33,003 results on '"Morey, A."'
Search Results
102. Development of Quantifiable Assays for Detection of Hypersialylation in Oral Cancer Diagnosis
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Shrutam Somkuwar, Shravasti Jangle, Vedanti Morey, Devyani Salotkar, Shreya Reddy, Aparna Nair, and Deovrat Begde
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animal tissue culture ,colorimetry ,densitometry ,fluorometry ,oral cancer ,orcinol ,resorcinol ,sialic acid ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study is to Quantify sialic acid for oral cancer diagnosis using different method using densitometric analysis. Background: Early detection of OSCC is critical for improving survival rates and reducing morbidity, which has prompted researchers to look for potential biomarkers to aid in early diagnosis. Saliva is an excellent diagnostic tool due to its noninvasive nature. Sialic acid levels in saliva have been found to be higher in cancer patients. Hypersialylation is associated with poor prognosis and accelerated cancer progression, as well as immune escape, tumor growth and spread, angiogenesis, and resistance to apoptosis and treatment. This study addresses the imperative need for adaptive, effective, and non-invasive strategies in the diagnosis and treatment of oral cancer, emphasising the importance of early detection for improved prognosis. This study introduces various methods for quantify levels of sialic acid in saliva, including resorcinol and orcinol assays, using colorimetric and densitometric assays. Material and Method: In this study, sialic acid detection methods have been standardized using standards as well as spent media from cancer cell lines to develop noninvasive diagnostic tools for early detection. Two methods used for the detection of sialic acid Resorcinal and Orcinol method by densitometric analysis using Image J software. Results: The study has successfully quantified sialic acid from spent media and saliva using resorcinol and orcinol method by densitometric analysis. Conclusion: In this study we aim to develop a reliable and cost-effective method for quantification of sialic acid using Image j software. The approach presents a non-invasive and efficient alternative for early cancer diagnosis showcasing its potential impact on advancing diagnostic technologies.
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- 2024
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103. C-terminally phosphorylated p27 activates self-renewal driver genes to program cancer stem cell expansion, mammary hyperplasia and cancer
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Seyedeh Fatemeh Razavipour, Hyunho Yoon, Kibeom Jang, Minsoon Kim, Hend M. Nawara, Amir Bagheri, Wei-Chi Huang, Miyoung Shin, Dekuang Zhao, Zhiqun Zhou, Derek Van Boven, Karoline Briegel, Lluis Morey, Tan A. Ince, Michael Johnson, and Joyce M. Slingerland
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Science - Abstract
Abstract In many cancers, a stem-like cell subpopulation mediates tumor initiation, dissemination and drug resistance. Here, we report that cancer stem cell (CSC) abundance is transcriptionally regulated by C-terminally phosphorylated p27 (p27pT157pT198). Mechanistically, this arises through p27 co-recruitment with STAT3/CBP to gene regulators of CSC self-renewal including MYC, the Notch ligand JAG1, and ANGPTL4. p27pTpT/STAT3 also recruits a SIN3A/HDAC1 complex to co-repress the Pyk2 inhibitor, PTPN12. Pyk2, in turn, activates STAT3, creating a feed-forward loop increasing stem-like properties in vitro and tumor-initiating stem cells in vivo. The p27-activated gene profile is over-represented in STAT3 activated human breast cancers. Furthermore, mammary transgenic expression of phosphomimetic, cyclin-CDK-binding defective p27 (p27CK-DD) increases mammary duct branching morphogenesis, yielding hyperplasia and microinvasive cancers that can metastasize to liver, further supporting a role for p27pTpT in CSC expansion. Thus, p27pTpT interacts with STAT3, driving transcriptional programs governing stem cell expansion or maintenance in normal and cancer tissues.
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- 2024
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104. Utilization of lysed and dried bacterial biomass from the marine purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum as a sustainable nitrogen fertilizer for plant production
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Shamitha Rao Morey-Yagi, Yu Kinoshita, Ko Motoki, Yu Iwahashi, Dao Duy Hanh, Shota Kato, Ryohei Nakano, Kumiko Ochiai, Masaru Kobayashi, Tetsuya Nakazaki, and Keiji Numata
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Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Plant-based agricultural systems rely heavily on inorganic nitrogen (N) fertilizers to increase yields and ensure food security for the rapidly growing global population. However, the production and overuse of synthetic fertilizers lead to significant amounts of greenhouse gas emissions, causing a critical need for the development of alternative and sustainable organic N fertilizers. Here, we demonstrate the effective use of lysed and dried bacterial biomass from the marine purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum as an alternative source of N fertilizer for the cultivation of Japanese mustard spinach (komatsuna, Brassica rapa var. perviridis). To assess the suitability of this processed bacterial biomass, containing approximately 11% N, as a N fertilizer, we examined the effects of its application on plant germination and growth (measured by leaf chlorophyll, maximum leaf length, and dry weight) under two different temperature regimes, comparing it to that of a conventional N-containing mineral fertilizer. Application at rates up to four times that of the mineral fertilizer had no negative effects on seed germination and plant growth. The bacterial biomass had to be applied at approximately twice the rate of mineral fertilizer to obtain similar plant growth parameters, roughly corresponding to the predicted 62% rate of mineralization of the bacterial N. Our findings confirm the ability of plants to take up N from the lysed and dried biomass of marine purple photosynthetic bacteria, demonstrating the potential for using R. sulfidophilum as a source of N fertilizer.
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- 2024
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105. Private land conservation towards large landscape goals: Role of relational values, property rights orientations and perceived efficacy in ranchers' actions
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Chloe B. Wardropper, Rose A. Graves, Jodi Brandt, Morey Burnham, Neil Carter, Rebecca L. Hale, Vicken Hillis, and Matthew A. Williamson
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conservation adoption ,large landscape ,private property ,ranchers ,relational values ,survey research ,Human ecology. Anthropogeography ,GF1-900 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Many of the world's iconic, endangered and endemic species rely on large, contiguous landscapes for their survival. In the US West, working ranches are integral to large landscape conservation goals and there are numerous influences on ranchers' conservation actions, including their relational values, perceived self‐efficacy and property rights concerns. Using survey data from 681 ranchers in eastern Idaho and western Montana, we sought to answer the question: How do relational values, property rights orientations, perceived efficacy and public lands dependence affect reported conservation actions on private ranch lands? Conservation adoption varied widely by action, with invasive plant removal having the highest (92%) and conifer removal the lowest (21%) rates of adoption. Conservation adoption was higher among ranchers who believe they are responsible for conserving nature, believe their land should be used to provide environmental benefits to the region, have higher perceived self‐efficacy, lower property rights concerns and higher incomes. Programmes encouraging the adoption of conservation on private lands could benefit from message framing that resonates with the worldviews of landowners and land managers. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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- 2024
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106. Calculating quasinormal modes of Schwarzschild anti-de Sitter black holes using the continued fraction method
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Daghigh, Ramin G., Green, Michael D., and Morey, Jodin C.
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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We investigate the scalar, gravitational, and electromagnetic quasinormal mode spectra of Schwarzschild anti-de Sitter black holes using the numerical continued fraction method. The spectra have similar, almost linear structures. With a few exceptions, the low overtone quasinormal modes are consistent with previously obtained results in the literature that use other numerical techniques. The intermediate and high overtone quasinormal modes, in comparison to the Schwarzschild case, converge very quickly to the asymptotic formulas previously obtained by analytic monodromy techniques. In addition, we find a connection between the analytic asymptotic formulas and the purely imaginary modes. In particular, these formulas can be used to predict the bifurcation of the lowest damped electromagnetic modes. Finally, we find no high overtone quasinormal modes with high oscillation frequency and low damping, which had been previously predicted., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, regular article, some typos corrected, new references added, a claim about -2i being a QNM was corrected
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- 2022
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107. Mixed-Immigration Status Families During the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Iraheta, Stephanie and Morey, Brittany N
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Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Zero Hunger ,mixed-status families ,COVID-19 ,immigration policy - Abstract
IntroductionTo understand how mixed-immigration status families-families with a mixture of people with and without documentation-in the United States (U.S.) fared during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, this study highlights how health inequities were exacerbated during the height of the pandemic due to the implementation of anti-immigration policies such as Public Charge Rule, which stipulates that receiving public benefits is grounds for inadmissibility for immigrants seeking naturalization.MethodsIn-depth semistructured interviews were conducted over Zoom with 14 members of mixed-status families between February and April 2021. The interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using Atlas.ti. Using grounded theory, we assessed the level of awareness about Public Charge Rule and the health challenges these families faced during the COVID-19 pandemic.ResultsThemes that emerged included financial problems, job insecurity, housing insecurity, food insecurity, mental health problems, distrust of government and health officials, and a fear of Public Charge Rule. We present a framework for understanding health inequities for mixed-status families during the COVID-19 pandemic.DiscussionPublic Charge Rule caused fear and confusion for mixed-status families during the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in individuals not receiving public benefits they urgently needed. This created heightened mental health problems due to job, housing, and food insecurity.Health equity implicationsWe discuss how trust between mixed-status families and the government needs foundational rebuilding. In addition to streamlining the process for these families to apply for legal status, it is important to protect and support mixed-status families through programs and policies during public health emergencies.
