71 results on '"James Hunter"'
Search Results
2. Prophylactic Peri-Nephric Drain Placement in Renal Transplant Surgery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Author
-
Adil S. Lakha, Shahzaib Ahmed, James Hunter, and John O’Callaghan
- Subjects
drain ,renal transplant ,prophylactic drainage ,collection ,perinephric drain ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Renal transplantation is common worldwide, with >25,000 procedures performed in 2022. Usage of prophylactic perinephric drains is variable in renal transplantation; drains are associated with risks, and there is a lack of consensus regarding benefit of routine drain placement in these patients. This meta-analysis assessed whether prophylactic drainage reduced need for reintervention postoperatively. This systematic review and meta-analysis was carried out using the Preferred Reporting Items in Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis, and prospectively registered on PROSPERO. Summary statistics for outcomes of interest underwent meta-analyses to a confidence interval (CI) of 95% and are presented as Forest Plots for Odds Ratio (OR). A systematic literature search in June 2023 revealed 1,540 unique articles across four databases. Of these, four retrospective cohort studies were selected. Meta-analysis of three studies showed no significant reduction in reintervention rate with pre-emptive drain placement, OR = 0.59 (95% CI: 0.16–2.23), p = 0.44. Meta-analysis did not show a significant reduction in perinephric collections with prophylactic drain insertion OR = 0.55 (95% CI: 0.13–2.37), p = 0.42. Finally, there is not good evidence that drain placement reduces superficial wound complications or improves 12-month graft survival. Further work is needed, including well-designed, prospective studies to assess the risks and benefits of drain placement in these patients.Systematic Review Registration: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42023422685, Identifier PROSPERO CRD42021255795.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Doppler ultrasound surveillance of recently formed haemodialysis arteriovenous fistula: the SONAR observational cohort study
- Author
-
James Richards, Dominic Summers, Anna Sidders, Elisa Allen, Mohammed Ayaz Hossain, Subhankar Paul, Matthew Slater, Matthew Bartlett, Regin Lagaac, Emma Laing, Valerie Hopkins, Chloe Fitzpatrick-Creamer, Cara Hudson, Joseph Parsons, Samuel Turner, Andrew Tambyraja, Subash Somalanka, James Hunter, Sam Dutta, Neil Hoye, Sarah Lawman, Tracey Salter, Mohammed Farid Aslam, Atul Bagul, Rajesh Sivaprakasam, George E Smith, Helen L Thomas, Zia Moinuddin, Simon R Knight, Nicholas Barnett, Reza Motallebzadeh, and Gavin J Pettigrew
- Subjects
arteriovenous fistula ,renal dialysis ,ultrasonography ,doppler ,kidney failure ,chronic: haemodialysis ,vascular access surgery ,feasibility studies ,observational cohort study ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Background Arteriovenous fistulas are considered the best option for haemodialysis provision, but as many as 30% fail to mature or suffer early failure. Objective To assess the feasibility of performing a randomised controlled trial that examines whether, by informing early and effective salvage intervention of fistulas that would otherwise fail, Doppler ultrasound surveillance of developing arteriovenous fistulas improves longer-term arteriovenous fistula patency. Design A prospective multicentre observational cohort study (the ‘SONAR’ study). Setting Seventeen haemodialysis centres in the UK. Participants Consenting adults with end-stage renal disease who were scheduled to have an arteriovenous fistula created. Intervention Participants underwent Doppler ultrasound surveillance of their arteriovenous fistulas at 2, 4, 6 and 10 weeks after creation, with clinical teams blinded to the ultrasound surveillance findings. Main outcome measures Fistula maturation at week 10 defined according to ultrasound surveillance parameters of representative venous diameter and blood flow (wrist arteriovenous fistulas: ≥ 4 mm and > 400 ml/minute; elbow arteriovenous fistulas: ≥ 5 mm and > 500 ml/minute). Mixed multivariable logistic regression modelling of the early ultrasound scan data was used to predict arteriovenous fistula non-maturation by 10 weeks and fistula failure at 6 months. Results A total of 333 arteriovenous fistulas were created during the study window (47.7% wrist, 52.3% elbow). By 2 weeks, 37 (11.1%) arteriovenous fistulas had failed (thrombosed), but by 10 weeks, 219 of 333 (65.8%) of created arteriovenous fistulas had reached maturity (60.4% wrist, 67.2% elbow). Persistently lower flow rates and venous diameters were observed in those fistulas that did not mature. Models for arteriovenous fistulas’ non-maturation could be optimally constructed using the week 4 scan data, with fistula venous diameter and flow rate the most significant variables in explaining wrist fistula maturity failure (positive predictive value 60.6%, 95% confidence interval 43.9% to 77.3%), whereas resistance index and flow rate were most significant for elbow arteriovenous fistulas (positive predictive value 66.7%, 95% confidence interval 48.9% to 84.4%). In contrast to non-maturation, both models predicted fistula maturation much more reliably [negative predictive values of 95.4% (95% confidence interval 91.0% to 99.8%) and 95.6% (95% confidence interval 91.8% to 99.4%) for wrist and elbow, respectively]. Additional follow-up and modelling on a subset (n = 192) of the original SONAR cohort (the SONAR-12M study) revealed the rates of primary, assisted primary and secondary patency arteriovenous fistulas at 6 months were 76.5, 80.7 and 83.3, respectively. Fistula vein size, flow rate and resistance index could identify primary patency failure at 6 months, with similar predictive power as for 10-week arteriovenous fistula maturity failure, but with wide confidence intervals for wrist (positive predictive value 72.7%, 95% confidence interval 46.4% to 99.0%) and elbow (positive predictive value 57.1%, 95% confidence interval 20.5% to 93.8%). These models, moreover, performed poorly at identifying assisted primary and secondary patency failure, likely because a subset of those arteriovenous fistulas identified on ultrasound surveillance as at risk underwent subsequent successful salvage intervention without recourse to early ultrasound data. Conclusions Although early ultrasound can predict fistula maturation and longer-term patency very effectively, it was only moderately good at identifying those fistulas likely to remain immature or to fail within 6 months. Allied to the better- than-expected fistula patency rates achieved (that are further improved by successful salvage), we estimate that a randomised controlled trial comparing early ultrasound-guided intervention against standard care would require at least 1300 fistulas and would achieve only minimal patient benefit. Trial Registration This trial is registered as ISRCTN36033877 and ISRCTN17399438. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR135572) and is published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 28, No. 24. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information. Plain language summary What was the problem? For people with advanced kidney disease, haemodialysis is best provided by an ‘arteriovenous fistula’, which is created surgically by joining a vein onto an artery at the wrist or elbow. However, these take about 2 months to develop fully (‘mature’), and as many as 3 out of 10 fail to do so. What was the question? We asked whether we could use early ultrasound scanning of the fistula to identify those that are unlikely to mature. This would allow us to decide whether it would be practical to run a large, randomised trial to find out if using early ultrasound allows us to ‘rescue’ fistulas that would otherwise fail. What did we do? We invited adults to undergo serial ultrasound scanning of their fistula in the first few weeks after it was created. We then analysed whether we could use the data from the early scans to identify those fistulas that were not going to mature by week 10. What did we find? Of the 333 fistulas that were created, about two-thirds reached maturity by week 10. We found that an ultrasound scan 4 weeks after fistula creation could reliably identify those fistulas that were going to mature. However, of those fistulas predicted to fail, about one-third did eventually mature without further intervention, and even without knowing what the early scans showed, another third were successfully rescued by surgery or X-ray-guided treatment at a later stage. What does this mean? Performing an early ultrasound scan on a fistula can provide reassurance that it will mature and deliver trouble-free dialysis. However, because scans are poor at identifying fistulas that are unlikely to mature, we would not recommend their use to justify early surgery or X-ray-guided treatment in the expectation that this will improve outcomes. Scientific summary Background Because of their favourable durability and low infection rates, arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are considered the best option for provision of haemodialysis, and they offer survival advantages compared to dialysis through a central venous catheter (CVC). Upon surgical creation, AVFs undergo a period of ‘maturation’, wherein the transit of high-pressure arterial flow through the anastomosis triggers compensatory dilatation and thickening of the draining fistula vein, with marked increases in blood flow through the AVF. This maturation, which generally takes about 2 months, is required to achieve functionality and enables the AVF to be used for dialysis. The main drawback with AVFs is that a large proportion (in excess of 30% in some series) do not develop fully, and either thrombose or remain patent in an immature state. This necessitates further surgical or radiological interventions to aid maturation, or formation of an entirely new fistula, thus potentially prolonging the requirement for dialysis through a CVC. Strategies to increase maturation rates and early patency of AVFs may therefore make a substantial difference to patient outcomes. In this respect, widespread patient and clinician consultation, supported by the James Lind Alliance, has identified the question, ‘What can be done to make fistulas or grafts last as long as possible?’ as one of the top 10 research priorities in vascular access provision. One possible approach to counter early fistula loss from non-maturation/thrombosis is to use Doppler ultrasound (US) surveillance in the first few weeks after creation to identify at-risk fistulas and to inform early radiological or surgical intervention, in anticipation that this improves longer-term fistula patency. This has, however, not yet been tested. The SONAR consortium, representing 17 UK centres that provide vascular access surgery, was established to test the hypothesis: Doppler US surveillance of AVFs immediately after creation improves longer-term AVF patency, by directing early and effective surgical or radiological salvage of those AVFs at risk of failing or not maturing. Objectives In considering the above hypothesis, several conditions must be met if US-guided early salvage intervention is to improve outcomes following AVF creation: that US can effectively distinguish those newly formed fistulas that are unlikely to mature that maturity failure occurs commonly enough that clinically meaningful improvements in fistula outcomes by early identification of at-risk fistulas are plausible that salvage interventions performed on those ‘at-risk’ fistulas are effective and improve fistula patency. The SONAR study thus aimed to address the following objectives sequentially, over a 5-year window: Run an observational cohort study in which consenting participants undergo serial US assessment of their AVF in the first 3 months after its formation (phase 1). Model whether features on early US can reliably identify those fistulas that will not mature or will fail early. Assess from the observational cohort study whether a randomised controlled trial (RCT) evaluating early US-guided salvage intervention is feasible. Run a multicentre RCT in which 1-year fistula patency in a treatment group receiving early US surveillance of their developing fistula is compared against standard care: monitoring of fistula maturation by clinical assessment only (phase 2). Progression to the phase 2 study depended upon accomplishing the first three objectives and, in particular, demonstrating that US surveillance could accurately predict fistula non-maturation. This manuscript will thus focus on the phase 1 study set-up and outcomes. Methods A prospective multicentre observational cohort study of adult patients undergoing formation of AVF for haemodialysis was performed to test the hypothesis: Doppler US surveillance early after AVF creation can reliably identify those AVFs that will not mature or will fail early. Criteria for participation were as follows: Adult, aged 16 years or older. The participant had end-stage renal disease and was either already established on haemodialysis or likely to start imminently. The participant was due creation of an arm AVF (either wrist or elbow) including the following types of fistula: radiocephalic, ulnobasilic, brachiocephalic and brachiobasilic (one- or two-stage) fistula, with a minimal acceptable threshold of 2 mm venous diameter at whatever site was chosen. Full informed consent to participate was provided. Consenting participants underwent serial US scanning at weeks 2, 4, 6 and 10 after fistula formation in addition to standard care (such as regular clinical assessment) as per local centre policy. Fistula flow rates, fistula venous diameter and resistance index were recorded, according to a standard study protocol, with clinical teams blinded to the US findings, unless a scan was simultaneously requested on clinical grounds or the scan confirmed thrombosis of the fistula. The primary outcome measure was fistula maturation at 10 weeks. To encompass participants who remained pre-dialysis, along with clinical examination, maturation was assessed at 10 weeks according to accepted surrogate US parameters: wrist fistula: representative venous diameter ≥ 4 mm, with flow > 400 ml/minute elbow fistula: representative venous fistula diameter ≥ 5 mm, with flow > 500 ml/minute. Three distinct outcomes defined fistula non-maturation: a fistula occlusion/thrombosis within the study period (76 days post AVF creation) fistula abandonment within the study period due to failure to mature or due to thrombosis/occlusion failure to achieve (either reported at the week 10 scan or imputed) maturation, according to the preset US parameters. The following secondary outcome measures were also recorded: for those patients established on dialysis, successful use of the fistula for dialysis on three successive occasions clinical suitability for dialysis 10 weeks after fistula creation based on examination alone according to local practice formation of a new fistula (including fashioning of proximal neoanastomosis) or radiological salvage procedure fistula thrombosis secondary fistula patency patient acceptability, based on the proportion of patients that complete their scans. Assuming that early US surveillance predicts fistula non-maturation/failure in 25% of AVFs, a total of 347 fistulas were required to achieve precision of ± 10% for an estimated 72% positive predictive value (PPV) for detecting non-maturation/failure. The total sample size allows for 10% dropout. Mixed multivariable logistic regression (binary-data population-average model with exchangeable correlation structure) of the early US scan data was then used to build separate models for wrist and elbow AVF that contained the minimum number of measurements required to predict AVF non-maturation by 10 weeks. Receiver operating characteristic curves of the developed risk scores were analysed to determine when surgical or radiological intervention on the developing AVF could be considered. The PPV and negative predictive value (NPV; the probability of AVF maturation given that the model predicts maturation) were calculated alongside a 95% confidence interval (CI) for the chosen risk-score cut-off. Additional modelling was then performed on a subset (n = 192) of the original SONAR cohort available for follow-up, to assess whether fistula failure at 6 and 12 months could be identified by analysis of early US characteristics. The primary outcome measure for the longer-term follow-up was primary fistula patency at 6 months, defined as ‘the interval between access creation to the earliest time of fistula thrombosis, abandonment (except abandonment because of steal), intervention on the fistula (to re-establish or maintain patency) or the time of measurement of patency’. Secondary outcome measures included assisted primary patency (the interval from access creation until access thrombosis or the time of measurement of patency, including any interventions to maintain patency) and secondary patency (the interval from access creation to time of measurement of patency or to abandonment of the fistula). Similar binary-data population-average modelling was performed as for predicting 10-week non-maturation, aiming to build parsimonious models that contained the minimum number of variables from one scan time point (at either week 4 or week 6) to effectively predict primary fistula non-patency at 6 months. Results Of 347 consents to participation (median age 65 years; interquartile range 52–74 years; 64.8% male; 43.2% diabetic; 55.0% pre-dialysis), 333 underwent AVF creation during the study window (47.7% wrist, 52.3% elbow fistula). Early failure before the first US scan occurred in 37 (11.1%) AVFs, but by 10 weeks, 219 of 333 (65.8%) created AVFs had reached maturity (67.2% elbow, 60.4% wrist). Of the remainder, by week 10 a further 20 had failed (57 failures in total; 17.1%), 29 (8.7%) remained patent but not mature and the status of 28 (8.4%) was unknown. Excluding those failures occurring within the first 2 weeks (because it would be impractical to organise salvage so quickly) results in a fistula maturation rate of 74.0% at 10 weeks. Serial US scanning revealed that maturation occurred rapidly (the vast majority of AVFs that were mature by 10 weeks had reached maturation by 2 weeks). Comparison of the early scan data in those AVFs that had matured by week 10 against those AVFs that remained immature (see Figure 4) revealed consistently lower fistula flow rates and fistula vein diameter in the latter. For example, the median blood flow at 2 weeks was 1135.5 and 691.0 ml/minute in those elbow and wrist fistulas, respectively, that reached maturation by week 10, whereas week 2 flows of 349.0 and 395.5 ml/minute were recorded in those elbow and wrist fistulas that did not reach maturation at week 10. Modelling to predict AVF non-maturation at week 10 was optimally built on the week 4 scan data but required separate algorithms for wrist and elbow fistulas, with fistula venous diameter and flow rate at week 4 identified as the most significant variables in explaining wrist fistula maturity failure (PPV 60.6%, 95% CI 43.9% to 77.3%), whereas resistance index and flow rate were most significant for elbow fistula maturity failure (PPV 66.7%, 95% CI 48.9% to 84.4%). Diagnostic tests for model fit and influential observations were run on the optimum models for wrist and elbow AVFs, with both performing well, with area under the curve values of at least 0.90. Conversely, both models could predict fistula maturation much more reliably [NPVs of 95.4% (91.0–99.8) and 95.6% (91.8–99.4) for wrist and elbow, respectively]. Additional modelling was then performed