1,245 results on '"Buscaglia, A."'
Search Results
2. Presentaci´on
- Author
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Pilar Barba Buscaglia
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General Engineering - Published
- 2023
3. 3D Multispectral Imaging for Cultural Heritage Preservation: The Case Study of a Wooden Sculpture of the Museo Egizio di Torino
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Leila Es Sebar, Luca Lombardo, Paola Buscaglia, Tiziana Cavaleri, Alessandro Lo Giudice, Alessandro Re, Matilde Borla, Sara Aicardi, and Sabrina Grassini
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3D multispectral model ,cultural heritage ,data fusion ,digital methods ,digital twin ,digitalization ,multispectral imaging ,photogrammetry ,Archeology ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,Conservation - Abstract
Digitalization techniques, such as photogrammetry (PG), are attracting the interest of experts in the cultural heritage field, as they enable the creation of three-dimensional virtual replicas of historical artifacts with 2D digital images. Indeed, PG allows for acquiring data regarding the overall appearance of an artifact, its geometry, and its texture. Furthermore, among several image-based techniques exploited for the conservation of works of art, multispectral imaging (MSI) finds great application in the study of the materials of historical items, taking advantage of the different responses of materials when exposed to specific wavelengths. Despite their great usefulness, PG and MSI are often used as separate tools. Integrating radiometric and geometrical data can notably expand the information carried by a 3D model. Therefore, this paper presents a novel research methodology that enables the acquisition of multispectral 3D models, combining the outcomes of PG and MSI (Visible (VIS), Ultraviolet-induced Visible Luminescence (UVL), Ultraviolet-Reflected (UVR), and Ultraviolet-Reflected False Color (UVR-FC) imaging) in a single coordinate system, using an affordable tunable set-up and open-source software. The approach has been employed for the study of two wooden artifacts from the Museo Egizio di Torino to investigate the materials present on the surface and provide information that could support the design of suitable conservation treatments.
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- 2023
4. A novel through-the-scope helix tack-and-suture device for mucosal defect closure following colorectal endoscopic submucosal dissection: a multicenter study
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Jad, Farha, Hemchand, Ramberan, Hiroyuki, Aihara, Linda Y, Zhang, Amit, Mehta, Camille, Hage, Alexander, Schlachterman, Anand, Kumar, Brianna, Shinn, Andrew, Canakis, Raymond Eunho, Kim, Lionel S, D'Souza, Jonathan, Buscaglia, Andrew C, Storm, Jason, Samarasena, Kenneth, Chang, Shai, Friedland, Peter V, Dragonov, Bashar, Qumseya, Salmaan, Jawaid, Mohamed O, Othman, Muhammad Khalid, Hasan, Dennis, Yang, Mouen A, Khashab, and Saowanee, Ngamruengphong
- Subjects
Gastroenterology - Abstract
Background Complete closure of large mucosal defects following colorectal endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) with through-the-scope (TTS) clips is oftentimes not possible. We aimed to report our early experience of using a novel TTS suturing system for the closure of large mucosal defects after colorectal ESD. Methods We performed a retrospective multicenter cohort study of consecutive patients who underwent attempted prophylactic defect closure using the TTS suturing system after colorectal ESD. The primary outcome was technical success in achieving complete defect closure, defined as a Results 82 patients with a median defect size of 30 (interquartile range 25–40) mm were included. Technical success was achieved in 92.7 % (n = 76): TTS suturing only in 44 patients (53.7 %) and a combination of TTS suturing to approximate the widest segment followed by complete closure with TTS clips in 32 (39.0 %). Incomplete/partial closure, failure of appropriate TTS suture deployment, and the need for over-the-scope salvage closure methods were observed in 7.3 % (n = 6). One intraprocedural bleed, one delayed bleed, and three intraprocedural perforations were observed. There were no adverse events related to placement of the TTS suture. Conclusion The TTS suture system is an effective and safe tool for the closure of large mucosal defects after colorectal ESD and is an alternative when complete closure with TTS clips alone is not possible.
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- 2022
5. Digital Detection of Single Virus Particles by Multi‐Spot, Label‐Free Imaging Biosensor on Anti‐Reflective Glass
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Giovanni Nava, Luca Casiraghi, Thomas Carzaniga, Giuliano Zanchetta, Marcella Chiari, Francesco Damin, Valentina Bollati, Lucia Signorini, Serena Delbue, Tommaso Bellini, and Marco Buscaglia
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Biomaterials ,General Materials Science ,General Chemistry ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2023
6. Supplemental Figures from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Supplemental Figures
- Published
- 2023
7. Table S3 from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Table S3
- Published
- 2023
8. Table S2 from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Table S2
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- 2023
9. Table S1 from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Table S1
- Published
- 2023
10. Table S5 from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Table S5
- Published
- 2023
11. Table S4 from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Table S4
- Published
- 2023
12. Supplemental Table Legends from Organoid Profiling Identifies Common Responders to Chemotherapy in Pancreatic Cancer
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David A. Tuveson, Steven Gallinger, Alexander Krasnitz, Jennifer Knox, Richard Moffitt, Julie M. Wilson, Sandra E. Fischer, Benjamin Hubert, Christopher R. Vakoc, Ellen Li, Kenneth H. Yu, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Allyson Ocean, Craig Devoe, James M. Crawford, Edward Kim, Faiyaz Notta, Grainne M. O'Kane, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Jonathan R. Brody, Paul M. Grandgenett, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Dominick J. DiMaio, Jean L. Grem, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jordan M. Winter, James D. Sullivan, William Nealon, Divyesh V. Sejpal, Peter Allen, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Maoxin Wu, Joseph Kim, Aaron Sasson, Brian M. Wolpin, Andrew J. Aguirre, Elizabeth Thompson, Ralph H. Hruban, Laura D. Wood, Hans Clevers, Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue, Gokce Askan, Nicolas LeComte, Else Driehuis, Laura Martello, Cinthya Y. Lowder, Austin B. Goetz, Rashesh Sanghvi, Minita Shah, Nicolas Robine, Kanika Arora, Molly Johnson, Jasmine C. Huynh, Ammar A. Javed, Randze Lerie D. Palmaira, Joseph F. LaComb, Michelle Ma, Hardik Patel, C. Megan Young, Koji Miyabayashi, Gun-Ho Jang, Robert E. Denroche, Richard A. Burkhart, Fieke E. M. Froeling, Tim D. D. Somerville, Astrid Deschênes, Dennis Plenker, Dannielle D. Engle, Pascal Belleau, and Hervé Tiriac
