445 results on '"Ennis C"'
Search Results
202. Comparative analysis of chromatography peaks by computer and disc-integrator
- Author
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Bernstein, Joanne F., Chan, Linda S., Azen, Stanley P., Layne, Ennis C., and Geiger, Paul J.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. Modulation of the GABA autoreceptor by benzodiazepine receptor ligands
- Author
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Ennis, C. and Minchin, M.C.W.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. Panuramine, a selective inhibitor of uptake of 5-hydroxytryptamine in the brain of the rat
- Author
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Blurton, P.A., Broadhurst, A.M., Cross, J.A., Ennis, C., Wood, M.D., and Wyllie, M.G.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. The Dutch health care system.
- Author
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Ennis, C S
- Published
- 1997
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206. Modulation of the GABA~A-like autoreceptor by barbiturates but not by steroids
- Author
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Ennis, C. and Minchin, M. C. W.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. An examination of the multidimensionality of situational interest in elementary school physical education.
- Author
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Sun H, Chen A, Ennis C, Martin R, Shen B, Sun, Haichun, Chen, Ang, Ennis, Catherine, Martin, Robert, and Shen, Bo
- Abstract
It has been demonstrated that situational interest in physical activity may derive from five dimensional sources, Novelty, Optimal Challenge, Attention Demand, Exploration Intent, and Instant Enjoyment. The purpose of this study was to examine the multidimensional sources in elementary school physical education. The five dimensions were measured in 5,717 students in third, fourth, and fifth grades from a random sample of 30 elementary schools. Students' responses were randomly divided into two samples for a two-step confirmatory factor analysis. The results confirmed that the five dimensions are primary sources of situational interest for elementary school physical education. The findings implied that situational interest should be taken into account as a necessary curricular component in elementary physical education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
208. Reviews.
- Author
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Ennis, C.
- Subjects
- CELEBRATING Excellence: Canadian Women Athletes (Book)
- Abstract
Reviews the book `Celebrating Excellence: Canadian Women Athletes,' by Wendy Long.
- Published
- 1996
209. Etrolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis in patients previously treated with tumour necrosis factor inhibitors (HICKORY): a phase 3, randomised, controlled trial
- Author
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Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet, Ailsa Hart, Peter Bossuyt, Millie Long, Matthieu Allez, Pascal Juillerat, Alessandro Armuzzi, Edward V Loftus, Elham Ostad-Saffari, Astrid Scalori, Young S Oh, Swati Tole, Akiko Chai, Jennifer Pulley, Stuart Lacey, William J Sandborn, Humberto Aguilar, Tariq Ahmad, Evangelos Akriviadis, Xavier Aldeguer Mante, Istvan Altorjay, Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, Vibeke Andersen, Montserrat Andreu Garcia, Guy Aumais, Irit Avni-Biron, Jeffrey Axler, Kamran Ayub, Filip Baert, Mauro Bafutto, George Bamias, Isaac Bassan, Curtis Baum, Laurent Beaugerie, Brian Behm, Pradeep Bekal, Michael Bennett, Fernando Bermejo San Jose, Charles Bernstein, Dominik Bettenworth, Sudhir Bhaskar, Livia Biancone, Bahri Bilir, Michael Blaeker, Stuart Bloom, Verle Bohman, Francisco Javier Bosques Padilla, Yoram Bouhnik, Gerd Bouma, Raymond Bourdages, Stephan Brand, Brian Bressler, Markus Brückner, Carsten Buening, Franck Carbonnel, Thomas Caves, Jonathon Chapman, Jae Hee Cheon, Naoki Chiba, Camelia Chioncel, Dimitrios Christodoulou, Martin Clodi, Albert Cohen, Gino Roberto Corazza, Richard Corlin, Rocco Cosintino, Fraser Cummings, Robin Dalal, Silvio Danese, Marc De Maeyer, Carlos Fernando De Magalhães Francesconi, Aminda De Silva, Henry Debinski, Pierre Desreumaux, Olivier Dewit, Geert D'Haens, Sandra Di Felice Boratto, John Nik Ding, Tyler Dixon, Gerald Dryden, George Aaron Du Vall, Matthias Ebert, Ana Echarri Piudo, Robert Ehehalt, Magdy Elkhashab, Craig Ennis, Jason Etzel, Jan Fallingborg, Brian Feagan, Roland Fejes, Daniel Ferraz de Campos Mazo, Valéria Ferreira de Almeida Borges, Andreas Fischer, Alan Fixelle, Mark Fleisher, Sharyle Fowler, Bradley Freilich, Keith Friedenberg, Walter Fries, Csaba Fulop, Mathurin Fumery, Sergio Fuster, Gyula G Kiss, Santiago Garcia Lopez, Sonja Gassner, Kanwar Gill, Cyrielle Gilletta de Saint Joseph, Philip Ginsburg, Paolo Gionchetti, Eran Goldin, Adrian-Eugen Goldis, Hector Alejandro Gomez Jaramillo, Maciej Gonciarz, Glenn Gordon, Daniel Green, Jean-Charles Grimaud, Rogelio Guajardo Rodriguez, Zoltan Gurzo, Alexandra Gutierrez, Tibor Gyökeres, Ki Baik Hahm, Stephen Hanauer, John Hanson, William Harlan III, Peter Hasselblatt, Buhussain Hayee, Xavier Hebuterne, Peter Hendy, Melvin Heyman, Peter Higgins, Raouf Hilal, Pieter Hindryckx, Frank Hoentjen, Peter Hoffmann, Frank Holtkamp-Endemann, Gerald Holtmann, Gyula Horvat, Stefanie Howaldt, Samuel Huber, Ikechukwu Ibegbu, Maria Isabel Iborra Colomino, Peter Irving, Kim Isaacs, Kiran Jagarlamudi, Rajesh Jain, Sender Jankiel Miszputen, Jeroen Jansen, Jennifer Jones, John Karagiannis, Nicholas Karyotakis, Arthur Kaser, Lior Katz, Seymour Katz, Leo Katz, Nirmal Kaur, Edita Kazenaite, Reena Khanna, Sunil Khurana, Joo Sung Kim, Young-Ho Kim, Sung Kook Kim, Dongwoo Kim, Jochen Klaus, Dariusz Kleczkowski, Pavel Kohout, Bartosz Korczowski, Georgios Kouklakis, Ioannis Koutroubakis, Richard Krause, Tunde Kristof, Ian Kronborg, Annette Krummenerl, Limas Kupcinskas, Jorge Laborda Molteni, David Laharie, Adi Lahat-zok, Jonghun Lee, Kang-Moon Lee, Rupert Leong, Henry Levine, Jimmy Limdi, James Lindsay, Nilesh Lodhia, Edward Loftus, Randy Longman, Pilar Lopez Serrano, Edouard Louis, Maria Helena Louzada Pereira, John Lowe, Stefan Lueth, Milan Lukas, Giovanni Maconi, Finlay Macrae, Laszlo Madi-Szabo, Uma Mahadevan-Velayos, Everson Fernando Malluta, Fazia Mana, Peter Mannon, Gerasimos Mantzaris, Ignacio Marin Jimenez, Maria Dolores Martin Arranz, Radu-Bogdan Mateescu, Felipe Mazzoleni, Agnieszka Meder, Ehud Melzer, Jessica Mertens, Konstantinos Mimidis, Brent Mitchell, Tamas Molnar, Gregory Moore, Luis Alonso Morales Garza, Reme Mountifield, Vinciane Muls, Charles Murray, Bela Nagy, Markus Neurath, Augustin Nguyen, Remo Panaccione, William Pandak, Julian Panes Diaz, Jihye Park, Luca Pastorelli, Bhaktasharan Patel, Markus Peck-Radosavljevic, Gyula Pecsi, Farhad Peerani, Javier Perez Gisbert, Martin Pesta, Robert Petryka, Raymond Phillips, Marieke Pierik, Vijayalakshmi