate stone burden, often requiring more invasive and extensive procedures. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effects of preventative health screening on kidney stone surgical treatment patterns., Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) Florida state-wide dataset and the PLACES Local Data for Better Health dataset from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) identified from the PLACES data were merged with the HCUP dataset to create a single dataset of community-level stone outcomes and community health measures. We included adult patients 18 years or older who underwent at least one urologic stone procedure from 2016 to 2020., Results: 128,038 patients from 885 communities were included in the study. Patients underwent an average of 1.42 surgeries (Median = 1.39, SD = 0.16). Increased core preventative screening was associated with increased surgical frequency (Estimate: 0.51, P < 0.001). The low core preventative screening group had a higher prevalence of PNL than SWL while the high core preventative screening group had a low PNL prevalence compared to SWL., Conclusion: Increased core preventative screenings are associated with less invasive kidney stone surgeries, suggesting that preventative screenings detect stones at an earlier stage., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2024
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5. Organic Matrix Derived from Host-Microbe Interplay Contributes to Pathological Renal Biomineralization.
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Bai Y, Wang Y, Kang M, Gabe CM, Srirangapatanam S, Edwards A, Stoller M, Green SJ, Aloni S, Tamura N, Beniash E, Hardt M, and Ho SP
- Abstract
Matrix stones are a rare form of kidney stones. They feature a high percentage of hydrogel-like organic matter, and their formation is closely associated with urinary tract infections. Herein, comprehensive materials and biochemical approaches were taken to map the organic-inorganic interface and gather insights into the host-microbe interplay in pathological renal biomineralization. Surgically extracted soft and slimy matrix stones were examined using micro-X-ray computed tomography and various microspectroscopy techniques. Higher-mineral-density laminae were positive for calcium-bound Alizarin red. Lower-mineral-density laminae revealed periodic acid-Schiff-positive organic filamentous networks of varied thickness. These organic filamentous networks, which featured a high polysaccharide content, were enriched with zinc, carbon, and sulfur elements. Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) along with immune response-related proteins, including calprotectin, myeloperoxidase, CD63, and CD86, also were identified in the filamentous networks. Expressions of NETs and upregulation of polysaccharide-rich mucin secretion are proposed as a part of the host immune defense to "trap" pathogens. These host-microbe derived organic matrices can facilitate heterogeneous nucleation and precipitation of inorganic particulates, resulting in macroscale aggregates known as "matrix stones". These insights into the plausible aggregation of constituents through host-microbe interplay underscore the unique "double-edged sword" effect of the host immune response to pathogens and the resulting renal biominerals., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
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- 2023
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6. Effects of Delayed Surgical Intervention Following Emergency Department Presentation on Stone Surgery Complexity.
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Bayne D, Maru J, Srirangapatanam S, Hicks C, Neuhaus J, Scales C, Chi T, and Stoller M
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Kidney surgery, Emergency Service, Hospital, Treatment Outcome, Kidney Calculi surgery, Nephrolithotomy, Percutaneous
- Abstract
Introduction and Objective: Prior literature had demonstrated increased stone burden and higher rates of staged surgery in individuals of lower socioeconomic status (SES). Low SES individuals are more likely to experience delays in definitive stone surgery after initial presentation to the emergency department (ED) for kidney stones. This study aims to investigate the relationship between delays in definitive kidney stone surgery and the subsequent need for percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PNL) and/or staged surgical procedures using a statewide data set. Methods: This retrospective cohort study gathered longitudinal data from 2009 to 2018 using the California Department of Health Care Access and Information data set. Patient demographic characteristics, comorbidities, diagnosis/procedure codes, and distance were analyzed. Complex stone surgery was defined as initial PNL and/or undergoing more than one procedure within 365 days of initial intervention. Results: A total of 1,816,093 billing encounters from 947,798 patients were screened, resulting in 44,835 patients with ED visits for kidney stones followed by a urologic stone procedure. Multivariable analysis revealed that relative to patients who underwent surgery within 1 month of initial ED visit for stone disease, patients were at increased odds of undergoing complex surgery if waiting ≥6 months (odds ratio [OR] 1.18, p = 0.022), ≥1 year (OR 1.29, p < 0.001), and ≥3 years (OR 1.43, p < 0.001). Conclusions: Delays in definitive stone surgery after initial ED encounter for stone disease were associated with increased likelihood of undergoing a complex stone treatment.