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- 2023
108. The Cross-Sectional Association of Sleep Disturbance and Sleep Apnea With Complex Multimorbidity Among Chinese and Korean Americans.
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Ryu, Soomin, Morey, Brittany, Lee, Grace, Kawachi, Ichiro, Redline, Susan, and Lee, Sunmin
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Asian Americans ,complex multimorbidity ,emigrants and immigrants ,sleep ,Humans ,Asian ,Multimorbidity ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,East Asian People ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,Sleep - Abstract
A new concept called complex multimorbidity provides a more reliable measure of disease burden than multimorbidity based on a simple count of diseases, by categorizing diseases according to the body system they affect. This study examined associations between sleep measures and complex multimorbidity among Chinese and Korean Americans in the Baltimore-Washington DC Metropolitan Area, using cross-sectional data (n = 400) from the Screening to Prevent Colorectal Cancer study (2018-2020). Sleep disturbance was measured using the 8-item Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Sleep Disturbance scale and sleep apnea risk was assessed using the Berlin questionnaire. Complex multimorbidity was defined as the coexistence of 3 or more of body system disorders assessed by self-report of physician-diagnosed diseases. Poisson regression models with adjustments indicated that individuals with sleep disturbance had 2.15 times the prevalence of having complex multimorbidity (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.07, 4.29). Individuals with a high risk of sleep apnea had 1.19 times the prevalence of having complex multimorbidity (95% CI: 0.47, 3.01). These findings suggest a need for interventions to increase awareness of the importance of sleep among health-care providers and the public and to educate them about causes, signs, and treatment of sleep disturbance and sleep apnea.
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- 2023
109. Histopathologic and Transcriptomic Profiling Identifies Novel Trophoblast Defects in Patients With Preeclampsia and Maternal Vascular Malperfusion.
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Horii, Mariko, To, Cuong, Morey, Robert, Jacobs, Marni B, Li, Yingchun, Nelson, Katharine K, Meads, Morgan, Siegel, Brent A, Pizzo, Donald, Adami, Rebecca, Zhang-Rutledge, Kathy, Lamale-Smith, Leah, Laurent, Louise C, and Parast, Mana M
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Trophoblasts ,Placenta ,Humans ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Pathology ,Clinical ,Pregnancy ,Female ,Transcriptome ,cytotrophoblast ,extravillous trophoblast ,fetal vascular malperfusion ,maternal vascular malperfusion ,preeclampsia ,syncytiotrophoblast ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Pathology - Abstract
Preeclampsia (PE) is a heterogeneous disease for which the current clinical classification system is based on the presence or absence of specific clinical features. PE-associated placentas also show heterogeneous findings on pathologic examination, suggesting that further subclassification is possible. We combined clinical, pathologic, immunohistochemical, and transcriptomic profiling of placentas to develop integrated signatures for multiple subclasses of PE. In total, 303 PE and 1388 nonhypertensive control placentas were included. We found that maternal vascular malperfusion (MVM) in the placenta was associated with preterm PE with severe features and with small-for-gestational-age neonates. Interestingly, PE placentas with either MVM or no histologic pattern of injury showed a linear decrease in proliferative (p63+) cytotrophoblast per villous area with increasing gestational age, similar to placentas obtained from the nonhypertensive patient cohort; however, PE placentas with fetal vascular malperfusion or villitis of unknown etiology lost this phenotype. This is mainly because of cases of fetal vascular malperfusion in placentas of patients with preterm PE and villitis of unknown etiology in placentas of patients with term PE, which are associated with a decrease or increase, respectively, in the cytotrophoblast per villous area. Finally, a transcriptomic analysis identified pathways associated with hypoxia, inflammation, and reduced cell proliferation in PE-MVM placentas and further subclassified this group into extravillous trophoblast-high and extravillous trophoblast-low PE, confirmed using an immunohistochemical analysis of trophoblast lineage-specific markers. Our findings suggest that within specific histopathologic patterns of placental injury, PE can be subclassified based on specific cellular and molecular defects, allowing the identification of pathways that may be targeted for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes.
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- 2023
110. Acculturation and self-rated health among Chinese and Korean immigrants aged 49 to 75.
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Ryu, Soomin, Morey, Brittany, Shi, Yuxi, and Lee, Sunmin
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Asian Americans ,Chinese Americans ,English proficiency ,Korean Americans ,acculturation ,ethnic identity ,immigrants ,self-rated health ,Humans ,Aged ,Acculturation ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Language ,China ,Republic of Korea - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Given the rapidly growing Asian populations in the U.S. due to immigration, and the aging demographic of Asian immigrants, it is crucial to understand how acculturation shapes health among older adult Asian immigrants. We study the relationship between acculturation and self-rated health (SRH) and moderating roles of age and Asian subgroup. METHODS: Our cross-sectional study consisted of 200 Chinese and 200 Korean immigrants aged 49-75 living in Baltimore-Washington DC metropolitan area, who were recruited from primary care physicians clinics in Maryland and Northern Virginia. The participants completed the survey either in-person or by phone in their preferred language. Multidimensional proxies were used to measure acculturation: years living in the U.S. (≥23 years,
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- 2023
111. Adolescent alcohol use is linked to disruptions in age-appropriate cortical thinning: an unsupervised machine learning approach
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Sun, Delin, Adduru, Viraj R, Phillips, Rachel D, Bouchard, Heather C, Sotiras, Aristeidis, Michael, Andrew M, Baker, Fiona C, Tapert, Susan F, Brown, Sandra A, Clark, Duncan B, Goldston, David, Nooner, Kate B, Nagel, Bonnie J, Thompson, Wesley K, De Bellis, Michael D, and Morey, Rajendra A
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Underage Drinking ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Pediatric ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Biomedical Imaging ,Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Cancer ,Stroke ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Humans ,Aged ,Unsupervised Machine Learning ,Cerebral Cortical Thinning ,Alcohol Drinking ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Ethanol ,Longitudinal Studies ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Neurosciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Cortical thickness changes dramatically during development and is associated with adolescent drinking. However, previous findings have been inconsistent and limited by region-of-interest approaches that are underpowered because they do not conform to the underlying spatially heterogeneous effects of alcohol. In this study, adolescents (n = 657; 12-22 years at baseline) from the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) study who endorsed little to no alcohol use at baseline were assessed with structural magnetic resonance imaging and followed longitudinally at four yearly intervals. Seven unique spatial patterns of covarying cortical thickness were obtained from the baseline scans by applying an unsupervised machine learning method called non-negative matrix factorization (NMF). The cortical thickness maps of all participants' longitudinal scans were projected onto vertex-level cortical patterns to obtain participant-specific coefficients for each pattern. Linear mixed-effects models were fit to each pattern to investigate longitudinal effects of alcohol consumption on cortical thickness. We found in six NMF-derived cortical thickness patterns, the longitudinal rate of decline in no/low drinkers was similar for all age cohorts. Among moderate drinkers the decline was faster in the younger adolescent cohort and slower in the older cohort. Among heavy drinkers the decline was fastest in the younger cohort and slowest in the older cohort. The findings suggested that unsupervised machine learning successfully delineated spatially coordinated patterns of vertex-level cortical thickness variation that are unconstrained by neuroanatomical features. Age-appropriate cortical thinning is more rapid in younger adolescent drinkers and slower in older adolescent drinkers, an effect that is strongest among heavy drinkers.
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- 2023
112. Risk of Sleep Apnea Is Associated with Abdominal Obesity Among Asian Americans: Comparing Waist-to-Hip Ratio and Body Mass Index.