- Abstract
Supplemental Table Legends
- Published
- 2023
13. Data from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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Jason A. Chesney, Kelly M. McMasters, Holden T. Maecker, Robert Buscaglia, Robert C.G. Martin, Michael E. Egger, Rahul Gosain, Sabine J. Waigel, Andrei Smolenkov, Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam, Bryce F. Stamp, and Kavitha Yaddanapudi
- Abstract
Purpose:Improving our understanding of the immunologic response to cancer cells within the sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) of primary tumors is expected to identify new approaches to stimulate clinically meaningful cancer immunity.Experimental Design:We used mass cytometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF), flow cytometry, and T-cell receptor immunosequencing to conduct simultaneous single-cell analyses of immune cells in the SLNs of patients with melanoma.Results:We found increased effector-memory αβ T cells, TCR clonality, and γδ T cells selectively in the melanoma-bearing SLNs relative to non–melanoma-bearing SLNs, consistent with possible activation of an antitumor immune response. However, we also observed a markedly immunotolerant environment in the melanoma-bearing SLNs indicated by reduced and impaired NK cells and increased levels of CD8+CD57+PD-1+ cells, which are known to display low melanoma killing capabilities. Other changes observed in melanoma-bearing SLNs when compared with non–melanoma-bearing SLNs include (i) reduced CD8+CD69+ T cell/T regulatory cell ratio, (ii) high PD-1 expression on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and (iii) high CTLA-4 expression on γδ T cells.Conclusions:Our data suggest that these immunologic changes compromise antimelanoma immunity and contribute to a high relapse rate. We propose the development of clinical trials to test the neo-adjuvant administration of anti–PD-1 antibodies prior to SLN resection in patients with stage III melanoma.See related commentary by Lund, p. 1996
- Published
- 2023
14. Supplementary Data from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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Jason A. Chesney, Kelly M. McMasters, Holden T. Maecker, Robert Buscaglia, Robert C.G. Martin, Michael E. Egger, Rahul Gosain, Sabine J. Waigel, Andrei Smolenkov, Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam, Bryce F. Stamp, and Kavitha Yaddanapudi
- Abstract
Supplementary Data from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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- 2023
15. Supplementary Figure from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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Jason A. Chesney, Kelly M. McMasters, Holden T. Maecker, Robert Buscaglia, Robert C.G. Martin, Michael E. Egger, Rahul Gosain, Sabine J. Waigel, Andrei Smolenkov, Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam, Bryce F. Stamp, and Kavitha Yaddanapudi
- Abstract
Supplementary Figure from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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- 2023
16. Supplementary Table from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
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Jason A. Chesney, Kelly M. McMasters, Holden T. Maecker, Robert Buscaglia, Robert C.G. Martin, Michael E. Egger, Rahul Gosain, Sabine J. Waigel, Andrei Smolenkov, Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam, Bryce F. Stamp, and Kavitha Yaddanapudi
- Abstract
Supplementary Table from Single‐Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
- Published
- 2023
17. Novel through-the-scope suture closure of colonic endoscopic mucosal resection defects (with video)
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Danse Bi, Linda Y. Zhang, Mohammad Alqaisieh, Apurva Shrigiriwar, Jad Farha, Tala Mahmoud, Karl Akiki, Jose Antonio Almario, Sardar M. Shah-Khan, Stuart R. Gordon, Jeffrey M. Adler, Mark Radetic, Peter V. Draganov, Yakira N. David, Brianna Shinn, Zahraa Mohammed, Alexander Schlachterman, Sofia Yuen, Ahmad Al-Taee, Namn Yunseok, Roberto Trasolini, Michael Bejjani, Bachir Ghandour, Hemchand Ramberan, Andrew Canakis, Saowanee Ngamruengphong, Andrew C. Storm, Shailendra Singh, Heiko Pohl, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Lionel S. D’Souza, Bashar Qumseya, Nikhil A. Kumta, Anand Kumar, Gregory B. Haber, Hiroyuki Aihara, Mandeep Sawhney, Raymond Kim, Tyler M. Berzin, and Mouen A. Khashab
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Gastroenterology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging - Published
- 2023
18. Unusual syncope due to silent coronary vasospasm: a case description and an overview of coronary vasospasm
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Alberto Somaschini, Matteo Astuti, Stefano Cordone, Matteo Ghione, Elisa Buscaglia, Stefano Cornara, and Pietro Bellone
- Abstract
Variant angina is a condition triggered by the transient vasospasm of epicardial coronary arteries, which usually causes chest pain episodes and may be associated with dangerous arrhythmias. Among patients with coronary artery vasospasm, a non-negligible subset experiences silent myocardial ischemia, defined as the objective documentation of myocardial ischemia in the absence of angina or anginal equivalents. This condition is associated with the increased cardiac mortality and incidence of acute cardiac events. Herein, we described the case of a 65-year-old man who was admitted to our Emergency Department (ED) for syncope. He reported palpitations before the event but did not complain of chest pain. Baseline electrocardiogram (ECG) showed that troponin values of biphasic T waves in V2-V6 were normal. The patient was admitted to our coronary care unit (CCU) for monitoring. Immediately after hospital admission, he developed dynamic ST segment elevation and non-sustained polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, being symptomatic only for palpitations. Both ECG abnormalities and symptoms quickly resolved after the administration of intravenous nitrates and oral calcium channel blockers. Coronary angiography showed a critical non-occlusive fixed stenosis at the proximal right coronary artery (RCA). The lesion was treated by angioplasty and stenting, and the patient was discharged on dual antiplatelet therapy, statins and oral high-dose calcium-channel antagonist.