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- 2023
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7. Underinsurance And Multiple Surgical Treatments for Kidney Stones.
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Bayne D, Hicks CR, Srirangapatanam S, Armas-Phan M, Maru J, Gennatas E, Allen IE, Seligman H, Stoller M, Suskind A, and Chi TL
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- Adult, Humans, Aged, United States, Insurance, Health, Retrospective Studies, Medicaid, Insurance Coverage, Medicare, Kidney Calculi surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To further elucidate the relationship between low socioeconomic status (SES) and larger, more complex stones requiring staged surgical interventions. Specifically, we aimed to determine if underinsurance (Medicaid, Medicare, and self-pay insurance types) is associated with multiple surgeries within 1 year., Methods: We performed a retrospective longitudinal analysis of prospectively collected data from the California statewide Department of Health Care Access and Information (HCAI) dataset. We included adult patients who had their first recorded kidney stone encounter between 2009 and 2018 and underwent at least 1 urologic stone procedure. We followed these patients within the dataset for one year after their initial surgery to assess for factors predicting multiple surgical treatments for stones., Results: A total of 156,319 adults were included in the study. The proportions of individuals in private insurance, Medicaid, Medicare and self-pay/indigent groups differed by the presence or absence of additional surgeries (64.0%, 13.5%, 19.4%, and 0.1%, vs 70.3%, 10.1%, 16.6%, and 0.1%, respectively). Compared to private insurance, Medicaid (1.46 [1.40-1.53] P < .001) and Medicare (1.15 [1.10-1.20] P < .001) insurance types were associated with significantly greater odds of multiple surgeries, whereas no significant association was seen in the self-pay/indigent insurance type (1.35 [0.83-2.19], P = 1.0)., Conclusion: In a statewide, California database from 2009 to 2018, underinsured adults had higher odds of undergoing a second procedure for kidney stones within 1 year of initial surgical treatment. This study adds to the expanding body of literature linking suboptimal healthcare access and disparate outcomes for kidney stone patients., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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8. Contact ratio and adaptations in the maxillary and mandibular dentoalveolar joints in rats and human clinical analogs.
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Wang B, Nguyen N, Kang M, Srirangapatanam S, Connelly S, Souza R, and Ho SP
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- Adult, Adolescent, Humans, Rats, Male, Animals, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Periodontal Ligament, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Maxilla, Tooth
- Abstract
Spatial maps of function-based contact areas and resulting mechanical strains in bones of intact fibrous joints in preclinical small-scale animal models are limited. Functional imaging in situ on intact dentoalveolar fibrous joints (DAJs) in hemimandibles and hemimaxillae harvested from 10 male Sprague-Dawley rats (N = 5 at 12 weeks, N = 5 at 20 weeks) was performed in this study. Physical features including bone volume fraction (BVF), bone pore diameter and pore density, and cementum fraction (CF) of the molars in the maxillary and mandibular joints were evaluated. Biomechanical testing in situ provided estimates of joint stiffness, changes in periodontal ligament spaces (PDL-space) between the molar and bony socket, and thereby localization of contact area in the respective joints. Contact area localization revealed mechanically stressed interradicular and apical regions in the joints. These anatomy-specific contact stresses in maxillary and mandibular joints were correlated with the physical features and resulting strains in interradicular and bony socket compartments. The mandibular joint spaces, in general, were higher than maxillary, and this trend was consistent with age (younger loaded: Mn - 134 ± 55 μm, Mx - 110 ± 47 μm; older loaded: Mn - 122 ± 49 μm, Mx - 105 ± 48 μm). However, a significant decrease (P < 0.05) in mandibular and maxillary joint spaces with age (younger unloaded: Mn - 147 ± 51 μm; Mx - 125 ± 42 μm; older unloaded: Mn - 134 ± 46 μm; Mx - 116 ± 44 μm) was observed. The bone volume fraction (BVF) of mandibular interradicular bone (IR bone) increased significantly with age (P < 0.05) with the percent porosity of coronal mandibular bone lower than its maxillary counterpart. The contact ratio (contact area to total surface area) of maxillary teeth was significantly greater (P < 0.05) than mandibular teeth; both maxillary interradicular and apical contact ratios (IR bone: 41%, 56%; Apical bone: 4%, 12%) increased with age, and were higher than the mandibular (IR bone: 19%, 44%; Apical bone: 1%, 4%) counterpart. Resulting higher but uniform strains in maxillary bone contrasted with lower but higher variance in mandibular strains at a younger age. Anatomy-specific colocalization of physical properties and functional strains in bone provided insights into form-guided adaptive dominance of the maxilla compared to material property-guided adaptive dominance of the mandible. These age-related trends from the preclinical animal model paralleled with age- and tooth position-specific variabilities in mandibular craniofacial bones of adolescent and adult patients following orthodontic treatment., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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9. Standardization of mineral density maps of physiologic and pathologic biominerals in humans using cone-beam CT and micro-CT scanners.
