6,302 results on '"J. Newman"'
Search Results
102. Spectra of random networks with arbitrary degrees.
- Author
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M. E. J. Newman, Xiao Zhang, and Raj Rao Nadakuditi
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- 2019
103. The Effects of Rental Assistance Programs on Neighborhood Outcomes for U.S. Children: Nationwide Evidence by Program and Race/Ethnicity
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Andrew Fenelon, Natalie Slopen, and Sandra J. Newman
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Urban Studies ,Sociology and Political Science - Abstract
Project-based housing programs and tenant-based housing programs (vouchers) may have differential effects on neighborhood outcomes for residents. Theoretically, vouchers should enhance access to low-poverty neighborhoods for low-income families thereby promoting economic mobility for children, though vouchers’ success may vary by race and ethnicity. Drawing on a national survey-administrative data linkage and a quasi-experimental approach, we examine the impact of project-based housing and vouchers on an index of socioeconomic neighborhood disadvantage among children. We find that living in project-based housing leads to greater exposure to neighborhood disadvantage while receiving vouchers leads to reduced exposure. Reductions in neighborhood disadvantage for children receiving vouchers are found only for non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic/Latino children. For non-White families, vouchers are associated with a reduced likelihood of living in high-poverty neighborhoods and increased likelihood of living in low-poverty neighborhoods, presenting an opportunity to narrow racial and ethnic differences in children's neighborhood attainment.
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- 2022
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104. Intracranial computed tomography histogram analysis detects changes in the setting of elevated intracranial pressure and normal imaging
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Solmaz Asnafi, Benson S Chen, Valérie Biousse, Nancy J Newman, and Amit M Saindane
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Pseudotumor Cerebri ,Transverse Sinuses ,Intracranial Pressure ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,Intracranial Hypertension ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background: Patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) have elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) of unclear etiology. This study evaluated the ability of quantitative intracranial Hounsfield unit (HU) histogram analysis to detect pathophysiological changes from elevated ICP in the setting of a normal head CT. Methods: Retrospective analysis of non-contrast-enhanced head CT images of IIH patients and matched controls. Following skull stripping, total intracranial CT voxels within the range of 0-70 HU were divided into seven 10 HU bins. A measurement of total intracranial HU was also calculated for each patient. Imaging studies for IIH patients were reviewed for features of IIH including transverse sinus stenosis (TSS). Histogram measures were compared between IIH and control groups and correlated with imaging and clinical data. Results: Fourteen IIH patients with CSF opening pressure ≥25 cm water, and 31 age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched controls were included. Compared to controls, IIH patients had a significantly greater proportion of voxels in the 40-50, 50-60, and 60-70 HU bins ( p = 0.003, 0.001, and 0.003, respectively) but similar proportion in the 0-10 HU range. Severity of TSS significantly correlated with total intracranial HU measures. 50-60 HU and 60-70 HU bins demonstrated high AUCs of 0.81 and 0.80, respectively, in differentiating IIH from normal status. Conclusion: Idiopathic intracranial hypertension patients have a greater proportion of high intracranial HU voxels representing blood volume, which may be explained by TSS causing venous congestion. The pattern provides further insights into the pathophysiology of IIH and may be useful for detecting elevated ICP in the setting of normal head CT imaging.
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- 2022
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105. A Workshop on Improving Our Methodologies of Selecting Earth System Models for Climate Change Impact Applications
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Andrew J. Newman, Jeffrey R. Arnold, Andrew W. Wood, and Ethan D. Gutmann
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Atmospheric Science - Published
- 2022
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106. The Opinion-Mobilizing Effect of Social Protest against Police Violence: Evidence from the 2020 George Floyd Protests – CORRIGENDUM
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TYLER T. RENY and BENJAMIN J. NEWMAN
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Sociology and Political Science ,Political Science and International Relations - Published
- 2022
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107. Marine-Derived Pharmaceuticals in Clinical Trials in 2022
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Alejandro MS. Mayer, Marsha Pierce, Maria Reji, Alex C. Wu, Karolina K. Jekielek, Henry Q. Le, Katelyn Howe, Maryam Butt, Sujin Seo, David J. Newman, and Keith B. Glaser
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- 2023
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108. Subconjunctival Plasmacytoma Causing Diplopia
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Gabriele Berman, Andre B. Aung, Mung Y. Lin, Nancy J. Newman, and Valérie Biousse
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Ophthalmology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
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109. What They Have but Also Who They Are: Avarice, Elitism, and Public Support for Taxing the Rich
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John V Kane and Benjamin J Newman
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History ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Sociology and Political Science ,Communication ,General Social Sciences - Abstract
Scholarship evaluating public support for redistribution has emphasized that stereotypical perceptions of low-income people inform citizens’ willingness to redistribute wealth to the poor. Less understood, however, is the extent to which stereotypical perceptions of high-income people lead to greater willingness to raise taxes on high-income individuals. These perceptions likely involve resource-based considerations (i.e., what rich people have). However, following recent scholarship, perceptions of the wealthy may also involve more fundamental, trait-based considerations (i.e., who the rich are as people). In this Research Note, we isolate causal effects, utilizing conjoint experiments, of both resource-based and character-based attributes of the rich on support for taxing wealthy people. We find evidence that two character traits—avarice and elitism—significantly increase support for raising taxes on wealthy individuals, and this pattern appears to be the case even among groups generally opposed to redistribution (e.g., Republicans and conservatives). We conclude that, while resource-based considerations remain important, the scholarly literature on redistribution may also benefit from a deeper understanding of the trait-based foundations of public attitudes toward taxing the wealthy.