on a subset (n = 192) of the original SONAR cohort available for follow-up, to assess whether fistula failure at 6 and 12 months could be identified by analysis of early US characteristics. Primary, assisted primary and secondary patency AVF rates at 6 months were 76.5%, 80.7% and 83.3%, respectively, and at 12 months were 68.3%, 74.1% and 79.5%, respectively. Broadly similar US characteristics (fistula vein size, flow rate and resistance index) were identified as the most significant variables predicting primary patency failure at 6 months, with similar predictive power as for 10-week AVF maturity failure, but with wide CIs (wrist AVF: PPV 72.7%, 95% CI 46.4% to 99.0%; elbow AVF: 57.1%, 95% CI 20.5% to 93.8%). Moreover, the models performed very poorly at identifying assisted primary and secondary patency failure, likely because a subset of those identified as liable to fail were instead successfully salvaged by radiological or surgical intervention. Conclusions Although early US can predict fistula maturation and longer-term patency very effectively, it was only moderately good at identifying those unlikely to mature or to fail within 6 months. Allied to the better than expected fistula patency rate achieved by the SONAR consortium (that is further improved by successful radiological or survival salvage without recourse to the early US data), we estimate that a prospective randomised trial comparing early US-guided intervention against standard care (observation only) would require at least 1300 fistulas and would only achieve a minimally clinically important difference in the intervention arm if virtually every intervention were successful in maintaining/restoring fistula patency. Limitations The US scan findings were generally not made available to the clinical teams, so as to avoid their influencing participant management. However, scan results were revealed to the responsible clinical team on 98 occasions (10.7% of all scans), either because an early US scan was standard care for that unit (76 occasions) or because unblinding was requested because of clinical concern relating to the fistula’s maturation. It is therefore possible that in a small number of cases, the study US scans triggered salvage procedures that would not otherwise have been performed on clinical grounds alone. This is particularly problematic for the 12-month follow-up study, because the intervention would mark the end of primary patency – the primary outcome measure for the 6-month analysis – and it would therefore provide false support for the statistical modelling. However, in the majority of cases, unblinding did not prompt further intervention (simply instead confirming fistula maturation), and thus is unlikely to have compromised the statistical modelling. Similarly, to include pre-dialysis patients in the study, it was necessary to adopt surrogate US markers to define fistula maturation, and it is perhaps not ideal to be using the same modality to delineate the maturation process as one uses to define maturation, particularly because fistula maturation is principally a functional concern relating to whether the fistula can be used to provide adequate dialysis. Repeat US was not performed at 6 months for the follow-up study, and the analysis of fistula patency, rather than maturation status, provides a better reflection of fistula functionality. This may partly explain the differences in the modelling findings between the 10-week and 6-month studies. Trial registration The SONAR study was approved by the Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Research Ethics Committee and by the Health Research Authority (REC 18/EE/0234) and assigned ISRCTN36033877. The SONAR-12M study was approved by the West Midlands – Edgbaston Research Ethics Committee (REC 20/WM/0331) and assigned ISRCTN17399438. Funding This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR135572) and is published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 28, No. 24. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Re-emergence of mayaro virus and coinfection with chikungunya during an outbreak in the state of Tocantins/Brazil
- Author
-
Robson dos Santos Souza Marinho, Rodrigo Lopes Sanz Duro, Débora Bellini Caldeira, Juliana Galinskas, Mânlio Tasso Oliveira Mota, James Hunter, Maria da Aparecida Rodrigues Teles, Flávio Augusto de Pádua Milagres, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz, Fernando Shinji Kawakubo, and Shirley Vasconcelos Komninakis
- Subjects
Arbovirus ,Molecular screening ,Coinfection ,Mayaro ,Chikungunya ,Brazil ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Abstract Objective To perform a molecular screening to detect infections by the mayaro virus and possible coinfections with Chikungunya during an outbreak in the state of Tocantins/Brazil in 2017. Results Of a total 102 samples analyzed in this study, 6 cases were identified with simultaneous infection between mayaro and chikungunya viruses (5.88%). In these 6 samples, the mean Cycle threshold (Ct) for CHIKV was 26.87 (SD ± 10.54) and for MAYV was 29.58 (SD ± 6.34). The mayaro sequences generated showed 95–100% identity to other Brazilian sequences of this virus and with other MAYV isolates obtained from human and arthropods in different regions of the world. The remaining samples were detected with CHIKV monoinfection (41 cases), DENV monoinfection (50 cases) and coinfection between CHIKV/DENV (5 cases). We did not detect MAYV monoinfections.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. CC-4066 therapy delivered to kidneys during cold storage and assessed with normothermic reperfusion is feasible and safe
- Author
-
Pommelien Meertens, Azita Mellati, Richard Dumbill, M. Letizia Lo Faro, Kaithlyn Rozenberg, John Mulvey, Hans Fliri, Rutger Ploeg, and James Hunter
- Subjects
normothermic machine perfusion ,CC4066 ,cyclophilin ,inflammation ,transplantation ,ischemia-reperfusion injury ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
IntroductionCurrently there is an urgent need to translate interventions that may be beneficial to marginal donor kidneys prior to transplant, to improve their quality from bench to bedside. This project investigated the effects of CC-4066, a potent dual inhibitor of cyclophilin proteins A and D, treatment during static cold storage (SCS) in a porcine model of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) using Normothermic Reperfusion (NR).Materials and methodsPorcine kidneys and autologous blood were retrieved in pairs from a local abattoir (n = 7). One kidney from each pair was randomly allocated to treatment and one allocated to control and flushed with preservation solution containing CC-4066 or vehicle. After 7 h of SCS kidneys underwent 3 h Normothermic Reperfusion (NR) with autologous whole blood while perfusion characteristics and samples were collected.ResultsPerfusion and metabolic parameters showed similar trends and no statistical differences were observed between the groups. IL-6 showed a significant increase over time but no significant difference between groups (p-value 0.009 and 0.14 respectively, two-way ANOVA). Oxygen consumption and lactate levels were similar between groups but there was increased vacuolation on histology in the control group.ConclusionsThe addition of CC-4066 during SCS of kidneys is safe and feasible and has no adverse or detrimental effects on perfusion during assessment on NR. There was no difference in cytokine levels although there was a trend towards less vacuolation on histology in the treatment group.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Cardiorespiratory Optimisation By Arteriovenous fistula Ligation after renal Transplantation (COBALT): study protocol for a multicentre randomised interventional feasibility trial
- Author
-
Madalina Garbi, Leila Rooshenas, Jennifer Banks, James Hunter, Dominic Summers, Matthew Slater, Matthew Bartlett, Anna Sidders, Cara Hudson, Simon Knight, Reza Motallebzadeh, Gavin Pettigrew, Veena Surendrakumar, Andrew Norton, Karl Sylvester, Patrick Mark, Emma Aitken, Aimen Amer, and Kirsten Rennie
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Cardiovascular events are a major cause of mortality following successful kidney transplantation.Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are considered the best option for haemodialysis, but may contribute to this excess mortality because they promote adverse cardiac remodelling and ventricular hypertrophy. This raises the question whether recipients with a well-functioning kidney transplant should undergo elective AVF ligation.Methods and analysis The COBALT feasibility study is a multicentre interventional randomised controlled trial (RCT) that will randomise renal transplant patients with stable graft function and a working AVF on a 1:1 basis to standard care (continued conservative management) or to AVF ligation. All patients will perform cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) on recruitment and 6 months later. Daily functioning and quality of life will be additionally assessed by questionnaire completion and objective measure of physical activity. The primary outcome—the proportion of approached patients who complete the study (incorporating rates of consent, receipt of allocated intervention and completion of both CPETs without withdrawal)—will determine progression to a full-scale RCT. Design of the proposed RCT will be informed by an embedded qualitative assessment of participant and healthcare professional involvement.Ethics and dissemination This study has been approved by the East Midlands—Derby Research Ethics Committee (22/EM/0002) and the Health Research Authority. The results of this work will be disseminated academically through presentation at national and international renal meetings and via open access, peer-reviewed outputs. Existing networks of renal patient groups will also be used to disseminate the study findings to other key stakeholders.Trial registration number ISRCTN49033491.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Latency-associated DNA methylation patterns among HIV-1 infected individuals with distinct disease progression courses or antiretroviral virologic response