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Srirangapatanam S, Kang M, Ellenikiotis Y, Jheon A, Kapila S, Swana HS, Stoller ML, Seo Y, and Ho SP
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- Humans, Minerals, Reference Standards, X-Ray Microtomography methods, Bone and Bones, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography methods
- Abstract
Objectives: The lack of standardized X-ray imaging remains a challenge for comparative studies on spatial scans acquired from different clinic-specific X-ray scanners. The central objectives of this study are: 1) to delineate mineral density (MD) values, and 2) generate spatial MD maps of various physiologic and pathologic biominerals, and 3) propose a standardization protocol within the safe-operating zone of a CT scanner that underpins normalization of absorbed dose to shape and density of tissues., Methods: A systematic approach to propose a standardization protocol for CT imaging in vivo included: 1) estimation of pathologic MD ranges by performing a comparative meta-analysis on 2009-2019 data from the PubMed database; 2) calibration of cone-beam CT (CBCT) and micro-CT scanners with phantoms of known mineral densities (0, 250, 500, 750 and 3000 mg/cc) and shapes (cylinders and polyhedrons); 3) scanning craniofacial bones (N = 5) and dental tissues (N = 5), and ectopic minerals from humans (N = 3 each, pulp, salivary gland, kidney and prostrate stones, and penile and vascular plaques); 4) underscoring the effect of shape-factor (surface area-to-volume ratio) on MD of biominerals., Results: Higher MDs of physiologic and pathologic cortical bones (504-1009 mg/cc) compared to trabecular bone (82-212 mg/cc) were observed. An increase in shape-factor increased the CBCT error in MD measurement and revealed that the scanner resolution is dependent on the absorbed dose and shape-factor of detectable features., Significance: CT scanners should be calibrated with phantoms containing segments of known shape-factors and mineral densities to identify safe-operating zones. The calibrated approach will narrow the gap between length-scale dependent measurements, and will permit spatiotemporal quantitative and reliable detection of pathologies., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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10. Food hardness can regulate orthodontic tooth movement in mice.
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Ustriyana P, He R, Srirangapatanam S, Chang J, Arman ST, Sidhu S, Wang B, Kang M, and Ho SP
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- Animals, Hardness, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Periodontal Ligament physiology, Dental Cementum physiology, Tooth Movement Techniques
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Orthodontic treatment is often accompanied with prescription of softer foods to patients. The question to ask is, is this prescribed load regimen congruent with Wolff's law, and does it provide an adequate mechanical stimulus to maintain the functional health of periodontal complex? This question was answered by studying the effects of mice chewing on soft food (SF) and hard food (HF) while undergoing experimental tooth movement (ETM)., Methods: Three-week-old C57BL/6 mice (n = 18) were fed either hard pellet (HF; n = 9) or soft-chow food (SF; n = 9). ETM was performed on mice at 8 weeks of age, and mice were euthanized at 1 min, 2 weeks, and 4 weeks (8, 10, and 12 weeks old, respectively). A logistic regression model was applied to the experimental data to extrapolate the prolonged effects of ETM on the physical features of the dentoalveolar joint (DAJ)., Results: By 12 weeks, mice that chewed on SF expressed wider periodontal ligament space than those that chewed on HF. Mice that chewed on SF demonstrated increased alveolar socket roughness with larger alveoli and decreased bone volume fraction but with significantly lower bone mineral density and reduced overall tooth movement., Conclusions: These altered physical features when contextualized within the DAJ illustrated that (a) the regions farther away from the "site of insult" also undergo significant adaptation, and (b) these adaptations vary between mesial and distal sides of the periodontal complex and topographically differentiate in the direction of the ETM. These insights underpin the main conclusion, in that there is a need to "regulate chewing loads" as a therapeutic dose following ETM to encourage regeneration of periodontal complex as an effective clinical outcome. The discussed multiscale image analyses also can be used on patient cone beam computed tomography data to identify the effectiveness of orthodontic treatment within the realm of masticatory function., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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11. Mineralized Peyronie's plaque has a phenotypic resemblance to bone.
