2,228 results on '"Adam, B. A."'
Search Results
2. Preparing for Biometric Litigation from COVID-19
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Briones, Joshua, Morales, Esteban, and Korn, Adam B.
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Privacy -- Laws, regulations and rules ,State laws ,Employers -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Right of privacy -- Laws, regulations and rules ,COVID-19 -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Privacy issue ,Business ,Human resources and labor relations ,Insurance - Abstract
Over the past few years, Arkansas, California, Illinois, New York, Texas and Washington have all enacted legislation that impacts how businesses can use an individual's biometric data. As a result [...]
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- 2020
3. PROMIS Upper Extremity underperforms psychometrically relative to American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score in patients undergoing primary rotator cuff repair
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Nikhil N. Verma, Adam B. Yanke, Brian J. Cole, Nabil Mehta, Enrico M. Forlenza, Brian Forsythe, Hailey P. Huddleston, Benedict U. Nwachukwu, Ophelie Lavoie-Gagne, and Michael C. Fu
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Shoulder ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Shoulders ,Upper Extremity ,Rotator Cuff ,Quality of life ,Floor effect ,Elbow ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Retrospective Studies ,Surgeons ,Rasch model ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,United States ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Convergent validity ,Physical therapy ,Ceiling effect ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND A number of patient-reported outcome measure (PROMs) instruments are used to assess shoulder pain, function, and postoperative satisfaction. Computer adaptive tests (CAT) have been developed in an effort to tailor question delivery, decrease time to completion and floor/ceiling effects, and increase compliance. Previous investigations have demonstrated excellent correlation between Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Upper Extremity CAT (UE-CAT) and American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) instruments, indicating that the PROMIS UE-CAT may be an acceptable alternative to the ASES. Prior to widespread adoption, however, rigorous psychometric validation must be performed. Thus, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of PROMIS UE-CAT relative to the ASES score in patients undergoing primary rotator cuff repair (RCR). METHODS A retrospective study of an institutional RCR registry was performed from July 2018 through March 2019. Preoperative PROMIS UE-CAT and ASES scores were collected. Floor and ceiling effects were determined, and convergent validity was established through Pearson correlations. Rasch partial credit modeling was used for psychometric analysis of the validity of PROMIS UE-CAT and ASES question items, a previously established methodology for assessing shoulder PROMs. Person-item maps were generated to characterize the distribution of question responses along the latent dimension of shoulder disability. RESULTS Responses from 107 patients (107 shoulders) were included. PROMIS UE-CAT had a strong correlation to ASES (r=0.684; P
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- 2022
4. Quantifying the magnitude of local tendon injury from electrosurgical transection
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Katie T. Bisazza, Steven F. DeFroda, Hailey P. Huddleston, Grant E. Garrigues, Navya Dandu, Jeremiah T. Easley, Adam B. Yanke, and Brad B. Nelson
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Tissue architecture ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Electrosurgery ,Rotator Cuff Injuries ,Rotator Cuff ,Tendon Injuries ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Dead cell ,Sheep ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,General Medicine ,Surgical Instruments ,musculoskeletal system ,Arthroplasty ,Tendon ,Surgery ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Incision Site ,ELECTROSURGICAL DEVICE ,Cadaveric spasm ,business - Abstract
Background Electrocautery is a common surgical technique and is often used during shoulder arthroplasty to elevate or transect the subscapularis tendon. The relative amount of tissue damage caused by cautery as opposed to sharp transection is not currently known. The purpose of this study was to examine local tissue damage resulting from electrocautery vs. sharp transection with a scalpel. We hypothesized that the electrosurgical unit would cause higher collateral tissue damage and cell death compared with sharp transection. Methods Twelve cadaveric ovine shoulders were randomized to either the electrosurgical or sharp transection group. The infraspinatus tendon was isolated, and a partial-thickness transection was made using either a monopolar electrosurgical device (Bovie) or No. 10 scalpel blade. Tendon explants were then visualized with confocal microscopy to evaluate tissue architecture. A live/dead assay was performed using microscopy imaging analysis software. Comparisons between Bovie and scalpel transection were made using the Mann-Whitney U test, and the cell death percentage at standardized distances from the transection site was compared between groups using a mixed-model analysis. Significance was defined at P Results The cellular and tendon fibril architecture was well maintained beyond the scalpel transection site, whereas Bovie transection disrupted the architecture beyond its transection path. The percentage of dead cells in the Bovie group (74.9% ± 31.2%) was significantly higher than that in the scalpel group (27.6% ± 29.9%, P = .0004). Compared with the transection site, the cell death percentage after Bovie transection significantly declined at 2.5 mm whereas that after scalpel transection significantly declined at 1 mm from the transection site. Conclusion There was a significantly higher dead cell percentage in the Bovie transection group, indicating extensive damage beyond the local incision site, compared with sharp transection. Electrosurgical transection of the ovine infraspinatus tendon ex vivo caused higher cell death and greater tissue architecture disruption compared with sharp scalpel transection.
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- 2022
5. Development of an observer-reported outcome measure to capture the signs and impact of fever distress symptoms in infants and young children
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Adam B. Smith, Dipak Kanabar, Lisa Miles, and Evi Tselenti
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Parents ,Observer (quantum physics) ,business.industry ,Outcome measures ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Distress ,Child, Preschool ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Quality of Life ,Medicine ,Humans ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,business ,Child ,Qualitative Research ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
PurposeThis qualitative study aimed to construct an observer-reported outcome measure (ObsRO) that evaluates fever distress in young children.MethodsA literature review was conducted to identify fever-related concepts. Clinical experts were interviewed for feedback on these concepts. Parents of young children were interviewed to identify behaviours the child exhibited during a recent fever episode. Fever sign and behaviour concepts endorsed by ≥20% parents were used to create items for the draft ObsRO. Parents of young children who recently had fever completed the ObsRO and gave feedback during two successive rounds of cognitive interviews.ResultsTwenty-five parents participated in the concept elicitation. Mean child age was 2.7 years (range: 0.6‑5.8). Fever sign and behaviour concepts endorsed by ≥20% participants were high temperature (80%), skin hot to touch (32%), skin redness/flushing (32%), reduced appetite/drink (48‑96%), needy/clingy/irritable (48‑92%), less active/interactive (68‑84%) and lethargic (64‑88%). Eighteen items, four in the Fever Signs Module and 14 in the Fever Behaviours Module, were developed for the draft ObsRO. Chosen recall period was 24 hours. Thirty participants (Round 1: n=17; Round 2: n=13), participated in cognitive interviews. Mean child age was 2.4 years (range: 0.3‑5.8). Round 1 feedback resulted in two Fever Signs items being combined. Three Fever Behaviour items were deleted, six revised and four unchanged. No changes were made following Round 2 feedback. Most participants understood all aspects of the ObsRO and found it user-friendly.ConclusionThe ObsRO will undergo further development in validation studies testing measurement properties of each item.
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- 2022
6. The Lateral Side
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Navya Dandu, Adam B. Yanke, Nicholas A. Trasolini, Reem Y. Darwish, and Steven F. DeFroda
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Orthodontics ,Lateral release ,Lateral retinaculum ,business.industry ,Anterior knee pain ,Soft tissue ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Lateral side ,musculoskeletal system ,Lateral displacement ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Patella ,business ,Clinical evaluation - Abstract
The lateral patellofemoral complex is an important stabilizer to medial and lateral displacement of the patella. Soft tissue abnormalities can range from pathologic tightness to laxity, presenting with symptoms related to patellar instability, anterior knee pain, or arthritis. Clinical evaluation should be performed to confirm patellar dislocation, assess the integrity of the lateral and medial soft tissues, and explore other pathoanatomic factors that may need to be addressed. Lateral retinacular lengthening is recommended over lateral release owing to the potential of iatrogenic medial instability with release, and a lateral patellofemoral ligament reconstruction can be performed to effectively treat medial instability.
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- 2022
7. Understanding the Interplay Between CdSe Thickness and Cu Doping Temperature in CdSe/CdTe Devices
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Ebin Bastola, Manoj K. Jamarkattel, Abdul Quader, Xavier Mathew, Adam B. Phillips, Michael J. Heben, Jacob M. Gibbs, Randy J. Ellingson, Deng-Bing Li, Yanfa Yan, Dipendra Pokhrel, Griffin Barros-King, and Jared D. Friedl
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Cu doping ,Optoelectronics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics ,business ,Cadmium telluride photovoltaics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2022
8. Prophylactic Muscle Flaps in Primary Vascular Procedures of the Groin
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Michael Holland, Charles M. Eichler, Adam B. Wallace, Scott L. Hansen, Merisa Piper, Solomon Lee, Esther A. Kim, and Matthew J Orringer
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Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Surgical Wound ,Wound Breakdown ,Muscle flap ,Arterial Occlusive Diseases ,Groin ,Revascularization ,Surgical Flaps ,Wound care ,Postoperative Complications ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Soft tissue ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Aneurysm ,Surgery ,Plastic surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Vascular Surgical Procedures - Abstract
BACKGROUND Complications following vascular procedures involving the groin can lead to significant morbidity. Achieving stable soft tissue coverage over sites of revascularization can help mitigate complications. Prior evidence supports the use of muscle flaps in reoperative groins and in high risk patient populations to reduce postoperative complications. Data regarding the use of prophylactic muscle flap coverage of the groin is lacking. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of immediate prophylactic muscle flap coverage of vascular wounds involving the groin. METHODS A retrospective cohort study was performed on all patients undergoing primary open vascular procedures involving the groin for occlusive, aneurysmal, or oncologic disease between 2014 and 2020 at a single institution where plastic surgery was involved in closure. Patient demographics, comorbidities, surgical details, and postoperative complications were compared between patients who had sartorius muscle flap coverage of the vascular repair versus layered closure alone. RESULTS A total of 133 consecutive groins were included in our analysis. A sartorius flap was used in 115 groins (86.5%) and a layered closure was used in 18 (13.5%). Wound breakdown was similar between groups (25.2% sartorius vs. 38.9% layered closure, P = 0.26). However, the rate of reoperation was significantly higher in the layered closure group (50.0% vs. 12.2%, P < 0.01). Among patients who experienced wound breakdown (N = 36), a larger proportion of layered closure patients required operative intervention (71.4% vs. 20.7%, P = 0.02). Other rates of complications were not statistically different between groups. CONCLUSIONS In patients undergoing primary open vascular procedures involving the groin, patients who underwent prophylactic sartorius muscle flap closure had lower rates of reoperation. Although incisional breakdown was similar between the groups overall, the presence of a vascularized muscle flap overlying the vascular repair was associated with reduced need for reoperation and allowed more wounds to be managed with local wound care alone. Consideration should be given to this low morbidity local muscle flap in patients undergoing vascular procedures involving the groin.
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- 2022
9. Bone Marrow Lesions on Preoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Correlate With Outcomes Following Isolated Osteochondral Allograft Transplantation
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Eric D. Haunschild, Mohamad Alzein, Adam B. Yanke, Brian J. Cole, William M. Cregar, Stephanie E. Wong, and Hailey P. Huddleston
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Allograft transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Knee Joint ,Visual analogue scale ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bone Marrow ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,030222 orthopedics ,Bone Transplantation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Allografts ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cohort ,Health survey ,Bone marrow ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of preoperative bone marrow lesion (BML) size and location on (1) postoperative patient reported outcomes and (2) postoperative failure and time to failure after osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation.Consecutive patients from 2 senior surgeons who underwent isolated OCA transplantation to the knee from 2009-2018 were identified for the case series. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was evaluated for BMLs based on 2 classification systems (Welsch et al. and Costa-Paz et al.) by 2 independent graders. BMLs associated with minimum 1-year postoperative outcomes were evaluated, and the effect of BML classification on survivorship was investigated with Kaplan-Meier curves.The 77 patients who underwent isolated OCA transplantation (mean follow-up: 39.46 ± 22.67 months) and had preoperative MRIs were included. Within this cohort, 82% of patients demonstrated a BML. The preoperative Costa-Paz et al. classification was significantly positively correlated with the postoperative Visual Analog Scale, International Knee Documentation Committee and Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey raw scores for both graders (P0.05). Failure occurred in 5 of 65 (8%) patients at a mean of 22.86 ± 12.04 months postoperatively. The presence of BML alone did not significantly affect survival (P = 0.780). However, for 1 grader, the Welsch et al. classification was associated with increased risk of graft failure (P = 0.031).Preoperative subchondral BMLs were present in 82% of patients undergoing OCA transplantation. We found that more severe BMLs based on the Costa-Paz classification, with increasing involvement in the juxta-articular surface, were correlated with higher postoperative patient-reported functional outcomes after OCA. BMLs may be associated with an increase in graft failure, but their role in this remains unclear.IV, Retrospective Case Series.
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- 2021
10. Symptom monitoring after coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination in a large integrated healthcare system: Separating symptoms from severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection
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Erica S. Shenoy, Adam B. Landman, Aleena Banerji, Andrew Gottlieb, Amanda J Centi, Hang Lee, Esther Kim, Lauren R West, Paige G. Wickner, Kimberly G. Blumenthal, Lynn Simpson, Dean Hashimoto, and Marvel Kim
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Microbiology (medical) ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Epidemiology ,Context (language use) ,Nasal congestion ,medicine.disease_cause ,COVID-19 Testing ,medicine ,Sore throat ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Coronavirus ,rhinorrhea ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Vaccination ,COVID-19 ,Infectious Diseases ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business ,2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 - Abstract
Objective:To describe the incidence of systemic overlap and typical coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) symptoms in healthcare personnel (HCP) following COVID-19 vaccination and association of reported symptoms with diagnosis of severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection in the context of public health recommendations regarding work exclusion.Design:This prospective cohort study was conducted between December 16, 2020, and March 14, 2021, with HCP who had received at least 1 dose of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine.Setting:Large healthcare system in New England.Interventions:HCP were prompted to complete a symptom survey for 3 days after each vaccination. Reported symptoms generated automated guidance regarding symptom management, SARS-CoV-2 testing requirements, and work restrictions. Overlap symptoms (ie, fever, fatigue, myalgias, arthralgias, or headache) were categorized as either lower or higher severity. Typical COVID-19 symptoms included sore throat, cough, nasal congestion or rhinorrhea, shortness of breath, ageusia and anosmia.Results:Among 64,187 HCP, a postvaccination electronic survey had response rates of 83% after dose 1 and 77% after dose 2. Report of ≥3 lower-severity overlap symptoms, ≥1 higher-severity overlap symptoms, or at least 1 typical COVID-19 symptom after dose 1 was associated with increased likelihood of testing positive. HCP with prior COVID-19 infection were significantly more likely to report severe overlap symptoms after dose 1.Conclusions:Reported overlap symptoms were common; however, only report of ≥3 low-severity overlap symptoms, at least 1 higher-severity overlap symptom, or any typical COVID-19 symptom were associated with infection. Work-related restrictions for overlap symptoms should be reconsidered.
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- 2021
11. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) screening system utilizing daily symptom attestation helps identify hospital employees who should be tested to protect patients and coworkers
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Adam B. Landman, Charles A. Morris, Hojjat Salmasian, Michael Klompas, Sunil Eappen, Karen Hopcia, Ellen Kim, Haipeng Zhang, and Dean Hashimoto
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Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,education ,MEDLINE ,Occupational safety and health ,Health care ,Sore throat ,Medicine ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,humanities ,Hospitals ,Test (assessment) ,Personnel, Hospital ,Infectious Diseases ,Family medicine ,Ambulatory ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objective:To investigate the effectiveness of a daily attestation system used by employees of a multi-institutional academic medical center, which comprised of symptom-screening, self-referrals to the Occupational Health Services team, and/or a severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) test.Design:We conducted a retrospective cohort study of all employee attestations and SARS-CoV-2 tests performed between March and June 2020.Setting:A large multi-institutional academic medical center, including both inpatient and ambulatory settings.Participants:All employees who worked at the study site.Methods:Data were combined from the attestation system (COVIDPass), the employee database, and the electronic health records and were analyzed using descriptive statistics including χ2, Wilcoxon, and Kruskal-Wallis tests. We investigated whether an association existed between symptomatic attestations by the employees and the employee testing positive for SARS-CoV-2.Results:After data linkage and cleaning, there were 2,117,298 attestations submitted by 65,422 employees between March and June 2020. Most attestations were asymptomatic (99.9%). The most commonly reported symptoms were sore throat (n = 910), runny nose (n = 637), and cough (n = 570). Among the 2,026 employees who ever attested that they were symptomatic, 905 employees were tested within 14 days of a symptomatic attestation, and 114 (13%) of these tests were positive. The most common symptoms associated with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test were anosmia (23% vs 4%) and fever (46% vs 19%).Conclusions:Daily symptom attestations among healthcare workers identified a handful of employees with COVID-19. Although the number of positive tests was low, attestations may help keep unwell employees off campus to prevent transmissions.
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- 2021
12. Presence of estrogen and progesterone receptors in proliferating and involuting infantile hemangiomas
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Ting Wei, Haihong Zhang, Adam B. Johnson, Madison P Lee, Santiago R. Gonzalez, and Gresham T. Richter
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Blotting, Western ,Estrogen receptor ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Hemangioma ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Western blot ,Progesterone receptor ,medicine ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Sex hormone receptor ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Estrogen ,Hormone receptor ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Female ,Receptors, Progesterone ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Studies in the literature have demonstrated the presence of sex hormone receptors in infantile hemangiomas (IHs), but further investigation is needed to determine the role of these receptors in their proliferation and involution. To date, there are no studies in the literature that aimed to quantitatively examine the expression of sex hormone receptors throughout the different phases of hemangioma development. Objective The objective of our study was to quantitatively evaluate the expression of estrogen (ER) and progesterone (PR) receptors in the proliferative and involuting phases of IHs through the use of real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Methods Twenty IHs (10 proliferating and 10 involuting) were harvested and prepared for molecular investigation. ER receptor alpha (ERα) and beta (ERβ) and the PR expression were examined by RT-PCR and western blot. Results RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that mRNA expression of ERα, ERβ, and PR was significantly lower in proliferating versus involuting IH. Western blot analysis revealed increased protein expression of ERα in involuting hemangiomas as compared to proliferating ones. Conclusions Our study demonstrates the variable expression of ER and PR receptors in proliferating and involuting hemangiomas. Further studies are needed to determine the exact role of these hormone receptors in the growth and involution of IHs.
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- 2021
13. Performance of prostate health index and PSA density in a diverse biopsy‐naïve cohort with mpMRI for detecting significant prostate cancer
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Andre Kajdacsy-Balla, Karen Ferrer, Marin Sekosan, Ximing J. Yang, Courtney M.P. Hollowell, Rilwan Babajide, Daniel P. Dalton, Peter H. Gann, David D. Casalino, Adam B. Murphy, Edward M. Schaeffer, Samuel Carbunaru, James Stinson, Patrice King-Lee, Rick A. Kittles, Josephine Abelleira, and Maria Ruden
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,PIRADS 3 ,Psa density ,Cancer detection ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Prostate cancer ,Health index ,Prostate ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,African American ,Prostate Health Index ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,cancer detection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cohort ,Biomarker (medicine) ,biomarker ,RC870-923 ,business ,prostate MRI - Abstract
Objective To compare Prostate Health Index (PHI) and prostate‐specific antigen (PSA) density as secondary tests after multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) in improving the detection accuracy of Gleason grade group (GG) 2‐5 prostate cancer (PCa) and in decreasing unnecessary biopsies in a multiethnic biopsy‐naïve population. Methods From February 2017 to February 2020, we recruited consecutive biopsy‐naïve men in participating urology clinics for elevated PSA levels. They all had a PHI score, mpMRI, and prostate biopsy. Experienced genitourinary radiologists read all mpMRI studies based on PIRADS version 2.0. Logistic regression models were used to generate receiver operating characteristic curves. Models were tested for effect modification between Race (Black vs White) and both PHI and PSA density, and Race and PIRADS to determine if race impacted their prediction accuracy. Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of PHI and PSA density thresholds were calculated by PIRADS scores. The primary outcome was GG2‐5 PCa, that is, Gleason score ≥3 + 4. Results The study included 143 men, of which 65 (45.5%) were self‐reported Black. Median age was 62.0 years and 55 men (38.4%) had GG2‐5 PCa. Overall, 18.1% had PIRADS 1‐2, 32.9% had PIRADS 3, and 49.0% had PIRADS 4‐5. For the binary logistic regressions, the interactions between PIRADS and Race (P = .08), Log (PHI) and Race (P = .17), and Log (PSA density) and Race (P = .42) were not statistically significant. Within PIRADS 3 lesions, a PHI ≥49 prevented unnecessary biopsies in 55% of men and missed no GG2‐5 PCa, yielding a negative predictive value of 100%. There was no reliable PHI or PSA density threshold to avoid PCa biopsies in PIRADS 1‐2 or 4‐5. Conclusions PHI and PSA density can be used after mpMRI to improve the detection of GG2‐5 PCa in a biopsy‐naïve cohort. PHI may be superior to PSA density in PIRADS 3 lesions by avoiding 55% of unnecessary biopsies. Using both PHI and PSA density in series may further increase specificity and lead to fewer unnecessary biopsies, but further larger studies are warranted to determine the optimal threshold of each biomarker.