Pratha, Vlastimil Prochazka, Istvan Racz, Graham Radford-Smith, Daniel Ramos Castañeda, Odery Ramos Júnior, Jaroslaw Regula, Jean-Marie Reimund, Bryan Robbins, Xavier Roblin, Francesca Rogai, Gerhard Rogler, Jerzy Rozciecha, David Rubin, Azalia Yuriria Ruiz Flores, Maciej Rupinski, Grazyna Rydzewska, Sumona Saha, Simone Saibeni, Agnes Salamon, Zoltan Sallo, Bruce Salzberg, Douglas Samuel, Sunil Samuel, William Sandborn, Edoardo Vincenzo Savarino, Anja Schirbel, Robert Schnabel, Stefan Schreiber, John Scott, Shahriar Sedghi, Frank Seibold, Jakob Seidelin, Ursula Seidler, Ahmad Shaban, Ira Shafran, Aasim Sheikh, Alex Sherman, Haim Shirin, Patryk Smolinski, Geun Am Song, Konstantinos Soufleris, Alexander Speight, Dirk Staessen, Andreas Stallmach, Michael Staun, Daniel Stein, Hillary Steinhart, Jonathas Stifft, David Stokesberry, Andreas Sturm, Keith Sultan, Gyorgy Szekely, Kuldeep Tagore, Hugo Tanno, Lena Thin, Syed Thiwan, Carlton Thomas, Michal Tichy, Gabor Tamas Toth, Zsolt Tulassay, Jan Ulbrych, John Valentine, Marta Varga, Eduardo Vasconcellos, Byron Vaughn, Brenda Velasco, Francisco Velazquez, Severine Vermeire, Erica Villa, Aron Vincze, Harald Vogelsang, Miroslava Volfova, Lucine Vuitton, Petr Vyhnalek, Peter Wahab, Jens Walldorf, Mattitiahu Waterman, John Weber, L. Michael Weiss, Anna Wiechowska-Kozlowska, Elise Wiesner, Thomas Witthoeft, Robert Wohlman, Barbara Wozniak-Stolarska, Bruce Yacyshyn, Byong-Duk Ye, Ziad Younes, Lígia Yukie Sassaki, Cyrla Zaltman, Stefan Zeuzem, Neurosurgery, ANS - Neurovascular Disorders, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Peyrin-Biroulet L., Hart A., Bossuyt P., Long M., Allez M., Juillerat P., Armuzzi A., Loftus E.V., Ostad-Saffari E., Scalori A., Oh Y.S., Tole S., Chai A., Pulley J., Lacey S., Sandborn W.J., Aguilar H., Ahmad T., Akriviadis E., Aldeguer Mante X., Altorjay I., Ananthakrishnan A., Andersen V., Andreu Garcia M., Aumais G., Avni-Biron I., Axler J., Ayub K., Baert F., Bafutto M., Bamias G., Bassan I., Baum C., Beaugerie L., Behm B., Bekal P., Bennett M., Bermejo San Jose F., Bernstein C., Bettenworth D., Bhaskar S., Biancone L., Bilir B., Blaeker M., Bloom S., Bohman V., Bosques Padilla F.J., Bouhnik Y., Bouma G., Bourdages R., Brand S., Bressler B., Bruckner M., Buening C., Carbonnel F., Caves T., Chapman J., Cheon J.H., Chiba N., Chioncel C., Christodoulou D., Clodi M., Cohen A., Corazza G.R., Corlin R., Cosintino R., Cummings F., Dalal R., Danese S., De Maeyer M., De Magalhaes Francesconi C.F., De Silva A., Debinski H., Desreumaux P., Dewit O., D'Haens G., Di Felice Boratto S., Ding J.N., Dixon T., Dryden G., Du Vall G.A., Ebert M., Echarri Piudo A., Ehehalt R., Elkhashab M., Ennis C., Etzel J., Fallingborg J., Feagan B., Fejes R., Ferraz de Campos Mazo D., Ferreira de Almeida Borges V., Fischer A., Fixelle A., Fleisher M., Fowler S., Freilich B., Friedenberg K., Fries W., Fulop C., Fumery M., Fuster S., G Kiss G., Garcia Lopez S., Gassner S., Gill K., Gilletta de Saint Joseph C., Ginsburg P., Gionchetti P., Goldin E., Goldis A.-E., Gomez Jaramillo H.A., Gonciarz M., Gordon G., Green D., Grimaud J.-C., Guajardo Rodriguez R., Gurzo Z., Gutierrez A., Gyokeres T., Hahm K.B., Hanauer S., Hanson J., Harlan III W., Hasselblatt P., Hayee B., Hebuterne X., Hendy P., Heyman M., Higgins P., Hilal R., Hindryckx P., Hoentjen F., Hoffmann P., Holtkamp-Endemann F., Holtmann G., Horvat G., Howaldt S., Huber S., Ibegbu I., Iborra Colomino M.I., Irving P., Isaacs K., Jagarlamudi K., Jain R., Jankiel Miszputen S., Jansen J., Jones J., Karagiannis J., Karyotakis N., Kaser A., Katz L., Katz S., Kaur N., Kazenaite E., Khanna R., Khurana S., Kim J.S., Kim Y.-H., Kim S.K., Kim D., Klaus J., Kleczkowski D., Kohout P., Korczowski B., Kouklakis G., Koutroubakis I., Krause R., Kristof T., Kronborg I., Krummenerl A., Kupcinskas L., Laborda Molteni J., Laharie D., Lahat-zok A., Lee J., Lee K.-M., Leong R., Levine H., Limdi J., Lindsay J., Lodhia N., Loftus E., Longman R., Lopez Serrano P., Louis E., Louzada Pereira M.H., Lowe J., Lueth S., Lukas M., Maconi G., Macrae F., Madi-Szabo L., Mahadevan-Velayos U., Malluta E.F., Mana F., Mannon P., Mantzaris G., Marin Jimenez I., Martin Arranz M.D., Mateescu R.-B., Mazzoleni F., Meder A., Melzer E., Mertens J., Mimidis K., Mitchell B., Molnar T., Moore G., Morales Garza L.A., Mountifield R., Muls V., Murray C., Nagy B., Neurath M., Nguyen A., Panaccione R., Pandak W., Panes Diaz J., Park J., Pastorelli L., Patel B., Peck-Radosavljevic M., Pecsi G., Peerani F., Perez Gisbert J., Pesta M., Petryka R., Phillips R., Pierik M., Pratha V., Prochazka V., Racz I., Radford-Smith G., Ramos Castaneda D., Ramos Junior O., Regula J., Reimund J.-M., Robbins B., Roblin X., Rogai F., Rogler G., Rozciecha J., Rubin D., Ruiz Flores A.Y., Rupinski M., Rydzewska G., Saha S., Saibeni S., Salamon A., Sallo Z., Salzberg B., Samuel D., Samuel S., Sandborn W., Savarino E.V., Schirbel A., Schnabel R., Schreiber S., Scott J., Sedghi S., Seibold F., Seidelin J., Seidler U., Shaban A., Shafran I., Sheikh A., Sherman A., Shirin H., Smolinski P., Song G.A., Soufleris K., Speight A., Staessen D., Stallmach A., Staun M., Stein D., Steinhart H., Stifft J., Stokesberry D., Sturm A., Sultan K., Szekely G., Tagore K., Tanno H., Thin L., Thiwan S., Thomas C., Tichy M., Toth G.T., Tulassay Z., Ulbrych J., Valentine J., Varga M., Vasconcellos E., Vaughn B., Velasco B., Velazquez F., Vermeire S., Villa E., Vincze A., Vogelsang H., Volfova M., Vuitton L., Vyhnalek P., Wahab P., Walldorf J., Waterman M., Weber J., Weiss L.M., Wiechowska-Kozlowska A., Wiesner E., Witthoeft T., Wohlman R., Wozniak-Stolarska B., Yacyshyn B., Ye B.-D., Younes Z., Yukie Sassaki L., Zaltman C., and Zeuzem S.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Ulcerative Colitis Flare ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Adolescent ,Oceania ,Population ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Injections, Subcutaneou ,Placebo ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,Middle East ,Young Adult ,Maintenance therapy ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Gastrointestinal Agent ,medicine ,Adverse effect ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitor ,education.field_of_study ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Remission Induction ,Gastroenterology ,Middle Aged ,South America ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Etrolizumab ,North America ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business ,Inflammatory diseases Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 5] ,Human - Abstract
