307 results on '"McKinnon, John"'
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2. Early trajectories of virological and immunological biomarkers and clinical outcomes in patients admitted to hospital for COVID-19: an international, prospective cohort study
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Sahner, David, Tierney, John, Vogel, Susan E., Herpin, Betsey R., Smolskis, Mary C., McKay, Laura A., Cahill, Kelly, Crew, Page, Sardana, Ratna, Raim, Sharon Segal, Hensely, Lisa, Lorenzo, Johsua, Mock, Rebecca, Zuckerman, Judith, Atri, Negin, Miller, Mark, Vallee, David, Chung, Lucy, Kang, Nayon, Barrett, Kevin, Adam, Stacey J., Read, Sarah, Draghia-Akli, Ruxandra, Currier, Judy, Hughes, Eric, Harrigan, Rachel H., Amos, Laura, Carlsen, Amy, Carter, Anita, Collins, Gary, Davis, Bionca, Denning, Eileen, DuChene, Alain, Eckroth, Kate, Engen, Nicole, Frase, Alex, Gandits, Greg, Grund, Birgit, Harrison, Merrie, Hurlbut, Nancy, Kaiser, Payton, Koopmeiners, Joseph, Larson, Gregg, Meger, Sue, Mistry, Shweta Sharma, Murray, Thomas, Nelson, Ray, Quan, Kien, Quan, Siu Fun, Reilly, Cavan, Siegel, Lianne, Thompson, Greg, Vock, David, Walski, Jamie, Gelijns, Annetine C., Moskowitz, Alan J., Bagiella, Emilia, Moquete, Ellen, O'Sullivan, Karen, Marks, Mary E., Accardi, Evan, Kinzel, Emily, Burris, Sarah, Bedoya, Gabriela, Gupta, Lola, Overbey, Jessica R., Santos, Milerva, Gillinov, Marc A., Miller, Marissa A., Taddei-Peters, Wendy C., Fenton, Kathleen, Sandkovsky, Uriel, Gottlieb, Robert L., Mack, Michael, Berhe, Mezgebe, Haley, Clinton, Dishner, Emma, Bettacchi, Christopher, Golden, Kevin, Duhaime, Erin, Ryan, Madison, Tallmadge, Catherine, Estrada, Lorie, Jones, Felecia, Villa, Samatha, Wang, Samatha, Robert, Raven, Coleman, Tanquinisha, Clariday, Laura, Baker, Rebecca, Hurutado-Rodriguez, Mariana, Iram, Nazia, Fresnedo, Michelle, Davis, Allyson, Leonard, Kiara, Ramierez, Noelia, Thammavong, Jon, Duque, Krizia, Turner, Emma, Fisher, Tammy, Robinson, Dianna, Ransom, Desirae, Maldonado, Nicholas, Lusk, Erica, Killian, Aaron, Palacious, Adriana, Solis, Edilia, Jerrow, Janet, Watts, Matthew, Whitacre, Heather, Cothran, Elizabeth, Smith, Peter K., Barkauskas, Christina E., Vekstein, Andrew M., Ko, Emily R., Dreyer, Grace R., Stafford, Neil, Brooks, Megan, Der, Tatyana, Witte, Marie, Gamarallage, Ruwan, Franzone, John, Ivey, Noel, Lumsden, Rebecca H., Mosaly, Nilima, Mourad, Ahmaad, Holland, Thomas L., Motta, Mary, Lane, Kathleen, McGowan, Lauren M., Stout, Jennifer, Aloor, Heather, Bragg, Kennesha M., Toledo, Barvina, McLendon-Arvik, Beth, Bussadori, Barbara, Hollister, Beth A., Griffin, Michelle, Giangiacomo, Dana M., Rodriguez, Vicente, Bokhart, Gordon, Eichman, Sharon M., Parrino, Patrick E., Spindel, Stephen, Bansal, Aditya, Baumgarten, Katherine, Hand, Johnathan, Vonderhaar, Derek, Nossaman, Bobby, Sylvia Laudun, Ames, DeAnna, Broussard, Shane, Hernandez, Nilmo, Isaac, Geralyn, Dinh, Huan, Zheng, Yiling, Tran, Sonny, McDaniel, Hunter, Crovetto, Nicolle, Perin, Emerson, Costello, Briana, Manian, Prasad, Sohail, M. 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Shane, Nyatsatsang, Sonam T., Wilson, David M., Wallick, Julie A., Duven, Alexandria M., Fletcher, Dakota D., Miller, Chadwick, Files, D. Clark, Gibbs, Kevin W., Flores, Lori S., LaRose, Mary E., Landreth, Leigha D., Palacios, D. 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Theresa, Lopez, Jessica, Tan, Susanna Yu, Lee, Robert H., Asghar, Aliya, Karyn Isip, Tasadduq Karim, Le, Katherine, Nguyen, Thao, Wong, Shinn, Raben, Dorthe, Murray, Daniel D., Jensen, Tomas O., Peters, Lars, Aagaard, Bitten, Nielsen, Charlotte B., Krapp, Katharina, Nykjær, Bente Rosdahl, Olsson, Christina, Kanne, Katja Lisa, Grevsen, Anne Louise, Joensen, Zillah Maria, Bruun, Tina, Bojesen, Ane, Woldbye, Frederik, Normand, Nick E., Esman, Frederik V.L., Benfield, Thomas, Clausen, Clara Lundetoft, Hovmand, Nichlas, Israelsen, Simone Bastrup, Iversen, Katrine, Leding, Caecilie, Pedersen, Karen Brorup, Thorlacius-Ussing, Louise, Tinggaard, Michaela, Tingsgard, Sandra, Krohn-Dehli, Louise, Pedersen, Dorthe, Villadsen, Signe, Staehr Jensen, Jens-Ulrik, Overgaard, Rikke, Rastoder, Ema, Heerfordt, Christian, Hedsund, Caroline, Ronn, Christian Phillip, Kamstrup, Peter Thobias, Hogsberg, Dorthe Sandbaek, Bergsoe, Christina, Søborg, Christian, Hissabu, Nuria M.S., Arp, Bodil C., Ostergaard, Lars, Staerke, Nina Breinholt, Yehdego, Yordanos, Sondergaard, Ane, Johansen, Isik S., Pedersen, Andreas Arnholdt, Knudtzen, Fredrikke C., Larsen, Lykke, Hertz, Mathias A., Fabricius, Thilde, Holden, Inge K., Lindvig, Susan O., Helleberg, Marie, Gerstoft, Jan, Kirk, Ole, Jensen, Tomas Ostergaard, Madsen, Birgitte Lindegaard, Pedersen, Thomas Ingemann, Harboe, Zitta Barrella, Roge, Birgit Thorup, Hansen, Thomas Michael, Glesner, Matilde Kanstrup, Lofberg, Sandra Valborg, Nielsen, Ariella Denize, Leicht von Huth, Sebastian, Nielsen, Henrik, Thisted, Rikke Krog, Petersen, Kristine Toft, Juhl, Maria Ruwald, Podlekareva, Daria, Johnsen, Stine, Andreassen, Helle Frost, Pedersen, Lars, Clara Ellinor Lindnér, Cecilia Ebba, Wiese, Lothar, Knudsen, Lene Surland, Skrøder Nytofte, Nikolaj Julian, Havmøller, Signe Ravn, Expósito, Maria, Badillo, José, Martínez, Ana, Abad, Elena, Chamorro, Ana, Figuerola, Ariadna, Mateu, Lourdes, España, Sergio, Lucero, Maria