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- 2023
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110. What's in a name? The paradox of citizen science and community science
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Danielle E Lin Hunter, Gregory J Newman, and Meena M Balgopal
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Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
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111. Transthoracic Echocardiography Can Help to Predict Venous Thromboembolism and Mortality in Sickle Cell Disease
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M. Spring, J. Newman, S.L. Khan, R.C. Lawrence, B. Scarpato, R. Strykowski, R.T. Cohen, F. Ruberg, S.M. Nouraie, and E.S. Klings
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- 2023
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112. Reply to Comment on: Race distribution in non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
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Ana Banc, Mark Kupersmith, Nancy J. Newman, and Valérie Biousse
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Ophthalmology - Published
- 2023
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113. Effects of sleep disturbance on dyspnoea and impaired lung function following hospital admission due to COVID-19 in the UK: a prospective multicentre cohort study
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Callum Jackson, Iain D Stewart, Tatiana Plekhanova, Peter S Cunningham, Andrew L Hazel, Bashar Al-Sheklly, Raminder Aul, Charlotte E Bolton, Trudie Chalder, James D Chalmers, Nazia Chaudhuri, Annemarie B Docherty, Gavin Donaldson, Charlotte L Edwardson, Omer Elneima, Neil J Greening, Neil A Hanley, Victoria C Harris, Ewen M Harrison, Ling-Pei Ho, Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, Luke S Howard, Caroline J Jolley, Mark G Jones, Olivia C Leavy, Keir E Lewis, Nazir I Lone, Michael Marks, Hamish J C McAuley, Melitta A McNarry, Brijesh V Patel, Karen Piper-Hanley, Krisnah Poinasamy, Betty Raman, Matthew Richardson, Pilar Rivera-Ortega, Sarah L Rowland-Jones, Alex V Rowlands, Ruth M Saunders, Janet T Scott, Marco Sereno, Ajay M Shah, Aarti Shikotra, Amisha Singapuri, Stefan C Stanel, Mathew Thorpe, Daniel G Wootton, Thomas Yates, R Gisli Jenkins, Sally J Singh, William D-C Man, Christopher E Brightling, Louise V Wain, Joanna C Porter, A A Roger Thompson, Alex Horsley, Philip L Molyneaux, Rachael A Evans, Samuel E Jones, Martin K Rutter, John F Blaikley, C Jackson, I D Stewart, T Plekhanova, P S Cunningham, A L Hazel, B Al-Sheklly, R Aul, C E Bolton, T Chalder, J D Chalmers, N Chaudhuri, A B Docherty, G Donaldson, C L Edwardson, O Elneima, N J Greening, N A Hanley, V C Harris, E M Harrison, L-P Ho, L Houchen-Wolloff, L S Howard, C J Jolley, M G Jones, O C Leavy, K E Lewis, N I Lone, M Marks, H J C McAuley, M A McNarry, B Patel, K Piper-Hanley, K Poinasamy, B Raman, M Richardson, P Rivera-Ortega, S L Rowland-Jones, A V Rowlands, R M Saunders, J T Scott, M Sereno, A M Shah, A Shikotra, A Singapuri, S C Stanel, M Thorpe, D G Wootton, T Yates, G Jenkins, S J Singh, W D-C Man, C E Brightling, L V Wain, J C Porter, R Thompson, A Horsley, P L Molyneaux, R A Evans, S E Jones, M K Rutter, J F Blaikley, K Abel, H Adamali, D Adeloye, O Adeyemi, R Adrego, L A Aguilar Jimenez, S Ahmad, N Ahmad Haider, R Ahmed, N Ahwireng, M Ainsworth, A Alamoudi, M Ali, M Aljaroof, AM All, L Allan, R J Allen, L Allerton, L Allsop, P Almeida, D Altmann, M Alvarez Corral, S Amoils, D Anderson, C Antoniades, G Arbane, A Arias, C Armour, L Armstrong, N Armstrong, D Arnold, H Arnold, A Ashish, A Ashworth, M Ashworth, S Aslani, H Assefa-Kebede, C Atkin, P Atkin, H Aung, L Austin, C Avram, A Ayoub, M Babores, R Baggott, J Bagshaw, D Baguley, L Bailey, J K Baillie, S Bain, M Bakali, M Bakau, E Baldry, D Baldwin, M Baldwin, C Ballard, A Banerjee, B Bang, R E Barker, L Barman, S Barratt, F Barrett, D Basire, N Basu, M Bates, A Bates, R Batterham, H Baxendale, H Bayes, M Beadsworth, P Beckett, M Beggs, M Begum, P Beirne, D Bell, R Bell, K Bennett, E Beranova, A Bermperi, A Berridge, C Berry, S Betts, E Bevan, K Bhui, M Bingham, K Birchall, L Bishop, K Bisnauthsing, J Blaikely, A Bloss, A Bolger, J Bonnington, A Botkai, C Bourne, M Bourne, K Bramham, L Brear, G Breen, J Breeze, A Briggs, E Bright, S Brill, K Brindle, L Broad, A Broadley, C Brookes, M Broome, A Brown, J Brown, J S Brown, M Brown, V Brown, T Brugha, N Brunskill, M Buch, P Buckley, A Bularga, E Bullmore, L Burden, T Burdett, D Burn, G Burns, A Burns, J Busby, R Butcher, A Butt, S Byrne, P Cairns, P C Calder, E Calvelo, H Carborn, B Card, C Carr, L Carr, G Carson, P Carter, A Casey, M Cassar, J Cavanagh, M Chablani, R C Chambers, F Chan, K M Channon, K Chapman, A Charalambou, A Checkley, J Chen, Y Cheng, L Chetham, C Childs, E R Chilvers, H Chinoy, A Chiribiri, K Chong-James, G Choudhury, N Choudhury, P Chowienczyk, C Christie, M Chrystal, D Clark, C Clark, J Clarke, S Clohisey, G Coakley, Z Coburn, S Coetzee, J Cole, C Coleman, F Conneh, D Connell, B Connolly, L Connor, A Cook, B Cooper, J Cooper, S Cooper, D Copeland, T Cosier, M Coulding, C Coupland, E Cox, T Craig, P Crisp, D Cristiano, M G Crooks, A Cross, I Cruz, P Cullinan, D Cuthbertson, L Daines, M Dalton, P Daly, A Daniels, P Dark, J Dasgin, A David, C David, E Davies, F Davies, G Davies, G A Davies, K Davies, M J Davies, J Dawson, E Daynes, A De Soyza, B Deakin, A Deans, C Deas, J Deery, S Defres, A Dell, K Dempsey, E Denneny, J Dennis, A Dewar, R Dharmagunawardena, N Diar-Bakerly, C Dickens, A Dipper, S Diver, S N Diwanji, M Dixon, R Djukanovic, H Dobson, S L Dobson, A Donaldson, T Dong, N Dormand, A Dougherty, R Dowling, S Drain, K Draxlbauer, K Drury, P Dulawan, A Dunleavy, S Dunn, C Dupont, J Earley, N Easom, C Echevarria, S Edwards, C Edwardson, H El-Taweel, A Elliott, K Elliott, Y Ellis, A Elmer, D Evans, H Evans, J Evans, R Evans, R I Evans, T Evans, C Evenden, L Evison, L Fabbri, S Fairbairn, A Fairman, K Fallon, D Faluyi, C Favager, T Fayzan, J Featherstone, T Felton, J Finch, S Finney, J Finnigan, L Finnigan, H Fisher, S Fletcher, R Flockton, M Flynn, H Foot, D Foote, A Ford, D Forton, E Fraile, C Francis, R Francis, S Francis, A Frankel, E Fraser, R Free, N French, X Fu, J Fuld, J Furniss, L Garner, N Gautam, J R Geddes, J George, P M George, M Gibbons, M Gill, L Gilmour, F Gleeson, J Glossop, S Glover, N Goodman, C Goodwin, B Gooptu, H Gordon, T Gorsuch, M Greatorex, P L Greenhaff, W Greenhalf, A Greenhalgh, J Greenwood, H Gregory, R Gregory, D Grieve, D Griffin, L Griffiths, A-M Guerdette, B Guillen Guio, M Gummadi, A Gupta, S Gurram, E Guthrie, Z Guy, H Henson, K Hadley, A Haggar, K Hainey, B Hairsine, P Haldar, I Hall, L Hall, M Halling-Brown, R Hamil, A Hancock, K Hancock, S Haq, H E Hardwick, E Hardy, T Hardy, B Hargadon, K Harrington, E Harris, P Harrison, N Hart, A Harvey, M Harvey, M Harvie, L Haslam, M Havinden-Williams, J Hawkes, N Hawkings, J Haworth, A Hayday, M Haynes, J Hazeldine, T Hazelton, L G Heaney, C Heeley, J L Heeney, M Heightman, S Heller, M Henderson, L Hesselden, M Hewitt, V Highett, T Hillman, T Hiwot, A Hoare, M Hoare, J Hockridge, P Hogarth, A Holbourn, S Holden, L Holdsworth, D Holgate, M Holland, L Holloway, K Holmes, M Holmes, B Holroyd-Hind, L Holt, A Hormis, A Hosseini, M Hotopf, K Howard, A Howell, E Hufton, A D Hughes, J Hughes, R Hughes, A