12,974 results on '"J Smith"'
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2. Policy Statement on Clinical Informatics Fellowships and the Future of Informatics-Driven Medicine.
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Kannry J, Smith J, Mohan V, Levy B, Finnell J, and Lehmann CU
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- Aged, Fellowships and Scholarships, Humans, Medicare, Policy, United States, Medical Informatics, Medicine
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Board certified clinical informaticians provide expertise in leveraging health IT (HIT) and health data for patient care and quality improvement. Clinical Informatics experts possess the requisite skills and competencies to make systems-level improvements in care delivery using HIT, workflow and data analytics, knowledge acquisition, clinical decision support, data visualization, and related informatics tools. However, these physicians lack structured and sustained funding because they have no billing codes. The sustainability and growth of this new and promising medical subspecialty is threatened by outdated and inconsistent funding models that fail to support the education and professional growth of clinical informaticians. The Clinical Informatics Program Directors' Community is calling upon the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to consider novel funding structures and programs through its Innovation Center for Clinical Informatics Fellowship training. Only through structural and sustained funding for Clinical Informatics fellows will be able to fully develop the potential of electronic health records to improve the quality, safety, and cost of clinical care., Competing Interests: C.U.L. reports that he is designated to be the Fellowship program director, UT Southwestern. J.S. reports that he was employed by the American Medical Informatics Association, which serves as the professional home for Clinical Informatics Fellows., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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3. [Economic income in peruvian physicians according to the specialty: A cross-sectional analysis of the ENSUSALUD 2015].
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Taype-Rondan A, Torres-Roman JS, Herrera-Añazco P, Diaz CA, Brañez-Condorena A, and Moscoso-Porras MG
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Peru, Young Adult, Income, Medicine, Physicians economics
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Objectives: To evaluate the relationship between having a medical specialty and the monthly income of Peruvian doctors, and to compare the economic incomes among areas with higher and lower density of medical doctors in Peru., Materials and Methods: : We analyzed data of the National Satisfaction Survey of Health Users (in Spanish: ENSUSALUD) carried out in Peru in the year 2015. This survey, with a national level of inference, was performed on physicians working at health facilities in Peru. Monthly income was measured considering all paid activities of the physician. Crude and adjusted prevalence ratios (PR and aPR) and their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were calculated through Poisson regression models with robust variance, taking into account the complex sampling of the survey., Results: Out of 2 219 Physicians surveyed, 2 154 (97.0%) observations were analyzed. The probability of earning > S/5 000 (1 572.3 USD) per month was 29.1% for general practitioners; 65.6% for specialists; 63.0% for clinical specialists; 70.5% for surgeons, and 55.7% for other specialties. Compared to general practitioners, physicians with clinical, surgical, and other specialties were more likely to earn > S/5 000 per month (aPR = 1.44, 1.49, and 1.26, respectively). The probability of earning > S/5 000 was higher in those working in departments with low medical density., Conclusions: Monthly incomes were higher for specialist physicians than for non-specialists. Economic incomes were higher in departments with lower density of physicians, which may encourage physicians to work in these departments.
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- 2017
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4. Survival according to the site of metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer patients: The Peruvian experience.
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Luis Piedra-Delgado, Diego Chambergo-Michilot, Zaida Morante, Carlos Fairen, Fernando Jerves-Coello, Renato Luque-Benavides, Fresia Casas, Eduarda Bustamante, Cesar Razuri-Bustamante, J Smith Torres-Roman, Hugo Fuentes, Henry Gomez, Alexis Narvaez-Rojas, Gabriel De la Cruz-Ku, and Jhajaira Araujo
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundEvidence regarding differences in survival associated with the site of metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) remains limited. Our aim was to analyze the overall survival (OS), distant relapse free survival (DRFS), and survival since the diagnosis of the relapse (MS), according to the side of metastasis.MethodsThis was a retrospective study of TNBC patients with distant metastases at the Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Neoplasicas (Lima, Peru) from 2000 to 2014. Prognostic factors were determined by multivariate Cox regression analysis.ResultsIn total, 309 patients were included. Regarding the type of metastasis, visceral metastasis accounted for 41% and the lung was the most frequent first site of metastasis (33.3%). With a median follow-up of 10.2 years, the 5-year DRFS and OS were 10% and 26%, respectively. N staging (N2-N3 vs. N0, HR = 1.49, 95%CI: 1.04-2.14), metastasis in visceral sites (vs. bone; HR = 1.55, 95%CI: 0.94-2.56), the central nervous system (vs. bone; HR = 1.88, 95% CI: 1.10-3.22), and multiple sites (vs. bone; HR = 2.55, 95%CI:1.53-4.25) were prognostic factors of OS whereas multiple metastasis (HR = 2.30, 95% CI: 1.42-3.72) was a predictor of MS. In terms of DRFS, there were no differences according to metastasis type or solid organ.ConclusionTNBC patients with multiple metastasis and CNS metastasis have an increased risk of death compared to those with bone metastasis in terms of OS and MS.
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- 2024
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5. Commentary on the published position statement regarding the pathogenesis of fetal basal ganglia- thalamic hypoxic-ischaemic injury
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J Anthony, J Smith, L Murray, G F Kirsten, G Gericke, Y Kara, V Davies, D Pearce, R van Toorn, M M Lippert, J W Lotz, S Andronikou, B Alheit, L van Wyk, A S Ebrahim, and B S Schifrin
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pathogenesis ,hypoxic ischemic injury ,fetal ,basal ganglia-thalamic ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2023
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6. Self-reported beta-lactam allergy in government and private hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa
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C Day, M Deetlefs, A O’Brien, J Smith, M Boyd, N Embling, S Patel, K Moody, T Ramabele, A Budge, T Tarwa, O Jim, T Maharaj, S Pandy, J-M Abrahams, A Panieri, S Verhage, M van der Merwe, A Geragotellis, W Amanjee, C Joseph, Z Zhao, S Moosa, M Bunting, Y Pulani, P Mukhari, M de Paiva, G Deyi, R P Wonkam, N Mancotywa, A Dunge, T Msimanga, A Singh, O Monnaruri, B Molale, T A G Butler, K Browde, C Muller, J van der Walt, R Whitelaw, D Cronwright, S Sinha, U Binase, I Francis, D Boakye, S Dlamini, M Mendelson, and J Peter
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Public health ,antibiotic ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background. Up to a quarter of inpatients in high-income countries (HICs) self-report beta-lactam allergy (BLA), which if incorrect,increases the use of alternative antibiotics, worsening individual health outcomes and driving bacterial resistance. In HICs, up to 95% ofself-reported BLAs are incorrect. The epidemiology of BLA in low- and middle-income African countries is unknown.Objectives. To describe the epidemiology and de-labelling outcomes of self-reported BLA in hospitalised South African (SA) patients.Methods. Point-prevalence surveys were conducted at seven hospitals (adult, paediatric, government and privately funded, district andtertiary level) in Cape Town, SA, between April 2019 and June 2021. Ward prescription records and in-person interviews were conductedto identify and risk-stratify BLA patients using the validated PEN-FAST tool. De-labelling was attempted at the tertiary allergy clinic atGroote Schuur Hospital.Results. A total of 1 486 hospital inpatients were surveyed (1 166 adults and 320 children). Only 48 patients (3.2%) self-reported a BLA,with a higher rate in private than in government-funded hospitals (6.3% v. 2.8%; p=0.014). Using the PEN-FAST tool, only 10.4% (n=5/48)of self-reported BLA patients were classified as high risk for true penicillin hypersensitivity. Antibiotics were prescribed to 70.8% (n=34/48)of self-reported BLA patients, with 64.7% (n=22/34) receiving a beta-lactam. Despite three attempts to contact patients for de-labelling atthe allergy clinic, only 3/36 underwent in vivo testing, with no positive results, and 1 patient proceeded to a negative oral challenge.Conclusion. Unlike HICs, self-reported BLA is low among inpatients in SA. The majority of those who self-reported BLA were low risk fortype 1 hypersensitivity, but outpatient de-labelling efforts were largely unsuccessful.
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- 2023
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7. Tourniquet use in total knee replacement surgery: a feasibility study and pilot randomised controlled trial (SAFE-TKR study)
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Martin Underwood, Charles E Hutchinson, Helen Parsons, J Smith, J Brown, Imran Ahmed, Andrew James Price, J Dixon, Jane Warwick, Andrew Metcalfe, Muhamed M Farhan-Alanie, Peter David Henry Wall, Claire Edwin, B Rahman, C Goulden, K Seers, and N Demeyere
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Tourniquets are routinely used during total knee replacement (TKR) surgery. They could increase the risk of thromboembolic events including cerebral emboli, cognitive decline, pain and other adverse events (AEs). A randomised controlled trial to assess whether tourniquet use might safely be avoided is therefore warranted but it is unclear whether such a trial would be feasible.Methods In a single-site feasibility study and pilot randomised controlled trial, adults having a TKR were randomised to surgery with an inflated tourniquet versus a non-inflated tourniquet. Participants underwent brain MRI preoperatively and within 2 days postoperatively. We assessed cognition using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) and thigh pain using a Visual Analogue Scale at baseline and days 1 and 2, and 1 week postsurgery. AEs related to surgery were recorded up to 12 months.Results We randomised 53 participants (27 tourniquet inflated and 26 tourniquet not inflated). Fifty-one participants received care per-protocol (96%) and 48 (91%) were followed up at 12 months. One new ischaemic brain lesion was detected. Of the cognitive tests, MoCA was easy to summarise, sensitive to change with lower ceiling effects compared with OCS and MMSE. There was a trend towards more thigh pain (mean 49.6 SD 30.4 vs 36.2 SD 28 at day 1) and more AEs related to surgery (21 vs 9) in participants with an inflated tourniquet compared with those with a tourniquet not inflated.Conclusion A full trial is feasible, but using MRI as a primary outcome is unlikely to be appropriate or feasible. Suitable primary outcomes would be cognition measured using MoCA, pain and AEs, all of which warrant investigation in a large multicentre trial.Trial registration number ISRCTN20873088.
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- 2021
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8. Wheat rust epidemics damage Ethiopian wheat production: A decade of field disease surveillance reveals national-scale trends in past outbreaks.
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M Meyer, N Bacha, T Tesfaye, Y Alemayehu, E Abera, B Hundie, G Woldeab, B Girma, A Gemechu, T Negash, T Mideksa, J Smith, M Jaleta, D Hodson, and C A Gilligan
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Wheat rusts are the key biological constraint to wheat production in Ethiopia-one of Africa's largest wheat producing countries. The fungal diseases cause economic losses and threaten livelihoods of smallholder farmers. While it is known that wheat rust epidemics have occurred in Ethiopia, to date no systematic long-term analysis of past outbreaks has been available. We present results from one of the most comprehensive surveillance campaigns of wheat rusts in Africa. More than 13,000 fields have been surveyed during the last 13 years. Using a combination of spatial data-analysis and visualization, statistical tools, and empirical modelling, we identify trends in the distribution of wheat stem rust (Sr), stripe rust (Yr) and leaf rust (Lr). Results show very high infection levels (mean incidence for Yr: 44%; Sr: 34%; Lr: 18%). These recurrent rust outbreaks lead to substantial economic losses, which we estimate to be of the order of 10s of millions of US-D annually. On the widely adopted wheat variety, Digalu, there is a marked increase in disease prevalence following the incursion of new rust races into Ethiopia, which indicates a pronounced boom-and-bust cycle of major gene resistance. Using spatial analyses, we identify hotspots of disease risk for all three rusts, show a linear correlation between altitude and disease prevalence, and find a pronounced north-south trend in stem rust prevalence. Temporal analyses show a sigmoidal increase in disease levels during the wheat season and strong inter-annual variations. While a simple logistic curve performs satisfactorily in predicting stem rust in some years, it cannot account for the complex outbreak patterns in other years and fails to predict the occurrence of stripe and leaf rust. The empirical insights into wheat rust epidemiology in Ethiopia presented here provide a basis for improving future surveillance and to inform the development of mechanistic models to predict disease spread.