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Ustriyana P, Hennefarth MR, Srirangapatanam S, Jung H, Wang Y, Chen L, Lue TF, Lin G, Kang M, Stoller ML, and Ho SP
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- Collagen, Fibrosis, Humans, Male, Penis pathology, Penile Induration pathology
- Abstract
Mineralized Peyronie's plaque (MPP) impairs penile function. The association, colocalization, and dynamic interplay between organic and inorganic constituents can provide insights into biomineralization of Peyronie's plaque. Human MPPs (n = 11) were surgically excised, and the organic and inorganic constituents were spatially mapped using multiple high-resolution imaging techniques. Multiscale image analyses resulted in spatial colocalization of elements within a highly porous material with heterogenous composition, lamellae, and osteocytic lacuna-like features with a morphological resemblance to bone. The lower (520 ± 179 mg/cc) and higher (1024 ± 155 mg/cc) mineral density regions were associated with higher (11%) and lower (7%) porosities in MPP. Energy dispersive X-ray and micro-X-ray fluorescent spectroscopic maps in the higher mineral density regions of MPP revealed higher counts of calcium (Ca) and phosphorus (P), and a Ca/P ratio of 1.48 ± 0.06 similar to bone. More importantly, higher counts of zinc (Zn) were localized at the interface between softer (more organic to inorganic ratio) and harder (less organic to inorganic ratio) tissue regions of MPP and adjacent softer matrix, indicating the involvement of Zn-related proteins and/or pathways in the formation of MPP. In particular, dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP-1) was colocalized in a matrix rich in proteoglycans and collagen that contained osteocytic lacuna-like features. This combined materials science and biochemical with correlative microspectroscopic approach provided insights into the plausible cellular and biochemical pathways that incite mineralization of an existing fibrous Peyronie's plaque. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Aberrant human penile mineralization is known as mineralized Peyronie's plaque (MPP) and often results in a loss of form and function. This study focuses on investigating the spatial association of matrix proteins and elemental composition of MPP by colocalizing calcium, phosphorus, and trace metal zinc with dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP-1), acidic proteoglycans, and fibrillar collagen along with the cellular components using high resolution correlative microspectroscopy techniques. Spatial maps provided insights into cellular and biochemical pathways that incite mineralization of fibrous Peyronie's plaque in humans., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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12. Community Income, Healthy Food Access, and Repeat Surgery for Kidney Stones.
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Bayne D, Srirangapatanam S, Hicks CR, Armas-Phan M, Showen A, Suskind A, Seligman H, Bibbins-Domingo K, Stoller M, and Chi TL
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Reoperation, United States, Income, Kidney Calculi surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To determine if limited food access census tracts and food swamp census tracts are associated with increased risk for repeat kidney stone surgery. And to elucidate the relationship between community-level food retail environment relative to community-level income on repeat stone surgery over time., Methods: Data were abstracted from the University of California, San Francisco Information Commons. Adult patients were included if they underwent at least one urologic stone procedure. Census tracts from available geographical data were mapped using Food Access Research Atlas data from the United States Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service. Kaplan-Meier curves were employed to illustrate time to a second surgical procedure over 5 years, and log-rank tests were used to test for statistically significant differences. A multivariate Cox regression model was used to generate hazard ratios for undergoing second surgery by group., Results: A total of 1496 patients were included in this analysis. Repeat stone surgery occurred in 324 patients. Kaplan-Meier curves demonstrated a statistically significant difference in curves depicting patients living in low income census tracts (LICTs) vs those not living in LICTs (P <.001). On Cox regression models, patients in LICTs had significantly higher risk of undergoing repeat surgery (P = .011). Patients from limited food access census tracts and food swamp census tracts did not have a significantly higher adjusted risk of undergoing second surgery (P = .11 and P = .88, respectively)., Conclusion: Income more so than food access associates with increased risk of repeat kidney stone surgery. Further research is needed to explore the interaction between low socioeconomic status and kidney stone outcomes., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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13. Functional Adaptation of LPS-affected Dentoalveolar Fibrous Joints in Rats.