Humphries, N Huneke, E Hurditch, J Hurst, M Husain, T Hussell, J Hutchinson, W Ibrahim, F Ilyas, J Ingham, L Ingram, D Ionita, K Isaacs, K Ismail, T Jackson, J Jacob, W Y James, W Jang, C Jarman, I Jarrold, H Jarvis, R Jastrub, B Jayaraman, R G Jenkins, P Jezzard, K Jiwa, C Johnson, S Johnson, D Johnston, D Jones, G Jones, H Jones, I Jones, L Jones, S Jones, S Jose, T Kabir, G Kaltsakas, V Kamwa, N Kanellakis, S Kaprowska, Z Kausar, N Keenan, S Kelly, G Kemp, S Kerr, H Kerslake, A L Key, F Khan, K Khunti, S Kilroy, B King, C King, L Kingham, J Kirk, P Kitterick, P Klenerman, L Knibbs, S Knight, A Knighton, O Kon, S Kon, S S Kon, S Koprowska, A Korszun, I Koychev, C Kurasz, P Kurupati, C Laing, H Lamlum, G Landers, C Langenberg, D Lasserson, L Lavelle-Langham, A Lawrie, C Lawson, A Layton, A Lea, D Lee, J-H Lee, E Lee, K Leitch, R Lenagh, D Lewis, J Lewis, V Lewis, N Lewis-Burke, X Li, T Light, L Lightstone, W Lilaonitkul, L Lim, S Linford, A Lingford-Hughes, M Lipman, K Liyanage, A Lloyd, S Logan, D Lomas, R Loosley, J M Lord, H Lota, W Lovegrove, A Lucey, E Lukaschuk, A Lye, C Lynch, S MacDonald, G MacGowan, I Macharia, J Mackie, L Macliver, S Madathil, G Madzamba, N Magee, M M Magtoto, N Mairs, N Majeed, E Major, F Malein, M Malim, G Mallison, S Mandal, K Mangion, C Manisty, R Manley, K March, S Marciniak, P Marino, M Mariveles, E Marouzet, S Marsh, B Marshall, M Marshall, J Martin, A Martineau, L M Martinez, N Maskell, D Matila, W Matimba-Mupaya, L Matthews, A Mbuyisa, S McAdoo, H McAllister-Williams, A McArdle, P McArdle, D McAulay, G P McCann, J McCormick, W McCormick, P McCourt, L McGarvey, C McGhee, K Mcgee, J McGinness, K McGlynn, A McGovern, H McGuinness, I B McInnes, J McIntosh, E McIvor, K McIvor, L McLeavey, A McMahon, M J McMahon, L McMorrow, T Mcnally, M McNarry, J McNeill, A McQueen, H McShane, C Mears, C Megson, S Megson, P Mehta, J Meiring, L Melling, M Mencias, D Menzies, M Merida Morillas, A Michael, C Miller, L Milligan, C Mills, G Mills, N L Mills, L Milner, S Misra, J Mitchell, A Mohamed, N Mohamed, S Mohammed, W Monteiro, S Moriera, A Morley, L Morrison, R Morriss, A Morrow, A J Moss, P Moss, K Motohashi, N Msimanga, E Mukaetova-Ladinska, U Munawar, J Murira, U Nanda, H Nassa, M Nasseri, A Neal, R Needham, P Neill, S Neubauer, D E Newby, H Newell, T Newman, J Newman, A Newton-Cox, T Nicholson, D Nicoll, A Nikolaidis, C M Nolan, M J Noonan, C Norman, P Novotny, J Nunag, L Nwafor, U Nwanguma, J Nyaboko, C O'Brien, K O'Donnell, D O'Regan, L O'Brien, N Odell, G Ogg, O Olaosebikan, C Oliver, Z Omar, P J M Openshaw, L Orriss-Dib, L Osborne, R Osbourne, M Ostermann, C Overton, J Owen, J Oxton, J Pack, E Pacpaco, S Paddick, S Painter, A Pakzad, S Palmer, P Papineni, K Paques, K Paradowski, M Pareek, D Parekh, H Parfrey, C Pariante, S Parker, M Parkes, J Parmar, S Patale, M Patel, S Patel, D Pattenadk, M Pavlides, S Payne, L Pearce, J E Pearl, D Peckham, J Pendlebury, Y Peng, C Pennington, I Peralta, E Perkins, Z Peterkin, T Peto, N Petousi, J Petrie, P Pfeffer, J Phipps, J Pimm, R Pius, H Plant, S Plein, M Plowright, O Polgar, L Poll, J Porter, S Portukhay, N Powell, A Prabhu, J Pratt, A Price, C Price, D Price, L Price, A Prickett, J Propescu, S Prosper, S Pugmire, S Quaid, J Quigley, J Quint, H Qureshi, I N Qureshi, K Radhakrishnan, N M Rahman, M Ralser, A Ramos, H Ramos, J Rangeley, B Rangelov, L Ratcliffe, P Ravencroft, A Reddington, R Reddy, A Reddy, H Redfearn, D Redwood, A Reed, M Rees, T Rees, K Regan, W Reynolds, C Ribeiro, A Richards, E Richardson, K Roberts, E Robertson, E Robinson, L Robinson, L Roche, C Roddis, J Rodger, A Ross, G Ross, J Rossdale, A Rostron, A Rowe, A Rowland, J Rowland, M J Rowland, K Roy, M Roy, I Rudan, R Russell, E Russell, G Saalmink, R Sabit, E K Sage, T Samakomva, N Samani, C Sampson, K Samuel, R Samuel, A Sanderson, E Sapey, D Saralaya, J Sargent, C Sarginson, T Sass, N Sattar, K Saunders, P Saunders, L C Saunders, H Savill, W Saxon, A Sayer, J Schronce, W Schwaeble, K Scott, N Selby, M G Semple, T A Sewell, K Shah, P Shah, M Shankar-Hari, M Sharma, C Sharpe, M Sharpe, S Shashaa, A Shaw, K Shaw, V Shaw, A Sheikh, S Shelton, L Shenton, K Shevket, J Short, S Siddique, S Siddiqui, J Sidebottom, L Sigfrid, G Simons, J Simpson, N Simpson, C Singh, D Sissons, J Skeemer, K Slack, A Smith, D Smith, S Smith, J Smith, L Smith, M Soares, T S Solano, R Solly, A R Solstice, T Soulsby, D Southern, D Sowter, M Spears, L G Spencer, F Speranza, L Stadon, S Stanel, N Steele, M Steiner, D Stensel, G Stephens, L Stephenson, M Stern, R Stimpson, S Stockdale, J Stockley, W Stoker, R Stone, W Storrar, A Storrie, K Storton, E Stringer, S Strong-Sheldrake, N Stroud, C Subbe, C L Sudlow, Z Suleiman, C Summers, C Summersgill, D Sutherland, D L Sykes, R Sykes, N Talbot, A L Tan, L Tarusan, V Tavoukjian, A Taylor, C Taylor, J Taylor, A Te, H Tedd, C J Tee, J Teixeira, H Tench, S Terry, S Thackray-Nocera, F Thaivalappil, B Thamu, D Thickett, C Thomas, D C Thomas, S Thomas, A K Thomas, T Thomas-Woods, T Thompson, A A R Thompson, T Thornton, R S Thwaites, J Tilley, N Tinker, G F Tiongson, M Tobin, J Tomlinson, C Tong, M Toshner, R Touyz, K A Tripp, E Tunnicliffe, A Turnbull, E Turner, S Turner, V Turner, K Turner, S Turney, L Turtle, H Turton, J Ugoji, R Ugwuoke, R Upthegrove, J Valabhji, M Ventura, J Vere, C Vickers, B Vinson, E Wade, P Wade, T Wainwright, L O Wajero, S Walder, S Walker, E Wall, T Wallis, S Walmsley, J A Walsh, S Walsh, L Warburton, T J C Ward, K Warwick, H Wassall, S Waterson, E Watson, L Watson, J Watson, J Weir McCall, C Welch, H Welch, B Welsh, S Wessely, S West, H Weston, H Wheeler, S White, V Whitehead, J Whitney, S Whittaker, B Whittam, V Whitworth, A Wight, J M Wild, M Wilkins, D Wilkinson, B Williams, N Williams, J Williams, S A Williams-Howard, M Willicombe, G Willis, J Willoughby, A Wilson, D Wilson, I Wilson, N Window, M Witham, R Wolf-Roberts, C Wood, F Woodhead, J Woods, J Wormleighton, J Worsley, D Wraith, C Wrey Brown, C Wright, L Wright, S Wright, J Wyles, I Wynter, M Xu, N Yasmin, S Yasmin, K P Yip, B Young, S Young, A Young, A J Yousuf, A Zawia, L Zeidan, B Zhao, B Zheng, O Zongo, Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, PHOSP-COVID Study Collaborative Group, and Group, PHOSP-COVID Study Collaborative
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,PHOSP-COVID Study Collaborative Group - Abstract