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- 2021
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9. Feasibility of reporting results of large randomised controlled trials to participants: experience from the Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision (FOCUS) trial
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Martin Dennis, D Cohen, A Thompson, M Smith, A Naqvi, Graham Ellis, A Khan, L Hunt, X Huang, J Andrews, J Foot, J Smith, S Wong, A Stevens, D Bailey, S Johnston, S Jones, R Robinson, A Johnson, S Williams, T Smith, A Ahmed, S Bloom, L Sekaran, D Singh, F Smith, R Greenwood, A Singh, R Brown, J White, S Smith, S Arif, S Ross, S Trippier, S Levy, B Patel, M Khan, A Thomas, S Brown, V Jones, D Wood, S Maguire, U Khan, P Nair, A Smith, G Hann, R Williams, M Cooper, S Jackson, M Hassan, P Kumar, A Metcalf, R Patel, A Wright, S Khan, A Bell, C Williams, M Robinson, K Jones, S Alam, R Shah, J Simpson, K Ali, K Miller, K Kennedy, S Ahmed, J Francis, L Thomas, M Scott, S Nelson, S Clayton, L Zhang, B Charles, P Lopez, A Fleming, C Lambert, A Shah, J Wong, David Burgess, L Wilson, A Siddiqui, S Kumar, A Hassan, D Cooke, M Williams, P Cooper, S Graham, S Morrison, M Holland, C Green, C Edwards, K Subramanian, K Patel, J Mitchell, J Stewart, S Keenan, C Duggan, S McKenna, R Murphy, M Ward, S Walker, S Lewis, R Jones, L Wright, M Edwards, N Sattar, J Mcgee, R Butler, M Wilkinson, S Das, C Kelly, R Cowan, C Brown, K Moore, L Denny, M Harrison, S Patel, R Rodriguez, J Allen, M Kalita, Gillian Mead, A Bowring, A Edwards, J Scott, J Drew, D Ward, L Dixon, K Burton, E Brown, E Epstein, R Miller, F Reid, A Jones, P Murphy, A Ali, N Ahmad, S Noor, C Leonard, A Nair, M Naeem, M Johnson, E Douglas, J Thompson, R Evans, C Jenkins, J Wilson, R Anderson, H Wilson, H Stone, J Ward, L Greenhalgh, P Walker, A Hill, K Stagg, S Naqvi, R Scott, M Hughes, P Jones, M Simpson, K Elliott, M Davy, S Young, Karen Innes, Pippa Tyrrell, A David, Steff Lewis, A Bwalya, C Buckley, S Kelly, C Thomas, I Kane, M Hussain, S Shah, J Roberts, D Morales, C McInnes, N Khan, N Weir, L Hill, J McLaughlin, K Kavanagh, R Clarke, P Thompson, J Price, J Ball, L Benton, E Walton, E Walker, L Burgess, K McCormick, L Wade, C Anderson, S Stevenson, R Blackburn, L Brown, B Clarke, T Khan, S Dhar, L Harrison, S Bell, D Buchanan, A Deary, J Drever, R Fraser, C Graham, K Innes, C McGill, D Perry, A Barugh, G Blair, Y Chun, E Maschauer, J Forbes, M Hackett, G Hankey, A House, E Lundström, Peter Sandercock, Judith Williamson, John Forbes, Graeme Hankey, Maree Hackett, Veronica Murray, Ray French, David Stott, Jonathan Emberson, P Sandercock, M MacLeod, F Sullivan, P Langhorne, H Rodgers, N Hunter, R Parakramawansha, A Fazal, P Taylor, W Rutherford, R Buchan, A MacRaild, R Paulton, S Burgess, D McGowan, J Skwarski, F Proudfoot, J Perry, J Bamford, C Bedford, D Waugh, E Veraque, M Kambafwile, L Makawa, P Smalley, M Randall, L Idrovo, T Thirugnana-Chandran, R Vowden, J Jackson, A Bhalla, C Tam, A Rudd, C Gibbs, J Birns, L Lee Carbon, E Cattermole, A Cape, L hurley, K Marks, S Kullane, N Smyth, E Giallombardo, C Eglinton, D Dellafera, P Reidy, M Pitt, L Sykes, A Frith, V Croome, J Duffy, M Hancevic, L Kerwood, C Narh, C Merritt, J Willson, T Jackson, H Bowler, C Kamara, J Howe, K Stocks, G Dunn, K Endean, F Claydon, S Duty, C Doyle, K Harkness, E Richards, M Meegada, A Maatouk, L Barron, K Dakin, R Lindert, A Majid, P Rana, C Brighouse-Johnson, J Greig, M Kyu, S Prasad, B Mclean, I Alam, Z Ahmed, C Roffe, S Brammer, A Barry, C Beardmore, K Finney, H Maguire, P Hollinshead, J Grocott, I Natarajan, J Chembala, R Sanyal, S Lijko, N Abano, A Remegoso, P Ferdinand, S Stevens, C Stephen, P Whitmore, A Butler, C Causley, R Varquez, G Muddegowda, R Carpio, J Hiden, H Denic, J Sword, F Hall, J Cageao, R Curwen, M James, P Mudd, C Roughan, H Kingwell, A Hemsley, C Lohan, S Davenport, T Chapter, M Hough, D Strain, K Gupwell, A Goff, E Cusack, S Todd, R Partridge, G Jennings, K Thorpe, J Stephenson, K Littlewood, M Barber, F Brodie, S Marshall, D Esson, I Coburn, F Ross, V Withers, E Bowie, H Barcroft, L Miller, P Willcoxson, M Keeling, M Donninson, D Daniel, J Coyle, M Elliott, P Wanklyn, J Wightman, E Iveson, A Porteous, N Dyer, M Haritakis, J Bell, C Emms, P Wood, P Cottrell, L Doughty, L Carr, C Anazodo, M O Neill, J Westmoreland, R Mir, C Donne, E Bamford, P Clark Brown, A Stanners, I Ghouri, A Needle, M Eastwood, M Carpenter, P Datta, R Davey, F Razik, G Bateman, J Archer, V Balasubramanian, L Jackson, R Bowers, J Ellam, K Norton, P Guyler, S Tysoe, P Harman, A Kundu, T Dowling, S Chandler, O Omodunbi, T Loganathan, S Kunhunny, D Sinha, M Sheppard, S Kelavkar, K Ng, A Ropun, L Kamuriwo, R Orath Prabakaran, E France, S Rashmi, D Mangion, C Constantin, S Markova, A Hardwick, J Borley, L De Michele Hock, T Lawrence, J Fletcher, K Netherton, R Spencer, H Palmer, M Soliman, S Leach, J Sharma, C Taylor, I Wahishi, A Fields, S Butler, J Hindle, E Watson, C Hewitt, C Cullen, D Hamill, Z Mellor, T Fluskey, V Hankin, A Keeling, R Durairaj, D Shackcloth, R Tangney, T Hlaing, V Sutton, J Ewing, C Patterson, H Ramadan, R Bellfield, U Hamid, M Hooley, R Ghulam, L Masters, W Gaba, O Quinn, M Tate, N Mohammed, S Sethuraman, L Alwis, K Bharaj, R Pattni, F Justin, M Chauhan, L Eldridge, S Mintias, J Palmones, C Holmes, L Guthrie, N Devitt, J Leonard, M Osborn, L Ball, A Steele, E Dodd, A Holloway, P Baker, I Penwarden, S Caine, S Clarke, L Dow, R Wynn-Williams, J Kennedy, A DeVeciana, P Mathieson, I Reckless, R Teal, U Schulz, G Ford, P Mccann, G Cluckie, G Howell, J Ayer, B Moynihan, R Ghatala, G Cloud, N Al-Samarrai, F Watson, T Adedoyin, N Chopra, L Choy, N Clarke, A Dainty, A Blight, J Selvarajah, W Smith, F Moreton, A Welch, D Kalladka, B Cheripelli, A Lush, S El Tawil, N Day, K Montgomery, H Hamilton, D Ritchie, S Ramachandra, K McLeish, B Badiani, M Abdul-Saheb, A Chamberlain, M Mpelembue, R Bathula, M Lang, J Devine, L Southworth, N Epie, E Owoyele, F Guo, A Oshodi, V Sudkeo, K Thavanesan, D Tiwari, C Ovington, E Rogers, R Bower, B Longland, O David, A Hogan, S Loganathan, C Cox, S Orr, M Keltos, K Rashed, B Williams-Yesson, J Board, S De Bruijn, C Vickers, S Board, J Allison, E Keeling, T Duckett, D Donaldson, C Barron, L Balian, T England, A Hedstrom, E Bedford, M Harper, E Melikyan, W Abbott, M Goldsworthy, M Srinivasan, I Mukherjee, U Ghani, A Yeomans, F Hurford, R Chapman, S Shahzad, N Motherwell, L Tonks, R Young, D Dutta, P Brown, F Davis, J Turfrey, M Obaid, B Cartwright, B Topia, J Spurway, C Hughes, S OConnell, K Collins, R Bakawala, K Chatterjee, T Webster, S Haider, P Rushworth, F Macleod, C Perkins, A Nallasivan, E Burns, S Leason, T Carter, S Seagrave, E Sami, S Parkinson, L Armstrong, S Mawer, G Darnbrook, C Booth, B Hairsine, S Williamson, F Farquhar, B Esisi, T Cassidy, B McClelland, G Mankin, M Bokhari, D Sproates, S Hurdowar, N Sukhdeep, S Razak, N Upton, A Hashmi, K Osman, K Fotherby, A Willberry, D Morgan, G Sahota, K Jennings-Preece, D Butler, K Kauldhar, F Harrington, A Mate, J Skewes, K Adie, K Bond, G Courtauld, C Schofield, L Lucas, A James, S Ellis, B Maund, L Allsop, C Brodie, E Driver, K Harris, M Drake, E Thomas, M Burn, A Hamilton, S Mahalingam, A Benford, D Hilton, A Misra, L Hazell, K Ofori, M Mathew, S Dayal, I Burn, D Bruce, R Burnip, R Hayman, P Earnshaw, P Gamble, S Dima, M Dhakal, G Rogers, L Stephenson, R Nendick, Y Pai, K Nyo, V Cvoro, M Couser, A Tachtatzis, K Ullah, R Cain, N Chapman, S Pound, S McAuley, D Hargroves, B Ransom, K Mears, K Griffiths, L Cowie, T Hammond, T Webb, I Balogun, H Rudenko, A Thomson, D Ceccarelli, A Gillian, E Beranova, A Verrion, N Chattha, N Schumacher, A Bahk, D Sims, R Tongue, M Willmot, C Sutton, E Littleton, J Khaira, S Maiden, J Cunningham, Y Chin, M Bates, K Ahlquist, J Breeds, T Sargent, L Latter, A Pitt Ford, T Levett, N Gainsborough, A Dunne, E Barbon, S Hervey, S Ragab, T Sandell, C Dickson, S Power, J Dube, N Evans, B Wadams, S Elitova, B Aubrey, T Garcia, J Mcilmoyle, C Dickinson, C Jeffs, J Howard, C Armer, J Frudd, A Potter, S Donaldson, D Collas, S Sundayi, L Denham, D Oza, M Bhandari, S Ispoglou, K Sharobeem, A Hayes, J Howard-Brown, S Shanu, S Billingham, G Howard, E Wood, V Pressly, P Crawford, H Burton, A Walters, J Marigold, R Said, C Allen, S Evans, S Egerton, J Hakkak, R Lampard, S Tsang, R Creeden, I Gartrell, F Price, J Pryor, A Hedges, L Moseley, L Mercer, E Warburton, D Handley, S Finlay, N Hannon, A Espanol, H Markus, D Chandrasena, J Sesay, D Hayden, H Hayhoe, J Macdonald, M Bolton, C Farron, E Amis, D Day, A Culbert, L Whitehead, S Crisp, J OConnell, E Osborne, R Beard, P Corrigan, L Mokoena, M Myint, R Krishnamurthy, A Azim, S Whitworth, A Nicolson, M Krasinska-Chavez, J Imam, S Chaplin, J Curtis, L Wood, A Byrne, C McGhee, A Smart, F Donaldson, J Blackburn, C Copeland, P Fitzsimmons, G Fletcher, A Manoj, P Cox, L Trainor, H Allsop, U Sukys, S Valentine, D Jarrett, K Dodsworth, M Wands, C Watkinson, W Golding, J Tandy, K Yip, C James, Y Davies, A Suttling, K Nagaratnam, N Mannava, N Haque, N Shields, K Preston, G Mason, K Short, G Uitenbosch, G Lumsdale, H Emsley, S Sultan, B Walmsley, D Doyle, A McLoughlin, L Hough, B Gregary, S Raj, A Maney, S Blane, G Gamble, A Hague, B Duran, R Whiting, M Harvey, J Homan, L Foote, L Graham, C Lane, L Kemp, J Rowe, H Durman, L Brotherton, N Hunt, A Whitcher, C Pawley, P Sutton, S Mcdonald, D Pak, A Wiltshire, J Balami, C Self, J Jagger, G Healey, M Crofts, A Chakrabarti, C Hmu, J Keshet-Price, G Ravenhill, C Grimmer, T Soe, I Potter, P Tam, M Langley, M Christie, J Irvine, A Joyson, F Annison, D Christie, C Meneses, V Taylor, J Furnace, H Gow, J Reid, Y Abousleiman, S Goshawk, J Purcell, T Beadling, S Collins, S Sangaralingham, E Munuswamy Vaiyapuri, M Landicho, Y Begum, S Mutton, J Lowe, I Wiggam, S Tauro, S Cuddy, B Wells, A Mohd Nor, N Persad, M Weinling, S Weatherby, D Lashley, A Pace, A Mucha, J Baker, M Marner, J Westcott, N Wilmshurst, D Chadha, M Fairweather, D Walstow, R Fong, M Krishnan, H Thompson Jones, C Lynda, C Clements, T Anjum, S Sharon, D Lynne, S Tucker, D Colwill, E Vasileiadis, A Parry, C Mason, M Holden, K Petrides, T Nishiyama, H Mehta, S Mumani, C Almadenboyle, S Carson, M Stirling, E Tenbruck, D Broughton, A Annamalai, D Tryambake, A Skotnicka, A Sigsworth, S Whitehouse, J Pagan, A Pusalkar, H Beadle, K Chan, P Dangri, A Asokanathan, A Rana, S Gohil, K Crabtree, A Cook, M Massyn, P Aruldoss, S Dabbagh, T Black, C Clarke, R Fennelly, L Nardone, V DiMartino, A Anthony, D Mead, M Tribbeck, B Affley, C Sunderland, E Young, L Goldenberg, P Wilkinson, L Abbott, R Nari, S Lock, A Shakhon, R Pereira, M DSouza, S Dunn, N Cron, A Mckenna, R Sivakumar, S Cook, J Ngeh, R Saksena, J Ketley-O'Donel, R Needle, E Chinery, L Howaniec, C Watchurst, R Erande, M Brezitski, N Passeron, E Elliott, N Oji, D Austin, A Banaras, C Hogan, T Corbett, M Kidd, G Hull, S Punekar, J Nevinson, H Penney, W Wareing, N Hayes, K Bunworth, L Connell, K Mahawish, G Drummond, N Sengupta, M Metiu, C Gonzalez, J Margalef, S Funnell, G Peters, I Chadbourn, H Proeschel, P Ashcroft, S Sharpe, P Cook, D Jenkinson, D Kelly, H Bray, G Gunathilagan, S Tilbey, S Abubakar, A Rajapakse, A Nasar, J Janbieh, L Otter, I Wynter, S Haigh, R Boulton, J Burgoyne, A Boulton, J Vassallo, A Hasan, L Orrell, S Qamar, D Leonard, E Hewitt, M Haque, J Awolesi, E Bradshaw, A Kent, A Hynes, E Nurse, S Raza, U Pallikona, B Edwards, G Morgan, H Tench, R Loosley, K Dennett, T Trugeon-Smith, D Robson, R Rayessa, A Abdul-Hamid, V Lowthorpe, K Mitchelson, E Clarkson, H Rhian, R Kirthivasan, J Topliffe, R Keskeys, F McNeela, E Bohannan, L Cooper, G Zachariah, F Cairns, T James, L Fergey, S Smolen, A Lyle, E Cannon, S Omer, S Mavinamane, S Meenakshisundaram, L Ranga, J Bate, M Hargreaves, S Dealing, S Amlani, G Gulli, M Hawkes-Blackburn, L Francis, S Holland, A Peacocke, J Amero, M Burova, O Speirs, S Brotheridge, S Al Hussayni, H Lyon, C Hare, J Featherstone, M Goorah, J Walford, D Rusk, D Sutton, F Patel, S Duberley, K Hayes, E Ahmed El Nour, S Dyer, E Temlett, J Paterson, S Honour, C Box, R Furness, E Orugun, H Crowther, R Glover, C Brewer, S Thornthwaite, M Sein, K Haque, L Bailey, E Gibson, L Brookes, K Rotchell, K Waltho, C Lindley, P Harlekar, C Culmsee, L Booth, J Ritchie, N Mackenzie, J Barker, M Haley, D Cotterill, L Lane, D Simmons, R Warinton, G Saunders, H Dymond, S Kidd, C Little, Y Neves-Silva, B Nevajda, M Villaruel, U Umasankar, A Man, N Gadi, N Christmas, R Ladner, R Rangasamy, G Butt, W Alvares, M Power, S Hagan, K Dynan, D Wilson, S Crothers, B Wroath, G Douris, D Vahidassr, B Gallen, C McGoldrick, M Bhattad, J Putteril, R Gallifent, E Makanju, M Lepore, C McRedmond, L Arundell, A Goulding, K Kawafi, P Jacob, L Turner, N Saravanan, L Johnson, D Morse, R Namushi, S Humphrey, M Salehin, S Tinsley, T Jones, L Garcia-Alen, L Kalathil, N Gautam, J Horton, J Meir, E Margerum, A Ritchings, K Amor, V Nadarajan, J Laurence, S Fung Lo, S Melander, P Nicholas, E Woodford, G McKenzie, V Le, J Crause, P OMahony, C Orefo, C McDonald, E Osikominu, G Appiatse, A Wardale, M Augustin, R Luder, M Bhargava, G Bhome, V Johnson, D Chesser, H Bridger, E Murali, A Burns, J Graham, M Duffy, E Pitcher, J Gaylard, J Newman, S Punnoose, S Oakley, V Murray, C Bent, R Walker, K Purohit, A Rees, S Besley, O Chohan, L Argandona, L Cuenoud, H Hassan, E Erumere, A OCallaghan, O Redjep, G Auld, P Gompertz, A Song, R Hungwe, H Kabash, T Tarkas, G Livingstone, F Butler, S Bradfield, L Gordon, J Schmit, A Wijewardane, C Medcalf, T Edmunds, R Wills, and C Peixoto
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives Informing research participants of the results of studies in which they took part is viewed as an ethical imperative. However, there is little guidance in the literature about how to do this. The Fluoxetine Or Control Under Supervision trial randomised 3127 patients with a recent acute stroke to 6 months of fluoxetine or placebo and was published in the Lancet on 5 December 2018. The trial team decided to inform the participants of the results at exactly the same time as the Lancet publication, and also whether they had been allocated fluoxetine or placebo. In this report, we describe how we informed participants of the results.Design In the 6-month and 12-month follow-up questionnaires, we invited participants to provide an email address if they wished to be informed of the results of the trial. We re-opened our trial telephone helpline between 5 December 2018 and 31 March 2019.Setting UK stroke services.Participants 3127 participants were randomised. 2847 returned 6-month follow-up forms and 2703 returned 12-month follow-up forms; the remaining participants had died (380), withdrawn consent or did not respond.Results Of those returning follow-up questionnaires, a total of 1845 email addresses were provided and a further 50 people requested results to be sent by post. Results were sent to all email and postal addresses provided; 309 emails were returned unrecognised. Seventeen people replied, of whom three called the helpline and the rest responded by email.Conclusion It is feasible to disseminate results of large trials to research participants, though only around 60% of those randomised wanted to receive the results. The system we developed was efficient and required very little resource, and could be replicated by trialists in the future.Trial registration number ISRCTN83290762; Post-results.