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- 2021
14. Correction to: The role of land use and land cover change in climate change vulnerability assessments of biodiversity: a systematic review
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Stefan C. Dekker, Naia Morueta-Holme, David Moreno-Mateos, Pedro J. Leitão, Maarten B. Eppinga, Michael Ruggeri, Maria José Santos, and Adam B. Smith
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Sustainable development ,Ecology ,Land use ,business.industry ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Environmental resource management ,Biodiversity ,Land cover ,Climate change vulnerability ,Geography ,Nature Conservation ,Landscape ecology ,business ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Published
- 2021
15. Treatment of Proximal Trochlear Dysplasia in the Setting of Patellar Instability: An Arthroscopic Technique
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Nicholas A. Trasolini, Adam B. Yanke, Joseph Serino, and Navya Dandu
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Trochlear dysplasia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Medial patellofemoral ligament ,Sulcus ,musculoskeletal system ,eye diseases ,Surgery ,Resection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Technical Note ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business - Abstract
Patellar instability is a complex disorder with multiple etiologies, and treatment must be individualized to the unique pathoanatomy of each patient. Medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction is one of the most commonly performed procedures for the treatment of patellar instability. Patients with a symptomatic supratrochlear spur, defined by the presence of a “jumping” J sign on examination, also may benefit from an adjunctive proximal trochlear resection. Here, we describe a technique for an arthroscopic proximal trochlear resection, or “bumpectomy,” involving resection of the supratrochlear spur. In appropriately indicated patients, we have found this procedure to be a useful adjunct to medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction without the need for concurrent trochlear sulcus deepening., Technique Video Video 1 This is a presentation of an arthroscopic technique for proximal trochlear resection to treat patients with patellar instability. Our disclosures are listed here as well as online. This is a 17-year-old male patient who has a 10-year history of patellar instability with subluxation and occasional complete dislocation events laterally and failed conservative management. He has no effusion on examination, he has 2 quadrants of lateral and medial translation, and has a jumping J-sign that is 2 quadrants when going from extension to flexion. When we look at his lateral radiograph as well as 3-dimensional MRI data, we see that he has a 9.9-mm supratrochlear spur that is even greater than this when we add cartilage into the equation. We also see that this extension of the trochlea is proximal to the proximal aspect of the posterior condyles, which means that this is taller than the normal trochlear height and likely can be resected as opposed to a formal trochleoplasty being performed. The patient has a Caton–Deschamps ratio of 1.25, and a Dejour classification of B. We elected to treat the primary issues, which were the proximal bump as well as the ligamentous instability by performing a proximal trochlear resection and MPFL reconstruction with hamstring allograft. During the examination under anesthesia, we see a giant jumping J-sign as he gets to approximately 70° of flexion or slightly more. We then can evaluate lateral translation, where we see that he's fully dislocatable on extension and once he is fully dislocated, he has a difficult time engaging due to this area of abrupt transition as he gets into high flexion. If we move the knee into flexion and try to dislocate laterally at 90° this is not possible, but the kneecap does come out at about 70°, demonstrating his significant dysplasia. Arthroscopic examination, starting at the notch moving proximal, demonstrates the trochlear dysplasia as well as the supratrochlear spur that is present at the most proximal aspect of the trochlea. We now spinal needle localize a superior lateral patellar portal, which can help with diagnostic arthroscopy as well as visualization of this spur. Here we can see the superior lateral trochlear damage, as well as the patella tracking and the distal medial patellar chondral wear. We then obtain a perfect lateral radiograph, where here we can see on live fluoroscopy the prominence of this bump proximally. We then find the associated area in the arthroscopic view that correlates with the fluoroscopic view so that we know where to perform our resection. This bump is typically proximal to the posterior condyle line that we draw perpendicular to the femur, as discussed in the preoperative planning. We then postage stamp using fluoroscopy to demonstrate where this should be located so we know where to start our resection. We then use a combination of direct arthroscopic visualization as well as fluoroscopic visualization to use a curette to remove the proximal bump or spur. Once we are through the cartilage, we then move to a bone-cutting shaver, or a Burr, to resect this to the level of the anterior femur. The goal of the surgery is to create a smooth transition similar to a cam resection for hip arthroscopy which would allow for less contact pressure on the patella. Here we see spinal needle localization of the direct lateral portal; we can use this for easier access to resect the remaining component of the spur perpendicular to where the spur is located. It's important to carry this resection from all the way lateral to medial. We can then move our camera to the superior lateral portal and have our shaver through the direct lateral portal so that we can visualize the resection from another viewpoint to make sure that it is adequate. Using different portals for viewing as well as the fluoroscopic guidance helps make sure that the resection is being performed in a 3-dimensional way that is correct and allows for a smooth transition for the patella after this is complete. Resection of the bump is typically not adequate in itself, but the resection should be done in a way that the ramp that is created is relatively shallow and so that there is not a vertical wall that is created from the resection of the bump. Here we can see that smooth transition both in arthroscopy and now the final result on fluoroscopy here where it has been resected and there’s a normal transition into the groove. After surgery the patient’s allowed full weight-bearing in a brace locked in extension until they have active quad extension without a lag. We then unlock the brace, we work on full range of motion without restriction, and hope to achieve this by 6 to 8 weeks after surgery and allowing return to full activity 4 to 6 months after surgery. (MPFL, medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.)
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- 2021
16. Prevalence, Incidence, and Risk of Progression of Asymptomatic Pancreatic Cysts in Large Sample Real-world Data
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Chin Hur, Emil Agarunov, Adam B Schweber, Tamas A. Gonda, and Christian Brooks
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Prevalence ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Asymptomatic ,Young Adult ,Endocrinology ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Pancreatic cancer ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Cyst ,Cumulative incidence ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Pancreatic Cyst ,medicine.symptom ,Pancreatic cysts ,business ,Administrative Claims, Healthcare - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Using large-sample, real-world administrative claims data, we evaluated the prevalence of putatively asymptomatic pancreatic cysts, the historical growth in their incident diagnosis, and their risk of malignant progression. METHODS Data were sourced from IBM MarketScan administrative claims databases of more than 200 million patients. Period prevalence was assessed using 700,000 individuals without conditions that predispose to pancreatic cyst. The standardized cumulative incidence was compared with the cross-sectional abdominal imaging rate from 2010-2017. The risk of progression to pancreatic cancer for 14,279 newly diagnosed patients with a cyst was estimated using Kaplan-Meier analysis. RESULTS Standardized prevalence increased exponentially with age and was 1.84% (95% confidence interval, 1.80%-1.87%) for patients older than 45. Standardized incidence nearly doubled from 2010-2017 (6.3 to 11.4 per 10,000), whereas the imaging rate changed from only 8.0% to 9.4%. The cumulative risk of pancreatic cancer at 7 years was 3.0% (95% confidence interval, 2.4%-3.5%), increasing linearly (R2 = 0.991) with an annual progression risk of 0.47%. CONCLUSIONS Using large-sample data, we show a significant burden of asymptomatic pancreatic cysts, with an annual risk of progression to cancer of 0.47% for 7 years. Rapid growth in cyst diagnosis over the last decade far outpaced increases in the imaging rate.
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- 2021
17. A 40-year Study of the Factors Associated with Diaphyseal Forearm Fractures in Skiers and Snowboarders
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Peter K Twining, Michael J. DeSarno, Ryan A. Caldwell, Ethan W. Blackburn, and Adam B. Shafritz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Younger age ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Monteggia fracture ,Wrist ,medicine.disease ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Forearm ,Mechanism of injury ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Level iii ,Experience level ,business ,human activities - Abstract
BACKGROUND Skiing and snowboarding are popular sports that are associated with a high number of orthopaedic injuries. Diaphyseal forearm fractures are an important subset of these injuries. To our knowledge, factors associated with these injuries, the mechanisms that cause them, and their relative frequencies in skiers and snowboarders have not been described. In addition, it has been proposed that the use of wrist guards may increase the risk of sustaining a diaphyseal forearm fracture; therefore, we sought to explore the relationship between wrist guard use and diaphyseal forearm fractures. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES (1) What are the relative frequencies and types of diaphyseal forearm fractures in skiers and snowboarders? (2) What factors are associated with these injuries? (3) Is the use of wrist guards associated with an increased risk of forearm fractures? METHODS This was an unmatched case-control study performed with an injury database from a university-run clinic at the base lodge of a major ski resort. Cases were injured skiers and snowboarders; controls were randomly selected uninjured skiers and snowboarders. Data were collected on the mechanism of injury; experience level; equipment; radiographs; skiing or snowboarding habits; and trail type, defined as green circle (easiest), blue square (intermediate), black diamond (difficult), and double black diamond (most difficult). From this database, we identified 84 patients with diaphyseal forearm fractures, one of which was a Monteggia fracture and was excluded. A logistic regression analysis was used to compare the injured and control groups to identify factors associated with diaphyseal forearm fractures, including wrist guard use. RESULTS When adjusted for participant days, diaphyseal forearm fractures were more common in snowboarders than skiers (0.03 injuries per 1000 person-days versus 0.004 per 1000 person-days). On multivariable analysis, factors associated with forearm fractures in skiers were younger age (odds ratio 1.08 [95% CI 1.05 to 1.14]; p < 0.01), being a man or boy (OR 11.9 [95% CI 2.5 to 57.2]; p < 0.01), lack of movement at the time of falling (OR 18.2 [95% CI 3.2 to 102.5]; p < 0.01), and skiing on green circle trails compared with black diamond trails (OR 3.6 [95% CI 1.4 to 12.5]; p = 0.04). Factors associated with forearm fractures in snowboarders were younger age (OR 1.08 [95% CI 1.02 to 1.15]; p = 0.01), decreased weight (OR 1.02 [95% CI 1.00 to 1.02]; p < 0.01), snowboarding on gentle terrain (OR 8.4 [95% CI 1.6 to 45.0]; p = 0.01), and snowboarding on groomed terrain compared with other (OR 7.2 [95% CI 1.9 to 28.0]; p < 0.01) or wet, heavy snow (OR 24.8 [95% CI 2.5 to 246.7]; p = 0.01). Wrist guard use was not associated with an increased odds of diaphyseal forearm fracture in skiers or snowboarders. CONCLUSION Diaphyseal forearm fractures occur more frequently in snowboarders than in skiers. Despite speculation in prior evidence that wrist guards may paradoxically increase the risk of sustaining these injuries, our study suggests that this is not the case and wrist guards are not unsafe to wear. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level III, prognostic study.
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- 2021
18. Safeguards and pitfalls for Bioprosthetic or Native Aortic Scallop Intentional Laceration to Prevent Iatrogenic Coronary Artery Obstruction during transcatheter aortic valve replacement—the BASILICA technique
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Toby Rogers, Christopher G Bruce, Adam B. Greenbaum, Robert J. Lederman, Jaffar M. Khan, and Vasilis Babaliaros
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcatheter aortic ,business.industry ,Art of Operative Techniques ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine.disease ,Culprit ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Valve replacement ,Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Complication ,Stroke ,Sinus (anatomy) ,Artery - Abstract
Coronary artery obstruction is a devastating complication of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). Bioprosthetic or native Aortic Scallop Intentional Laceration to prevent Iatrogenic Coronary Artery Obstruction (BASILICA) is a transcatheter, electrosurgical technique that was developed to prevent obstruction due to sinus effacement or sinus sequestration. BASILICA creates a midline laceration of one (solo) or both (doppio) offending aortic leaflets and has been performed in over 1,000 patients at high risk for obstruction. The procedure has been studied in the prospective BASILICA IDE Trial and data from the International BASILICA Registry of 214 patients supports efficacy and safety; procedural success was achieved in 94.4% and at thirty days 95.3% were free from culprit coronary artery obstruction, all-cause mortality was 2.8% and disabling stroke was reported in only 0.5%. In this review we discuss screening for patients at high risk for coronary artery obstruction, technical details related to performing the BASILICA procedure and how to troubleshoot a BASILICA procedure.
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- 2021
19. Assessment of Injury History, Severity, and Medical Care for Athletes Participating in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
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Sofia Jawed-Wessel, Nealy F. Grandgenett, Hiromichi Usuki, Melanie L. McGrath, and Adam B. Rosen
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030222 orthopedics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Athletes ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,biology.organism_classification ,Medical care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
While Brazilian jiu-jitsu (BJJ) has a rate of injury similar to other combat sports, there is little information on the types of injuries sustained by BJJ athletes. The purpose of this study was to assess demographic information, participation rates, injuries, and medical care in BJJ athletes over a 12-month period. Seventy-eight athletes (75.0%) reported 136 injuries in the past year; however, medical attention was only sought for 59 (43.4%) of those injuries. No significant association was found between each demographic variable and injury prevalence. Despite the fact that a majority of BJJ athletes reported suffering an injury within the past year, slightly less than half of these injured athletes sought medical care. There was no difference in injury prevalence between belt ranks.
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- 2021
20. Design and rationale of a clinical trial to increase cardiomyocyte division in infants with tetralogy of Fallot
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Matthew L. Steinhauser, Jessie W. Yester, Michelle Barlas, Miguel Reyes-Múgica, Anthony Fabio, Rachel Sada, Luciana da Fonseca da Silva, Victor O. Morell, Andrew McCormick, Adam B. Christopher, Samar R. El Khoudary, José Pedro da Silva, Frank Gyngard, Melita Viegas, Dawn Thomas, Mario Castro-Medina, Niyatie Ammanamanchi, Elizabeth Hartigan, Honghai Liu, Phillip S. Adams, David K. Groscost, Megan Cuda, and Bernhard Kühn
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Propranolol ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Ventricular hypertrophy ,law ,Internal medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Medicine ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,Beta blocker ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Tetralogy of Fallot ,Ventricular Remodeling ,business.industry ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary Valve Stenosis ,Clinical trial ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Receptors, Adrenergic, beta-2 ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Patients with Tetralogy of Fallot with pulmonary stenosis (ToF/PS), the most common form of cyanotic congenital heart disease (CHD), develop adverse right ventricular (RV) remodeling, leading to late heart failure and arrhythmia. We recently demonstrated that overactive β-adrenergic receptor signaling inhibits cardiomyocyte division in ToF/PS infants, providing a conceptual basis for the hypothesis that treatment with the β-adrenergic receptor blocker, propranolol, early in life would increase cardiomyocyte division. No data are available in ToF/PS infants on the efficacy of propranolol as a possible novel therapeutic option to increase cardiomyocyte division and potentially reduce adverse RV remodeling. Methods Using a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we will evaluate the effect of propranolol administration on reactivating cardiomyocyte proliferation to prevent adverse RV remodeling in 40 infants with ToF/PS. Propranolol administration (1 mg/kg po QID) will begin at 1 month of age and last until surgical repair. The primary endpoint is cardiomyocyte division, quantified after 15N-thymidine administration with Multi-isotope Imaging Mass Spectrometry (MIMS) analysis of resected myocardial specimens. The secondary endpoints are changes in RV myocardial and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Conclusion This trial will be the first study in humans to assess whether cardiomyocyte proliferation can be pharmacologically increased. If successful, the results could introduce a paradigm shift in the management of patients with ToF/PS from a purely surgical approach, to synergistic medical and surgical management. It will provide the basis for future multi-center randomized controlled trials of propranolol administration in infants with ToF/PS and other types of CHD with RV hypertension. Clinical trial registration: The trial protocol was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04713657).
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- 2021
21. Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Reconstruction With Concomitant Lateral Patellofemoral Reconstruction for Patellar Instability
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Adam B. Yanke, Hailey P. Huddleston, and Kevin C. Parvaresh
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Patellofemoral reconstruction ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Conservative management ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medial patellofemoral ligament ,musculoskeletal system ,Osteotomy ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Concomitant ,Lateral patellofemoral ligament ,Technical Note ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Patella ,business - Abstract
Patients with bidirectional patellar instability who are unresponsive to conservative management may benefit from a medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction and lateral patellofemoral ligament (LPFL) reconstruction. If an isolated MPFL reconstruction does not provide adequate stabilization intraoperatively, combined MPFL and LPFL reconstruction allows independent reconstruction, which can be performed with a facile, reproducible technique. The purpose of this report was to describe our technique for performing an MPFL reconstruction with a concurrent soft-tissue LPFL reconstruction combined with a distalizing tibial tubercle osteotomy to correct patella alta., Technique Video Video 1 This video is a narrated step-by-step approach to performing a concomitant MPFL and LPFL reconstruction. The MPFL reconstruction is performed first via an osseous based approach with graft fixation with 2 PEEK SutureTak anchors along the medial aspect of the patella and an interference screw in the femur. After this, a soft tissue–based LPFL is performed by making incisions in the iliotibial band, quadriceps tendon, and patellar tendon, looping the graft through these and suturing it down. (LPFL, lateral patellofemoral ligament; MPFL, medial patellofemoral ligament.)
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- 2021
22. Lung Metastases Versus Second Primary Lung Cancers in Patients with Primary Urothelial Carcinoma of the Bladder: A National Population-Based Assessment
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Arjun Vasant Balar, Binhuan Wang, Richard S. Matulewicz, Gary D. Steinberg, Adam B. Weiner, and Jacob Taylor
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,Primary (chemistry) ,business.industry ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Second primary cancer ,Population based ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,In patient ,business ,Urothelial carcinoma - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The work-up and diagnosis of indeterminate lung nodules at time of bladder cancer diagnosis may delay or change treatment. OBJECTIVE: To quantify the incidence of synchronous and metachronous lung cancers in adults with bladder cancer and compare these rates to the incidence of bladder cancer metastases in the lung. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed all adults diagnosed with bladder cancer in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) registry (2010– 2015) and identified second primary lung cancers defined as being either synchronous (diagnosed within 6 months of bladder cancer diagnosis) or metachronous (more than 6 months following index bladder cancer diagnosis). The risk of second primary lung cancers were reported as a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) reflecting observed and expected case ratios. RESULTS: A total of 88,335 patients diagnosed with bladder cancer were included. Among adults with NMIBC (n = 66,071) and MIBC (n = 18,879), 0.3% and 3.9% had bladder cancer metastatic to the lungs at diagnosis. Synchronous second primary lung cancers were diagnosed in 0.4% and 0.7% of patients with NMIBC and MIBC, respectively. Compared to the general population, the SIR for synchronous lung cancers among adults with NMIBC was 2.5 (95% CI 2.3– 2.9) and was 4.7 (95% CI 4.0– 5.6) for adults with MIBC. CONCLUSIONS: Bladder cancer metastatic to the lung is more common in adults with MIBC compared to NMIBC. There are similar frequencies of synchronous second primary lung cancers regardless of initial bladder cancer stage.