Data sharing: The PHOSP-COVID study protocol, consent form, definition, and derivation of clinical characteristics and outcomes, training materials, regulatory documents, information about requests for data access, and other relevant study materials are available online. UK Biobank information can be released once necessary approvals have been obtained. Other data (eg, the R code and protocol) will be made available on reasonable request to the corresponding author. Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Background: Sleep disturbance is common following hospital admission both for COVID-19 and other causes. The clinical associations of this for recovery after hospital admission are poorly understood despite sleep disturbance contributing to morbidity in other scenarios. We aimed to investigate the prevalence and nature of sleep disturbance after discharge following hospital admission for COVID-19 and to assess whether this was associated with dyspnoea. Methods: CircCOVID was a prospective multicentre cohort substudy designed to investigate the effects of circadian disruption and sleep disturbance on recovery after COVID-19 in a cohort of participants aged 18 years or older, admitted to hospital for COVID-19 in the UK, and discharged between March, 2020, and October, 2021. Participants were recruited from the Post-hospitalisation COVID-19 study (PHOSP-COVID). Follow-up data were collected at two timepoints: an early time point 2–7 months after hospital discharge and a later time point 10–14 months after hospital discharge. Sleep quality was assessed subjectively using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire and a numerical rating scale. Sleep quality was also assessed with an accelerometer worn on the wrist (actigraphy) for 14 days. Participants were also clinically phenotyped, including assessment of symptoms (ie, anxiety [Generalised Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale questionnaire], muscle function [SARC-F questionnaire], dyspnoea [Dyspnoea-12 questionnaire] and measurement of lung function), at the early timepoint after discharge. Actigraphy results were also compared to a matched UK Biobank cohort (non-hospitalised individuals and recently hospitalised individuals). Multivariable linear regression was used to define associations of sleep disturbance with the primary outcome of breathlessness and the other clinical symptoms. PHOSP-COVID is registered on the ISRCTN Registry (ISRCTN10980107). Findings: 2320 of 2468 participants in the PHOSP-COVID study attended an early timepoint research visit a median of 5 months (IQR 4–6) following discharge from 83 hospitals in the UK. Data for sleep quality were assessed by subjective measures (the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire and the numerical rating scale) for 638 participants at the early time point. Sleep quality was also assessed using device-based measures (actigraphy) a median of 7 months (IQR 5–8 months) after discharge from hospital for 729 participants. After discharge from hospital, the majority (396 [62%] of 638) of participants who had been admitted to hospital for COVID-19 reported poor sleep quality in response to the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire. A comparable proportion (338 [53%] of 638) of participants felt their sleep quality had deteriorated following discharge after COVID-19 admission, as assessed by the numerical rating scale. Device-based measurements were compared to an age-matched, sex-matched, BMI-matched, and time from discharge-matched UK Biobank cohort who had recently been admitted to hospital. Compared to the recently hospitalised matched UK Biobank cohort, participants in our study slept on average 65 min (95% CI 59 to 71) longer, had a lower sleep regularity index (–19%; 95% CI –20 to –16), and a lower sleep efficiency (3·83 percentage points; 95% CI 3·40 to 4·26). Similar results were obtained when comparisons were made with the non-hospitalised UK Biobank cohort. Overall sleep quality (unadjusted effect estimate 3·94; 95% CI 2·78 to 5·10), deterioration in sleep quality following hospital admission (3·00; 1·82 to 4·28), and sleep regularity (4·38; 2·10 to 6·65) were associated with higher dyspnoea scores. Poor sleep quality, deterioration in sleep quality, and sleep regularity were also associated with impaired lung function, as assessed by forced vital capacity. Depending on the sleep metric, anxiety mediated 18–39% of the effect of sleep disturbance on dyspnoea, while muscle weakness mediated 27–41% of this effect. Interpretation: Sleep disturbance following hospital admission for COVID-19 is associated with dyspnoea, anxiety, and muscle weakness. Due to the association with multiple symptoms, targeting sleep disturbance might be beneficial in treating the post-COVID-19 condition. Funding: UK Research and Innovation, National Institute for Health Research, and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. UK Research and Innovation, National Institute for Health Research, and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
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- 2023
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114. Race distribution in non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
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Ana Banc, Mark Kupersmith, Nancy J. Newman, and Valérie Biousse
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Ophthalmology - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
115. Using CForest to Analyze Diffusion Tensor Imaging Data: A Study of White Matter Integrity in Healthy Aging.
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Sean R. McWhinney, Antoine Tremblay, Thérèse M. Chevalier, Vanessa K. Lim, and Aaron J. Newman
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- 2016
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116. Technology enhanced neuroanatomy teaching techniques: A focused BEME systematic review of current evidence: BEME Guide No. 75
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Hamish J. Newman, Amanda J. Meyer, Tim J. Wilkinson, Nalini Pather, and Sandra. E. Carr
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Neuroanatomy ,Technology ,Augmented Reality ,Virtual Reality ,Humans ,Curriculum ,General Medicine ,Education - Abstract
In response to growing curriculum pressures and reduced time dedicated to teaching anatomy, research has been conducted into developing innovative teaching techniques. This raises important questions for neuroanatomy education regarding which teaching techniques are most beneficial for knowledge acquisition and long-term retention, and how they are best implemented. This focused systematic review aims to provide a review of technology-enhanced teaching methods available to neuroanatomy educators, particularly in knowledge acquisition and long-term retention, compared to traditional didactic techniques, and proposes reasons for why they work in some contexts.Electronic databases were searched from January 2015 to June 2020 with keywords that included combinations of 'neuroanatomy,' 'technology,' 'teaching,' and 'effectiveness' combined with Boolean phrases 'AND' and 'OR.' The contexts and outcomes for all studies were summarised while coding, and theories for why particular interventions worked were discussed.There were 4287 articles identified for screening, with 13 studies included for final analysis. There were four technologies of interest: stereoscopic views of videos, stereoscopic views of images, augmented reality (AR), and virtual reality (VR). No recommendation for a particular teaching method was made in six studies (46%) while recommendations (from weak to moderate) were made in seven studies (54%). There was weak to moderate evidence for the efficacy of stereoscopic images and AR, and no difference in the use of stereoscopic videos or VR compared to controls.To date, technology-enhanced teaching is not inferior to teaching by conventional didactic methods. There are promising results for these methods in complex spatial anatomy and reducing cognitive load. Possible reasons for why interventions worked were described including students' engagement with the object, cognitive load theory, complex spatial relationships, and the technology learning curve. Future research may build on the theorised explanations proposed here and develop and test innovative technologies that build on prior research.