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- 2020
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10. Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio predicts early mortality in females with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer.
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Gabriel de la Cruz-Ku, Diego Chambergo-Michilot, J Smith Torres-Roman, Pamela Rebaza, Joseph Pinto, Jhajaira Araujo, Zaida Morante, Daniel Enriquez, Claudio Flores, Renato Luque, Antonella Saavedra, Maria Lujan, Henry Gomez, and Bryan Valcarcel
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThe aim of this study was to determine the utility of the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) as a biomarker for predicting early-mortality (MethodsWe reviewed 118 medical records of females with mTNBC. The cut-off value for the NLR (ResultsThe median follow-up was 24 months. Females with NLR ≥2.5 had a poor overall survival compared to females with NLR ConclusionThe NLR is an accessible and reliable biomarker that predicts early mortality among females with mTNBC. Our results suggest that females with high NLR values have poor prognosis despite receiving standard chemotherapy. Health providers should evaluate the possibility to enroll these patients in novel immunotherapy trials.
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- 2020
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11. Exploring occupational therapy graduates’ conceptualisations of occupational justice in practice: Curriculum implications
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L Hess-April, J Smith, and J de Jongh
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Education ,Education (General) ,L7-991 ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background. The concept of occupational justice was derived from a social justice perspective in response to a renewed commitment by the occupational therapy profession to address the occupational needs of individuals, groups and communities who experience social injustice. Accordingly, it is acknowledged that education with regard to occupational justice has the deliberate intention of preparing graduates, who would be change agents as critical practitioners. Nonetheless, while occupational therapy education programmes may seek to instil broader professional values, theory covered in the curriculum may not always assure congruent practice.Objective. To explore how occupational therapy graduates’ conceptualisations of occupational justice, as instilled by the occupational therapy curriculum of the University of the Western Cape, South Africa, manifested in their practice while undergoing community service.Methods. Seven occupational therapy graduates were selected to participate in the study through purposive sampling. A descriptive case study of their practice was generated through qualitative methods. Semi-structured interviews, document review and participant observation were used as data collection methods, analysed through a process of inductive thematic analysis.Results. The findings revealed that while the participants conceptualised occupational justice as broader social change through occupational enablement, they encountered several constraints related to structural and systemic power issues in their practice contexts.Conclusion. The study supports the utilisation of transformative learning and inter-professional education in developing critical competencies such as agency and political proficiency to assist graduates in dealing with the complexities of practice during community service.
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- 2016
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12. Motivation towards medical career choice and academic performance in Latin American medical students: A cross-sectional study.
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J Smith Torres-Roman, Yuridia Cruz-Avila, Karina Suarez-Osorio, Miguel Ángel Arce-Huamaní, Alejandra Menez-Sanchez, Telmo Raúl Aveiro-Róbalo, Christian R Mejia, and Eloy F Ruiz
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
INTRODUCTION:Motivation in medical students is positively associated with learning strategies. However, the evidence of a direct relationship between motivation and performance is vague. The objective of this study is to determine if the motivation that pushed students to choose the medical career is associated with their academic performance during their university years. METHODS:The study was conducted in 4,290 medical students from 10 countries in Latin America. The "Attribution Scale of General Achievement Motivation" was used to evaluate their general performance. The "Medical motivation Scale" test was used to measure social, altruist, economic, and prestige motivators. For statistical analyses, frequencies and percentages were described, and generalized linear models were used to establish statistical associations. RESULTS:Fifty percent of the students surveyed were females and the mean student age was 21 years old. This study showed that male students had a higher social/altruist motivation (PR:1.11,95%CI: 1.03-1.18; p
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- 2018
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13. Effects of an Oncology Nurse-Led, Primary Palliative Care Intervention (CONNECT) on Illness Expectations Among Patients With Advanced Cancer
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Edward Chu, Lauren E Sigler, Andrew D. Althouse, Douglas B. White, Margaret Rosenzweig, Kenneth J. Smith, Yael Schenker, Teresa Hagan Thomas, Robert M. Arnold, and Thomas J. Smith
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Adult ,Oncologists ,Motivation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Palliative Care ,MEDLINE ,ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS ,Nurse's Role ,Advanced cancer ,Oncology nursing ,Oncology ,Neoplasms ,Intervention (counseling) ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE: Patients with advanced cancer often have unrealistic expectations about prognosis and treatment. This study assessed the effect of an oncology nurse-led primary palliative care intervention on illness expectations among patients with advanced cancer. METHODS: This study is a secondary analysis of a cluster-randomized trial of primary palliative care conducted at 17 oncology clinics. Adult patients with advanced solid tumors for whom the oncologist would not be surprised if died within 1 year were enrolled. Monthly visits were designed to foster realistic illness expectations by eliciting patient concerns and goals for their medical care and empowering patients and families to engage in discussions with oncologists about treatment options and preferences. Baseline and 3-month questionnaires included questions about life expectancy, treatment intent, and terminal illness acknowledgment. Odds of realistic illness expectations at 3 months were adjusted for baseline responses, patient demographic and clinical characteristics, and intervention dose. RESULTS: Among 457 primarily White patients, there was little difference in realistic illness expectations at 3 months between intervention and standard care groups: 12.8% v 11.4% for life expectancy (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.15; 95% CI, 0.59 to 2.22; P = .684); 24.6% v 33.3% for treatment intent (aOR = 0.76; 95% CI, 0.44 to 1.27; P = .290); 53.6% v 44.7% for terminal illness acknowledgment (aOR = 1.28; 95% CI, 0.81 to 2.00; P = .288). Results did not differ when accounting for variation in clinic sites or intervention dose. CONCLUSION: Illness expectations are difficult to change among patients with advanced cancer. Additional work is needed to identify approaches within oncology practices that foster realistic illness expectations to improve patient decision making.
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- 2022
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14. Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenator Failure in a Patient With Gestational Trophoblastic Neoplasm: Possible Mechanisms and Considerations in Critical Care
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Lucian A. Durham, Nathan J. Smith, Lindsey A. McAlarnen, E. Bishop, M. Tracy Zundel, and Beth A. Nance
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenator ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Pregnancy ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,medicine ,Trophoblastic neoplasm ,Humans ,Gestation ,Female ,Gestational Trophoblastic Disease ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Oxygenator ,Etoposide ,Oxygenators, Membrane ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2022
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15. Prenatal opioid exposure inhibits microglial sculpting of the dopamine system selectively in adolescent male offspring
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N. Constantino, A. Abiad, V. J. Kim, M. J. Clark, Y. Alonso-Caraballo, Karen E. Malacon, Caroline J. Smith, Elena H. Chartoff, Y. C. Jo, Staci D. Bilbo, and T. Lintz
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Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tyrosine hydroxylase ,Offspring ,business.industry ,Nucleus accumbens ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Dopamine receptor D1 ,Endocrinology ,Opioid ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,Dopamine receptor D2 ,medicine ,business ,Oxycodone ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The current opioid epidemic has dramatically increased the number of children who are prenatally exposed to opioids, including oxycodone. A number of social and cognitive abnormalities have been documented in these children as they reach young adulthood. However, little is known about the mechanisms underlying developmental effects of prenatal opioid exposure. Microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain, respond to acute opioid exposure in adulthood. Moreover, microglia are known to sculpt neural circuits during healthy development. Indeed, we recently found that microglial phagocytosis of dopamine D1 receptors (D1R) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is required for the natural developmental decline in NAc-D1R that occurs between adolescence and adulthood in rats. This microglial pruning occurs only in males, and is required for the normal developmental trajectory of social play behavior. However, virtually nothing is known as to whether this developmental program is altered by prenatal exposure to opioids. Here, we show in rats that maternal oxycodone self-administration during pregnancy leads to reduced adolescent microglial phagocytosis of D1R and subsequently higher D1R density within the NAc in adult male, but not female, offspring. Finally, we show that prenatal opioid exposure abolishes the extinction of oxycodone-conditioned place preference in these male offspring. This work demonstrates for the first time that microglia play a key role in translating prenatal opioid exposure to long-term changes in neural systems and behavior.HighlightsPrenatal opioid exposure decreases offspring viability and body weight in males and femalesPrenatal opioid exposure decreases microglial phagocytosis of D1R in the nucleus accumbens in males onlyPrenatal opioid exposure increases nucleus accumbens dopamine D1 receptor expression in males but not femalesAdult males fail to extinguish oxycodone-conditioned place preference following prenatal oxycodone exposure
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- 2022
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16. Perioperative Incidence of Venous Thromboembolism in Patients With Ovarian Cancer Using Four Different Data Collection Methods: A Manitoba Ovarian Cancer Outcomes (MOCO) Group Study
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Alon D. Altman, Sarah J. Smith, Pascal Lambert, and Mark W. Nachtigal
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Ovarian Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Data collection ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,MEDLINE ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Manitoba ,Venous Thromboembolism ,Perioperative ,Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial ,Debulking ,medicine.disease ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,cardiovascular diseases ,Stage (cooking) ,business ,Ovarian cancer ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Objective To evaluate the incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in 90-day pre-operative period and at 30 and 90 days post surgery in patients who underwent debulking for ovarian cancer, analyze the impact of extended prophylaxis that was initiated in 2012, and examine the influence of data collection technique on reported rates of VTE. Methods This retrospective database and records study examined rates of VTE in epithelial ovarian cancer patients in Manitoba, Canada between 2004 and 2016. Cases of VTE were identified using ICD codes, drug prescriptions, and records reviews; 4 different data collection methods were used. Analysis was performed with analysis of variance, Kruskal-Wallis and χ2 tests, and interrupted time series models. Results Data collection identified 823 debulking surgeries, with a final cohort of 779 patients; data were analyzed before and after extended prophylaxis intervention. Overall rates of VTE varied by collection method and were 1.82%–5.47%, 0.36%–3.16%, 0.85%–1.46%, and 1.46%–2.79%, respectively. During this timeframe, we noted a significant increase in the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P = 0.010) and stage migration to stage 3 (P Conclusion We report the rates of VTE utilizing four different data collection methods. We found a low overall rate, with some trends requiring further investigation. This study highlights the importance of data collection method on the reported rates of VTE in research.