Constanza, Santos, José Ramón, Lladós, Gemma, Lopez, Cristina, Carabias, Lydia, Molina-Morant, Daniel, Loste, Cora, Bracke, Carmen, Siles, Adrian, Fernández-Cruz, Eduardo, Di Natale, Marisa, Padure, Sergiu, Gomez, Jimena, Ausin, Cristina, Cervilla, Eva, Balastegui, Héctor, Sainz, Carmen Rodríguez, Lopez, Paco, Carbone, Javier, Escobar, Mariam, Balerdi, Leire, Legarda, Almudena, Roldan, Montserrat, Letona, Laura, Muñoz, José, Camprubí, Daniel, Arribas, Jose R., Sánchez, Rocio Montejano, Díaz-Pollán, Beatriz, Stewart, Stefan Mark, Garcia, Irene, Borobia, Alberto, Mora-Rillo, Marta, Estrada, Vicente, Cabello, Noemi, Nuñez-Orantos, M.J., Sagastagoitia, I., Homen, J.R., Orviz, E., Montalvá, Adrián Sánchez, Espinosa-Pereiro, Juan, Bosch-Nicolau, Pau, Salvador, Fernando, Burgos, Joaquin, Morales-Rull, Jose Luis, Moreno Pena, Anna Maria, Acosta, Cristina, Solé-Felip, Cristina, Horcajada, Juan P., Sendra, Elena, Castañeda, Silvia, López-Montesinos, Inmaculada, Gómez-Junyent, Joan, Gonzáles, Carlota Gudiol, Cuervo, Guilermo, Pujol, Miquel, Carratalà, Jordi, Videla, Sebastià, Günthard, Huldrych, Braun, Dominique L., West, Emily, M’Rabeth-Bensalah, Khadija, Eichinger, Mareile L., Grüttner-Durmaz, Manuela, Grube, Christina, Zink, Veronika, pharmacist, Goes pharmacist, Josefine, Fätkenheuer, Gerd, Malin, Jakob J., Tsertsvadze, Tengiz, Abutidze, Akaki, Chkhartishvili, Nikoloz, Metchurtchlishvili, Revaz, Endeladze, Marina, Paciorek, Marcin, Bursa, Dominik, Krogulec, Dominika, Pulik, Piotr, Ignatowska, Anna, Horban, Andrzej, Bakowska, Elzbieta, Kowaska, Justyna, Bednarska, Agnieszka, Jurek, Natalia, Skrzat-Klapaczynska, Agata, Bienkowski, Carlo, Hackiewicz, Malgorzata, Makowiecki, Michal, Platowski, Antoni, Fishchuk, Roman, Kobrynska, Olena, Levandovska, Khrystyna, Kirieieva, Ivanna, Kuziuk, Mykhailo, Naucler, Pontus, Perlhamre, Emma, Mazouch, Lotta, Kelleher, Anthony, Polizzotto, Mark, Carey, Catherine, Chang, Christina C., Hough, Sally, Virachit, Sophie, Davidson, Sarah, Bice, Daniel J., Ognenovska, Katherine, Cabrera, Gesalit, Flynn, Ruth, Young, Barnaby E., Chia, Po Ying, Lee, Tau Hong, Lin, Ray J., Lye, David C., Ong, Sean W.X., Puah, Ser Hon, Yeo, Tsin Wen, Diong, Shiau Hui, Ongko, Juwinda, Yeo, He Ping, Eriobu, Nnakelu, Kwaghe, Vivian, Zaiyad, Habib, Idoko, Godwin, Uche, Blessing, Selvamuthu, Poongulali, Kumarasamy, Nagalingeswaran, Beulah, Faith Ester, Govindarajan, Narayan, Mariyappan, Kowsalya, Losso, Marcelo H., Abela, Cecilia, Moretto, Renzo, Belloc, Carlos G., Ludueña, Jael, Amar, Josefina, Toibaro, Javier, Macias, Laura Moreno, Fernandez, Lucia, Frare, Pablo S., Chaio, Sebastian R., Pachioli, Valeria, Timpano, Stella M., Sanchez, Marisa del Lujan, de Paz Sierra, Mariana, Stanek, Vanina, Belloso, Waldo, Cilenti, Flavia L., Valentini, Ricardo N., Stryjewski, Martin E., Locatelli, Nicolas, Soler Riera, Maria C., Salgado, Clara, Baeck, Ines M., Di Castelnuovo, Valentina, Zarza, Stella M., Hudson, Fleur, Parmar, Mahesh K.B., Goodman, Anna L., Dphil, Badrock, Jonathan, Gregory, Adam, Goodall, Katharine, Harris, Nicola, Wyncoll, James, Bhagani, S., Rodger, A., Luntiel, A., Patterson, C., Morales, J., Witele, E., Preston, A.-M., Nandani, A., Price, D.A., Hanrath, Aiden, Nell, Jeremy, Patel, Bijal, Hays, Carole, Jones, Geraldine, Davidson, Jade, Bawa, T., Mathews, M., Mazzella, A., Bisnauthsing, K., Aguilar-Jimenez, L., Borchini, F., Hammett, S., Touloumi, Giota, Pantazis, Nikos, Gioukari, Vicky, Souliou, Tania, Antoniadou, A., Protopapas, K., Kavatha, D., Grigoropoulou, S., Oikonomopoulo, C., Moschopoulos, C., Koulouris, N.G., Tzimopoulos, K., Koromilias, A., Argyraki, K., Lourida, P., Bakakos, P., Kalomenidis, I., Vlachakos, V., Barmparessou, Z., Balis, E., Zakynthinos, S., Sigala, I., Gianniou, N., Dima, E., Magkouta, S., Synolaki, E., Konstanta, S., Vlachou, M., Stathopoulou, P., Panagopoulos, P., Petrakis, V., Papazoglou, D., Tompaidou, E., Isaakidou, E., Poulakou, G., Rapti, V., Leontis, K., Nitsotolis, T., Athanasiou, K., Syrigos, K., Kyriakoulis, K., Trontzas, I., Arfara-Melanini, M., Kolonis, V., Kityo, Cissy, Mugerwa, Henry, Kiweewa, Francis, Kimuli, Ivan, Lukaakome, Joseph, Nsereko, Christoher, Lubega, Gloria, Kibirige, Moses, Nakahima, William, Wangi, Deus, Aguti, Evelyne, Generous, Lilian, Massa, Rosemary, Nalaki, Margaret, Magala, Felix, Nabaggala, Phiona Kaweesi, Kidega, Robert, Faith, Oryem Daizy, Florence, Apio, Emmanuel, Ocung, Beacham, Mugoonyi Paul, Geoffrey, Amone, Nakiboneka, Dridah, Apiyo, Paska, Kirenga, Bruce, Atukunda, Angella, Muttamba, Winters, Remmy, Kyeyume, Segawa, Ivan, Pheona, Nsubuga, Kigere, David, Mbabazi, Queen Lailah, Boersalino, Ledra, Nyakoolo, Grace, Fred, Aniongo, Alupo, Alice, Ebong, Doryn, Monday, Edson, Nalubwama, Ritah Norah, Kainja, Milton, Ambrose, Munu, Kwehayo, Vanon, Nalubega, Mary