- Author
-
Nathalia Mantovani, Alexandre Defelicibus, Israel Tojal da Silva, Maira Ferreira Cicero, Luiz Claudio Santana, Rafael Arnold, Daniela Funayama de Castro, Rodrigo Lopes Sanz Duro, Milton Yutaka Nishiyama-Jr, Inácio Loiola Meirelles Junqueira-de-Azevedo, Bosco Christiano Maciel da Silva, Alberto José da Silva Duarte, Jorge Casseb, Simone de Barros Tenore, James Hunter, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz, and Shirley Cavalcante Vasconcelos Komninakis
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract DNA methylation is one of the epigenetic modifications that configures gene transcription programs. This study describes the DNA methylation profile of HIV-infected individuals with distinct characteristics related to natural and artificial viremia control. Sheared DNA from circulating mononuclear cells was subjected to target enrichment bisulfite sequencing designed to cover CpG-rich genomic regions. Gene expression was assessed through RNA-seq. Hypermethylation in virologic responders was highly distributed closer to Transcription Start Sites (p-value = 0.03). Hyper and hypomethylation levels within TSS adjacencies varied according to disease progression status (Kruskal–Wallis, p
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Kidney Normothermic Machine Perfusion Can Be Used as a Preservation Technique and a Model of Reperfusion to Deliver Novel Therapies and Assess Inflammation and Immune Activation
- Author
-
Azita Mellati, Letizia Lo Faro, Richard Dumbill, Pommelien Meertens, Kaithlyn Rozenberg, Sadr Shaheed, Corinna Snashall, Hannah McGivern, Rutger Ploeg, and James Hunter
- Subjects
normothermic machine perfusion ,alpha-1 antitrypsin ,inflammatory response ,immune activation ,cytokines ,ischaemia–reperfusion injury ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Ischaemia–reperfusion injury (IRI) is an inevitable process in transplantation and results in inflammation and immune system activation. Alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) has anti-inflammatory properties. Normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) can be used to deliver therapies and may help in assessing the effects of IRI and immunity. This study investigated the effects of AAT on IRI and inflammation in pig kidneys when administered during preservation, followed by normothermic reperfusion (NR) with autologous whole blood, as a surrogate for transplant. Two different models were used to deliver AAT or placebo to paired slaughterhouse pig kidneys: Model 1: 7-h static cold storage (SCS) + 3-h NR (n = 5 pairs), where either AAT (10 mg/ml) or placebo was delivered in the flush following retrieval; Model 2: 4-h SCS + 3-h NMP + 3-h NR (n = 5 pairs), where either AAT or placebo was delivered during NMP. Injury markers and cytokines levels were analysed in the perfusate, and heat shock protein 70 KDa (HSP-70) was analysed in biopsies. AAT delivered to kidneys showed no adverse effects on perfusion parameters. HSP-70 fold changes were significantly lower in the AAT group during NMP (P < 0.01, paired t-test) but not during NR. Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) fold changes were significantly higher in the AAT group during NR model 1 (p < 0.05, two-way ANOVA). In contrast to the AAT group, significant upregulation of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) between t = 90 min and t = 180 min and interleukin-8 (IL-8) between baseline and t = 90 min was observed in the control group in NR model 2 (p < 0.05, Tukey’s multiple comparison test). However, overall inflammatory cytokines and injury markers showed similar levels between groups. Delivery of AAT to pig kidneys was safe without any detrimental effects. NMP and NR provided excellent methods for comparison of inflammation and immune activation in the delivery of a novel therapy.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Good and the Bad: The Bifunctional Enzyme Xanthine Oxidoreductase in the Production of Reactive Oxygen Species
- Author
-
Charles Seychell, Brandon, primary, Vella, Marita, additional, James Hunter, Gary, additional, and Hunter, Thérèse, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Deep Learning Assisted Kidney Organ Image Analysis for Assessing the Viability of Transplantation.
- Author
-
Ali Elmhamudi, Aliyu Abubakar, Hassan Ugail, Brian Thomson, Colin Wilson, Mark Turner 0007, Derek Manas, Samuel Tingle, Sam Colenutt, Gourab Sen, James Hunter, Meng Sun, and Jackie Scully
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Selected Injuries
- Author
-
Winegarner, James Hunter, Paulman, Paul M., editor, Taylor, Robert B., editor, Paulman, Audrey A., editor, and Nasir, Laeth S., editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Cardiac Enhanced Recovery Program Implementation and Its Effect on Opioid Administration in Adult Cardiac Surgery
- Author
-
Hawkins, Robert B., Mehaffey, James Hunter, Downs, Emily, Smith, Judy, Howell, April, Kirkner, Allison, Sarosiek, Bethany M, Chaudry, Bakhtiar, Dahl, Jolian J, Krebs, Elizabeth D, Teman, Nicholas R, Hulse, Matthew, Thiele, Robert H, Singh, Karen, and Yount, Kenan W
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Updates in the Pharmacologic Prophylaxis and Treatment of Invasive Candidiasis in the Pediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care Units: Updates in the Pharmacologic Prophylaxis
- Author
-
Fly, James Hunter, Kapoor, Seerat, Bobo, Kelly, and Stultz, Jeremy S.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Personal NO2 sensor demonstrates feasibility of in-home exposure measurements for pediatric asthma research and management
- Author
-
Scott Downen, R., Dong, Quan, Chorvinsky, Elizabeth, Li, Baichen, Tran, Nam, Jackson, James Hunter, Pillai, Dinesh K., Zaghloul, Mona, and Li, Zhenyu
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. How does computed tomography inform our understanding of shoulder kinematics? A structured review
- Author
-
Baraa Daher, James Hunter, George S. Athwal, and Emily A. Lalone
- Subjects
Biomedical Engineering ,Computer Science Applications - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. T Cell-mediated Immune Response and Correlates of Inflammation and their relationship with COVID-19 clinical severity: not an intuitive guess
- Author
-
Nathalia Mantovani, Luiz Santana, James Hunter, Vinicius Blum, Tania Vergara, Celso Gouvea, Elcio Leal, Nancy Bellei, Mauro Schechter, and Ricardo Diaz
- Abstract
Background: Predictors of the outcome of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-Cov-2) infection remain to be fully determined. We evaluated selected viral characteristics and immunological responses that might predict and/or correlate to the clinical outcome of COVID-19. Methods: The magnitude and breadth of T cell-mediated responses were measured within 36 hours of symptom onset for individuals developing divergent clinical outcomes. Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) were subjected to in vitro stimulation with SARS-CoV-2-based peptides. In addition, SARS-CoV-2 sequences were generated by metagenome, and HLA typing was performed using Luminex technology. Findings: CD4+ T cell activation was found to be negatively correlated with SARS-CoV-2 basal viral load in patients with severe COVID-19 (p = 0·043). The overall cellular immune response, as inferred by IFN-γ signal, was higher at baseline for patients that progressed to mild disease compared to patients that progressed to severe disease (p = 0·0044). Subjects with milder disease developed higher T cell responses for MHC class I and II-restricted peptides (p = 0·033). Interpretation: Mounting specific cellular immune responses in the first days after symptom onset, as inferred by IFN-γ magnitude in the ELISPOT assay, may efficiently favor a positive outcome. In contrast, progression to severe COVID-19 was accompanied by stronger cellular immune responses, higher CD4+ T cell activation, and a higher number of in silico predicted high-affinity class I HLA alleles. Funding: Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) - Grant 2020/10396-2, and Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico - Grant 441817/2018-1.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Assessing the Implementation of Stormwater Utility Fees: A Review of Case Studies
- Author
-
Adriélli B. Pagnoncelli, James Hunter, and Dong Hee Kang
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Diffusion-limited O2release in human kidneys perfused with stored blood
- Author
-
Richard Dumbill, Julija Rabcuka, Simon Knight, James Hunter, John Fallon, Daniel Voyce, Jacob Barrett, Matt Ellen, Annemarie Weissenbacher, Tetuko Kurniawan, Slawomir Blonski, Piotr Korczyk, Rutger Ploeg, Constantin Coussios, Peter Friend, and Pawel Swietach
- Abstract
A central dogma in physiology is that oxygen release at tissues is not diffusion-limited because gas exchange at capillaries is rapid. This assertion has influenced clinical care, which focuses on optimising oxygen delivery through improving blood flow and oxygen content, rather than oxygen unloading from red blood cells (RBCs). Since storage of blood causes profound changes that slow oxygen release from RBCs, transfusions could compromise tissue respiration. We investigated this in transplant human kidneys normothermically perfused with stored blood. During perfusions, renal respiration was measured from blood gases and RBCs were analysed for oxygen-unloading kinetics. Respiratory rate did not correlate significantly with the standard definition of oxygen delivery based on blood flow and oxygen content. However, a strong correlation was obtained after introducing a factor describing oxygen release from RBCs. Oxygen release to tissues can become diffusion-limited with transfused blood, and therefore the kinetic quality of RBCs should be considered.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Persistently non-compliant employment practice in the informal economy: permissive visibility in a multiple regulator setting
