1,757 results on '"Dunn, James"'
Search Results
2. Spring-mediated distraction enterogenesis may alter the course of adaptation in porcine short bowel syndrome
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Bautista, Geoanna M, Dubrovsky, Genia, Sweeney, Nicolle K, Solórzano-Vargas, RS, Tancredi, Daniel J, Lewis, Michael, Stelzner, Mattias, Martín, Martín G, and Dunn, James CY
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Women's Health ,Digestive Diseases ,intestinal failure ,intestinal lengthening ,neonatal short bowel syndrome ,short bowel syndrome ,spring-mediated enterogenesis - Abstract
IntroductionSevere forms of short bowel syndrome (SBS) resulting in chronic intestinal failure (IF) have limited therapeutic options, all of which are associated with significant morbidities. Spring-mediated distraction enterogenesis (SMDE) uses an intraluminal self-expanding spring to generate mechanical force to induce intestinal stretching and sustained axial growth, providing a promising novel approach for patients with SBS. Previous studies have established this method to be safe and effective in small and large animal models. However, SMDE has previously not been implemented in a large, clinically relevant animal model.MethodsJuvenile mini-Yucatan pigs with 75% of their small intestine resected had intraluminal springs placed after an initial adaptive period. Morphological and histological assessments were performed on SMDE segments compared to the control region of the intestine undergoing normal adaptive responses to resection.ResultsWhile the initial histologic adaptive response observed following resection was attenuated after a month, the SMDE segments instead augmented these adaptive changes. Specifically, intestinal length increased 2-fold in SMDE segments, and the widths of the epithelial, muscularis, and serosal layers were enhanced in SMDE compared with control segments of the same animal. This data suggests that morphologic intestinal adaptation may be enhanced with SMDE in the setting of SBS.DiscussionHere we demonstrate the successful and reproducible implementation of SMDE in a large animal model in the setting of prior intestinal resection, making SMDE a viable and novel approach for SBS to be explored further.
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- 2024
3. Jack of all trades, master of one: domain-specific and domain-general contributions to perceptual expertise in visual comparison
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Growns, Bethany, Dunn, James D., Helm, Rebecca K., Towler, Alice, Mattijssen, Erwin J. A. T., and Martire, Kristy A.
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- 2024
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4. An Engineered Living Intestinal Muscle Patch Produces Macroscopic Contractions that can Mix and Break Down Artificial Intestinal Contents.
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Wang, Qianqian, Wang, Jiafang, Tokhtaeva, Elmira, Li, Zhen, Martín, Martín, Ling, Xuefeng, and Dunn, James
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intestinal smooth muscle regeneration ,intestinal tissue engineering ,living building blocks ,Humans ,Muscle ,Smooth ,Gastrointestinal Contents ,Intestines ,Tissue Engineering ,Muscle Contraction ,Biological Factors - Abstract
The intestinal muscle layers execute various gut wall movements to achieve controlled propulsion and mixing of intestinal content. Engineering intestinal muscle layers with complex contractile function is critical for developing bioartificial intestinal tissue to treat patients with short bowel syndrome. Here, the first demonstration of a living intestinal muscle patch capable of generating three distinct motility patterns and displaying multiple digesta manipulations is reported. Assessment of contractility, cellular morphology, and transcriptome profile reveals that successful generation of the contracting muscle patch relies on both biological factors in a serum-free medium and environmental cues from an elastic electrospun gelatin scaffold. By comparing gene-expression patterns among samples, it is shown that biological factors from the medium strongly affect ion-transport activities, while the scaffold unexpectedly regulates cell-cell communication. Analysis of ligandreceptor interactome identifies scaffold-driven changes in intercellular communication, and 78% of the upregulated ligand-receptor interactions are involved in the development and function of enteric neurons. The discoveries highlight the importance of combining biomolecular and biomaterial approaches for tissue engineering. The living intestinal muscle patch represents a pivotal advancement for building functional replacement intestinal tissue. It offers a more physiological model for studying GI motility and for preclinical drug discovery.
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- 2023
5. Using face averages to measure differential accuracy for demographic groups in facial recognition
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Dunn, James and White, David
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Computer Science ,Psychology ,Face Processing ,Representation ,Neural Networks - Abstract
Facial recognition Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) and humans both show systematic differences in face recognition accuracy for different demographic groups. Differential accuracy has been shown due to race, age and gender, raising important questions about the impact of facial recognition decisions on the fairness of society. Current methods for measuring bias require curating large databases of face images, which is labor-intensive, producing bespoke tests that cannot be easily shared or standardized due to data privacy. Here we develop a novel solution to this problem inspired by psychological research in face perception. We ask whether face averages can be used to predict face recognition accuracy differentials for DNNs and humans. We generate sets of average images from random samples of exemplar faces from a demographic group to measure the density of these sets in representational space. We find that this approach provides reliable predictions of differential accuracy across demographic groups in both DNNs and human participants. However, we also find evidence that face averages were not represented in the center of face categories. This finding should be addressed in future development of our approach, and also challenges influential cognitive models of face identity representation.
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- 2023
6. Should judges join in?: A normative study of joint judgments in selected Australian intermediate appellate courts
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Dunn, James Anthony John
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- 2021
7. Effect of a neighbourhood intervention on social cohesion in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
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Young, Marisa, Halapy, Erika, and Dunn, James R.
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- 2024
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8. A tissue-like neurotransmitter sensor for the brain and gut
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Li, Jinxing, Liu, Yuxin, Yuan, Lei, Zhang, Baibing, Bishop, Estelle Spear, Wang, Kecheng, Tang, Jing, Zheng, Yu-Qing, Xu, Wenhui, Niu, Simiao, Beker, Levent, Li, Thomas L, Chen, Gan, Diyaolu, Modupeola, Thomas, Anne-Laure, Mottini, Vittorio, Tok, Jeffrey B-H, Dunn, James CY, Cui, Bianxiao, Pașca, Sergiu P, Cui, Yi, Habtezion, Aida, Chen, Xiaoke, and Bao, Zhenan
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Neurosciences ,Biotechnology ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Neurological ,Animals ,Biosensing Techniques ,Brain ,Brain-Gut Axis ,Elastomers ,Enteric Nervous System ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Graphite ,Lasers ,Mice ,Nanoparticles ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Serotonin ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Neurotransmitters play essential roles in regulating neural circuit dynamics both in the central nervous system as well as at the peripheral, including the gastrointestinal tract1-3. Their real-time monitoring will offer critical information for understanding neural function and diagnosing disease1-3. However, bioelectronic tools to monitor the dynamics of neurotransmitters in vivo, especially in the enteric nervous systems, are underdeveloped. This is mainly owing to the limited availability of biosensing tools that are capable of examining soft, complex and actively moving organs. Here we introduce a tissue-mimicking, stretchable, neurochemical biological interface termed NeuroString, which is prepared by laser patterning of a metal-complexed polyimide into an interconnected graphene/nanoparticle network embedded in an elastomer. NeuroString sensors allow chronic in vivo real-time, multichannel and multiplexed monoamine sensing in the brain of behaving mouse, as well as measuring serotonin dynamics in the gut without undesired stimulations and perturbing peristaltic movements. The described elastic and conformable biosensing interface has broad potential for studying the impact of neurotransmitters on gut microbes, brain-gut communication and may ultimately be extended to biomolecular sensing in other soft organs across the body.
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- 2022
9. Critical Cultural Awareness and Learning through Digital Environments
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Dunn, James D.
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Students with cultural and linguistic competence are needed to navigate an increasingly globalized society. This study collected and analyzed cultural awareness data from students who communicated with people of other cultures through Virtual Reality (VR) environments. Students from a private university in Japan engaged in directed communication with other students from the USA using an online virtual chat program. A questionnaire based on the Global Perspectives Inventory (GPI) was used by the students to self-report their views on the intercultural interactions and give a metacognitive analysis of their intercultural competence/knowledge of intercultural phenomena. In addition to directed communicative objectives, students were given the chance to engage in free conversation in the digital space created by the software to facilitate intercultural critical cultural awareness skills. Early findings show that students were able to improve critical cultural awareness through a virtual experience. [For the complete proceedings, see ED600837.]
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- 2019
10. Diverse types of expertise in facial recognition
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Towler, Alice, Dunn, James D., Castro Martínez, Sergio, Moreton, Reuben, Eklöf, Fredrick, Ruifrok, Arnout, Kemp, Richard I., and White, David
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- 2023
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11. Differences between male and female patients with pilonidal disease
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Chiu, Bill, Abrajano, Claire, Shimada, Hiroyuki, Yousefi, Razie, Dalusag, Kyla, Adams, Madeline, Su, Wendy, Hui, Thomas, Mueller, Claudia, Fuchs, Julie, and Dunn, James
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- 2024
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12. Vertebral compression fractures in pediatric patients with intestinal failure: A prospective observational case series.