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- 2021
23. Combining patient-specific, digital 3D models with tele-education for adolescents with CHD
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Karin S. Hamann, Yue-Hin Loke, David Liddle, Adam B. Christopher, Laura Olivieri, and Sheri L. Balsara
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Adult ,Heart Defects, Congenital ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Psychological intervention ,3d model ,Telehealth ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cardiac Surgical Procedures ,Tetralogy of Fallot ,business.industry ,Communication ,Heart ,General Medicine ,Patient specific ,medicine.disease ,Great arteries ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Tele education ,Patient education - Abstract
Introduction:Adolescents with CHD require transition to specialised adult-centred care. Previous studies have shown that adolescents’ knowledge of their medical condition is correlated with transition readiness. Three-dimensional printed models of CHD have been used to educate medical trainees and patients, although no studies have focused on adolescents with CHD. This study investigates the feasibility of combining patient-specific, digital 3D heart models with tele-education interventions to improve the medical knowledge of adolescents with CHD.Methods:Adolescent patients with CHD, aged between 13 and 18 years old, were enrolled and scheduled for a tele-education session. Patient-specific digital 3D heart models were created using images from clinically indicated cardiac magnetic resonance studies. The tele-education session was performed using commercially available, web-conferencing software (Zoom, Zoom Video Communications Inc.) and a customised software (Cardiac Review 3D, Indicated Inc.) incorporating an interactive display of the digital 3D heart model. Medical knowledge was assessed using pre- and post-session questionnaires that were scored by independent reviewers.Results:Twenty-two adolescents completed the study. The average age of patients was 16 years old (standard deviation 1.5 years) and 56% of patients identified as female. Patients had a variety of cardiac defects, including tetralogy of Fallot, transposition of great arteries, and coarctation of aorta. Post-intervention, adolescents’ medical knowledge of their cardiac defects and cardiac surgeries improved compared to pre-intervention (p < 0.01).Conclusions:Combining patient-specific, digital 3D heart models with tele-education sessions can improve adolescents’ medical knowledge and may assist with transition to adult-centred care.
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- 2021
24. Early Development and Kilogram Scale-Up of a Non-steroidal FXR Agonist for the Treatment of Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH)
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Adam B. Weinstein, Michael A. Ischay, Edward M. Doerffler, Nolan D. Griggs, Greg T. Cizio, Matthew M. Logan, Lok Him Lawrence Yu, Baldip S. Kang, Dao Kathy, and Patricia D. MacLeod
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Agonist ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,Organic Chemistry ,Liver failure ,food and beverages ,Non alcoholic ,medicine.disease ,Chronic liver disease ,Gastroenterology ,Non steroidal ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Steatohepatitis ,business - Abstract
Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a serious chronic liver disease characterized by progressive fibrosis that can lead to cirrhosis, liver failure, and death. Compound 1 is a farnesoid X recep...
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- 2021
25. Effect of isolated hip abductor fatigue on single-leg landing mechanics and simulated ACL loading
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Sae Yong Lee, Terry L. Grindstaff, Brian A. Knarr, Namwoong Kim, Adam B. Rosen, and Sung-Cheol Lee
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Adult ,Weakness ,Knee Joint ,Movement ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Injury risk ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Hip abductor ,Leg ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Biomechanics ,030229 sport sciences ,Mechanics ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Trunk ,ACL injury ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Increased risk ,Lower Extremity ,Muscle Fatigue ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background Altered movement biomechanics are a risk factor for ACL injury. While hip abductor weakness has been shown to negatively impact landing biomechanics, the role of this musculature and injury risk is not clear. The aim of this musculoskeletal simulation study was to determine the effect of hip abductor fatigue-induced weakness on ACL loading, force production of lower extremity muscles, and lower extremity biomechanics during single-leg landing. Methods Biomechanical data from ten healthy adults were collected before and after a fatigue protocol and used to derive subject-specific estimates of muscle forces and ACL loading using a 5-degree of freedom (DOF) model. Results There were no significant differences in knee joint angles and ACL loading between pre and post-fatigue. However, there were significant differences, due to fatigue, in lateral trunk flexion angle, total excursion of trunk, muscle forces, and joint moments. Conclusion Altered landing mechanics, due to hip abductor fatigue-induced weakness, may be associated with increased risk of ACL injury during single-leg landings. Clinical assessment or screening of ACL injury risk will benefit from subject-specific musculoskeletal models during dynamic movements. Future study considering the type of the fatigue protocols, cognitive loads, and various tasks is needed to further identify the effect of hip abductor weakness on lower extremity landing biomechanics.
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- 2021
26. Modified ND:YAG Laser Therapy in the Treatment of Cutaneous Venous Malformations
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Adam B. Johnson, Heather D. Wright, Jay Kincannon, Thomas Ples Spradley, and Gresham T. Richter
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Vascular Malformations ,Dermatologic Surgical Procedures ,Lasers, Solid-State ,Veins ,Young Adult ,Photography ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Skin ,Congenital Vascular Malformations ,business.industry ,Infant ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Nd:YAG laser ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background: Venous malformations (VMs) are congenital vascular malformations that grow progressively and never resolve on their own. Cutaneous VMs are difficult to treat due to risk of injury and d...
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- 2021
27. Association between secondhand marijuana smoke and respiratory infections in children
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Vidya R. Raghavan, Karen M. Wilson, Adam B Johnson, David M. Cline, Timothy E. Craven, Sarah Slaven, George Sam Wang, and Rakesh D. Mistry
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Smoke ,Critically ill ,business.industry ,Smoking Tobacco ,Emergency department ,Smoke exposure ,Otitis ,Environmental health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Respiratory system ,business - Abstract
Background Little is known about the effects of secondhand marijuana smoke on children. We aimed to determine caregiver marijuana use prevalence and evaluate any association between secondhand marijuana smoke, childhood emergency department (ED) or urgent care (UC) visitation, and several tobacco-related illnesses: otitis media, viral respiratory infections (VRIs), and asthma exacerbations. Methods This study was a cross-sectional, convenience sample survey of 1500 subjects presenting to a pediatric ED. The inclusion criteria were as follows: caregivers aged 21-85 years, English- or Spanish-speaking. The exclusion criteria were as follows: children who were critically ill, medically complex, over 11 years old, or using medical marijuana. Results Of 1500 caregivers, 158 (10.5%) reported smoking marijuana and 294 (19.6%) reported smoking tobacco. Using negative-binomial regression, we estimated rates of reported ED/UC visits and specific illnesses among children with marijuana exposure and those with tobacco exposure, compared to unexposed children. Caregivers who used marijuana reported an increased rate of VRIs in their children (1.31 episodes/year) compared to caregivers with no marijuana use (1.04 episodes/year) (p = 0.02). Conclusions Our cohort did not report any difference with ED/UC visits, otitis media episodes, or asthma exacerbations, regardless of smoke exposure. However, caregivers of children with secondhand marijuana smoke exposure reported increased VRIs compared to children with no smoke exposure. Impact Approximately 10% of caregivers in our study were regular users of marijuana. Prior studies have shown that secondhand tobacco smoke exposure is associated with negative health outcomes in children, including increased ED utilization and respiratory illnesses. Prior studies have shown primary marijuana use is linked to negative health outcomes in adults and adolescents, including increased ED utilization and respiratory illnesses. Our study reveals an association between secondhand marijuana smoke exposure and increased VRIs in children. Our study did not find an association between secondhand marijuana smoke exposure and increased ED or UC visitation in children.
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- 2021
28. The Effect of Aberrant Rotation on Radiographic Patellar Height Measurement Using Canton-Deschamps Index: A Cadaveric Analysis
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William M. Cregar, David R. Christian, Charles P. Hannon, Hailey P. Huddleston, Adam B. Yanke, and Michael L. Redondo
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030222 orthopedics ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Intraclass correlation ,Radiography ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,030229 sport sciences ,Sagittal plane ,03 medical and health sciences ,Transverse plane ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cadaver ,Coronal plane ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Cadaveric spasm ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
The Caton-Deschamps Index (CDI) is a measurement used to evaluate patella alta based on true lateral radiographs; however, no prior study has investigated how altering the degree of radiograph aberrancy affects CDI measurement. The primary and secondary purpose of this study was to evaluate effects of rotational radiographic changes on patella height measurements and compare these findings to MRI measurements, respectively. Five cadaver knees (n = 5) were utilized in this study. True lateral radiographs were obtained for each specimen by using a fluoroscopic C-arm machine. The C-arm was then altered in two planes (axial and coronal) in both the clockwise and counterclockwise direction and radiographs were taken at 5, 10, and 15 degrees of error from the true lateral position. A CDI measurement of each specimen was performed based on sagittal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) slices and compared with radiographic CDI measurements. Three orthopedic surgeons measured the CDI for each radiograph and MRI performed. Interrater reliability and changes in CDI were analyzed. Clinically significant difference in CDI was set to 0.1. Mean intraclass correlation coefficient was high (≥0.7) at true lateral and at all varying degrees of error. When performing a pairwise comparison of mean CDI from the true lateral position to increasing degrees of error, statistically significant differences were observed in the axial plane. The largest change in CDI measurements was seen with rotational malposition in the axial plane and counterclockwise direction. No statistically significant differences in mean CDI were observed in the coronal plane. The change in CDI from the true lateral position reached an absolute maximum of at least 0.1 in all four scenarios at each tested degree of error. This study found that aberrant radiographic rotation in the axial plane resulted in a significantly different mean CDI measurement when compared with true lateral radiographs. All degrees of error in both directions and in both planes could have a clinically significant effect on CDI (≥0.1). Our findings confirm the importance of a perfect true lateral radiograph when measuring patella height.
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- 2021
29. Eliciting Health State Utilities for Aromatic L-Amino Acid Decarboxylase (AADC) Deficiency: A Vignette Study in France
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F. Hammes, Igor Beitia Ortiz de Zarate, Gérard de Pouvourville, K. Buesch, Andria Hanbury, and Adam B. Smith
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Cost effectiveness ,standard gamble ,vignettes ,Population ,Sitting ,Time-trade-off ,Patient Related Outcome Measures ,Proxy (climate) ,Clinical trial ,Vignette ,Quality of life ,AADC deficiency ,time trade-off ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,education ,business ,Original Research - Abstract
Adam B Smith,1 Andria Hanbury,1 Igor Beitia Ortiz de Zarate,2 Florence Hammes,2 Gerard de Pouvourville,3 Katharina Buesch4 1York Health Economics Consortium, University of York, York, UK; 2PTC Therapeutics France, Paris, France; 3Department of Economics, ESSEC, Paris, France; 4PTC Therapeutics GmbH, Zug, SwitzerlandCorrespondence: Adam B SmithYork Health Economics Consortium, University of York, Enterprise House, Innovation Way, YO10 5NQ, UKTel +44 1904 323620Fax +44 1904 323628Email adam.smith@york.ac.ukPurpose: Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is difficult to measure in rare diseases, especially in paediatric populations, yet capturing HRQoL is critical to evaluating treatment, including the cost-effectiveness of treatments. Given the ultra-rare nature of AADC deficiency indirect elicitation of HRQoL data through proxy caregiver/parent ratings is not feasible. In these circumstances, HRQoL data may be derived through vignette studies using the general population. The aim of the study was to generate health utility values specific for France for AADC deficiency using vignettes.Methods: The study was completed online by panel participants from a French representative sample. Five health state vignettes, reflecting key milestones in the eladocagene exuparvovec clinical trials and economic model, were presented to the participants: âbedriddenâ, âhead controlâ, âsitting unsupportedâ, âstanding with assistanceâ and âwalking with assistanceâ. The vignettes had been previously developed with input from parents of patients with AADC deficiency, patients and expert opinion. Participants also completed the Health Utilities Index-3 for the âbedriddenâ health state.Results: A total of 1001 participants (51% females; mean age 46 years) completed the vignettes. Utilities increased linearly as the health state improved for both the time trade-off (TTO): 0.47 (standard deviation, SD 0.36) to 0.54 (SD 0.36) and standard gamble (SG): 0.61 (SD 0.29) to 0.67 (SD 0.27). A significant minority had incongruent responses (high utilities for the bedridden compared to walking health states) for the vignette (27%). When these were removed, the TTO health utilities (N=729) ranged from 0.39 (SD 0.36) to 0.56 (SD 0.38) and 0.61 (SD 0.30) to 0.69 (SD 0.27) for the SG.Conclusion: Health utilities were derived for AADC deficiency which will be used for a cost-effectiveness model of an AADC deficiency treatment.Keywords: AADC deficiency, vignettes, time trade-off, standard gamble
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- 2021
30. Surgical Technique for Obligate Flexion Patellar Dislocation: Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Reconstruction, Distal Femoral Osteotomy, Quadricepsplasty, and Lateral Retinacular Reconstruction with Dermal Allograft
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Hailey P. Huddleston, Blake M. Bodendorfer, and Adam B. Yanke
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Medial patellofemoral ligament ,musculoskeletal system ,biology.organism_classification ,Surgery ,Valgus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Technical Note ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,human activities ,Distal femoral osteotomy ,Patellar maltracking - Abstract
Lateral patellar dislocation is a relatively common pathology that can be surgically treated with a medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction. In rare occurrences patients can present with patellar maltracking that results in obligate patellar instability in flexion but central tracking in extension. This presentation can be much more complicated to treat surgically and may require a combination of multiple patellofemoral procedures. In this technique we describe a four-pronged treatment approach for improving patellar tracking in a patient with obligate flexion patellar dislocation and valgus malalignment including VY quadricepsplasty, distal femoral osteotomy, medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction, and lateral retinacular and capsular reconstruction with a dermal allograft., Technique Video Video 1 Video demonstrating a step-by-step approach of a 4-pronged technique for treating obligate flexion patellar dislocation in a patient with valgus malalignment. The 4-pronged treatment approach includes a VY quadricepsplasty, distal femoral osteotomy, medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction, and lateral retinacular and capsular reconstruction with a dermal allograft.
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- 2021
31. Prevention of coronary obstruction in patients at risk undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation: the Hamburg BASILICA experience
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Hermann Reichenspurner, Niklas Schofer, Andreas T. Schaefer, Dirk Westermann, Lenard Conradi, Daniel Kalbacher, Sebastian Ludwig, Lisa Voigtländer, M. Linder, Till Demal, Moritz Seiffert, Stefan Blankenberg, Johannes Schirmer, Adam B Greenbaum, Simon Pecha, Oliver D. Bhadra, Lara Waldschmidt, Clemens Spink, and Julius Nikorowitsch
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Aortic valve ,Original Paper ,Transcatheter aortic valve implantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcatheter aortic ,business.industry ,BASILICA ,General Medicine ,Individual risk ,Euroscore ii ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,medicine ,Cardiology ,In patient ,Coronary obstruction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Right coronary cusp ,Artery - Abstract
Objectives This study aimed to assess the clinical outcome of the bioprosthetic or native aortic scallop intentional laceration to prevent iatrogenic coronary obstruction (BASILICA) technique in a single-center patient cohort considered at high or prohibitive risk of transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI)-induced coronary obstruction. Methods Between October 2019 and January 2021, a total of 15 consecutive patients (age 81.0 [78.1, 84.4] years; 53.3% female; EuroSCORE II 10.6 [6.3, 14.8] %) underwent BASILICA procedure prior to TAVI at our institution. Indications for TAVI were degeneration of stented (n = 12, 80.0%) or stentless (n = 1, 6.7%) bioprosthetic aortic valves, or calcific stenosis of native aortic valves (n = 2, 13.3%), respectively. Individual risk of TAVI-induced coronary obstruction was assessed by pre-procedural computed tomography analysis. Procedural and 30-day outcomes were documented in accordance with Valve Academic Research Consortium (VARC)-2 criteria. Results BASILICA was attempted for single left coronary cusp in 12 patients (80.0%), for single right coronary cusp in 2 patients (13.3%), and for both cusps in 1 patient (6.7%), respectively. The procedure was feasible in 13 patients (86.7%) resulting in effective prevention of coronary obstruction, whilst TAVI was performed without prior successful bioprosthetic leaflet laceration in two patients (13.3%). In one of these patients (6.7%), additional chimney stenting immediately after TAVI was performed. No all-cause deaths or strokes were documented after 30 days. Conclusion The BASILICA technique appears to be a feasible, safe and effective concept to avoid iatrogenic coronary artery obstruction during TAVI in both native and bioprosthetic valves of patients at high or prohibitive risk. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04227002 (Hamburg AoRtic Valve cOhoRt).
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- 2021
32. Paid Sick Leave and Healthcare Utilization in Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
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Fernando A. Wilson, Rashmi Lamsal, Krishtee Napit, and Adam B. Rosen
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,MEDLINE ,Scopus ,Context (language use) ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Preventive Health Services ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Preventive healthcare ,Salaries and Fringe Benefits ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Meta-analysis ,Family medicine ,Sick leave ,Sick Leave ,business ,Developed country ,Mammography - Abstract
The U.S. is the only industrialized country in the world with no national policy mandating paid sick leave for workers. This study systematically reviews and quantifies the impact of paid sick leave on the use of healthcare services among employed adults.Articles published from January 2000 to February 2020 were located in MEDLINE/PubMed, SCOPUS, ScienceDirect, and Embase from March/April 2020. Key search terms included paid sick leave and health care utilization. Articles were assessed for methodologic quality, and qualitative and quantitative data were extracted. From the quantitative data, pooled OR, distribution, and heterogeneity statistics were calculated when possible.A total of 12 manuscripts met the criteria for systematic review, and 8 of them had statistics required for meta-analysis. Individuals with paid sick leave had 1.57 (95% CI=1.50, 1.63; p0.001) odds of having an influenza vaccination, 1.54 (95% CI=1.48, 1.60; p0.001) odds of having a mammogram, 1.33 (95% CI=1.25, 1.41; p0.001) odds of seeing a doctor, and 1.29 (95% CI=1.18, 1.39; p0.001) odds of getting a Pap test compared with individuals without paid sick leave. However, the IPaid sick leave is likely to be an effective way to increase the use of primary and preventive healthcare services in the U.S. Further studies should be carried out to track outcomes over a longer period and to compare the effect of the number of paid sick days in relation to healthcare utilization.
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- 2021
33. Distinguishing and Managing Acute-Onset Complex Tic-like Behaviors in Adolescence
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John T. Walkup, Emily J. Ricketts, Matthew R. Capriotti, Flint M. Espil, Laurie Gayes Thompson, Joseph F. McGuire, Melanie McConnell, Adam B. Lewin, Seonaid Anderson, Devin C. McNulty, Christine A. Conelea, Douglas W. Woods, John Piacentini, Shannon M. Bennett, Sarah E. Nadeau, and Michael B. Himle
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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Tourette syndrome ,Motor movement ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Acute onset ,Tic Disorders ,Complex Tic ,Tics ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Tourette Syndrome - Abstract
Consistent with international reports,1 this group of Tourette syndrome (TS) experts has noticed a recent increase in adolescents presenting with tic-like symptoms that show a markedly atypical onset and course. These sudden-onset motor movements and vocalizations are often associated with significant impairment and disability, resulting in emergency department visits and hospitalizations for some affected youths.
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- 2021
34. We are a team of leaders: practicing leadership in professional sport
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Stephen Frawley, Lewis Whales, Adam B. Cohen, and Natalia Nikolova
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Marketing ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Professional sport ,Sport, Leisure & Tourism ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Leadership development ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,1503 Business and Management, 1504 Commercial Services, 1505 Marketing ,Relational leadership ,Explorator ,Context (language use) ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Public relations ,Social constructionism ,InformationSystems_GENERAL ,ComputerApplications_MISCELLANEOUS ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,Sociology ,Business and International Management ,business - Abstract
HIGHLIGHTS Leadership is collectively performed through social action. Relational leadership recognizes and promotes mutual influence. Leadership is practiced through interactions and meaning making. Experience and intuition influence leadership practice. Shared understandings enhance collective performance. Guided by the emerging literature on relational leadership this paper discusses how leadership is socially constructed in the context of a professional sporting organization. An in-depth exploratory case study with a championship winning professional team was conducted for the duration of the championship season. Data was collected through interviews with various members of the organization as well as through observations of training and game sessions. The findings highlight that leadership is practiced through interactions between individuals, informed by established and ongoing relationships. Specifically, leadership is found to be practiced through verbal interactions, non-verbal interactions, and social processes of meaning making. The outlined relational approach is concerned with the collective performance of leadership through social action, revealing insights that can inform leadership practice, development, and recruitment in professional sporting organizations. The paper concludes by suggesting potential directions for research on leadership in professional sport based on conceptualizing leadership as a relational phenomenon.