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- 2022
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17. Teprotumumab Efficacy, Safety, and Durability in Longer-Duration Thyroid Eye Disease and Re-treatment
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Katharina A. Ponto, Shoaib Ugradar, Michele Marinò, Sara T. Wester, Robert J. Holt, Heike M. Elflein, Rosa A. Tang, George J. Kahaly, Terry J. Smith, Megan Francis-Sedlak, Amy Patel Jain, Saba Sile, Jade S. Schiffman, Raymond S Douglas, Brian T. Fowler, Roger A. Dailey, Anja Eckstein, Alessandro Antonelli, Dagmar Führer-Sakel, Gerald J. Harris, Claudio Marcocci, and Mario Salvi
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Diplopia ,Mild hearing impairment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Eye disease ,Thyroid ,medicine.disease ,Placebo ,eye diseases ,Disease course ,Surgery ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Safety risk ,medicine ,In patient ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate teprotumumab safety/efficacy in patients with thyroid eye disease (TED) who were nonresponsive or who experienced a disease flare. DESIGN The Treatment of Graves' Orbitopathy to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in an Open-Label Clinical Extension Study (OPTIC-X) is a teprotumumab treatment and re-treatment trial following the placebo-controlled teprotumumab Phase 3 Treatment of Graves' Orbitopathy (Thyroid Eye Disease) to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Clinical Study (OPTIC) trial. PARTICIPANTS Patients who previously received placebo (n = 37) or teprotumumab (n = 14) in OPTIC. METHODS OPTIC nonresponders or those who flared (≥2-mm increase in proptosis, ≥2-point increase in clinical activity score [CAS], or both) during follow-up were treated for the first time (previous placebo patients) or re-treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X with 8 infusions over 24 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Proptosis response and safety. Secondary outcomes included proptosis, CAS, subjective diplopia, and quality-of-life. RESULTS Thirty-three of 37 placebo-treated OPTIC patients (89.2%) became proptosis responders (mean ± standard deviation, -3.5 ± 1.7 mm) when treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X. The responses were equivalent to the OPTIC study. In these responders, proptosis, CAS of 0 or 1, and diplopia responses were maintained in 29 of 32 patients (90.6%), 20 of 21 patients (95.2%), and 12 of 14 patients (85.7%), respectively, at follow-up week 48. The median TED duration was 12.9 months versus 6.3 months in those treated with teprotumumab in the OPTIC study. Of the 5 OPTIC teprotumumab nonresponders re-treated in OPTIC-X, 2 responded, 1 showed a proptosis reduction of 1.5 mm from OPTIC baseline, and 2 discontinued treatment early. Of the OPTIC teprotumumab responders who experienced flare, 5 of 8 patients (62.5%) responded when re-treated (mean proptosis reduction, 1.9 ± 1.2 mm from OPTIC-X baseline and 3.3 ± 0.7 mm from OPTIC baseline). Compared with published double-masked trials and their integrated follow-up, no new safety signals were identified. Mild hearing impairment was reported; 4 events occurred during first course of treatment, and 2 events reoccurred after re-treatment. CONCLUSIONS Patients with TED of longer disease duration responded similarly to those treated earlier in the disease course. Patients with an insufficient initial response or flare may benefit from additional teprotumumab therapy. No new safety risk was identified; however additional postmarketing pharmacovigilance is ongoing.
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- 2022
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18. Does health literacy impact technological comfort in cancer patients?
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Mona N. Fouad, Daniel I. Chu, Barry P. Sleckman, Haller J. Smith, Thomas N. Wang, J. Bart Rose, Jeremie M. Lever, A. Irfan, and Sushanth Reddy
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,education ,Health literacy ,Telehealth ,Cohort Studies ,Patient age ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Medicine ,Male gender ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Telemedicine ,Health Literacy ,Male patient ,Family medicine ,Cohort ,Female ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Introduction As healthcare systems are adapting due to COVID-19, there has been an increased need for telehealth in the outpatient setting. Not all patients have been comfortable with this transition. We sought to determine the relationship between health literacy and technological comfort in our cancer patients. Methods We conducted a survey of patients that presented to the oncology clinics at a single-center over a 2-month period. Patients were given a voluntary, anonymous, survey during their visit containing questions regarding demographics, health literacy and technological comfort. Results 344 surveys were returned (response-rate 64.3%). The median patient age was 61 years, 70% of responders were female and the most common race was White (67.3%). Increasing patient age, male gender, Black and Native-American race, decreased health literacy and lack of home broadband were associated with lower technological comfort score. Conclusion In our cohort, patients with lower health literacy scores, older and male patients, or who have poor internet access showed a lower level of technological comfort. At risk patients can be identified and provided additional support in their use of telehealth services.
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- 2022
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19. Longitudinal trends and predictors of muscle-strengthening activity guideline adherence among Canadian youths
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Jason A. Bennie, Wei Qian, Guy Faulkner, Jordan J. Smith, and Scott T. Leatherdale
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Canada ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Population ,Physical fitness ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Muscles ,Guideline ,Exercise Therapy ,body regions ,Cohort ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,Underweight ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Adolescent health ,Demography - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Muscle-strengthening activity (MSE e.g. push-ups, sit-ups, use of weight machines) is linked to multiple health benefits for youth, and is part of the global physical activity guidelines for children and adolescents (5-17 years). However, MSE is rarely assessed in youth health surveillance. This study describes the longitudinal trends and predictors of MSE among a cohort of Canadian youths. DESIGN Longitudinal. METHODS Data were drawn from a cohort of 3366 youths who participated in three waves of COMPASS, a longitudinal study of secondary school students across Canada [Wave 1 (T1) 2015/16, Wave 2 (T2) 2016/17, Wave 3 (T3) 2018/19]. The prevalence of the sample meeting the MSE guideline (≥3 days/week) was calculated for each wave. A multivariable logistic regression assessed the odds of meeting the MSE guideline for each wave (T1 and T2 and T3) across sociodemographic/lifestyle characteristics (e.g. sex, race, regionally, Body Mass Index, and aerobic physical activity). RESULTS For the total sample, MSE guideline adherence significantly declined across each study wave (T1 = 57.0%; T2 = 52.0%; T3 = 48.5%; p
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- 2022
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20. Preoperative opioid usage predicts markedly inferior outcomes 2 years after reverse total shoulder arthroplasty
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Robert T. Neel, Aaron M. Baessler, David L. Bernholt, Rongshun Zhu, Thomas W. Throckmorton, Patrick J. Smith, Frederick M. Azar, Tyler J. Brolin, and Saunak Sen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual analogue scale ,Narcotic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Periprosthetic ,Arthroplasty ,symbols.namesake ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Rotator cuff ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Fisher's exact test ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Shoulder ,symbols ,Range of motion ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA) has proved to be a highly effective treatment for rotator cuff-deficient conditions and other end-stage shoulder pathologies. With value-based care emerging, identifying predictive factors of outcomes is of great interest. Although preoperative opioid use has been shown to predict inferior outcomes after anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty and rotator cuff repair, there is a paucity of data regarding its effect on outcomes after RTSA. We analyzed a series of RTSAs to determine the influence of preoperative opioid use on clinical and radiographic outcomes at a minimum of 2 years' follow-up. METHODS A retrospective review of primary RTSA patient data revealed 264 patients with ≥2 years of clinical and radiographic follow-up. Patients were classified as preoperative opioid users (71 patients) if they had taken narcotic pain medication for a minimum of 3 months prior to surgery or as opioid naive (193 patients) at the time of surgery. Assessments included preoperative and postoperative visual analog scale pain scores, American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons scores, strength, and range of motion, as well as complications and revisions. Radiographs were analyzed for signs of loosening or mechanical failure. The Mann-Whitney U and Fisher exact tests were used for comparisons between groups. Statistical significance was set at P < .05. RESULTS The mean patient age was 69.9 years, and the mean follow-up time was 2.8 years. Opioid users were significantly younger (66.1 years vs. 70.7 years, P < .001) at the time of surgery and had significantly higher preoperative rates of mood disorders, chronic pain disorders, and disability status (all P < .05). Postoperatively, opioid users had inferior visual analog scale pain scores (2.59 vs. 1.25, P < .001), American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons scores (63.2 vs. 75.2, P < .001), active forward elevation (P < .001), and internal and external rotational shoulder strength (all P < .05) compared with opioid-naive patients. Periprosthetic radiolucency (8.45% vs. 2.07%, P = .026) and subsequent revision arthroplasty (14.1% vs. 4.66%, P = .014) occurred more frequently in opioid users than in opioid-naive patients. Both groups improved from baseline preoperatively to most recent follow-up in terms of functional outcomes and pain. CONCLUSION Preoperative opioid use portended markedly inferior clinical outcomes in patients undergoing RTSA. Additionally, opioid users had significantly increased rates of periprosthetic radiolucency and revision. Preoperative opioid use appears to be a significant marker for adverse outcomes after RTSA.
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- 2022
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21. Factors contributing to PTSD treatment dropout in veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan: A systematic review
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Wright Williams, Brooke A. Bartlett, Colleen E. Martin, Nicole A. Sciarrino, and Lia J. Smith
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Evidence-based practice ,Afghan Campaign 2001 ,business.industry ,education ,Afghanistan ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,PsycINFO ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Clinical Psychology ,Iraq ,mental disorders ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,Psychiatry ,health care economics and organizations ,Applied Psychology ,Dropout (neural networks) ,Veterans - Abstract
Although treatment effectiveness among evidence-based psychotherapies (EBPs) for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been well established, treatment dropout among veterans continues to be a concern within these treatments. Due to the uniqueness of the Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF)/Operation New Dawn (OND) veteran cohort, this article reviewed the literature examining factors contributing to treatment dropout from EBPs for PTSD among OEF/OIF/OND veterans. We conducted a systematic review of the published literature using PsycINFO, PubMed, and PTSDpubs with a restriction on year of publication beginning in 2007, following the first VA national initiative to roll-out EBPs for PTSD, through May 1st, 2020. Articles were retained if treatment dropout for EBPs was examined among OEF/OIF/OND veterans with PTSD, which yielded a total of 26 manuscripts. Common themes associated with treatment dropout were identified, including demographic, psychological, cognitive, practical, and treatment-related factors. Specifically, younger age, concurrent substance use, and practical concerns (e.g., balancing multiple life roles) emerged as factors that consistently contributed to treatment dropout. Other findings were mixed (e.g., pretreatment symptom severity and presence of traumatic brain injury). While factors contributing to dropout are complex and interact uniquely for each veteran, improved understanding of these factors in combination with innovative strategies for treating OEF/OIF/OND veterans utilizing EBPs is needed to enhance treatment engagement, retention, and outcomes. Implications for these factors are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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22. Using the electronic health record to identify suicide risk factors in an Alaska Native Health System
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Jennifer L. Shaw, Clemma J. Muller, Julia J. Smith, Jaedon P Avey, and Krista R. Schaefer
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Suicide Prevention ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,Odds ratio ,Emergency department ,PsycINFO ,Alaskan Natives ,Confidence interval ,Health equity ,Clinical Psychology ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,Health care ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Medicine ,Residence ,business ,education ,Applied Psychology ,Retrospective Studies ,Demography - Abstract
Suicide rates are higher in some Alaska Native and American Indian communities than the general U.S. population. Screening for suicide risk typically requires self-report, but many people may not engage with conventional screening because of distrust or are reluctant to disclose thoughts of suicide. Resource-sensitive methods of detecting suicide risk are needed. This study identifies routinely collected electronic health record data to identify demographic, clinical, and utilization factors associated with suicide-related visits in a tribal health care system. In this retrospective, case-control study, cases were defined as any person with a suicide-related visit from 2012 to 2015. Cases and controls were matched by age, sex, and urban/rural residence. We used conditional logistic regression to estimate odds ratios, which were interpreted as prevalence ratios (PR) based on the rare outcome assumption. The dataset included 314 cases and 1,169 controls. In the year before the index visit, cases had higher prevalence of poisoning or overdose (PR = 13.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] [3.5, 51.7]), emergency department and urgent care visits (PR = 15.8, 95% CI [6.6, 38.1]), and hospitalizations (PR = 4.5, 95% CI [3.0, 6.8]). Electronic health records can be used to identify factors that are significantly associated with suicide risk among those who may not be flagged by screening. Risk detection through electronic health record assessment might increase clinical workload in the short term, but this change would be offset by downstream prevention of suicide-related events. Such efforts could improve suicide risk detection and help to improve suicide-related health disparities in Alaska Native and American Indian populations. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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23. New directions in modelling dysregulated reward seeking for food and drugs
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Christopher V. Dayas, Robyn M Brown, Rachel J. Smith, and Morgan H. James
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Punishment (psychology) ,Binge eating ,Stress exposure ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Addiction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Feeding Behavior ,Behavioral neuroscience ,medicine.disease ,Behavioral economics ,Article ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Reward ,Food ,Binge-eating disorder ,medicine ,Animals ,Bulimia ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Cocaine seeking ,media_common - Abstract
Behavioral models are central to behavioral neuroscience. To study the neural mechanisms of maladaptive behaviors (including binge eating and drug addiction), it is essential to develop and utilize appropriate animal models that specifically focus on dysregulated reward seeking. Both food and cocaine are typically consumed in a regulated manner by rodents, motivated by reward and homeostatic mechanisms. However, both food and cocaine seeking can become dysregulated, resulting in binge-like consumption and compulsive patterns of intake. The speakers in this symposium for the 2021 International Behavioral Neuroscience Meeting utilize behavioral models of dysregulated reward-seeking to investigate the neural mechanisms of binge-like consumption, enhanced cue-driven reward seeking, excessive motivation, and continued use despite negative consequences. In this review, we outline examples of maladaptive patterns of intake and explore recent animal models that drive behavior to become dysregulated, including stress exposure and intermittent access to rewards. Lastly, we explore select behavioral and neural mechanisms underlying dysregulated reward-seeking for both food and drugs.