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- 2022
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117. Applying Social Work Values to Practice in Sport
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Lauren Beasley, Tarkington J. Newman, and Robin Hardin
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ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Sociology and Political Science ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education - Abstract
Social workers are beginning to be hired in collegiate athletic departments to meet the holistic needs of student-athletes. The limited research that has examined social work practice in sport has not explicitly explored ways in which social work values manifest in practice. The current study explored how the values of the social work profession are applied when providing mental and behavioral health services in collegiate athletics. Using a qualitative design, nine licensed social workers employed in athletic departments were interviewed. Data were deductively coded using the NASW (2017) Code of Ethics’ six values: service, social justice, dignity and worth of the person, importance of human relationships, integrity, and competence. Social workers recognized student-athletes as a vulnerable population, worked on social justice issues, placed an emphasis on the diversity of student-athletes, built relationships with both student-athletes and sport staff, and advocated for social work values in athletics. They also called for more opportunities to increase knowledge of social work practice in sport settings. Results support the need for social work programs to prepare students for careers in sport through efforts such as offering elective courses related to social work practice in sport and providing sport-specific practicum opportunities.
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- 2022
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118. Changes in Body Weight and Knee Pain in Adults With Knee Osteoarthritis <scp>Three‐and‐a‐Half</scp> Years After Completing Diet and Exercise Interventions: Follow‐Up Study for a <scp>Single‐Blind</scp> , <scp>Single‐Center</scp> , Randomized Controlled Trial
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Gary D. Miller, Matthew J Scarlett, Felix Eckstein, Shannon L. Mihalko, Barbara J. Nicklas, Ali Guermazi, Stephen P. Messier, Richard F. Loeser, Daniel P. Beavers, David J. Hunter, Mary F. Lyles, Jovita J. Newman, and Paul DeVita
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medicine.medical_specialty ,WOMAC ,Exercise intervention ,business.industry ,Arthritis ,Osteoarthritis ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Body weight ,Knee pain ,Rheumatology ,Weight loss ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine whether long-term diet (D) and exercise (E) interventions, alone or in combination (D+E), have beneficial effects for older adults with knee osteoarthritis 3.5-years after the interventions end. METHODS This is a secondary analysis of a subset (N = 94) of the first 184 participants who had successfully completed the Intensive Diet and Exercise in Arthritis (IDEA) trial (N = 399) and who consented to follow-up testing. Participants were older (age ≥ 55 years), overweight and obese adults with radiographic and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis in at least one knee who completed 1.5-year D+E (N=27), D (N=35), or E (N=32) interventions and returned for 5-year follow-up testing an average of 3.5-years later. RESULTS During the 3.5-years following the interventions, weight regain in D+E and D was 5.9 kg (7%) and 3.1 kg (4%), respectively, with a 1 kg (1%) weight loss in E. Compared to baseline, weight (D+E, -3.7 kg, P=.0007; D, -5.8 kg, P
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- 2022
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119. Understanding the Needs of Social Workers in Sport Settings: Opportunities for Specialized Education and Training
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Erica D. Magier, Tarkington J. Newman, Carlyn Kimiecik, Katlin Okamoto, Lauren Beasley, Lauren Shute, and Anita R. Tucker
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Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education - Published
- 2022
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120. Prognostic Value of the Neurological Pupil Index in Patients With Acute Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
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Rahul A, Sharma, Philip S, Garza, Valérie, Biousse, Owen B, Samuels, Nancy J, Newman, and Beau B, Bruce
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Ophthalmology ,Humans ,Pupil ,Neurology (clinical) ,Subarachnoid Hemorrhage ,Prognosis ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The Neurological Pupil index (NPi) provides a quantitative assessment of pupil reactivity and may have prognostic value in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). We aimed to explore associations between the NPi and clinical outcomes in patients with SAH.A retrospective analysis of 79 consecutive patients with acute SAH. Age, sex, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation-II score, and respiratory failure and NPi in each eye were recorded at admission. The primary outcomes included death and poor clinical outcome (defined as inpatient death, care withdrawal, or discharge Glasgow Outcome Score4). Groups were compared using the Fisher exact test, and predictive models developed with fast-and-frugal trees (FFTs).A total of 53 patients were included: 21 (40%) had poor clinical outcomes and 2 (4%) died. Univariate analysis found that only APACHE-II score (P0.001) and respiratory failure (P = 0.04) were significantly associated with poor clinical outcomes. NPi was lower among patients with poor clinical outcomes (mean 4.3 in the right eye and 4.2 in the left eye) vs those without (mean 4.5 in the right eye and 4.5 in the left eye), but neither was significant. However, the most accurate FFTs for death and poor clinical outcome included NPi after accounting for age in the death FFT and APACHE-II score in the poor outcome FFT (sensitivity [sn] = 100%, specificity [sp] = 94%, and accuracy (ac) = 94% in a model for death; sn = 100%, sp = 50%, and ac = 70%) in a model for poor clinical outcome.Our study supports the NPi as a useful prognostic marker for poor outcomes in acute SAH after accounting for age and APACHE-II score.
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- 2022
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121. The dual pandemic: COVID-19, systemic racism, and college student-athletic mental health
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Tarkington J. Newman, Stéphanie Turgeon, Matt Moore, Corliss Bean, Levone Lee, Megan Knuettel, and Cathy Osmers Rahill
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Social Psychology ,Applied Psychology - Published
- 2022
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122. Nouveaux outils d’évaluation du mouvement chez l’enfant avec handicap moteur
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Lena Carcreff, Stéphane Armand, Alice Bonnefoy-Mazure, Geraldo De Coulon, and Christopher J. Newman
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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123. Conditional CRISPR‐mediated deletion of Lyn kinase enhances differentiation and function of iPSC‐derived megakaryocytes
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Peter J. Newman and Alyssa J. Moroi
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Blood Platelets ,Megakaryocyte differentiation ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Cell Differentiation ,Hematology ,Biology ,Article ,In vitro ,Thrombopoiesis ,Cell biology ,Mice ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Platelet transfusion ,Thrombopoietin ,Megakaryocyte ,LYN ,medicine ,Animals ,Platelet ,GPVI ,Induced pluripotent stem cell ,Megakaryocytes - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Thrombocytopenia leading to life-threatening excessive bleeding can be treated by platelet transfusion. Currently, such treatments are totally dependent on donor-derived platelets. To support future applications in the use of in vitro-derived platelets, we sought to identify genes whose manipulation might improve the efficiency of megakaryocyte production and resulting hemostatic effectiveness. Disruption of Lyn kinase has previously been shown to improve cell survival, megakaryocyte ploidy and TPO-mediated activation in mice, but its role in human megakaryocytes and platelets has not been examined. METHODS: To analyze the role of Lyn at defined differentiation stages during human megakaryocyte differentiation, conditional Lyn-deficient cells were generated using CRISPR/Cas9 technology in iPS cells. The efficiency of Lyn-deficient megakaryocytes to differentiate and become activated in response to a range of platelet agonists was analyzed in iPSC-derived megakaryocytes. RESULTS: Temporally controlled deletion of Lyn improved the in vitro differentiation of hematopoietic progenitor cells into mature megakaryocytes, as measured by the rate and extent of appearance of CD41(+)CD42(+) cells. Lyn-deficient megakaryocytes also demonstrated improved hemostatic effectiveness, as reported by their ability to mediate clot formation in rotational thromboelastometry. Finally, Lyn-deficient megakaryocytes produced increased numbers of platelet-like particles (PLP) in vitro. CONCLUSIONS: Conditional deletion of Lyn kinase increases the hemostatic effectiveness of megakaryocytes and their progeny as well as improving their yield. Adoption of this system during generation of in vitro-derived platelets may contribute to both their efficiency of production and their ability to support hemostasis.