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- 2022
35. Outcome of acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure: insights from the LUNG SAFE Study
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Pham, Tài, Pesenti, Antonio, Bellani, Giacomo, Rubenfeld, Gordon, Fan, Eddy, Bugedo, Guillermo, Lorente, José Angel, Fernandes, Antero do Vale, Van Haren, Frank, Bruhn, Alejandro, Rios, Fernando, Esteban, Andres, Gattinoni, Luciano, Larsson, Anders, McAuley, Daniel F., Ranieri, Marco, Thompson, B. Taylor, Wrigge, Hermann, Brochard, Laurent J., Laffey, John G, Antonio Pesenti, John G Laffey, Laurent Brochard, Andres Esteban, Luciano Gattinoni, Frank van Haren, Anders Larsson, Daniel F McAuley, Marco Ranieri, Gordon Rubenfeld, B Taylor Thompson, Hermann Wrigge, Arthur S Slutsky, Giacomo Bellani, Tài Pham, Eddy Fan, Fernando Rios, Thierry Sottiaux, Pieter Depuydt, Fredy S Lora, Luciano Cesar Azevedo, Guillermo Bugedo, Haibo Qiu, Marcos Gonzalez, Juan Silesky, Vladimir Cerny, Jonas Nielsen, Manuel Jibaja, Dimitrios Matamis, Jorge Luis Ranero, Pravin Amin, S M Hashemian, Kevin Clarkson, Kiyoyasu Kurahashi, Asisclo Villagomez, Amine Ali Zeggwagh, Leo M Heunks, Jon Henrik Laake, Jose Emmanuel Palo, Antero do Vale Fernandes, Dorel Sandesc, Yaasen Arabi, Vesna Bumbasierevic, Nicolas Nin, Jose A Lorente, Lise Piquilloud, Fekri Abroug, Lia McNamee, Javier Hurtado, Ed Bajwa, Gabriel Démpaire, Hektor Sula, Lordian Nunci, Alma Cani, Alan Zazu, Christian Dellera, Carolina S Insaurralde, Risso V Alejandro, Julio Daldin, Mauricio Vinzio, Ruben O Fernandez, Luis P Cardonnet, Lisandro R Bettini, Mariano Carboni Bisso, Emilio M Osman, Mariano G Setten, Pablo Lovazzano, Javier Alvarez, Veronica Villar, Norberto C Pozo, Nicolas Grubissich, Gustavo A Plotnikow, Daniela N Vasquez, Santiago Ilutovich, Norberto Tiribelli, Ariel Chena, Carlos A Pellegrini, María G Saenz, Elisa Estenssoro, Matias Brizuela, Hernan Gianinetto, Pablo E Gomez, Valeria I Cerrato, Marco G Bezzi, Silvina A Borello, Flavia A Loiacono, Adriana M Fernandez, Serena Knowles, Claire Reynolds, Deborah M Inskip, Jennene J Miller, Jing Kong, Christina Whitehead, Shailesh Bihari, Aylin Seven, Amanda Krstevski, Helen J Rodgers, Rebecca T Millar, Toni E McKenna, Irene M Bailey, Gabrielle C Hanlon, Anders Aneman, Joan M Lynch, Raman Azad, John Neal, Paul W Woods, Brigit L Roberts, Mark R Kol, Helen S Wong, Katharina C Riss, Thomas Staudinger, Xavier Wittebole, Caroline Berghe, Pierre A Bulpa, Alain M Dive, Rik Verstraete, Herve Lebbinck, Joris Vermassen, Philippe Meersseman, Helga Ceunen, Jonas I Rosa, Daniel O Beraldo, Claudio Piras, Adenilton M Rampinelli, Antonio P Nassar Jr, Sergio Mataloun, Marcelo Moock, Marlus M Thompson, Claudio H Gonçalves, Ana Carolina P Antônio, Aline Ascoli, Rodrigo S Biondi, Danielle C Fontenele, Danielle Nobrega, Vanessa M Sales, Ahmad Yazid Bin Hj Abul Wahab, Maizatul Ismail, Suresh Shindhe, John Laffey, Francois Beloncle, Kyle G Davies, Rob Cirone, Venika Manoharan, Mehvish Ismail, Ewan C Goligher, Mandeep Jassal, Erin Nishikawa, Areej Javeed, Gerard Curley, Nuttapol Rittayamai, Matteo Parotto, Niall D Ferguson, Sangeeta Mehta, Jenny Knoll, Antoine Pronovost, Sergio Canestrini, Alejandro R Bruhn, Patricio H Garcia, Felipe A Aliaga, Pamela A Farías, Jacob S Yumha, Claudia A Ortiz, Javier E Salas, Alejandro A Saez, Luis D Vega, Eduardo F Labarca, Felipe T Martinez, Nicolás G Carreño, Pilar Lora, Haitao Liu, Ling Liu, Rui Tang, Xiaoming Luo, Youzhong An, Huiying Zhao, Yan Gao, Zhe Zhai, Zheng L Ye, Wei Wang, Wenwen Li, Qingdong Li, Ruiqiang Zheng, Wenkui Yu, Juanhong Shen, Xinyu Li, Tao Yu, Weihua Lu, Ya Q Wu, Xiao B Huang, Zhenyang He, Yuanhua Lu, Hui Han, Fan Zhang, Renhua Sun, Hua X Wang, Shu H Qin, Bao H Zhu, Jun Zhao, Jian Liu, Bin Li, Jing L Liu, Fa C Zhou, Qiong J Li, Xing Y Zhang, Zhou Li-Xin, Qiang Xin-Hua, Liangyan Jiang, Yuan N Gao, Xian Y Zhao, Yuan Y Li, Xiao L Li, Chunting Wang, Qingchun Yao, Rongguo Yu, Kai Chen, Huanzhang Shao, Bingyu Qin, Qing Q Huang, Wei H Zhu, Ai Y Hang, Ma X Hua, Yimin Li, Yonghao Xu, Yu D Di, Long L Ling, Tie H Qin, Shou H Wang, Junping Qin, Yi Han, Suming Zhou, Monica P Vargas, Juan I Silesky Jimenez, Manuel A González Rojas, Jaime E SolisQuesada, Christian M Ramirez-Alfaro, Jan Máca, Peter Sklienka, Jakob Gjedsted, Aage Christiansen, Boris G Villamagua, Iguel Llano, Philippe Burtin, Gautier Buzancais, Pascal Beuret, Nicolas Pelletier, Satar Mortaza, Alain Mercat, Jonathan Chelly, Sébastien Jochmans, Nicolas Terzi, Cédric Daubin, Guillaume Carteaux, Nicolas de Prost, Jean-Daniel Chiche, Fabrice Daviaud, Muriel Fartoukh, Guillaume Barberet, Jerome Biehler, Jean Dellamonica, Denis Doyen, Jean-Michel Arnal, Anais Briquet, Sami Hraiech, Laurent Papazian, Arnaud Follin, Damien Roux, Jonathan Messika, Evangelos Kalaitzis, Laurence Dangers, Alain Combes, Siu-Ming Au, Gaetan Béduneau, Dorothée Carpentier, Elie H Zogheib, Herve Dupont, Sylvie Ricome, Francesco L Santoli, Sebastien L Besset, Philippe Michel, Bruno Gelée, Pierre-Eric Danin, Bernard Goubaux, Philippe J Crova, Nga T Phan, Frantz Berkelmans, Julio C Badie, Romain Tapponnier, Josette Gally, Samy Khebbeb, Jean-Etienne Herbrecht, Francis Schneider, PierreLouis M Declercq, Jean-Philippe Rigaud, Jacques Duranteau, Anatole Harrois, Russell Chabanne, Julien Marin, Charlene Bigot, Sandrine Thibault, Mohammed Ghazi, Messabi Boukhazna, Salem Ould Zein, Jack R Richecoeur, Daniele M Combaux, Fabien Grelon, Charlene Le Moal, Elise P Sauvadet, Adrien Robine, Virginie Lemiale, Danielle Reuter, Martin Dres, Alexandre Demoule, Dany Goldgran-Toledano, Loredana Baboi, Claude Guérin, Ralph Lohner, Jens Kraßler, Susanne Schäfer, Kai D Zacharowski, Patrick Meybohm, Andreas W Reske, Philipp Simon, HansBernd F Hopf, Michael Schuetz, Thomas Baltus, Metaxia N Papanikolaou, Theonymfi G Papavasilopoulou, Giannis A Zacharas, Vasilis Ourailogloy, Eleni K Mouloudi, Eleni V Massa, Eva O Nagy, Electra E Stamou, Ellada V Kiourtzieva, Marina A Oikonomou, Luis E Avila, Cesar A Cortez, Johanna E Citalán, Sameer A Jog, Safal D Sable, Bhagyesh Shah, Mohan Gurjar, Arvind K Baronia, Mohammedfaruk Memon, Radhakrishnan Muthuchellappan, Venkatapura J Ramesh, Anitha Shenoy, Ramesh Unnikrishnan, Subhal B Dixit, Rachana V Rhayakar, Nagarajan Ramakrishnan, Vallish K Bhardwaj, Heera L Mahto, Sudha V Sagar, Vijayanand Palaniswamy, Deeban Ganesan, Seyed Mohammadreza Hashemian, Hamidreza Jamaati, Farshad Heidari, Edel A Meaney, Alistair Nichol, Karl M Knapman, Donall O'Croinin, Eimhin S Dunne, Dorothy M Breen, Kevin P Clarkson, Rola F Jaafar, Rory Dwyer, Fahd Amir, Olaitan O Ajetunmobi, Aogan C O'Muircheartaigh, Colin S Black, Nuala Treanor, Daniel V Collins, Wahid Altaf, Gianluca Zani, Maurizio Fusari, Savino Spadaro, Carlo A Volta, Romano Graziani, Barbara Brunettini, Salvatore Palmese, Paolo Formenti, Michele Umbrello, Andrea Lombardo, Elisabetta Pecci, Marco Botteri, Monica Savioli, Alessandro Protti, Alessia Mattei, Lorenzo Schiavoni, Andrea Tinnirello, Manuel Todeschini, Antonino Giarratano, Andrea Cortegiani, Massimo M Antonelli, Luca M Montini, Paolo Casalena, Sergio Scafetti, Giovanna Panarello, Giovanna Occhipinti, Nicolò Patroniti, Matteo Pozzi, Roberto R Biscione, Michela M Poli, Ferdinando Raimondi, Daniela Albiero, Giulia Crapelli, Eduardo Beck, Vincenzo Pota, Vincenzo Schiavone, Alexandre Molin, Fabio Tarantino, Giacomo Monti, Elena Frati, Lucia Mirabella, Gilda Cinnella, Tommaso Fossali, Riccardo Colombo, Pierpaolo Terragni, Ilaria Pattarino, Francesco Mojoli, Antonio Braschi, Erika E Borotto, Andrea N Cracchiolo, Daniela M Palma, Francesco Raponi, Giuseppe Foti, Ettore R Vascotto, Andrea Coppadoro, Luca Brazzi, Leda Floris, Giorgio A Iotti, Aaron Venti, Osamu Yamaguchi, Shunsuke Takagi, Hiroki N Maeyama, Eizo Watanabe, Yoshihiro Yamaji, Kazuyoshi Shimizu, Kyoko Shiozaki, Satoru Futami, Sekine Ryosuke, Koji Saito, Yoshinobu Kameyama, Keiko Ueno, Masayo Izawa, Nao Okuda, Hiroyuki Suzuki, Tomofumi Harasawa, Michitaka Nasu, Tadaaki Takada, Fumihito Ito, Shin Nunomiya, Kansuke Koyama, Toshikazu Abe, Kohkichi Andoh, Kohei Kusumoto, Akira Hirata, Akihiro Takaba, Hiroyasu Kimura, Shuhei Matsumoto, Ushio Higashijima, Hiroyuki Honda, Nobumasa Aoki, Hiroshi Imai, Yasuaki Ogino, Ichiko Mizuguchi, Kazuya Ichikado, Kenichi Nitta, Katsunori Mochizuki, Tomoaki Hashida, Hiroyuki Tanaka, Tomoyuki Nakamura, Daisuke Niimi, Takeshi Ueda, Yozo Kashiwa, Akinori Uchiyama, Olegs Sabelnikovs, Peteris Oss, Youssef Haddad, Kong Y Liew, Silvio A Ñamendys-Silva, Yves D Jarquin-Badiola, Luis A Sanchez-Hurtado, Saira S Gomez-Flores, Maria C Marin, Asisclo J Villagomez, Jordana S Lemus, Jonathan M Fierro, Mavy Ramirez Cervantes, Francisco Javier Flores Mejia, Dulce Dector, Alejandro Rojas, Daniel R Gonzalez, Claudia R Estrella, Jorge R Sanchez-Medina, Alvaro Ramirez-Gutierrez, Fernando G George, Janet S Aguirre, Juan A Buensuseso, Manuel Poblano, Tarek Dendane, Hicham Balkhi, Mina Elkhayari, Nacer Samkaoui, Hanane Ezzouine, Abdellatif Benslama, Mourad Amor, Wajdi Maazouzi, Nedim Cimic, Oliver Beck, Monique M Bruns, Jeroen A Schouten, Myra Rinia, Monique Raaijmakers, Hellen M van Wezel, Serge J Heines, Ulrich Strauch, Marc P Buise, Fabienne D Simonis, Marcus J Schultz, Jennifer C Goodson, Troy S Browne, Leanlove Navarra, Anna Hunt, Robyn A Hutchison, Mathew B Bailey, Lynette Newby, Colin McArthur, Michael Kalkoff, Alex Mcleod, Jonathan Casement, Danielle J Hacking, Finn H Andersen, Merete S Dolva, Jon H Laake, Andreas Barratt-Due, Kim Andre L Noremark, Eldar Søreide, Brit Å Sjøbø, Anne B Guttormsen, Hector H Leon Yoshido, Ronald Zumaran Aguilar, Fredy A Montes Oscanoa, Alain U Alisasis, Joanne B Robles, Rossini Abbie B Pasanting-Lim, Beatriz C Tan, Pawel Andruszkiewicz, Karina Jakubowska, Cristina M Coxo, António M Alvarez, Bruno S Oliveira, Gustavo M Montanha, Nelson C Barros, Carlos S Pereira, António M Messias, Jorge M Monteiro, Ana M Araujo, Nuno T Catorze, Susan M Marum, Maria J Bouw, Rui M Gomes, Vania A Brito, Silvia Castro, Joana M Estilita, Filipa M Barros, Isabel M Serra, Aurelia M Martinho, Dana R Tomescu, Alexandra Marcu, Ovidiu H Bedreag, Marius Papurica, Dan E Corneci, Silvius Ioan Negoita, Evgeny Grigoriev, Alexey I Gritsan, Andrey A Gazenkampf, Ghaleb Almekhlafi, Mohamad M Albarrak, Ghanem M Mustafa, Khalid A Maghrabi, Nawal Salahuddin, Tharwat M Aisa, Ahmed S Al Jabbary, Edgardo Tabhan, Yaseen M Arabi, Olivia A Trinidad, Hasan M Al Dorzi, Edgardo E Tabhan, Vesna Bumbasirevic, Bojan Jovanovic, Stefan Bolon, Oliver Smith, Jordi Mancebo, Hernan Aguirre-Bermeo, Juan C Lopez-Delgado, Francisco Esteve, Gemma Rialp, Catalina Forteza, Candelaria De Haro, Antonio Artigas, Guillermo M Albaiceta, Sara De Cima-Iglesias, Leticia Seoane-Quiroga, Alexandra Ceniceros-Barros, Antonio L RuizAguilar, Luis M Claraco-Vega, Juan Alfonso Soler, Maria Del Carmen Lorente, Cecilia Hermosa, Federico Gordo, Miryam PrietoGonzález, Juan B López-Messa, Manuel P Perez, Cesar P Perez, Raquel Montoiro Allue, Ferran RocheCampo, Marcos Ibañez-Santacruz, Susana TempranoSusana, Maria C Pintado, Raul De Pablo, Pilar Ricart Aroa Gómez, Silvia Rodriguez Ruiz, Silvia Iglesias Moles, Mª Teresa Jurado, Alfons Arizmendi, Enrique A Piacentini, Nieves Franco, Teresa Honrubia, Meisy Perez Cheng, Elena Perez Losada, Javier Blanco, Luis J Yuste, Cecilia Carbayo-Gorriz, Francisca G Cazorla-Barranquero, Javier G Alonso, Rosa S Alda, Ángela Algaba, Gonzalo Navarro, Enrique Cereijo, Esther Diaz-Rodriguez, Diego Pastor Marcos, Laura Alvarez Montero, Luis Herrera Para, Roberto Jimenez Sanchez, Miguel Angel Blasco Navalpotro, Ricardo Diaz Abad, Raquel Montiel González, Dácil Parrilla Toribio, Alejandro G Castro, Maria Jose D Artiga, Oscar Penuelas, Tomas P Roser, Moreno F Olga, Elena Gallego Curto, Rocío Manzano Sánchez, Vallverdu P Imma, Garcia M Elisabet, Laura Claverias, Monica Magret, Ana M Pellicer, Lucia L Rodriguez, Jesús Sánchez-Ballesteros, Ángela González-Salamanca, Antonio G Jimenez, Francisco P Huerta, Juan Carlos J Sotillo Diaz, Esther Bermejo Lopez, David D Llinares Moya, Alec A Tallet Alfonso, Palazon Sanchez Eugenio Luis, Palazon Sanchez Cesar, Sánchez I Rafael, Corcoles G Virgilio, Noelia N Recio, Christian C Rylander, Bernhard Holzgraefe, Lars M Broman, Joanna Wessbergh, Linnea Persson, Fredrik Schiöler, Hans Kedelv, Anna Oscarsson Tibblin, Henrik Appelberg, Lars Hedlund, Johan Helleberg, Karin E Eriksson, Rita Glietsch, Niklas Larsson, Ingela Nygren, Silvia L Nunes, Anna-Karin Morin, Thomas Kander, Anne Adolfsson, Hervé O Zender, Corinne Leemann-Refondini, Souheil Elatrous, Slaheddine Bouchoucha, Imed Chouchene, Islem Ouanes, Asma Ben Souissi, Salma Kamoun, Oktay Demirkiran, Mustafa Aker, Emre Erbabacan, Ilkay Ceylan, Nermin Kelebek Girgin, Menekse Ozcelik, Necmettin Ünal, Basak Ceyda Meco, Onat O Akyol, Suleyman S Derman, Barry Kennedy, Ken Parhar, Latha Srinivasa, Danny McAuley, Phil Hopkins, Clare Mellis, Vivek Kakar, Dan Hadfield, Andre Vercueil, Kaushik Bhowmick, Sally K Humphreys, Andrew Ferguson, Raymond Mckee, Ashok S Raj, Danielle A Fawkes, Philip Watt, Linda Twohey, Rajeev R Jha, Matthew Thomas, Alex Morton, Varsha Kadaba, Mark J Smith, Anil P Hormis, Santhana G Kannan, Miriam Namih, Henrik Reschreiter, Julie Camsooksai, Alek Kumar, Szabolcs Rugonfalvi, Christopher Nutt, Orla Oneill, Colette Seasman, Ged Dempsey, Christopher J Scott, Helen E Ellis, Stuart Mckechnie, Paula J Hutton, Nora N Di Tomasso, Michela N Vitale, Ruth O Griffin, Michael N Dean, Julius H Cranshaw, Emma L Willett, Nicholas Ioannou, Sarah Gillis, Peter Csabi, Rosaleen Macfadyen, Heidi Dawson, Pieter D Preez, Alexandra J Williams, Owen Boyd, Laura Ortiz-Ruiz de Gordoa, Jon Bramall, Sophie Symmonds, Simon K Chau, Tim Wenham, Tamas Szakmany, Piroska Toth-Tarsoly, Katie H McCalman, Peter Alexander, Lorraine Stephenson, Thomas Collyer, Rhiannon Chapman, Raphael Cooper, Russell M Allan, Malcolm Sim, David W Wrathall, Donald A Irvine, Kim S Zantua, John C Adams, Andrew J Burtenshaw, Gareth P Sellors, Ingeborg D Welters, Karen E Williams, Robert J Hessell, Matthew G Oldroyd, Ceri E Battle, Suresh Pillai, Istvan Kajtor, Mageswaran Sivashanmugavel, Sinead C Okane, Adrian Donnelly, Aniko D Frigyik, Jon P Careless, Martin M May, Richard Stewart, T John Trinder, Samantha J Hagan, Jade M Cole, Caroline C MacFie, Anna T Dowling, Nicolás Nin, Edgardo Nuñez, Gustavo Pittini, Ruben Rodriguez, María C Imperio, Cristina Santos, Ana G França, Alejandro Ebeid, Alberto Deicas, Carolina Serra, Aditya Uppalapati, Ghassan Kamel, Valerie M Banner-Goodspeed, Jeremy R Beitler, Satyanarayana Reddy Mukkera, Shreedhar Kulkarni, John O Shinn Iii, Dina Gomaa, Christopher Tainter, Jarone Lee, Tomaz MesarJarone Lee, Dale J Yeatts, Jessica Warren, Michael J Lanspa, Russel R Miller, Colin K Grissom, Samuel M Brown, Philippe R Bauer, Ryan J Gosselin, Barrett T Kitch, Jason E Cohen, Scott H Beegle, Shazia Choudry, Renaud M Gueret, Aiman Tulaimat, William Stigler, Hitesh Batra, Nidhi G Huff, Keith D Lamb, Trevor W Oetting, Nicholas M Mohr, Claine Judy, Shigeki Saito, Fayez M Kheir, Fayez Kheir, Adam B Schlichting, Angela Delsing, Daniel R Crouch, Mary Elmasri, Dina Ismail, Kyle R Dreyer, Thomas C Blakeman, Rebecca M Baro, Carolina Quintana Grijalba, Peter C Hou, Raghu Seethala, Imo Aisiku, Galen Henderson, Gyorgy Frendl, Sen-Kuang Hou, Robert L Owens, Ashley Schomer, Pham, Tài, Pesenti, Antonio, Bellani, Giacomo, Rubenfeld, Gordon, Fan, Eddy, Bugedo, Guillermo, Lorente, José Angel, Fernandes, Antero do Vale, Van Haren, Frank, Bruhn, Alejandro, Rios, Fernando, Esteban, Andre, Gattinoni, Luciano, Larsson, Ander, McAuley, Daniel F., Ranieri, Marco, Thompson, B. Taylor, Wrigge, Hermann, Brochard, Laurent