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- 2022
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24. Universal activity-based labeling method for ammonia- and alkane-oxidizing bacteria
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Mike S. M. Jetten, Dimitra Sakoula, Garrett J. Smith, Linnea F. M. Kop, Sebastian Lücker, Rob Mesman, Maartje A. H. J. van Kessel, Jeroen Frank, and Pieter Blom
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In situ ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Microorganism ,Bacteria Present ,Biology ,Monooxygenase ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Biochemistry ,Metagenomics ,Ecological Microbiology ,Biotinylation ,medicine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Bacteria ,Fluorescence in situ hybridization - Abstract
The advance of metagenomics in combination with intricate cultivation approaches has facilitated the discovery of novel ammonia-, methane-, and other short-chain alkane-oxidizing microorganisms, indicating that our understanding of the microbial biodiversity within the biogeochemical nitrogen and carbon cycles still is incomplete. The in situ detection and phylogenetic identification of novel ammonia- and alkane-oxidizing bacteria remain challenging due to their naturally low abundances and difficulties in obtaining new isolates from complex samples. Here, we describe an activity-based protein profiling protocol allowing cultivation-independent unveiling of ammonia- and alkane-oxidizing bacteria. In this protocol, 1,7-octadiyne is used as a bifunctional enzyme probe that, in combination with a highly specific alkyne-azide cycloaddition reaction, enables the fluorescent or biotin labeling of cells harboring active ammonia and alkane monooxygenases. Biotinylation of these enzymes in combination with immunogold labeling revealed the subcellular localization of the tagged proteins, which corroborated expected enzyme targets in model strains. In addition, fluorescent labeling of cells harboring active ammonia or alkane monooxygenases provided a direct link of these functional lifestyles to phylogenetic identification when combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization. Furthermore, we show that this activity-based labeling protocol can be successfully coupled with fluorescence-activated cell sorting for the enrichment of nitrifiers and alkane-oxidizing bacteria from complex environmental samples, enabling the recovery of high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes. In conclusion, this study demonstrates a novel, functional tagging technique for the reliable detection, identification, and enrichment of ammonia- and alkane-oxidizing bacteria present in complex microbial communities.
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- 2022
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25. Bi-directional associations between healthy lifestyles and mood disorders in young adults: the childhood determinants of adult health study
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Alison Venn, Terence Dwyer, Seana L. Gall, Kylie J. Smith, Kristy Sanderson, and George C Patton
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Adult ,Male ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Healthy Lifestyle ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Applied Psychology ,Mood Disorders ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mood ,Mood disorders ,Relative risk ,Cohort ,Female ,Psychology ,Body mass index ,Follow-Up Studies ,Demography - Abstract
BackgroundHealthy lifestyles prevent cardiovascular disease and are increasingly recognized in relation to mental health but longitudinal studies are limited. We examined bi-directional associations between mood disorders and healthy lifestyles in a cohort followed for 5 years.MethodParticipants were aged 26–36 years at baseline (2004–2006) and 31–41 years at follow-up (2009–2011). At follow-up, lifetime mood disorders (depression or dysthymia) were retrospectively diagnosed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. A five-item lifestyle score (comprising body mass index, non-smoking, alcohol consumption, leisure time physical activity and healthy diet) was measured at both time points. Linear and log multinomial regression determined if mood disorder before baseline predicted changes in lifestyle (n= 1041). Log binomial regression estimated whether lifestyle at baseline predicted new episodes of mood disorder (n= 1233). Covariates included age, sex, socio-economic position, parental and marital status, social support, major life events, cardiovascular disease history, and self-rated physical and mental health.ResultsA history of mood disorder before baseline predicted unfavourable trajectories of lifestyle over follow-up, including somewhat lower risk of improvement [relative risk (RR) 0.76, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.56–1.03] and greater risk of worsening (RR 1.46, 95% CI 0.99–2.15) of lifestyle independent of confounding factors. Higher lifestyle scores at baseline were associated with a 22% (RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.61–0.95) reduced risk of first episodes of mood disorder, independent of confounding factors.ConclusionsHealthy lifestyles and mood disorders are closely related. Our results suggest that healthy lifestyles may not only reduce cardiovascular disease but also promote mental health.
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- 2023
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26. Burn Resuscitation Practices in North America: Results of the Acute Burn ResUscitation Multicenter Prospective Trial (ABRUPT)
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Julie A Rizzo, Sandra L. Taylor, Rajiv Sood, Angela Gibson, Robert Cartotto, M. A. Marano, Giavonni M. Lewis, Edward E. Tredget, Jeffrey R. Fine, Carlos J. Jimenez, Herbert Phelan, James H. Holmes, Kevin N Foster, Sarah Fischer, Ariel M. Aballay, David T. Hill, Lucy Wibbenmeyer, David J. Smith, Mark R. Hemmila, Anjay Khandelwal, David G. Greenhalgh, Anthony Baldea, and Jeremy Goverman
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Parkland formula ,Resuscitation ,business.industry ,Organ dysfunction ,Albumin ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Prospective trial ,law ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,Total body surface area - Abstract
Objectives ABRUPT was a prospective, non-interventional, observational study of resuscitation practices at 21 burn centers. The primary goal was to examine burn resuscitation with albumin or crystalloids alone, in order to design a future prospective randomized trial. Summary background data No modern prospective study has determined whether to use colloids or crystalloids for acute burn resuscitation. Methods Patients ≥ 18 years with burns ≥ 20% total body surface area (TBSA) had hourly documentation of resuscitation parameters for 48 hours. Patients received either crystalloids alone or had albumin supplemented to crystalloid based on center protocols. Results Of 379 enrollees, two-thirds (253) were resuscitated with albumin and one-third (126) were resuscitated with crystalloid alone. Albumin patients received more total fluid than Crystalloid patients (5.2± 2.3 versus 3.7 ± 1.7 mL/kg/% TBSA burn/24 hours) but patients in the Albumin Group were older, had larger burns, higher admission Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores, and more inhalation injury. Albumin lowered the in-to-out (I/O) ratio and was started ≤ 12 hours in patients with the highest initial fluid requirements, given >12 hours with intermediate requirements, and avoided in patients who responded to crystalloid alone. Conclusion Albumin use is associated with older age, larger and deeper burns, and more severe organ dysfunction at presentation. Albumin supplementation is started when initial crystalloid rates are above expected targets and improves the I/O ratio. The fluid received in the first 24 hours was at or above the Parkland Formula estimate.
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- 2023
27. Stronger therapeutic alliance is associated with better quality of life among patients with advanced cancer
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Yael Schenker, Thomas J. Smith, Teresa Hagan Thomas, Douglas B. White, Lauren Sigler, Kenneth J. Smith, Edward Chu, Robert M. Arnold, Andrew D. Althouse, and Margaret Rosenzweig
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Palliative care ,Therapeutic Alliance ,Psycho-oncology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Oncologists ,business.industry ,Confounding ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Distress ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Quality of Life ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Patient–oncologist therapeutic alliance is a foundation of quality cancer care, although there is limited research demonstrating its relationship with patient outcomes. We investigated the relationship between therapeutic alliance and patient quality of life with a secondary goal of determining whether the association varied by patients’ baseline level of psychological distress. METHODS: Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from a randomized clinical trial of 672 patients with advanced cancer participating in a primary palliative care intervention trial. Patients completed baseline self-reported measures of therapeutic alliance (The Human Connection Scale, range: 16–64), overall quality of life (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy—Palliative Care, range: 0–184), and psychological distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, range: 0–42). First, we determined the relationship between therapeutic alliance and quality of life using multivariable regression adjusting for confounders. We then examined if psychological distress was an effect modifier in this relationship by adding interaction effects of depression and anxiety symptoms on therapeutic alliance into the regression model. RESULTS: Patients reported high levels of therapeutic alliance (56.4 ± 7.4) and moderate quality of life (130.3 ± 25.5). Stronger therapeutic alliance was associated with better quality of life after adjusting for other confounding factors (β = 3.7, 95% confidence interval = 2.1, 5.3, p < 0.01). The relationship between therapeutic alliance and quality of life was generally consistent regardless of psychological distress. CONCLUSIONS: Collaborative, trusting relationships between patients with advanced cancer and their oncologists are associated with better patient quality of life. Future research should investigate the causal, longitudinal nature of these relationships.
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- 2021
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28. The Association Between Area Deprivation Index and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Patients with Advanced Cancer
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Andrew D. Althouse, Douglas B. White, Robert M. Arnold, Margaret Rosenzweig, Lindsay M. Sabik, Thomas J. Smith, Edward Chu, Yael Schenker, and Kenneth J. Smith
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Univariate analysis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Palliative care ,Multivariate analysis ,neighborhood deprivation index ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cancer ,anxiety ,Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ,medicine.disease ,Health Information Management ,Quality of life ,low deprivation ,Internal medicine ,advanced cancer ,Medicine ,Anxiety ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
Background: This analysis describes associations between area deprivation and patient-reported outcomes among patients with advanced cancer. Methods: This is a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from a multisite primary palliative care intervention trial. Participants were adult patients with advanced cancer. Patient-level area deprivation scores were calculated using the Area Deprivation Index (ADI). Quality of life and symptom burden were measured. Uni- and multivariate regressions estimated associations between area deprivation and outcomes of interest. Results: Among 672 patients, ∼0.5 (54%) were women and most (94%) were Caucasian. Mean age was 69.3±10.2 years. Lung (36%), breast (13%), and colon (10%) were the most common malignancies. Mean ADI was 64.0, scale of 1 (low)–100 (high). In unadjusted univariate analysis, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy—Palliative (p=0.002), Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (p=0.025) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale anxiety (p=0.003) and depression (p=0.029) scores were significantly associated with residence in more deprived areas (p=0.003). In multivariate analysis, controlling for patient-level factors, living in more deprived areas was associated with more anxiety (p=0.019). Conclusion: Higher ADI was associated with higher levels of anxiety among patients with advanced cancer. Geographic information could assist clinicians with providing geographically influenced social support strategies.