- Published
- 2022
19. Photocatalysis of TiO2 Sensitized with Graphitic Carbon Nitride and Electrodeposited Aryl Diazonium on Screen-Printed Electrodes to Detect Prostate Specific Antigen under Visible Light
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José L. Bott-Neto, Thiago S. Martins, Lorenzo A. Buscaglia, Sergio A. S. Machado, and Osvaldo N. Oliveira
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PRÓSTATA ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
20. Three‐dimensional spheroid cell culture of human MSC‐derived neuron‐like cells: New in vitro model to assess magnetite nanoparticle‐induced neurotoxicity effects
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Uliana De Simone, Anna Cleta Croce, Patrizia Pignatti, Eleonora Buscaglia, Francesca Caloni, and Teresa Coccini
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Neurons ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Spheroids, Cellular ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Humans ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Magnetite Nanoparticles ,Toxicology - Abstract
As nanoparticles (NPs) can access the brain and impact on CNS function, novel in vitro models for the evaluation of NPs-induced neurotoxicity are advocated. Three-dimensional spheroids of primary neuron-like cells (hNLCs) of human origin have been generated, from differentiation of human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). The study evaluated Fe
- Published
- 2022
21. Single-Cell Immune Mapping of Melanoma Sentinel Lymph Nodes Reveals an Actionable Immunotolerant Microenvironment
- Author
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Kavitha Yaddanapudi, Bryce F. Stamp, Priyanka B. Subrahmanyam, Andrei Smolenkov, Sabine J. Waigel, Rahul Gosain, Michael E. Egger, Robert C.G. Martin, Robert Buscaglia, Holden T. Maecker, Kelly M. McMasters, and Jason A. Chesney
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Purpose: Improving our understanding of the immunologic response to cancer cells within the sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) of primary tumors is expected to identify new approaches to stimulate clinically meaningful cancer immunity. Experimental Design: We used mass cytometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF), flow cytometry, and T-cell receptor immunosequencing to conduct simultaneous single-cell analyses of immune cells in the SLNs of patients with melanoma. Results: We found increased effector-memory αβ T cells, TCR clonality, and γδ T cells selectively in the melanoma-bearing SLNs relative to non–melanoma-bearing SLNs, consistent with possible activation of an antitumor immune response. However, we also observed a markedly immunotolerant environment in the melanoma-bearing SLNs indicated by reduced and impaired NK cells and increased levels of CD8+CD57+PD-1+ cells, which are known to display low melanoma killing capabilities. Other changes observed in melanoma-bearing SLNs when compared with non–melanoma-bearing SLNs include (i) reduced CD8+CD69+ T cell/T regulatory cell ratio, (ii) high PD-1 expression on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and (iii) high CTLA-4 expression on γδ T cells. Conclusions: Our data suggest that these immunologic changes compromise antimelanoma immunity and contribute to a high relapse rate. We propose the development of clinical trials to test the neo-adjuvant administration of anti–PD-1 antibodies prior to SLN resection in patients with stage III melanoma. See related commentary by Lund, p. 1996
- Published
- 2022
22. Assessment of consolidation treatments: micro-CT as a potential tool for material’s penetration detection
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Paola Buscaglia, Andrea Baldi, Sabrina Grassini, Sara Croci, Paola Croveri, Luisa Cervini, Corrado Cremonini, Alessandro Re, and Alessandro Lo Giudice
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- 2023
23. An inexact algorithm for stochastic variational inequalities
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Buscaglia, Emelin L., Lotito, Pablo A., and Parente, Lisandro A.
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Optimization and Control (math.OC) ,FOS: Mathematics ,Mathematics - Optimization and Control - Abstract
We present a new Progressive Hedging Algorithm to solve Stochastic Variational Inequalities in the formulation introduced by Rockafellar and Wets in 2017, allowing the generated subproblems to be approximately solved with an implementable tolerance condition. Our scheme is based on Inexact Proximal Point methods and generalizes the exact algorithm developed by Rockafellar and Sun in 2019, providing stronger convergence results. We also show some numerical experiments in two-stage Nash games.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Reply to Kukucka: Calculating error rates in forensic handwriting examiner decisions
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R. Austin Hicklin, Linda Eisenhart, Nicole Richetelli, Peter Belcastro, Ted M. Burkes, Michael Smith, JoAnn Buscaglia, Rebecca Schwartz Perlman, and Eugene M. Peters
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Multidisciplinary - Published
- 2022
25. Aprendizado de estratégias de propulsão de micronadadores a baixo número de Reynolds
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Paula Jaíne A. Da Silva, Luciano Dellier, Roberto F. Ausas, Gustavo C. Buscaglia, and Stevens Paz
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- 2022
26. 1416. The Economic Burden of Adverse Events Requiring Acute Care Services from Outpatient Parenteral Antibiotic Therapy (OPAT) Treatment
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Mauricio Rodriguez, Georgia Buscaglia, Steven Tolle, and Darren Michael
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Infectious Diseases ,Oncology - Abstract
Background Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a growing threat. ESBL-producing Enterobacterales infections are rising, especially within the community setting. Patients requiring OPAT services will increase based on AMR to oral antibiotic (ABX) options. OPAT adverse events (AEs) are linked to the use of IV catheters, followed by adverse drug events. Complications that arise from OPAT, often necessitate acute care services. We sought to quantify costs associated with OPAT AEs. Methods A multicenter retrospective claims analysis from the state of Utah’s (UT) Public IBIS database was performed for 2020. OPAT AEs as described in the literature were used to query charges. All UT hospitals and common OPAT AE principal diagnosis (PDx) codes were included in the analysis. Estimated inpatient (IP) costs associated with common OPAT AEs were calculated from a charge-to-cost ratio (22.5%) using publicly available data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Event counts reported for UT were scaled proportionally to estimate total events for the U.S. population. Emergency department (ED) incidence rates for OPAT AEs from 2016 to 2020 were also examined. Results During the study period, 248,843 patients met study inclusion for an OPAT AE PDx. Among IV-related complications, catheter phlebitis accounted for highest median cost per IP event at $14,051. Other PDx, included catheter blockage and central line-associated bloodstream infections at $11,237 and $10,103, respectively, followed by $9,371 for complications post injection. Thrombotic events equated to total of $11,915 for the combined costs of deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Lastly, C. difficile infections accounted for a median cost of $5,284 (Figure 1). Age-adjusted rates of ED activity related to AEs rose to 17.6 per 10,000 in 2020; this marked an 18% increase from 2016 (Figure 2). Figure 1.Figure 2. Conclusion Give that viable oral ABX treatment options in the community setting are limited, patients will require additional OPAT services as AMR rates continue to escalate. OPAT services are not without added risks of complications, as the average median cost for an OPAT AE was $8,852. These costs may be minimized by the addition of new oral ABXs that overcome AMR, thus improving patient outcomes. Disclosures Mauricio Rodriguez, PharmD, MS-HEOR, BCPS, BCCCP, BCIDP, Spero Therapeutics: Employee Georgia Buscaglia, PhD, Spero Therapeutics: Advisor/Consultant Steven Tolle, BFA, Spero Therapeutics: Advisor/Consultant Darren Michael, PhD, CC, SC, Spero Therapeutics: Advisor/Consultant|Spero Therapeutics: Grant/Research Support.