J., Laffey, John G, Antonio Pesenti, John G Laffey, Laurent Brochard, Andres Esteban, Luciano Gattinoni, Frank van Haren, Anders Larsson, Daniel F McAuley, Marco Ranieri, Gordon Rubenfeld, B Taylor Thompson, Hermann Wrigge, Arthur S Slutsky, John G Laffey, Giacomo Bellani, Tài Pham, Eddy Fan, Fernando Rios, Frank van Haren, Thierry Sottiaux, Pieter Depuydt, Fredy S Lora, Luciano Cesar Azevedo, Eddy Fan, Guillermo Bugedo, Haibo Qiu, Marcos Gonzalez, Juan Silesky, Vladimir Cerny, Jonas Nielsen, Manuel Jibaja, Tài Pham, Hermann Wrigge, Dimitrios Matamis, Jorge Luis Ranero, Pravin Amin, S M Hashemian, Kevin Clarkson, Giacomo Bellani, Kiyoyasu Kurahashi, Asisclo Villagomez, Amine Ali Zeggwagh, Leo M Heunks, Jon Henrik Laake, Jose Emmanuel Palo, Antero do Vale Fernandes, Dorel Sandesc, Yaasen Arabi, Vesna Bumbasierevic, Nicolas Nin, Jose A Lorente, Anders Larsson, Lise Piquilloud, Fekri Abroug, Daniel F McAuley, Lia McNamee, Javier Hurtado, Ed Bajwa, Gabriel Démpaire, Hektor Sula, Lordian Nunci, Alma Cani, Alan Zazu, Christian Dellera, Carolina S Insaurralde, Risso V Alejandro, Julio Daldin, Mauricio Vinzio, Ruben O Fernandez, Luis P Cardonnet, Lisandro R Bettini, Mariano Carboni Bisso, Emilio M Osman, Mariano G Setten, Pablo Lovazzano, Javier Alvarez, Veronica Villar, Norberto C Pozo, Nicolas Grubissich, Gustavo A Plotnikow, Daniela N Vasquez, Santiago Ilutovich, Norberto Tiribelli, Ariel Chena, Carlos A Pellegrini, María G Saenz, Elisa Estenssoro, Matias Brizuela, Hernan Gianinetto, Pablo E Gomez, Valeria I Cerrato, Marco G Bezzi, Silvina A Borello, Flavia A Loiacono, Adriana M Fernandez, Serena Knowles, Claire Reynolds, Deborah M Inskip, Jennene J Miller, Jing Kong, Christina Whitehead, Shailesh Bihari, Aylin Seven, Amanda Krstevski, Helen J Rodgers, Rebecca T Millar, Toni E McKenna, Irene M Bailey, Gabrielle C Hanlon, Anders Aneman, Joan M Lynch, Raman Azad, John Neal, Paul W Woods, Brigit L Roberts, Mark R Kol, Helen S Wong, Katharina C Riss, Thomas Staudinger, Xavier Wittebole, Caroline Berghe, Pierre A Bulpa, Alain M Dive, Rik Verstraete, Herve Lebbinck, Pieter Depuydt, Joris Vermassen, Philippe Meersseman, Helga Ceunen, Jonas I Rosa, Daniel O Beraldo, Claudio Piras, Adenilton M Rampinelli, Antonio P Nassar Jr, Sergio Mataloun, Marcelo Moock, Marlus M Thompson, Claudio H Gonçalves, Ana Carolina P Antônio, Aline Ascoli, Rodrigo S Biondi, Danielle C Fontenele, Danielle Nobrega, Vanessa M Sales, Ahmad Yazid Bin Hj Abul Wahab, Maizatul Ismail, Suresh Shindhe, John Laffey, Francois Beloncle, Kyle G Davies, Rob Cirone, Venika Manoharan, Mehvish Ismail, Ewan C Goligher, Mandeep Jassal, Erin Nishikawa, Areej Javeed, Gerard Curley, Nuttapol Rittayamai, Matteo Parotto, Niall D Ferguson, Sangeeta Mehta, Jenny Knoll, Antoine Pronovost, Sergio Canestrini, Alejandro R Bruhn, Patricio H Garcia, Felipe A Aliaga, Pamela A Farías, Jacob S Yumha, Claudia A Ortiz, Javier E Salas, Alejandro A Saez, Luis D Vega, Eduardo F Labarca, Felipe T Martinez, Nicolás G Carreño, Pilar Lora, Haitao Liu, Haibo Qiu, Ling Liu, Rui Tang, Xiaoming Luo, Youzhong An, Huiying Zhao, Yan Gao, Zhe Zhai, Zheng L Ye, Wei Wang, Wenwen Li, Qingdong Li, Ruiqiang Zheng, Wenkui Yu, Juanhong Shen, Xinyu Li, Tao Yu, Weihua Lu, Ya Q Wu, Xiao B Huang, Zhenyang He, Yuanhua Lu, Hui Han, Fan Zhang, Renhua Sun, Hua X Wang, Shu H Qin, Bao H Zhu, Jun Zhao, Jian Liu, Bin Li, Jing L Liu, Fa C Zhou, Qiong J Li, Xing Y Zhang, Zhou Li-Xin, Qiang Xin-Hua, Liangyan Jiang, Yuan N Gao, Xian Y Zhao, Yuan Y Li, Xiao L Li, Chunting Wang, Qingchun Yao, Rongguo Yu, Kai Chen, Huanzhang Shao, Bingyu Qin, Qing Q Huang, Wei H Zhu, Ai Y Hang, Ma X Hua, Yimin Li, Yonghao Xu, Yu D Di, Long L Ling, Tie H Qin, Shou H Wang, Junping Qin, Yi Han, Suming Zhou, Monica P Vargas, Juan I Silesky Jimenez, Manuel A González Rojas, Jaime E SolisQuesada, Christian M Ramirez-Alfaro, Jan Máca, Peter Sklienka, Jakob Gjedsted, Aage Christiansen, Jonas Nielsen, Boris G 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Charlene Bigot, Sandrine Thibault, Mohammed Ghazi, Messabi Boukhazna, Salem Ould Zein, Jack R Richecoeur, Daniele M Combaux, Fabien Grelon, Charlene Le Moal, Elise P Sauvadet, Adrien Robine, Virginie Lemiale, Danielle Reuter, Martin Dres, Alexandre Demoule, Dany Goldgran-Toledano, Loredana Baboi, Claude Guérin, Ralph Lohner, Jens Kraßler, Susanne Schäfer, Kai D Zacharowski, Patrick Meybohm, Andreas W Reske, Philipp Simon, HansBernd F Hopf, Michael Schuetz, Thomas Baltus, Metaxia N Papanikolaou, Theonymfi G Papavasilopoulou, Giannis A Zacharas, Vasilis Ourailogloy, Eleni K Mouloudi, Eleni V Massa, Eva O Nagy, Electra E Stamou, Ellada V Kiourtzieva, Marina A Oikonomou, Luis E Avila, Cesar A Cortez, Johanna E Citalán, Sameer A Jog, Safal D Sable, Bhagyesh Shah, Mohan Gurjar, Arvind K Baronia, Mohammedfaruk Memon, Radhakrishnan Muthuchellappan, Venkatapura J Ramesh, Anitha Shenoy, Ramesh Unnikrishnan, Subhal B Dixit, Rachana V Rhayakar, Nagarajan Ramakrishnan, Vallish K Bhardwaj, Heera L Mahto, Sudha V Sagar, Vijayanand Palaniswamy, Deeban Ganesan, Seyed Mohammadreza Hashemian, Hamidreza Jamaati, Farshad Heidari, Edel A Meaney, Alistair Nichol, Karl M Knapman, Donall O'Croinin, Eimhin S Dunne, Dorothy M Breen, Kevin P Clarkson, Rola F Jaafar, Rory Dwyer, Fahd Amir, Olaitan O Ajetunmobi, Aogan C O'Muircheartaigh, Colin S Black, Nuala Treanor, Daniel V Collins, Wahid Altaf, Gianluca Zani, Maurizio Fusari, Savino Spadaro, Carlo A Volta, Romano Graziani, Barbara Brunettini, Salvatore Palmese, Paolo Formenti, Michele Umbrello, Andrea Lombardo, Elisabetta Pecci, Marco Botteri, Monica Savioli, Alessandro Protti, Alessia Mattei, Lorenzo Schiavoni, Andrea Tinnirello, Manuel Todeschini, Antonino Giarratano, Andrea Cortegiani, Massimo M Antonelli, Luca M Montini, Paolo Casalena, Sergio Scafetti, Giovanna Panarello, Giovanna Occhipinti, Nicolò Patroniti, Matteo Pozzi, Roberto R Biscione, Michela M Poli, Ferdinando Raimondi, Daniela Albiero, Giulia Crapelli, Eduardo Beck, Vincenzo Pota, Vincenzo Schiavone, Alexandre Molin, Fabio Tarantino, Giacomo Monti, Elena Frati, Lucia Mirabella, Gilda Cinnella, Tommaso Fossali, Riccardo Colombo, Pierpaolo Terragni, Ilaria Pattarino, Francesco Mojoli, Antonio Braschi, Erika E Borotto, Andrea N Cracchiolo, Daniela M Palma, Francesco Raponi, Giuseppe Foti, Ettore R Vascotto, Andrea Coppadoro, Luca Brazzi, Leda Floris, Giorgio A Iotti, Aaron Venti, Osamu Yamaguchi, Shunsuke Takagi, Hiroki N Maeyama, Eizo Watanabe, Yoshihiro Yamaji, Kazuyoshi Shimizu, Kyoko Shiozaki, Satoru Futami, Sekine Ryosuke, Koji Saito, Yoshinobu Kameyama, Keiko Ueno, Masayo Izawa, Nao Okuda, Hiroyuki Suzuki, Tomofumi Harasawa, Michitaka Nasu, Tadaaki Takada, Fumihito Ito, Shin Nunomiya, Kansuke Koyama, Toshikazu Abe, Kohkichi Andoh, Kohei Kusumoto, Akira Hirata, Akihiro Takaba, Hiroyasu Kimura, Shuhei Matsumoto, Ushio Higashijima, Hiroyuki Honda, Nobumasa Aoki, Hiroshi Imai, Yasuaki Ogino, Ichiko Mizuguchi, Kazuya Ichikado, Kenichi Nitta, Katsunori 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Jennifer C Goodson, Troy S Browne, Leanlove Navarra, Anna Hunt, Robyn A Hutchison, Mathew B Bailey, Lynette Newby, Colin McArthur, Michael Kalkoff, Alex Mcleod, Jonathan Casement, Danielle J Hacking, Finn H Andersen, Merete S Dolva, Jon H Laake, Andreas Barratt-Due, Kim Andre L Noremark, Eldar Søreide, Brit Å Sjøbø, Anne B Guttormsen, Hector H Leon Yoshido, Ronald Zumaran Aguilar, Fredy A Montes Oscanoa, Alain U Alisasis, Joanne B Robles, Rossini Abbie B Pasanting-Lim, Beatriz C Tan, Pawel Andruszkiewicz, Karina Jakubowska, Cristina M Coxo, António M Alvarez, Bruno S Oliveira, Gustavo M Montanha, Nelson C Barros, Carlos S Pereira, António M Messias, Jorge M Monteiro, Ana M Araujo, Nuno T Catorze, Susan M Marum, Maria J Bouw, Rui M Gomes, Vania A Brito, Silvia Castro, Joana M Estilita, Filipa M Barros, Isabel M Serra, Aurelia M Martinho, Dana R Tomescu, Alexandra Marcu, Ovidiu H Bedreag, Marius Papurica, Dan E Corneci, Silvius Ioan Negoita, Evgeny Grigoriev, Alexey I Gritsan, Andrey A Gazenkampf, Ghaleb Almekhlafi, Mohamad M Albarrak, Ghanem M Mustafa, Khalid A Maghrabi, Nawal Salahuddin, Tharwat M Aisa, Ahmed S Al Jabbary, Edgardo Tabhan, Yaseen M Arabi, Yaseen M Arabi, Olivia A Trinidad, Hasan M Al Dorzi, Edgardo E Tabhan, Vesna Bumbasirevic, Bojan Jovanovic, Stefan Bolon, Oliver Smith, Jordi Mancebo, Hernan Aguirre-Bermeo, Juan C Lopez-Delgado, Francisco Esteve, Gemma Rialp, Catalina Forteza, Candelaria De Haro, Antonio Artigas, Guillermo M Albaiceta, Sara De Cima-Iglesias, Leticia Seoane-Quiroga, Alexandra Ceniceros-Barros, Antonio L RuizAguilar, Luis M Claraco-Vega, Juan Alfonso Soler, Maria Del Carmen Lorente, Cecilia Hermosa, Federico Gordo, Miryam PrietoGonzález, Juan B López-Messa, Manuel P Perez, Cesar P Perez, Raquel Montoiro Allue, Ferran RocheCampo, Marcos Ibañez-Santacruz, Susana TempranoSusana, Maria C Pintado, Raul De Pablo, Pilar Ricart Aroa Gómez, Silvia Rodriguez Ruiz, Silvia Iglesias Moles, Mª Teresa Jurado, Alfons Arizmendi, Enrique A Piacentini, Nieves Franco, Teresa Honrubia, Meisy Perez Cheng, Elena Perez Losada, Javier Blanco, Luis J Yuste, Cecilia Carbayo-Gorriz, Francisca G Cazorla-Barranquero, Javier G Alonso, Rosa S Alda, Ángela Algaba, Gonzalo Navarro, Enrique Cereijo, Esther Diaz-Rodriguez, Diego Pastor Marcos, Laura Alvarez Montero, Luis Herrera Para, Roberto Jimenez Sanchez, Miguel Angel Blasco Navalpotro, Ricardo Diaz Abad, Raquel Montiel González, Dácil Parrilla Toribio, Alejandro G Castro, Maria Jose D Artiga, Oscar Penuelas, Tomas P Roser, Moreno F Olga, Elena Gallego Curto, Rocío Manzano Sánchez, Vallverdu P Imma, Garcia M Elisabet, Laura Claverias, Monica Magret, Ana M Pellicer, Lucia L Rodriguez, Jesús Sánchez-Ballesteros, Ángela González-Salamanca, Antonio G Jimenez, Francisco P Huerta, Juan Carlos J Sotillo Diaz, Esther Bermejo Lopez, David D Llinares Moya, Alec A Tallet Alfonso, Palazon Sanchez Eugenio Luis, Palazon Sanchez Cesar, Sánchez I Rafael, Corcoles G Virgilio, Noelia N Recio, Christian C Rylander, Bernhard Holzgraefe, Lars M Broman, Joanna Wessbergh, Linnea Persson, Fredrik Schiöler, Hans Kedelv, Anna Oscarsson Tibblin, Henrik Appelberg, Lars Hedlund, Johan Helleberg, Karin E Eriksson, Rita Glietsch, Niklas Larsson, Ingela Nygren, Silvia L Nunes, Anna-Karin Morin, Thomas Kander, Anne Adolfsson, Lise Piquilloud, Hervé O Zender, Corinne Leemann-Refondini, Souheil Elatrous, Slaheddine Bouchoucha, Imed Chouchene, Islem Ouanes, Asma Ben Souissi, Salma Kamoun, Oktay Demirkiran, Mustafa Aker, Emre Erbabacan, Ilkay Ceylan, Nermin Kelebek Girgin, Menekse Ozcelik, Necmettin Ünal, Basak Ceyda Meco, Onat O Akyol, Suleyman S Derman, Barry Kennedy, Ken Parhar, Latha Srinivasa, Lia McNamee, Danny McAuley, Phil Hopkins, Clare Mellis, Vivek Kakar, Dan Hadfield, Andre Vercueil, Kaushik Bhowmick, Sally K Humphreys, Andrew Ferguson, Raymond Mckee, Ashok S Raj, Danielle A Fawkes, Philip Watt, Linda Twohey, Rajeev R Jha, Matthew Thomas, Alex Morton, Varsha Kadaba, Mark J Smith, Anil P Hormis, Santhana G Kannan, Miriam Namih, Henrik Reschreiter, Julie Camsooksai, Alek Kumar, Szabolcs Rugonfalvi, Christopher Nutt, Orla Oneill, Colette Seasman, Ged Dempsey, Christopher J Scott, Helen E Ellis, Stuart Mckechnie, Paula J Hutton, Nora N Di Tomasso, Michela N Vitale, Ruth O Griffin, Michael N Dean, Julius H Cranshaw, Emma L Willett, Nicholas Ioannou, Sarah Gillis, Peter Csabi, Rosaleen Macfadyen, Heidi Dawson, Pieter D Preez, Alexandra J Williams, Owen Boyd, Laura Ortiz-Ruiz de Gordoa, Jon Bramall, Sophie Symmonds, Simon K Chau, Tim Wenham, Tamas Szakmany, Piroska Toth-Tarsoly, Katie H McCalman, Peter Alexander, Lorraine Stephenson, Thomas Collyer, Rhiannon Chapman, Raphael Cooper, Russell M Allan, Malcolm Sim, David W Wrathall, Donald A Irvine, Kim S Zantua, John C Adams, Andrew J Burtenshaw, Gareth P Sellors, Ingeborg D Welters, Karen E Williams, Robert J Hessell, Matthew G Oldroyd, Ceri E Battle, Suresh Pillai, Istvan Kajtor, Mageswaran Sivashanmugavel, Sinead C Okane, Adrian Donnelly, Aniko D Frigyik, Jon P Careless, Martin M May, Richard Stewart, T John Trinder, Samantha J Hagan, Jade M Cole, Caroline C MacFie, Anna T Dowling, Javier Hurtado, Nicolás Nin, Javier Hurtado, Edgardo Nuñez, Gustavo Pittini, Ruben Rodriguez, María C Imperio, Cristina Santos, Ana G França, Alejandro Ebeid, Alberto Deicas, Carolina Serra, Aditya Uppalapati, Ghassan Kamel, Valerie M Banner-Goodspeed, Jeremy R Beitler, Satyanarayana Reddy Mukkera, Shreedhar Kulkarni, John O Shinn Iii, Dina Gomaa, Christopher Tainter, Jarone Lee, Tomaz MesarJarone Lee, Dale J Yeatts, Jessica Warren, Michael J Lanspa, Russel R Miller, Colin K Grissom, Samuel M Brown, Philippe R Bauer, Ryan J Gosselin, Barrett T Kitch, Jason E Cohen, Scott H Beegle, Shazia Choudry, Renaud M Gueret, Aiman Tulaimat, William Stigler, Hitesh Batra, Nidhi G Huff, Keith D Lamb, Trevor W Oetting, Nicholas M Mohr, Claine Judy, Shigeki Saito, Fayez M Kheir, Fayez Kheir, Adam B Schlichting, Angela Delsing, Daniel R Crouch, Mary Elmasri, Daniel R Crouch, Dina Ismail, Kyle R Dreyer, Thomas C Blakeman, Dina Gomaa, Rebecca M Baro, Carolina Quintana Grijalba, Peter C Hou, Raghu Seethala, Imo Aisiku, Galen Henderson, Gyorgy Frendl, Sen-Kuang Hou, Robert L Owens, Ashley Schomer, Intensive Care Medicine, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, ACS - Microcirculation, Pham, T, Pesenti, A, Bellani, G, Rubenfeld, G, Fan, E, Bugedo, G, Lorente, J, Fernandes, A, Van Haren, F, Bruhn, A, Rios, F, Esteban, A, Gattinoni, L, Larsson, A, Mcauley, D, Ranieri, M, Thompson, B, Wrigge, H, Brochard, L, Laffey, J, AP-HP Hôpital Bicêtre (Le Kremlin-Bicêtre), St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Groupe de recherche clinique CARMAS, Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et santé des populations (CESP), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay, Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda - Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Università degli Studi di Milano [Milano] (UNIMI), University of Milan, San Gerardo Hospital, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, Mount Sinai Hospital [Toronto, Canada] (MSH), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC), University Hospital of Getafe, CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias (CIBERES), Universidad Europea de Madrid, Hospital Garcia de Orta (EPE), Canberra Hospital, Medical School [Australian National University - ANU], Australian National University (ANU), University of Canberra, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red Enfermedades Respiratorias (CIBERES), University of Göttingen - Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Uppsala University, Queen's University [Belfast] (QUB), Royal Victoria Hospital, McGill University Health Center [Montreal] (MUHC), Università degli Studi di Bologna, Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston], University Hospital Leipzig, Department of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, Pain Therapy, Bergmannstrost Hospital Halle, 06112, Halle, National University of Ireland [Galway] (NUI Galway), Bayer GlaxoSmithKline, GSK Baxter International Boehringer Ingelheim Wellcome Trust, WT National Institute for Health Research, NIHR Queen's University Belfast, QUB Medical Research Council Canada, MRC European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, ESICM, Support statement: This work was supported by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. Funding information for this article has been deposited with the Crossref Funder Registry., Conflict of interest: T. Pham has nothing to