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Smith, Asia, Namjoshi, Shweta S., Bachrach, Laura K., Grover, Monica, Hoyer, Christine, Dunn, James CY, Hanudel, Mark R., and Kinberg, Sivan
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- 2024
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13. Butyrate induces development-dependent necrotizing enterocolitis-like intestinal epithelial injury via necroptosis
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Wang, Kewei, Tao, Guo-Zhong, Salimi-Jazi, Fereshteh, Lin, Po-Yu, Sun, Zhen, Liu, Bo, Sinclair, Tiffany, Mostaghimi, Mirko, Dunn, James, and Sylvester, Karl G.
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- 2023
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14. Initial Laparotomy Versus Peritoneal Drainage in Extremely Low Birthweight Infants With Surgical Necrotizing Enterocolitis or Isolated Intestinal Perforation: A Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Blakely, Martin L, Tyson, Jon E, Lally, Kevin P, Hintz, Susan R, Eggleston, Barry, Stevenson, David K, Besner, Gail E, Das, Abhik, Ohls, Robin K, Truog, William E, Nelin, Leif D, Poindexter, Brenda B, Pedroza, Claudia, Walsh, Michele C, Stoll, Barbara J, Geller, Rachel, Kennedy, Kathleen A, Dimmitt, Reed A, Carlo, Waldemar A, Cotten, C Michael, Laptook, Abbot R, Van Meurs, Krisa P, Calkins, Kara L, Sokol, Gregory M, Sanchez, Pablo J, Wyckoff, Myra H, Patel, Ravi M, Frantz, Ivan D, Shankaran, Seetha, D'Angio, Carl T, Yoder, Bradley A, Bell, Edward F, Watterberg, Kristi L, Martin, Colin A, Harmon, Carroll M, Rice, Henry, Kurkchubasche, Arlet G, Sylvester, Karl, Dunn, James CY, Markel, Troy A, Diesen, Diana L, Bhatia, Amina M, Flake, Alan, Chwals, Walter J, Brown, Rebeccah, Bass, Kathryn D, St Peter, Shawn D, Shanti, Christina M, Pegoli, Walter, Skarda, David, Shilyansky, Joel, Lemon, David G, Mosquera, Ricardo A, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Goldstein, Ricki F, Vohr, Betty R, Purdy, Isabell B, Hines, Abbey C, Maitre, Nathalie L, Heyne, Roy J, DeMauro, Sara B, McGowan, Elisabeth C, Yolton, Kimberly, Kilbride, Howard W, Natarajan, Girija, Yost, Kelley, Winter, Sarah, Colaizy, Tarah T, Laughon, Matthew M, Lakshminrusimha, Satyanarayana, and Higgins, Rosemary D
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Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Clinical Research ,Infant Mortality ,Rare Diseases ,Digestive Diseases ,Preterm ,Low Birth Weight and Health of the Newborn ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Good Health and Well Being ,Drainage ,Enterocolitis ,Necrotizing ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Extremely Low Birth Weight ,Infant ,Newborn ,Infant ,Premature ,Infant ,Premature ,Diseases ,Intestinal Perforation ,Laparotomy ,Male ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,isolated intestinal perforation ,neonatal surgery ,premature infant ,randomized clinical trial ,surgical necrotizing enterocolitis ,Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health ,Human Development Neonatal Research Network ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Surgery - Abstract
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine which initial surgical treatment results in the lowest rate of death or neurodevelopmental impairment (NDI) in premature infants with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) or isolated intestinal perforation (IP).Summary background dataThe impact of initial laparotomy versus peritoneal drainage for NEC or IP on the rate of death or NDI in extremely low birth weight infants is unknown.MethodsWe conducted the largest feasible randomized trial in 20 US centers, comparing initial laparotomy versus peritoneal drainage. The primary outcome was a composite of death or NDI at 18 to 22 months corrected age, analyzed using prespecified frequentist and Bayesian approaches.ResultsOf 992 eligible infants, 310 were randomized and 96% had primary outcome assessed. Death or NDI occurred in 69% of infants in the laparotomy group versus 70% with drainage [adjusted relative risk (aRR) 1.0; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.87-1.14]. A preplanned analysis identified an interaction between preoperative diagnosis and treatment group (P = 0.03). With a preoperative diagnosis of NEC, death or NDI occurred in 69% after laparotomy versus 85% with drainage (aRR 0.81; 95% CI: 0.64-1.04). The Bayesian posterior probability that laparotomy was beneficial (risk difference
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- 2021
15. Intestinal adaptation following spring insertion into a roux limb in mice
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Portelli, Katherine I, Park, Jun-Beom, Taylor, Jordan S, Thomas, Anne-Laure, Stelzner, Matthias, Martin, Martin G, and Dunn, James CY
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Animals ,Intestines ,Jejunum ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Short Bowel Syndrome ,Tissue Expansion ,Tissue Expansion Devices ,Short bowel syndrome ,Distraction enterogenesis ,Intestinal lengthening ,Intestinal failure ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background/purposeIntraluminal springs have recently been shown to lengthen segments of intestine in a process known as distraction enterogenesis. We hypothesized that biocompatible springs could be used to lengthen defunctionalized murine small intestine and would lead to identifiable intestinal adaptations at the molecular level.MethodsAge and weight matched C57BL/6 mice underwent surgical insertion of nitinol spring-loaded capsules into a Roux limb of jejunum. Segment lengths were measured at initial spring placement and at euthanasia after 14 and 21 days. Histology and gene expression of the Roux limb were evaluated at scarification and compared to untreated control segments.ResultsIntestinal segments loaded with compressed springs lengthened an average of 240%, which was significantly longer than control segments loaded with either empty capsules or uncompressed springs. Muscularis thickening was greater in spring-treated mice compared to controls without springs. Crypt depth and Lgr5+ expression was greater in mice that received compressed spring treatments when compared to control groups.ConclusionsInsertion of a compressed nitinol spring into a Roux limb results in significant intestinal lengthening, smooth muscle thickening, and Lgr5+ expression in a mouse model. The ability to increase small bowel length in a defunctionalized murine model may be used to understand the mechanism of distraction enterogenesis.
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- 2021
16. Verifying Unfamiliar Identities: Effects of Processing Name and Face Information in the Same Identity-Matching Task
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Trinh, Anita, Dunn, James D., and White, David
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Matching the identity of unfamiliar faces is important in applied identity verification tasks, for example when verifying photo ID at border crossings, in secure access areas, or when issuing identity credentials. In these settings, other biographical details--such as name or date of birth on an identity document--are also often compared to existing records, but the impact of these concurrent checks on decisions has not been examined. Here, we asked participants to sequentially compare name, then face information between an ID card and digital records to detect errors. Across four experiments (combined n = 274), despite being told that mismatches between written name pairs and face image pairs were independent, participants were more likely to say that face images matched when names also matched. Across all experiments, we found that this bias was unaffected by the image quality, suggesting that the source of the bias is somewhat independent of perceptual processes. In a final experiment, we show that this decisional bias was found only for name checks, but not when participants were asked to check ID card expiration dates or unrelated object names. We conclude that the bias arises from processing identity information and propose that it operates at the level of unfamiliar person identity representations. Results are interpreted in the context of theoretical models of face processing, and we discuss applied implications.
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- 2022
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17. Statistical Feature Training Improves Fingerprint-Matching Accuracy in Novices and Professional Fingerprint Examiners
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Growns, Bethany, Towler, Alice, Dunn, James D., Salerno, Jessica M., Schweitzer, N. J., and Dror, Itiel E.
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Forensic science practitioners compare visual evidence samples (e.g. fingerprints) and decide if they originate from the same person or different people (i.e. fingerprint 'matching'). These tasks are perceptually and cognitively complex--even practising professionals can make errors--and what limited research exists suggests that existing professional training is ineffective. This paper presents three experiments that demonstrate the benefit of perceptual training derived from mathematical theories that suggest statistically rare features have diagnostic utility in visual comparison tasks. Across three studies (N = 551), we demonstrate that a brief module training participants to focus on statistically rare fingerprint features improves fingerprint-matching performance in both novices and experienced fingerprint examiners. These results have applied importance for improving the professional performance of practising fingerprint examiners, and even other domains where this technique may also be helpful (e.g. radiology or banknote security).