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- 2022
27. Four-fold multifunctional properties in self-organized layered ferrite
- Author
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Lavinia Curecheriu, Liliana Mitoseriu, Alain Pignolet, Catalin Harnagea, Vincenzo Buscaglia, Vasile Adrian Surdu, Federico Rosei, Adelina-Carmen Ianculescu, Ilaria Pallecchi, Maria Teresa Buscaglia, and Bogdan Stefan Vasile
- Subjects
Materials science ,Piezoelectric coefficient ,Ferroelectricity ,Magnetic domain ,High resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) ,02 engineering and technology ,Dielectric ,01 natural sciences ,Seebeck coefficient ,0103 physical sciences ,Thermoelectric effect ,Materials Chemistry ,High-resolution transmission electron microscopy ,Thermoelectric propertie ,010302 applied physics ,Condensed matter physics ,Magnetoresistivity ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,Piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Magnetic force microscopy (MFM) ,Piezoresponse force microscopy ,Ceramics and Composites ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Four different functional properties at room temperature were found in Ba12Fe28Ti15O84 quaternary ferrite ceramics: a thermoelectric character with a prominent Seebeck coefficient of -400 μV/K, a strong ferrimagnetic character and weak magnetoresistivity, non-linear dielectric character (tunability) and ferro/piezoelectric response. The complex crystalline structure with a naturally occurring self-organized layered structure was mapped by High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy. A n-type conduction was found for optimized samples, consistent with the negative Seebeck coefficient. The presence of magnetic domains with a lateral size ranging from few hundreds of nanometers, up to few microns, extended over several grains indicates a strong intergranular magnetic interaction. Local ferroelectric switching as revealed by piezoresponse force microscopy showed a relatively weak effective piezoelectric coefficient with a remnant value of 0.5 p.m./V and a clockwise cycling direction, which was attributed to an effective negative piezoelectric coefficient. The switching behavior was described as originating from the material’s nanoscale layered complexity, with a strong anisotropy of its dielectric and ferro/piezoelectric local properties.
- Published
- 2020
28. How to do Pancreatic Mass FNA
- Author
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Yunseok Namn and Jonathan M. Buscaglia
- Published
- 2021
29. Elucidating the relationships between two automated handwriting feature quantification systems for multiple pairwise comparisons
- Author
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Christopher P. Saunders, Cami Fuglsby, JoAnn Buscaglia, Danica M. Ommen, and Michael P. Caligiuri
- Subjects
Matching (statistics) ,Biometrics ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Statistical model ,Pattern recognition ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Handwriting ,Genetics ,Feature (machine learning) ,Graph (abstract data type) ,Pairwise comparison ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Cursive - Abstract
Recent advances in complex automated handwriting identification systems have led to a lack of understandability of these systems' computational processes and features by the forensic handwriting examiners that they are designed to support. To mitigate this issue, this research studied the relationship between two systems: FLASH ID® , an automated handwriting/black box system that uses measurements extracted from a static image of handwriting, and MovAlyzeR® , a system that captures kinematic features from pen strokes. For this study, 33 writers each wrote 60 phrases from the London Letter using cursive writing and handprinting, which led to thousands of sample pairs for analysis. The dissimilarities between pairs of samples were calculated using two score functions (one for each system). The observed results indicate that dissimilarity scores based on kinematic spatial-geometric pen stroke features (e.g., amplitude and slant) have a statistically significant relationship with dissimilarity scores obtained using static, graph-based features used by the FLASH ID® system. Similar relationships were observed for temporal features (e.g., duration and velocity) but not pen pressure, and for both handprinting and cursive samples. These results strongly imply that both the current implementation of FLASH ID® and MovAlyzeR® rely on similar features sets when measuring differences in pairs of handwritten samples. These results suggest that studies of biometric discrimination using MovAlyzeR® , specifically those based on the spatial-geometric feature set, support the validity of biometric matching algorithms based on FLASH ID® output.