Summary Background Etrolizumab is a gut-targeted, anti-β7 integrin, monoclonal antibody. In an earlier phase 2 induction study, etrolizumab significantly improved clinical remission compared with placebo in patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of etrolizumab in patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis who had been previously treated with anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) agents. Methods HICKORY was a multicentre, phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in adult (18–80 years) patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (Mayo Clinic total score [MCS] of 6–12 with an endoscopic subscore of ≥2, a rectal bleeding subscore of ≥1, and a stool frequency subscore of ≥1) previously treated with TNF inhibitors. Patients were recruited from 184 treatment centres across 24 countries in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Oceania, and the Middle East. Patients needed to have an established diagnosis of ulcerative colitis for at least 3 months, corroborated by both clinical and endoscopic evidence, and evidence of disease extending at least 20 cm from the anal verge. In cohort 1, patients received open-label etrolizumab 105 mg every 4 weeks for a 14-week induction period. In cohort 2, patients were randomly assigned (4:1) to receive subcutaneous etrolizumab 105 mg or placebo every 4 weeks for the 14-week induction phase. Patients in either cohort achieving clinical response to etrolizumab induction were eligible for the maintenance phase, in which they were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive subcutaneous etrolizumab 105 mg or placebo every 4 weeks through to week 66. Randomisation was stratified by baseline concomitant treatment with corticosteroids, concomitant treatment with immunosuppressants (induction randomisation only), baseline disease activity, week 14 MCS remission status (maintenance randomisation only), and induction cohort (maintenance randomisation only). All patients and study site personnel were masked to treatment assignment. Primary endpoints were remission (Mayo Clinic total score [MCS] ≤2, with individual subscores of ≤1 and a rectal bleeding subscore of 0) at week 14, and remission at week 66 among patients with a clinical response (MCS with ≥3-point decrease and ≥30% reduction from baseline, plus ≥1 point decrease in rectal bleeding subscore or absolute rectal bleeding score of 0 or 1) at week 14. Efficacy was analysed using a modified intent-to-treat population. Safety analyses included all patients who received at least one dose of study drug during the induction phase. This study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT02100696 . Findings HICKORY was conducted from May 21, 2014, to April 16, 2020, during which time 1081 patients were screened, and 609 deemed eligible for inclusion. 130 patients were included in cohort 1. In cohort 2,479 patients were randomly assigned to the induction phase (etrolizumab n=384, placebo n=95). 232 patients were randomly assigned to the maintenance phase (etrolizumab to etrolizumab n=117, etrolizumab to placebo n=115). At week 14, 71 (18·5%) of 384 patients in the etrolizumab group and six (6·3%) of 95 patients in the placebo group achieved the primary induction endpoint of remission (p=0·0033). No significant difference between etrolizumab and placebo was observed for the primary maintenance endpoint of remission at week 66 among patients with a clinical response at week 14 (27 [24·1%] of 112 vs 23 [20·2%] of 114; p=0·50). Four patients in the etrolizumab group reported treatment-related adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation. The proportion of patients reporting at least adverse event was similar between treatment groups for induction (etrolizumab 253 [66%] of 384; placebo 63 [66%] of 95) and maintenance (etrolizumab to etrolizumab 98 [88%] of 112; etrolizumab to placebo 97 [85%] of 114). The most common adverse event in both groups was ulcerative colitis flare. Most adverse events were mild or moderate. During induction, the most common serious adverse event was ulcerative colitis flare (etrolizumab ten [3%] of 384; placebo: two [2%] of 95). During maintenance, the most common serious adverse event in the etrolizumab to etrolizumab group was appendicitis (two [2%] of 112) and the most common serious adverse events in the etrolizumab to placebo group were ulcerative colitis flare (two [2%] of 114) and anaemia (two [2%] of 114). Interpretation HICKORY demonstrated that a significantly higher proportion of patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis who had been previously treated with anti-TNF agent were able to achieve remission at week 14 when treated with etrolizumab compared with placebo; however, there was no significant difference between groups in remission at week 66 among patients with a clinical response at week 14. Funding F Hoffmann-La Roche.
- Published
- 2022
210. In the shadow of displaceability
- Author
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Mukherjee, A., Wickramasinghe, N.K., Sunderason, S., Ennis, C., Lucassen, L., Sen, S., Schendel, W. van, and Leiden University
- Subjects
Refugees ,Caste ,Identity ,Enumeration ,Citizenship ,Displacement ,Dalit ,Migrants - Abstract
In this dissertation I have explored contemporary modes of displacement and citizenship in India. Rather than large-scale spectacular dislocations which are a focus of ‘refugee’ studies or set patterns of ‘voluntary’ population movement which come under the rubric of ‘migration’ studies, I am interested in low-key everyday forms of displacements which fall through these categories of understanding, are invisible, and remain undiscussed. I have explored everyday forms of displacement through Oren Yiftachel’s (2020) concept of displaceability. I draw on two case studies of two different displaced groups in Calcutta and North 24 Parganas in West Bengal: i) East Bengali dalit refugees coming from East Bengal (present day Bangladesh) to West Bengal and ii) a group of peripatetic impoverished rural people coming from the villages of Bangladesh and West Bengal to the urban agglomeration around Calcutta. The time frame of the dissertation is from the beginning of the Second World War in 1939 till the present. I have utilised the concept of displaceability to show how these groups are kept in a condition of permanent temporariness through deliberate state policies and how this erodes their citizenship. Displaceability expands understanding of displacement from an act to a systemic condition of informal urban living. In displaceable conditions actual displacements or the potential threats of it are utilised as an administrative tool to extract services from the urban poor and coerce them into participating in unequal political exchanges. My study shows that while these refugees and migrants become displaceable through state mechanisms, they negotiate this condition through their own brands of politics from below.
- Published
- 2021
211. 522 - ARE THE GASTROKINETIC PROPERTIES OF DOMPERIDONE RELATED TO DOPAMINE AND SECRETIN ANTAGONISM IN THE GASTRIC WALL?
- Author
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Van Nueten, J.M., Helsen, L., and Ennis, C.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. DESALINATION PLANTS USING HIGHER STEAM PRESSURES.