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- 2022
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18. The effect of colonic tissue electrical stimulation and celiac branch of the abdominal vagus nerve neuromodulation on colonic motility in anesthetized pigs
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Larauche, Muriel, Wang, Yushan, Wang, Po‐Min, Dubrovsky, Genia, Lo, Yi‐Kai, Hsiang, En‐Lin, Dunn, James CY, Taché, Yvette, Liu, Wentai, and Million, Mulugeta
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Medical Physiology ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Animals ,Colon ,Electric Stimulation ,Gastrointestinal Motility ,Manometry ,Sus scrofa ,Swine ,Vagus Nerve ,celiac branch of the abdominal vagus nerve ,colon ,electroceuticals ,functional mapping ,manometry ,motility ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences ,Medical physiology - Abstract
BackgroundKnowledge on optimal electrical stimulation (ES) modalities and region-specific functional effects of colonic neuromodulation is lacking. We aimed to map the regional colonic motility in response to ES of (a) the colonic tissue and (b) celiac branch of the abdominal vagus nerve (CBVN) in an anesthetized porcine model.MethodsIn male Yucatan pigs, direct ES (10 Hz, 2 ms, 15 mA) of proximal (pC), transverse (tC), or distal (dC) colon was done using planar flexible multi-electrode array panels and CBVN ES (2 Hz, 0.3-4 ms, 5 mA) using pulse train (PT), continuous (10 min), or square-wave (SW) modalities, with or without afferent nerve block (200 Hz, 0.1 ms, 2 mA). The regional luminal manometric changes were quantified as area under the curve of contractions (AUC) and luminal pressure maps generated. Contractions frequency power spectral analysis was performed. Contraction propagation was assessed using video animation of motility changes.Key resultsDirect colon ES caused visible local circular (pC, tC) or longitudinal (dC) muscle contractions and increased luminal pressure AUC in pC, tC, and dC (143.0 ± 40.7%, 135.8 ± 59.7%, and 142.0 ± 62%, respectively). The colon displayed prominent phasic pressure frequencies ranging from 1 to 12 cpm. Direct pC and tC ES increased the dominant contraction frequency band (1-6 cpm) power locally. Pulse train CBVN ES (2 Hz, 4 ms, 5 mA) triggered pancolonic contractions, reduced by concurrent afferent block. Colon contractions propagated both orally and aborally in short distances.Conclusion and inferencesIn anesthetized pigs, the dominant contraction frequency band is 1-6 cpm. Direct colonic ES causes primarily local contractions. The CBVN ES-induced pancolonic contractions involve central neural network.
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- 2020
19. Tumescent Injections in Subcutaneous Pig Tissue Disperse Fluids Volumetrically and Maintain Elevated Local Concentrations of Additives for Several Hours, Suggesting a Treatment for Drug Resistant Wounds
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Koulakis, John P, Rouch, Joshua, Huynh, Nhan, Wu, Holden H, Dunn, James CY, and Putterman, Seth
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,Biomedical Imaging ,Animals ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Injections ,Subcutaneous ,Subcutaneous Tissue ,Swine ,Wound Infection ,Wounds and Injuries ,antibiotic injections ,antibiotic resistant wounds ,chronic wounds ,hydraulic permeability of subcutaneous tissue ,pig subcutaneous tissue ,subcutaneous injections ,tumescent Injections ,tumescent tissue ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
PurposeBolus injection of fluid into subcutaneous tissue results in accumulation of fluid at the injection site. The fluid does not form a pool. Rather, the injection pressure forces the interstitial matrix to expand to accommodate the excess fluid in its volume, and the fluid becomes bound similar to that in a hydrogel. We seek to understand the properties and dynamics of externally tumesced (swollen) subcutaneous tissue as a first step in assessing whether tumescent antibiotic injections into wounds may provide a novel method of treatment.MethodsSubcutaneous injections of saline are performed in live and dead pigs and the physical properties (volume, expansion ratio, residence time, apparent diffusion constant) of the resulting fluid deposits are observed with diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, and 3D scanning.ResultsSubcutaneous tissue can expand to a few times its initial volume to accommodate the injected fluid, which is dispersed thoroughly throughout the tumescent volume. The fluid spreads to peripheral unexpanded regions over the course of a few minutes, after which it remains in place for several hours. Eventually the circulation absorbs the excess fluid and the tissue returns to its original state.ConclusionsGiven the evidence for dense fluid dispersal and several-hour residence time, a procedure is proposed whereby tumescent antibiotic injections are used to treat drug-resistant skin infections and chronic wounds that extend into the subcutaneous tissue. The procedure has the potential to effectively treat otherwise untreatable wounds by keeping drug concentrations above minimum inhibitory levels for extended lengths of time.
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- 2020
20. Comparison of Surgical and Cadaveric Intestine as a Source of Crypt Culture in Humans
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Scott, Andrew, Olack, Barbara, Rouch, Joshua D, Khalil, Hassan A, Kokubun, Brent A, Lei, Nan Ye, Wang, Jiafang, Solorzano, Sergio, Lewis, Michael, Dunn, James CY, Stelzner, Matthias G, Niland, Joyce C, and Martín, Martín G
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Biological Sciences ,Regenerative Medicine ,Stem Cell Research ,Clinical Research ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Digestive Diseases ,Cadaver ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Cell Differentiation ,Humans ,Intestines ,cadaveric ,surgical ,intestinal stem cells ,Technology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Human small intestinal crypts are the source of intestinal stem cells (ISCs) that are capable of undergoing self-renewal and differentiation to an epithelial layer. The development of methods to expand the ISCs has provided opportunities to model human intestinal epithelial disorders. Human crypt samples are usually obtained from either endoscopic or discarded surgical samples, and are thereby exposed to warm ischemia, which may impair their in vitro growth as three-dimensional culture as spheroids or enteroids. In this study we compared duodenal samples obtained from discarded surgical samples to those isolated from whole-body preserved cadaveric donors to generate in vitro cultures. We also examined the effect of storage solution (phosphate-buffered saline or University of Wisconsin [UW] solution) as well as multiple storage times on crypt isolation and growth in culture. We found that intestinal crypts were successfully isolated from cadaveric tissue stored for up to 144 h post-procurement and also were able to generate enteroids and spheroids in certain media conditions. Surgical samples stored in UW after procurement were sufficiently viable up to 24 h and also allowed the generation of enteroids and spheroids. We conclude that surgical samples stored for up to 24 h post-procurement in UW solution allowed for delayed crypt isolation and viable in vitro cultures. Furthermore, in situ, hypothermic preservation in cadaveric duodenal samples permitted crypt/ISC isolation, and successful culture of spheroids and enteroids from tissues held for up to 6 days post-procurement.
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- 2020
21. Self-reported face recognition abilities moderately predict face-learning skills: Evidence from Italian samples
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Tagliente, Serena, Passarelli, Marcello, D’Elia, Vitiana, Palmisano, Annalisa, Dunn, James D., Masini, Michele, Lanciano, Tiziana, Curci, Antonietta, and Rivolta, Davide
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- 2023
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22. The cellular regulators PTEN and BMI1 help mediate NEUROGENIN-3–induced cell cycle arrest
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Solorzano-Vargas, R Sergio, Bjerknes, Matthew, Wu, S Vincent, Wang, Jiafang, Stelzner, Matthias, Dunn, James CY, Dhawan, Sangeeta, Cheng, Hazel, Georgia, Senta, and Martín, Martín G
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Stem Cell Research ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors ,Cell Cycle Checkpoints ,Cell Line ,Cellular Senescence ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Genes ,p16 ,Humans ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 7 ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Proto-Oncogene Mas ,endocrinology ,neuroendocrinology ,basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor ,pancreatic islet ,intestinal epithelium ,Chemical Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
Neurogenin-3 (NEUROG3) is a helix-loop-helix (HLH) transcription factor involved in the production of endocrine cells in the intestine and pancreas of humans and mice. However, the human NEUROG3 loss-of-function phenotype differs subtly from that in mice, but the reason for this difference remains poorly understood. Because NEUROG3 expression precedes exit of the cell cycle and the expression of endocrine cell markers during differentiation, we investigated the effect of lentivirus-mediated overexpression of the human NEUROG3 gene on the cell cycle of BON4 cells and various human nonendocrine cell lines. NEUROG3 overexpression induced a reversible cell cycle exit, whereas expression of a neuronal lineage homolog, NEUROG1, had no such effect. In endocrine lineage cells, the cellular quiescence induced by short-term NEUROG3 expression required cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (CDKN1A)/p21CIP1 expression. Expression of endocrine differentiation markers required sustained NEUROG3 expression in the quiescent, but not in the senescent, state. Inhibition of the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) pathway reversed quiescence by inducing cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) and reducing p21CIP1 and NEUROG3 protein levels in BON4 cells and human enteroids. We discovered that NEUROG3 expression stimulates expression of CDKN2a/p16INK4a and BMI1 proto-oncogene polycomb ring finger (BMI1), with the latter limiting expression of the former, delaying the onset of CDKN2a/p16INK4a -driven cellular senescence. Furthermore, NEUROG3 bound to the promoters of both CDKN1a/p21CIP1 and BMI1 genes, and BMI1 attenuated NEUROG3 binding to the CDKN1a/p21CIP1 promoter. Our findings reveal how human NEUROG3 integrates inputs from multiple signaling pathways and thereby mediates cell cycle exit at the onset of differentiation.