disclose. A. Pesenti reports personal fees from Maquet, Novalung/Xenios, Baxter, Gilead and Boehringer Ingelheim, outside the submitted work. G. Bellani reports grants and personal fees from Draeger Medical, personal fees from Getinge, Hamilton, GE Healthcare, Dimar SRL, Intersurgical and Flowmeter SPA, outside the submitted work. G. Rubenfeld has nothing to disclose. E. Fan reports personal fees from ALung Technologies, Getinge and MC3 Cardiopulmonary, grants, personal fees and non-financial support from Fresenius Medical Care, outside the submitted work. G. Bugedo has nothing to disclose. J.A. Lorente has nothing to disclose. A.D. V. Fernandes has nothing to disclose. F. Van Haren has nothing to disclose. A. Bruhn has nothing to disclose. F. Rios has nothing to disclose. A. Esteban has nothing to disclose. L. Gattinoni has nothing to disclose. A. Larsson reports grants from the Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation, during the conduct of the study. D.F. McAuley reports personal fees from consultancy for GlaxoSmithKline, Boehringer Ingelheim and Bayer, outside the submitted work, in addition, his institution has received funds from grants from the UK NIHR, Wellcome Trust, Innovate UK, NI HSC R&D Division, NI Chest Heart and Stroke, and MRC, is one of four named inventors on a patent US8962032 covering the use of sialic acid-bearing nanoparticles as anti-inflammatory agents issued to his institution, The Queen’s University of Belfast (http://www.google.com/patents/US8962032), and is a Director of Research for the Intensive Care Society and NIHR EME Programme Director. M. Ranieri has nothing to disclose. B.T. Thompson reports personal fees from Bayer, Thetis and Novartis, outside the submitted work. H. Wrigge reports personal fees for consultancy from Dräger Medical, personal fees for advisory board work from Liberate Medical, grants and personal fees for lectures from InfectoPharm, personal fees for lectures from MSD and GE, outside the submitted work. L.J. Brochard reports grants from Medtronic Covidien, grants and non-financial support from Fisher Paykel, non-financial support from Air Liquide, Sentec and Philips, other (patent) from General Electric, outside the submitted work. J.G. Laffey reports grants and personal fees from Baxter, grants and non-financial support from Aerogen and Factor Biosciences, outside the submitted work., LUNG SAFE Investigators and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine Trials Group: Antonio Pesenti, John G Laffey, Laurent Brochard, Andres Esteban, Luciano Gattinoni, Frank van Haren, Anders Larsson, Daniel F McAuley, Marco Ranieri, Gordon Rubenfeld, B Taylor Thompson, Hermann Wrigge, Arthur S Slutsky, John G Laffey, Giacomo Bellani, Tài Pham, Eddy Fan, Fernando Rios, Frank van Haren, Thierry Sottiaux, Pieter Depuydt, Fredy S Lora, Luciano Cesar Azevedo, Eddy Fan, Guillermo Bugedo, Haibo Qiu, Marcos Gonzalez, Juan Silesky, Vladimir Cerny, Jonas Nielsen, Manuel Jibaja, Tài Pham, Hermann Wrigge, Dimitrios Matamis, Jorge Luis Ranero, Pravin Amin, S M Hashemian, Kevin Clarkson, Giacomo Bellani, Kiyoyasu Kurahashi, Asisclo Villagomez, Amine Ali Zeggwagh, Leo M Heunks, Jon Henrik Laake, Jose Emmanuel Palo, Antero do Vale Fernandes, Dorel Sandesc, Yaasen Arabi, Vesna Bumbasierevic, Nicolas Nin, Jose A Lorente, Anders Larsson, Lise Piquilloud, Fekri Abroug, Daniel F McAuley, Lia McNamee, Javier Hurtado, Ed Bajwa, Gabriel Démpaire, Hektor Sula, Lordian Nunci, Alma Cani, Alan Zazu, Christian Dellera, Carolina S Insaurralde, Risso V Alejandro, Julio Daldin, Mauricio Vinzio, Ruben O Fernandez, Luis P Cardonnet, Lisandro R Bettini, Mariano Carboni Bisso, Emilio M Osman, Mariano G Setten, Pablo Lovazzano, Javier Alvarez, Veronica Villar, Norberto C Pozo, Nicolas Grubissich, Gustavo A Plotnikow, Daniela N Vasquez, Santiago Ilutovich, Norberto Tiribelli, Ariel Chena, Carlos A Pellegrini, María G Saenz, Elisa Estenssoro, Matias Brizuela, Hernan Gianinetto, Pablo E Gomez, Valeria I Cerrato, Marco G Bezzi, Silvina A Borello, Flavia A Loiacono, Adriana M Fernandez, Serena Knowles, Claire Reynolds, Deborah M Inskip, Jennene J Miller, Jing Kong, Christina Whitehead, Shailesh Bihari, Aylin Seven, Amanda Krstevski, Helen J Rodgers, Rebecca T Millar, Toni E McKenna, Irene M Bailey, Gabrielle C Hanlon, Anders Aneman, Joan M Lynch, Raman Azad, John Neal, Paul W Woods, Brigit L Roberts, Mark R Kol, Helen S Wong, Katharina C Riss, Thomas Staudinger, Xavier Wittebole, Caroline Berghe, Pierre A Bulpa, Alain M Dive, Rik Verstraete, Herve Lebbinck, Pieter Depuydt, Joris Vermassen, Philippe Meersseman, Helga Ceunen, Jonas I Rosa, Daniel O Beraldo, Claudio Piras, Adenilton M Rampinelli, Antonio P Nassar Jr, Sergio Mataloun, Marcelo Moock, Marlus M Thompson, Claudio H Gonçalves, Ana Carolina P Antônio, Aline Ascoli, Rodrigo S Biondi, Danielle C Fontenele, Danielle Nobrega, Vanessa M Sales, Ahmad Yazid Bin Hj Abul Wahab, Maizatul Ismail, Suresh Shindhe, John Laffey, Francois Beloncle, Kyle G Davies, Rob Cirone, Venika Manoharan, Mehvish Ismail, Ewan C Goligher, Mandeep Jassal, Erin Nishikawa, Areej Javeed, Gerard Curley, Nuttapol Rittayamai, Matteo Parotto, Niall D Ferguson, Sangeeta Mehta, Jenny Knoll, Antoine Pronovost, Sergio Canestrini, Alejandro R Bruhn, Patricio H Garcia, Felipe A Aliaga, Pamela A Farías, Jacob S Yumha, Claudia A Ortiz, Javier E Salas, Alejandro A Saez, Luis D Vega, Eduardo F Labarca, Felipe T Martinez, Nicolás G Carreño, Pilar Lora, Haitao Liu, Haibo Qiu, Ling Liu, Rui Tang, Xiaoming Luo, Youzhong An, Huiying Zhao, Yan Gao, Zhe Zhai, Zheng L Ye, Wei Wang, Wenwen Li, Qingdong Li, Ruiqiang Zheng, Wenkui Yu, Juanhong Shen, Xinyu Li, Tao Yu, Weihua Lu, Ya Q Wu, Xiao B Huang, Zhenyang He, Yuanhua Lu, Hui Han, Fan Zhang, Renhua Sun, Hua X Wang, Shu H Qin, Bao H Zhu, Jun Zhao, Jian Liu, Bin Li, Jing L Liu, Fa C Zhou, Qiong J Li, Xing Y Zhang, Zhou Li-Xin, Qiang Xin-Hua, Liangyan Jiang, Yuan N Gao, Xian Y Zhao, Yuan Y Li, Xiao L Li, Chunting Wang, Qingchun Yao, Rongguo Yu, Kai Chen, Huanzhang Shao, Bingyu Qin, Qing Q Huang, Wei H Zhu, Ai Y Hang, Ma X Hua, Yimin Li, Yonghao Xu, Yu D Di, Long L Ling, Tie H Qin, Shou H Wang, Junping Qin, Yi Han, Suming Zhou, Monica P Vargas, Juan I Silesky Jimenez, Manuel A González Rojas, Jaime E SolisQuesada, Christian M Ramirez-Alfaro, Jan Máca, Peter Sklienka, Jakob Gjedsted, Aage Christiansen, Jonas Nielsen, Boris G Villamagua, Iguel Llano, Philippe Burtin, Gautier Buzancais, Pascal Beuret, Nicolas Pelletier, Satar Mortaza, Alain Mercat, Jonathan Chelly, Sébastien Jochmans, Nicolas Terzi, Cédric Daubin, Guillaume Carteaux, Nicolas de Prost, Jean-Daniel Chiche, Fabrice Daviaud, Tài Pham, Muriel Fartoukh, Guillaume Barberet, Jerome Biehler, Jean Dellamonica, Denis Doyen, Jean-Michel Arnal, Anais Briquet, Sami Hraiech, Laurent Papazian, Arnaud Follin, Damien Roux, Jonathan Messika, Evangelos Kalaitzis, Laurence Dangers, Alain Combes, Siu-Ming Au, Gaetan Béduneau, Dorothée Carpentier, Elie H Zogheib, Herve Dupont, Sylvie Ricome, Francesco L Santoli, Sebastien L Besset, Philippe Michel, Bruno Gelée, Pierre-Eric Danin, Bernard Goubaux, Philippe J Crova, Nga T Phan, Frantz Berkelmans, Julio C Badie, Romain Tapponnier, Josette Gally, Samy Khebbeb, Jean-Etienne Herbrecht, Francis Schneider, PierreLouis M Declercq, Jean-Philippe Rigaud, Jacques Duranteau, Anatole Harrois, Russell Chabanne, Julien Marin, Charlene Bigot, Sandrine Thibault, Mohammed Ghazi, Messabi Boukhazna, Salem Ould Zein, Jack R Richecoeur, Daniele M Combaux, Fabien Grelon, Charlene Le Moal, Elise P Sauvadet, Adrien Robine, Virginie Lemiale, Danielle Reuter, Martin Dres, Alexandre Demoule, Dany Goldgran-Toledano, Loredana Baboi, Claude Guérin, Ralph Lohner, Jens Kraßler, Susanne Schäfer, Kai D Zacharowski, Patrick Meybohm, Andreas W Reske, Philipp Simon, HansBernd F Hopf, Michael Schuetz, Thomas Baltus, Metaxia N Papanikolaou, Theonymfi G Papavasilopoulou, Giannis A Zacharas, Vasilis Ourailogloy, Eleni K Mouloudi, Eleni V Massa, Eva O Nagy, Electra E Stamou, Ellada V Kiourtzieva, Marina A Oikonomou, Luis E Avila, Cesar A Cortez, Johanna E Citalán, Sameer A Jog, Safal D Sable, Bhagyesh Shah, Mohan Gurjar, Arvind K Baronia, Mohammedfaruk Memon, Radhakrishnan Muthuchellappan, Venkatapura J Ramesh, Anitha Shenoy, Ramesh Unnikrishnan, Subhal B Dixit, Rachana V Rhayakar, Nagarajan Ramakrishnan, Vallish K Bhardwaj, Heera L Mahto, Sudha V Sagar, Vijayanand Palaniswamy, Deeban Ganesan, Seyed Mohammadreza Hashemian, Hamidreza Jamaati, Farshad Heidari, Edel A Meaney, Alistair Nichol, Karl M Knapman, Donall O'Croinin, Eimhin S Dunne, Dorothy M Breen, Kevin P Clarkson, Rola F Jaafar, Rory Dwyer, Fahd Amir, Olaitan O Ajetunmobi, Aogan C O'Muircheartaigh, Colin S Black, Nuala Treanor, Daniel V Collins, Wahid Altaf, Gianluca Zani, Maurizio Fusari, Savino Spadaro, Carlo A Volta, Romano Graziani, Barbara Brunettini, Salvatore Palmese, Paolo Formenti, Michele Umbrello, Andrea Lombardo, Elisabetta Pecci, Marco Botteri, Monica Savioli, Alessandro Protti, Alessia Mattei, Lorenzo Schiavoni, Andrea Tinnirello, Manuel Todeschini, Antonino Giarratano, Andrea Cortegiani, Antonino Giarratano, Andrea Cortegiani, Massimo M Antonelli, Luca M Montini, Paolo Casalena, Sergio Scafetti, Giovanna Panarello, Giovanna Occhipinti, Nicolò Patroniti, Matteo Pozzi, Roberto R Biscione, Michela M Poli, Ferdinando Raimondi, Daniela Albiero, Giulia Crapelli, Eduardo Beck, Vincenzo Pota, Vincenzo Schiavone, Alexandre Molin, Fabio Tarantino, Giacomo Monti, Elena Frati, Lucia Mirabella, Gilda Cinnella, Tommaso Fossali, Riccardo Colombo, Pierpaolo Terragni, Ilaria Pattarino, Francesco Mojoli, Antonio Braschi, Erika E Borotto, Andrea N Cracchiolo, Daniela M Palma, Francesco Raponi, Giuseppe Foti, Ettore R Vascotto, Andrea Coppadoro, Luca Brazzi, Leda Floris, Giorgio A Iotti, Aaron Venti, Osamu Yamaguchi, Shunsuke Takagi, Hiroki N Maeyama, Eizo Watanabe, Yoshihiro Yamaji, Kazuyoshi Shimizu, Kyoko Shiozaki, Satoru Futami, Sekine Ryosuke, Koji Saito, Yoshinobu Kameyama, Keiko Ueno, Masayo Izawa, Nao Okuda, Hiroyuki Suzuki, Tomofumi Harasawa, Michitaka Nasu, Tadaaki Takada, Fumihito Ito, Shin Nunomiya, Kansuke Koyama, Toshikazu Abe, Kohkichi Andoh, Kohei Kusumoto, Akira Hirata, Akihiro Takaba, Hiroyasu Kimura, Shuhei Matsumoto, Ushio Higashijima, Hiroyuki Honda, Nobumasa Aoki, Hiroshi Imai, Yasuaki Ogino, Ichiko Mizuguchi, Kazuya Ichikado, Kenichi Nitta, Katsunori Mochizuki, Tomoaki Hashida, Hiroyuki Tanaka, Tomoyuki Nakamura, Daisuke Niimi, Takeshi Ueda, Yozo Kashiwa, Akinori Uchiyama, Olegs Sabelnikovs, Peteris Oss, Youssef Haddad, Kong Y Liew, Silvio A Ñamendys-Silva, Yves D Jarquin-Badiola, Luis A Sanchez-Hurtado, Saira S Gomez-Flores, Maria C Marin, Asisclo J Villagomez, Jordana S Lemus, Jonathan M Fierro, Mavy Ramirez Cervantes, Francisco Javier Flores Mejia, Dulce Dector, Alejandro Rojas, Daniel R Gonzalez, Claudia R Estrella, Jorge R Sanchez-Medina, Alvaro Ramirez-Gutierrez, Fernando G George, Janet S Aguirre, Juan A Buensuseso, Manuel Poblano, Juan A Buensuseso, Manuel Poblano, Tarek Dendane, Amine Ali Zeggwagh, Hicham Balkhi, Mina Elkhayari, Nacer Samkaoui, Hanane Ezzouine, Abdellatif Benslama, Mourad Amor, Wajdi Maazouzi, Nedim Cimic, Oliver Beck, Monique M Bruns, Jeroen A Schouten, Myra Rinia, Monique Raaijmakers, Leo M Heunks, Hellen M van Wezel, Serge J Heines, Ulrich Strauch, Marc P Buise, Fabienne D Simonis, Marcus J Schultz, Jennifer C Goodson, Troy S Browne, Leanlove Navarra, Anna Hunt, Robyn A Hutchison, Mathew B Bailey, Lynette Newby, Colin McArthur, Michael Kalkoff, Alex Mcleod, Jonathan Casement, Danielle J Hacking, Finn H Andersen, Merete S Dolva, Jon H Laake, Andreas Barratt-Due, Kim Andre L Noremark, Eldar Søreide, Brit Å Sjøbø, Anne B Guttormsen, Hector H Leon Yoshido, Ronald Zumaran Aguilar, Fredy A Montes Oscanoa, Alain U Alisasis, Joanne B Robles, Rossini Abbie B Pasanting-Lim, Beatriz C Tan, Pawel Andruszkiewicz, Karina Jakubowska, Cristina M Coxo, António M Alvarez, Bruno S Oliveira, Gustavo M Montanha, Nelson C Barros, Carlos S Pereira, António M Messias, Jorge M Monteiro, Ana M Araujo, Nuno T Catorze, Susan M Marum, Maria J Bouw, Rui M Gomes, Vania A Brito, Silvia Castro, Joana M Estilita, Filipa M Barros, Isabel M Serra, Aurelia M Martinho, Dana R Tomescu, Alexandra Marcu, Ovidiu H Bedreag, Marius Papurica, Dan E Corneci, Silvius Ioan Negoita, Evgeny Grigoriev, Alexey I Gritsan, Andrey A Gazenkampf, Ghaleb Almekhlafi, Mohamad M Albarrak, Ghanem M Mustafa, Khalid A Maghrabi, Nawal Salahuddin, Tharwat M Aisa, Ahmed S Al Jabbary, Edgardo Tabhan, Yaseen M Arabi, Yaseen M Arabi, Olivia A Trinidad, Hasan M Al Dorzi, Edgardo E Tabhan, Vesna Bumbasirevic, Bojan Jovanovic, Stefan Bolon, Oliver Smith, Jordi Mancebo, Hernan Aguirre-Bermeo, Juan C Lopez-Delgado, Francisco Esteve, Gemma Rialp, Catalina Forteza, Candelaria De Haro, Antonio Artigas, Guillermo M Albaiceta, Sara De Cima-Iglesias, Leticia Seoane-Quiroga, Alexandra Ceniceros-Barros, Antonio L RuizAguilar, Luis M Claraco-Vega, Juan Alfonso Soler, Maria Del Carmen Lorente, Cecilia Hermosa, Federico Gordo, Miryam PrietoGonzález, Juan B López-Messa, Manuel P Perez, Cesar P Perez, Raquel Montoiro Allue, Ferran RocheCampo, Marcos Ibañez-Santacruz, Susana TempranoSusana, Maria C Pintado, Raul De Pablo, Pilar Ricart Aroa Gómez, Silvia Rodriguez Ruiz, Silvia Iglesias Moles, Mª Teresa Jurado, Alfons Arizmendi, Enrique A Piacentini, Nieves Franco, Teresa Honrubia, Meisy Perez Cheng, Elena Perez Losada, Javier Blanco, Luis J Yuste, Cecilia Carbayo-Gorriz, Francisca G Cazorla-Barranquero, Javier G Alonso, Rosa S Alda, Ángela Algaba, Gonzalo Navarro, Enrique Cereijo, Esther Diaz-Rodriguez, Diego Pastor Marcos, Laura Alvarez Montero, Luis Herrera Para, Roberto Jimenez Sanchez, Miguel Angel Blasco Navalpotro, Ricardo Diaz Abad, Raquel Montiel González, Dácil Parrilla Toribio, Alejandro G Castro, Maria Jose D Artiga, Oscar Penuelas, Tomas P Roser, Moreno F Olga, Elena Gallego Curto, Rocío Manzano Sánchez, Vallverdu P Imma, Garcia M Elisabet, Laura Claverias, Monica Magret, Ana M Pellicer, Lucia L Rodriguez, Jesús Sánchez-Ballesteros, Ángela González-Salamanca, Antonio G Jimenez, Francisco P Huerta, Juan Carlos J Sotillo Diaz, Esther Bermejo Lopez, David D Llinares Moya, Alec A Tallet Alfonso, Palazon Sanchez Eugenio Luis, Palazon Sanchez Cesar, Sánchez I Rafael, Corcoles G Virgilio, Noelia N Recio, Christian C Rylander, Bernhard Holzgraefe, Lars M Broman, Joanna Wessbergh, Linnea Persson, Fredrik Schiöler, Hans Kedelv, Anna Oscarsson Tibblin, Henrik Appelberg, Lars Hedlund, Johan Helleberg, Karin E Eriksson, Rita Glietsch, Niklas Larsson, Ingela Nygren, Silvia L Nunes, Anna-Karin Morin, Thomas Kander, Anne Adolfsson, Lise Piquilloud, Hervé O Zender, Corinne Leemann-Refondini, Souheil Elatrous, Slaheddine Bouchoucha, Imed Chouchene, Islem Ouanes, Asma Ben Souissi, Salma Kamoun, Oktay Demirkiran, Mustafa Aker, Emre Erbabacan, Ilkay Ceylan, Nermin Kelebek Girgin, Menekse Ozcelik, Necmettin Ünal, Basak Ceyda Meco, Onat O Akyol, Suleyman S Derman, Barry Kennedy, Ken Parhar, Latha Srinivasa, Lia McNamee, Danny McAuley, Phil Hopkins, Clare Mellis, Vivek Kakar, Dan Hadfield, Andre Vercueil, Kaushik Bhowmick, Sally K Humphreys, Andrew Ferguson, Raymond Mckee, Ashok S Raj, Danielle A Fawkes, Philip Watt, Linda Twohey, Rajeev R Jha, Matthew Thomas, Alex Morton, Varsha Kadaba, Mark J Smith, Anil P Hormis, Santhana G Kannan, Miriam Namih, Henrik Reschreiter, Julie Camsooksai, Alek Kumar, Szabolcs Rugonfalvi, Christopher Nutt, Orla Oneill, Colette Seasman, Ged Dempsey, Christopher J Scott, Helen E Ellis, Stuart Mckechnie, Paula J Hutton, Nora N Di Tomasso, Michela N