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Lee, Sunmin, Ryu, Soomin, Lee, Grace E, Redline, Susan, and Morey, Brittany N
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Abdominal obesity ,Asian Americans ,Sleep apnea ,Obesity ,Sleep Research ,Prevention ,Lung ,Aging ,Cancer ,Nutrition ,Clinical Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
ObjectiveThis study examines associations between the risk of sleep apnea and abdominal obesity (assessed by waist-to-hip ratio (WHR)) and general obesity (assessed by body mass index (BMI)) in a sample of Chinese and Korean American immigrants.MethodsThe dataset included Chinese and Korean participants aged 50-75 who were recruited from primary care physicians' clinics from April 2018 to June 2020 in the Baltimore-Washington D.C. Metropolitan area (n = 394). Abdominal obesity was determined if WHR ≥ 0.9 in men and WHR ≥ 0.85 in women. General obesity was determined if BMI ≥ 30. The risk of sleep apnea was determined by using the Berlin questionnaire. Poisson regression models examined associations between sleep apnea risk and obesity. Models controlled for socio-demographic risk factors.ResultsTwelve percent of the study participants were classified as a high risk for sleep apnea, and 75% had abdominal obesity whereas 6.4% had general obesity. High risk of sleep apnea was positively associated with abdominal obesity (PR = 1.31, 95% CI: 1.17-1.47) and general obesity (PR = 2.19, 95% CI: 0.90-5.32), marginally significant at p
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- 2023
113. The Mediating Role of Sleep Disturbance on the Association Between Stress and Self-Rated Health Among Chinese and Korean Immigrant Americans
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Morey, Brittany N, Ryu, Soomin, Shi, Yuxi, and Lee, Sunmin
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Mental Health ,Mind and Body ,Sleep Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Ethnicity ,Asian ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,East Asian People ,Minority Groups ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,Sleep ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Republic of Korea ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
IntroductionDisturbed sleep may be a factor that links stress with poor health, especially among groups experiencing high levels of stress caused by racial and ethnic minority and nativity status. The objective of this study was to describe the potential mediating role of sleep disturbance in the associations between various types of stress and self-rated health among Chinese and Korean Americans.MethodsOur cross-sectional study consisted of 400 Chinese and Korean immigrants aged 50 to 75 years recruited from August 2018 through June 2020 from physicians' clinics in the Baltimore-Washington, DC, metropolitan area. We used the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) short-form questionnaire to measure sleep disturbance. Linear regression analyses examined associations between 3 types of stress (acculturative stress, perceived stress, and distress) and self-rated health, accounting for demographic, socioeconomic, and health insurance factors. The Karlson-Holm-Breen method was used to estimate the total and direct effects of stresses on self-rated health and the indirect effects of stresses on health through sleep disturbance.ResultsGreater acculturative stress (β = 0.08; 95% CI, 0.01-0.14), perceived stress (β = 0.05; 95% CI, 0.03-0.08), and distress (β = 0.09; 95% CI, 0.05-0.13) were all associated with poorer self-rated health. Sleep disturbance was a partial mediator, with sleep disturbance accounting for 21.7%, 14.9%, and 18.7% of the associations between acculturative stress, perceived stress, and distress and self-rated health, respectively.ConclusionBecause sleep disturbance partially mediates the associations between stress and poor self-rated health, future interventions and research may consider mitigating sleep disturbances and stress among racial and ethnic minority populations to address health disparities.
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- 2023
114. Corrigendum: Transcriptomic drivers of differentiation, maturation, and polyploidy in human extravillous trophoblast
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Morey, Robert, Farah, Omar, Kallol, Sampada, Requena, Daniela F, Meads, Morgan, Moretto-Zita, Matteo, Soncin, Francesca, Laurent, Louise C, and Parast, Mana M
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,extravillous trophoblast ,placenta ,polyploid ,senescence ,cytotrophoblast ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.702046.].
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- 2023
115. Assessing the Impact of COVID-19 on the Health of Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander People in the United States, 2021
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Subica, Andrew M, Aitaoto, Nia, Li, Qiuxi, Morey, Brittany N, Wu, Li-Tzy, Iwamoto, Derek K, Guerrero, Erick G, and Moss, Howard B
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Immunization ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Vaccine Related ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,United States ,Humans ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Pandemics ,Hawaii ,Obesity ,Native Hawaiian ,Pacific Islander ,health disparities ,Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Policy and Administration ,Public Health ,Health services and systems ,Public health ,Policy and administration - Abstract
ObjectivesMinimal research has assessed COVID-19's unique impact on the Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander (NH/PI) population-an Indigenous-colonized racial group with social and health disparities that increase their risk for COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. To address this gap, we explored the scope of COVID-19 outcomes, vaccination status, and health in diverse NH/PI communities.MethodsNH/PI staff at partner organizations collected survey data from April through November 2021 from 319 community-dwelling NH/PI adults in 5 states with large NH/PI populations: Arkansas, California, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics, Pearson χ2 tests, independent and paired t tests, and linear and logistic regression analyses.ResultsDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, 30% of survey participants had contracted COVID-19, 16% had a close family member who died of the disease, and 64% reported COVID-19 vaccine uptake. Thirty percent reported fair/poor health, 21% currently smoked cigarettes, and 58% reported obesity. Survey participants reported heightened COVID-19-related psychosocial distress (mean score = 4.9 on 10-point scale), which was more likely when health outcomes (general health, sleep, obesity) were poor or a family member had died of COVID-19. Logistic regression indicated that age, experiencing COVID-19 distress, and past-year use of influenza vaccines were associated with higher odds of COVID-19 vaccine uptake (1.06, 1.18, and 7.58 times, respectively).ConclusionsOur empirical findings highlight the acute and understudied negative impact of COVID-19 on NH/PI communities in the United States and suggest new avenues for improving NH/PI community health, vaccination, and recovery from COVID-19.
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- 2023
116. Introduction: “The Machine”
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Haber, Morey J., primary and Rolls, Darran, additional
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- 2024
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117. Identity Attack Vectors
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Haber, Morey J., primary and Rolls, Darran, additional
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- 2024
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118. Conclusion
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Haber, Morey J., primary and Rolls, Darran, additional
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- 2024
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119. Timing Is Everything: Developmental Changes in the Associations between Intergroup Contact and Bias
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Merrilees, Christine E., Taylor, Laura K., Klotz, Madeline, Goeke-Morey, Marcie C., Shirlow, Peter, and Cummings, E. Mark
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Identifying developmental patterns in intergroup contact and its relation with bias is crucial for improving prevention strategies around intergroup relations. This study applied time-varying effects modeling (TVEM) to examine age-based changes in relations between contact and bias in a divided community that included 667 youth (M age = 15.74, SD = 1.97) from Belfast, Northern Ireland, a conflict-affected setting. The results suggest no change in the relation between contact frequency and bias; however, the relation between contact quality and bias increases from ages 10-14 and then levels off. Differences between Catholics, the historic minority group, and Protestants, the historic majority group, also emerged. The article concludes with implications for future research and interventions for youth growing up amid conflict.
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- 2023
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120. Practical Qualitative Data Analysis for Public Health Research: A Guide to a Team-Based Approach With Flexible Coding
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Melina Michelen, Madeleine Phan, Arianna Zimmer, Natalie Coury, Brittany Morey, Gloria Montiel Hernandez, Patricia Cantero, Salvador Zarate, Mary Anne Foo, Sora Tanjasiri, John Billimek, and Alana M.W. LeBrón
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Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Qualitative research is important to advance health equity as it offers nuanced insights into structural determinants of health inequities, amplifies the voices of communities directly affected by health inequities, and informs community-based interventions. The scale and frequency of public health crises have accelerated in recent years (e.g., pandemic, environmental disasters, climate change). The field of public health research and practice would benefit from timely and time-sensitive qualitative inquiries for which a practical approach to qualitative data analysis (QDA) is needed. One useful QDA approach stemming from sociology is flexible coding. We discuss our practical experience with a team-based approach using flexible coding for qualitative data analysis in public health, illustrating how this process can be applied to address multiple research questions simultaneously or asynchronously. We share lessons from this case study, while acknowledging that flexible coding has broader applicability across disciplines. Flexible coding provides an approachable step-by-step process that enables collaboration among coders of varying levels of experience to analyze large datasets. It also serves as a valuable training tool for novice coders, something urgently needed in public health. The structuring enabled through flexible coding allows for prioritizing urgent research questions, while preparing large datasets to be revisited many times, facilitating secondary analysis. We further discuss the benefit of flexible coding for increasing the reliability of results through active engagement with the data and the production of multiple analytical outputs.