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- 2019
23. A Wireless Implantable System for Facilitating Gastrointestinal Motility.
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Wang, Po-Min, Dubrovsky, Genia, Dunn, James CY, Lo, Yi-Kai, and Liu, Wentai
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bioelectronics medicine ,electroceuticals ,gastrointestinal stimulation ,implant ,motility ,neuromodulation ,Nanotechnology - Abstract
Gastrointestinal (GI) electrical stimulation has been shown in several studies to be a potential treatment option for GI motility disorders. Despite the promising preliminary research progress, however, its clinical applicability and usability are still unknown and limited due to the lack of a miniaturized versatile implantable stimulator supporting the investigation of effective stimulation patterns for facilitating GI dysmotility. In this paper, we present a wireless implantable GI modulation system to fill this technology gap. The system consists of a wireless extraluminal gastrointestinal modulation device (EGMD) performing GI electrical stimulation, and a rendezvous device (RD) and a custom-made graphical user interface (GUI) outside the body to wirelessly power and configure the EGMD to provide the desired stimuli for modulating GI smooth muscle activities. The system prototype was validated in bench-top and in vivo tests. The GI modulation system demonstrated its potential for facilitating intestinal transit in the preliminary in vivo chronic study using porcine models.
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- 2019
24. Chemical Composition and Antioxidant Properties of Essential Oils from Peppermint, Native Spearmint and Scotch Spearmint.
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Wu, Zhaohai, Tan, Bie, Liu, Yanhong, Dunn, James, Martorell Guerola, Patricia, Tortajada, Marta, Cao, Zhijun, and Ji, Peng
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Cell Line ,Animals ,Swine ,Mentha piperita ,Phenols ,Oils ,Volatile ,Plant Extracts ,Antioxidants ,Cell Survival ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Phytochemicals ,antioxidant activity ,essential oil ,peppermint ,spearmint ,Oils ,Volatile ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Theoretical and Computational Chemistry - Abstract
Natural antioxidants have drawn growing interest for use in animal feed and the food industry. In the current study, essential oils (EOs) obtained from hydrodistillation of three mentha species, including Mentha piperita (peppermint), Mentha spicata (native spearmint) and Mentha gracilis (Scotch spearmint), harvested in the Midwest region in the United States, were analyzed for their chemical composition using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and their antioxidant properties were assessed through chemical assays, in vitro cell culture modeling and in Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). The activity of ferric iron reduction and free-radical scavenging capacity were assessed through chemical-based assays, including the reducing power assay, 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical scavenging assay, and Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity assay (TEAC). Subsequently, the capacity of EOs to mitigate lipid peroxidation was analyzed at various doses using fresh liver homogenates from pigs. A porcine jejunum epithelial cell line (IPEC-J2) was employed as in vitro model to study the cellular antioxidant activity of the mint EOs. Finally, the effectiveness of mint EOs to alleviate acute systemic oxidative damage were evaluated in vivo using C. elegans. Data were analyzed by the MIXED procedure of SAS. Contrast statement was performed to assess linear or quadratic effects of mint EOs given at various doses. All three EOs are mostly composed of monoterpenes and their derivatives (76-90%), but differed in the major compounds, which are menthol and menthone (50%) in peppermint EO and carvone (70%) in spearmint EOs. Three mint EOs demonstrated prominent radical scavenging and Fe3+ reducing activity in chemical-based assays. In comparison with native and Scotch spearmint EOs, peppermint EO had the lowest (p < 0.05) half maximal effective concentration (EC50) in DPPH and TEAC assays and higher efficacy in the reducing power assay. All three EOs exhibited equivalent activity in mitigation of chemical-induced lipid peroxidation in liver tissues in a dose-dependent manner (linear, p < 0.001). The maximal cellular antioxidant activity (CAA) was observed at 5 µg/mL for peppermint, and 100 µg/mL for native and Scotch spearmint EOs. The addition of 25 µg/mL of both spearmint EOs increased (p < 0.05) cellular concentrations of glutathione in H2O2-treated IPEC-J2 cells, suggesting enhanced endogenous antioxidant defense. Supplementation of 100 µg/mL of peppermint or Scotch spearmint EO significantly increased (p < 0.05) the survival rate of C. elegans in response to H2O2-induced oxidative stress. The protective effect is comparable to that of supplementation of 10 µg/mL of ascorbic acid. However native spearmint EO failed to reduce the death rate within the same supplementation dose (10-200 μg/mL).
- Published
- 2019
25. Intestinal epithelial replacement by transplantation of cultured murine and human cells into the small intestine.
- Author
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Khalil, Hassan A, Hong, Sung Noh, Rouch, Joshua D, Scott, Andrew, Cho, Yonghoon, Wang, Jiafang, Lewis, Michael S, Martin, Martin G, Dunn, James CY, and Stelzner, Matthias G
- Subjects
Intestine ,Small ,Jejunum ,Cells ,Cultured ,Spheroids ,Cellular ,Epithelial Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Mice ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Cell Differentiation ,Graft Survival ,Cells ,Cultured ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Intestine ,Small ,Spheroids ,Cellular ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Adult intestinal epithelial stem cells are a promising resource for treatment of intestinal epithelial disorders that cause intestinal failure and for intestinal tissue engineering. We developed two different animal models to study the implantation of cultured murine and human intestinal epithelial cells in the less differentiated "spheroid" state and the more differentiated "enteroid" state into the denuded small intestine of mice. Engraftment of donor cells could not be achieved while the recipient intestine remained in continuity. However, we were able to demonstrate successful implantation of murine and human epithelial cells when the graft segment was in a bypassed loop of jejunum. Implantation of donor cells occurred in a random fashion in villus and crypt areas. Engraftment was observed in 75% of recipients for murine and 36% of recipients for human cells. Engrafted spheroid cells differentiated into the full complement of intestinal epithelial cells. These findings demonstrate for the first time successful engraftment into the small bowel which is optimized in a bypassed loop surgical model.
- Published
- 2019
26. Health and social outcomes in the Housing First model: Testing the theory of change
- Author
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O'Campo, Patricia, Stergiopoulos, Vicky, Davis, Owen, Lachaud, James, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Dunn, James R., Ahmed, Naveed, and Tsemberis, Sam
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Disrupting the LINC complex in smooth muscle cells reduces aortic disease in a mouse model of Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome
- Author
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Kim, Paul H, Luu, Jennings, Heizer, Patrick, Tu, Yiping, Weston, Thomas A, Chen, Natalie, Lim, Christopher, Li, Robert L, Lin, Po-Yu, Dunn, James CY, Hodzic, Didier, Young, Stephen G, and Fong, Loren G
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Orphan Drug ,Aging ,Rare Diseases ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Congenital ,Adventitia ,Animals ,Aorta ,Aortic Diseases ,Cell Death ,Cells ,Cultured ,Collagen Type VIII ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Lamin Type A ,Lamin Type B ,Mice ,Multiprotein Complexes ,Myocytes ,Smooth Muscle ,Phenotype ,Progeria ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome is a disorder of premature aging in children caused by de novo mutations in LMNA that lead to the synthesis of an internally truncated form of prelamin A (commonly called progerin). The production of progerin causes multiple disease phenotypes, including an unusual vascular phenotype characterized by the loss of smooth muscle cells in the arterial media and fibrosis of the adventitia. We show that progerin expression, combined with mechanical stress, promotes smooth muscle cell death. Disrupting the linker of the nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton (LINC) complex in smooth muscle cells ameliorates the toxic effects of progerin on smooth muscle cells and limits the accompanying adventitial fibrosis.
- Published
- 2018
28. Bioengineering functional smooth muscle with spontaneous rhythmic contraction in vitro.
- Author
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Kobayashi, Masae, Khalil, Hassan A, Lei, Nan Ye, Wang, Qianqian, Wang, Ke, Wu, Benjamin M, and Dunn, James CY
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Muscle ,Smooth ,Intestines ,Cell Line ,Fibroblasts ,Myocytes ,Smooth Muscle ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Animals ,Newborn ,Humans ,Mice ,Intestinal Diseases ,Polyesters ,Colonoscopy ,Tissue Engineering ,Gastrointestinal Motility ,Muscle Contraction ,Female ,Male ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Primary Cell Culture ,Newborn ,Inbred C57BL ,Muscle ,Smooth ,Myocytes ,Smooth Muscle - Abstract
Oriented smooth muscle layers in the intestine contract rhythmically due to the action of interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) that serve as pacemakers of the intestine. Disruption of ICC networks has been reported in various intestinal motility disorders, which limit the quality and expectancy of life. A significant challenge in intestinal smooth muscle engineering is the rapid loss of function in cultured ICC and smooth muscle cells (SMC). Here we demonstrate a novel approach to maintain the function of both ICC and SMC in vitro. Primary intestinal SMC mixtures cultured on feeder cells seeded electrospun poly(3-caprolactone) scaffolds exhibited rhythmic contractions with directionality for over 10 weeks in vitro. The simplicity of this system should allow for wide usage in research on intestinal motility disorders and tissue engineering, and may prove to be a versatile platform for generating other types of functional SMC in vitro.