- Author
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Ennis, C
- Published
- 1969
213. DESALTED WATER AS A COMPETITIVE COMMODITY.
- Author
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Ennis, C
- Published
- 1967
214. Vacuum-ultraviolet irradiation of pyridine:acetylene ices relevant to Titan astrochemistry.
- Author
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Lopes Cavalcante L, Czaplinski EC, Maynard-Casely HE, Cable ML, Chaouche-Mechidal N, Hodyss R, and Ennis C
- Abstract
Nitrogen-containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (NPAHs) are important molecules for astrochemistry and prebiotic chemistry, as their occurrence spans from interstellar molecular clouds to planetary systems. Their formation has been previously explored in gas phase experiments, but the role of solid-state chemical reactions in their formation under cryogenic conditions remains elusive. Here, we explore the formation of NPAHs through vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) irradiation of pyridine:acetylene ices in amorphous and co-crystalline phases, with the aim to simulate conditions relevant to the interstellar medium and Titan's atmosphere. Our results show that the synthesis of ethynylpyridines from VUV-irradiated pyridine:acetylene amorphous ices is achievable at 18 K. In the co-crystal phase, photolysis at 110 K leads to the formation of NPAHs such as quinolizinium+ and precursors, reflecting a dynamical system under our conditions. In contrast, irradiation at 90 K under stable conditions did not produce volatile photoproducts. These results suggest that such chemical processes can occur in Titan's atmosphere and potentially in its stratosphere, where the co-condensation of these molecules can form composite ices. Concurrently, the formation of stable co-crystals can influence the depletion rates of pyridine, which suggests that these structures can be preserved and potentially delivered to Titan's surface. Our findings provide insights into the molecular diversity and chemical evolution of organic matter on Titan, crucial for future space exploration missions, such as the Dragonfly mission, which may uncover higher-order organics derived from pyridine precursors on Titan's surface.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. A Method for Efficient De-identification of DICOM Metadata and Burned-in Pixel Text.
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Macdonald JA, Morgan KR, Konkel B, Abdullah K, Martin M, Ennis C, Lo JY, Stroo M, Snyder DC, and Bashir MR
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- Humans, Computer Security, Radiology Information Systems, Diagnostic Imaging methods, Metadata
- Abstract
De-identification of DICOM images is an essential component of medical image research. While many established methods exist for the safe removal of protected health information (PHI) in DICOM metadata, approaches for the removal of PHI "burned-in" to image pixel data are typically manual, and automated high-throughput approaches are not well validated. Emerging optical character recognition (OCR) models can potentially detect and remove PHI-bearing text from medical images but are very time-consuming to run on the high volume of images found in typical research studies. We present a data processing method that performs metadata de-identification for all images combined with a targeted approach to only apply OCR to images with a high likelihood of burned-in text. The method was validated on a dataset of 415,182 images across ten modalities representative of the de-identification requests submitted at our institution over a 20-year span. Of the 12,578 images in this dataset with burned-in text of any kind, only 10 passed undetected with the method. OCR was only required for 6050 images (1.5% of the dataset)., (© 2024. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Microwave Spectroscopy of Chiral Astrochemical Candidate Vinyloxirane: The Missing Gauche Conformer.
- Author
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Alasmari A, Medcraft C, Rolfe K, Ennis C, and Robertson EG
- Abstract
The recent detection of a chiral molecule, propylene oxide, in the interstellar medium provides impetus for investigation of related analogues as candidates for discovery of a second chiral species. Vinyloxirane (VO) shares many of the characteristics of propylene oxide that favored its remote detection such as modest size, appreciable dipole moment and modest adsorption to water ice. The microwave spectrum of vinyloxirane at room temperature has been studied in the 18 - 26 GHz region. Rotational transitions of the previously undetected gauche -1 conformer have been assigned and fitted. The quantum number range of anti conformer transitions has been greatly expanded, providing improved molecular constants. Vibrational satellite transitions were assigned and fitted for the lowest frequency ν
27 torsion mode, for 2ν27 , and for the ν26 C=CC bend of anti VO, along with ν27 satellites of gauche -1. The rovibrational analyses were assisted by anharmonic vibrational calculations at B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-PVTZ, B2PLYPD3/cc-pVTZ, and DSDPBEP86/cc-pVTZ levels. Experimental peak intensities provide a population ratio Ngauche-1 / Nanti of 0.36 ± 0.06, corresponding to a Gibbs free energy difference of 2.5 ± 0.4 kJ mol-1 in favor of the anti , is optimized at -35° to favor an intramolecular C gauche -1 conformer, the torsional angle between vinyl group and oxirane ring, τC=CCM , is optimized at -35° to favor an intramolecular Cvinyl H11 of + 74° suffers from C gauche -2 conformer with τC=CCM of + 74° suffers from Cvinyl H11 ...HCcyclopropyl repulsion so that it is calculated to be 8-9 kJ mol-1 higher than gauche -1. Reinterpretation of earlier Raman spectra suggests that the gauche -2 conformer had not been observed as reported.- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
217. A Review of Recent Low-dose Research and Recommendations for Moving Forward.
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Wilson C, Adams GG, Patel P, Windham K, Ennis C, and Caffrey E
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- Humans, Risk Assessment, Radiation Protection standards, Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation, Radiation Injuries prevention & control, Radiation Dosage
- Abstract
Abstract: The linear no-threshold (LNT) model has been the regulatory "law of the land" for decades. Despite the long-standing use of LNT, there is significant ongoing scientific disagreement on the applicability of LNT to low-dose radiation risk. A review of the low-dose risk literature of the last 10 y does not provide a clear answer, but rather the body of literature seems to be split between LNT, non-linear risk functions (e.g., supra- or sub-linear), and hormetic models. Furthermore, recent studies have started to explore whether radiation can play a role in the development of several non-cancer effects, such as heart disease, Parkinson's disease, and diabetes, the mechanisms of which are still being explored. Based on this review, there is insufficient evidence to replace LNT as the regulatory model despite the fact that it contributes to public radiophobia, unpreparedness in radiation emergency response, and extreme cleanup costs both following radiological or nuclear incidents and for routine decommissioning of nuclear power plants. Rather, additional research is needed to further understand the implications of low doses of radiation. The authors present an approach to meaningfully contribute to the science of low-dose research that incorporates machine learning and Edisonian approaches to data analysis., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Health Physics Society.)
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- 2024
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218. Improving eSource Site Start-Up Practices.