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- 2021
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29. Racial Disparities in Management and Outcomes of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Complicating Myocardial Infarction: A National Study From England and Wales
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Muhammad Rashid, Purvi Parwani, Michelle M. Graham, Triston B. B. J. Smith, Mohamed Dafaalla, Rachel M. Bond, Saadiq M Moledina, Ritu Thamman, and Mamas A. Mamas
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cardiogenic shock ,Ethnic group ,RC666 ,medicine.disease ,Logistic regression ,R1 ,Out of hospital cardiac arrest ,RA0421 ,RC666-701 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,National study ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Original Article ,In patient ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,National audit ,RA - Abstract
Background Studies of racial disparities in care of patients admitted with an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) in the setting of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have shown inconsistent results. Whether these differences in care exist in the universal healthcare system in United Kingdom is unknown. Methods Patients admitted with a diagnosis of AMI and OHCA between 2010 and 2017 from the Myocardial Ischaemia National Audit Project (MINAP) were studied. All patients were stratified based on ethnicity into a Black, Asian, or minority ethnicity (BAME) group vs a White group. We used multivariable logistic regression models to evaluate the predictors of clinical outcomes and treatment strategy. Results From 14,287 patients admitted with AMI complicated by OHCA, BAME patients constituted a minority of patients (1185 [8.3%]), compared with a White group (13,102 [91.7%]). BAME patients were younger (median age [interquartile range]) for BAME group, 58 [50-70] years; for White group, 65 [55-74] years). Cardiogenic shock (BAME group, 33%; White group, 20.7%; P < 0.001) and severe left ventricular impairment (BAME group, 21%; White group, 16.5%; P < 0.003) were more frequent among BAME patients. BAME patients were more likely to be seen by a cardiologist (BAME group, 95.9%; White group, 92.5%; P < 0.001) and were more likely to receive coronary angiography than the White group (odds ratio [OR] 1.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.2-1.88). The BAME group had significantly higher in-hospital mortality (OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.04-1.52) and re-infarction (OR 1.52, 95% CI 1.06-2.18) than the White group. Conclusions BAME patients were more likely to be seen by a cardiologist and receive coronary angiography than White patients. Despite this difference, the in-hospital mortality of BAME patients, particularly in the Asian population, was significantly higher., Graphical abstract
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- 2021
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30. Symptomatic aseptic loosening of a short humeral stem following anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty
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Benjamin Zmistowski, Peter N. Chalmers, Jay D. Keener, Matthew J. Smith, and Daniel P. Carpenter
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Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Shoulders ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiography ,Aseptic loosening ,Periprosthetic ,Pathognomonic ,medicine ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Shoulder Prosthesis ,General Medicine ,Humerus ,Middle Aged ,Arthroplasty ,Prosthesis Failure ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Shoulder ,Female ,Aseptic processing ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The rate of aseptic humeral component loosening with standard-length stems is historically so low (0.3%) that presence of humeral loosening was given substantial weight in defining periprosthetic shoulder infection by the International Consensus Meeting (ICM) in 2018. This study aims to confirm that the historically low rate of humeral stem aseptic loosening is not affected by the adoption of a novel short humeral stem.Following institutional review board approval, this retrospective multi-institutional study was undertaken. A review of anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) cases at 3 institutions provided 184 shoulders that received TSA with a grit-blasted, rectangular short humeral stem without ingrowth coating (Univers Apex; Arthrex). The average patient age was 62.1 years (range: 30-84), and 57.1% (105/184) were male. One-year radiographic follow-up was achieved in 64.7%. Patient clinical charts were reviewed for onset of newly painful shoulders, radiographic evidence of loosening, and return to the operating room for any reason. All patients with concern for clinically significant humeral loosening underwent workup for periprosthetic shoulder infection. Immediate postoperative films were reviewed to identify any differences in prosthetic canal fit. The definition of periprosthetic shoulder infection used was provided by the recent ICM shoulder guidelines.Twenty-three (12.5%) patients presented with a painful shoulder and radiographic concern for potential humeral loosening at a mean follow-up of 1.5 years (range: 1.5 months-3.4 years). Thirteen (7.1%) of these underwent revision shoulder arthroplasty where a loose stem was confirmed. All revisions underwent tissue culture, and 3 cases were consistent with probable or possible periprosthetic infection at the time of revision arthroplasty. The rate of symptomatic aseptic humeral loosening in this series was 10.9% (20/184), with 5.4% undergoing revision surgery. Patients with symptomatic aseptic humeral loosening were more likely to be male (90.5%) than those patients without symptoms (52.8%, P.001). There were no differences in canal fit between patients with concern for symptomatic loosening and those with pain-free, stable implants.In this multisurgeon, multicenter study, the early humeral loosening rate for this stem design far outpaces previously reported rates, and this study likely under-reports the true incidence of clinically significant loosening as it only contains limited short-term follow-up. The perception that humeral loosening is nearly pathognomonic for periprosthetic shoulder infection should be reconsidered for certain short humeral stem designs.
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- 2021
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31. Right ventricle pressure‐volume loops for monitoring right ventricular function in left ventricular assist device patient
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Samuel Carlson, David L. Joyce, Nathan J. Smith, Lyle D. Joyce, and Colton Brown
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Ventricular function ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Bioengineering ,General Medicine ,Biomaterials ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Ventricular assist device ,Internal medicine ,Pressure volume loop ,medicine ,Ventricular pressure ,Cardiology ,business - Published
- 2021
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32. Hope and advance care planning in advanced cancer: Is there a relationship?
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Yael Schenker, Michael G. Cohen, Robert M. Arnold, Andrew D. Althouse, Kenneth J. Smith, Edward Chu, Margaret Rosenzweig, Hailey W. Bulls, and Douglas B. White
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Advance care planning ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Randomization ,Breast Neoplasms ,Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ,Article ,law.invention ,Advance Care Planning ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Socioeconomic status ,Aged ,Terminal Care ,business.industry ,Communication ,Palliative Care ,Middle Aged ,Oncology ,Marital status ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Advance Directives ,business - Abstract
Background Clinicians often cite a fear of giving up hope as a reason they defer advance care planning (ACP) among patients with advanced cancer. The objective of this study was to determine whether engagement in ACP affects hope in these patients. Methods This was a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial of primary palliative care in advanced cancer. Patients who had not completed ACP at baseline were included in the analysis. ACP was assessed in the forms of an end-of-life (EOL) conversation with one's oncologist and completion of a living will or advance directive (AD). Measurements were obtained at baseline and at 3 months. Hope was measured using the Herth Hope Index (HHI) (range, 12-48; higher scores indicate higher hope). Multivariate regression was performed to assess associations between ACP and hope, controlling for baseline HHI score, study randomization, patient age, religious importance, education, marital status, socioeconomic status, time since cancer diagnosis, pain/symptom burden (Edmonton Symptom Assessment System), and anxiety/depression score (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale)-all variables known to be associated with ACP and/or hope. Results In total, 672 patients with advanced cancer were enrolled in the overall study. The mean age was 69 ± 10 years, and the most common cancer types were lung cancer (36%), gastrointestinal cancer (20%) and breast/gynecologic cancers (16%). In this group, 378 patients (56%) had not had an EOL conversation at baseline, of whom 111 of 378 (29%) reported having an EOL conversation by 3 months. Hope was not different between patients who did or did not have an EOL conversation over the study period (mean ± standard deviation ∆HHI, 0.20 ± 5.32 vs -0.53 ± 3.80, respectively; P = .136). After multivariable adjustment, hope was significantly increased in patients who had engaged in an EOL conversation (adjusted mean difference in ∆HHI, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.08-1.82; P = .032). Similarly, of 216 patients (32%) without an AD at baseline, 67 (31%) had subsequently completed an AD. Unadjusted hope was not different between those who did and did not complete an AD (∆HHI, 0.20 ± 3.89 vs -0.91 ± 4.50, respectively; P = .085). After adjustment, hope was significantly higher in those who completed an AD (adjusted mean difference in ∆HHI, 1.31; 95% CI, 0.13-2.49; P = .030). Conclusions The current results demonstrate that hope is not decreased after engagement in ACP and indeed may be increased. These findings may provide reassurance to clinicians who are apprehensive about having these important and difficult conversations. Lay summary Many oncologists defer advance care planning (ACP) out of concern for giving up hope. This study demonstrates that hope is not decreased in patients who have engaged in ACP either as a conversation with their oncologists or by completing an advance directive. With this information, providers may feel more comfortable having these important conversations with their patients.
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- 2021
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33. The stability of cerebrovascular CO 2 reactivity following attainment of physiological steady‐state
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Ryan L. Hoiland, Kurt J. Smith, Michael M. Tymko, Philip N. Ainslie, Hannah G. Caldwell, Jay M. J. R. Carr, Daniel J. Green, and Howard H. Carter
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Mean arterial pressure ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Steady state (electronics) ,Physiology ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,General Medicine ,Transcranial Doppler ,Cerebral blood flow ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Middle cerebral artery ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Internal carotid artery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Hypercapnia - Abstract
New findings What is the central question of this study? During a steady-state cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity test, do different data extraction time points change the outcome for cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity? What is the main finding and its importance? Once steady-state end-tidal pressure of CO2 and haemodynamics were achieved, cerebral blood flow was stable, and so cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity values remained unchanged regardless of data extraction length (30 vs. 60 s) and time point (at 2-5 min). Abstract This study assessed cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity (CVR) and examined data extraction time points and durations with the hypotheses that: (1) there would be no difference in CVR values when calculated with cerebral blood flow (CBF) measures at different time points following the attainment of physiological steady-state, (2) once steady-state was achieved there would be no difference in CVR values derived from 60 to 30 s extracted means, and (3) that changes in V E would not be associated with any changes in CVR. We conducted a single step iso-oxic hypercapnic CVR test using dynamic end-tidal forcing (end-tidal P C O 2 , +9.4 ± 0.7 mmHg), and transcranial Doppler and Duplex ultrasound of middle cerebral artery (MCA) and internal carotid artery (ICA), respectively. From the second minute of hypercapnia onwards, physiological steady-state was apparent, with no subsequent changes in end-tidal P C O 2 , P O 2 or mean arterial pressure. Therefore, CVR measured in the ICA and MCA was stable following the second minute of hypercapnia onwards. Data extraction durations of 30 or 60 s did not give statistically different CVR values. No differences in CVR were detected following the second minute of hypercapnia after accounting for mean arterial pressure via calculated conductance or covariation of mean arterial pressure. These findings demonstrate that, provided the P C O 2 stimulus remains in a steady-state, data extracted from any minute of a CVR test during physiological steady-state conditions produce equivalent CVR values; any change in the CVR value would represent a failure of CVR mechanisms, a change in the magnitude of the stimulus, or measurement error.
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- 2021
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34. Long-read sequencing reveals increased occurrence of genomic variants and adenosine methylation in Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032 after long-duration flight exposure onboard the International Space Station
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S. Marshall Ledford, Bianca M. Serda, Samantha M. Waters, Jordan M. McKaig, Amanda L. Wacker, Joseph Varelas, Patrick M. Nicoll, Sonali Verma, David J. Smith, and Kasthuri Venkateswaran
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Genetics ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Space and Planetary Science ,Bacillus pumilus ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,medicine ,Methylation ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Adenosine ,Short duration ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032, an endospore-forming bacterial strain, was investigated to determine its methylation pattern (methylome) change, compared to ground control, after direct exposure to space conditions onboard the International Space Station (ISS) for 1.5 years. The resulting ISS-flown and non-flown strains were sequenced using the Nanopore MinION and an in-house method and pipeline to identify methylated positions in the genome. Our analysis indicated genomic variants and m6A methylation increased in the ISS-flown SAFR-032. To complement the broader omics investigation and explore phenotypic changes, ISS-flown and non-flown strains were compared in a series of laboratory-based chamber experiments using an X-ray irradiation source (doses applied at 250, 500, 750, 1000 and 1250 Gy); results show a potentially higher survival fraction of ISS-flown DS2 at the two highest exposures. Taken together, results from this study document lasting changes to the genome by methylation, potentially triggered by conditions in spaceflight, with functional consequences for the resistance of bacteria to stressors expected on long-duration missions beyond low Earth orbit.
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- 2021
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35. Automated detection of squint as a sensitive assay of sex-dependent calcitonin gene–related peptide and amylin-induced pain in mice
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Kylie J. Smith, Martin-Junior Ketcha, Pieter Poolman, Abigail Davison, Levi P. Sowers, Aaron M. Fairbanks, Anne-Sophie Wattiez, Randy H. Kardon, Andrew F. Russo, and Brandon J. Rea
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medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide ,Pain ,Amylin ,Neuropeptide ,Calcitonin gene-related peptide ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Islet Amyloid Polypeptide ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Strabismus ,Mice ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Neurology ,Migraine ,Ophthalmology ,Animals ,Medicine ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nociceptive Stimulus ,business - Abstract
We developed an automated squint assay using both black C57BL/6J and white CD1 mice to measure the interpalpebral fissure area between the upper and lower eyelids as an objective quantification of pain. The automated software detected a squint response to the commonly used nociceptive stimulus formalin in C57BL/6J mice. After this validation, we used the automated assay to detect a dose-dependent squint response to a migraine trigger, the neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide, including a response in female mice at a dose below detection by the manual grimace scale. Finally, we found that the calcitonin gene-related peptide amylin induced squinting behavior in female mice, but not males. These data demonstrate that an automated squint assay can be used as an objective, real-time, continuous-scale measure of pain that provides higher precision and real-time analysis compared with manual grimace assessments.
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- 2021
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36. Preventive antibiotic therapy in acute stroke patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis of individual patient data of randomized controlled trials
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Lalit Kalra, Mohammad Reza Amiri-Nikpour, Fabrizio A. DeFalco, Jeffrey A. Switzer, Ángel Chamorro, Marcel G. W. Dijkgraaf, Jan Dirk Vermeij, John Hodsoll, Craig J. Smith, Amit Kishore, Jason J. Chang, Willeke F. Westendorp, Diederik van de Beek, David Blacker, Paul H. J. Nederkoorn, Yousef Rezaei, Andreas Meisel, Neurology, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neuroinfection & -inflammation, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurovascular Disorders, Epidemiology and Data Science, and APH - Methodology
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Lydia Becker Institute ,business.industry ,Patient data ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,infection ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/lydia_becker_institute_of_immunology_and_inflammation ,Internal medicine ,Meta-analysis ,Antibiotic therapy ,antibiotic therapy ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Introduction Infection after stroke is associated with unfavorable outcome. Randomized controlled studies did not show benefit of preventive antibiotics in stroke but lacked power for subgroup analyses. Aim of this study is to assess whether preventive antibiotic therapy after stroke improves functional outcome for specific patient groups in an individual patient data meta-analysis. Patients and methods We searched MEDLINE (1946–7 May 2021), Embase (1947–7 May 2021), CENTRAL (17th September 2021), trial registries, cross-checked references and contacted researchers for randomized controlled trials of preventive antibiotic therapy versus placebo or standard care in ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke patients. Meta-analysis was performed by a one-step and two-step approach. Primary outcome was functional outcome adjusted for age and stroke severity. Secondary outcomes were infections and mortality. Results 4197 patients from nine trials were included. Preventive antibiotic therapy was not associated with a shift in functional outcome (mRS) at 3 months (OR1.13, 95%CI 0.98–1.31) or unfavorable functional outcome (mRS 3–6) (OR0.85, 95%CI 0.60–1.19). Preventive antibiotics did not improve functional outcome in pre-defined subgroups (age, stroke severity, timing and type of antibiotic therapy, pneumonia prediction scores, dysphagia, type of stroke, and type of trial). Preventive antibiotics reduced infections (276/2066 (13.4%) in the preventive antibiotic group vs. 417/2059 (20.3%) in the control group, OR 0.60, 95% CI 0.51–0.71, p < 0.001), but not pneumonia (191/2066 (9.2%) in the preventive antibiotic group vs. 205/2061 (9.9%) in the control group (OR 0.92 (0.75–1.14), p = 0.450). Discussion and conclusion Preventive antibiotic therapy did not benefit any subgroup of patients with acute stroke and currently cannot be recommended.