- Published
- 2018
29. Fluid flow in tumescent subcutaneous tissue observed with 3D scanning: massage accelerates injection dispersal
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Koulakis, John Pandelis, Dubrovsky, Genia, Huynh, Nhan, Rouch, Joshua, Dunn, James C Y, and Putterman, Seth
- Published
- 2018
30. A Wireless Implant for Gastrointestinal Motility Disorders.
- Author
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Lo, Yi-Kai, Wang, Po-Min, Dubrovsky, Genia, Wu, Ming-Dao, Chan, Michael, Dunn, James CY, and Liu, Wentai
- Subjects
bioelectronics medicine ,electroceuticals ,gastrointestinal stimulation ,implant ,motility ,neuromodulation ,wireless power and data telemetry ,Nanotechnology - Abstract
Implantable functional electrical stimulation (IFES) has demonstrated its effectiveness as an alternative treatment option for diseases incurable pharmaceutically (e.g., retinal prosthesis, cochlear implant, spinal cord implant for pain relief). However, the development of IFES for gastrointestinal (GI) tract modulation is still limited due to the poorly understood GI neural network (gut⁻brain axis) and the fundamental difference among activating/monitoring smooth muscles, skeletal muscles and neurons. This inevitably imposes different design specifications for GI implants. This paper thus addresses the design requirements for an implant to treat GI dysmotility and presents a miniaturized wireless implant capable of modulating and recording GI motility. This implant incorporates a custom-made system-on-a-chip (SoC) and a heterogeneous system-in-a-package (SiP) for device miniaturization and integration. An in vivo experiment using both rodent and porcine models is further conducted to validate the effectiveness of the implant.
- Published
- 2018
31. Three-dimensionally printed surface features to anchor endoluminal spring for distraction enterogenesis.
- Author
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Huynh, Nhan, Dubrovsky, Genia, Rouch, Joshua D, Scott, Andrew, Chiang, Elvin, Nguyen, Tommy, Wu, Benjamin M, Shekherdimian, Shant, Krummel, Thomas M, and Dunn, James CY
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Intestines ,Animals ,Swine ,Swine ,Miniature ,Fecal Incontinence ,Implants ,Experimental ,Female ,Implants ,Experimental ,Miniature ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Spring-mediated distraction enterogenesis has been studied as a novel treatment for short bowel syndrome (SBS). Previous approaches are limited by multiple surgeries to restore intestinal continuity. Purely endoluminal devices require a period of intestinal attachment for enterogenesis. The purpose of this study is to modify the device to prevent premature spring migration in a porcine model. Two models were created in juvenile mini-Yucatan pigs for the placement of three-dimensionally printed springs. (1) Two Roux-en-y jejunojenostomies with two Roux limbs were made. A spring with bidirectional hooked surface features was placed in one Roux limb and a spring with smooth surface was placed in the other Roux limb. (2) The in-continuity model had both hooked and smooth surface springs placed directly in intestinal continuity. Spring location was evaluated by weekly radiographs, and the intestine was retrieved after 2 to 4 weeks. Springs with smooth surfaces migrated between 1 to 3 weeks after placement in both porcine models. Springs with bidirectional hooked surface features were anchored to the intestine for up to 4 weeks without migration. Histologically, the jejunal architecture showed significantly increased crypt depth and muscularis thickness compared to normal jejunum. Bidirectional features printed on springs prevented the premature migration of endoluminal springs. These novel spring anchors allowed for their endoluminal placement without any sutures. This approach may lead to the endoscopic placement of the device for patients with SBS.
- Published
- 2018
32. Bioengineered intestinal muscularis complexes with long-term spontaneous and periodic contractions.
- Author
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Wang, Qianqian, Wang, Ke, Solorzano-Vargas, R Sergio, Lin, Po-Yu, Walthers, Christopher M, Thomas, Anne-Laure, Martín, Martín G, and Dunn, James CY
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Muscle ,Smooth ,Neuroglia ,Neurons ,Cell Line ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Humans ,Mice ,Coculture Techniques ,Muscle Contraction ,Time Factors ,Infant ,Bioengineering ,Inbred C57BL ,Muscle ,Smooth ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Although critical for studies of gut motility and intestinal regeneration, the in vitro culture of intestinal muscularis with peristaltic function remains a significant challenge. Periodic contractions of intestinal muscularis result from the coordinated activity of smooth muscle cells (SMC), the enteric nervous system (ENS), and interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC). Reproducing this activity requires the preservation of all these cells in one system. Here we report the first serum-free culture methodology that consistently maintains spontaneous and periodic contractions of murine and human intestinal muscularis cells for months. In this system, SMC expressed the mature marker myosin heavy chain, and multipolar/dipolar ICC, uniaxonal/multipolar neurons and glial cells were present. Furthermore, drugs affecting neural signals, ICC or SMC altered the contractions. Combining this method with scaffolds, contracting cell sheets were formed with organized architecture. With the addition of intestinal epithelial cells, this platform enabled up to 11 types of cells from mucosa, muscularis and serosa to coexist and epithelial cells were stretched by the contracting muscularis cells. The method constitutes a powerful tool for mechanistic studies of gut motility disorders and the functional regeneration of the engineered intestine.
- Published
- 2018
33. Interstitial Matrix Prevents Therapeutic Ultrasound From Causing Inertial Cavitation in Tumescent Subcutaneous Tissue
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Koulakis, John Pandelis, Rouch, Joshua, Huynh, Nhan, Dubrovsky, Genia, Dunn, James C. Y., and Putterman, Seth
- Published
- 2018
34. Traumatic Native Hip Dislocations: An Audit at a Major Trauma Centre and Assessment of Clinical Practice at Centres Across the United Kingdom
- Author
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Jawad, Zayd, primary, Abdul, Wahid, additional, Topping, Jonathan, additional, Dunn, James, additional, Lewis, James, additional, and Mohanty, Khitish, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Post-COVID rehabilitation for IMT outpatient training: a quality improvement project demonstrating the benefit of protected clinic time
- Author
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Wilkins, Dominic, primary, Nkonde, Chowa, additional, Dunn, James, additional, Doni-Kwame, Mercy, additional, and Mathews, Catherine, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Spring-mediated distraction enterogenesis may alter the course of adaptation in porcine short bowel syndrome
- Author
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Bautista, Geoanna M., primary, Dubrovsky, Genia, additional, Sweeney, Nicolle K., additional, Solórzano-Vargas, R.S., additional, Tancredi, Daniel J., additional, Lewis, Michael, additional, Stelzner, Mattias, additional, Martín, Martín G., additional, and Dunn, James C.Y., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Antibiotics-First Versus Surgery for Appendicitis: A US Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial Allowing Outpatient Antibiotic Management
- Author
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Talan, David A, Saltzman, Darin J, Mower, William R, Krishnadasan, Anusha, Jude, Cecilia M, Amii, Ricky, DeUgarte, Daniel A, Wu, James X, Pathmarajah, Kavitha, Morim, Ashkan, Moran, Gregory J, Group, Olive View–UCLA Appendicitis Study, Bennion, Robert, Schmit, Paul, Gibbons, Melinda, Hiyama, Darryl, Chen, Formosa, Cheaito, Ali, Brunicardi, F Charles, Lee, Steven, Dunn, James, Flum, David, Davidson, Giana, Ehlers, Annie, Mason, Rodney, Abrahamian, Fredrick M, Begaz, Tomer, Chiem, Alan, Diaz, Jorge, Dyne, Pamela, Hui, Joshua, Lovato, Luis, Lundberg, Scott, Rouhani, Amir, Waxman, Mathew, McCollough, Maureen, Taira, Breena, Torrez, Raquel, Gonzalez, Eva, Sayegh, Christine, Seloadji, Paula, Quinteros, Noemi, Martin, Gabina, Salem, Roee, Uribe, Lisandra A, De La Guerra, Justin A, Garrett, Alexander, and Jeng, Arthur C
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Administration ,Intravenous ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Appendectomy ,Appendicitis ,Cefdinir ,Cephalosporins ,Child ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Ertapenem ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Metronidazole ,Middle Aged ,Outpatients ,Pain ,Pilot Projects ,Quality of Life ,Severity of Illness Index ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Young Adult ,beta-Lactams ,Olive View–UCLA Appendicitis Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
Study objectiveRandomized trials suggest that nonoperative treatment of uncomplicated appendicitis with antibiotics-first is safe. No trial has evaluated outpatient treatment and no US randomized trial has been conducted, to our knowledge. This pilot study assessed feasibility of a multicenter US study comparing antibiotics-first, including outpatient management, with appendectomy.MethodsPatients aged 5 years or older with uncomplicated appendicitis at 1 US hospital were randomized to appendectomy or intravenous ertapenem greater than or equal to 48 hours and oral cefdinir and metronidazole. Stable antibiotics-first-treated participants older than 13 years could be discharged after greater than or equal to 6-hour emergency department (ED) observation with next-day follow-up. Outcomes included 1-month major complication rate (primary) and hospital duration, pain, disability, quality of life, and hospital charges, and antibiotics-first appendectomy rate.ResultsOf 48 eligible patients, 30 (62.5%) consented, of whom 16 (53.3%) were randomized to antibiotics-first and 14 (46.7%) to appendectomy. Median age was 33 years (range 9 to 73 years), median WBC count was 15,000/μL (range 6,200 to 23,100/μL), and median computed tomography appendiceal diameter was 10 mm (range 7 to 18 mm). Of 15 antibiotic-treated adults, 14 (93.3%) were discharged from the ED and all had symptom resolution. At 1 month, major complications occurred in 2 appendectomy participants (14.3%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.8% to 42.8%) and 1 antibiotics-first participant (6.3%; 95% CI 0.2% to 30.2%). Antibiotics-first participants had less total hospital time than appendectomy participants, 16.2 versus 42.1 hours, respectively. Antibiotics-first-treated participants had less pain and disability. During median 12-month follow-up, 2 of 15 antibiotics-first-treated participants (13.3%; 95% CI 3.7% to 37.9%) developed appendicitis and 1 was treated successfully with antibiotics; 1 had appendectomy. No more major complications occurred in either group.ConclusionA multicenter US trial comparing antibiotics-first to appendectomy, including outpatient management, is feasible to evaluate efficacy and safety.