- Author
-
Ian Clark, Alan Collins, James Hunter, Richard Pickford, Jack Barratt, and Huw Fearnall-Williams
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics - Abstract
The growing significance of non-compliant employment practice in the British economy has motivated scrutiny of the effectiveness of current regulation. In some markets, charges of labour exploitation, underpayment of the national minimum wage and associated ‘wage theft’ from workers are rife where business operations are characterised by academics, regulators and stakeholders as exuding ‘permissive visibility’. The current landscape of enforcement and regulation of informal business and employment practices features complex structural and operational issues for regulators subject to tight resource constraints. These enable permissiveness and offer scope for strategic regulatory tolerance of some violation types, possibly to raise compliance rates for other types of violations. Drawing on extensive empirical evidence and qualitative data sources in one market sector (hand car washes), this study investigates some key hypotheses focussing on compliance and responses by businesses and regulators to the extant regulatory regime. These inform a pragmatic institutional analysis considering the merits of some movement towards a single enforcement body instead of the existing arrangements featuring multiple regulatory institutions.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Ureterorenoscopy during normothermic machine perfusion: effect of varying renal pelvis pressure
- Author
-
Richard Dumbill, Azita Mellati, Bingyuan D. Yang, Rutger Ploeg, Ben Turney, and James Hunter
- Subjects
Urology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Lessons Learnt from the Completion Design for a HPHT Sour Gas Field Development in Offshore Sarawak
- Author
-
Grant, CW Graham, additional, Bandyopadhyay, Parthasarathi, additional, Wejwittayaklung, Kittipat, additional, Mansion, James Hunter, additional, Ong, Swee Hong Gary, additional, Konganuntragul, Pornchuda, additional, Toempromraj, Wararit, additional, Jantasuwanna, Prapaporn, additional, Lee, Choon How, additional, Chia, Boon Shin, additional, and Lewis, David, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Personal NO2 sensor demonstrates feasibility of in-home exposure measurements for pediatric asthma research and management
- Author
-
R. Scott Downen, Quan Dong, Elizabeth Chorvinsky, Baichen Li, Nam Tran, James Hunter Jackson, Dinesh K. Pillai, Mona Zaghloul, and Zhenyu Li
- Subjects
Epidemiology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Toxicology ,Pollution - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. 4D evolution of Cr23C6 precipitates in neutron-irradiated and annealed HT-UPS steel observed via synchrotron micro-computed tomography
- Author
-
Sri Tapaswi Nori, Alejandro Figueroa Bengoa, Jonova Thomas, James Hunter, Peter Kenesei, Jun-Sang Park, Jonathan Almer, and Maria A. Okuniewski
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
High-temperature-ultrafine precipitate strengthened (HT-UPS) steel is a potential structural material for advanced nuclear reactors; however, its irradiation response is not well understood. This research provides insight into irradiation-induced effects, such as precipitate evolution mechanisms and four-dimensional morphological evolution, in HT-UPS steel using synchrotron micro-computed tomography. Identical specimens were characterized pre-irradiation and post-irradiation following neutron exposure up to 0.3 displacements per atom at 600 °C. Irradiation effects were also differentiated from the annealing response of precipitates. Following neutron irradiation, the average Cr23C6 precipitate size reduced, affected by the synergy of nucleation and growth, ballistic dissolution, and inverse coarsening, which was observed at fluences an order of magnitude lower than previously observed. Annealing at 600 °C for 32 h increased the average Cr23C6 precipitate size and decreased the phase fraction, attributed to precipitate coarsening. The precipitate morphology evolution and resultant mechanisms can be utilized to parameterize and validate microstructural models simulating radiation damage or annealing. Graphical abstract
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Lessons Learnt from the Completion Design for a HPHT Sour Gas Field Development in Offshore Sarawak
- Author
-
CW Graham Grant, Parthasarathi Bandyopadhyay, Kittipat Wejwittayaklung, James Hunter Mansion, Swee Hong Gary Ong, Pornchuda Konganuntragul, Wararit Toempromraj, Prapaporn Jantasuwanna, Choon How Lee, Boon Shin Chia, and David Lewis
- Abstract
This paper deals with the lessons learned during the completion design for a HPHT gas field (Field-X) offshore Sarawak, Malaysia. It is a carbonate reservoir with more than 500 meters of the gas column containing between 6-10 tcf of OGIP making it one of the major discoveries in recent years in this region. However, the combination of HPHT and the presence of about 18% CO2 and 2% H2S in the gas makes it a complex development, particularly for well and completion design.To address the challenges associated with the development of this field, a taskforce was formed with personnel from all relevant disciplines to come up with an appropriate design that can help produce from this reservoir safely. The project is now in the detailed design phase where the final aspects of the completion designs are being formulated. Considering that this will be one of the first development in this area with this combination of reservoir conditions, it is expected that the lessons learned from this project will support other future developments too.The paper discusses lessons learned during the design process specifically related to material selection for the highly sour environment, temperature modeling, identification of annulus pressure envelopes and their management, perforation philosophy, and surveillance methods for both reservoir management and well integrity.Another aspect which affects the overall well and completion philosophy for a complex development is the challenges associated with procurement and component qualification. At this stage, the key issues are being identified and will be briefly covered in this paper.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Cardiorespiratory Optimisation By Arteriovenous fistula Ligation after renal Transplantation (COBALT): study protocol for a multicentre randomised interventional feasibility trial
- Author
-
Veena Surendrakumar, Emma Aitken, Patrick Mark, Reza Motallebzadeh, James Hunter, Aimen Amer, Dominic Summers, Kirsten Rennie, Leila Rooshenas, Madalina Garbi, Karl Sylvester, Cara Hudson, Jennifer Banks, Anna Sidders, Andrew Norton, Matthew Slater, Matthew Bartlett, Simon Knight, Gavin Pettigrew, Surendrakumar, Veena [0000-0003-2272-1143], Mark, Patrick [0000-0003-3387-2123], Knight, Simon [0000-0003-4837-9446], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
transplant medicine ,transplant surgery ,Renal Dialysis ,Arteriovenous Fistula ,Humans ,Feasibility Studies ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,General Medicine ,renal transplantation ,Kidney ,Kidney Transplantation ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
Peer reviewed: True, Acknowledgements: We thank Lewis Griffiths (MRC Epidemiology Unit) for their support for the physical activity measurement collection. We also give special thanks to Andrew Norton, our patient representative, who was instrumental in helping us develop this study proposal and securing support and funding from our local kidney patient association., IntroductionCardiovascular events are a major cause of mortality following successful kidney transplantation.Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) are considered the best option for haemodialysis, but may contribute to this excess mortality because they promote adverse cardiac remodelling and ventricular hypertrophy. This raises the question whether recipients with a well-functioning kidney transplant should undergo elective AVF ligation.Methods and analysisThe COBALT feasibility study is a multicentre interventional randomised controlled trial (RCT) that will randomise renal transplant patients with stable graft function and a working AVF on a 1:1 basis to standard care (continued conservative management) or to AVF ligation. All patients will perform cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) on recruitment and 6 months later. Daily functioning and quality of life will be additionally assessed by questionnaire completion and objective measure of physical activity. The primary outcome—the proportion of approached patients who complete the study (incorporating rates of consent, receipt of allocated intervention and completion of both CPETs without withdrawal)—will determine progression to a full-scale RCT. Design of the proposed RCT will be informed by an embedded qualitative assessment of participant and healthcare professional involvement.Ethics and disseminationThis study has been approved by the East Midlands—Derby Research Ethics Committee (22/EM/0002) and the Health Research Authority. The results of this work will be disseminated academically through presentation at national and international renal meetings and via open access, peer-reviewed outputs. Existing networks of renal patient groups will also be used to disseminate the study findings to other key stakeholders.Trial registration numberISRCTN49033491.