Grace, Ongoli, Augustine, Obbo, Stephen, Sebudde, Nicholus, Alaba, Jeniffer, Magombe, Geoffrey, Tino, Harriet, Obonya, Emmanuel, Lutaakome, Joseph, Kitonsa, Jonathan, Onyango, Martin, Naboth, Tukamwesiga, Naluyinda, Hadijah, Nanyunja, Regina, Irene, Muttiibwa, Jane, Biira, Wimfred, Kyobejja, Leonard, Ssemazzi, Deus, Tkiinomuhisha, Babra, Namasaba, Taire, Paul, Nabankema, Evelyn, Ogavu, Joseph, Mugerwa, Oscar, Okoth, Ivan, Mwebaze, Raymond, Mugabi, Timothy, Makhoba, Anthony, Arikiriza, Phiona, Theresa, Nabuuma, Nakayima, Hope, Frank, Kisuule, Ramgi, Patrícia, Pereira, Kássia, Osinusi, Anu, Cao, Huyen, Klekotka, Paul, Price, Karen, Nirula, Ajay, Osei, Suzette, Tipple, Craig, Wills, Angela, Peppercorn, Amanda, Watson, Helen, Gupta, Rajesh, Alexander, Elizabeth, Mogalian, Erik, Lin, Leo, Ding, Xiao, Margolis, David, Yan, Li, Girardet, Jean-Luc, Ma, Ji, Hong, Zhi, Zhu, Quing, Seegobin, Seth, Gibbs, Michael, Latchman, Mickel, Hasior, Katarzyna, Bouquet, Jerome, Wei, Jianxin, Streicher, Katie, Schmelzer, Albert, Brooks, Dennis, Butcher, Jonny, Tonev, Dimitar, Arbetter, Douglas, Damstetter, Philippe, Legenne, Philippe, Stumpp, Michael, Goncalves, Susana, Ramanathan, Krishnan, Chandra, Richa, Baseler, Beth, Teitelbaum, Marc, Schechner, Adam, Holley, H. Preston, Jankelevich, Shirley, Becker, Nancy, Dolney, Suzanne, Hissey, Debbie, Simpson, Shelly, Kim, Mi Ha, Beeler, Joy, Harmon, Liam, Asomah, Mabel, Jato, Yvonne, Stottlemyer, April, Tang, Olivia, Vanderpuye, Sharon, Yeon, Lindsey, Buehn, Molly, Eccard-Koons, Vanessa, Frary, Sadie, MacDonald, Leah, Cash, Jennifer, Hoopengardner, Lisa, Linton, Jessica, Schaffhauser, Marylu, Nelson, Michaela, Spinelli-Nadzam, Mary, Proffitt, Calvin, Lee, Christopher, Engel, Theresa, Fontaine, Laura, Osborne, C.K., Hohn, Matt, Galcik, Michael, Thompson, DeeDee, Kopka, Stacey, Shelley, Denise M., Mendez, Gregg, Brown, Shawn, Albert, Sara, Balde, Abby, Baracz, Michelle, Bielica, Mona, Billouin-Frazier, Shere, Choudary, Jay, Dixon, Mary, Eyler, Carolyn, Frye, Leanne, Gertz, Jensen, Giebeig, Lisa, Gulati, Neelam, Hankinson, Liz, Hogarty, Debi, Huber, Lynda, Krauss, Gary, Lake, Eileen, Manandhar, Meryan, Rudzinski, Erin, Sandrus, Jen, Suders, Connie, Natarajan, Ven, Rupert, Adam W., Baseler, Michael, Lynam, Danielle, Imamichi, Tom, Laverdure, Sylvain, McCormack, Ashley, Paudel, Sharada, Cook, Kyndal, Haupt, Kendra, Khan, Ayub, Hazen, Allison, Badralmaa, Yunden, Smith, Kenneth, Patel, Bhakti, Kubernac, Amanda, Kubernac, Robert, Hoover, Marie L., Solomon, Courtney, Rashid, Marium, Murphy, Joseph, Brown, Craig, DuChateau, Nadine, Ellis, Sadie, Flosi, Adam, Fox, Lisa, Johnson, Les, Nelson, Rich, Stojanovic, Jelena, Treagus, Amy, Wenner, Christine, Williams, Richard, Jensen, Tomas O, Murray, Thomas A, Grandits, Greg A, Jain, Mamta K, Shaw-Saliba, Kathryn, Matthay, Michael A, Baker, Jason V, Dewar, Robin L, Goodman, Anna L, Hatlen, Timothy J, Highbarger, Helene C, Lallemand, Perrine, Leshnower, Bradley G, Looney, David, Moschopoulos, Charalampos D, Murray, Daniel D, Mylonakis, Eleftherios, Rehman, M Tauseef, Rupert, Adam, Stevens, Randy, Turville, Stuart, Wick, Katherine, Lundgren, Jens, and Ko, Emily R
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Impacts of plasma microbial lipopolysaccharide translocation on B cell perturbations and anti-CD4 autoantibody production in people with HIV on suppressive antiretroviral therapy
- Author
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Fu, Xiaoyu, Cheng, Da, Luo, Zhenwu, Heath, Sonya L., Adekunle, Ruth, McKinnon, John E, Martin, Lisa, Sheng, Zizhang, Espinosa, Enrique, and Jiang, Wei
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Chronic ergot exposure in adult bulls suppresses prolactin but minimally impacts results of typical breeding soundness exams
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Cowan, Vanessa E., Chohan, Moveed, Blakley, Barry R., McKinnon, John, Anzar, Muhammad, and Singh, Jaswant
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Effects of rumen-protected Capsicum oleoresin on dry matter intake, average daily gain, and carcass characteristics of finishing beef steers
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Eidsvik, John C., McKinnon, John J., Blanchard, Alexandra, Khelil, Hajer, Moya, Diego, and Penner, Gregory B.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Surface translocation of ACE2 and TMPRSS2 upon TLR4/7/8 activation is required for SARS-CoV-2 infection in circulating monocytes
- Author
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Yao, Yi, Subedi, Kalpana, Liu, Tingting, Khalasawi, Namir, Pretto-Kernahan, Carla Diana, Wotring, Jesse William, Wang, Jie, Yin, Congcong, Jiang, Aimin, Fu, Chunmei, Dimitrion, Peter, Li, Jia, Veenstra, Jesse, Yi, Qijun, McKinnon, Kathy, McKinnon, John Ernest, Sexton, Jonathan Zachary, Zhou, Li, and Mi, Qing-Sheng
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Safety and tolerability of hydroxychloroquine in health care workers and first responders for the prevention of COVID-19: WHIP COVID-19 Study
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McKinnon, John E., Wang, Dee Dee, Zervos, Marcus, Saval, Matt, Marshall-Nightengale, Laurie, Kilgore, Paul, Pabla, Pardeep, Szandzik, Ed, Maksimowicz-McKinnon, Kathleen, and O'Neill, William W.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Local and regional enhancements of CH4, CO, and CO2 inferred from TCCON column measurements.
- Author
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Mottungan, Kavitha, Roychoudhury, Chayan, Brocchi, Vanessa, Gaubert, Benjamin, Tang, Wenfu, Mirrezaei, Mohammad Amin, McKinnon, John, Guo, Yafang, Griffith, David W. T., Feist, Dietrich G., Morino, Isamu, Sha, Mahesh K., Dubey, Manvendra K., De Mazière, Martine, Deutscher, Nicholas M., Wennberg, Paul O., Sussmann, Ralf, Kivi, Rigel, Goo, Tae-Young, and Velazco, Voltaire A.