- Published
- 2021
30. Higher Author Fees in Gastroenterology Journals Are Not Associated with Faster Processing Times or Higher Impact
- Author
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William M. Briggs, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Benjamin Dwight Renelus, Vasilios Koulouris, and Daniel S. Jamorabo
- Subjects
Financial costs ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Impact factor ,Physiology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Transplant surgery ,SOCIOECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED ,SCImago Journal Rank ,Publishing ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Publications are an important component of academic careers. We investigated the financial costs to authors for submitting and publishing manuscripts in gastroenterology (GI) journals in the United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), and elsewhere. This was a cross-sectional study carried out from 11/1/2020 to 12/31/2020. We used the SCImago Journal and Country Rankings site to compile a list of gastroenterology and hepatology journals to analyze. We gathered information on the journals’ Hirsch indices (h indices), SCImago Journal Rank (SJR), Impact Factor (IF), and base countries as of 2019, processing and publication fees, open access fees, time to first decision, and time from acceptance to publication. We used t-testing and linear regression modeling to evaluate the effect of geography and journal quality metrics on processing fees and times. We analyzed 97 GI journals, of which 51/97 (52.6%) were based in the US/UK while the other 46/97 (47.4%) were based elsewhere. The mean IF (5.67 vs 3.53, p = 0.08), h index (90.5 vs 41.8, p
- Published
- 2021
31. Role of Density and Grain Size on the Electrocaloric Effect in Ba
- Author
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Lavinia, Curecheriu, Maria Teresa, Buscaglia, Vlad Alexandru, Lukacs, Leontin, Padurariu, and Cristina Elena, Ciomaga
- Abstract
Pure perovskite Ba
- Published
- 2022
32. Activation of Amygdala Prokineticin receptor 2 neurons drives the anorexigenic activity of the neuropeptide PK2
- Author
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Terry C. Yin, Ayushi Mittal, Paul Buscaglia, Wenxian Li, and Julien A. Sebag
- Subjects
Cell Biology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Abstract
The regulation of energy homeostasis is a complex system involving multiple hormones, neuropeptides, and receptors. Prokineticins (PK1 and PK2) are agonists to two GPCRs, Prokineticin receptor 1 and 2 (PKR1 and PKR2), which decrease food intake when injected in rodents. The relative contribution of PKR1 and PKR2 to the anorexigenic effect of PK2 and their site of action in the brain have not yet been elucidated. While PKR1 and PKR2 are both expressed in the hypothalamus, a central region involved in the control of energy homeostasis, PKR2 is also present in the amygdala, which has recently been shown to regulate food intake in response to several anorexigenic signals. PKRs trafficking and signaling are inhibited by the Melanocortin Receptor Accessory Protein 2 (MRAP2), thus suggesting that MRAP2 has the potential to alter the anorexigenic activity of PK2 in vivo. In this study, we investigated the importance of PKR1 and PKR2 for PK2-mediated inhibition of food intake, the brain region involved in this function, and the effect of MRAP2 on PK2 action in vivo. Using targeted silencing of PKR2 and chemogenetic manipulation of PKR2 neurons, we show that the anorexigenic effect of PK2 is mediated by PKR2 in the amygdala and that altering MRAP2 expression in PKR2 neurons modulates the activity of PK2. Collectively, our results provide evidence that inhibition of food intake by prokineticins is not mediated through activation of hypothalamic neurons but rather amygdala PKR2 neurons and further establishes the importance of MRAP2 in the regulation of energy homeostasis.
- Published
- 2022
33. Improving the load capacity of journal bearings with chevron textures on the shaft surface
- Author
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Luis Fernando dos Anjos, Alfredo Palma Jaramillo, Gustavo Carlos Buscaglia, and Rodrigo Nicoletti
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films - Published
- 2023
34. Supplementary document for Spontaneous parametric down-conversion in bottom-up grown lithium niobate microcubes - 5975176.pdf
- Author
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Duong, Ngoc My Hanh, Saerens, Gregoire, Timpu, Flavia, BUSCAGLIA, MARIA TERESA, BUSCAGLIA, Vincenzo, Morandi, Andrea, Muller, Jolanda, Maeder, Andreas, Kaufmann, Fabian, and Solntsev, Alexander
- Abstract
Supplemental Document
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Supplementary document for Spontaneous parametric down-conversion in bottom-up grown lithium niobate microcubes - 5977811.pdf
- Author
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Duong, Ngoc My Hanh, Saerens, Gregoire, Timpu, Flavia, BUSCAGLIA, MARIA TERESA, BUSCAGLIA, Vincenzo, Morandi, Andrea, Muller, Jolanda, Maeder, Andreas, Kaufmann, Fabian, and Solntsev, Alexander
- Abstract
Supplemental Document
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Electrocaloric Effect and Diffuse Phase Transition of Eu3+- Doped Bazryti1-Yo3 Ceramics
- Author
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Lavinia Curecheriu, Teodora Sandu, Oana Condurache, Giovanna Canu, Chiara Costa, Maria Teresa Buscaglia, Mihai Asandulesa, Vlad-Alexandru Lukacs, J. Banys, Vincenzo Buscaglia, and Liliana Mitoseriu
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
37. Dielectric, ferroelectric and electrocaloric properties of 1%Eu - doped BaZryTi1-yO3 ceramics
- Author
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Lavinia Curecheriu, Teodora Sandu, Oana Condurache, Giovanna Canu, Chiara Costa, Maria Teresa Buscaglia, Mihai Asandulesa, Juras Banys, Vincenzo Buscaglia, and Liliana Mitoseriu
- Subjects
BaTiO3- solid solutions ,dielectric ,Dc-tunability ,electrocaloric effect ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
Pure perovskite 1%Eu – BaZryTi1–0.0025-yO3 ceramics with compositions y = 0, 0.05, 0.15, and 0.30 prepared by solid-state reaction were investigated by impedance spectroscopy and high field measurements (P(E), dc-tunability). The ceramic samples present a nonlinear dielectric character and the dc-tunability reaches a maximum for y = 0.15 (nr = 85%) due to the proximity of the ferroelectric-paraelectric phase transition and due to a good accommodation of the europium ions into the BZT matrix. All the compositions have a maximum temperature change around the phase transition with a maximum ΔT=1.13 K for y = 0. At room temperature, the maximum is found for the composition y = 0.05 (ΔT=0.46 K), while for y = 0.15 a constant value ΔT=0.40 K was obtained from room temperature up to 350 K. This kind of electrocaloric dependence, the large nonlinear dielectric character with the lack of hysteresis in the permittivity vs. field dependence make this composition as interesting for microelectronics applications.
- Published
- 2023
38. Mixtures of airborne lidar-based approaches improve predictions of forest structure
- Author
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Robert Buscaglia, Andrew J. Sánchez Meador, and Ryan C. Blackburn
- Subjects
Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Point cloud ,Forestry ,02 engineering and technology ,Common method ,01 natural sciences ,Lidar ,Forest structure ,Environmental science ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Remote sensing - Abstract
The most common method for modeling forest attributes with airborne lidar, the area-based approach, involves summarizing the point cloud of individual plots and relating this to attributes of interest. Tree- and voxel-based approaches have been considered as alternatives to the area-based approach but are rarely considered in an area-based context. We estimated three forest attributes (basal area, overstory biomass, and volume) across 1680 field plots in Arizona and New Mexico. Variables from the three lidar approaches (area, tree, and voxel) were created for each plot. Random forests were estimated using subsets of variables based on each individual lidar approach and mixtures of each approach. Boruta feature selection was performed on variable subsets, including the mixture of all lidar-approach predictors (KS-Boruta). A corrected paired t test was utilized to compare six validated models (area-Boruta, tree-Boruta, voxel-Boruta, KS-Boruta, KS-all, and ridge-all) for each forest attribute. Based on significant reductions in error (SMdAPE), basal area and biomass were best modeled with KS-Boruta, while volume was best modeled with KS-all. Analysis of variable importance shows that voxel-based predictors are critical for the prediction of the three forest attributes. This study highlights the importance of multiresolution voxel-based variables for modeling forest attributes in an area-based context.