- Published
- 2023
26. Patching an aortic tear using the side‐arm and surrounding skirt of a physician‐modified ascending aortic graft
- Author
-
William Mitchell, James Hunter Mehaffey, John A. Kern, and Kenan W. Yount
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Updates in the Pharmacologic Prophylaxis and Treatment of Invasive Candidiasis in the Pediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care Units: Updates in the Pharmacologic Prophylaxis
- Author
-
James Hunter Fly, Seerat Kapoor, Kelly Bobo, and Jeremy S. Stultz
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,History ,Anthropology ,Language and Linguistics - Abstract
Purpose of review The goal of this review was to provide an update on the prevention and treatment options for invasive candidiasis (IC) in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Recent findings Studies have further validated the use of fluconazole for IC prophylaxis among high-risk patients in the NICU. It remains unclear if prophylaxis leads to resistance development and the ideal dosage regimen is still not clear. Recent studies have been published comparing caspofungin and micafungin to amphotericin B and illustrated similar efficacy outcomes in the NICU. Micafungin now has approval from the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in infants Summary Fluconazole prophylaxis remains a reasonable strategy in select NICU patients, although further analyses of resistance and the optimal dosage regimen are needed. Echinocandins are potential therapeutic options for non-meningitis or urinary tract infections in both the neonatal and pediatric population.
- Published
- 2022
28. Two bright, optically clear, intrinsic fast-neutron and charged-particle detector materials for neutron imaging and other applications
- Author
-
Ronald Nelson, Brenden Wiggins, Markus Hehlen, Donald Gautier, James Hunter, Michelle Espy, Igor Usov, Neliza Leon Brito, and Douglas Vodnik
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Environmental Changes and the Impact on the Human Infections by Dengue, Chikungunya and Zika Viruses in Northern Brazil, 2010–2019
- Author
-
Robson dos Santos Souza Marinho, Rodrigo Lopes Sanz Duro, Mânlio Tasso de Oliveira Mota, James Hunter, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz, Fernando Shinji Kawakubo, and Shirley Vasconcelos Komninakis
- Subjects
Dengue ,Zika Virus Infection ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Chikungunya Fever ,Humans ,environmental change ,arbovirus infections ,human ,Brazil ,Zika Virus ,Dengue Virus - Abstract
Environmental changes are among the main factors that contribute to the emergence or re-emergence of viruses of public health importance. Here, we show the impact of environmental modifications on cases of infections by the dengue, chikungunya and Zika viruses in humans in the state of Tocantins, Brazil, between the years 2010 and 2019. We conducted a descriptive and principal component analysis (PCA) to explore the main trends in environmental modifications and in the cases of human infections caused by these arboviruses in Tocantins. Our analysis demonstrated that the occurrence of El Niño, deforestation in the Cerrado and maximum temperatures had correlations with the cases of infections by the Zika virus between 2014 and 2016. El Niño, followed by La Niña, a gradual increase in precipitation and the maximum temperature observed between 2015 and 2017 were shown to have contributed to the infections by the chikungunya virus. La Niña and precipitation were associated with infections by the dengue virus between 2010 and 2012 and El Niño contributed to the 2019 outbreak observed within the state. By PCA, deforestation, temperatures and El Niño were the most important variables related to cases of dengue in humans. We conclude from this analysis that environmental changes (deforestation and climate change) presented a strong influence on the human infections caused by the dengue, chikungunya and Zika viruses in Tocantins from 2010 to 2019.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A Segmentation Strategy for Structures with Common Mode Coupling
- Author
-
James Hunter, Shengxuan Xia, Aaron Harmon, Mohamed Z. M. Hamdalla, Ahmed M. Hassan, Victor Khilkevich, and Daryl G. Beetner
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A Fast Cascading Method for Predicting the Coupling from External Plane Waves to PCBs
- Author
-
Shengxuan Xia, James Hunter, Aaron Harmon, Mohamed Z. M. Hamdalla, Ahmed M. Hassan, Chulsoon Hwang, Victor Khilkevich, and Daryl G. Beetner
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Cardiac Enhanced Recovery Program Implementation and Its Effect on Opioid Administration in Adult Cardiac Surgery
- Author
-
Jolian J Dahl, Elizabeth D Krebs, Nicholas R Teman, Matthew Hulse, Robert H Thiele, Karen Singh, Kenan W Yount, Robert B. Hawkins, James Hunter Mehaffey, Emily Downs, Judy Smith, April Howell, Allison Kirkner, Bethany M Sarosiek, and Bakhtiar Chaudry
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
In light of the worsening opioid epidemic and nationwide parenteral opioid shortage, our institution created an enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol. Our objective was to evaluate our initial experience transitioning to ERAS in cardiac surgery. An institutional cardiac ERAS protocol was implemented in April 2018, consisting of opioid-sparing analgesia, liberalization of fasting and activity restrictions, and goal-directed standardization of perioperative care. Clinical outcomes, opioid administration, and pain scores of patients undergoing nonemergent cardiac surgery were reviewed from March 2017 to July 2018. Patients were propensity score matched into pre-ERAS and transition-to-ERAS (t-ERAS) cohorts and compared by univariate analysis. Of 467 patients, 236 patients were well-matched (118 per cohort). The transition to ERAS resulted in a 79% reduction in morphine equivalents through postoperative day 1 (359.3 mg pre-ERAS vs 75.4 mg ERAS, P0.0001). Despite less opioid utilization, t-ERAS patients reported lower pain scores (median 4.88 vs 4.14, P = 0.011). There was no difference in mortality (2% vs 0%, P = 0.498) or postoperative complications including initial hours ventilated (5.3 vs 5.2 hours, P = 0.380), prolonged ventilation (9.3% vs 6.8%, P = 0.473), renal failure (3.4% vs 2.5%, P = 0.701), and ICU length of stay (58.3 vs 70.4 hours, P = 0.272). The transition to cardiac ERAS resulted in significantly reduced opioid administration and improved patient pain scores while maintaining excellent outcomes. Well-supported, multidisciplinary teams of cardiac surgeons, anesthesiologists, and intensivists can dramatically reduce opioid use without sacrificing pain control or excellent clinical outcomes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cardiac Enhanced Recovery Program Implementation and Its Effect on Opioid Administration in Adult Cardiac Surgery
- Author
-
Dahl, Jolian J, primary, Krebs, Elizabeth D, additional, Teman, Nicholas R, additional, Hulse, Matthew, additional, Thiele, Robert H, additional, Singh, Karen, additional, Yount, Kenan W, additional, Hawkins, Robert B., additional, Mehaffey, James Hunter, additional, Downs, Emily, additional, Smith, Judy, additional, Howell, April, additional, Kirkner, Allison, additional, Sarosiek, Bethany M, additional, and Chaudry, Bakhtiar, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Patching an aortic tear using the side‐arm and surrounding skirt of a physician‐modified ascending aortic graft
- Author
-
Mitchell, William, primary, Mehaffey, James Hunter, additional, Kern, John A., additional, and Yount, Kenan W., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Successful Drilling of the Deepest and Hottest HPHT Carbonate Well in Central Luconia, Off the Coast of Sarawak, Offshore Malaysia
- Author
-
Swee Hong Gary Ong, Warapong Dejdamrongpreecha, Pawan Sookparkkit, Ungku Syafena Ungku Hamzah, Boon Shin Chia, Rurizalakmal Udin, Marzuki Zulkarnain, James Hunter Manson, Chevit Phasook, Lawrence Umar, and Nitipong Kongpat
- Abstract