- Subjects
AIR masses ,CARBON dioxide ,CARBON monoxide ,COMBUSTION ,BIOMASS energy ,TRACE gases ,EMISSION inventories - Abstract
In this study, we demonstrate the utility of available correlative measurements of carbon species to identify regional and local air mass characteristics as well as their associated source types. In particular, we combine different regression techniques and enhancement ratio algorithms with carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO 2), and methane (CH 4) total column abundance from 11 sites of the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) to infer relative contributions of regional and local sources to each of these sites. The enhancement ratios provide a viable alternative to univariate measures of relationships between the trace gases that are insufficient in capturing source-type and transport signatures. Regional enhancements are estimated from the difference between bivariate regressions across a specific time window of observed total abundance of these species (BERr for bulk enhancement regression ratio) and inferred anomalies (AERr for anomaly enhancement regression ratio) associated with a site-specific background. Since BERr and AERr represent the bulk and local species enhancement ratio, respectively, its difference simply represents the site-specific regional component of these ratios. We can then compare these enhancements for CO 2 and CH 4 with CO to differentiate between combustion and non-combustion air masses. Our results show that while the regional and local influences in enhancements vary across sites, dominant characteristics are found to be consistent with previous studies over these sites and with bottom-up anthropogenic and fire emission inventories. The site in Pasadena shows a dominant local influence (> 60 %) across all species enhancement ratios, which appear to come from a mixture of biospheric and combustion activities. In contrast, Anmyeondo shows more regionally influenced (> 60 %) air masses associated with high-temperature and/or biofuel combustion activities. Ascension Island appears to only show a large regional influence (> 80 %) on CO / CO 2 and CO / CH 4 , which is indicative of transported and combustion-related CO from the nearby African region, consistent with a sharp rise in column CO (3.51 ± 0.43 % ppb yr -1) at this site. These methods have important applications to source analysis using spaceborne column retrievals of these species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Sustained low-dose ergot alkaloids minimally affect post-thaw sperm characteristics in mature and yearling Angus bulls
- Author
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Chohan, Moveed R., Singh, Jaswant, Cowan, Vanessa E., Munro, Brennan J., Blakley, Barry, McKinnon, John, Kastelic, John P., and Anzar, Muhammad
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Subclinical CMV viremia is associated with increased nosocomial infections and prolonged hospitalization in patients with systemic autoimmune diseases
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Maksimowicz-McKinnon, Kathleen, Zhou, Junying, Hudy, Jenna, Hegab, Sara, and McKinnon, John E.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Feeding yearling Angus bulls low-level ergot daily for 9 weeks decreased serum prolactin concentrations and had subtle effects on sperm end points
- Author
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Chohan, Moveed R., Munro, Brennan J., Cowan, Vanessa E., Anzar, Muhammad, Blakley, Barry, McKinnon, John, Kastelic, John P., Rivera-Acuña, Fernando, and Singh, Jaswant
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Pathophysiological Basis and Rationale for Early Outpatient Treatment of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) Infection
- Author
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McCullough, Peter A., Kelly, Ronan J., Ruocco, Gaetano, Lerma, Edgar, Tumlin, James, Wheelan, Kevin R., Katz, Nevin, Lepor, Norman E., Vijay, Kris, Carter, Harvey, Singh, Bhupinder, McCullough, Sean P., Bhambi, Brijesh K., Palazzuoli, Alberto, De Ferrari, Gaetano M., Milligan, Gregory P., Safder, Taimur, Tecson, Kristen M., Wang, Dee Dee, McKinnon, John E., O'Neill, William W., Zervos, Marcus, and Risch, Harvey A.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Treatment with hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, and combination in patients hospitalized with COVID-19
- Author
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Nauriyal, Varidhi, Hamed, Asif Abdul, Nadeem, Owais, Swiderek, Jennifer, Godfrey, Amanda, Jennings, Jeffrey, Gardner-Gray, Jayna, Ackerman, Adam M., Lezotte, Jonathan, Ruhala, Joseph, Fadel, Raef, Vahia, Amit, Gudipati, Smitha, Parraga, Tommy, Shallal, Anita, Maki, Gina, Tariq, Zain, Suleyman, Geehan, Yared, Nicholas, Herc, Erica, Williams, Johnathan, Lanfranco, Odaliz Abreu, Bhargava, Pallavi, Reyes, Katherine, Arshad, Samia, Kilgore, Paul, Chaudhry, Zohra S., Jacobsen, Gordon, Wang, Dee Dee, Huitsing, Kylie, Brar, Indira, Alangaden, George J., Ramesh, Mayur S., McKinnon, John E., O’Neill, William, and Zervos, Marcus
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The love of money
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2021
15. New Zealand’s China — past, present and future
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2019
16. Virologic and immunologic effects of adding maraviroc to suppressive antiretroviral therapy in individuals with suboptimal CD4+ T-cell recovery
- Author
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Cillo, Anthony R, Hilldorfer, Benedict B, Lalama, Christina M, McKinnon, John E, Coombs, Robert W, Tenorio, Allan R, Fox, Lawrence, Gandhi, Rajesh T, Ribaudo, Heather, Currier, Judith S, Gulick, Roy M, Wilkin, Timothy J, and Mellors, John W
- Subjects
Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Genetics ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Cyclohexanes ,Female ,HIV Infections ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Male ,Maraviroc ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Triazoles ,Viral Load ,antiretroviral therapy intensification ,HIV-1 immunotherapeutics ,HIV-1 persistence ,maraviroc ,suboptimal T-cell recovery ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundCombination antiretroviral therapy (ART) suppresses HIV-1 replication, but does not restore CD4 T-cell counts in all individuals. To investigate the effects of maraviroc on HIV-1 persistence and the relations between virologic and immunologic parameters in individuals with incomplete CD4 T-cell recovery, we performed a prospective, open-label pilot trial in which maraviroc was added to a suppressive ART regimen for 24 weeks.DesignA5256 was a single-arm trial in which individuals on suppressive ART with incomplete CD4 T-cell recovery added maraviroc for 24 weeks.MethodsWe quantified low-level, residual viremia in plasma and total HIV-1 DNA and 2-long terminal repeat (2-LTR) circles in peripheral blood mononuclear cells before and after maraviroc intensification. We also evaluated markers of CD4 and CD8 T-cell immune activation (%CD38HLA-DR) and apoptosis (%caspase3/Bcl-2).ResultsNo effect of maraviroc was found on the probability of detectable plasma viremia (≥1 copy/ml; n = 31, exact McNemar P = 1.0) or detectable 2-LTR circles (n = 28, P = 0.25) or on total HIV-1 DNA (n = 28, 90% confidence interval -0.1, +0.3 log10 copies/10 CD4 T-cells). Premaraviroc HIV-1 DNA levels were inversely related to premaraviroc %CD38HLA-DR CD4 T-cells (Spearman = -0.52, P = 0.004), and lower premaraviroc HIV-1 DNA levels were associated with larger decreases in %CD38HLA-DR CD4 T-cells during maraviroc intensification (Spearman = 0.44, P = 0.018).ConclusionIn individuals on suppressive ART with incomplete CD4 T-cell recovery, maraviroc intensification did not affect measures of HIV-1 persistence but did decrease persistent CD4 T-cell immune activation especially in individuals with low preintensification levels of HIV-1 DNA.