- Published
- 2021
39. Pain Phenotypes in Chronic Pancreatitis: Beginning to Fine-tune Our Approach to Treatment
- Author
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Jonathan M. Buscaglia and Lin Chang
- Subjects
Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,MEDLINE ,Medicine ,Pancreatitis ,business ,medicine.disease ,Bioinformatics ,Phenotype - Published
- 2022
40. Accuracy and reliability of forensic handwriting comparisons
- Author
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R. Austin Hicklin, Linda Eisenhart, Nicole Richetelli, Meredith D. Miller, Peter Belcastro, Ted M. Burkes, Connie L. Parks, Michael A. Smith, JoAnn Buscaglia, Eugene M. Peters, Rebecca Schwartz Perlman, Jocelyn V. Abonamah, and Brian A. Eckenrode
- Subjects
Handwriting ,Professional Competence ,Multidisciplinary ,Forensic Sciences ,Twins ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results - Abstract
Forensic handwriting examination involves the comparison of writing samples by forensic document examiners (FDEs) to determine whether or not they were written by the same person. Here we report the results of a large-scale study conducted to assess the accuracy and reliability of handwriting comparison conclusions. Eighty-six practicing FDEs each conducted up to 100 handwriting comparisons, resulting in 7,196 conclusions on 180 distinct comparison sets, using a five-level conclusion scale. Erroneous “written by” conclusions (false positives) were reached in 3.1% of the nonmated comparisons, while 1.1% of the mated comparisons yielded erroneous “not written by” conclusions (false negatives). False positive rates were markedly higher for nonmated samples written by twins (8.7%) compared to nontwins (2.5%). Notable associations between training and performance were observed: FDEs with less than 2 y of formal training generally had higher error rates, but they also had higher true positive and true negative rates because they tended to provide more definitive conclusions; FDEs with at least 2 y of formal training were less likely to make definitive conclusions, but those definitive conclusions they made were more likely to be correct (higher positive predictive and negative predictive values). We did not observe any association between writing style (cursive vs. printing) and rates of errors or incorrect conclusions. This report also provides details on the repeatability and reproducibility of conclusions, and reports how conclusions are affected by the quantity of writing and the similarity of content.
- Published
- 2022
41. Análisis de causas de muerte intrahospitalarias mal definidas e imprecisas
- Author
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Benjamín Muedra, Germán N. Baez, Milagros B. Buscaglia Nacif, Lucía Dezuñiga, Cecilia Fieiras, Federico Gallego, Celeste Puga, and Diego H. Giunta
- Abstract
Introducción: la información sobre las causas de muerte es de gran importancia tanto para los países como para las instituciones sanitarias, en la medida en que contribuye a la evaluación y el seguimiento del estado de salud de la población y a la planificación de intervenciones sanitarias. El objetivo del estudio fue evaluar la proporción de causas de muerte mal definidas e imprecisas y su relación con el día de la semana y período lectivo de médicos residentes en el Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires (HIBA) durante 2020. Métodos: se realizó un estudio analítico de corte transversal a partir de certificados médicos de defunción de pacientes fallecidos en el ámbito intrahospitalario, evaluando las causas de muerte mal definidas (términos médicos que no aportan información desde el punto de vista clínico y epidemiológico) y las imprecisas (no resultan lo suficientemente específicas como para identificar entidades nosológicas que permitan establecer acciones de prevención y control). Resultados: se analizaron 1030 certificados de defunción, con una proporción de certificados con causa básica de muerte mal definida del 2,3% (n =24), mientras que en el 17,4% (n =180) fue imprecisa. No se hallaron diferencias entre la proporción de causas básicas mal definidas y las imprecisas según el día de la semana o período lectivo. Al extender el análisis a todas las causas (básicas, mediatas e inmediatas), la proporción de causas mal definidas fue del 1,6% (n =40) y la de imprecisas del 51% (n =1212). Conclusiones: los resultados definen al HIBA como un centro de mediana calidad estadística en el registro de causas de muerte. Se concluye que es necesario mejorarla, para lo que resulta de interés la creación de un plan de capacitación y entrenamiento de los médicos en el grado y el posgrado.
- Published
- 2022
42. Impact of type 2 diabetes on adenoma detection in screening colonoscopies performed in disparate populations
- Author
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Dimitri Joseph, Evan Grossman, Yi-Cong Zhu, Jonathan M. Buscaglia, Juan Carlos Bucobo, Samuel L. Stanley, Rajesh Veluvolu, Joshua D. Miller, Jie Yang, Michele Follen, Lorenzo F. Ottaviano, Xiao-Ning Li, and Ellen Li
- Subjects
Adenoma ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,endocrine system diseases ,education ,Colonoscopy ,Type 2 diabetes ,03 medical and health sciences ,fluids and secretions ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,African continental ancestry group ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Retrospective Cohort Study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Diabetes mellitus, type 2 ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,body regions ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,European continental ancestry group - Abstract
BACKGROUND The Black/African Ancestry (AA) population has a higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and a higher incidence and mortality rate for colorectal cancer (CRC) than all other races in the United States. T2DM has been shown to increase adenoma risk in predominantly white/European ancestry (EA) populations, but the effect of T2DM on adenoma risk in Black/AA individuals is less clear. We hypothesize that T2DM has a significant effect on adenoma risk in a predominantly Black/AA population. AIM To investigate the effect of T2DM and race on the adenoma detection rate (ADR) in screening colonoscopies in two disparate populations. METHODS A retrospective cohort study was conducted on ADR during index screening colonoscopies (age 45-75) performed at an urban public hospital serving a predominantly Black/AA population (92%) (2017-2018, n = 1606). Clinical metadata collected included basic demographics, insurance, body mass index (BMI), family history of CRC, smoking, diabetes diagnosis, and aspirin use. This dataset was combined with a recently reported parallel retrospective cohort data set collected at a suburban university hospital serving a predominantly White/EA population (87%) (2012-2015, n = 2882). RESULTS The ADR was higher in T2DM patients than in patients without T2DM or prediabetes (35.2% vs 27.9%, P = 0.0166, n = 981) at the urban public hospital. Multivariable analysis of the combined datasets showed that T2DM [odds ratio (OR) = 1.29, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.08-1.55, P = 0.0049], smoking (current vs never OR = 1.47, 95%CI: 1.18-1.82, current vs past OR = 1.32, 95%CI: 1.02-1.70, P = 0.0026), older age (OR = 1.05 per year, 95%CI: 1.04-1.06, P < 0.0001), higher BMI (OR = 1.02 per unit, 95%CI: 1.01-1.03, P = 0.0003), and male sex (OR = 1.87, 95%CI: 1.62-2.15, P < 0.0001) were associated with increased ADR in the combined datasets, but race, aspirin use and insurance were not. CONCLUSION T2DM, but not race, is significantly associated with increased ADR on index screening colonoscopy while controlling for other factors.