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- 2022
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124. Cheminformatic analysis of natural product-based drugs and chemical probes
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Samantha Stone, David J. Newman, Derek S. Tan, and Steven L Colletti
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Biological Products ,Natural product ,Drug discovery ,Chemistry ,Cheminformatics ,Organic Chemistry ,Computational biology ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Chemical space ,Synthetic drugs ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmacophore - Abstract
Covering: 1981 to 2019Natural products continue to play a major role in drug discovery, with half of new chemical entities based structurally on a natural product. Herein, we report a cheminformatic analysis of the structural and physicochemical properties of natural product-based drugs in comparison to top-selling brand-name synthetic drugs, and a selection of chemical probes recently discovered from diversity-oriented synthesis libraries. In this analysis, natural product-based drugs covered a broad range of chemical space based on size, polarity, and three-dimensional structure. Natural product-based structures were also more prevalent in top-selling drugs of 2018 compared to 2006. Further, the drugs clustered well according to biosynthetic origins, but less so based on therapeutic classes. Macrocycles occupied distinctive and relatively underpopulated regions of chemical space, while chemical probes largely overlapped with synthetic drugs. This analysis highlights the continued opportunities to leverage natural products and their pharmacophores in modern drug discovery.
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- 2022
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125. Future Simulated Changes in Central U.S. Mesoscale Convective System Rainfall Caused by Changes in Convective and Stratiform Structure
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Ethan Gutmann, Andreas Prein, Erin Dougherty, and Andrew J. Newman
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Atmospheric Science ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
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126. Message passing methods on complex networks
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M. E. J. Newman
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Social and Information Networks (cs.SI) ,FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Physics - Physics and Society ,Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech) ,General Mathematics ,General Engineering ,FOS: Physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph) ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
Networks and network computations have become a primary mathematical tool for analyzing the structure of many kinds of complex systems, ranging from the Internet and transportation networks to biochemical interactions and social networks. A common task in network analysis is the calculation of quantities that reside on the nodes of a network, such as centrality measures, probabilities, or model states. In this review article we discuss message passing methods, a family of techniques for performing such calculations, based on the propagation of information between the nodes of a network. We introduce the message passing approach with a series of examples, give some illustrative applications and results, and discuss the deep connections between message passing and phase transitions in networks. We also point out some limitations of the message passing approach and describe some recently-introduced methods that address these limitations., 16 pages and 16 figures
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- 2023
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127. Atomic Level Dissection of the Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule 1 (PECAM-1) Homophilic Binding Interface: Implications for Endothelial Cell Barrier Function
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Danying Liao, Jesse Sundlov, Jieqing Zhu, Heng Mei, Yu Hu, Debra K. Newman, and Peter J. Newman
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Models, Molecular ,Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 ,Cell Adhesion ,Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells ,Endothelial Cells ,Humans ,Cell Communication ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Article ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Objective:PECAM-1 (platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1) is a 130 kDa member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) gene superfamily that is expressed on the surfaces of platelets and leukocytes and concentrated at the intercellular junctions of confluent endothelial cell monolayers. PECAM-1 Ig domains 1 and 2 (IgD1 and IgD2) engage in homophilic interactions that support a host of vascular functions, including support of leukocyte transendothelial migration and the maintenance of endothelial junctional integrity. The recently solved crystal structure of PECAM-1 IgD1 and IgD2 revealed a number of intermolecular interfaces predicted to play important roles in stabilizing PECAM-1/PECAM-1 homophilic interactions and in formation and maintenance of endothelial cell-cell contacts. We sought to determine whether the protein interfaces implicated in the crystal structure reflect physiologically important interactions.Approach and Results:We assessed the impact of single amino acid substitutions at the interfaces between opposing PECAM-1 molecules on homophilic binding and endothelial cell function. Substitution of key residues within the IgD1-IgD1 and IgD1-IgD2 interfaces but not those within the smaller IgD2-IgD2 interface, markedly disrupted PECAM-1 homophilic binding and its downstream effector functions, including the ability of PECAM-1 to localize at endothelial cell-cell borders, mediate the formation of endothelial tubes, and restore endothelial barrier integrity.Conclusions:Taken together, these results validate the recently described PECAM-1 IgD1/IgD2 crystal structure by demonstrating that specific residues visualized within the IgD1-IgD1 and IgD1-IgD2 interfaces of opposing molecules in the crystal are required for functionally important homophilic interactions. This information can now be exploited to modulate functions of PECAM-1 in vivo.
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- 2023
128. Telephone Referral to a Paediatric Emergency Department: Why Do Parents Not Show Up?
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Mélanie Freiermuth, Christopher J. Newman, and Judit Villoslada
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telephone triage ,non-adherence ,children ,emergency department ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Medical call centres can evaluate and refer patients to an emergency department (ED), a physician or provide guidance for self-care. Our aim was (1) to determine parental adherence to an ED orientation after being referred by the nurses of a call centre, (2) to observe how adherence varies according to children’s characteristics and (3) to assess parents’ reasons for non-adherence. This was a prospective cohort study set in the Lausanne agglomeration, Switzerland. From 1 February to 5 March 2022, paediatric calls (
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- 2023
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129. Corrigendum to 'Automated enumeration of Eimeria oocysts in feces for rapid coccidiosis monitoring' [Poultry Science, Volume 102, Issue 1, January 2023, 102252]
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Mary K. Smith, Diane L. Buhr, Thabani A. Dhlakama, Diana Dupraw, Steve Fitz-Coy, Alexandra Francisco, Arjun Ganesan, Sue Ann Hubbard, Andrew Nederlof, Linnea J. Newman, Matthew R. Stoner, June Teichmann, John C. Voyta, Robert Wooster, Alla Zeygerman, Matthew F. Zwilling, and Margaret M. Kiss
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Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Corrigendum - Published
- 2023
130. Indirect Comparison of Lenadogene Nolparvovec Gene Therapy Versus Natural History in Patients with Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy Carrying the m.11778G>A MT-ND4 Mutation
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Valerio, Carelli, Nancy J, Newman, Patrick, Yu-Wai-Man, Valerie, Biousse, Mark L, Moster, Prem S, Subramanian, Catherine, Vignal-Clermont, An-Guor, Wang, Sean P, Donahue, Bart P, Leroy, Robert C, Sergott, Thomas, Klopstock, Alfredo A, Sadun, Gema, Rebolleda Fernández, Bart K, Chwalisz, Rudrani, Banik, Jean François, Girmens, Chiara, La Morgia, Adam A, DeBusk, Neringa, Jurkute, Claudia, Priglinger, Rustum, Karanjia, Constant, Josse, Julie, Salzmann, François, Montestruc, Michel, Roux, Magali, Taiel, José-Alain, Sahel, Rod, Forooza, Carelli, Valerio, Newman, Nancy J, Yu-Wai-Man, Patrick, Biousse, Valerie, Moster, Mark L, Subramanian, Prem S, Vignal-Clermont, Catherine, Wang, An-Guor, Donahue, Sean P, Leroy, Bart P, Sergott, Robert C, Klopstock, Thoma, Sadun, Alfredo A, Rebolleda Fernández, Gema, Chwalisz, Bart K, Banik, Rudrani, Girmens, Jean Françoi, La Morgia, Chiara, DeBusk, Adam A, Jurkute, Neringa, Priglinger, Claudia, Karanjia, Rustum, Josse, Constant, Salzmann, Julie, Montestruc, Françoi, Roux, Michel, Taiel, Magali, Sahel, José-Alain, Carelli, Valerio [0000-0003-4923-6404], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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MT-ND4 ,Ophthalmology ,LHON ,Gene therapy ,Visual acuity ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Natural history ,Leber hereditary optic neuropathy - Abstract
Introduction: Lenadogene nolparvovec is a promising novel gene therapy for patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) carrying the m.11778G>A ND4 mutation (MT-ND4). A previous pooled analysis of phase3 studies showed an improvement in visual acuity of patients injected with lenadogene nolparvovec compared to natural history. Here, we report updated results by incorporating data from the latest phase3 trial REFLECT in the pool, increasing the number of treated patients from 76 to 174. Methods: The visual acuity of 174 MT-ND4-carrying patients with LHON injected in one or both eyes with lenadogene nolparvovec from four pooled phase3 studies (REVERSE, RESCUE and their long-term extension trial RESTORE; and REFLECT trial) was compared to the spontaneous evolution of an external control group of 208 matched patients from 11 natural history studies. Results: Treated patients showed a clinically relevant and sustained improvement in their visual acuity when compared to natural history. Mean improvement versus natural history was - 0.30 logMAR (+ 15 ETDRS letters equivalent) at last observation (P
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- 2023
131. Moving Land Models Toward More Actionable Science: A Novel Application of the Community Terrestrial Systems Model Across Alaska and the Yukon River Basin
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Yifan Cheng, Keith N. Musselman, Sean Swenson, David Lawrence, Joseph Hamman, Katherine Dagon, Daniel Kennedy, and Andrew J. Newman
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Water Science and Technology - Published
- 2023
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132. Aspirational pursuit of mates in online dating markets.