- Published
- 2017
38. Concise Review: The Potential Use of Intestinal Stem Cells to Treat Patients with Intestinal Failure
- Author
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Hong, Sung Noh, Dunn, James CY, Stelzner, Matthias, and Martín, Martín G
- Subjects
Medical Biotechnology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Stem Cell Research - Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell - Human ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Regenerative Medicine ,Transplantation ,Stem Cell Research - Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell ,Biotechnology ,Hematology ,Stem Cell Research ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,5.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,CRISPR-Cas Systems ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Lineage ,Cell Proliferation ,Gene Editing ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Developmental ,Humans ,Intestines ,Recovery of Function ,Regeneration ,Risk Factors ,Short Bowel Syndrome ,Signal Transduction ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,Stem Cells ,Treatment Outcome ,Intestinal failure ,Congenital diarrhea ,Microvillus inclusion disease ,Congenital tufting enteropathy ,Intestinal stem cell ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical biotechnology ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
: Intestinal failure is a rare life-threatening condition that results in the inability to maintain normal growth and hydration status by enteral nutrition alone. Although parenteral nutrition and whole organ allogeneic transplantation have improved the survival of these patients, current therapies are associated with a high risk for morbidity and mortality. Development of methods to propagate adult human intestinal stem cells (ISCs) and pluripotent stem cells raises the possibility of using stem cell-based therapy for patients with monogenic and polygenic forms of intestinal failure. Organoids have demonstrated the capacity to proliferate indefinitely and differentiate into the various cellular lineages of the gut. Genome-editing techniques, including the overexpression of the corrected form of the defective gene, or the use of CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)/Cas9 to selectively correct the monogenic disease-causing variant within the stem cell, make autologous ISC transplantation a feasible approach. However, numerous techniques still need to be further optimized, including more robust ex vivo ISC expansion, native ISC ablation, and engraftment protocols. Large-animal models can to be used to develop such techniques and protocols and to establish the safety of autologous ISC transplantation because outcomes in such models can be extrapolated more readily to humans.The field of intestinal stem cell biology has exploded over the past 5 years with discoveries related to in vivo and in vitro stem cell identity and function. The goal of this review article is to highlight the potential use of these cells to treat various epithelial disorders of the gut and discuss the various roadblocks that will be encountered in the coming years.
- Published
- 2017
39. Recommandations pour une reprise equitable apres la pandemie de COVID-19 au Canada
- Author
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Persaud, Nav, Woods, Hannah, Workentin, Aine, Adekoya, Itunu, Dunn, James R., Hwang, Stephen W., Maguire, Jonathon, Pinto, Andrew D., O'Campo, Patricia, Rourke, Sean B., and Werb, Daniel
- Subjects
Health - Abstract
Les iniquites en matiere de sante, ou les differences evitables de l'etat de sante de populations diverses, qui ont ete revelees et exacerbees durant la pandemie de COVID-19 pourraient etre [...]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Exploring the relationship between neighbourhood quality (NQ) and housing stability among formerly homeless individuals with mental illness in housing first
- Author
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Distasio, Jino, Adair, Carol E., Hwang, Stephen, Hinds, Aynslie, Kopp, Brianna C., Aubry, Tim, Somers, Julian, Lemieux, Ashley, Dunn, James, Veldhuizen, Scott, and Kaufman, Andrew F.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Recommendations for equitable COVID-19 pandemic recovery in Canada
- Author
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Persaud, Nav, Woods, Hannah, Workentin, Aine, Adekoya, Itunu, Dunn, James R., Hwang, Stephen W., Maguire, Jonathon, Pinto, Andrew D., O'Campo, Patricia, Rourke, Sean B., and Werb, Daniel
- Subjects
Epidemics -- Economic aspects -- Social aspects -- Canada ,Welfare -- Methods ,Economic recovery -- Analysis ,Health care disparities -- Analysis ,Health - Abstract
Health inequities--or avoidable differences in health status between populations--that were exposed and exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic can be addressed through interventions and policy changes that were studied before SARS-CoV-2 [...]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Ideas made real : how a mediating instrument governs by enacting logics in practice
- Author
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Dunn, James McAlastair, Mitchell, Falconer, and Jeacle, Ingrid
- Subjects
657 ,accounting ,governmentality ,institutional logics - Abstract
This thesis explores how symbolic ideas embedded in an accounting instrument come to be enacted in practice: detailing the processes through which they are realised by actors. It draws on theories of governmentality and the institutional logics perspective to develop a holistic theorisation of how programmes, ideas or ‘logics’ come to be enacted in practice as individuals interact with a performance appraisal process. It seeks to develop a theorised narrative that unpicks the various realities which actors construct in a particular assemblage. The story is informed by an abductive case study of one branch of John Lewis Department Stores. It develops a model which details the factors which influence the effective performativity of the accounting instrument. As such it explores how governance occurs as non-local ideas are prescribed to, and then enacted in, a local domain. The model describes how actors interact with a ‘mediating instrument’ and thereby constitute multiple realities based on three moderating factors: underlying ties to existing logics, self-interest and others’ influence. In outlining these moderating factors the thesis also highlights that multiple logics are more likely to be enacted when they are added or merged to existing sense making, in comparison to when they are framed or reframed according to those existing framings. As such it contributes to governmentality by detailing the process of governing and unpacking the factors which influence whether a mediating instrument is effectively performative. Additionally it contributes to institutional theory by providing a more nuanced understanding of how the symbolic elements of logics come to be enacted in practice through interactions with such material artefacts and how actors come to recognise the legitimacy of alternatives.
- Published
- 2016
43. Social Support, Depression and Self-Reported Physical Health in Persons Waiting for Access to Subsidized Housing.
- Author
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Woodhall-Melnik, Julia, Lamont, Allyson, Nombro, Emily, Dunn, James R., and Dutton, Daniel D. J.
- Subjects
HOUSING ,EVIDENCE-based policy ,HOUSING subsidies ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL impact - Abstract
Housing is a pervasive determinant of physical and mental health. Studies indicate the importance of social support to the mental and physical health of individuals who are unhoused; however, to date, little is known about this relationship in persons who are housed in unaffordable accommodations. As the demand for subsidized housing continues to increase far beyond sustainable levels in many countries, investigations of the implications of social support on the health and wellbeing of those waiting for access to subsidized accommodations becomes important to generate evidence-based policy responses. Using data from the NB Housing Study, this paper presents an analysis of the relationships between perceived social support, depression, and self-reported physical health in individuals who wait for access to subsidized housing in New Brunswick, Canada (n = 271). Hierarchical linear regression of Oslo Social Support Scale (OSSS-3) scores on Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale 10 (CES-D-10) scores and of OSSS-3 scores on self-reported physical health scores finds increases in social support are associated with decreased depression (F [1, 260] = 26.34, p <.001, R
2 =.32) and greater physical health (F [1, 260] = 7.62, p =.006, R2 =.15). The findings indicate a need to focus on health interventions that improve mental and physical health alongside social support. Implications for programming, policy, and future research are discussed. Plain language summary: Subsidized Housing, Social Support and Health Housing is a pervasive determinant of health. Studies find that social support impacts the mental and physical health of individuals who are unhoused; however, little is known about this relationship in persons who are housed in unaffordable accommodations. As housing crises persist in many countries, investigations of the implications of social support on the health of those waiting for access to government subsidized accommodations is important to generate evidence-based policy responses. Using data from the NB Housing Study, we analyze the relationships between perceived social support, depression, and self-reported physical health in individuals who wait for access to subsidized housing in New Brunswick, Canada. Our analyses indicate that individuals with higher social support report greater health and decreased depression. This indicates a need to focus on interventions that improve mental and physical health alongside social support, income support, and access to housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Concise Review: The Potential Use of Intestinal Stem Cells to Treat Patients With Intestinal Failure.