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- 2024
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121. Community Activation to TrAnsform Local sYSTems (CATALYST): A Qualitative Study Protocol
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Alana M. W. LeBrón, Melina Michelen, Brittany Morey, Gloria I. Montiel Hernandez, Patricia Cantero, Salvador Zárate, Mary Anne Foo, Samantha Peralta, Jacqueline J. Chow, Julia Mangione, Sora Tanjasiri, and John Billimek
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Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Community Health Workers, promotores, and navigators (henceforth, CHWs) emerged as critical members of the public health workforce addressing social, economic, and health inequities worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic. While there is increased appreciation for and utilization of CHW models, and recognition of the importance of tailoring and innovating these models during the pandemic, few studies have examined the processes of change by which CHW models operated during the COVID-19 pandemic and factors that facilitated or constrained CHW health equity efforts. This protocol paper describes and reflects on the research methodology used in our qualitative study focused on CHWs. The CATALYST study aims to examine the roles that CHWs served during the COVID-19 pandemic and facilitators and barriers related to CHW health equity strategies. This qualitative study incorporates the lived experiences of CHWs, low-income communities of color whom CHWs engaged, and institutional representatives and policymakers familiar with locally implemented CHW models during the pandemic. Through a community-based participatory research process, this study involves an abductive qualitative approach to data collection and analysis. We integrate community member expertise alongside CHW and health equity frameworks in designing the research questions and data collection process. Additionally, we use an analytic approach that combines inductive (drawn from qualitative data) and deductive codes (drawn from theoretical frameworks and practice-based evidence integrated through a participatory research process) and nimbly leverages flexible coding to address inductive themes and practice-based questions. Our collaborative process offers concrete strategies to develop qualitative research protocols with community partners, with evidence used to inform policy, programmatic, and relational changes to support and amplify CHW models to promote community health and health equity.
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- 2024
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122. Prosumers and retailers based decentralized energy trading model in the smart grid considering network constraints
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Ashwini D. Manchalwar, Nita R. Patne, Chaitali D. Morey, and Sumanth Pemmada
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Decentralized energy market ,Network constraints ,Peer-to-peer energy trading ,Product differentiation ,Smart grid ,Production of electric energy or power. Powerplants. Central stations ,TK1001-1841 - Abstract
The rapid integration of renewable energy sources and evolving consumer demands have transformed traditional electrical markets into prosumer-centric markets. In a prosumer-centric economy, prosumers exchange energy with one another on a peer-to-peer (P2P) basis. To emphasize P2P transactions, this study presents a decentralized P2P energy trading framework for direct interaction between market players such as prosumers and retailers in the community. Retailers are profit-based companies that are able to generate energy. They can also trade their energy with prosumers and the grid. The designed model respects the market participant’s preferences and gives them more options for energy transactions. Energy transactions between participants are transported through electrical networks. Hence, network constraints such as power losses and network access charges are considered in the presented model. The primary objective of the proposed model is to maximize the social welfare of the participants integrated with the network constraints. The performance of the developed model is evaluated on an IEEE 14-bus system. The simulation results ensure the efficient and global optimal solution with limited information flow between market participants.
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- 2024
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123. Rapid, low-cost determination of Hg2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+ using a cellulose paper-based sensor and UV–vis method with silver nanoparticles synthesized with S. mammosum
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Fernanda Pilaquinga, Jeroni Morey, Paulino Duel, Gabriela S. Yánez-Jácome, Esthefanía Chuisaca-Londa, Karen Guzmán, Jazel Caiza, Melanny Tapia, Alexis Debut, Karla Vizuete, and María de las Nieves Piña
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AgNPs ,Solanum mammosum ,Cellulose ,Sensor ,Mercury ,Copper ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
As water effluents are often highly contaminated with metals, having a quick and cost-effective method of analysis is crucial. This study used the supernatant derived from the green synthesis of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) with Solanum mammosum to detect mercury, copper, and iron with a low-cost cellulose paper-based sensor and a rapid colorimetric method applying ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy (UV–Vis). AgNPs in two precursor concentrations using silver nitrate, 1 mM (17.4 ± 9 nm) and 50 mM (and 22 ± 8.1 nm), were utilized to assess the efficacy of the analysis and removal of Hg2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+ from contaminated water. Cellulose paper-based sensor showed limits of detection (LODs) for Hg2+ of 2.46 and 123 μM using AgNPs at concentrations of 1 and 50 mM, respectively. For Cu2+, the LODs were 55 and 2750 μM, and for Fe3+, the LODs were 49 and 2470 μM using the respective concentrations. To differentiate and detect the cations with the naked eye, a potassium iodide and potassium ferrocyanide (1:1) aqueous solution was used, producing a yellow, pink, and blue color for Hg2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+, respectively. Additionally, the titration curves of Hg2+, Fe3+, and Cu2+ were examined by UV–Vis using the supernatant liquid. The LODs for the UV–Vis method using AgNPs at a concentration of 1 mM were 1.50 μM for Hg2+, 10.7 μM for Cu2+, and 4.33 μM for Fe3+, while the LODs for AgNPs at 50 mM were 5.75, 27.6, and 15 μM for Hg2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+, respectively. Furthermore, these nanoparticles were utilized to assess the efficacy of the removal of Hg2+, Cu2+, and Fe3+ from contaminated water. Removal efficiency with the solid 50 mM AgNPs was analyzed via flame absorption spectrophotometry; values over 95% were obtained for the three ions. The results underscore the effectiveness of a green synthesis approach to generating AgNPs, enabling efficient and economical cation analysis and water decontamination.
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- 2024
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124. Dermatomyositis Associated With High-Grade B-Lymphoproliferative Disorders: A Case Report and Literature Review
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Jun Yen Ng MBBS, Mridula Mokoonlall FRACP, FRCPA, Hana Kawatu MD, Fathima Ayyalil FRACP, FRCPA, Chandima Perera FRACP, Adrienne Morey FRCPA, and Nalini K. Pati FRACP, FRCPA
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Dermatomyositis (DM) and polymyositis are idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs), most associated with solid organ malignancies, and less commonly hematological malignancies. We discuss a case of DM associated with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, followed by a review of literature on the pathogenesis, clinical course, treatment, and prognosis. Various challenges with the diagnosis and management of underlying lymphoproliferative disorders (LPDs) in patients with IIM are discussed. The case demonstrates the importance of being vigilant of the association between IIM and LPD. Cancer screening in patients with IIM is discussed, including the recently published International Guideline for IIM-Associated Cancer Screening. More research is required to address knowledge gaps in cancer screening in IIM.
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- 2024
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125. Modification of eating habits and lifestyle during COVID-19 in university students from Mexico and Peru
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Claudia Milagros Arispe-Alburqueque, Fernando Luis Díaz del Olmo-Morey, César Arellano Sacramento, Benjamín Dario Sánchez-Mendoza, Martha Patricia López-González, Judith Soledad Yangali-Vicente, Miguel Ipanaqué-Zapata, Aldo Alvarez-Risco, Shyla Del-Aguila-Arcentales, Jaime A. Yáñez, Tania Ivette Alvarado-Santiago, and Marx Engels Morales-Martínez
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eating habits ,lifestyle ,nutrition ,quality of life ,physical activity ,COVID-19 ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
ObjectiveIt was to evaluate changes in lifestyle habits and health behavior among university students in Peru and Mexico during periods of confinement associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and to identify possible relationships between these changes and sociodemographic variables, health status, and technology consumption.MethodsIt was a quantitative, observational, and cross-sectional study conducted among a population of 739 Mexican students and 305 Peruvian students, most of whom were women (n =778, 74.5%) and non-graduates (n =921, 88.2%). The questionnaire scale for changes in lifestyles during the quarantine period has been previously validated.ResultsThe association between sociodemographic factors and dimensions of change in healthy lifestyles was evaluated, and it was shown that gender and country of residence were significant for all dimensions of healthy lifestyle (p < 0.05), except for the level of education, which did not show significance about the change in the dimensions of media consumption (p = 0.875) and physical activity (p = 0.239). Within the dimensions mentioned, it can be stated that women are more likely than men to change their eating habits (adjusted prevalences (aPR) = 1.08, p < 0.001), media consumption (aPR = 1.04, p < 0.001), and physical activity (aPR = 1.02, p < 0.001). Meanwhile, participants from Peru are more likely than participants from Mexico to change physical activity (aPR = 1.14, p < 0.001) and media consumption (aPR = 1.22, p < 0.001). Finally, graduate students were more likely than undergraduate students to change eating habits (aPR = 1.09, p = 0.005) and unhealthy habits (aPR = 1.06, p = 0.030).ConclusionIt was concluded that there were lifestyle changes in Mexican and Peruvian university students in their eating habits, physical activity, internet consumption, and food delivery.
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- 2024
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126. Deep learning for computer vision based activity recognition and fall detection of the elderly: a systematic review.
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Francesc Xavier Gaya-Morey, Cristina Manresa-Yee, and José María Buades-Rubio
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- 2024
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127. Situated Interpretation and Data: Explainability to Convey Machine Misalignment.
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Dane Anthony Morey and Michael F. Rayo
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- 2024
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128. Application of soft systems methodology to frame the challenges of integrating autonomous trains within a legacy rail operating environment.