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Elizabeth E. Bruch and M. E. J. Newman
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- 2018
133. Balance in signed networks.
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Alec Kirkley, George T. Cantwell, and M. E. J. Newman
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- 2018
134. Network reconstruction and error estimation with noisy network data.
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M. E. J. Newman
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- 2018
135. Mixing patterns and individual differences in networks.
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George T. Cantwell and M. E. J. Newman
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- 2018
136. Only a paper moon
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Christopher J. Newman and William Ralston
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The Artemis Accords provide a framework of agreed principles which the United States and other partner countries have committed to following when conducting lunar exploration. Although negotiated as part of Project Artemis, the Accords could also shape the law as humans move out into the solar system. This chapter will examine both the compliance with existing space law and evaluate the suitability of the Accords as a blueprint for future human settlements beyond the Earth and Moon. It is contended that the most important contribution of the Accords is to reinforce existing principles of international space law. It is also argued that efforts must be made to ensure the maintenance of established international forums to avoid the fracturing of the existing Treaty frameworks and the increased risk of conflict that would bring.
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- 2022
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137. Effect of Diet and Exercise on Knee Pain in Patients With Osteoarthritis and Overweight or Obesity: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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Stephen P. Messier, Daniel P. Beavers, Kate Queen, Shannon L. Mihalko, Gary D. Miller, Elena Losina, Jeffrey N. Katz, Richard F. Loeser, Paul DeVita, David J. Hunter, Jovita J. Newman, Sara A. Quandt, Mary F. Lyles, Joanne M. Jordan, and Leigh F. Callahan
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Male ,Humans ,Female ,General Medicine ,Obesity ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis, Knee ,Overweight ,Arthralgia ,Original Investigation ,Aged - Abstract
ImportanceSome weight loss and exercise programs that have been successful in academic center–based trials have not been evaluated in community settings.ObjectiveTo determine whether adaptation of a diet and exercise intervention to community settings resulted in a statistically significant reduction in pain, compared with an attention control group, at 18-month follow-up.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsAssessor-blinded randomized clinical trial conducted in community settings in urban and rural counties in North Carolina. Patients were men and women aged 50 years or older with knee osteoarthritis and overweight or obesity (body mass index ≥27). Enrollment (N = 823) occurred between May 2016 and August 2019, with follow-up ending in April 2021.InterventionsPatients were randomly assigned to either a diet and exercise intervention (n = 414) or an attention control (n = 409) group for 18 months.Main Outcomes and MeasuresThe primary outcome was the between-group difference in the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) knee pain score (range, 0 [none] to 20 [severe]; minimum clinically important difference, 1.6) over 18 months, tested using a repeated-measures mixed linear model with adjustments for covariates. There were 7 secondary outcomes including body weight.ResultsAmong the 823 randomized patients (mean age, 64.6 years; 637 [77%] women), 658 (80%) completed the trial. At 18-month follow-up, the adjusted mean WOMAC pain score was 5.0 in the diet and exercise group (n = 329) compared with 5.5 in the attention control group (n = 316) (adjusted difference, −0.6; 95% CI, −1.0 to −0.1; P = .02). Of 7 secondary outcomes, 5 were significantly better in the intervention group compared with control. The mean change in unadjusted 18-month body weight for patients with available data was −7.7 kg (8%) in the diet and exercise group (n = 289) and −1.7 kg (2%) in the attention control group (n = 273) (mean difference, −6.0 kg; 95% CI, −7.3 kg to −4.7 kg). There were 169 serious adverse events; none were definitely related to the study. There were 729 adverse events; 32 (4%) were definitely related to the study, including 10 body injuries (9 in diet and exercise; 1 in attention control), 7 muscle strains (6 in diet and exercise; 1 in attention control), and 6 trip/fall events (all 6 in diet and exercise).Conclusions and RelevanceAmong patients with knee osteoarthritis and overweight or obesity, diet and exercise compared with an attention control led to a statistically significant but small difference in knee pain over 18 months. The magnitude of the difference in pain between groups is of uncertain clinical importance.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02577549
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- 2022
138. The expanding spectrum of idiopathic intracranial hypertension
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Valérie Biousse and Nancy J. Newman
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Ophthalmology - Published
- 2022
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139. A Deep Learning System for Automated Quality Evaluation of Optic Disc Photographs in Neuro-Ophthalmic Disorders
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Ebenezer, Chan, Zhiqun, Tang, Raymond P, Najjar, Arun, Narayanaswamy, Kanchalika, Sathianvichitr, Nancy J, Newman, Valérie, Biousse, Dan, Milea, and For The Bonsai Group
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Clinical Biochemistry ,retinal image quality assessment ,artificial intelligence ,deep learning ,optic nerve head ,papilledema - Abstract
The quality of ocular fundus photographs can affect the accuracy of the morphologic assessment of the optic nerve head (ONH), either by humans or by deep learning systems (DLS). In order to automatically identify ONH photographs of optimal quality, we have developed, trained, and tested a DLS, using an international, multicentre, multi-ethnic dataset of 5015 ocular fundus photographs from 31 centres in 20 countries participating to the Brain and Optic Nerve Study with Artificial Intelligence (BONSAI). The reference standard in image quality was established by three experts who independently classified photographs as of “good”, “borderline”, or “poor” quality. The DLS was trained on 4208 fundus photographs and tested on an independent external dataset of 807 photographs, using a multi-class model, evaluated with a one-vs-rest classification strategy. In the external-testing dataset, the DLS could identify with excellent performance “good” quality photographs (AUC = 0.93 (95% CI, 0.91–0.95), accuracy = 91.4% (95% CI, 90.0–92.9%), sensitivity = 93.8% (95% CI, 92.5–95.2%), specificity = 75.9% (95% CI, 69.7–82.1%) and “poor” quality photographs (AUC = 1.00 (95% CI, 0.99–1.00), accuracy = 99.1% (95% CI, 98.6–99.6%), sensitivity = 81.5% (95% CI, 70.6–93.8%), specificity = 99.7% (95% CI, 99.6–100.0%). “Borderline” quality images were also accurately classified (AUC = 0.90 (95% CI, 0.88–0.93), accuracy = 90.6% (95% CI, 89.1–92.2%), sensitivity = 65.4% (95% CI, 56.6–72.9%), specificity = 93.4% (95% CI, 92.1–94.8%). The overall accuracy to distinguish among the three classes was 90.6% (95% CI, 89.1–92.1%), suggesting that this DLS could select optimal quality fundus photographs in patients with neuro-ophthalmic and neurological disorders affecting the ONH.