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Wang B, Ustriyana P, Tam CS, Lin JD, Srirangapatanam S, Kapila Y, Ryder MI, Webb S, Seo Y, and Ho SP
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- Animals, Maxilla, Periodontal Ligament diagnostic imaging, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Dental Cementum, Lipopolysaccharides
- Abstract
Introduction: The functional interplay between cementum of the root and alveolar bone of the socket is tuned by a uniquely positioned 70-80 µm wide fibrous and lubricious ligament in a dentoalveolar joint (DAJ). In this study, structural and biomechanical properties of the DAJ, periodontal ligament space (PDL-space also known as the joint space), alveolar bone of the socket, and cementum of the tooth root that govern the biomechanics of a lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-affected DAJ were mapped both in space and time., Methods: The hemi-maxillae from 20 rats (4 control at 6 weeks of age, 4 control and 4 LPS-affected at 12 weeks of age, 4 control and 4 LPS-affected at 16 weeks of age) were investigated using a hybrid technique; micro-X-ray computed tomography (5 µm resolution) in combination with biomechanical testing in situ. Temporal variations in bone and cementum volume fractions were evaluated. Trends in mineral apposition rates (MAR) in additional six Sprague Dawley rats (3 controls, 3 LPS-affected) were revealed by transforming spatial fluorochrome signals to functional growth rates (linearity factor - RW) of bone, dentin, and cementum using a fast Fourier transform on fluorochrome signals from 100-µm hemi-maxillae sections., Results: An overall change in LPS-affected DAJ biomechanics (a 2.5-4.5X increase in tooth displacement and 2X tooth rotation at 6 weeks, no increase in displacement and a 7X increase in rotation at 12 weeks; 27% increase in bone effective strain at 6 weeks and 11% at 12 weeks relative to control) was associated with structural changes in the coronal regions of the DAJ (15% increase in PDL-space from 0 to 6 weeks but only 5% from 6 to 12 weeks compared to control). A significant increase (p < 0.05) in PDL-space between ligated and age-matched control was observed. The bone fraction of ligated at 12 weeks was significantly lower than its age-matched control, and no significant differences (p > 0.05) between groups were observed at 6 weeks. Cementum in the apical regions grew faster but nonlinearly (11% and 20% increase in cementum fraction (CF) at 6 and 12 weeks) compared to control. Alveolar bone revealed site-specific nonlinear growth with an overall increase in MAR (108.5 µm/week to 126.7 µm/week after LPS treatment) compared to dentin (28.3 µm/week in control vs. 26.1 µm/week in LPS-affected) and cementum (126.5 µm/week in control vs. 119.9 µm/week in LPS-affected). A significant increase in CF (p < 0.05) in ligated specimens was observed at 6 weeks of age., Conclusions: Anatomy-specific responses of cementum and bone to the mechano-chemo stimuli, and their collective temporal contribution to observed changes in PDL-space were perpetuated by altered tooth movement. Data highlight the "resilience" of DAJ function through the predominance of nonlinear growth response of cementum, changes in PDL-space, and bone architecture. Despite the significant differences in bone and cementum architectures, data provided insights into the reactionary effects of cementum as a built-in compensatory mechanism to reestablish functional competence of the DAJ. The spatial shifts in architectures of alveolar bone and cementum, and consequently ligament space, highlight adaptations farther away from the site of insult, which also is another novel insight from this study. These adaptations when correlated within the context of joint function (biomechanics) illustrate that they are indeed necessary to sustain DAJ function albeit being pathological., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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14. Ex vivo human testes as a practical model to simulate ultrasound-guided testicular cell transplantation for human fertility restoration.