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- 2021
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37. The Relationship Between Mucosal Microbiota, Colitis, and Systemic Inflammation in Chronic Granulomatous Disorder
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Charles Murray, Mehmet Davrandi, David M. Lowe, Philip J Smith, and Stephanie Harris
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biology ,business.industry ,Immunology ,medicine.disease ,Systemic inflammation ,biology.organism_classification ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Pathogenesis ,Primary immunodeficiency ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Microbiome ,Colitis ,medicine.symptom ,Bacteroides ,Calprotectin ,business - Abstract
Purpose Chronic granulomatous disorder (CGD) is a primary immunodeficiency which is frequently complicated by inflammatory colitis and is associated with systemic inflammation. Herein, we aimed to investigate the role of the microbiome in the pathogenesis of colitis and systemic inflammation. Methods We performed 16S rDNA sequencing on mucosal biopsy samples from each segment of 10 CGD patients' colons and conducted compositional and functional pathway prediction analyses. Results The microbiota in samples from colitis patients demonstrated reduced taxonomic alpha-diversity compared to unaffected patients, even in apparently normal bowel segments. Functional pathway richness was similar between the colitic and non-colitic mucosa, although metabolic pathways involved in butyrate biosynthesis or utilization were enriched in patients with colitis and correlated positively with fecal calprotectin levels. One patient with very severe colitis was dominated by Enterococcus spp., while among other patients Bacteroides spp. abundance correlated with colitis severity measured by fecal calprotectin and an endoscopic severity score. In contrast, Blautia abundance is associated with low severity scores and mucosal health. Several taxa and functional pathways correlated with concentrations of inflammatory cytokines in blood but not with colitis severity. Notably, dividing patients into "high" and "low" systemic inflammation groups demonstrated clearer separation than on the basis of colitis status in beta-diversity analyses. Conclusion The microbiome is abnormal in CGD-associated colitis and altered functional characteristics probably contribute to pathogenesis. Furthermore, the relationship between the mucosal microbiome and systemic inflammation, independent of colitis status, implies that the microbiome in CGD can influence the inflammatory phenotype of the condition.
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- 2021
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38. Delivery Technique for Fibular Strut Bone Grafting to Proximal Humerus Nonunion Fractures
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Matthew J. Smith, Steven M. Kane, and Scott Tanaka
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Proximal humerus ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Nonunion ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Bone grafting ,business ,medicine.disease ,Surgery - Published
- 2021
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39. Comparison of Outcomes Following Glaucoma Drainage Tube Surgery Between Primary and Secondary Glaucomas, and Between Phakic and Pseudophakic eyes
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Nicole C. Rosenberg, Alissa M. Meyer, Cooper D Rodgers, C. Richard Blake, Phuong T Nguyen, Emily F. Dawson, Mark B. Sherwood, Charlotte A Bolch, Brady E. Culpepper, Mary Kate Wilson, and Ryan J. Smith
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Intraocular pressure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,Glaucoma ,surgery ,Cohort Studies ,T004 ,pseudophakic ,medicine ,Humans ,Original Study ,Patient group ,Glaucoma Drainage Implants ,Intraocular Pressure ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Secondary glaucoma ,Lens Status ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Glaucoma drainage device ,eye diseases ,Surgery ,Ophthalmology ,Treatment Outcome ,glaucoma drainage implant ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cohort study ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose: To report outcomes of glaucoma drainage device (GDD) surgery based on primary or secondary glaucoma diagnosis and lens status. Design: Single-center, retrospective, consecutive cohort study. Methods: University of Florida patients aged 18 to 93 years who underwent nonvalved GDD surgery between 1996 and 2015 with a minimum of 1-year follow-up were examined. Of the 186 eyes of 186 patients enrolled, 108 had a primary glaucoma and 78 a secondary glaucoma diagnosis. Excluding 13 aphakic patients, 57 eyes were phakic and 116 pseudophakic. Mean intraocular pressure (IOP), mean number of medications, visual acuity (VA), surgical complications, and failure (IOP ≥18 mm Hg, IOP 0.05) between eyes with primary and secondary glaucomas at up to 5 years postoperatively. Comparison of phakic and pseudophakic eyes showed a statistically significant higher success rate for the pseudophakic patient group at the ≥18 mm Hg upper limit and
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- 2021
40. Determining the role of natural SARS-CoV-2 infection in the death of domestic pets: 10 cases (2020–2021)
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Dustin W. Currie, Jana M. Ritter, Mia Kim Torchetti, Brent Robbins, Deepanker Tewari, Francisco R. Carvallo, Sally Slavinski, Kelley Steury, Betsy Schroeder, Ryan M. Wallace, Dee Jones, Jane A. Rooney, Ria R. Ghai, James B. Stanton, Boyd Parr, Julia Murphy, Diego G. Diel, Casey Barton Behravesh, Carl Williams, Gary Balsamo, Hemant Naikare, Kevin Brightbill, Mathias Martins, Janemarie H. Hennebelle, Rachel Radcliffe, Joy Gary, Robert Cobb, Lore Boger, Tony Frazier, Natalie Wendling, Yung-Yi C. Mosley, Kathryn McCullough, Ann Carpenter, David J. Smith, Julie Gabel, and Doug Meckes
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,General Veterinary ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,viruses ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,fungi ,COVID-19 ,Pets ,Cat Diseases ,Virology ,respiratory tract diseases ,body regions ,Dogs ,Cats ,Animals ,Medicine ,Dog Diseases ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To establish a pathoepidemiological model to evaluate the role of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the first 10 companion animals that died while infected with SARS-CoV-2 in the US. ANIMALS 10 cats and dogs that tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and died or were euthanized in the US between March 2020 and January 2021. PROCEDURES A standardized algorithm was developed to direct case investigations, determine the necessity of certain diagnostic procedures, and evaluate the role, if any, that SARS-CoV-2 infection played in the animals’ course of disease and death. Using clinical and diagnostic information collected by state animal health officials, state public health veterinarians, and other state and local partners, this algorithm was applied to each animal case. RESULTS SARS-CoV-2 was an incidental finding in 8 animals, was suspected to have contributed to the severity of clinical signs leading to euthanasia in 1 dog, and was the primary reason for death for 1 cat. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE This report provides the global community with a standardized process for directing case investigations, determining the necessity of certain diagnostic procedures, and determining the clinical significance of SARS-CoV-2 infections in animals with fatal outcomes and provides evidence that SARS-CoV-2 can, in rare circumstances, cause or contribute to death in pets.
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- 2021
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41. Resistance, but not endurance exercise training, induces changes in cerebrovascular function in healthy young subjects
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Philip N. Ainslie, Channa E. Marsh, Hannah J. Thomas, Louise H. Naylor, Daniel J. Green, Kurt J. Smith, and Howard H. Carter
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Adult ,Male ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial ,Physiology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Random Allocation ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endurance training ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Vertebral Artery ,Posterior Cerebral Artery ,Ultrasonography, Doppler, Duplex ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,Resistance training ,Brain ,Resistance Training ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Healthy Volunteers ,Endurance Training ,Cerebral blood flow ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity ,Carotid Artery, Internal ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
It is generally considered that regular exercise maintains brain health and reduces the risk of cerebrovascular diseases such as stroke and dementia. Since the benefits of different "types" of exercise are unclear, we sought to compare the impacts of endurance and resistance training on cerebrovascular function. In a randomized and crossover design, 68 young healthy adults were recruited to participate in 3 mo of resistance and endurance training. Cerebral hemodynamics through the internal carotid, vertebral, middle and posterior cerebral arteries were measured using Duplex ultrasound and transcranial Doppler at rest and during acute exercise, dynamic autoregulation, and cerebrovascular reactivity (to hypercapnia). Following resistance, but not endurance training, middle cerebral artery velocity and pulsatility index significantly decreased (
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- 2021
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42. The influence of sex and maturation on carotid and vertebral artery hemodynamics and associations with free-living (in)activity in 6–17-year-olds
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Kurt J. Smith, Christine M. Tallon, Philip N. Ainslie, Mark S. Tremblay, Alyssa V. Koziol, Daniela Nowak-Flück, Daniel J. Green, Mathew G. Rieger, Lesley D. Lutes, and Ali M. McManus
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Carotid Artery, Common ,Physiology ,Cervical Artery ,Vertebral artery ,Hemodynamics ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Common carotid artery ,Child ,Vertebral Artery ,business.industry ,Blood flow ,Anthropometry ,Cerebral blood flow ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Cardiology ,Female ,Internal carotid artery ,business ,Carotid Artery, Internal ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
We explored the influence of sex and maturation on resting cervical artery hemodynamics (common carotid artery, CCA; internal carotid artery, ICA; and vertebral artery, VA), free-living physical activity, and sedentary behavior in children 6-17 yr of age. In addition, we investigated the relationship between physical activity, sedentary behavior, and cervical artery hemodynamics. Seventy-eight children and adolescents, girls (n = 42; mean age, 11.4 ± 2.5 yr) and boys (n = 36; mean age, 11.0 ± 2.6 yr), completed anthropometric measures, duplex ultrasound assessment of the cervical arteries, and wore an activPAL accelerometer to assess physical activity (indexed by steps/day) and sedentary behavior for 7 days. The ICA and VA diameters were similar between prepubertal and pubertal groups, as was volumetric blood flow (Q); however, the CCA diameter was significantly larger in the pubertal group (P < 0.05). Boys were found to have larger diameters in all cervical arteries than girls, as well as higher QCCA, QICA, and global cerebral blood flow (P < 0.05). The pubertal group was more sedentary (100 min/day more; P < 0.05) and took 3,500 fewer steps/day than the prepubertal group (P < 0.05). Shear rate (SR) and Q of the cervical arteries showed no relationship to physical activity or prolonged bouts of sedentary behavior; however, a significant negative relationship was apparent between total sedentary time and internal carotid artery shear rate (ICASR) after covarying for steps/day and maturation (P < 0.05). These findings provide novel insight into the potential influence sedentary behavior may have on cerebrovascular blood flow in healthy girls and boys.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Cerebral blood flow is known to change with age; however, assessing these age-related changes is complex and requires consideration of pubertal status. This, to our knowledge, is the first study to investigate the influence of sex and maturation on resting cervical artery hemodynamics and subsequently explore associations with physical activity and sedentary behavior in healthy children and adolescents. Our findings suggest that habitual sedentary behavior may influence cervical artery hemodynamics in youth, independent of physical activity, maturation, and sex.
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- 2021
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43. Efficacy and Safety of Teprotumumab in Thyroid Eye Disease
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Shannon S. Joseph, Terry J. Smith, and Honeylen Maryl Teo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Eye disease ,Review ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,anti-IGF-IR ,Graves' ophthalmopathy ,Internal medicine ,Graves’ ophthalmopathy ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Adverse effect ,Pregnancy ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Teprotumumab ,business.industry ,thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy ,Thyroid ,autoimmune ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,monoclonal antibody ,business ,Safety Research ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Thyroid eye disease (TED; also known as thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy) is an autoimmune condition with disabling and disfiguring consequences. Teprotumumab is the first and only medication approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of TED. We review the efficacy and safety of teprotumumab in TED, highlighting results from the 2 randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled trials. Post-approval case reports of teprotumumab use in patients with compressive optic neuropathy (CON) and inactive TED were similarly favorable to those from the trials. The preliminarily results of teprotumumab for CON and inactive TED should be investigated in formal clinical trials. Teprotumumab should be avoided in pregnancy. Evidence also suggests that teprotumumab may exacerbate pre-existing inflammatory bowel disease, worsen hyperglycemia, and be associated with hearing impairment. Patients at risk for these adverse events need to be closely monitored with baseline and periodic assessments.