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- 2022
140. The Roles of Age of Acquisition, Proficiency, and First Language on Second Language Processing
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Annika Andersson and Aaron J. Newman
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- 2022
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141. Deafness and Signed Language
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Aaron J. Newman and Mairéad MacSweeney
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- 2022
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142. Changing Brains
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Giordana Grossi and Aaron J. Newman
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- 2022
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143. Introduction
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Aaron J. Newman and Giordana Grossi
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- 2022
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144. Multidimensional Measures of Physical Activity and Their Association with Gross Motor Capacity in Children and Adolescents with Cerebral Palsy.
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Corinna N. Gerber, Lena Carcreff, Anisoara Paraschiv-Ionescu, Stéphane Armand, and Christopher J. Newman
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- 2020
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145. Combined Analysis of X-Ray Spectra of NGC 3227
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J. Newman, S. Tsuruta, A. C. Liebmann, H. Kunieda, and Y. Haba
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- 2021
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146. An intrinsically eye safe approach to high apparent brightness augmented reality displays using computer‐generated holography
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Andrzej Kaczorowski, Darran F. Milne, Timothy D. Wilkinson, Taufiq Widjanarko, Alfred J. Newman, and Alden O. Spiess
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Brightness ,Apparent magnitude ,Computer science ,Computer graphics (images) ,Augmented reality ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Virtual reality ,Stereo display ,Computer-generated holography ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Mixed reality ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2021
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147. Sound and credibility in the virtual court: Low audio quality leads to less favorable evaluations of witnesses and lower weighting of evidence
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Elena Bild, Annabel Redman, Eryn J. Newman, Bethany R. Muir, David Tait, and Norbert Schwarz
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Judgment ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Guilt ,Humans ,Law ,General Psychology - Abstract
Recent virtual court proceedings have seen a range of technological challenges, producing not only trial interruptions but also cognitive interruptions in processing evidence. Very little empirical research has focused on how the subjective experience of processing evidence affects evaluations of trial participants and trial decisions. Metacognitive research shows that the subjective ease or difficulty of processing information can affect evaluations of people, belief in information, and how a given piece of information is weighted in decision making.We hypothesized that when people experienced technological challenges (e.g., poor audio quality) while listening to eyewitness accounts, the difficulty in processing evidence would lead them to evaluate a witness more negatively, influence their memory for key facts, and lead them to weigh that evidence less in final trial judgments.Across three experiments (total N = 593), participants listened to audio clips of witnesses describing an event, one presented in high-quality audio and one presented in low-quality audio.When people heard witnesses present evidence in low-quality audio, they rated the witnesses as less credible, reliable, and trustworthy (Experiment 1, d = 0.32; Experiment 3, d = 0.55); had poorer memory for key facts presented by the witness (Experiment 2, d = 0.44); and weighted witness evidence less in final guilt judgments (Experiment 3, ηThese results show that audio quality influences perceptions of witnesses and their evidence. Because these variables can contribute to trial outcomes, audio quality warrants consideration in trial proceedings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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148. Integrated analyses of SNP-genotype and environmental data in a continuously distributed snapper species (Lutjanus johnii, Bloch, 1792) reveals a mosaic of populations and a challenge for sustainable management
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David A. Crook, Stephen J. Newman, Danielle Davenport, Jennifer R. Ovenden, Christine L. Dudgeon, Mark Hearnden, Diane P. Barton, Richard J. Saunders, Safia Maher, Michael J. Travers, Laura Taillebois, and Thor Saunders
- Subjects
Lutjanus johnii ,Ecology ,Sustainable management ,Genotype ,SNP ,Mosaic (geodemography) ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Oceanography ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Environmental data - Abstract
Understanding population structure is important for predicting the outcomes of anthropogenic development, harvest, and environmental change on the abundance of fisheries species. Logically, the use of several data sources is best for delineating population structure, but combining across data types adds extra challenges as results can be incongruent. Here, genetic and environmental markers were used to test hypotheses about population structure in a collection of 523 tropical inshore finfish (Lutjanus johnii) across northern Australia from 20 locations. Redundancy analyses (RDA) were used to statistically test for correlations among data sources providing a basis for reconciliation and insights into ecological and evolutionary processes. Genomic data (10349 SNP loci) revealed low, but significant genetic divergence (max FST 0.0402) between 16 locations. A total of 12 putative contiguous biological stocks were proposed whose distributions were correlated with IMCRA bioregions but not to existing regions used for management of the fishery. RDA showed a significant correlation between environmental markers (otolith chemistry and parasite abundances) and SNP genotype in two of three region-wide analyses supporting the proposed stock structure, and suggesting that L. johnii may be locally adapted to the heterogeneous environment. These findings are significant for the conservation of the commercially and recreationally important L. johnii and can be used to guide future fisheries management actions.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. The application of particle swarm optimization and maneuver automatons during non-Markovian motion planning for air vehicles performing ground target search.
- Author
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Sean R. Martin and Andrew J. Newman
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Bloodstream Infections at Two Neonatal Intensive Care Units in Ghana
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Appiah-Korang Labi, Leif P. Andersen, Stephanie Bjerrum, Jørgen A. L. Kurtzhals, Edmund T. Nartey, Mercy J. Newman, Christabel Enweronu-Laryea, and Prosper K Ayibor
- Subjects
Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ghana ,Antibiotic resistance ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Intensive Care Units, Neonatal ,Sepsis ,Internal medicine ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood culture ,Prospective Studies ,Cross Infection ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mortality rate ,Hazard ratio ,Enterobacteriaceae Infections ,Infant, Newborn ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Amikacin ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Gentamicin ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Bloodstream infections (BSIs) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in hospitalized neonates. Data on antibiotic resistance in neonatal BSIs and their impact on clinical outcomes in Africa are limited. Methods We conducted a prospective cohort study at 2 tertiary level neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in Ghana. All neonates admitted to the NICUs were included from October 2017 to September 2019. We monitored BSI rates and analyzed the effect of BSI and antibiotic resistance on mortality and duration of hospitalization. Results Out of 5433 neonates included, 3514 had at least one blood culture performed and 355 had growth of a total of 368 pathogenic microorganisms. Overall incidence of BSI was 1.0 (0.9-1.1) per 100 person days. The predominant organisms were Klebsiella pneumoniae 49.7% (183/368) and Streptococcus spp. 10.6% (39/368). In addition, 512 coagulase negative Staphylococci were isolated but considered probable contaminants. Among K. pneumoniae, resistance to gentamicin and amikacin was 91.8% and 16.4%, respectively, while carbapenem resistance was 4.4%. All-cause mortality among enrolled neonates was 19.7% (1066/5416). The mortality rate was significantly higher in neonates with BSI compared with culture-negative neonates in univariate analysis (27.9%, n = 99/355 vs. 16.5%, n = 520/3148; hazard ratio 1.4, 95% confidence interval 1.07-1.70) but not in multivariate analysis. Conclusion The diversity of etiological agents and the high risk of antibiotic resistance suggest that standard empirical treatment is unlikely to improve the outcome of BSIs in low and middle income. Such improvements will depend on access to reliable clinical microbiologic services.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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