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Emily J. Morey, Kevin Galvin, Thomas Riley, and R. Eddie Wilson
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- 2024
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129. Simplicial Resolutions of Powers of Square-free Monomial Ideals
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Cooper, Susan M., Khoury, Sabine El, Faridi, Sara, Mayes-Tang, Sarah, Morey, Susan, Sega, Liana M., and Spiroff, Sandra
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Mathematics - Commutative Algebra ,Mathematics - Combinatorics ,13D02, 13F55 - Abstract
The Taylor resolution is almost never minimal for powers of monomial ideals, even in the square-free case. In this paper we introduce a smaller resolution for each power of any square-free monomial ideal, which depends only on the number of generators of the ideal. More precisely, for every pair of fixed integers $r$ and $q$, we construct a simplicial complex that supports a free resolution of the $r$-th power of any square-free monomial ideal with $q$ generators. The resulting resolution is significantly smaller than the Taylor resolution, and is minimal for special cases. Considering the relations on the generators of a fixed ideal allows us to further shrink these resolutions. We also introduce a class of ideals called "extremal ideals", and show that the Betti numbers of powers of all square-free monomial ideals are bounded by Betti numbers of powers of extremal ideals. Our results lead to upper bounds on Betti numbers of powers of any square-free monomial ideal that greatly improve the binomial bounds offered by the Taylor resolution., Comment: 32 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2022
130. Advancing the scholarship and practice of stakeholder engagement in working landscapes: a co-produced research agenda
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Eaton, Weston M, Burnham, Morey, Robertson, Tahnee, Arbuckle, JG, Brasier, Kathryn J, Burbach, Mark E, Church, Sarah P, Hart-Fredeluces, Georgia, Jackson-Smith, Douglas, Wildermuth, Grace, Canfield, Katherine N, Córdova, S Carolina, Chatelain, Casey D, Fowler, Lara B, Hendawy, Mennatullah Mohamed Zein elAbdeen, Kirchhoff, Christine J, Manheim, Marisa K, Martinez, Rubén O, Mook, Anne, Mullin, Cristina A, Murrah-Hanson, A Laurie, Onabola, Christiana O, Parker, Lauren E, Redd, Elizabeth A, Schelly, Chelsea, Schoon, Michael L, Sigler, W Adam, Smit, Emily, van Huysen, Tiff, Worosz, Michelle R, Eberly, Carrie, and Rogers, Andi
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Environmental Sciences ,Environmental Management ,Sociology ,Human Society ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,8.3 Policy ,ethics ,and research governance ,Health and social care services research ,Generic health relevance ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Community and stakeholder engagement ,Engagement outcomes ,Knowledge co-production ,Process design ,Research-practice gaps ,Working lands ,Environmental management - Abstract
Participatory approaches to science and decision making, including stakeholder engagement, are increasingly common for managing complex socio-ecological challenges in working landscapes. However, critical questions about stakeholder engagement in this space remain. These include normative, political, and ethical questions concerning who participates, who benefits and loses, what good can be accomplished, and for what, whom, and by who. First, opportunities for addressing justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion interests through engagement, while implied in key conceptual frameworks, remain underexplored in scholarly work and collaborative practice alike. A second line of inquiry relates to research-practice gaps. While both the practice of doing engagement work and scholarly research on the efficacy of engagement is on the rise, there is little concerted interplay among 'on-the-ground' practitioners and scholarly researchers. This means scientific research often misses or ignores insight grounded in practical and experiential knowledge, while practitioners are disconnected from potentially useful scientific research on stakeholder engagement. A third set of questions concerns gaps in empirical understanding of the efficacy of engagement processes and includes inquiry into how different engagement contexts and process features affect a range of behavioral, cognitive, and decision-making outcomes. Because of these gaps, a cohesive and actionable research agenda for stakeholder engagement research and practice in working landscapes remains elusive. In this review article, we present a co-produced research agenda for stakeholder engagement in working landscapes. The co-production process involved professionally facilitated and iterative dialogue among a diverse and international group of over 160 scholars and practitioners through a yearlong virtual workshop series. The resulting research agenda is organized under six cross-cutting themes: (1) Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion; (2) Ethics; (3) Research and Practice; (4) Context; (5) Process; and (6) Outcomes and Measurement. This research agenda identifies critical research needs and opportunities relevant for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers alike. We argue that addressing these research opportunities is necessary to advance knowledge and practice of stakeholder engagement and to support more just and effective engagement processes in working landscapes.Supplementary informationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42532-022-00132-8.
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- 2022
131. Associations between sleep apnea risk and cardiovascular disease indicators among Chinese and Korean Americans
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Morey, Brittany N, Ryu, Soomin, Shi, Yuxi, Redline, Susan, Kawachi, Ichiro, and Lee, Sunmin
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Nutrition ,Lung ,Obesity ,Aging ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Prevention ,Heart Disease ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Sleep Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Asian Americans ,Cardiovascular disease ,Cholesterol ,Diabetes ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Sleep apnea - Abstract
Study objectivesWhile sleep apnea has been associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors in white individuals in the U.S., these associations in Chinese and Korean Americans are less well-understood, particularly how these associations vary by age, gender, Asian origin, obesity, chronic conditions, and daytime sleepiness.MethodsWe used a sample of Chinese and Korean Americans ages 50-75 (n = 394) from the Baltimore-Washington DC Metropolitan Area to examine the associations of high risk (HR) sleep apnea with diagnoseable hypercholesterolemia and diabetes, as well as the following biomarkers: total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), total cholesterol/HDL-C ratio, triglycerides, and glucose (non-fasting). Poisson models included demographic factors, socioeconomic status, and body mass index (BMI). We tested for potential effect modifiers.ResultsHR-sleep apnea was associated with higher LDL-C level (β = 14.56, p < 0.05) and higher total cholesterol/HDL ratio (β = 0.64, p < 0.01). Younger respondents had higher levels of triglycerides associated with HR-sleep apnea than older respondents. For men, HR-sleep apnea was associated with higher total cholesterol, total cholesterol/HDL-C ratio, and triglycerides. Obese and overweight respondents had positive associations between HR-sleep apnea and total cholesterol, total cholesterol/HDL ratio, and triglycerides, while underweight/normal weight individuals did not. The interactions between snoring and daytime sleepiness were associated with hypercholesterolemia and diabetes.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates associations between sleep apnea risk and dyslipidemia among Chinese and Korean Americans. Associations were particularly pronounced among younger, male, overweight/obese, and sicker individuals. Future research should examine how to improve sleep health in Asian American populations to improve CVD risk.
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- 2022
132. Stabilization of hESCs in two distinct substates along the continuum of pluripotency
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Dekel, Chen, Morey, Robert, Hanna, Jacob, Laurent, Louise C, Ben-Yosef, Dalit, and Amir, Hadar
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Stem Cell Research - Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell - Human ,Human Genome ,Stem Cell Research - Embryonic - Human ,Genetics ,Stem Cell Research - Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell ,Stem Cell Research ,Regenerative Medicine ,Developmental biology ,Epigenetics ,Stem cell plasticity ,Transcriptomics - Abstract
A detailed understanding of the developmental substates of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) is needed to optimize their use in cell therapy and for modeling early development. Genetic instability and risk of tumorigenicity of primed hPSCs are well documented, but a systematic isogenic comparison between substates has not been performed. We derived four hESC lines in naive human stem cell medium (NHSM) and generated isogenic pairs of NHSM and primed cultures. Through phenotypic, transcriptomic, and methylation profiling, we identified changes that arose during the transition to a primed substate. Although early NHSM cultures displayed naive characteristics, including greater proliferation and clonogenic potential compared with primed cultures, they drifted toward a more primed-like substate over time, including accumulation of genetic abnormalities. Overall, we show that transcriptomic and epigenomic profiling can be used to place human pluripotent cultures along a developmental continuum and may inform their utility for clinical and research applications.
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- 2022
133. The Influence of Asian Subgroup and Acculturation on Colorectal Cancer Screening Knowledge and Attitudes Among Chinese and Korean Americans
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Morey, Brittany N, Valencia, Connie, and Lee, Sunmin
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Digestive Diseases ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Colo-Rectal Cancer ,Prevention ,Humans ,United States ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Asian ,Acculturation ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,China ,Colorectal cancer ,Cancer screening ,Asian American ,Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health - Abstract
Understanding how knowledge and attitudes about colorectal cancer (CRC) screening differs among Asian immigrants is important for informing targeted health interventions aimed at preventing and treating CRC in this diverse population. This study examines how Asian subgroup and acculturation are associated with CRC knowledge and attitudes among Chinese and Korean immigrants in the United States (U.S.). Data come from the baseline survey of a randomized controlled trial to increase CRC screening among Chinese and Korean American immigrants living in the Baltimore-Washington DC Metropolitan Area (n = 400). We use linear regression to examine how Asian subgroup, time in the U.S., English-speaking proficiency, and ethnic identity are associated with CRC knowledge and screening attitudes, accounting for demographic variables, socioeconomic status, and health insurance status. Results show that greater socioeconomic status was associated with higher CRC knowledge, and socioeconomic status explained more of the variance in CRC knowledge than acculturation factors. Additionally, attitudes varied by Asian subgroup, with Chinese reporting lower CRC screening salience, worry, response efficacy, and social influence compared to Koreans. Findings suggest that in-language interventions aimed at increasing CRC knowledge and capitalizing on attitudes about screening can help to bridge disparities in CRC screening by socioeconomic status and country of origin. We discuss implications for future interventions to increase CRC screening uptake among Chinese and Korean immigrants in the U.S.