- Published
- 2015
17. Local and Regional Enhancements of CH4, CO, and CO2 Inferred from TCCON Column Measurements.
- Author
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Mottungan, Kavitha, Brocchi, Vanessa, Roychoudhury, Chayan, Gaubert, Benjamin, Tang, Wenfu, Mirrezaei, Mohammad Amin, McKinnon, John, Guo, Yafang, and Arellano, Avelino
- Subjects
COMPOSITE columns ,AIR masses ,EMISSION inventories ,TRACE gases ,HIGH temperatures ,COMBUSTION - Abstract
In this study, we demonstrate the utility of available correlative measurements of carbon species to identify regional and local airmass characteristics and their associated source types. In particular, we combine different regression techniques and enhancement ratio algorithms with CO, CO
2 , and CH4 data of total column abundance from 11 sites of the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) to infer relative contributions of regional and local sources to each of these sites. The enhancement ratios provide a viable alternative to univariate measures of relationships between the trace gases that are insufficient in capturing source type and transport signatures. Regional enhancements are estimated from the difference between bivariate regressions across a specific time window of observed total abundance of these species (BEHr) and inferred anomalies (AERr) associated with a site-specific background. Since BEHr and AERr represent the bulk and local species enhancement ratio, respectively, its difference simply represents the site-specific regional component of these ratios. We can then compare these enhancements for CO2 and CH4 with CO to differentiate combustion versus non-combustion associated airmasses. Our results show that while the regional and local influences in enhancements vary across sites, dominant characteristics are found to be consistent with previous studies over these sites and with bottom-up anthropogenic and fire emission inventories. The site in Pasadena shows a dominant local influence (>60 %) across all species enhancement ratios, which appear to come from a mixture of biospheric and combustion activities. In contrast, Anmyeondo shows more regionally influenced (>60 %) air masses associated with high temperature and/or biofuel combustion activities. Ascension appears to only show a large regional influence (>80 %) on CO/CO2 and CO/CH4 which is indicative of transported and combustion-related CO from nearby African region, consistent with sharp rise in column CO (3.51±0.43 % ppb/year) in this site. These methods have important application to source analysis using space-borne column retrievals of these species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. "We Used to Say Rats Fell from the Sky After a Flood" : Temporary Recovery of Muskrat Following Ice Jams in the Peace-Athabasca Delta
- Author
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Straka, Jason R., Antoine, Archie, Bruno, Rene, Campbell, David, Campbell, Ron, Campbell, Ross, Cardinal, John, Gibot, Gerald, Gray, Queenie Z., Irwin, Sharon, Kindopp, Rhona, Ladouceur, Ray, Ladouceur, Walter, Lankshear, Jessica, Maclean, Bruce, Macmillan, Stuart, Marcel, Freddy, Marten, George, Marten, Larry, McKinnon, John, Patterson, Lucy D., Voyageur, Charlie, Voyageur, Morgan, Whiteknife, George "Sloan", and Wiltzen, Leslie
- Published
- 2018
19. Descriptive Analysis of Patients Living with HIV Affected By COVID-19
- Author
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Gudipati, Smitha, Brar, Indira, Murray, Shannon, McKinnon, John E., Yared, Nicholas, and Markowitz, Norman
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Considerations for antibiotic prophylaxis in head and neck cancer surgery
- Author
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Veve, Michael P., Davis, Susan L., Williams, Amy M., McKinnon, John E., and Ghanem, Tamer A.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Enpatoran in COVID‐19 pneumonia: Safety and efficacy results from a phase II randomized trial.
- Author
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McKinnon, John E., Santiaguel, Joel, Murta de Oliveira, Claudia, Yu, Dongzi, Khursheed, Mukhy, Moreau, Flavie, Klopp‐Schulze, Lena, Shaw, Jamie, Roy, Sanjeev, Kao, Amy H., Barbers, Richard, El Ghazal, Roland, Ramachandruni, Srikanth, Zervos, Marcus, De La Rosa, Benjamin, Lima, Marina Andrade, Aguiar, Valeria Cristina, Candida, Caroline, Dal Pizzol, Felipe, and de Faria Freire, Antonio
- Subjects
- *
SARS-CoV-2 , *COVID-19 , *SAFETY - Abstract
Enpatoran is a selective inhibitor of toll‐like receptors 7 and 8 (TLR7/8) that potentially targets pro‐inflammatory pathways induced by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2). A phase II study conducted in Brazil, the Philippines, and the USA during the early pandemic phase assessed the safety and efficacy of enpatoran in patients hospitalized with COVID‐19 pneumonia (NCT04448756). A total of 149 patients, who scored 4 on the World Health Organization's (WHO) 9‐point ordinal severity scale, were randomized 1:1:1 and received enpatoran 50 mg (n = 54) or 100 mg (n = 46), or placebo (n = 49) twice daily (b.i.d.) for 14 days plus standard of care. The primary objectives were safety and time to recovery (WHO 9‐point scale ≤3). Clinical deterioration (WHO 9‐point scale ≥ 5) was a key secondary objective. Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were comparable across groups (56.5%–63.0%). Treatment‐related TEAEs were numerically higher with enpatoran 50 mg (14.8%) than 100 mg (10.9%) or placebo (8.2%). Serious TEAEs were numerically lower with enpatoran (50 mg 9.3%, 100 mg 2.2%) than placebo (18.4%). The primary efficacy objective was not met; median time to recovery was 3.4–3.9 days across groups, with placebo‐treated patients recovering on average faster than anticipated. Clinical deterioration event‐free rates up to Day 7 were 90.6%, 95.6%, and 81.6% with enpatoran 50 mg, 100 mg, and placebo, respectively. Enpatoran was well tolerated by patients acutely ill and hospitalized with COVID‐19 pneumonia. Positive signals in some secondary end points suggested potential beneficial effects, supporting further evaluation of enpatoran in patients with hyperinflammation due to infection or autoimmunity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Autoimmune disease and vaccination: impact on infectious disease prevention and a look at future applications
- Author
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McKinnon, John E. and Maksimowicz-McKinnon, Kathleen
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Discovering Asia
- Author
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2014
24. New Zealand between America and China
- Author
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2013
25. A Pilot Trial of Adding Maraviroc to Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy for Suboptimal CD4 + T-Cell Recovery Despite Sustained Virologic Suppression: ACTG A5256
- Author
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Wilkin, Timothy J., Lalama, Christina M., McKinnon, John, Gandhi, Rajesh T., Lin, Nina, Landay, Alan, Ribaudo, Heather, Fox, Lawrence, Currier, Judith S., Mellors, John W., Gulick, Roy, and Tenorio, Allan R.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Regimen Simplification to Atazanavir-Ritonavir Alone as Maintenance Antiretroviral Therapy: Final 48-Week Clinical and Virologic Outcomes
- Author
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Wilkin, Timothy J., McKinnon, John E., DiRienzo, A. Gregory, Mollan, Katie, Fletcher, Courtney V., Margolis, David M., Bastow, Barbara, Thai, Gary, Woodward, William, Godfrey, Catherine, Wiegand, Ann, Maldarelli, Frank, Palmer, Sarah, Coffin, John M., Mellors, John W., and Swindells, Susan
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. REMEMBERING THE LANDING AT MONO
- Author
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The strategic outlook: A New Zealand perspective
- Author
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 2013
29. Optimizing crop byproduct inclusion in beef cattle diets: Utilization of wheat straw to improve operational economics and oilseed screenings as protein supplements.
- Author
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Montenegro, Beatriz J., Penner, Gregory B., Lardner, H. (Bart) A., Larson, Kathy A., McKinnon, John J., Gibb, Darryl, McAllister, Tim A., and Ribeiro, Gabriel O.