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Yang H, Lindsey JP 2nd, Gillis-Buck EM, Srirangapatanam S, Rosen JE, Hussein AA, and Smith JF
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- Adult, Cell Transplantation, Fertility, Humans, Male, Ultrasonography, Interventional, Methylene Blue, Testis diagnostic imaging
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Objective: To develop an ex vivo model to practice ultrasound-guided injection of cellular material into human seminiferous tubules to simulate testicular cell transplantation (TCT)., Design: Simulated TCT injections were performed in human testes removed during orchiectomy. The rete testis was the target site of injection. Successful retrograde infiltration of injected material into the lumen of the seminiferous tubules was detected using ultrasound and confirmed with histology., Setting: Single academic surgical center., Patient(s): Adult patients undergoing orchiectomy for nononcologic indications., Intervention(s): The testes were injected with sonographic contrast (Optison), methylene blue, and fluorescent-labeled cells., Main Outcome Measure(s): A characteristic streaming pattern of sonographic contrast in the testis was used to define sonographic success, and the presence of methylene blue and fluorescent-labeled cells within the seminiferous tubules confirmed histologic success., Result(s): We performed simulated TCT injections in 30 testes obtained from 16 patients undergoing orchiectomy. We were able to achieve sonographic success in 57% of injections and confirmed that sonographic success is correlated with histologic success., Conclusion(s): Testicular cell transplantation injections can be practiced using human testes. As there appears to be a learning curve associated with this procedure, developing this infrastructure to practice these skills is critical before implementation in patients., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2021
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15. Low Urologist Density Predicts High-Cost Surgical Treatment of Stone Disease.
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Bayne DB, Armas-Phan M, Srirangapatanam S, Ahn J, Brown TT, Stoller M, and Chi TL
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Urologists, Kidney Calculi surgery, Ureterolithiasis, Urolithiasis surgery
- Abstract
Introduction and Objectives: Lack of access to urologic specialists is approaching crisis levels as the number of urologists is decreasing, while the demand for urologic care is increasing. The financial implications of this have not been explored. The objective of this study is to examine the impact of access and other patient factors on cost to treat urolithiasis. We hypothesized that markers of poor access would associate with higher costs of surgical encounters for patients presenting with urolithiasis. Methods: A retrospective review of prospectively collected data from the Registry for Stones of the Kidney and Ureter (ReSKU) from September 2015 to July 2018 was conducted to investigate characteristics of surgical patients treated for urinary stone disease. Univariate analysis was performed using the Welch two-sample t -test. Multivariate analysis was performed using logistic regression. Statistical analysis was performed in R version 3.5. Results: When taking into account age, delayed presentation, procedure type, stone size >20 mm, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) code, gender, race, income, distance, urologist density, body mass index, diabetes, infection, education, language, insurance, and stone complexity, patients undergoing percutaneous nephrolithotomy procedure ( p < 0.001; odds ratio [OR] 12.9, confidence interval [CI] 4.05-48.5), urologist density in the bottom quartile ( p = 0.014; OR 4.66, CI 1.40-16.9), diabetes ( p = 0.018; OR 4.38, CI 1.32-15.6), and infection ( p = 0.007; OR 4.51, CI 1.55-14.0) were the only variables statistically significant for association with top quartile of total cost. Conclusions: Surgical encounter costs are largely dictated by patient clinical factors, but low regional urologist density appears to independently predicted for high-cost stone surgery. Increasing patients' access to a urologist may prove to be financially beneficial in the longitudinal reduction in health care costs for stone disease.
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- 2021
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16. Synchronous genitourinary lichen sclerosus signals a distinct urinary microbiome profile in men with urethral stricture disease.
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Cohen AJ, Gaither TW, Srirangapatanam S, Castellanos ER, Enriquez A, Fergus KB, Fadrosh D, Lynch S, Mmonu NA, and Breyer BN
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- Aged, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Urine microbiology, Lichen Sclerosus et Atrophicus microbiology, Lichen Sclerosus et Atrophicus urine, Male Urogenital Diseases microbiology, Male Urogenital Diseases urine, Microbiota, Urethral Stricture microbiology, Urethral Stricture urine
- Abstract
Purpose: Alterations in the urinary microbiome have been associated with urological diseases. The microbiome of patients with urethral stricture disease (USD) remains unknown. Our objective is to examine the microbiome of USD with a focus on inflammatory USD caused by lichen sclerosus (LS)., Methods: We collected mid-stream urine samples from men with LS-USD (cases; n = 22) and non-LS USD (controls; n = 76). DNA extraction, PCR amplification of the V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene, and sequencing was done on the samples. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were defined using a > 97% sequence similarity threshold. Alpha diversity measurements of diversity, including microbiome richness (number of different OTUs) and evenness (distribution of OTUs) were calculated and compared. Microbiome beta diversity (difference between microbial communities) relationships with cases and controls were also assessed., Results: Fifty specimens (13 cases and 37 controls) produced a 16S rRNA amplicon. Mean sample richness was 25.9 vs. 16.8 (p = 0.076) for LS-USD vs. non-LS USD, respectively. LS-USD had a unique profile of bacteria by taxonomic order including Bacillales, Bacteroidales and Pasteurellales enriched urine. The beta variation of observed bacterial communities was best explained by the richness., Conclusions: Men with LS-USD may have a unique microbiologic richness, specifically inclusive of Bacillales, Bacteroidales and Pasteurellales enriched urine compared to those with non-LS USD. Further work will be required to elucidate the clinical relevance of these variations in the urinary microbiome.