- Published
- 2021
43. Serological Approaches for Trypanosoma cruzi Strain Typing
- Author
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Guadalupe Romer, Leonel Esteban Bracco, Alejandro Daniel Ricci, Fernán Agüero, Virginia Balouz, and Carlos A. Buscaglia
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Serotype ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,030231 tropical medicine ,Computational biology ,Disease ,Article ,Serology ,Immunomics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Species Specificity ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,Chagas Disease ,Serologic Tests ,Typing ,Genetic variability ,Genotyping ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology - Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi, the protozoan agent of Chagas' disease, displays a complex population structure made up of multiple strains showing a diverse ecoepidemiological distribution. Parasite genetic variability may be associated with disease outcome, hence stressing the need to develop methods for T. cruzi typing in vivo. Serological typing methods that exploit the presence of host antibodies raised against polymorphic parasite antigens emerge as an appealing approach to address this issue. These techniques are robust, simple, cost-effective, and are not curtailed by methodological/biological limitations intrinsic to available genotyping methods. Here, we critically assess the progress towards T. cruzi serotyping and discuss the opportunity provided by high-throughput immunomics to improve this field.
- Published
- 2021
44. An adaptive time stepping algorithm for IMPES with high order polynomial extrapolation
- Author
-
Roberto F. Ausas, Alfredo Jaramillo, Gustavo C. Buscaglia, Fabricio S. Sousa, Stevens Paz, Rafael T. Guiraldello, and Felipe Pereira
- Subjects
Polynomial ,Conservation law ,Partial differential equation ,Applied Mathematics ,Extrapolation ,Estimator ,02 engineering and technology ,Solver ,01 natural sciences ,DINÂMICA DOS FLUÍDOS ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Time stepping ,Modeling and Simulation ,0103 physical sciences ,Saturation (chemistry) ,010301 acoustics ,Algorithm ,Mathematics - Abstract
Two-phase flows in oil reservoirs can be modeled by a coupled system of elliptic and hyperbolic partial differential equations. The transport velocity of the multiphase fluid system is related to the pressure through Darcy’s law and it is coupled to a conservation law for the saturation variable of one of the phases. A time step of the classical IMPES (IMplicit Pressure Explicit Saturation) method consists of first solving the elliptic problem for pressure and Darcy velocity, and then updating the saturation with an explicit numerical scheme for conservation laws. This method is very computationally costly, since the time-consuming elliptic solver must be invoked at time intervals defined by the stability limit of the hyperbolic solver. A popular variant is not to update the velocity at all hyperbolic time steps, but to skip a fixed number C of them, with C determined by the user. In this work we propose a more accurate and systematic procedure for time stepping in IMPES codes. The velocity is updated at all transport time steps, though the elliptic solver is only invoked every C steps. In the time steps at which the elliptic problem is not solved, the velocity is extrapolated from previously computed values with polynomials of high degree. Further, we introduce an error estimator that allows for the number C to be adaptively determined without user intervention. The algorithm was tested in several relevant benchmark problems. This allowed for the optimization of its parameters and comparisons with previous variants. The results show that the proposed algorithm is very stable, reliable and time-cost effective. It is also easily implemented in pre-existent IMPES codes.
- Published
- 2021
45. P320 AN UNUSUAL CASE SYNCOPE DUE TO SILENT CORONARY VASOSPASM
- Author
-
A Somaschini, M Astuti, S Cordone, M Botta, M Ghione, E Buscaglia, S Cornara, and P Bellone
- Subjects
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background Variant angina is a condition due to a transient vasospasm of the epicardial coronary arteries, which usually causes chest pain episodes and may be associated with dangerous arrhythmias. A non–negligible subset of patients can also experience silent myocardial ischemia, defined as objective documentation of myocardial ischemia in the absence of angina or equivalents. This condition is associated with increased cardiac mortality and incidence of acute cardiac events. Description of the case. A 65–years–old man was admitted to our Emergency Department for syncope. He reported palpitations before the event without chest pain. ECG showed biphasic T waves in V2–V6 (Fig 1A), troponin values were normal. Immediately after admission in our coronary care unit for monitoring, he developed dynamic ST segment elevation with signs of inferior and posterior transmural ischemia (Fig 1B) and non–sustained polymorphic ventricular tachycardias (Fig 2), being symptomatic only for palpitations. ECG abnormalities and symptoms quickly resolved after intra–venous nitrates administration. Coronary angiography was performed showing a critical non–occlusive (85%) fixed stenosis at the proximal right coronary artery (Fig 3 A). The lesion was treated by angioplasty and stenting (Fig 3 B) and the patients was discharged on dual anti–platelet therapy, statins and oral high–dose calcium–channel antagonist. Discussion This case underlines first the importance of searching for high–risk features in patients with syncope of non–obvious origin: our patient reported palpitations and ECG changes consistent with myocardial ischemia (even with normal troponin values and echocardiographic findings). A peculiarity of our case is that the patient did not complaint any chest pain despite the presence of ST elevation, a condition known as silent ischemia. The transient nature of ECG modification and ventricular arrhythmias, their dramatic response to nitrates and coronary angiography findings were suggestive of silent vasospasm. Coronary vasospasm induces transient myocardial ischemia and may cause ventricular arrhythmias which in turn can cause syncope due to transient cerebral hypoperfusion or, when sustained, even cardiac arrest and sudden death. We did not perform provocative test with acetylcholine or ergonovine due to the likely vasospastic origin of myocardial ischemia and to their potential risks, especially in the presence of non–sustained plymorphic ventricular tachycardias.