- Subjects
GREENHOUSE gases ,CATTLE nutrition ,BEEF industry ,CROP residues ,BEEF cattle ,FEEDLOTS ,WHEAT straw - Abstract
Inclusion of crop residues and byproducts in beef cattle diets has become a significant practice in beef cattle production as producers are faced with conventional feed shortages, increased prices, and disrupted supply chains. Wheat straw is a widely available crop byproduct in the western Canadian prairies whose inclusion in beef cattle diets has been prevented by its low nutritional content, necessitating supplementation strategies to enhance its nutritional value. The present study explored the effect of incorporating wheat straw in backgrounding cattle diets with canola or flax screening supplementation to improve the nutritional profile of the diet and determine the sustainability of such inclusion through cattle performance measurements. The experiment was a completely randomized design. Steers [n = 300; initial body weight (BW): 297 ± 18 kg] were randomly assigned to 5 treatment diets, each diet having 4 pen replicates (15 steers/pen); control (CTL), low straw canola (LSC), low straw flax (LSF), high straw canola (HSC) and high straw flax (HSF). The CTL diet was a conventional Western Canadian backgrounding diet (60% barley silage:40% dry rolled barley grain-based concentrate). Low straw diets had a 25% wheat straw inclusion and high straw diets had 50% wheat straw inclusion on a dry matter (DM) basis. Respective screenings were included at 12.50% inclusion of diet DM. The steers were fed for a total of 84 d divided into four periods of 21 d. Statistical analyses were performed using the MIXED procedure of SAS 9.4 with diet treatment included as a fixed effect and pen within diet as a random effect. Treatment means were compared using the LSMEANS statement adjusted for the Tukey-Kramer method. Final BW, total BW gain, average daily gain (ADG) and gain:feed were greater (P < 0.001) for the CTL steers (Table 1). Dry matter intake (DMI) was greatest for CTL steers and decreased with increasing straw inclusion in the diet (P < 0.001). The type of screenings (canola or flax) did not affect (P > 0.05) steers final BW, total BW gain, ADG and gain:feed. Increasing the inclusion of wheat straw in backgrounding diets decreased growth performance parameters. The high level of neutral digestible fiber in wheat straw limited DMI and reduced growth performance compared with CTL steers. The addition of screenings to the diet provided protein content to offset the low nutritional value of the wheat straw; however, the different types of screenings did not result in a cattle performance advantage over the other. Although these findings demonstrate the challenges of including low nutritional crop byproducts, further research is needed to analyze the effects different diets have on operational economics, rumen fermentation parameters and greenhouse gas emissions to further outline any advantages or disadvantages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Introductory Essay: A Highlander's Geography of the Highlands: Mythology, Process, and Fact
- Author
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McKinnon, John
- Published
- 1983
31. On the Relevance of Aerosols to Snow Cover Variability Over High Mountain Asia.
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Roychoudhury, Chayan, He, Cenlin, Kumar, Rajesh, McKinnon, John M., and Arellano, Avelino F.
- Subjects
CARBONACEOUS aerosols ,SNOW cover ,MODIS (Spectroradiometer) ,ATMOSPHERIC aerosols ,DYNAMIC meteorology ,AEROSOLS - Abstract
While meteorology and aerosols are identified as key drivers of snow cover (SC) variability in High Mountain Asia, complex non‐linear interactions between them are not adequately quantified. Here, we attempt to unravel these interactions through a simple relative importance (RI) analysis of meteorological and aerosol variables from ERA5/CAMS‐EAC4 reanalysis against satellite‐derived SC from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer across 2003–2018. Our results show a statistically significant 7% rise in the RI of aerosol‐meteorology interactions (AMI) in modulating SC during late snowmelt season (June and July), notably over low snow‐covered (LSC) regions. Sensitivity tests further reveal that the importance of meteorological interactions with individual aerosol species are more prominent than total aerosols over LSC regions. We find that the RI of AMI for LSC regions is clearly dominated by carbonaceous aerosols, on top of the expected importance of dynamic meteorology. These findings clearly highlight the need to consider AMI in hydrometeorological monitoring, modeling, and reanalyses. Plain Language Summary: Understanding the changes in snow cover (SC) over glaciers in High Mountain Asia (HMA) is important yet challenging. Despite its impact on water resources, physical processes that drive these changes are complex. In particular, large‐scale weather patterns, together with aerosol pollution hotspots in the vicinity, and its steep elevation strongly interact with each other. We use a statistical approach to assess the relevance of these interactions using geophysical data from present day reanalysis and observed SC extent from satellite products for two decades. We find that during the late snowmelt period from June to July, interactions between aerosols and meteorology are significant, specifically in low SC regions. Interactions of individual aerosol species, especially carbonaceous aerosols like black carbon are more important than total aerosol concentration. This approach in quantifying the interactions of these processes can help improve the monitoring and modeling of snow hydrology. Representing these relevant interactions in current models and reanalysis of hydrometeorology can lead to more accurate predictions of the state of snow for critical regions like HMA. Key Points: Interactions between aerosols and meteorology are significant during late snowmelt (June and July) over low snow‐covered regions in High Mountain AsiaSpecies related interactions drive the seasonal variability of the overall relative importanceCarbonaceous aerosols are more relevant than mineral dust during late snowmelt [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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32. The clash of civilisations
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McKinnon, John
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- 1997
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33. Cigarette Makers Race Attorneys General to Court: Industry suits aimed at stopping expected litigation
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DUNCAN, LAURA and McKinnon, John D.
- Published
- 1996
34. Potential risks and benefits of HIV treatment simplification: a simulation model of a proposed clinical trial
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Schackman, Bruce R., Scott, Callie A., Sax, Paul E., Losina, Elena, Wilkin, Timothy J., McKinnon, John E., Swindells, Susan, Weinstein, Milton C., and Freedberg, Kenneth A.
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Drug therapy -- Economic aspects ,Drug therapy -- Research ,Protease inhibitors -- Dosage and administration ,Clinical trials -- Planning ,Life expectancy -- Forecasts and trends ,HIV infection -- Drug therapy ,Company business planning ,Market trend/market analysis ,Health ,Health care industry - Published
- 2007
35. Regimen simplification to atazanavir-ritonavir alone as maintenance antiretroviral therapy after sustained virologic suppression
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Swindells, Susan, DiRienzo, A. Gregory, Wilkin, Timothy, Fletcher, Courtney V., Margolis, David M., Thal, Gary D., Godfrey, Catherine, Bastow, Barbara, Ray, M. Graham, Wang, Hongying, Coombs, Robert W., McKinnon, John, and Mellors, John W.
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Ritonavir -- Health aspects ,Antiviral agents -- Health aspects ,Virus diseases -- Drug therapy - Abstract
Simplified maintenance therapy with atazanavir-ritonavir alone is assessed after virologic suppression increases the risk of virologic failure. It is suggested that simplified maintenance therapy with atazanavir-ritonavir alone is efficacious for maintaining virologic suppression in carefully selected patients with HIV infection.
- Published
- 2006
36. Feeling and knowing: neural scientific perspectives on intuitive practice
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McKinnon, John
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Intuition -- Usage ,Nursing -- Practice -- Usage ,Health ,Health care industry - Abstract
Summary This article re-evaluates the place of intuition in the hierarchy of nursing skills in the light of recent neuro-scientific findings. The author draws on neural scientific perspectives to clarify [...]
- Published
- 2005
37. Cerebral artery reactivity changes during pregnancy and the postpartum period: a role in eclampsia?
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Cipolla, Marilyn J., Vitullo, Lisa, and McKinnon, John
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Heart -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Cerebral artery reactivity changes during pregnancy and the postpartum period: a role in eclampsia? Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 286: H2127-H212, 2004. First published January 29, 2004; 10.1152/ajpheart. 01154.2003.--Eclampsia is thought to be similar to hypertensive encephalopathy, whereby acute elevations in intravascular pressure cause forced dilatation (FD) of intrinsic myogenic tone of cerebral arteries and arterioles, decreased cerebrovascular resistance, and hyperperfusion. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that pregnancy and/or the postpartum period predispose cerebral arteries to FD by diminishing pressure-induced myogenic activity. We compared the reactivity to pressure (myogenic activity) as well as factors that modulate the level of tone of third-order branches ( 0.05). This level of myogenic activity was maintained in the NP arteries at all pressures; however, both LP and PP arteries dilated at considerably lower pressures compared with NP, which lowered the pressure at which FD occurred from >175 for NP to 146 [+ or -] 6.5 mmHg for LP (P < 0.01 vs. NP) and 162 [+ or -] 7.7 mmHg for PP (P < 0.01 vs. NP). The amount of myogenic tone was also significantly diminished at 175 mmHg compared with NP: percent tone for NP, LP, and PP animals were 35 [+ or -] 2, 11 [+ or -] 3 (P < 0.01 vs. NP), and 20 [+ or -] 7% (P < 0.01 vs. NP), respectively. Inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) with 0.1 mM [N.sup.[omega]]-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) caused constriction of all vessel types that was significantly increased in the PP arteries, which demonstrates significant basal NO production. Reactivity to 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) was assessed in the presence of L-NNA and indomethacin. There was a differential response to serotonin: PCAs from NP animals dilated, whereas LP and PP arteries constricted. These results suggest that both pregnancy and the postpartum period predispose the cerebral circulation to FD at lower pressures, a response that may lower cerebrovascular resistance and promote hyperperfusion when blood pressure is elevated, as occurs during eclampsia. postpartum; circulation; myogenic tone; encephalapathy
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- 2004
38. Pilot comparison of the ease of swallowing of single tablet antiretroviral regimens.
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Parraga Acosta, Tommy, Osborn, Zachary, Lee, Jean C., Haubrich, Richard H., McNicholl, Ian, and McKinnon, John E.