HPHT wells are typically associated with high complexity, technically challenging, long duration, high risk and high NPT as many things could go wrong especially when any of the critical nitty- gritty details are overlooked. The complexity is amplified with high risk of losses in carbonate reservoir with high level of contaminants compounded by the requirement of high mud weight above 17 ppg during monsoon season in an offshore environment. The above sums up the challenges an operator had to manage in a groundbreaking HPHT carbonate appraisal well which had successfully pushed the historical envelope of such well category in Central Luconia area, off the coast of Sarawak where one of the new records of the deepest and hottest carbonate HPHT well had been created. This well took almost 4 months to drill with production testing carried out in a safe and efficient manner whereby more than 4000m of vertical interval was covered by 6 hole sections. With the seamless support from host authority, JV partners and all contractors, the well was successfully delivered within the planned duration and cost, despite the extreme challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper will share the experience of the entire cycle from pre job engineering/planning, execution and key lesson learnt for future exploitations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. MeVXRay-23A: We aim to increase the laser-driven MeV x-ray yield to ~ 4-6 Rads/shot (~2-3X increase) using novel target designs suitable for weapons radiography [Slides]
- Author
-
Sasikumar Palaniyappan, Donald Gautier, Joseph Strehlow, Brian Albright, Lin Yin, and James Hunter
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How does informalisation encourage or inhibit collective action by migrant workers? A comparative analysis of logistics warehouses in Italy and hand car washes in Britain
- Author
-
Gabriella Cioce, Ian Clark, and James Hunter
- Subjects
Industrial relations - Abstract
Cross-national research is key to understanding the global presence of informal and non-compliant workplaces. This article comparatively examines how informalisation encourages or inhibits collective action led by migrant workers employed in Italian logistics warehouses (LWs) and the British hand car washes (HCWs). The term collective action derives from mobilisation theory and refers to joint resistance initiatives developed by workers and labour organisations to improve work conditions. The article argues that migrant labour does not necessarily lead to informal practices and claims that labour market regulatory agencies and trade unions play an important but dialectical role in responding to labour market non-compliance and informality. Finally, it notes that sector-based specificities contribute to and potentially inhibit the emergence of collective dynamics in such workplaces.
- Published
- 2022
38. Successful Drilling of the Deepest and Hottest HPHT Carbonate Well in Central Luconia, Off the Coast of Sarawak, Offshore Malaysia
- Author
-
Ong, Swee Hong Gary, additional, Dejdamrongpreecha, Warapong, additional, Sookparkkit, Pawan, additional, Ungku Hamzah, Ungku Syafena, additional, Chia, Boon Shin, additional, Udin, Rurizalakmal, additional, Zulkarnain, Marzuki, additional, Manson, James Hunter, additional, Phasook, Chevit, additional, Umar, Lawrence, additional, and Kongpat, Nitipong, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Identifying the adoption of policing styles: A methodology for determining the commitment to problem-oriented policing amongst police forces in England and Wales
- Author
-
Ferhat Tura, James Hunter, Rebecca Thompson, and Andromachi Tseloni
- Subjects
Law - Abstract
Previous research consistently demonstrates that problem-oriented policing (POP) can address a range of policing issues; hence its continued appeal and relevance to current practice. However, there are well-documented challenges in terms of its implementation and sustenance within police forces. Studies of policing styles have yet to thoroughly assess the long-term commitment to POP within police forces in England and Wales. To this end, we first revisit and revise previous research findings on policing styles. Then, we advance a methodology for retrospectively measuring police force POP commitment using two novel indicators—problem-oriented projects submitted to the Tilley Award and those applied as part of the Crime Reduction Programme. We then rank police forces in terms of POP commitment. The empirical evidence and methodology presented here can be used to further examine contemporary adherence to POP as well as the role of policing styles in long-term crime falls or other policing outcomes in England and Wales.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. STUDENT FLUENCY AND TEACHER AUTHORITY
- Author
-
James Hunter
- Subjects
ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION - Abstract
In an early issue of Journey, Prasetianto (2019) argues that the best way to promote oral fluency in the Indonesian context is through information gap activities, and that small-group discussion activities are not appropriate. This article addresses misunderstandings in this position and clarifies why true communicative competence cannot be developed in controlled activities like information gaps. It discusses the role of accuracy in communicative competence, particularly in relation to emerging varieties of English, and notes the reluctance of some teachers to remove themselves from the center of the classroom and allow students to engage in authentic discussion, which is essential for the development of true fluency. Finally, it presents research indicating that students overwhelmingly value the opportunity to engage in authentic conversation with each other and the ability to see and correct their mistakes. Through this response to a critique of a student-led activity, I hope to demonstrate that a more learner-centered approach to oral communication and corrective feedback is possible, effective, and enthusiastically welcomed by our students.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Rapid Determination of Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Gram-Negative Bacteria from Clinical Blood Cultures Using a Scattered Light Integrated Collection (SLIC) Device
- Author
-
Kerry Falconer, Robert James Hunter Hammond, Benjamin J. Parcell, and Stephen Henry Gillespie
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Bioreator Media for Treatment of Slag Leachate
- Author
-
James Hunter and Dong hee Kang
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Can language learners hear their own errors? The identification of grammaticality in one’s own production
- Author
-
James Hunter
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Language and Linguistics ,Education - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rapid Determination of Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Gram-Negative Bacteria from Clinical Blood Cultures Using a Scattered Light Integrated Collection (SLIC) Device
- Author
-
Falconer, Kerry, primary, Hammond, Robert James Hunter, additional, Parcell, Benjamin J., additional, and Gillespie, Stephen Henry, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Corrigendum to 'Nitazoxanide superiority to placebo to treat moderate COVID-19 – A Pilot prove of concept randomized double-blind clinical trial.' [EClinicalMedicine 37 (2021) 100981]
- Author
-
Alexandre Soeiro, Acioly Lacerda, Florentino Cardoso, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz, Alda Maria Da-Cruz, Paulo Tierno, Sergio Cimerman, N Mantovani, Joanna Reis Santos-Oliveira, Luis Mário Ramos Janini, James Hunter, Danilo Rocha Dias, Nancy Bellei, Marcella Vassao, Vinicius Fontanesi Blum, Juliana Terzi Maricato, and Juliana Galinskas
- Subjects
2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (General) ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,MEDLINE ,Nitazoxanide ,General Medicine ,Placebo ,Clinical trial ,Double blind ,R5-920 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Corrigendum ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2021
46. Latency-associated DNA methylation patterns among HIV-1 infected individuals with distinct disease progression courses or antiretroviral virologic response
- Author
-
Alexandre Defelicibus, N Mantovani, Israel Tojal da Silva, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz, Shirley Vasconcelos Komninakis, James Hunter, Simone de Barros Tenore, Rodrigo Lopes Sanz Duro, Jorge Casseb, Alberto José da Silva Duarte, M Cicero, Milton Yutaka Nishiyama-Jr, Bosco Christiano Maciel da Silva, Daniela Funayama de Castro, Rafael Arnold, Inácio L.M. Junqueira-de-Azevedo, and Luiz Claudio Santana