- Published
- 2023
46. C34 AN UNUSUAL CASE OF CARDIAC ARREST DUE TO TRAUMA–INDUCED QT PROLONGATION
- Author
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M Astuti, A Somaschini, L Olivotti, S Cornara, M Ghione, M Buscemi, E Buscaglia, M Botta, S Cordone, F Pentimalli, and P Bellone
- Subjects
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Background QT prolongation is a well–known cause of sudden cardiac death due to polymorphic ventricular tachycardia triggered by early afterdepolarizations. Acquired long QT is a common finding in several clinical scenarios and invariably represents a high risk feature. Case Report An 84 years–old woman presented to our emergency department (ED) after experiencing a blunt chest trauma due to a car accident. She reported mild dyspnea and chest pain exacerbated by breathing and movement while denied palpitations and loss of consciousness. Baseline ECG showed atrial fibrillation with normal ventricular rate and a prolonged QT interval (QTc 640, Fig 1A) not present at previous ECGs. She did not assume any QT–prolonging drug and laboratory tests at admittance revealed troponin I values slightly elevated (29,6 ng/ml; n.v.
- Published
- 2023
47. Prevalence of Stimulant, Hallucinogen, and Dissociative Substances Detected in Biological Samples of NPS-Intoxicated Patients in Italy
- Author
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P. Papa, Elena Brambilla, A. Valli, Eleonora Buscaglia, Giulia Scaravaggi, Marcello Di Tuccio, Mariapina Gallo, and Carlo Locatelli
- Subjects
Hallucinogen ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,education ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Dissociative ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,health care economics and organizations ,General Psychology ,Retrospective Studies ,Psychotropic Drugs ,business.industry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,respiratory system ,030227 psychiatry ,Stimulant ,Italy ,Hallucinogens ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
A number of new psychoactive substances (NPS) have been released in the last decade, and the list of NPS continues to grow. This paper reports a retrospective evaluation of the toxicological analyses in 1,445 suspected intoxication cases by psychostimulant, hallucinogen, and dissociative NPS occurring in hospitals across Italy from 2011 to 2019. The objectives of the study were to contribute to the monitoring of the NPS diffusion based on analytically confirmed intoxications, and to evaluate the importance of the clinical toxicological laboratory in the diagnosis of NPS intoxication. For at least one NPS of the considered classes, 246 patients (17.0%) tested positive. Forty-four different NPS were detected and a consistent turnover was observed during the nine-year period, especially regarding cathinones. Among the positive cases, 47.2% tested positive for dissociative NPS, with particular regard to ketamine. Hallucinogens (30.9%) was the second most frequent NPS involved. Stimulants were found in 20% of the positive cases with a considerable presence of cathinones. Findings confirm the dynamism of the NPS phenomenon, underline the importance of awareness of this new public health threat among health care professionals, and highlight the need for analytical confirmation for the identification of the drugs in forensic contexts.
- Published
- 2021
48. Poisoning related to therapeutic error in prolonged low‐dose methotrexate treatment
- Author
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Valeria Margherita Petrolini, Marta Crevani, Carlo Locatelli, Giulia Scaravaggi, Azzurra Schicchi, Alberto Malovini, Davide Lonati, and Eleonora Buscaglia
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Leucovorin ,Low dose methotrexate ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Asymptomatic ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folinic acid ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharmacology ,Methylergometrine ,Glucarpidase ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Methotrexate ,Total dose ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
AIMS To study the predictive factors for the development of clinical manifestations in poisoning due to the erroneous taking of low-dose methotrexate (MTX). METHODS A retrospective observational study was performed. Only cases of erroneous administration in non-oncologic outpatients were included (July 2008-March 2020). RESULTS Forty-one cases were included. All patients were taking MTX for the first time. In 36 cases, patients took MTX daily instead of weekly. In the other five patients, MTX was sold instead of methylergometrine. Clinical manifestations were absent in 12/41 patients (29.3%). All 29 (70.7%) symptomatic patients recognized the medication error when they developed clinical manifestations: dermatological, haematological and gastrointestinal symptoms. Statistical results showed that symptomatic patients were older, received a higher amount of total dose and were treated for longer. Moreover, the probability of being symptomatic increases as a function of age and of total dose. Asymptomatic patients were treated with folinic acid (30 mg/m2 /day) for 5 days. Symptomatic patients were treated with folinic acid together with treatments for the specific clinical manifestations. No patients were treated with glucarpidase. All patients fully recovered. CONCLUSIONS When MTX is prescribed for the first time, it is important to clearly communicate with patients to avoid therapeutic errors. In our experience, age, total dose taken and number of days of assumption are predictive for the presence/absence of clinical manifestations. These parameters must be evaluated together to identify patients needing maximum starting treatment with folinic acid and closer monitoring.
- Published
- 2020
49. Sterilization of Our Echoendoscopes-More Questions Than Answers
- Author
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Isaiah P. Schuster and Jonathan M. Buscaglia
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,Sterilization ,Endosonography - Published
- 2022
50. Photocatalysis of TiO
- Author
-
José L, Bott-Neto, Thiago S, Martins, Lorenzo A, Buscaglia, Sergio A S, Machado, and Osvaldo N, Oliveira
- Subjects
Immunoassay ,Male ,Titanium ,Light ,Reproducibility of Results ,Biosensing Techniques ,Electrochemical Techniques ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Carbon ,Limit of Detection ,Humans ,Graphite ,Nitrogen Compounds ,Electrodes - Abstract
We report on a photoelectrochemical (PEC) device to detect prostatic-specific antigen (PSA) under visible LED light irradiation within the point-of-care (POC) paradigm. The device consists of a 3D printed miniaturized photoelectrochemical system and a disposable PEC immunosensor made with screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCEs). The SPCEs were coated with nickel single atoms anchored on graphitic carbon nitride (Ni-gC
- Published
- 2022
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