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- 2022
134. Feasibility, safety and outcomes of stereotactic radiotherapy for ultra-central thoracic oligometastatic disease guided by linear endobronchial ultrasound-inserted fiducials
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Sidhu, Calvin, Tang, Colin, Scott, Alison, Yamini Ramamurty, Hema, Yagnik, Lokesh, Morey, Sue, Phillips, Martin, Jacques, Angela, and Thomas, Rajesh
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- 2024
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135. A comparison of methods to harmonize cortical thickness measurements across scanners and sites
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Sun, Delin, Rakesh, Gopalkumar, Haswell, Courtney C, Logue, Mark, Baird, C Lexi, O'Leary, Erin N, Cotton, Andrew S, Xie, Hong, Tamburrino, Marijo, Chen, Tian, Dennis, Emily L, Jahanshad, Neda, Salminen, Lauren E, Thomopoulos, Sophia I, Rashid, Faisal, Ching, Christopher RK, Koch, Saskia BJ, Frijling, Jessie L, Nawijn, Laura, van Zuiden, Mirjam, Zhu, Xi, Suarez-Jimenez, Benjamin, Sierk, Anika, Walter, Henrik, Manthey, Antje, Stevens, Jennifer S, Fani, Negar, van Rooij, Sanne JH, Stein, Murray, Bomyea, Jessica, Koerte, Inga K, Choi, Kyle, van der Werff, Steven JA, Vermeiren, Robert RJM, Herzog, Julia, Lebois, Lauren AM, Baker, Justin T, Olson, Elizabeth A, Straube, Thomas, Korgaonkar, Mayuresh S, Andrew, Elpiniki, Zhu, Ye, Li, Gen, Ipser, Jonathan, Hudson, Anna R, Peverill, Matthew, Sambrook, Kelly, Gordon, Evan, Baugh, Lee, Forster, Gina, Simons, Raluca M, Simons, Jeffrey S, Magnotta, Vincent, Maron-Katz, Adi, du Plessis, Stefan, Disner, Seth G, Davenport, Nicholas, Grupe, Daniel W, Nitschke, Jack B, deRoon-Cassini, Terri A, Fitzgerald, Jacklynn M, Krystal, John H, Levy, Ifat, Olff, Miranda, Veltman, Dick J, Wang, Li, Neria, Yuval, De Bellis, Michael D, Jovanovic, Tanja, Daniels, Judith K, Shenton, Martha, van de Wee, Nic JA, Schmahl, Christian, Kaufman, Milissa L, Rosso, Isabelle M, Sponheim, Scott R, Hofmann, David Bernd, Bryant, Richard A, Fercho, Kelene A, Stein, Dan J, Mueller, Sven C, Hosseini, Bobak, Phan, K Luan, McLaughlin, Katie A, Davidson, Richard J, Larson, Christine L, May, Geoffrey, Nelson, Steven M, Abdallah, Chadi G, Gomaa, Hassaan, Etkin, Amit, Seedat, Soraya, Harpaz-Rotem, Ilan, Liberzon, Israel, van Erp, Theo GM, Quidé, Yann, Wang, Xin, Thompson, Paul M, and Morey, Rajendra A
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Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neuroimaging ,Stress Disorders ,Post-Traumatic ,Young Adult ,Data Harmonization ,Scanner Effects ,Site Effects ,Cortical Thickness ,ComBat ,ComBat-GAM ,Linear Mixed-Effects Model ,General Additive Model ,PTSD ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Results of neuroimaging datasets aggregated from multiple sites may be biased by site-specific profiles in participants' demographic and clinical characteristics, as well as MRI acquisition protocols and scanning platforms. We compared the impact of four different harmonization methods on results obtained from analyses of cortical thickness data: (1) linear mixed-effects model (LME) that models site-specific random intercepts (LMEINT), (2) LME that models both site-specific random intercepts and age-related random slopes (LMEINT+SLP), (3) ComBat, and (4) ComBat with a generalized additive model (ComBat-GAM). Our test case for comparing harmonization methods was cortical thickness data aggregated from 29 sites, which included 1,340 cases with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (6.2-81.8 years old) and 2,057 trauma-exposed controls without PTSD (6.3-85.2 years old). We found that, compared to the other data harmonization methods, data processed with ComBat-GAM was more sensitive to the detection of significant case-control differences (Χ2(3) = 63.704, p < 0.001) as well as case-control differences in age-related cortical thinning (Χ2(3) = 12.082, p = 0.007). Both ComBat and ComBat-GAM outperformed LME methods in detecting sex differences (Χ2(3) = 9.114, p = 0.028) in regional cortical thickness. ComBat-GAM also led to stronger estimates of age-related declines in cortical thickness (corrected p-values < 0.001), stronger estimates of case-related cortical thickness reduction (corrected p-values < 0.001), weaker estimates of age-related declines in cortical thickness in cases than controls (corrected p-values < 0.001), stronger estimates of cortical thickness reduction in females than males (corrected p-values < 0.001), and stronger estimates of cortical thickness reduction in females relative to males in cases than controls (corrected p-values < 0.001). Our results support the use of ComBat-GAM to minimize confounds and increase statistical power when harmonizing data with non-linear effects, and the use of either ComBat or ComBat-GAM for harmonizing data with linear effects.
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- 2022
136. Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander alcohol, tobacco and other drug use, mental health and treatment need in the United States during COVID‐19
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Subica, Andrew M, Guerrero, Erick G, Martin, Tammy KK, Okamoto, Scott K, Aitaoto, Nia, Moss, Howard B, Morey, Brittany N, and Wu, Li‐Tzy
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Substance Misuse ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Tobacco ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Health Services ,Depression ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,United States ,Humans ,Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ,Alcoholism ,Asian ,COVID-19 ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Hawaii ,Prevalence ,Tobacco Products ,alcohol use disorder ,alcohol ,tobacco ,drug use ,mental health ,Native Hawaiian ,Pacific Islanders ,Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse ,Health sciences ,Human society - Abstract
IntroductionBefore COVID-19, Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders (NH/PI) endured a heavy burden of alcohol, tobacco and other drug (ATOD) use in prior US data. Responding to reports that many NH/PI communities experienced severe COVID-19 disparities that could exacerbate their ATOD burden, we partnered with NH/PI communities to assess the substance use patterns and treatment needs of diverse NH/PIs during COVID-19.MethodsCollaborating with NH/PI community organisations across five states with large NH/PI populations, we conducted a large-scale investigation of NH/PI ATOD use, mental health and treatment need during COVID-19. Between April and November 2021, NH/PI-heritage research staff from our community partners collected data involving 306 NH/PI adults using several community-based recruitment methods (e-mail, telephone, in-person) and two survey approaches: online and paper-and-pencil. Multivariate regressions were conducted to examine potential predictors of NH/PI alcohol use disorder and need for behavioural health treatment.ResultsDuring COVID-19, 47% and 22% of NH/PI adults reported current alcohol and cigarette use, while 35% reported lifetime illicit substance use (e.g., cannabis, opioid). Depression and anxiety were high, and alcohol use disorder, major depression and generalised anxiety disorder prevalence were 27%, 27% and 19%, respectively. One-third of participants reported past-year treatment need with lifetime illicit substance use, COVID-19 distress and major depression respectively associating with 3.0, 1.2, and 5.3 times greater adjusted odds for needing treatment.ConclusionsNH/PI adults reported heavy ATOD use, depression, anxiety and treatment need during COVID-19. Targeted research and treatment services may be warranted to mitigate COVID-19's negative behavioural health impact on NH/PI communities.