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Sustained Virologic Response ,Science ,Bisulfite sequencing ,HIV Infections ,Biology ,Article ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Gene expression ,Humans ,Epigenetics ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Gene ,Multidisciplinary ,DNA methylation ,Methylation ,Middle Aged ,Virus Latency ,Differentially methylated regions ,chemistry ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Viral infection ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,Disease Progression ,HIV-1 ,Medicine ,CpG Islands ,Female ,Epigenetics analysis ,DNA ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
DNA methylation is one of the epigenetic modifications that configures gene transcription programs. This study describes the DNA methylation profile of HIV-infected individuals with distinct characteristics related to natural and artificial viremia control. Sheared DNA from circulating mononuclear cells was subjected to target enrichment bisulfite sequencing designed to cover CpG-rich genomic regions. Gene expression was assessed through RNA-seq. Hypermethylation in virologic responders was highly distributed closer to Transcription Start Sites (p-value = 0.03). Hyper and hypomethylation levels within TSS adjacencies varied according to disease progression status (Kruskal–Wallis, p
- Published
- 2021
47. Abdominal multiorgan procurement from slaughterhouse pigs: a bespoke model in organ donation after circulatory death for ex vivo organ perfusion compliant with the 3 Rs (Reduction, Replacement & Refinement)
- Author
-
Fungai Dengu, Flavia Neri, Etohan Ogbemudia, Georg Ebeling, Laura Knijff, Kaithlyn Rozenberg, Richard Dumbill, Julien Branchereau, Peter Friend, Rutger Ploeg, and James Hunter
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Dance Called America : The Scottish Highlands, the United States and Canada
- Author
-
James Hunter and James Hunter
- Abstract
A dance was devised in eighteenth-century Skye. An exhilarating dance. A dance, a visitor reports,'the emigration from Skye has occasioned'. The visitor asks for the dance's name.'They call it America,'he's told. In his introduction to this new edition of his classic and pioneering account of what happened to the thousands of people who left Skye and the wider north of Scotland to make new lives across the sea, historian James Hunter reflects on what led him to embark on travels and researches that took him across a continent. To Georgia, North Carolina and Montana; to Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario and the Mohawk Valley; to prairie farms and great cities; to the Rocky Mountains, British Columbia and Washington State. This is the story of the Highland impact on the New World. The story of how soldiers, explorers, guerrilla fighters, fur traders, lumberjacks, railway builders and settlers from Scotland's glens and islands contributed so much to the USA and Canada. It is the story of how a hard-pressed people found in North America a land of opportunity.
- Published
- 2022
49. The clinical course of hospitalized moderately ill COVID-19 patients is mirrored by routine hematologic tests and influenced by renal transplantation
- Author
-
Giuseppe Gianini Figueirêdo Leite, Paula M Peçanha-Pietrobom, Reinaldo Salomão, James Hunter, Marcelo Nascimento Burattini, Jaquelina S. Ota-Arakaki, Nancy Bellei, and Paulo Roberto Abrão Ferreira
- Subjects
Male ,Viral Diseases ,Neutrophils ,Disease ,Hematocrit ,Biochemistry ,White Blood Cells ,Medical Conditions ,Animal Cells ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Lymphocytes ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Kidney transplantation ,Virus Testing ,Kidney ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Hospitals ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Creatinine ,Cohort ,Female ,Cellular Types ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Immune Cells ,Science ,Immunology ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Hemoglobin ,Aged ,Blood Cells ,business.industry ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,COVID-19 ,Covid 19 ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,Health Care ,Transplantation ,Health Care Facilities ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Several studies of patients with COVID-19 have evaluated biological markers for predicting outcomes, most of them retrospectively and with a wide scope of clinical severity. We followed a prospective cohort of patients admitted in hospital wards with moderate COVID-19 disease, including those with a history of kidney transplantation, and examined the ability of changes in routine hematologic laboratory parameters to predict and mirror the patients’ clinical course regarding the severity of their condition (classified as critical vs. non-critical) and in-hospital mortality or hospital discharge. Among the 68 patients, 20 (29%) were kidney transplanted patients (KT), and they had much higher mortality than non-kidney transplanted patients in this cohort (40% X 8.3%). Lymphocytes, neutrophils and neutrophils/lymphocytes ratio (NLR) at admission and platelets as well as the red blood cells parameters hemoglobin, hematocrit, and RDW by the time of hospital discharge or death clearly differentiated patients progressing to critical disease and those with clinical recovery. Patients with deteriorating clinical courses presented elevated and similar NLRs during the first week of hospitalization. However, they were dramatically different at hospital discharge, with a decrease in the survivors (NLR around 5.5) and sustained elevation in non-survivors (NLR around 21). Platelets also could distinguish survivors from non-survivors among the critical patients. In conclusion, routine hematologic tests are useful to monitor the clinical course of COVID-19 patients admitted with moderate disease. Unexpectedly, changes in hematologic tests, including lymphopenia, were not predictive of complicated outcomes among KT recipients.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Radical and Transition Metal Strategies for Methodology Development
- Author
-
Herbort, James Hunter
- Subjects
- Chemistry
- Abstract
Organic chemistry is truly an applied science. Many of the common materials and medicines that society relies upon are made from organic reactions that are robust, reliable, and mechanistically well understood. The research of developing, improving, and understanding reactions is known as “Methodology Development” and has many different applications in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, and materials. As the next generation of challenging molecules comes down the pharmaceutical pipeline, novel strategies and methodologies are needed to minimize waste, utilize simple materials, and expedite the synthetic process. In this vein, selective functionalization of C-H bonds is an attractive strategy because it utilizes the most common motif in organic chemistry (a carbon-hydrogen bond) as a precursor to more complex structures. Broadly, there are many different approaches for approaching C-H functionalization, some of which are outlined in the subsequent chapters.Chapter 1 introduces the field of radical C-H functionalization via Hydrogen atom transfer (HAT)-based strategies, which form the basis of chapters 2, 4, and 5.Chapter 2 details the first strategy to access oxazoles via commercially available alcohols and nitriles. This is accomplished via the intermediacy of an imidate radical chaperone, which undergoes a double oxidation via intramolecular HAT to form an oxazoline intermediate, followed by intermolecular HAT from an acetoxy radical to furnish a library of substituted oxazoles. Chapter 3 describes the synthesis of functionalized pyrrolidines from 1,6-enynes and feedstock olefins through organometallic intermediates. The scope of this transformation is explored with ethylene and acrylates, which provide different selectivity in C-C bond formation in the product. This mechanistic divergence is examined through a combined experimental and computational analysis. Chapter 4 discloses the development of a new vinyl sulfonamide radical chaperone. This chaperone is able to realize remote desaturation of aliphatic amines via cobalt catalyzed metal hydrogen atom transfer(MHAT), 1,6-C to C HAT, and MHAT sequence to access homo-allylic amines. Additionally, this formal transfer dehydrogenation can be interrupted by the addition of radical traps to furnish γ-functionalized amines. Chapter 5 features preliminary results from an ongoing project which utilizes the MHAT strategy in Chapter 4 with aniline and benzylamine derived vinyl sulfonamides to access γ- and δ- sultams. Competition and deuterium labeling experiments provide insight into the native selectivity and catalyst turnover steps.
- Published
- 2022
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.