Vitale, Ruth O Griffin, Michael N Dean, Julius H Cranshaw, Emma L Willett, Nicholas Ioannou, Sarah Gillis, Peter Csabi, Rosaleen Macfadyen, Heidi Dawson, Pieter D Preez, Alexandra J Williams, Owen Boyd, Laura Ortiz-Ruiz de Gordoa, Jon Bramall, Sophie Symmonds, Simon K Chau, Tim Wenham, Tamas Szakmany, Piroska Toth-Tarsoly, Katie H McCalman, Peter Alexander, Lorraine Stephenson, Thomas Collyer, Rhiannon Chapman, Raphael Cooper, Russell M Allan, Malcolm Sim, David W Wrathall, Donald A Irvine, Kim S Zantua, John C Adams, Andrew J Burtenshaw, Gareth P Sellors, Ingeborg D Welters, Karen E Williams, Robert J Hessell, Matthew G Oldroyd, Ceri E Battle, Suresh Pillai, Istvan Kajtor, Mageswaran Sivashanmugavel, Sinead C Okane, Adrian Donnelly, Aniko D Frigyik, Jon P Careless, Martin M May, Richard Stewart, T John Trinder, Samantha J Hagan, Jade M Cole, Caroline C MacFie, Anna T Dowling, Javier Hurtado, Nicolás Nin, Javier Hurtado, Edgardo Nuñez, Gustavo Pittini, Ruben Rodriguez, María C Imperio, Cristina Santos, Ana G França, Alejandro Ebeid, Alberto Deicas, Carolina Serra, Aditya Uppalapati, Ghassan Kamel, Valerie M Banner-Goodspeed, Jeremy R Beitler, Satyanarayana Reddy Mukkera, Shreedhar Kulkarni, John O Shinn Iii, Dina Gomaa, Christopher Tainter, Jarone Lee, Tomaz MesarJarone Lee, Dale J Yeatts, Jessica Warren, Michael J Lanspa, Russel R Miller, Colin K Grissom, Samuel M Brown, Philippe R Bauer, Ryan J Gosselin, Barrett T Kitch, Jason E Cohen, Scott H Beegle, Shazia Choudry, Renaud M Gueret, Aiman Tulaimat, William Stigler, Hitesh Batra, Nidhi G Huff, Keith D Lamb, Trevor W Oetting, Nicholas M Mohr, Claine Judy, Shigeki Saito, Fayez M Kheir, Fayez Kheir, Adam B Schlichting, Angela Delsing, Daniel R Crouch, Mary Elmasri, Daniel R Crouch, Dina Ismail, Kyle R Dreyer, Thomas C Blakeman, Dina Gomaa, Rebecca M Baro, Carolina Quintana Grijalba, Peter C Hou, Raghu Seethala, Imo Aisiku, Galen Henderson, Gyorgy Frendl, Sen-Kuang Hou, Robert L Owens, Ashley Schomer, UCL - SSS/IREC/MEDA - Pôle de médecine aiguë, UCL - (MGD) Services des soins intensifs, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,ARDS ,Unidades de cuidados intensivos ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,medicine.medical_treatment ,mechanical ventilation ,NO ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tratamiento médico ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Settore MED/41 - ANESTESIOLOGIA ,Insuficiencia respiratoria ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Lung ,Mechanical ventilation ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Respiration, Artificial ,3. Good health ,Intensive Care Units ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030228 respiratory system ,Respiratory failure ,Heart failure ,Anesthesia ,Artificial ,ards ,business ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Enfermedad - Abstract
BackgroundCurrent incidence and outcome of patients with acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU) are unknown, especially for patients not meeting criteria for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).MethodsAn international, multicentre, prospective cohort study of patients presenting with hypoxaemia early in the course of mechanical ventilation, conducted during four consecutive weeks in the winter of 2014 in 459 ICUs from 50 countries (LUNG SAFE). Patients were enrolled with arterial oxygen tension/inspiratory oxygen fraction ratio ≤300 mmHg, new pulmonary infiltrates and need for mechanical ventilation with a positive end-expiratory pressure of ≥5 cmH2O. ICU prevalence, causes of hypoxaemia, hospital survival and factors associated with hospital mortality were measured. Patients with unilateral versus bilateral opacities were compared.Findings12 906 critically ill patients received mechanical ventilation and 34.9% with hypoxaemia and new infiltrates were enrolled, separated into ARDS (69.0%), unilateral infiltrate (22.7%) and congestive heart failure (CHF; 8.2%). The global hospital mortality was 38.6%. CHF patients had a mortality comparable to ARDS (44.1% versus 40.4%). Patients with unilateral-infiltrate had lower unadjusted mortality, but similar adjusted mortality compared to those with ARDS. The number of quadrants on chest imaging was associated with an increased risk of death. There was no difference in mortality comparing patients with unilateral-infiltrate and ARDS with only two quadrants involved.InterpretationMore than one-third of patients receiving mechanical ventilation have hypoxaemia and new infiltrates with a hospital mortality of 38.6%. Survival is dependent on the degree of pulmonary involvement whether or not ARDS criteria are reached.
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- 2021
36. Radiographic and Clinical Outcomes After Tibial Tubercle Osteotomy for the Treatment of Patella Alta: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
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Jorge Chahla, Kyle N. Kunze, Eric Azua, Amar S. Vadhera, Adam B. Yanke, and Derrick M. Knapik
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Adult ,Joint Instability ,Adolescent ,Tubercle ,Patellar Dislocation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiography ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Osteotomy ,Patellofemoral Joint ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Risk factor ,Orthodontics ,030222 orthopedics ,Tibia ,business.industry ,Patella ,030229 sport sciences ,Meta-analysis ,business - Abstract
Background: Patella alta is a known risk factor for patellar instability and, in the setting of recurrent patellar instability with significant patella alta, correction of patellar height with a tibial tubercle osteotomy (TTO) may help decrease the failure of soft tissue–based stabilization. Purpose: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of radiographic and clinical outcomes after TTO for patella alta. Study Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis; Level of evidence, 4. Methods: PubMed, OVID/Medline, and Cochrane databases were queried in June 2020 for studies reporting outcomes of TTO for patella alta. Data pertaining to study characteristics and design, radiographic and clinical outcome values, and incidence of complications and reoperations were extracted. DerSimonian-Laird continuous and binary random-effects models were constructed to (1) perform subgroup-based analysis of mean changes in radiographic indices after TTO and (2) quantify the pooled incidence of complications and reoperations. Results: Eight studies including 340 patients (420 knees) with a mean age of 24.7 ± 8.4 years were included. The mean follow-up was 53.1 months (range, 3-120 months), with 1 study reporting a mean follow-up of less than 2 years. The pooled mean anterior transfer was 5.6 mm; the mean medial transfer was 8.7 ± 1.3 mm; and the pooled mean distalization of the tibial tubercle was 12.2 ± 4.5 mm. Continuous random-effects meta-analysis determined that significant reductions in the mean Insall-Salvati ratio (1.40 vs 0.98, P < .001), Caton-Deschamps index (1.26 vs 0.97, P < .001), and tibial tubercle to trochlear groove ratio (18.27 vs 10.69, P < .001) were observed after TTO. The overall incidence of complications was 7.6% (95% CI, 4.8%-10.5%), while the overall incidence of reoperations was 14.3% (95% CI 6.2%-22.4%). Conclusion: TTO for patellar instability in the setting of patella alta results in a significant decrease in patellar height with varying degrees of medialization depending on the utilized technique. A mean postoperative complication rate of 7.6% was reported with a reoperation incidence of 14.3%, related primarily to hardware removal.
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- 2021
37. Impact of a Genomic Test on Treatment Decision in a Predominantly African American Population With Favorable-Risk Prostate Cancer: A Randomized Trial
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Heidy Wang, Shoujin Wu, Adam B. Murphy, Michael R. Abern, Patrice King-Lee, Patricia Vidal, Lisa K. Sharp, Roohollah Sharifi, Karen Ferrer, Marlene Gallegos, Carol Estwing Ferrans, Li Liu, Marin Sekosan, Courtney M.P. Hollowell, Andre Kajdacsy-Balla, and Peter H. Gann
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,African american population ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,030232 urology & nephrology ,MEDLINE ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Test (assessment) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Prostate ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Treatment decision making ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE The Genomic Prostate Score (GPS), performed on biopsy tissue, predicts adverse outcome in prostate cancer (PCa) and has shown promise for improving patient selection for active surveillance (AS). However, its impact on treatment choice in high-risk populations of African Americans is largely unknown and, in general, the effect of the GPS on this difficult decision has not been evaluated in randomized trials. METHODS Two hundred men with National Comprehensive Cancer Network very low to low-intermediate PCa from three Chicago hospitals (70% Black, 16% college graduates) were randomly assigned at diagnosis to standard counseling with or without a 12-gene GPS assay. The primary end point was treatment choice at a second postdiagnosis visit. The proportion of patients choosing AS was compared, and multivariable modeling was used to estimate the effects of various factors on AS acceptance. RESULTS AS acceptance was high overall, although marginally lower in the intervention group (77% v 88%; P = .067), and lower still when men with inadequate specimens were excluded ( P = .029). Men with lower health literacy who received a GPS were seven-fold less likely to choose AS compared with controls, whereas no difference was seen in men with higher health literacy ( Pinteraction = .022). Among men with low-intermediate risk, 69% had GPS values consistent with unfavorable intermediate or high-risk cancer. AS choice was also independently associated with a family history of PCa and having health insurance. CONCLUSION In contrast to other studies, the net effect of the GPS was to move patients away from AS, primarily among men with low health literacy. These findings have implications for our understanding of how prognostic molecular assays that generate probabilities of poor outcome can affect treatment decisions in diverse clinical populations.
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- 2021
38. Facial Soft Tissue Injuries in Pediatric Patients
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Adam B. Johnson, Margarita delaPena, Sydney C. Butts, Sam D. Schild, and Tatiana Reis Puntarelli
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Adult ,Child abuse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Soft Tissue Injuries ,Reconstructive Surgeon ,Population ,Physical examination ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Local anesthesia ,Bites and Stings ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,Facial Injuries ,Surgical repair ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Soft tissue ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,medicine.disease ,Soft tissue injury ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Soft tissue injuries of the head and neck are a common reason for medical evaluation and treatment in pediatric populations with some unique and important considerations when compared with adults. The incidence and type of injuries continue to evolve with the adoption of new safety measures, technology advancements, and education of the general population. The goal of this article is to provide the reader with a thorough understanding of the evaluation and management of pediatric soft tissue trauma including the initial workup, physical examination, appropriateness of antimicrobial therapy, and setting for surgical repair. Additionally, the pediatric anesthetic considerations for evaluation and repair in regard to local anesthesia, sedation, and general anesthesia are described in detail. There is a focus on dog bites, perinatal injuries, and child abuse as these entities are distinctive to a pediatric population and have particular management recommendations. Lastly, application of the reconstructive ladder as it applies to children is supported with specific case examples and figures. Although there are many parallels to the management of soft tissue injury in adults, we will highlight the special situations that occur in pediatric populations, which are imperative for the facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon to understand.
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- 2021
39. Preventing Coronary Obstruction During Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
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Ramzi Khalil, J Bradley Oldemeyer, Jaffar M. Khan, Howard C. Herrmann, John Lisko, Robert J. Lederman, Adnan K. Chhatriwalla, Paul Mahoney, Rachel L Koch, David V. Daniels, Itsik Ben-Dor, Andrei Pop, Roger J. Laham, Emily Perdoncin, Brian Whisenant, Vasilis C. Babaliaros, Peter S. Fail, Gilbert H.L. Tang, James M. McCabe, Ming Zhang, Christian Spies, Adam B Greenbaum, Jeremiah P. Depta, Isaac George, Toby Rogers, Robert A. Leonardi, Lowell F. Satler, Cheng Zhang, Jonas Lanz, Shahram Yazdani, Jeffrey E. Cohen, Ron Waksman, Ashish Pershad, Shikhar Agarwal, Kamran I. Muhammad, Pinak B. Shah, and George Hanzel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcatheter aortic ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Valve replacement ,Cohort ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Stroke ,Embolic protection ,Artery - Abstract
Objectives This study sought to determine the safety of the BASILICA (bioprosthetic or native aortic scallop intentional laceration to prevent iatrogenic coronary artery obstruction) procedure. Background Transcatheter aortic valve replacement causes coronary artery obstruction in 0.7% of cases, with 40% to 50% mortality. BASILICA is a procedure to prevent coronary obstruction. Safety and feasibility in a large patient cohort is lacking. Methods The international BASILICA registry was a retrospective, multicenter, real-world registry of patients at risk of coronary artery obstruction undergoing BASILICA and transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Valve Academic Research Consortium-2 definitions were used to adjudicate events. Results Between June 2017 and December 2020, 214 patients were included from 25 centers in North America and Europe; 72.8% had bioprosthetic aortic valves and 78.5% underwent solo BASILICA. Leaflet traversal was successful in 94.9% and leaflet laceration in 94.4%. Partial or complete coronary artery obstruction was seen in 4.7%. Procedure success, defined as successful BASILICA traversal and laceration without mortality, coronary obstruction, or emergency intervention, was achieved in 86.9%. Thirty-day mortality was 2.8% and stroke was 2.8%, with 0.5% disabling stroke. Thirty-day death and disabling stroke were seen in 3.4%. Valve Academic Research Consortium-2 composite safety was achieved in 82.8%. One-year survival was 83.9%. Outcomes were similar between solo and doppio BASILICA, between native and bioprosthetic valves, and with the use of cerebral embolic protection. Conclusions BASILICA is safe, with low reported rates of stroke and death. BASILICA is feasible in the real-world setting, with a high procedure success rate and low rates of coronary artery obstruction.