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- 2021
44. Management of Colorectal Cancer with Synchronous Liver Metastases: An Inception Cohort Study (CoSMIC)
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Jonathan I. Epstein, Saifee Mullamitha, Fergus Reid, Aali J. Sheen, Michael Braun, Mohammud Kurrimboccus, Jurjees Hassan, Kamran Siddiqui, Thomas Satyadas, Arif Khan, Santhalingam Jegatheeswaran, James Mason, Derek A. O'Reilly, Raj Rajashankar, Rahul Deshpand, Rishi Sethi, Minas Baltatzis, Anthony K.C. Chan, Raymond Mcmahon, Saurabh Jamdar, Nicola de Liguori Carino, James O. Hill, Marius Paraoan, Gregory C. Wilson, Christopher Smart, Ajith K. Siriwardena, Nooreen Alam, David J. Smith, and Ramesh Aswatha
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,Colorectal cancer ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,INCEPTION COHORT ,Oncology ,Quality of life ,Surgical oncology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
BACKGROUND Approximately one-fifth of patients with colorectal cancer present with hepatic metastases. There are limited prospective data on the outcomes of synchronous combined liver and bowel surgery and liver-first or bowel-first routes where contemporary chemo(radio)therapy is integrated into management. METHODS Between 1 April 2014 and 31 March 2017, 125 patients with colorectal cancer and synchronous liver metastases were recruited. Data are reported on pathway-specific outcomes, including perioperative complications, treatment completion, and overall and disease-free survival. The study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02456285). RESULTS There was no difference in age, body mass index, or Charlson score between surgical groups. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was used in 50 (40%) patients for a mean duration of 4.6 months (standard deviation [SD] 5.4), and mean time from completion of chemotherapy to surgery was 2.6 months (SD 1.9). Complications were similar between patients completing the synchronous and staged pathways (p = 0.66). Mean total inpatient stay was 16.5 days (SD 8.1) for staged surgery compared with 16.8 days (SD 10.3) for the synchronous group (t-test; p = 0.91). There was no difference in time to treatment completion between pathways. Thirty six (35%) patients were disease-free at 12 months, with no significant difference between groups (Chi-square, p = 0.448). Quality of life was similar in all surgical groups. CONCLUSIONS Perioperative complications and oncological and healthcare occupancy outcomes are equivalent between patients completing staged and synchronous pathways for the management of patients with colorectal cancer and synchronous liver metastases. Future studies should focus on optimizing the criteria for pathway selection, incorporation of cancer genomics data, and patient (user) preferences.
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- 2021
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45. Effects of dipeptidyl peptidase‐4 inhibitors and sulphonylureas on cognitive and physical function in nursing home residents
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Sarah D. Berry, Andrew R. Zullo, David D. Dore, Matthew S. Duprey, Medha Munshi, Robert J. Smith, and Roee Gutman
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Gerontology ,Activities of daily living ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicare ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Cognition ,Endocrinology ,Altered Mental Status ,Activities of Daily Living ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cognitive decline ,Dipeptidyl-Peptidases and Tripeptidyl-Peptidases ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Dipeptidyl-Peptidase IV Inhibitors ,Minimum Data Set ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,United States ,Confidence interval ,Nursing Homes ,Propensity score matching ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
AIMS Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4Is) may mitigate hypoglycaemia-mediated declines in cognitive and physical functioning compared with sulphonylureas (SUs), yet comparative studies are unavailable among older adults, particularly nursing home (NH) residents. We evaluated the effects of DPP4Is versus SUs on cognitive and physical functioning among NH residents. MATERIALS AND METHODS This new-user cohort study included long-stay NH residents aged ≥65 years from the 2007-2010 national US Minimum Data Set (MDS) clinical assessments and linked Medicare claims. We measured cognitive decline from the validated 6-point MDS Cognitive Performance Scale, functional decline from the validated 28-point MDS Activities of Daily Living scale, and hospitalizations or emergency department visits for altered mental status from Medicare claims. We compared 180-day outcomes in residents who initiated a DPP4I versus SU after 1:1 propensity score matching using Cox regression models. RESULTS The matched cohort (N = 1784) had a mean ± SD age of 80 ± 8 years and 73% were women. Approximately 46% had no or mild cognitive impairment and 35% had no or mild functional impairment before treatment initiation. Compared with SU users, DPP4I users had lower 180-day rates of cognitive decline [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.61, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.31-1.19], altered mental status events (HR = 0.71, 95% CI 0.39-1.27), and functional decline (HR = 0.89, 95% CI 0.51-1.56), but estimates were imprecise. CONCLUSIONS Rates of cognitive and functional decline may be reduced among older NH residents using DPP4Is compared with SUs, but larger studies with greater statistical power should resolve the remaining uncertainty by providing more precise effect estimates.
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- 2021
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46. Is nighttime bracing effective in the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis? A meta-analysis and systematic review based on scoliosis research society guidelines
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Kristin J Smith, Sara J. Morgan, Walter H. Truong, Dan J Miller, Abdul Fettah Buyuk, Kristine K Nolin, and Andrew J Snyder
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,MEDLINE ,Scoliosis ,Cochrane Library ,medicine.disease ,Lumbar ,Sample size determination ,Meta-analysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business - Abstract
Purpose Standard treatment for skeletally immature adolescents with moderate Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is a full-time spinal orthosis. However, adherence to full-time wear (≥ 18 h/day) is often challenging for these patients. Nighttime bracing is an alternative option that may improve patient adherence and/or satisfaction. This systematic review and meta-analysis assessed the effectiveness of nighttime bracing in patients with AIS. Methods A systematic review of studies evaluating nighttime bracing was performed. PubMed, Medline, Embase, CINAHL and Cochrane library databases were searched (01/1975-03/2020); two reviewers assessed eligibility. Eligible articles were peer reviewed, in English, and reported outcomes for patients who met Scoliosis Research Society (SRS) criteria. The primary outcome was curve progression ≥ 6°. Pooled progression rates were calculated from random effects meta-analyses with inverse-variance weights; 95% CIs were calculated. Results Nine studies (n = 595) were included. The overall pooled progression rate to ≥ 6° was 40.7% (95% CI: 30.4-51.5%). The pooled progression rate to surgical magnitude was 24.8% (95% CI: 4.5-53.6%). The most successful outcomes were in subjects with thoracolumbar/lumbar curves and subjects who initiated bracing at Risser 1/2 (pooled progression rates were 27.8% (95% CI: 17.0-40.0%) and 16.5% (95% CI: 11.7-21.8%), respectively). Univariate sub-analyses were conducted due to sample sizes. Conclusions Progression rates in patients with primary thoracolumbar/lumbar curves and in patients who initiated nighttime bracing at Risser 1/2 were comparable to published progression rates for full-time bracing, indicating that nighttime bracing may be equally effective for these patients. However, the strength of these conclusions is limited by the sample size and the overall quality of included studies.
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- 2021
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47. Dominant‐negative pathogenic variant <scp>BRIP1</scp> c. <scp>1045G</scp> >C is a high‐risk allele for non‐mucinous epithelial ovarian cancer: A case‐control study
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Stephanie Amico, Nicola Flaum, Olivia Smith, Emma J Crosbie, Richard J. Edmondson, D. Gareth Evans, Elke M van Veen, William G. Newman, and Miriam J. Smith
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system diseases ,Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial ,symbols.namesake ,Breast cancer ,Gene Frequency ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Epithelial ovarian cancer ,Family history ,Gene ,Alleles ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,Genes, Dominant ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Sanger sequencing ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,BRIP1 ,Case-control study ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Fanconi Anemia Complementation Group Proteins ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Case-Control Studies ,symbols ,Female ,business ,RNA Helicases - Abstract
BRIP1 is a moderate susceptibility epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) gene. Having identified the BRIP1 c.1045G>C missense variant in a number of families with EOC, we aimed to investigate the frequency of this and BRIP1.2392C>T pathogenic variant in patients with breast cancer (BC) and/or EOC. A case-control study of 3,767 cases and 2,043 controls was undertaken investigating the presence of these variants using Sanger sequencing and gene panel data. Individuals with BC and/or EOC were grouped by family history. BRIP1 c.1045G>C was associated with increased risk of BC/EOC (OR = 37.7; 95% CI 5.3-444.2; P=0.0001). The risk was highest for women with EOC (OR=140.8; 95% CI 23.5-1723.0; PT was associated with smaller risks for BC/EOC (OR=5.4; 95%CI 2.4-12.7; P=0.0003), EOC (OR=5.9; 95% CI 1.3-23.0; p=0.0550), and BC (OR=5.3; 95%CI 2.3-12.9; P=0.0009). Our study highlights the importance of BRIP1 as an EOC susceptibility gene, especially in familial EOC. The variant BRIP1 c.1045G>C, rs149364097, is of particular interest as its dominant-negative effect may confer a higher risk of EOC than that of the previously reported BRIP1 c.2392C>T nonsense variant. Dominant-negative missense variants may confer higher risks than their loss-of-function counterparts.
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- 2021
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48. Examining the effects of calorie restriction on testosterone concentrations in men: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Stephen J Smith, Shaun Y M Teo, Adrian L Lopresti, Brody Heritage, and Timothy J Fairchild
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Male ,Calorie restriction ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Physiology ,Context (language use) ,Overweight ,law.invention ,Sex hormone-binding globulin ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Obesity ,Caloric Restriction ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,business.industry ,Testosterone (patch) ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Meta-analysis ,biology.protein ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Context Testosterone concentrations decline with age, and lower testosterone concentrations are associated with several morbidities, including sexual dysfunction, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and metabolic syndrome. Objective Because dietary habits play a critical role in weight regulation and T2DM management, the aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to summarize and critically evaluate the evidence from randomized controlled trials to determine the effects of calorie restriction (CR) on testosterone concentrations in men. Data Sources A literature search was conducted across 4 databases, from their inception until March 2020. Data Extraction The screening and data extraction were completed by 2 authors independently, and in a blinded manner, according to a priori inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data Analysis Of the 4198 studies identified from the initial search, 7 randomized controlled trials were included for data extraction. Significant increases in total testosterone concentrations were reported in 3 of 4 studies in which CR was examined with overweight or obese men, compared with the control groups. Significant decreases in total testosterone concentrations were reported in 2 of 3 studies in which the effects of CR were examined with normal-weight, healthy men, compared with the control groups. In all 4 studies that examined the effect of CR on sex hormone–binding globulin concentrations, the intervention significantly increased sex hormone–binding globulin concentrations compared with that of the control groups irrespective of body composition. Conclusion This systematic review and meta-analysis provide some evidence that CR affects testosterone concentrations in men and this effect depends on their body mass index. PROSPERO registration no. CRD42020173102
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- 2021
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49. Glucocorticoid maturation of mitochondrial respiratory capacity in skeletal muscle before birth
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Katie L. Davies, Alison J. Forhead, Emily J. Camm, Owen R. Vaughan, Abigail L. Fowden, D J Smith, and Andrew J. Murray
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hydrocortisone ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell Respiration ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,cortisol ,Mitochondrion ,Oxidative Phosphorylation ,Oxygen Consumption ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Myosin ,medicine ,Animals ,Uncoupling protein ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Organelle Biogenesis ,Sheep ,Myosin Heavy Chains ,biology ,maturation ,Research ,Adenine nucleotide translocator ,Adrenalectomy ,Skeletal muscle ,Mitochondria, Muscle ,mitochondria ,fetus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animals, Newborn ,biology.protein ,Female ,Glucocorticoid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In adults, glucocorticoids act to match the supply and demand for energy during physiological challenges, partly through actions on tissue mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) capacity. However, little is known about the role of the natural prepartum rise in fetal glucocorticoid concentrations in preparing tissues for the increased postnatal energy demands. This study examined the effect of manipulating cortisol concentrations in fetal sheep during late gestation on mitochondrial OXPHOS capacity of two skeletal muscles with different postnatal locomotive functions. Mitochondrial content, biogenesis markers, respiratory rates and expression of proteins and genes involved in the electron transfer system (ETS) and OXPHOS efficiency were measured in the biceps femoris (BF) and superficial digital flexor (SDF) of fetuses either infused with cortisol before the prepartum rise or adrenalectomised to prevent this increment. Cortisol infusion increased mitochondrial content, biogenesis markers, substrate-specific respiration rates and abundance of ETS complex I and adenine nucleotide translocator (ANT1) in a muscle-specific manner that was more pronounced in the SDF than BF. Adrenalectomy reduced mitochondrial content and expression of PGC1α and ANT1 in both muscles, and ETS complex IV abundance in the SDF near term. Uncoupling protein gene expression was unaffected by cortisol manipulations in both muscles. Gene expression of the myosin heavy chain isoform, MHCIIx, was increased by cortisol infusion and reduced by adrenalectomy in the BF alone. These findings show that cortisol has a muscle-specific role in prepartum maturation of mitochondrial OXPHOS capacity with important implications for the health of neonates born pre-term or after intrauterine glucocorticoid overexposure.
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- 2021
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50. Acquired tracheomalacia due to aortic aneurysm managed with venopulmonary extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for perioperative support
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David L. Joyce, Samuel Carlson, Lyle D. Joyce, Peter J. Rossi, and Nathan J. Smith
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medicine.medical_specialty ,RD1-811 ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thoracic aortic aneurysm ,law.invention ,Aortic aneurysm ,law ,Case report ,medicine ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Tracheomalacia ,business.industry ,Veno-venous ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Cannula ,Surgery ,surgical procedures, operative ,Respiratory failure ,RC666-701 ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has diverse applications. In the present report, we have described a case of tracheomalacia from a thoracic aortic aneurysm causing respiratory failure. Total arch replacement with reverse frozen elephant trunk grafting was performed. Perioperative ECMO support was accomplished with venopulmonary artery ECMO. This strategy allowed for preoperative oxygenation support, venous drainage during cardiopulmonary bypass, and postoperative support without cannula exchanges. Our patient required ECMO support for 12 days postoperatively. We have illustrated a unique case of acquired tracheomalacia but also an ECMO cannulation strategy allowing for preoperative oxygenation, seamless transition to cardiopulmonary bypass, and postoperative support.
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- 2021
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