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PILOT projects ,HIV infections ,DEGLUTITION ,DRUG tolerance ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,DRUG administration ,PLACEBOS ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,T-test (Statistics) ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DRUGS ,CROSSOVER trials ,PATIENT compliance - Abstract
Daily adherence to lifelong antiretroviral therapy (ART) is required to achieve long term treatment success. However, patient preferences for ART tablet size have not been well studied. Our study assessed factors associated with the ease of swallowing (EoS) and tolerability of two placebo tablets representing and matching B/F/TAF (BPT) and DTG/ABC/3TC (DPT). Fifty ART-naïve patients were randomized into a two-period cross-over study. Likert scale (1–5) questionnaires were administered to assess patient factors influencing the ease of swallowing, adherence, home medications, medication preferences and perceptions. Comparisons were done using Student t-tests and ordinal regression. Participants were 64% female, 61% white, mean age 43 years, and taking a mean (median) of 4(1) pills/day. BPT was reported to be easier than DPT with ease of swallowability 1.76 vs. 2.42 (p < 0.001) (1 = very easy). DPT tablet was correctly perceived as larger than BPT (p < 0.001); with both tablets perceived as smaller than actual size (p < 0.001). EoS of either tablet was positively associated with the EoS of the largest home tablet medication (p = 0.021, p = 0.03). Patient's perceptions of EoS can affect their medication adherence, especially in HIV, and should be considered in treatment regimens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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39. Exploring nurses’ experiences of prescribing in secondary care: informing future education and practice
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Scrafton, Jane, McKinnon, John, and Kane, Roslyn
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- 2012
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40. Preparing for the future: nurse education and workforce development
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Linsley, Paul, Kane, Ros, McKinnon, John, Spencer, Rachael, and Simpson, Trevor
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- 2008
41. The level of persistent HIV viremia does not increase after successful simplification of maintenance therapy to lopinavir/ritonavir alone
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McKinnon, John E, Arribas, José R, Pulido, Federico, Delgado, Rafael, and Mellors, John W
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- 2006
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42. Effect of replacing barley silage with calcium oxide-treated barley straw on rumen fermentation, rumen microbiota, nutrient digestibility, and growth performance of finishing beef cattle.
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Stehr, Katelyn R., Terry, Stephanie A., Ribeiro, Gabriel O., Gruninger, Robert J., Penner, Gregory B., McKinnon, John, Gibb, Darryl, and McAllister, Tim A.
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RUMEN fermentation ,BEEF cattle ,LIME (Minerals) ,STRAW ,BARLEY ,CATTLE carcasses ,SILAGE - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Animal Science is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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43. Congestive Heart Failure and QRS Duration*: Establishing Prognosis Study
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Shenkman, Heather J., Pampati, Vijayamalini, Khandelwal, Akshay K., McKinnon, John, Nori, David, Kaatz, Scott, Sandberg, Keisha R., and McCullough, Peter A.
- Published
- 2002
44. A potential association between the BM 1500 microsatellite and fat deposition in beef cattle
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Fitzsimmons, Carolyn J., Schmutz, Sheila M., Bergen, Reynold D., and McKinnon, John J.
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- 1998
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45. The role of tocilizumab therapy in critically ill patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2.
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Saffo, Zaid, Weixia Guo, Springer, Kylie, Maksimowicz-McKinnon, Kathleen, Kak, Vivek, McKinnon, John E., and Bhargava, Pallavi
- Published
- 2021
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46. Association Between Implementation of a Universal Face Mask Policy for Healthcare Workers in a Health Care System and SARS-CoV-2 Positivity Testing Rate in Healthcare Workers.
- Author
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Dee Dee Wang, O'Neill, William W., Zervos, Marcus J., McKinnon, John E., Allard, David, Alangaden, George J., Schultz, Lonni R., Poisson, Laila M., Chu, Betty S., Kalkanis, Steven N., and Suleyman, Geehan
- Published
- 2021
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47. Rapid Reorganization of an Academic Infectious Diseases Program During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic in Detroit: A Novel Unit-based Group Rounding Model.
- Author
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Vahia, Amit T, Chaudhry, Zohra S, Kaljee, Linda, Parraga-Acosta, Tommy, Gudipati, Smitha, Maki, Gina, Tariq, Zain, Shallal, Anita, Nauriyal, Varidhi, Williams, Jonathan D, Suleyman, Geehan, Abreu-Lanfranco, Odaliz, Chen, Anne, Yared, Nicholas, Herc, Erica, McKinnon, John E, Brar, Indira, Bhargava, Pallavi, Zervos, Marcus, and Ramesh, Mayur
- Subjects
COMMUNICABLE diseases ,RESEARCH methodology ,HUMAN services programs ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL education - Abstract
The surge of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hospitalizations at our 877-bed quaternary care hospital in Detroit led to an emergent demand for Infectious Diseases (ID) consultations. The traditional 1-on-1 consultation model was untenable. Therefore, we rapidly restructured our ID division to provide effective consultative services. We implemented a novel unit-based group rounds model that focused on delivering key updates to teams and providing unit-wide consultations simultaneously to all team members. Effectiveness of the program was studied using Likert-scale survey data. The survey captured data from the first month of the Detroit COVID-19 pandemic. During this period there were approximately 950 patients hospitalized for treatment of COVID-19. The survey of trainees and faculty reported an overall 95% positive response to delivery of information, new knowledge acquisition, and provider confidence in the care of COVID-19 patients. This showed that the unit-based consult model is a sustainable effort to provide care during epidemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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48. Level of Supplemental Fat in the Diet of Gestating Beef Cows: Effects on Cow and Calf Performance.
- Author
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Cornand, Erika E., Larson, Kathy A., Fitzsimmons, Carolyn J., McKinnon, John J., and Lardner, Herbert A.