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Cramer AE, King LS, Buckley MT, Casteleyn P, Ennis C, Hamidi M, Rodrigues GMC, Snyder DC, Vattikola A, and Eisenstein EL
- Abstract
Background: eSource software that copies patient electronic health record data into a clinical trial electronic case report form holds promise for increasing data quality while reducing data collection, monitoring and source document verification costs. Integrating eSource into multicenter clinical trial start-up procedures could facilitate the use of eSource technologies in clinical trials., Methods: We conducted a qualitative integrative analysis to identify eSource site start-up key steps, challenges that might occur in executing those steps, and potential solutions to those challenges. We then conducted a value analysis to determine the challenges and solutions with the greatest impacts for eSource implementation teams., Results: There were 16 workshop participants: 10 pharmaceutical sponsor, 3 academic site, and 1 eSource vendor representatives. Participants identified 36 Site Start-Up Key Steps, 11 Site Start-Up Challenges, and 14 Site Start-Up Solutions for eSource-enabled studies. Participants also identified 77 potential impacts of the Challenges upon the Site Start-Up Key Steps and 70 ways in which the Solutions might impact Site Start-Up Challenges. The most important Challenges were: (1) not being able to identify a site eSource champion and (2) not agreeing on an eSource approach. The most important Solutions were: (1) vendors accepting electronic data in the FHIR standard, (2) creating standard content for eSource-related legal documents, and (3) creating a common eSource site readiness checklist., Conclusions: Site start-up for eSource-enabled multi-center clinical trials is a complex socio-technical problem. This study's Start-Up Solutions provide a basic infrastructure for scalable eSource implementation., Competing Interests: CONFLICT OF INTEREST STATEMENT Amy E. Cramer: Employment, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine Linda S. King: Employment, Astellas Pharma Michael T. Buckley: Employment, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Peter Casteleyn: Employment, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine Cory Ennis: Employment: Duke University School of Medicine Muayad Hamidi: Employment: UT Health San Antonio Gonçalo M. C. Rodrigues: Employment, Janssen-Cilag Denise C. Snyder: Employment, Duke University School of Medicine Aruna Vattikola: Employment, Merck & Co Eric L. Eisenstein: I have nothing to declare Additional Declarations: Competing interest reported. Amy E. Cramer: Employment, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine Linda S. King: Employment, Astellas Pharma Michael T. Buckley: Employment, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Peter Casteleyn: Employment, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine Cory Ennis: Employment: Duke University School of Medicine Muayad Hamidi: Employment: UT Health San Antonio Gonçalo M. C. Rodrigues: Employment, Janssen-Cilag Denise C. Snyder: Employment, Duke University School of Medicine Aruna Vattikola: Employment, Merck & Co Eric L. Eisenstein: I have nothing to declare
- Published
- 2024
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219. Dual-Lifetime Referencing ( t -DLR) Optical Fiber Fluorescent pH Sensor for Microenvironments.
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Chen WH, Armstrong E, Dillingham PW, Moratti SC, Ennis C, and McGraw CM
- Abstract
The pH behavior in the μm to cm thick diffusion boundary layer (DBL) surrounding many aquatic species is dependent on light-controlled metabolic activities. This DBL microenvironment exhibits different pH behavior to bulk seawater, which can reduce the exposure of calcifying species to ocean acidification conditions. A low-cost time-domain dual-lifetime referencing ( t -DLR) interrogation system and an optical fiber fluorescent pH sensor were developed for pH measurements in the DBL interface. The pH sensor utilized dual-layer sol-gel coatings of pH-sensitive iminocoumarin and pH-insensitive Ru(dpp)
3 -PAN. The sensor has a dynamic range of 7.41 (±0.20) to 9.42 ± 0.23 pH units (95% CI, T = 20 °C, S = 35), a response time ( t90 ) of 29 to 100 s, and minimal salinity dependency. The pH sensor has a precision of approximately 0.02 pHT units, which meets the Global Ocean Acidification Observing Network (GOA-ON) " weather " measurement quality guideline. The suitability of the t -DLR optical fiber pH sensor was demonstrated through real-time measurements in the DBL of green seaweed Ulva sp. This research highlights the practicability of optical fiber pH sensors by demonstrating real-time pH measurements of metabolic-induced pH changes.- Published
- 2023
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220. Simulation of Cocrystal Formation in Planetary Atmospheres: The C 6 H 6 :C 2 H 2 Cocrystal Produced by Gas Deposition.
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Francis TA, Maynard-Casely HE, Cable ML, Hodyss R, and Ennis C
- Abstract
The formation of molecular cocrystals in condensed aerosol particles has been recently proposed as an efficient pathway for generation of complex organics in Titan's atmosphere. It follows that cocrystal precipitation may facilitate the transport of biologically important precursors to the surface to be sequestered in an organic karstic and sand environment. Recent laboratory studies on these planetary minerals have predominantly synthesized cocrystals by the controlled freezing of binary mixtures from the liquid phase, allowing for their structural and spectroscopic characterization. However, these techniques are perhaps not best representative of aerosol nucleation and growth microphysics in planetary atmospheres. Herein, we report the first synthesis of the known 1:1 C
6 H6 :C2 H2 cocrystal using vapor deposition methods onto a cryogenically cooled substrate. Subsequent transmission FTIR spectroscopy has confirmed the formation of the empirical C6 H6 :C2 H2 cocrystal structure via the observation of diagnostic infrared spectral features. Predicted by periodic-DFT calculations, altered vibrational profiles depict a changing site symmetry of the C6 H6 and C2 H2 components after transition to the cocrystal unit cell geometry. The 80 K temperature of the cocrystal phase transition overlaps with the condensation curves obtained for both species in Titan's lower stratosphere, revealing that the cocrystal may act as an important environment for photo- and radio-lytic processes leading to the formation of higher order organics in Titan's atmosphere. Such solid-state astrochemistry can now be pursued in oxygen-free laboratory settings under (ultra)high vacuum using standard surface science setups.- Published
- 2023
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221. Addressing Barriers in Access to Mental Health Care Within the Veterans Health Administration: Evidence-Based Psychotherapies for Anxiety and Related Disorders.
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R Ennis C, M Raines A, A Aldea M, O Shapiro M, M Crowe C, and Franklin CL
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- Humans, United States, Mental Health, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Psychotherapy, Anxiety, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Accessibility, Veterans Health, Veterans psychology
- Published
- 2023
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222. Water Sorption Controls Extreme Single-Crystal-to-Single-Crystal Molecular Reorganization in Hydrogen Bonded Organic Frameworks.
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Boer SA, Conte L, Tarzia A, Huxley MT, Gardiner MG, Appadoo DRT, Ennis C, Doonan CJ, Richardson C, and White NG
- Abstract
As hydrogen bonded frameworks are held together by relatively weak interactions, they often form several different frameworks under slightly different synthesis conditions and respond dynamically to stimuli such as heat and vacuum. However, these dynamic restructuring processes are often poorly understood. In this work, three isoreticular hydrogen bonded organic frameworks assembled through charge-assisted amidinium⋅⋅⋅carboxylate hydrogen bonds (1
C/C , 1Si/C and 1Si/Si ) are studied. Three distinct phases for 1C/C and four for 1Si/C and 1Si/Si are fully structurally characterized. The transitions between these phases involve extreme yet recoverable molecular-level framework reorganization. It is demonstrated that these transformations are related to water content and can be controlled by humidity, and that the non-porous anhydrous phase of 1C/C shows reversible water sorption through single crystal to crystal restructuring. This mechanistic insight opens the way for the future use of the inherent dynamism present in hydrogen bonded frameworks., (© 2022 The Authors. Chemistry - A European Journal published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2022
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223. An evaluation of the safety and effectiveness of telephone triage in prioritising patient visits to an ophthalmic emergency department - the impact of COVID-19.
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Hanrahan G, Ennis C, Conway M, Murtagh P, and Brosnahan D
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- Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Pandemics, Prospective Studies, Telephone, COVID-19, Triage methods
- Abstract
Background: During the COVID-19 crisis, a new nurse and doctor-led telephone triage model of care was evaluated as a method of prioritising essential visits to the ophthalmic accident and emergency department in the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital. This new method of service is known as "Telehealth" or "E-Health"., Aims: To assess the safety and efficacy of a Telehealth model of care ultilised during the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: A prospective study was undertaken in the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear Hospital where the telephone triage records were examined over a 28-day period during the COVID-19 pandemic from 19 March 2020 to 16 April 2020 inclusive., Results: During this period, 1120 telephone calls were received by the call centre. A total of 739 patients attended the emergency department over the 28-day period compared to 2247 during the same period in 2019., Conclusion: To reduce risk of transmission, the COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated novel ways of interacting with patients and sharing healthcare information. Our new mode of service provision in the RVEEH portrays the effectiveness of Telehealth. This study gives us further scope to improve this model of care into the future., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland.)