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- 2021
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17. Novel measurement tool and model for aberrant urinary stream in 3D printed urethras derived from human tissue.
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Cohen AJ, Patino G, Mirramezani M, Srirangapatanam S, Tresh A, Cheema B, Tai J, Romero D, Enriquez A, Baskin LS, Shadden SC, and Breyer BN
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- Cadaver, Humans, Hydrodynamics, Models, Biological, Printing, Three-Dimensional, Urethra physiology, Urination physiology
- Abstract
Background: An estimated 10% of male adults have split or dribbled stream leading to poor hygiene, embarrassment, and inconvenience. There is no current metric that measures male stream deviation., Objective: To develop a novel method to measure spray in normal and abnormal anatomical conformations., Design, Setting, and Participants: We developed a novel platform to reliably describe spray. We used cadaveric tissues and 3D Printed models to study the impact of meatal shape on the urinary stream. Cadaveric penile tissue and 3D printed models were affixed to a fluid pump and used to simulate micturition. Dye captured on fabric allowed for spray detection., Outcome Measurements and Statistical Analysis: Spray pattern area, deviation from normal location, and flowrates were recorded. Computational fluid dynamic models were created to study fluid vorticity., Results and Limitations: Obstructions at the penile tip worsened spray dynamics and reduced flow. Ventral meatotomy improved flowrate (p<0.05) and reduced spray (p<0.05) compared to tips obstructed ventrally, dorsally or in the fossa navicularis. 3D models do not fully reproduce parameters of their parent cadaver material. The average flowrate from 3D model was 10ml/sec less than that of the penis from which it was derived (p = 0.03). Nonetheless, as in cadavers, increasing obstruction in 3D models leads to the same pattern of reduced flowrate and worse spray. Dynamic modeling revealed increasing distal obstruction was correlated to higher relative vorticity observed at the urethral tip., Conclusions: We developed a robust method to measure urine spray in a research setting. Dynamic 3D printed models hold promise as a methodology to study common pathologies in the urethra and corrective surgeries on the urine stream that would not be feasible in patients. These novel methods require further validation, but offer promise as a research and clinical tool., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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18. Characterizing voiding experiences of men choosing seated and standing positions.
- Author
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Namiri NK, Cheema B, Lui H, Enriquez A, Rios N, Srirangapatanam S, Cohen AJ, Mmonu NA, and Breyer BN
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms physiopathology, Sitting Position, Standing Position, Urination physiology
- Abstract
Aims: Voiding positions and preferences in men are not well characterized. In this study, we aim to understand the interplay of voiding characteristics and their impact on voiding position., Methods: We designed a 27-item survey to assess voiding characteristics and lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) severity in men seen in urology and other outpatient clinics. Participants included adult men patients and adult men accompanying patients at our institution's outpatient clinics. Data collected included demographics, International Prostate Symptom Score questionnaire, stream type (single, split, and dribble), voiding behavior, positional stream quality, and voiding bother., Results: We received 195 completed surveys (80% response rate). Of men queried, 18% (35/195) preferred to sit while voiding. Overall, men who sit had a higher proportion of LUTS (66% [23/35] vs. 41% [66/160]; p = .01), more physical limitations affecting voiding choice (20% [7/35] vs. 3% [5/160]; (p = .001), and a lower desire to stand (6% [2/35] vs. 24% [38/160]; p = .02), compared to men who stand. Men who sit while voiding reported nearly double the amount of voiding associated bother (34% [12/35]) compared to men who stand (18% [28/160]; p = .04). Older aged men reported a similar rate of seated urination compared to younger men. The most common reasons to void seated included comfort and avoidance of spraying., Conclusions: Our findings discourage the use of anecdotal beliefs founded on generalizable characteristics, such as age and stream type, to infer a patient's voiding characteristics. Open dialog with patients regarding voiding preferences may garner important information regarding overall urologic health and better inform urologic care., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Role of core body temperature in nephrolithiasis.