- Author
-
Hong, Sung Noh, Dunn, James CY, Stelzner, Matthias, and Martín, Martín G
- Subjects
Congenital diarrhea ,Congenital tufting enteropathy ,Intestinal failure ,Intestinal stem cell ,Microvillus inclusion disease ,Animals ,CRISPR-Cas Systems ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Lineage ,Cell Proliferation ,Gene Editing ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Developmental ,Humans ,Intestines ,Recovery of Function ,Regeneration ,Risk Factors ,Short Bowel Syndrome ,Signal Transduction ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,Stem Cells ,Treatment Outcome ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Medical Biotechnology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
: Intestinal failure is a rare life-threatening condition that results in the inability to maintain normal growth and hydration status by enteral nutrition alone. Although parenteral nutrition and whole organ allogeneic transplantation have improved the survival of these patients, current therapies are associated with a high risk for morbidity and mortality. Development of methods to propagate adult human intestinal stem cells (ISCs) and pluripotent stem cells raises the possibility of using stem cell-based therapy for patients with monogenic and polygenic forms of intestinal failure. Organoids have demonstrated the capacity to proliferate indefinitely and differentiate into the various cellular lineages of the gut. Genome-editing techniques, including the overexpression of the corrected form of the defective gene, or the use of CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)/Cas9 to selectively correct the monogenic disease-causing variant within the stem cell, make autologous ISC transplantation a feasible approach. However, numerous techniques still need to be further optimized, including more robust ex vivo ISC expansion, native ISC ablation, and engraftment protocols. Large-animal models can to be used to develop such techniques and protocols and to establish the safety of autologous ISC transplantation because outcomes in such models can be extrapolated more readily to humans.The field of intestinal stem cell biology has exploded over the past 5 years with discoveries related to in vivo and in vitro stem cell identity and function. The goal of this review article is to highlight the potential use of these cells to treat various epithelial disorders of the gut and discuss the various roadblocks that will be encountered in the coming years.
- Published
- 2016
45. A novel culture system for adult porcine intestinal crypts
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Khalil, Hassan A, Lei, Nan Ye, Brinkley, Garrett, Scott, Andrew, Wang, Jiafang, Kar, Upendra K, Jabaji, Ziyad B, Lewis, Michael, Martín, Martín G, Dunn, James CY, and Stelzner, Matthias G
- Subjects
Medical Biotechnology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Regenerative Medicine ,Biotechnology ,Digestive Diseases ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Stem Cell Research ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Aging ,Animals ,Cryopreservation ,Culture Media ,Conditioned ,Immunohistochemistry ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Intestines ,Mice ,Myofibroblasts ,Sus scrofa ,Temperature ,Tissue Culture Techniques ,Transduction ,Genetic ,Porcine intestinal culture ,Enteroid ,Intestinal spheroid ,Intestinal subepithelial myofibroblast ,Transduction of intestinal epithelium ,Medical Physiology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Porcine models are useful for investigating therapeutic approaches to short bowel syndrome and potentially to intestinal stem cell (ISC) transplantation. Whereas techniques for the culture and genetic manipulation of ISCs from mice and humans are well established, similar methods for porcine stem cells have not been reported. Jejunal crypts were isolated from murine, human, and juvenile and adult porcine small intestine, suspended in Matrigel, and co-cultured with syngeneic intestinal subepithelial myofibroblasts (ISEMFs) or cultured without feeder cells in various culture media. Media containing epidermal growth factor, noggin, and R-spondin 1 (ENR medium) were supplemented with various combinations of Wnt3a- or ISEMF-conditioned medium (CM) and with glycogen synthase kinase 3 inhibitor (GSK3i), and their effects were studied on cultured crypts. Cell lineage differentiation was assessed by immunohistochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Cultured porcine cells were serially passaged and transduced with a lentiviral vector. Whereas ENR medium supported murine enteroid growth, it did not sustain porcine crypts beyond 5 days. Supplementation of Wnt3a-CM and GSK3i resulted in the formation of complex porcine enteroids with budding extensions. These enteroids contained a mixture of stem and differentiated cells and were successfully passaged in the presence of GSK3i. Crypts grown in media supplemented with porcine ISEMF-CM formed spheroids that were less well differentiated than enteroids. Enteroids and spheroids were transfected with a lentivirus with high efficiency. Thus, our method maintains juvenile and adult porcine crypt cells long-term in culture. Porcine enteroids and spheroids can be successfully passaged and transduced by using lentiviral vectors.
- Published
- 2016
46. Long-term renewable human intestinal epithelial stem cells as monolayers: A potential for clinical use
- Author
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Scott, Andrew, Rouch, Joshua D, Jabaji, Ziyad, Khalil, Hassan A, Solorzano, Sergio, Lewis, Michael, Martín, Martín G, Stelzner, Matthias G, and Dunn, James CY
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Digestive Diseases ,Regenerative Medicine ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Stem Cell Research ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Biocompatible Materials ,Cadaver ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Collagen Type I ,Epithelial Cells ,Humans ,In Vitro Techniques ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Laminin ,Stem Cells ,Human intestinal epithelial stem cells ,Monolayers ,Differentiation ,Type I collagen ,Human laminin ,Spheroids ,Enteroids ,In vitro culture ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
PurposeCurrent culture schema for human intestinal stem cells (hISCs) frequently rely on a 3D culture system using Matrigel™, a laminin-rich matrix derived from murine sarcoma that is not suitable for clinical use. We have developed a novel 2D culture system for the in vitro expansion of hISCs as an intestinal epithelial monolayer without the use of Matrigel.MethodsCadaveric duodenal samples were processed to isolate intestinal crypts from the mucosa. Crypts were cultured on a thin coat of type I collagen or laminin. Intestinal epithelial monolayers were supported with growth factors to promote self-renewal or differentiation of the hISCs. Proliferating monolayers were sub-cultured every 4-5days.ResultsIntestinal epithelial monolayers were capable of long-term cell renewal. Less differentiated monolayers expressed high levels of gene marker LGR5, while more differentiated monolayers had higher expressions of CDX2, MUC2, LYZ, DEF5, and CHGA. Furthermore, monolayers were capable of passaging into a 3D culture system to generate spheroids and enteroids.ConclusionThis 2D system is an important step to expand hISCs for further experimental studies and for clinical cell transplantation.Level of evidence1 Experimental.
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- 2016
47. Dissociations of the Fluocinolone Acetonide Implant: The Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial and Follow-up Study
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Holbrook, Janet T, Sugar, Elizabeth A, Burke, Alyce E, Vitale, Albert T, Thorne, Jennifer E, Davis, Janet L, Jabs, Douglas A, Jaffe, Glenn J, Branchaud, Brenda, Hahn, Paul, Koreen, Larry, Lad, Eleonora M, Lin, Phoebe, Martel, Joseph Nissim, Serrano, Neha, Skalak, Cindy, Vajzovic, Lejla, Baer, Claxton, Bryant, Joyce, Chavala, Sai, Cusick, Michael, Day, Shelley, Dayani, Pouya, Ehlers, Justis, Kesen, Muge, Lee, Annie, Melamud, Alex, Qureshi, Jawad A, Scott, Adrienne Williams, See, Robert F, Shuler, Robert K, Wood, Megan, Yeh, Steven, Fernandes, Alcides, Gibbs, Deborah, Leef, Donna, Martin, Daniel F, Srivastava, Sunil, Dunn, James P, Begum, Hosne, Boring, Jeff, Brotherson, Kristen L, Burkholder, Bryn, Butler, Nicholas J, Cain, Dennis, Cook, Mary A, Emmert, David, Graul, Janis R, Herring, Mark, Laing, Ashley, Leung, Theresa G, Mahon, Michael C, Moradi, Ahmafreza, Nwankwo, Antonia, Ostheimer, Trucian L, Reed, Terry, Arnold, Ellen, Barnabie, Patricia M, Belair, Marie-Lynn, Bolton, Stephen G, Brodine, Joseph B, Brown, Diane M, Brune, Lisa M, Galor, Anat, Gan, Theresa, Jacobowitz, Adam, Kapoor, Meera, Kedhar, Sanjay, Kim, Stephen, Leder, Henry A, Livingston, Alison G, Morton, Yavette, Nolan, Kisten, Peters, George B, Soto, Priscilla, Stevenson, Ricardo, Tarver-Carr, Michelle, Wang, Yue, Foster, C Stephen, Anesi, Stephen D, Bruner, Linda, Ceron, Olga, Hinkle, David M, Persons, Nancy, Wentworth, Bailey, Acevedo, Sarah, Anzaar, Fahd, Cesca, Tom, Contero, Angelica, Fitzpatrick, Kayleigh, Goronga, Faith, Johnson, Jyothir, Lebron, Karina Q, Marvell, Danielle, Morgan, Chandra, Patel, Nita, Pinto, Jennifer, Siddique, Sana S, Sprague, Janet, and Yilmaz, Taygan
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Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Bioengineering ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Neurosciences ,Eye ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Drug Implants ,Equipment Failure ,Female ,Fluocinolone Acetonide ,Follow-Up Studies ,Foreign-Body Migration ,Glucocorticoids ,Humans ,Intravitreal Injections ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Postoperative Complications ,Reoperation ,Risk Factors ,Time Factors ,Uveitis ,Visual Acuity ,Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial Research Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo describe fluocinolone acetonide implant dissociations in the Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial.DesignRandomized clinical trial with extended follow-up.MethodsReview of data collected on the first implant in the eye(s) of participants. Dissociation was defined as the drug pellet no longer being affixed to the strut and categorized as spontaneous or surgically related.ResultsA total of 250 eyes (146 patients) had at least 1 implant placed. Median follow-up time after implant placement was 6 years (range 0.5-9.2 years). Thirty-four dissociations were reported in 30 participants. There were 22 spontaneous events in 22 participants; 6-year cumulative risk of a spontaneous dissociation was 4.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.4%-9.1%). The earliest event occurred 4.8 years after placement. Nine of 22 eyes with data had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters temporally related to the dissociation. Thirty-nine implant removal surgeries were performed, 33 with replacement. Twelve dissociations were noted during implant removal surgeries in 10 participants (26%, 95% CI 15%-48%); 5 of these eyes had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters after surgery. The time from implant placement to removal surgery was longer for the surgeries at which dissociated implants were identified than for those without one (5.7 vs 3.7 years, P < .001). Overall, visual acuity declined 15 or more letters from pre-implant values in 22% of affected eyes; declines were frequently associated with complications of uveitis or its treatment.ConclusionThere is an increasing risk of dissociation of Retisert implants during follow-up; the risk is greater with removal/exchange surgeries, but the risk of both spontaneous and surgically related events increases with longevity of the implants. In 22% of affected eyes visual acuity declined by 15 letters. In the context of eyes with moderate to severe uveitis for years, this rate is not unexpected.