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- 2022
137. Colorimetric sensor for copper and lead using silver nanoparticles functionalized with fluoresceinamine isomer I
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Pilaquinga, Fernanda, Miguez, Flávio B., Nobuyasu, Roberto S., Caicho-Caranqui, Jhonny, De Sousa, Frederico B., Morey, Jeroni, de las Nieves Piña, María, Chuisaca, Esthefanía, Borrero, Luis, and Alexis, Frank
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- 2024
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138. Heart at the center of life: An in-depth examination of the experiences in the life journeys of adolescents diagnosed with congenital heart disease
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Savaş, Eyşan Hanzade, Semerci, Remziye, Ay, Ayşe, Kızılkaya, Mete Han, and Morey, Aslıhan Özcan
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- 2024
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139. TNM 8 staging system beyond p16: Double HPV/p16 status is superior to p16 alone in predicting outcome in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma
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von Buchwald, Christian, Jakobsen, Kathrine Kronberg, Carlander, Amanda-Louise Fenger, Tous, Sara, Grønhøj, Christian, Rasmussen, Jacob H., Brooks, Jill, Taberna, Miren, Mena, Marisa, Morey, Francisca, Bruni, Laia, Batis, Nikolaos, Brakenhoff, Ruud H., René Leemans, C., Jong, Robert J.Baatenburg de, Klussmann, Jens Peter, Wuerdemann, Nora, Wagner, Steffen, Dalianis, Tina, Marklund, Linda, Mirghani, Haïtham, Schache, Andrew, James, Jaqueline A., Huang, Shao Hui, O’Sullivan, Brian, Nankivell, Paul, Broglie, Martina A., Hoffmann, Markus, Quabius, Elgar Susanne, Anderson, Lesley A., Craig, Stephanie G., Alemany, Laia, and Mehanna, Hisham
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- 2024
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140. Effects of Cohabitation on Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Rats Discordant for Neonatal Exposure to Sevoflurane
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Ju, Ling-Sha, Morey, Timothy, Gravenstein, Nikolaus, Setlow, Barry, Seubert, Christoph N., and Martynyuk, Anatoly E.
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- 2024
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141. Trajectories of eGFR and risk of albuminuria in youth with type 2 diabetes: results from the TODAY cohort study
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El ghormli, Laure, Wen, Hui, Uschner, Diane, Haymond, Morey W., Hughan, Kara S., Kutney, Katherine, and Laffel, Lori
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Albuminuria -- Risk factors ,Glomerular filtration rate -- Health aspects ,Pediatric research ,Type 2 diabetes -- Complications and side effects - Abstract
Background We conducted exploratory analyses to identify distinct trajectories of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and their relationship with hyperfiltration, subsequent rapid eGFR decline, and albuminuria in participants with youth-onset type 2 diabetes enrolled in the Treatment Options for type 2 Diabetes in Adolescents and Youth (TODAY) study. Methods Annual serum creatinine, cystatin C, urine albumin, and creatinine measurements were obtained from 377 participants followed for [greater than or equal to] 10 years. Albuminuria and eGFR were calculated. Hyperfiltration peak is the greatest eGFR inflection point during follow-up. Latent class modeling was applied to identify distinct eGFR trajectories. Results At baseline, participants' mean age was 14 years, type 2 diabetes duration was 6 months, mean HbA1c was 6%, and mean eGFR was 120 ml/min/1.73 m.sup.2. Five eGFR trajectories associated with different rates of albuminuria were identified, including a "progressive increasing eGFR" group (10%), three "stable eGFR" groups with varying starting mean eGFR, and an "eGFR steady decline" group (1%). Participants who exhibited the greatest peak eGFR also had the highest levels of elevated albuminuria at year 10. This group membership was characterized by a greater proportion of female and Hispanic participants. Conclusions Distinct eGFR trajectories that associate with albuminuria risk were identified, with the eGFR trajectory characterized by increasing eGFR over time associating with the highest level of albuminuria. These descriptive data support the current recommendations to estimate GFR annually in young persons with type 2 diabetes and provide insight into eGFR-related factors which may contribute to predictive risk strategies for kidney disease therapies in youth with type 2 diabetes. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00081328, date registered 2002. Graphical abstract, Author(s): Laure El ghormli [sup.1] , Hui Wen [sup.1] , Diane Uschner [sup.1] , Morey W. Haymond [sup.2] , Kara S. Hughan [sup.3] , Katherine Kutney [sup.4] , Lori Laffel [...]
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- 2023
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142. Experimental investigation of adaptive multi-generalized integrator-based controller for electronically interfaced hybrid microgrid system
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Gali, Vijayakumar, Gupta, Nitin, Ahmadi, Mohammad Jawid, Morey, Meghraj Sudhakar, Kural, Askat, and Jamwal, Prashant Kumar
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- 2025
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143. Optilume drug‐coated balloon for anterior urethral stricture: 2‐year results of the ROBUST III trial
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Maia E. VanDyke, Allen F. Morey, Karl Coutinho, Kaiser J. Robertson, Richard D'Anna, Kent Chevli, Christopher H. Cantrill, Michael J. Ehlert, Alexis E. Te, Jeffrey Dann, Jessica M. DeLong, Ramón Virasoro, Judith C. Hagedorn, Richard Levin, Euclid DeSouza, David DiMarco, Brad A. Erickson, Carl Olsson, and Sean P. Elliott
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anterior urethral strictures ,bladder outlet obstruction ,lower urinary tract symptoms ,urethral dilation ,urethral stricture ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Abstract Objective The aim of this study is to report the updated 2‐year results of the intervention arm of the ROBUST III randomized trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of the Optilume drug‐coated balloon (DCB) versus standard endoscopic management of recurrent male anterior urethral stricture. Materials and Methods Eligible patients included men with recurrent anterior urethral stricture ≤3 cm in length and ≤12Fr in diameter, International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) ≥11 and peak flow rate (Qmax)
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- 2024
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144. Neonates with a prenatal diagnosis of hydrops fetalis: A 10-year experience in a tertiary care center
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Miriam Morey-Olivé, Carlota Marín Córdoba, Fátima Camba Longueira, Carlota Rodó Rodríguez, Silvia Arévalo Martínez, Nerea Maíz, and Alicia Montaner-Ramón
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Hidrops fetal ,Diagnóstico prenatal ,Neonatología ,Tratamiento intrauterino ,Obstetricia ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Introduction: Hydrops fetalis (HF) is a rare condition with a high mortality. This study analysed the obstetric and perinatal outcomes of antenatally diagnosed HF according to its aetiology and the possibility of intrauterine treatment (IUT). Patients and methods: We carried out a retrospective review of the health records of 164 pregnant women with a prenatal diagnosis of HF in a tertiary care centre between 2011−2021. We analysed prenatal interventions, clinical findings, aetiologies and obstetric and live-born infant outcomes. Results: An invasive prenatal study had been performed in 79.3% cases. The most common aetiologies were genetic disorders (31%), TORCH and parvovirus B19 infections (9.7%) and structural heart diseases (9.1%). Intrauterine treatment was performed in 25.6%, and 74.4% of pregnancies were terminated. Pregnancies with a prenatal diagnosis of genetic or chromosomal disorders had higher rates of elective termination compared to other aetiologies (P < .01). Among all pregnancies, only 25.6% resulted in live births (LBs), most of them preterm. Perinatal and 1-year survival rates were higher in the group that received IUT (P < .001). Among the LBs, structural heart diseases had the worst survival rates, while the aetiology with the best outcomes was tachyarrhythmia. Survival at 1 year of life among those born alive was 70%, but 58.6% of these infants had significant morbidity at discharge. Conclusions: Despite advances in the management of FH, the poor obstetric prognosis, perinatal mortality and morbidity of survivors is still significant. These data are important for the purpose of counselling families when HF is diagnosed antenatally. Resumen: Introducción: El hidrops fetal (HF) es una condición rara con una alta mortalidad. Este estudio analiza la evolución obstétrica y perinatal de los diagnósticos prenatales de HF, relacionándola con la etiología y el tratamiento intrauterino (TIU) recibido. Pacientes y métodos: Se revisaron 164 gestantes con diagnóstico prenatal de HF entre 2011 y 2021. Se registraron intervenciones prenatales, hallazgos clínicos, etiologías y resultados de los recién nacidos vivos. Resultados: Se realizó estudio invasivo prenatal en 79,3% de pacientes. Las etiologías mayoritarias fueron alteraciones genéticas (31%), infecciones TORCH y por parvovirus B19 (9,7%) y cardiopatías estructurales (9,1%). En 25,6% se realizó TIU y entre todas las gestaciones un 74,4% fueron interrumpidas. Las alteraciones genéticas tuvieron tasas más altas de interrupción legal del embarazo respecto a otras etiologías (p
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- 2024
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145. Neonatos con diagnóstico prenatal de hidrops fetal: experiencia durante 10 años en un centro de tercer nivel
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Miriam Morey-Olivé, Carlota Marín Córdoba, Fátima Camba Longueira, Carlota Rodó Rodríguez, Silvia Arévalo Martínez, Nerea Maiz, and Alicia Montaner-Ramón
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Hydrops fetalis ,Prenatal diagnosis ,Neonatology ,Fetal therapies ,Obstetrics ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Resumen: Introducción: El hidrops fetal (HF) es una condición rara con una alta mortalidad. Este estudio analiza la evolución obstétrica y perinatal de los diagnósticos prenatales de HF, relacionándola con la etiología y el tratamiento intrauterino (TIU) recibido. Pacientes y métodos: Se revisaron 164 gestantes con diagnóstico prenatal de HF entre 2011 y 2021. Se registraron intervenciones prenatales, hallazgos clínicos, etiologías y resultados de los recién nacidos vivos. Resultados: Se realizó un estudio invasivo prenatal en el 79,3% de los pacientes. Las etiologías mayoritarias fueron alteraciones genéticas (31%), infecciones TORCH y por parvovirus B19 (9,7%), y cardiopatías estructurales (9,1%). En el 25,6% se realizó TIU, y entre todas las gestaciones, el 74,4% fueron interrumpidas. Las alteraciones genéticas tuvieron tasas más altas de interrupción legal del embarazo respecto a otras etiologías (p
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- 2024
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146. Novel species of Triatoma (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) identified in a case of vectorial transmission of Chagas disease in northern Belize
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Sarah M. Gunter, Alisa Nelson, Alexander R. Kneubehl, Silvia A. Justi, Russell Manzanero, Emily Zielinski-Gutierrez, Claudia Herrera, Julie Thompson, Rajendra Mandage, Hans Desale, Adrianna Maliga, Kim Bautista, Shannon E. Ronca, Francis Morey, Rafael Chacon Fuentes, Beatriz Lopez, Eric Dumonteil, Gerhaldine H. Morazan, and Kristy O. Murray
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Chagas disease is a leading cause of non-ischemic cardiomyopathy in endemic regions of Central and South America. In Belize, Triatoma dimidiata sensu lato has been identified as the predominate taxon but vectorial transmission of Chagas disease is considered to be rare in the country. We recently identified an acute case of vector-borne Chagas disease in the northern region of Belize. Here we present a subsequent investigation of triatomines collected around the case-patient’s home. We identified yet undescribed species, closely related to Triatoma huehuetenanguensis vector by molecular systematics methods occurring in the peridomestic environment. The identification of a T. cruzi-positive, novel species of Triatoma in Belize indicates an increased risk of transmission to humans in the region and warrants expanded surveillance and further investigation.