- Author
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Srirangapatanam S, Wiener S, and Stoller ML
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Body Temperature physiology, Nephrolithiasis epidemiology, Nephrolithiasis physiopathology
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the role of core body temperature in urinary stone formation using a large clinical dataset., Patients and Methods: We retrospectively collected 14 519 039 individual temperature measurements from 580 416 patients with medical history, laboratory values and medication history between 2013 and 2018 at a single institution. After exclusions and matching 2:1 (controls:cases) to account for confounding variables, 7104 patients with a history of urinary stones were identified., Results: Patients with a history of urinary stones (cases) had an elevated mean (SD) oral temperature compared to matched controls, at 36.666 (0.17) vs 36.659 (0.20)°C (P = 0.012). Logistic regression of matched samples showed that higher core body temperature was predictive of a history of nephrolithiasis (odds ratio 1.21, 95% confidence interval 1.04-1.4; P = 0.015)., Conclusion: Core body temperature was significantly higher in patients with a history of urinary stones compared to matched controls, contrary to the anticipated thermodynamic considerations leading to crystal aggregation. Given that the core body temperature is elevated, rather than decreased, thermodynamic process driving stone formation is unlikely., (© 2020 The Authors BJU International © 2020 BJU International Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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20. Ectopic biomineralization in kidney stone formers compared to non-stone formers.
- Author
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Fernandez AM, Sherer BA, Gansky SA, Mena JD, Srirangapatanam S, Wiener SV, Chi T, Ho SP, and Stoller ML
- Abstract
Background: Kidney stone formers (SFs) are at increased risk of stroke, myocardial infarction, and atherosclerosis of the carotid and coronary arteries. These cardiovascular and urologic pathologies can result from ectopic biomineral deposition. The objectives of this study are: (I) to evaluate risk factors for ectopic biomineralization, and (II) to characterize the overall burden of ectopic minerals in known SFs compared to non-stone formers (NSFs) matched for these risk factors., Methods: Presence and quantity of biominerals at eight anatomic locations (abdominal aorta, common iliac arteries, pelvic veins, prostate or uterus, mesentery, pancreas, and spleen) were determined in a case control study by retrospective analysis of clinical non-contrast computed tomography scans obtained from 190 SFs and 190 gender- and age-matched NSFs (renal transplant donors). Predictors of biomineralization were determined using negative binomial regression. A subgroup of 140 SFs and 140 NSFs were matched for risk factors for systemic biomineralization, and mineralization was compared between these matched SFs and NSFs using ordinal logistic regression., Results: Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, and smoking were more common amongst SFs. Risk factors for increased systemic biomineralization included history of nephrolithiasis, male gender, older age, and history of hyperlipidemia. When controlling for these comorbidities, SFs had significantly increased biomineralization systemically and at the abdominal aorta, iliac arteries, prostate, mesentery, pancreas, and spleen compared to NSFs., Conclusions: The current study provides evidence that SFs are at increased risk of biomineralization systemically, independent of common risk factors of atherosclerosis., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tau-19-927). MLS is owner and board member at Applaud Medical, Inc and owner of Ravine Group. He is a consultant and lecturer at C.R. Bard, Inc. and Boston Scientific. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (2020 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
- Full Text
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21. Female Urethral Strictures: Review of Diagnosis, Etiology, and Management.
- Author
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Agochukwu-Mmonu N, Srirangapatanam S, Cohen A, and Breyer B
- Subjects
- Dilatation, Female, Humans, Surgical Flaps, Urethral Stricture etiology, Vagina surgery, Mouth Mucosa transplantation, Urethra surgery, Urethral Stricture diagnosis, Urethral Stricture therapy
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: In this review, we describe the incidence, diagnosis, and management of urethral strictures in women., Recent Findings: Definitive repair of urethral strictures in women traditionally utilizes vaginal and labial flaps. Oral mucosal buccal graft urethroplasty also has high success rates, with larger series demonstrating feasibility and durability. Urethral strictures in women are very rare. When they do occur, they are often difficult to diagnose, requiring a high index of suspicion. Women with urethral strictures often present with symptoms of obstructed urinary flow, such as incomplete emptying, straining, and elevated postvoid residual. First line, minimally invasive treatment consists of urethral dilation and urethrotomy, though urethrotomy is rarely performed. Repeat urethral dilation has low success rates compared with urethroplasty, which is a more definitive treatment.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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