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DIETARY fats ,MILKFAT ,FAT ,CALVES ,COWS ,MILK proteins ,MILK yield - Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of feeding a canola seed-based (7.2% ether extract) pellet to gestating cows on cow performance, reproductive efficiency, milk yield and composition, and calf birth weight. Seventy-two pregnant, multiparous cows were allocated to 12 pens in a completely randomized block design. Body weight (BW; 605 ± 35 kg) was utilized as the blocking criteria. Diets were formulated to be isonitrogenous (CP: 8.20 ± 0.24% and 9.07 ± 0.05% second and third trimesters, respectively) and isocaloric (TDN: 58.29 ± 0.24% and 60.50 ± 0.04% second and third trimesters, respectively), and to meet NASEM (2016) nutrient requirements for pregnant beef cattle. Pens were randomly assigned to three replicated (n = 4) dietary treatments: 0 (CON), 150 (LOW), and 300 (HIGH) g of fat/d (DM basis). Dietary treatments were fed from 148 ± 8 d prepartum until at least 50% of all cows had calved, then switched to a common lactation diet. Body condition score (BCS), BW and subcutaneous fat thickness were measured at the start (SOT) and end of trial (EOT), and at 21 and 42 d postpartum. Orthogonal contrasts were used to assess linear and quadratic relationships between fat inclusion and dependent variables. At SOT, there were no differences (P ≥ 0.73) in conceptus corrected BW (597 ± 34 kg) or (P ≥ 0.13) BCS (2.85 ± 0.12, Canadian System: 1 to 5). After 84 d on trial (64 ± 8 d prepartum), conceptus corrected average daily gain (ADG) increased linearly (P = 0.04) as fat inclusion increased. After 151 d of supplementation (EOT), conceptus corrected ADG and subcutaneous fat thickness did not differ (P ≥ 0.71 and 0.63, respectively). BCS change from SOT to EOT increased, while EOT to 21 d postpartum decreased quadratically as fat inclusion increased (P = 0.02 and 0.01, respectively). Female calf birth weight decreased quadratically (P = 0.01) as fat inclusion increased, but there was no effect (P ≥ 0.75) on male calf birth weight. As fat inclusion increased, lactose concentration in milk decreased linearly (P = 0.04). As days in milk (DIM) increased, milk protein, total solids, and milk energy yield decreased (P = 0.05). Milk urea-N tended to increase (P = 0.07), while 12 h milk yield (P = 0.05) tended to decrease as DIM increased. Milk fat and energy were not affected by fat inclusion, day, or the interaction between fat inclusion and day (P ≥ 0.16). There was a quadratic tendency for fat inclusion to affect pregnancy rate (P = 0.09), being maximized on LOW treatment. These results suggest that increasing fat inclusion during mid-to-late gestation tended to improve cow reproductive efficiency. Further investigation is required to determine the optimal level of fat inclusion from canola seed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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49. Use of barley or corn silage when fed with barley, corn, or a blend of barley and corn on growth performance, nutrient utilization, and carcass characteristics of finishing beef cattle.
- Author
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Johnson, Jordan A, Sutherland, Brittney D, McKinnon, John J, McAllister, Tim A, and Penner, Gregory B
- Subjects
BARLEY ,ANIMAL carcasses ,ANIMAL nutrition ,CORN ,SILAGE - Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of the source of silage, cereal grain, and their interaction on growth performance, digestibility, and carcass characteristics of finishing beef cattle. Using a completely randomized design within an 89-d finishing study, 288 steers were randomly assigned to 1 of 24 pens (12 steers/pen) with average steer body weight (BW) within a pen of 464 kg ± 1.7 kg (mean ± SD). Diets were arranged in a 2 × 3 factorial with corn silage (CS) or barley silage (BS) included at 8% (dry matter [DM] basis). Within each silage source, diets contained dry-rolled barley grain (BG; 86% of DM), dry-rolled corn grain (CG; 85% of DM), or an equal blend of BG and CG (BCG; 85% of DM). Total tract digestibility of nutrients was estimated from fecal samples using near-infrared spectroscopy. Data were analyzed with pen as the experimental unit using the Mixed Model of SAS with the fixed effects of silage, grain, and the two-way interaction. Carcass and fecal kernel data were analyzed using GLIMMIX utilizing the same model. There were no interactions detected between silage and grain source. Feeding CG increased (P < 0.01) DM intake by 0.8 and 0.6 kg/d relative to BG and BCG, respectively. Gain-to-feed ratio was greater (P = 0.04) for BG (0.172 kg/kg) than CG (0.162 kg/kg) but did not differ from BCG (0.165 kg/kg). Furthermore, average daily gain (2.07 kg/d) and final body weight did not differ among treatments (P ≥ 0.25). Hot carcass weight (HCW) was 6.2 kg greater (372.2 vs. 366.0 kg; P < 0.01) and dressing percentage was 0.57 percentage units greater (59.53 vs. 58.96 %; P = 0.04) for steers fed CS than BS, respectively. There was no effect of dietary treatment on the severity of liver abscesses (P ≥ 0.20) with 72.0% of carcasses having clear livers, 24.4% with minor liver abscesses, and 3.6% with severe liver abscesses. Digestibility of DM, organic matter, crude protein, neutral detergent fiber, and starch were greater for BG (P < 0.01) than CG or BCG. As expected, grain source affected the appearance of grain kernels in the feces (P ≤ 0.04). Feeding CS silage increased the appearance of fractured corn kernels (P = 0.04), while feeding BS increased fiber appearance in the feces (P = 0.02). Current results indicate that when dry rolled, feeding BG resulted in improved performance and digestibility compared with CG and BCG. Even at low inclusion levels (8% of DM), CS resulted in improved carcass characteristics relative to BS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Effect of feeding barley or corn silage with dry-rolled barley, corn, or a blend of barley and corn grain on rumen fermentation, total tract digestibility, and nitrogen balance for finishing beef heifers.
- Author
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Johnson, Jordan A., Sutherland, Brittney D., McKinnon, John J., McAllister, Tim A., and Penner, Gregory B.
- Abstract
Five ruminally cannulated heifers were used in an incomplete 6 × 6 Latin square design to determine the effects of cereal silage (barley vs. corn), cereal grain (barley vs. corn vs. a 50:50 blend of barley and corn), and their interaction (S × G) on dry matter intake, ruminal fermentation, total tract digestibility, nitrogen balance, and in situ degradation. Corn silage (CS) or barley silage (BS) was included at 8% of dietary dry matter (DM). Within each silage source, diets contained (DM basis) either dry-rolled barley (BG; 86%), dry-rolled corn (CG; 85%), or an equal blend of barley and corn (BLEND; 85%). Periods were 25 d, with 5 d of dietary transition, 13 d of dietary adaptation, and 7 d of data and sample collection. Samples collected included feed and refusals, total urine and feces, and ruminal fluid. All data were analyzed using the Mixed model of SAS with the fixed effects of silage, grain, and the S × G. Dry matter intake (P ≥ 0.19) and mean ruminal pH (P ≥ 0.096) were not affected by the silage, grain, or S × G. Total short-chain fatty acid concentrations were greater for BLEND than BG or CG (grain, P = 0.003) and for CS (silage, P = 0.009) relative to BS. The molar proportion of acetate was greater for BS-BG and BS-CG (S × G, P < 0.001), while molar proportion of propionate was greater for CS-BG (S × G, P < 0.001) relative to other silage and grain source combinations. Rumen ammonia-N concentration was greater for CG than BG, or BLEND (grain, P < 0.001), and greater for CS compared to BS (silage, P = 0.023). Apparent total tract digestibility of DM, organic matter, neutral detergent fiber, starch, and gross energy were greatest for BG (grain, P ≤ 0.035). Digestible energy content (Mcal/kg) was greater for BG (grain, P = 0.029) than CG and BLEND. Total nitrogen retention (g/d and % of intake) was greatest for CS-BG (S × G, P ≤ 0.033) relative to all other treatments. In situ degradation rates of DM, crude protein, and starch were greater for BG than CG (P ≤ 0.004). The potentially degradable fraction of DM, crude protein, and starch was greater for CG (P ≤ 0.031), while the undegradable fraction was greater for BG (P ≤ 0.046). For silage sources, CS had greater 24 h in situ DM digestibility (P = 0.009) and starch digestibility (24, 48, and 72 h incubations, P ≤ 0.034) relative to BS. Results suggest that while feeding a combination of CS and BG promotes propionate production and greater N retention; few other additive effects were observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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