- Published
- 2022
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224. Vibrational mode analysis of hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs): synchrotron infrared studies.
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Ennis C, Appadoo DRT, Boer SA, and White NG
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Hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) are a promising class of porous crystalline materials for gas sorption and gas separation technologies that can be constructed under mild synthetic conditions. In forming three-dimensional networks of flexible hydrogen bonds between donor/acceptor subunits, these materials have displayed high stability at elevated temperature and under vacuum. Although the structural properties of HOFs are commonly characterized by diffraction techniques, new complimentary methods to elucidate phase behaviour and host-guest interactions at the molecular level are sought, particularly those that can be applied under changing physical conditions or solvent environment. To this end, this study has applied synchrotron far-IR and mid-IR spectroscopy to probe the properties of two known and one new HOF system assembled from tetrahedral amidinium and carboxylate building blocks. All three frameworks produce feature-rich and resolved infrared profiles from 30 to 4000 cm
-1 that provide information on hydrogen-bonded water solvent networks and the HOF channel topography via lattice and torsional bands. Comparison of experimental peaks to frequencies and atomic displacements (eigenvectors) predicted by high-level periodic DFT calculations have allowed for the assignment of vibrational modes associated with the aforementioned physicochemical properties. Now compiled, the specific vibrational modes identified as common to charge-assisted hydrogen-bonding motifs, as well as low frequency lattice and torsional bands attributed to HOF pore morphology and water-of-hydration networks, can act as diagnostic features in future spectroscopic investigations of HOF properties, such as those toward the design and tuning of host-guest properties for targeted applications.- Published
- 2022
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225. The crystal structure, thermal expansion and far-IR spectrum of propanal (CH 3 CH 2 CHO) determined using powder X-ray diffraction, neutron scattering, periodic DFT and synchrotron techniques.
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Maynard-Casely HE, Yevstigneyev NS, Duyker SG, and Ennis C
- Abstract
The crystal structure of propanal has been determined using powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), where this common laboratory aldehyde is measured to crystallise in spacegroup P 21/ a , Z = 4 with a unit cell a = 8.9833(6) Å, b = 4.2237(2) Å, c = 9.4733(6) Å and β = 97.508(6)°, resulting in a volume of 356.37(4) Å
3 at 100 K and atmospheric pressure. The thermal expansion observed from 100 K until the sample melted (∼164 K) was found to be anisotropic. An additional neutron diffraction study was carried out, reaching a temperature of 3 K and found no further phase transformations from the determined structure at lower temperatures. The investigated temperature regime correlates to astronomical surfaces, including outer Solar System bodies and interstellar dust mantles, where propanal is thought to be generated by energetic processing of composite molecular ices. Results from the structure determination were applied to model propanal ice using periodic density functional theory for the calculation of intermolecular frequencies, where the simulated far-infrared spectrum of solid propanal can now be used for future molecular astronomy.- Published
- 2021
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226. A Rare Complication of Fine-Needle Aspiration of Neck Structures.
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Qadadha YM, Nanda N, Ennis C, and McCulloch T
- Abstract
Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is a generally accepted tool for safe diagnostic evaluation in the workup of lesions and masses. Aside from the commonly discussed risks of infection and minor bleeding related to skin puncture, other more serious complications have been reported sparingly. We present two cases of pneumothorax from FNA of neck structures, which have been theorized but not previously reported to our knowledge. Discussion of cases of this complication rather than solely a theoretical understanding of it will aid in diagnosis and management of this complication., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Yazeed M. Qadadha et al.)
- Published
- 2021
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227. Rigid, biconical hydrogen-bonded dimers that strongly encapsulate cationic guests in solution and the solid state.
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Smith JN, Ennis C, and Lucas NT
- Abstract
The octol of a new rigid, tetraarylene-bridged cavitand was investigated for self-assembly behaviour in solution.
1 H and DOSY NMR spectroscopic experiments show that the cavitand readily dimerizes through an unusual seam of interdigitated hydrogen-bonds that is resistant to disruption by polar co-solvents. The well-defined cavity encapsulates small cationic guests, but not their neutral counterparts, restricting the conformation of sequestered tetraethylammonium in solution and the solid state., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)- Published
- 2021
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228. Distinct evolutionary paths in chronic lymphocytic leukemia during resistance to the graft-versus-leukemia effect.
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Bachireddy P, Ennis C, Nguyen VN, Gohil SH, Clement K, Shukla SA, Forman J, Barkas N, Freeman S, Bavli N, Elagina L, Leshchiner I, Mohammad AW, Mathewson ND, Keskin DB, Rassenti LZ, Kipps TJ, Brown JR, Getz G, Ho VT, Gnirke A, Neuberg D, Soiffer RJ, Ritz J, Alyea EP, Kharchenko PV, and Wu CJ
- Subjects
- Graft vs Leukemia Effect, HLA Antigens, Humans, Transplantation, Homologous, Graft vs Host Disease, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell genetics, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell therapy
- Abstract
Leukemic relapse remains a major barrier to successful allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) for aggressive hematologic malignancies. The basis for relapse of advanced lymphoid malignancies remains incompletely understood and may involve escape from the graft-versus-leukemia (GvL) effect. We hypothesized that for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) treated with allo-HSCT, leukemic cell-intrinsic features influence transplant outcomes by directing the evolutionary trajectories of CLL cells. Integrated genetic, transcriptomic, and epigenetic analyses of CLL cells from 10 patients revealed that the clinical kinetics of post-HSCT relapse are shaped by distinct molecular dynamics. Early relapses after allo-HSCT exhibited notable genetic stability; single CLL cell transcriptional analysis demonstrated a cellular heterogeneity that was static over time. In contrast, CLL cells relapsing late after allo-HSCT displayed notable genetic evolution and evidence of neoantigen depletion, consistent with marked single-cell transcriptional shifts that were unique to each patient. We observed a greater rate of epigenetic change for late relapses not seen in early relapses or relapses after chemotherapy alone, suggesting that the selection pressures of the GvL bottleneck are unlike those imposed by chemotherapy. No selective advantage for human leukocyte antigen (HLA) loss was observed, even when present in pretransplant subpopulations. Gain of stem cell modules was a common signature associated with leukemia relapse regardless of posttransplant relapse kinetics. These data elucidate the biological pathways that underlie GvL resistance and posttransplant relapse., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.)
- Published
- 2020
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229. Crystal structure of propionitrile (CH 3 CH 2 CN) determined using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction.
- Author
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Brand HEA, Gu Q, Kimpton JA, Auchettl R, and Ennis C
- Abstract
The structure and thermal expansion of the astronomical molecule propionitrile have been determined from 100 to 150 K using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. This temperature range correlates with the conditions of Titan's lower stratosphere, and near surface, where propionitrile is thought to accumulate and condense into pure and mixed-nitrile phases. Propionitrile was determined to crystallize in space group, Pnma (No. 62), with unit cell a = 7.56183 (16) Å, b = 6.59134 (14) Å, c = 7.23629 (14), volume = 360.675 (13) Å
3 at 100 K. The thermal expansion was found to be highly anisotropic with an eightfold increase in expansion between the c and b axes. These data will prove crucial in the computational modelling of propionitrile-ice systems in outer Solar System environments, allowing us to simulate and assign vibrational peaks in the infrared spectra for future use in planetary astronomy.- Published
- 2020
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230. The nature of learning tasks and knowledge acquisition:The role of cognitive engagement in physical education.