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- 2024
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147. Live-cell three-dimensional single-molecule tracking reveals modulation of enhancer dynamics by NuRD
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Basu, S., Shukron, O., Hall, D., Parutto, P., Ponjavic, A., Shah, D., Boucher, W., Lando, D., Zhang, W., Reynolds, N., Sober, L. H., Jartseva, A., Ragheb, R., Ma, X., Cramard, J., Floyd, R., Balmer, J., Drury, T. A., Carr, A. R., Needham, L.-M., Aubert, A., Communie, G., Gor, K., Steindel, M., Morey, L., Blanco, E., Bartke, T., Di Croce, L., Berger, I., Schaffitzel, C., Lee, S. F., Stevens, T. J., Klenerman, D., Hendrich, B. D., Holcman, D., and Laue, E. D.
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- 2023
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148. Scars of tectonism promote ice-sheet nucleation from Hercules Dome into West Antarctica
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Hoffman, Andrew O., Holschuh, Nicholas, Mueller, Megan, Paden, John, Muto, Atsuhiro, Ariho, Gordon, Brigham, Cassandra, Christian, John Erich, Davidge, Lindsey, Heitmann, Emma, Hills, Benjamin, Horlings, Annika, Morey, Susannah, O’Connor, Gemma, Fudge, T. J., Steig, Eric J., and Christianson, Knut
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- 2023
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149. Phase 2 of extracellular RNA communication consortium charts next-generation approaches for extracellular RNA research
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Mateescu, Bogdan, Jones, Jennifer C, Alexander, Roger P, Alsop, Eric, An, Ji Yeong, Asghari, Mohammad, Boomgarden, Alex, Bouchareychas, Laura, Cayota, Alfonso, Chang, Hsueh-Chia, Charest, Al, Chiu, Daniel T, Coffey, Robert J, Das, Saumya, De Hoff, Peter, deMello, Andrew, D’Souza-Schorey, Crislyn, Elashoff, David, Eliato, Kiarash R, Franklin, Jeffrey L, Galas, David J, Gerstein, Mark B, Ghiran, Ionita H, Go, David B, Gould, Stephen, Grogan, Tristan R, Higginbotham, James N, Hladik, Florian, Huang, Tony Jun, Huo, Xiaoye, Hutchins, Elizabeth, Jeppesen, Dennis K, Jovanovic-Talisman, Tijana, Kim, Betty YS, Kim, Sung, Kim, Kyoung-Mee, Kim, Yong, Kitchen, Robert R, Knouse, Vaughan, LaPlante, Emily L, Lebrilla, Carlito B, Lee, L James, Lennon, Kathleen M, Li, Guoping, Li, Feng, Li, Tieyi, Liu, Tao, Liu, Zirui, Maddox, Adam L, McCarthy, Kyle, Meechoovet, Bessie, Maniya, Nalin, Meng, Yingchao, Milosavljevic, Aleksandar, Min, Byoung-Hoon, Morey, Amber, Ng, Martin, Nolan, John, De Oliveira, Getulio P, Paulaitis, Michael E, Phu, Tuan Anh, Raffai, Robert L, Reátegui, Eduardo, Roth, Matthew E, Routenberg, David A, Rozowsky, Joel, Rufo, Joseph, Senapati, Satyajyoti, Shachar, Sigal, Sharma, Himani, Sood, Anil K, Stavrakis, Stavros, Stürchler, Alessandra, Tewari, Muneesh, Tosar, Juan P, Tucker-Schwartz, Alexander K, Turchinovich, Andrey, Valkov, Nedyalka, Van Keuren-Jensen, Kendall, Vickers, Kasey C, Vojtech, Lucia, Vreeland, Wyatt N, Wang, Ceming, Wang, Kai, Wang, ZeYu, Welsh, Joshua A, Witwer, Kenneth W, Wong, David TW, Xia, Jianping, Xie, Ya-Hong, Yang, Kaichun, Zaborowski, Mikołaj P, Zhang, Chenguang, Zhang, Qin, Zivkovic, Angela M, and Laurent, Louise C
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Genetics ,Biochemistry ,Biological sciences ,Cell biology ,Molecular biology - Abstract
The extracellular RNA communication consortium (ERCC) is an NIH-funded program aiming to promote the development of new technologies, resources, and knowledge about exRNAs and their carriers. After Phase 1 (2013-2018), Phase 2 of the program (ERCC2, 2019-2023) aims to fill critical gaps in knowledge and technology to enable rigorous and reproducible methods for separation and characterization of both bulk populations of exRNA carriers and single EVs. ERCC2 investigators are also developing new bioinformatic pipelines to promote data integration through the exRNA atlas database. ERCC2 has established several Working Groups (Resource Sharing, Reagent Development, Data Analysis and Coordination, Technology Development, nomenclature, and Scientific Outreach) to promote collaboration between ERCC2 members and the broader scientific community. We expect that ERCC2's current and future achievements will significantly improve our understanding of exRNA biology and the development of accurate and efficient exRNA-based diagnostic, prognostic, and theranostic biomarker assays.
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- 2022
150. Virtual Mentoring in Agricultural Education: Describing Digital Literacy, Technology Self-Efficacy, and Attitudes toward Technology of Secondary Agricultural Educators
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Morey, Tiffany, Foster, Daniel, and Ewing, John
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Digital literacy, technology self-efficacy, and attitude toward technology play an impactful role in the life of teachers. Proficiency in digital literacy and technology self-efficacy, along with a positive attitude toward technology, can predict and shape an educator's capacity to implement best practices for teaching and learning with technology. This study examined the effects of participation in a virtual mentoring program on the digital literacy, technology self-efficacy, and attitude toward technology of secondary agriculture teachers. We found secondary agriculture teachers who had participated in a virtual mentoring program exhibited higher overall digital literacy levels and technology self-efficacy levels than those secondary agriculture teachers who had not participated in a virtual mentoring program. Pragmatic implications include a defined opportunity for agricultural education leaders to develop appropriate and beneficial tools and materials to assist in-service agriculture teachers in developing digital literacy skills, technology self-efficacy skills, and a positive attitude toward technology. Recommendations for future research include examining different means of establishing virtual mentoring relationships between secondary agriculture teachers and exploring virtual professional development opportunities designed to help educators develop digital literacy, technology self-efficacy, and a positive attitude toward technology.
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- 2023
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