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- 2016
48. Development of Functional Microfold (M) Cells from Intestinal Stem Cells in Primary Human Enteroids.
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Rouch, Joshua D, Scott, Andrew, Lei, Nan Ye, Solorzano-Vargas, R Sergio, Wang, Jiafang, Hanson, Elaine M, Kobayashi, Masae, Lewis, Michael, Stelzner, Matthias G, Dunn, James CY, Eckmann, Lars, and Martín, Martín G
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Intestinal Mucosa ,Intestine ,Small ,Peyer's Patches ,Cells ,Cultured ,Stem Cells ,Humans ,Salmonella typhimurium ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Cell Differentiation ,Immunity ,Mucosal ,RANK Ligand ,Intestine ,Small ,Cells ,Cultured ,Immunity ,Mucosal ,Peyers Patches ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Background & aimsIntestinal microfold (M) cells are specialized epithelial cells that act as gatekeepers of luminal antigens in the intestinal tract. They play a critical role in the intestinal mucosal immune response through transport of viruses, bacteria and other particles and antigens across the epithelium to immune cells within Peyer's patch regions and other mucosal sites. Recent studies in mice have demonstrated that M cells are generated from Lgr5+ intestinal stem cells (ISCs), and that infection with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium increases M cell formation. However, it is not known whether and how these findings apply to primary human small intestinal epithelium propagated in an in vitro setting.MethodsHuman intestinal crypts were grown as monolayers with growth factors and treated with recombinant RANKL, and assessed for mRNA transcripts, immunofluorescence and uptake of microparticles and S. Typhimurium.ResultsFunctional M cells were generated by short-term culture of freshly isolated human intestinal crypts in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. RANKL stimulation of the monolayer cultures caused dramatic induction of the M cell-specific markers, SPIB, and Glycoprotein-2 (GP2) in a process primed by canonical WNT signaling. Confocal microscopy demonstrated a pseudopod phenotype of GP2-positive M cells that preferentially take up microparticles. Furthermore, infection of the M cell-enriched cultures with the M cell-tropic enteric pathogen, S. Typhimurium, led to preferential association of the bacteria with M cells, particularly at lower inoculum sizes. Larger inocula caused rapid induction of M cells.ConclusionsHuman intestinal crypts containing ISCs can be cultured and differentiate into an epithelial layer with functional M cells with characteristic morphological and functional properties. This study is the first to demonstrate that M cells can be induced to form from primary human intestinal epithelium, and that S. Typhimurium preferentially infect these cells in an in vitro setting. We anticipate that this model can be used to generate large numbers of M cells for further functional studies of these key cells of intestinal immune induction and their impact on controlling enteric pathogens and the intestinal microbiome.
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- 2016
49. Effect of air–liquid interface on cultured human intestinal epithelial cells
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Sabapaty, Akanksha, primary, Lin, Po‐Yu, additional, and Dunn, James C. Y., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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50. Factors Predicting Visual Acuity Outcome in Intermediate, Posterior, and Panuveitis: The Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial
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Kempen, John H, Van Natta, Mark L, Altaweel, Michael M, Dunn, James P, Jabs, Douglas A, Lightman, Susan L, Thorne, Jennifer E, Holbrook, Janet T, Jaffe, Glenn J, Branchaud, Brenda, Hahn, Paul, Koreen, Larry, Lad, Eleonora M, Lin, Phoebe, Martel, Joseph Nissim, Serrano, Neha, Skalak, Cindy, Vajzovic, Lejla, Baer, Claxton, Bryant, Joyce, Chavala, Sai, Cusick, Michael, Day, Shelley, Dayani, Pouya, Ehlers, Justis, Kesen, Muge, Lee, Annie, Melamud, Alex, Qureshi, Jawad A, Scott, Adrienne Williams, See, Robert F, Shuler, Robert K, Wood, Megan, Yeh, Steven, Fernandes, Alcides, Gibbs, Deborah, Leef, Donna, Martin, Daniel F, Srivastava, Sunil, Begum, Hosne, Boring, Jeff, Brotherson, Kristen L, Burkholder, Bryn, Butler, Nicholas J, Cain, Dennis, Cook, Mary A, Emmert, David, Graul, Janis R, Herring, Mark, Laing, Ashley, Leung, Theresa G, Mahon, Michael C, Moradi, Ahmafreza, Nwankwo, Antonia, Ostheimer, Trucian L, Reed, Terry, Arnold, Ellen, Barnabie, Patricia M, Belair, Marie-Lynn, Bolton, Stephen G, Brodine, Joseph B, Brown, Diane M, Brune, Lisa M, Galor, Anat, Gan, Theresa, Jacobowitz, Adam, Kapoor, Meera, Kedhar, Sanjay, Kim, Stephen, Leder, Henry A, Livingston, Alison G, Morton, Yavette, Nolan, Kisten, Peters, George B, Soto, Priscilla, Stevenson, Ricardo, Tarver-Carr, Michelle, Wang, Yue, Foster, C Stephen, Anesi, Stephen D, Bruner, Linda, Ceron, Olga, Hinkle, David M, Persons, Nancy, Wentworth, Bailey, Acevedo, Sarah, Anzaar, Fahd, Cesca, Tom, Contero, Angelica, Fitzpatrick, Kayleigh, Goronga, Faith, Johnson, Jyothir, Lebron, Karina Q, Marvell, Danielle, Morgan, Chandra, Patel, Nita, Pinto, Jennifer, Siddique, Sana S, and Sprague, Janet
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Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Eye ,Aged ,Drug Implants ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glucocorticoids ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Panuveitis ,Time Factors ,Tomography ,Optical Coherence ,Treatment Outcome ,Visual Acuity ,Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial Research Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Ophthalmology & Optometry - Abstract
PurposeTo identify factors associated with best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) presentation and 2-year outcome in 479 intermediate, posterior, and panuveitic eyes.DesignCohort study using randomized controlled trial data.MethodsMulticenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial masked BCVA measurements at baseline and at 2 years follow-up used gold-standard methods. Twenty-three clinical centers documented characteristics per protocol, which were evaluated as potential predictive factors for baseline BCVA and 2-year change in BCVA.ResultsBaseline factors significantly associated with reduced BCVA included age ≥50 vs 10 vs grade 0; cataract; macular thickening; and exudative retinal detachment. Over 2 years, eyes better than 20/50 and 20/50 or worse at baseline improved, on average, by 1 letter (P = .52) and 10 letters (P < .001), respectively. Both treatment groups and all sites of uveitis improved similarly. Factors associated with improved BCVA included resolution of active AC cells, resolution of macular thickening, and cataract surgery in an initially cataractous eye. Factors associated with worsening BCVA included longer duration of uveitis (6-10 or >10 vs
- Published
- 2015
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