- Author
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Wang Y, Chen A, Schweighardt R, Zhang T, Wells S, and Ennis C
- Abstract
Acquiring scientific knowledge about physical activity is necessary for students to become physically literate for life, and cognitive engagement and cognitive levels of tasks are two components that often determine the effectiveness of knowledge acquisition. This study sought to determine the extent to which students' cognitive engagement in descriptive, relational and reasoning learning tasks contributed to their acquisition of knowledge and the extent to which cognitive engagement on lower-level tasks contributed to higher-level tasks (e.g. descriptive to relational to reasoning). The performance of students in descriptive, relational and reasoning tasks and knowledge acquisition was measured in 992 middle school students in active physical education lessons. The results revealed that students' performance in relational (regression coefficient 0.09, p < 0.01) and reasoning (regression coefficient = 0.06, p < 0.01) tasks directly contributed to their acquisition of knowledge (R
2 = 0.14). The performance of students in descriptive tasks indirectly contributed to knowledge acquisition through influencing their performance in relational and reasoning tasks (indirect effect = 0.09, p < 0.01)., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.- Published
- 2019
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231. Elementary school students' naïve conceptions and misconceptions about energy in physical education context.
- Author
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Zhang T, Chen A, and Ennis C
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore and reveal naïve conceptions and misconceptions about energy embedded in elementary school students' prior knowledge. Students' performance on standardized knowledge test was used to classify students into low, median and high levels of knowledge about the cardiovascular system. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with students in each group to extract their understanding of energy in relation to food choices, physical activities, and exercises. Analysis of the interview data generated six categories of naïve conceptions and two categories of misconceptions. Different conceptual change theories, including Chi's ontological change theory, Ohlsson's resubsumption theory, and enculturation theory were used to analyze and understand these naïve conceptions and misconceptions and why they could be robust to change. The analyses confirm the need to adopt a multi-theoretical approach to the understanding of students' naïve conceptions and misconceptions (Chinn & Samarapungavan, 2009. Conceptual change-multiple routes, multiple mechanisms: A commentary on Ohlsson. Educational Psychologist , 44 (1), 1-10). The findings encourage physical and health educators adopt different strategies to address the potential learning obstacles brought by students' naïve conceptions and misconceptions., Competing Interests: Disclosure statement No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
- Published
- 2019
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232. The prediction of far-infrared spectra for planetary nitrile ices using periodic density functional theory with comparison to thin film experiments.
- Author
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Ennis C, Auchettl R, Appadoo DRT, and Robertson EG
- Abstract
Future spacecraft missions to planetary systems, Trans-Neptunian objects, and cometary bodies could implement far-infrared surveys to confirm the presence of condensed-phase species via their unique lattice features. For composite molecular ices of astrophysical significance, laboratory reference spectra are required to provide absorption coefficients used to quantify solid-state abundances. However, due to strong intermolecular interactions in polar ice systems, laboratory data of mixed-phase ices are difficult to interpret. In this study we have applied periodic density functional theory code to model bulk molecular crystals. This method allows for more accurate simulation of thin-film spectra than approaches simulating small clusters. For this proof-of-principle study on a series of pure nitrile ices of planetary interest, our simulated far-infrared spectra show excellent agreement to data from thin film studies performed at the Australian Synchrotron (crystalline acetonitrile and propionitrile) and to previously published spectra (hydrogen cyanide, acrylonitrile, cyanoacetylene, and cyanogen). The combined theoretical and experimental approach has provided a new explanation for the asymmetric profile of the hydrogen cyanide lattice feature and a more systematic assignment of nitrile ice absorption bands to low-frequency lattice modes. We nominate prominent absorption features for the detection of crystalline nitrile carriers located on planetary surfaces.
- Published
- 2018
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233. Factor structure and aetiological architecture of the BRIEF: A twin study.
- Author
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Little CW, Taylor J, Moltisanti A, Ennis C, Hart SA, and Schatschneider C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Neuropsychological Tests, Twins, Dizygotic, Twins, Monozygotic, Child Behavior physiology, Child Development physiology, Executive Function physiology, Gene-Environment Interaction, Memory, Short-Term physiology
- Abstract
Executive function is a broad construct that encompasses various processes involved in goal-directed behaviour in non-routine situations (Banich, 2009). The present study uses a sample of 560 5- to 16-year-old twin pairs (M = 11.14, SD = 2.53): 219 monozygotic twin pairs (114 female; 105 male) and 341 dizygotic twin pairs (136 female, 107 male; 98 opposite sex) to extend prior literature by providing information about the factor structure and the genetic and environmental architecture of the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF; Gioia et al., 2000, Child Neuropsychol., 6, 235; Gioia et al., 2000, Behavior rating inventory of executive function, Lutz, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources), a multifaceted rating scale of everyday executive functions. Phenotypic results revealed a 9-scale, 3-factor model best represents the BRIEF structure within the current sample. Results of the genetically sensitive analyses indicated the presence of rater bias/contrast effects for the Initiate, Working Memory, and Task-Monitor scales. Additive genetic and non-shared environmental influences were present for the Initiate, Plan/Organize, Organization of Materials, Shift, and Monitor and Self-Monitor scales. Influences on Emotional Control were solely environmental. Interestingly, the aetiological architecture observed was similar to that of performance-based measures of executive function. This observed similarity provided additional evidence for the usefulness of the BRIEF as a measure of 'everyday' executive function., (© 2015 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2017
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234. Burden of Psychosocial and Cognitive Impairment in Patients With Atrial Fibrillation.
- Author
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Bostrom JA, Saczynski JS, Hajduk A, Donahue K, Rosenthal LS, Browning C, Ennis C, Floyd KC, Richardson H, Esa N, Ogarek J, and McManus DD
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Atrial Fibrillation epidemiology, Atrial Fibrillation psychology, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Cognitive Dysfunction psychology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States epidemiology, Atrial Fibrillation complications, Cognitive Dysfunction economics, Cost of Illness, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Impairments in psychosocial status and cognition relate to poor clinical outcomes in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). However, how often these conditions co-occur and associations between burden of psychosocial and cognitive impairment and quality of life (QoL) have not been systematically examined in patients with AF., Methods: A total of 218 patients with symptomatic AF were enrolled in a prospective study of AF and psychosocial factors between May 2013 and October 2014 at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center. Cognitive function, depression, and anxiety were assessed at baseline and AF-specific QoL was assessed 6 months after enrollment using validated instruments. Demographic and clinical information were obtained from a structured interview and medical record review., Results: The mean age of the study participants was 63.5 ± 10.2 years, 35% were male, and 81% had paroxysmal AF. Prevalences of impairment in 1, 2, and 3 psychosocial/cognitive domains (eg, depression, anxiety, or cognition) were 75 (34.4%), 51 (23.4%), and 16 (7.3%), respectively. Patients with co-occurring psychosocial/cognitive impairments (eg, >1 domain) were older, more likely to smoke, had less education, and were more likely to have heart failure (all P < 0.05). Compared with participants with no psychosocial/cognitive impairments, AF-specific QoL at 6 months was significantly poorer among participants with baseline impairment in 2 (B = -13.6, 95% CI: -21.7 to -5.4) or 3 (B = -15.1, 95% CI: -28.0 to -2.2) psychosocial/cognitive domains., Conclusion: Depression, anxiety, and impaired cognition were common in our cohort of patients with symptomatic AF and often co-occurred. Higher burden of psychosocial/cognitive impairment was associated with poorer AF-specific QoL.