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- 2021
40. Prevalence of prostate cancer at autopsy in Nigeria—A preliminary report
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Oluwarotimi Nettey, Theodorus van der Kwast, Maarten C. Bosland, Adekoyejo A. Phillips, Oluyemi Akinloye, Virgilia Macias, Ima Abasi E. Bassey, Vikas Mehta, C. C. Anunobi, Ima Obong A. Ekanem, and Adam B. Murphy
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Nigeria ,Autopsy ,Adenocarcinoma ,Asymptomatic ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Neoplasm Staging ,Subclinical infection ,Intraepithelial neoplasia ,business.industry ,Nigerians ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cancer registry ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Neoplasm Grading ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background and objectives Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in Nigerian men despite the lack of PSA based screening. Current prevalence estimates in Nigeria are based on cancer registry data obtained primarily from hospital admissions and therefore not truly reflective of prostate cancer incidence. Prior autopsy series did not adhere to modern pathologic quality practices. The aim of this study was to explore the prevalence of asymptomatic prostate cancer among Nigerian men at the time of autopsy. Methods Prostates were collected at autopsy at the Universities of Lagos and Calabar Teaching Hospitals from men aged more than 40 who died from causes other than prostate cancer. Thirty-nine prostates from Nigerian men autopsied in 2017 to 2018 were formalin-fixed, weighed, and sliced at 4 mm intervals. Haematoxylin and eosin-stained paraffin sections were prepared from these slices. Presence and Gleason grade of prostatic adenocarcinomas and presence of high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN) were recorded. Results Mean age of cases was 55 ± 11 years and mean prostatic weight was 23.0 ± 10.9 g. The crude prevalence of HGPIN was 20.6%. Overall crude prevalence of prostate cancer was 8.8% (n = 34), increasing from 8.3% for men aged 40-59 (n = 23) to 10.0% for men ≥60 years old (n = 10). Two tumors were small and had Gleason Grade 3 + 3 or 3 + 4, and one large stage T3 tumor with Gleason Grade 4 + 3 disease and neuroendocrine appearance was found in a 54-year-old man. Conclusions The 8.8% prevalence of subclinical prostate cancer at autopsy was similar to previously reported Nigerian studies with more limited tissue sampling (6.7%-10%), but considerably lower than estimates in other populations, including African Americans. Our findings suggest that latent, clinically asymptomatic prostate cancer is less frequent in Nigerians than in African Americans, despite shared genetic ancestry. Future studies with increased sample size are warranted to provide insight in the natural history and true prevalence of prostate cancer in West Africa.
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- 2021
41. Beta-guanidinopropionic acid has age-specific effects on markers of health and function in mice
- Author
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Brett C. Ginsburg, Adam B. Salmon, Kevin M. Thyne, and Jonathan Dorigatti
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Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Guanidinopropionic acid ,AMP-Activated Protein Kinases ,Guanidines ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Internal medicine ,Animals ,Medicine ,Circadian rhythm ,Respiratory exchange ratio ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,AMPK ,Skeletal muscle ,Lipid metabolism ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Lean body mass ,Original Article ,Propionates ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business - Abstract
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a central regulator of both lifespan and health across multiple model organisms. β-Guanidinopropionic acid (GPA) is an endogenous AMPK activator previously shown to improve metabolic function in young and obese mice. In this study, we tested whether age of administration significantly affects the physiological outcomes of GPA administration in mice. We report that intervention starting at 7–8 months (young) results in activation of AMPK signaling and a phenotype consisting of lower body mass, improved glucose control, enhanced exercise tolerance, and altered mitochondrial electron transport chain flux similar to previous reports. When GPA treatment is started at 18–19 months (old), the effect of GPA on AMPK signaling is blunted compared to younger mice despite similar accumulation of GPA in skeletal muscle. Even so, GPA administration in older animals delayed age-related declines in lean mass, improved measures of gait performance and circadian rhythm, and increased fat metabolism as measured by respiratory exchange ratio. These results are likely partially driven by the relative difference in basal function and metabolic plasticity between young and old mice. Our results suggest that age-related declines in AMPK sensitivity may limit potential strategies targeting AMPK signaling in older subjects and suggest that further research and development is required for AMPK activators to realize their full potential. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11357-021-00372-8.
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- 2021
42. Cause of death during prostate cancer survivorship: A contemporary, US population–based analysis
- Author
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David J. Press, Anuj S. Desai, Eric Li, Edward M. Schaeffer, and Adam B. Weiner
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Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Survivorship ,Population based ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer Survivors ,Risk Factors ,Cause of Death ,Survivorship curve ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Cause of death ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Prostate ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Confidence interval ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background More than 3.6 million men in the United States harbor a diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa). The authors sought to provide in-depth analyses of the causes of death for contemporary survivors. Methods The authors performed a population-based cohort study in the United States (2000-2016) to assess causes of death for men diagnosed with PCa stratified by demographics and tumor stage. Using general population data, they calculated standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) as observed-to-expected death ratios. Results In total, 752,092 men with PCa, including 200,302 who died (27%), were assessed. A total of 29,048 men with local/regional disease (17%) died of PCa, whereas more than 4-fold men died of other causes (n = 143,719 [83%]). SMRs for death from noncancer causes (0.77; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.77-0.78) suggested that these men were less likely than the general population to die of most other causes. The most common noncancer cause of death was cardiac-related (23%; SMR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.75-0.77). Among men with distant PCa, 90% of deaths occurred within 5 years of diagnosis. Although deaths due to PCa composed the majority of deaths (74%), SMRs suggested that men with distant PCa were at heightened risk for death from most other noncancer causes (1.50; 95% CI, 1.46-1.54) and, in particular, for cardiac-related death (SMR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.41-1.54) and suicide (SMR, 2.32; 95% CI, 1.78-2.96). Further analyses demonstrated that causes of death varied by patient demographics. Conclusions Causes of death during PCa survivorship vary by patient and tumor characteristics. These data provide valuable information regarding health care prioritization during PCa survivorship. Lay summary Men with early-stage prostate cancer are 4-fold more likely to die of other causes, whereas those with advanced prostate cancer are at increased risk for several causes not related to prostate cancer in comparison with the general population. These findings can help guide physicians taking care of men with a diagnosis of prostate cancer.
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- 2021
43. Medical Students’ Attitudes toward Self-harm, and Curricular Influences on Attitude Development
- Author
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Christina Kaewchaluay and Adam B. Joiner
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Medical education ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,020205 medical informatics ,Health professionals ,business.industry ,education ,Stigma (botany) ,Coding (therapy) ,02 engineering and technology ,General Medicine ,Focus group ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Harm ,Health care ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Hidden curriculum ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Psychology ,Curriculum - Abstract
The authors explore attitudes that first and final year medical students have toward self-harm, and examine how the curriculum may influence the development of these attitudes. Six focus groups, involving a total of 21 medical students, were used to explore the objectives. Thematic framework analysis was used to analyze the data through iterative development of a coding framework and identification of themes. Medical students demonstrated simultaneously positive and negative attitudes. Students reported minimal exposure to self-harm through the formal curriculum and being exposed to negative attitudes exhibited by healthcare professionals through the informal curriculum. Students felt that self-harm was not as important as other subjects competing for their attention in their curriculum. Many students were discouraged by healthcare staff from seeing people who self-harm, in particular on psychiatry placements. The hidden curriculum may be encouraging negative attitudes toward people who self-harm; students learn that self-harm is “not important.” Findings from this study identify how the curriculum might influence the development of negative attitudes toward self-harm. Students would benefit from being encouraged to interact with people who self-harm and then having the opportunity to discuss the emotions these interactions create.
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- 2021
44. Survival by T Stage for Patients with Localized Bladder Cancer: Implications for Future Screening Trials
- Author
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Solomon L. Woldu, Xiaosong Meng, Joshua J. Meeks, Yair Lotan, Adam B. Weiner, and Lauren Folgosa Cooley
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bladder cancer ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,T-stage ,Neoplasm staging ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is insufficient data to recommend screening for bladder cancer (BC). For future BC screening trials, it is important to understand how and if tumor (T) stage can act as a surrogate outcome marker for overall (OS) and cancer-specific (CSS) survival. OBJECTIVE: To characterize OS and CSS between primary tumor (T) stages in non-metastatic bladder cancer (BC) patients. METHODS: Non-metastatic BC patients were identified in the National Cancer Database (NCDB; 2004-2015) (n = 343,163) and National Cancer Institute Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database (SEER) (n = 130,751). Cox multivariable regression compared relationships between T stage (LGTa, HGTa, Tis, LGT1, HGT1, T2-T4) and OS or CSS for all patients and sub-cohorts. RESULTS: Compared to stage LGTa as a reference, overall (SEER; NCDB) and cancer-specific (SEER) survival significantly declined with increasing T stage. Using SEER, OS ranged from HGTa (HR 1.16, CI 1.13–1.21, p
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- 2021
45. Impact of Surgery for Velopharyngeal Insufficiency on Eustachian Tube Function in Children: Pharyngeal Flap Versus Sphincter Pharyngoplasty
- Author
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Colin J. Fuller, Kesley M. Brown, Adam B. Johnson, Larry Hartzell, Ashlen Thomason, John L. Dornhoffer, James Reed Gardner, and Olivia Speed
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Velopharyngeal Insufficiency ,Eustachian tube function ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Velopharyngeal insufficiency ,medicine ,Humans ,Deletion syndrome ,In patient ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharyngeal flap ,business.industry ,Eustachian Tube ,030206 dentistry ,Eustachian tube dysfunction ,Surgery ,Cleft Palate ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Pharynx ,Sphincter ,Speech disorder ,Oral Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objective: Velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) is a common speech disorder in patients with a history of cleft palate (CP) or 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. Pharyngeal flap (PF) and sphincter pharyngoplasty (SP) are 2 common surgeries to treat this disorder by decreasing unwanted nasal air emission and hypernasal resonance. Because Eustachian tube dysfunction (ETD) in patients with CP may be more frequent after surgery for VPI, we examined whether ETD was associated with either type of surgery. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Children’s hospital-based tertiary referral center. Patients: A total of 225 children with VPI who underwent primary PF (201) or SP (24) between 2006 and 2017. Outcome measures: We examined differences in risk of ETD according to both surgical groups and proxies for postoperative nasal obstruction. These proxies included postoperative resonance measures and development of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Results: Both surgical groups had similar preoperative measures, except the PF group had higher hypernasality by PSA. Postoperatively, the PF group demonstrated lower hypernasal resonance by nasometry and PSA. There were no differences between PF and SP groups with regard to ETD. Proxies for postoperative nasal obstruction also were not predictive of postoperative ETD. Degree of CP and younger age were found to be risk factors for ETD. Conclusion: There was no significant difference in the effects of PF and SP on ETD in this study. Neither lower hypernasality nor incidence of OSA had any impact on ETD. Degree of CP and younger age were the only significant risk factors for ETD that this study identified.
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- 2021
46. Performance of Prostate Health Index in Biopsy Naïve Black Men
- Author
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Edward M. Schaeffer, Courtney M.P. Hollowell, Rilwan Babajide, Adam B. Murphy, Alfreda Holloway-Beth, Daniel P. Dalton, Oluwarotimi Nettey, Samuel Carbunaru, Tiffany McDowell, Karriem S. Watson, Peter H. Gann, Josef Ben Levi, James Stinson, Le’Andre Moore, Marcus Murray, and Rick A. Kittles
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biopsy ,Urology ,Comparative effectiveness research ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Unnecessary Procedures ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Gleason grade ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Health index ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prostate ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Chicago ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,medicine.disease ,Black or African American ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Neoplasm Grading ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE: The Prostate Health Index is validated for prostate cancer detection but has not been well validated for Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer detection in Black men. We hypothesize that the Prostate Health Index has greater accuracy than prostate specific antigen for detection of Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer. We estimated probability of overall and Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer across previously established Prostate Health Index ranges and identified Prostate Health Index cutoffs that maximize specificity for Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer with sensitivity >90%. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited a “cancer-free” Black control cohort (135 patients) and a cohort of biopsy naïve Black men (158) biopsied for elevated prostate specific antigen. Descriptive statistics compared the prostate cancer cases and controls and the frequency of Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer across Prostate Health Index scores. Receiver operating characteristics compared the discrimination of prostate specific antigen, Prostate Health Index and other prostate specific antigen related biomarkers. Sensitivity and specificity for Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer detection were assessed at prostate specific antigen and Prostate Health Index thresholds alone and in series. RESULTS: Of biopsied subjects 32.9% had Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer. In Blacks with prostate specific antigen from 4.0–10.0 ng/ml, Prostate Health Index and prostate specific antigen had similar discrimination for Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer (0.63 vs 0.57, p=0.27). In Blacks with prostate specific antigen ≤10.0, a threshold of prostate specific antigen ≥4.0 had 90.4% sensitivity for Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer; a threshold of prostate specific antigen ≥4.0 with Prostate Health Index ≥35.0 in series avoided unnecessary biopsy in 33.0% of men but missed 17.3% of Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer. Prostate specific antigen ≥4.0 with Prostate Health Index ≥28.0 in series spared biopsy in 17.9%, while maintaining 90.4% sensitivity of Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer. CONCLUSIONS: The Prostate Health Index has moderate accuracy in detecting Gleason grade group 2-5 prostate cancer in Blacks, but Prostate Health Index ≥28.0 can be safely used to avoid some unnecessary biopsies in Blacks.
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- 2021
47. Clinical Significance of Screening Electrocardiograms for the Administration of Propranolol for Problematic Infantile Hemangiomas
- Author
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Jenika Sanchez, R. Thomas Collins, Larry D. Hartzell, Gresham T. Richter, J. Reed Gardner, Tyler Merrill, James D. Phillips, Jay M. Kincannon, Adam B. Johnson, and Brian K. Eble
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Article Subject ,Premature atrial contraction ,Heart block ,Propranolol ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ventricular hypertrophy ,030225 pediatrics ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Effective treatment ,Clinical significance ,Abnormal Finding ,cardiovascular diseases ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective. Low-dose nonselective β blockade is an effective treatment for problematic infantile hemangioma (PIH). Screening electrocardiograms (ECG) are performed prior to the initiation of propranolol to minimize the risk of exacerbating undiagnosed heart block. How ECG results affect subsequent propranolol usage and patient management remains unclear. We examined the value of ECG prior to propranolol therapy in a quaternary pediatric hospital. Methods. A retrospective chart review was performed on all infants who received propranolol (2 mg/kg/day divided three times daily) to treat PIH at Arkansas Children’s Hospital from Sept. 2008 to Sept. 2015. All available demographic, historical, and clinical data were obtained. ECGs and echocardiographic data were reviewed and summarized. A pediatric cardiologist read all ECGs. Results. A total of 333 patients (75% female) received propranolol therapy. ECG information was available for 317 (95%). Abnormal findings were present on 44/317 (13.9%) of study ECGs. The most common abnormal finding was “voltage criteria for ventricular hypertrophy” ( n = 35 , 76.1%). Two patients had abnormal rhythms; one had first-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, and one had occasional premature atrial contractions. Of the 31 patients who underwent echocardiograms, 20 (35%) were abnormal. 2.9% of infants with PIH treated with propranolol required a follow-up with a cardiologist. No patient was precluded from taking propranolol due to the findings on screening ECG. Conclusions. Screening ECGs prior to propranolol therapy are abnormal in nearly 14% of patients with PIH but are unlikely to preclude therapy. In the absence of prior cardiac history, this cohort offers further evidence suggesting that screening ECGs may be of limited value in determining the safety of propranolol in otherwise healthy infants with PIH.
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- 2021
48. Comparative Assessment of the Proteolytic Stability and Impact of Poly-Arginine Peptides R18 and R18D on Infarct Growth and Penumbral Tissue Preservation Following Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion in the Sprague Dawley Rat
- Author
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Kirk W. Feindel, Diego Milani, Vince W. Clark, Bruno P. Meloni, Neville W. Knuckey, Adam B. Edwards, Ryan S. Anderton, Michael Bynevelt, and David Blacker
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,business.industry ,Plasmin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Penumbra ,Proteolytic enzymes ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Neuroprotection ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,business ,Saline ,Perfusion ,Stroke ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Poly-arginine peptides R18 and R18D have previously been demonstrated to be neuroprotective in ischaemic stroke models. Here we examined the proteolytic stability and efficacy of R18 and R18D in reducing infarct core growth and preserving the ischaemic penumbra following middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in the Sprague Dawley rat. R18 (300 or 1000 nmol/kg), R18D (300 nmol/kg) or saline were administered intravenously 10 min after MCAO induced using a filament. Serial perfusion and diffusion-weighted MRI imaging was performed to measure changes in the infarct core and penumbra from time points between 45- and 225-min post-occlusion. Repeated measures analyses of infarct growth and penumbral tissue size were evaluated using generalised linear mixed models (GLMMs). R18D (300 nmol/kg) was most effective in slowing infarct core growth (46.8 mm3 reduction; p
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- 2021
49. Machine-learning model successfully predicts patients at risk for prolonged postoperative opioid use following elective knee arthroscopy
- Author
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Yining Lu, Michael C. Fu, Brian Forsythe, Adam B. Yanke, Brian J. Cole, Enrico M. Forlenza, Ryan R. Wilbur, Nikhil N. Verma, and Ophelie Lavoie-Gagne
- Subjects
030222 orthopedics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Knee arthroscopy ,business.industry ,Opioid use ,030229 sport sciences ,Perioperative ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Decision curve analysis ,Opioid ,Orthopedic surgery ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Medical prescription ,Augment ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Recovery following elective knee arthroscopy can be compromised by prolonged postoperative opioid utilization, yet an effective and validated risk calculator for this outcome remains elusive. The purpose of this study is to develop and validate a machine-learning algorithm that can reliably and effectively predict prolonged opioid consumption in patients following elective knee arthroscopy. A retrospective review of an institutional outcome database was performed at a tertiary academic medical centre to identify adult patients who underwent knee arthroscopy between 2016 and 2018. Extended postoperative opioid consumption was defined as opioid consumption at least 150 days following surgery. Five machine-learning algorithms were assessed for the ability to predict this outcome. Performances of the algorithms were assessed through discrimination, calibration, and decision curve analysis. Overall, of the 381 patients included, 60 (20.3%) demonstrated sustained postoperative opioid consumption. The factors determined for prediction of prolonged postoperative opioid prescriptions were reduced preoperative scores on the following patient-reported outcomes: the IKDC, KOOS ADL, VR12 MCS, KOOS pain, and KOOS Sport and Activities. The ensemble model achieved the best performance based on discrimination (AUC = 0.74), calibration, and decision curve analysis. This model was integrated into a web-based open-access application able to provide both predictions and explanations. Following appropriate external validation, the algorithm developed presently could augment timely identification of patients who are at risk of extended opioid use. Reduced scores on preoperative patient-reported outcomes, symptom duration and perioperative oral morphine equivalents were identified as novel predictors of prolonged postoperative opioid use. The predictive model can be easily deployed in the clinical setting to identify at risk patients thus allowing providers to optimize modifiable risk factors and appropriately counsel patients preoperatively. III.
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- 2021
50. Understanding the difference between symptoms of focal cartilage defects and osteoarthritis of the knee: a matched cohort analysis
- Author
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Sumit Patel, Jaewon Yang, Anne DeBenedetti, Adam B. Yanke, Craig J. Della Valle, Eric D. Haunschild, Ron Gilat, and Brian J. Cole
- Subjects
030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,030222 orthopedics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Joint replacement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cartilage ,Osteoarthritis ,Sitting ,medicine.disease ,Arthroplasty ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cohort ,Orthopedic surgery ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Mass index ,business - Abstract
Comparing symptoms of patients with focal cartilage defects of the knee to those with knee osteoarthritis. Prospectively maintained databases identified patients with focal cartilage defects (FCD group) who underwent osteochondral allograft transplantation and patients with osteoarthritis (OA group) undergoing arthroplasty. Patients between 18 and 55 years of age were included and matched based on age. Baseline patient demographics, symptoms, and patient-reported outcomes including the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score for Joint Replacement (KOOS JR), SF-12, and VR-12 questionnaires were recorded. Patient symptoms and individual responses of the KOOS JR were compared between groups. Regression analysis was used to evaluate the association between pre-operative factors that significantly differed between groups and the KOOS JR questionnaire. Sixty-four patients were included: 32 patients in each group. The FCD group had a significantly lower body mass index (BMI) (p = 0.04) and greater number of workers’ compensation cases (p = 0.027) when compared to the OA group. Patients in the OA group complained more frequently of medial-sided pain (p = 0.02) and knee swelling (p = 0.003). The OA cohort also had greater pain with fully straightening the knee (p = 0.012), pain with standing upright (p = 0.016), and pain with rising from sitting (p = 0.003). Patients in the FCD group had greater KOOS JR outcome scores (51.5 ± 12.9 vs. 41.5 ± 20.5; p = 0.023). When compared to patients with focal cartilage defects, adults with knee osteoarthritis scheduled for knee arthroplasty have a more severe presentation of symptoms, particularly medial-sided pain, swelling of the knee, pain associated with straightening the knee, standing upright, and rising from sitting.
- Published
- 2021
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