- Published
- 2017
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235. Head and neck nonmelanoma cutaneous malignancy treatment in a skin cancer referral center.
- Author
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Stathopoulos P, Igoumenakis D, Shuttleworth J, Frawley T, Ennis C, Battista E, and Ameerally P
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy, Carcinoma, Basal Cell pathology, Carcinoma, Basal Cell surgery, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell surgery, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Head and Neck Neoplasms pathology, Head and Neck Neoplasms surgery, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Predictive Value of Tests, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Skin Neoplasms surgery, Treatment Outcome, Carcinoma, Basal Cell diagnosis, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell diagnosis, Head and Neck Neoplasms diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of our study was to determine the level of accuracy provided by clinical diagnosis in head and neck cutaneous malignancy as confirmed by histopathologic examination of the specimen in a skin cancer referral center. Positive predictive value was selected as a reliable measure of diagnostic accuracy. We also aimed to audit our surgical outcomes and record and present the completeness of excision, the rates of recurrence and metastasis, and the reconstructive method., Study Design: We reviewed the electronic charts of 867 consecutive patients with skin tumors and calculated the positive and negative predictive values of clinical diagnosis., Results: The positive predictive value was 91% for basal cell carcinoma and 78.8% for squamous cell carcinoma. Of the 178 histologically diagnosed squamous cell carcinomas, 15 were metastatic., Conclusions: In a skin cancer referral center, expert clinical diagnosis may safely overcome the need for preoperative biopsy. Relying on clinical diagnosis to formalize a treatment plan for head and neck nonmelanoma skin cancer is safe and efficient. This is more reliable in cases of basal cell carcinoma compared with suspected squamous cell carcinomas., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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236. Infrared characterisation of acetonitrile and propionitrile aerosols under Titan's atmospheric conditions.
- Author
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Ennis C, Auchettl R, Ruzi M, and Robertson EG
- Abstract
Pure, crystalline acetonitrile (CH
3 CN) and propionitrile (CH3 CH2 CN) particles were formed in a collisional cooling cell allowing for infrared (IR) signatures to be compiled from 50 to 5000 cm-1 . The cell temperature and pressure conditions were controlled to simulate Titan's lower atmosphere (80-130 K and 1-100 mbar), allowing for the comparison of laboratory data to the spectra obtained from the Cassini-Huygens mission. The far-IR features confirmed the morphology of CH3 CN aerosols as the metastable β-phase (monoclinic) ice, however, a specific crystalline phase for CH3 CH2 CN could not be verified. Mie theory and the literature complex refractive indices enabled of the experimental spectra to be modelled. The procedure yielded size distributions for CH3 CN (55-140 nm) and CH3 CH2 CN (140-160 nm) particles. Effective kinetic profiles, tracing the evolution of aerosol band intensities, showed that condensation of CH3 CH2 CN proceeded at twice the rate of CH3 CN aerosols. In addition, the rate of CH3 CH2 CN aerosol depletion via lateral diffusion of the particles from the interrogation volume was approximately 50% faster than that of CH3 CN. The far-IR spectra recorded for both nitrile aerosols did not display absorption profiles that could be attributed to the unassigned 220 cm-1 feature, which has been observed to fluctuate seasonally in the spectra obtained from Titan's atmosphere.- Published
- 2017
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237. Association of Left Atrial Function Index With Late Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence after Catheter Ablation.
- Author
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Sardana M, Ogunsua AA, Spring M, Shaikh A, Asamoah O, Stokken G, Browning C, Ennis C, Donahue JK, Rosenthal LS, Floyd KC, Aurigemma GP, Parikh NI, and McManus DD
- Subjects
- Aged, Area Under Curve, Atrial Fibrillation diagnostic imaging, Atrial Fibrillation physiopathology, Biomarkers blood, Female, Heart Atria diagnostic imaging, Heart Atria physiopathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain blood, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Recurrence, Registries, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Atrial Fibrillation surgery, Atrial Function, Left, Catheter Ablation adverse effects, Echocardiography, Heart Atria surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Although catheter ablation (CA) for atrial fibrillation (AF) is commonly used to improve symptoms, AF recurrence is common and new tools are needed to better inform patient selection for CA. Left atrial function index (LAFI), an echocardiographic measure of atrial mechanical function, has shown promise as a noninvasive predictor of AF. We hypothesized that LAFI would relate to AF recurrence after CA., Methods and Results: All AF patients undergoing index CA were enrolled in a prospective institutional AF Treatment Registry between 2011 and 2014. LAFI was measured post hoc from pre-ablation clinical echocardiographic images in 168 participants. Participants were mostly male (33% female), middle-aged (60 ± 10 years), obese and had paroxysmal AF (64%). Mean LAFI was 25.9 ± 17.6. Over 12 months of follow-up, 78 participants (46%) experienced a late AF recurrence. In logistic regression analyses adjusting for factors known to be associated with AF, lower LAFI remained associated with AF recurrence after CA [OR 0.04 (0.01-0.67), P = 0.02]. LAFI discriminated AF recurrence after CA slightly better than CHADS2 (C-statistic 0.60 LAFI, 0.57 CHADS2). For participants with persistent AF, LAFI performed significantly better than CHADS2 score (C statistic = 0.79 LAFI, 0.56 CHADS2, P = 0.02)., Conclusion: LAFI, an echocardiographic measure of atrial function, is associated with AF recurrence after CA and has improved ability to discriminate AF recurrence as compared to the CHADS-2 score, especially among persistent AF patients. Since LAFI can be calculated using standard 2D echocardiographic images, it may be a helpful tool for predicting AF recurrence., (© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2016
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238. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and insulin resistance in people at high risk of cardiovascular disease: a euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic clamp study.
- Author
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Wallace IR, McKinley MC, McEvoy CT, Hamill LL, Ennis CN, McGinty A, Bell PM, Patterson CC, Woodside JV, Young IS, and Hunter SJ
- Subjects
- Cardiovascular Diseases, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Middle Aged, Overweight, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Context: In observational studies, low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) concentration is associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). Increasing serum 25-OHD may have beneficial effects on insulin resistance or beta-cell function. Cross-sectional studies utilizing suboptimal methods for assessment of insulin sensitivity and serum 25-OHD concentration provide conflicting results., Objective: This study examined the relationship between serum 25-OHD concentration and insulin resistance in healthy overweight individuals at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, using optimal assessment techniques., Methods: A total of 92 subjects (mean age 56·0, SD 6·0 years), who were healthy but overweight (mean body mass index 30·9, SD 2·3 kg/m(2) ), underwent assessments of insulin sensitivity (two-step euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic clamp, HOMA2-IR), beta-cell function (HOMA2%B), serum 25-OHD concentration and body composition (DEXA)., Results: Mean total 25-OHD concentration was 32·2, range 21·8-46·6 nmol/l. No association was demonstrated between serum 25-OHD concentration and insulin resistance., Conclusions: In this study using optimal assessment techniques to measure 25-OHD concentration, insulin sensitivity and body composition, there was no association between serum 25-OHD concentration and insulin resistance in healthy, overweight individuals at high risk of developing cardiovascular disease. This study suggests the documented inverse association between serum 25-OHD concentration and risk of type 2 DM is not mediated by a relationship between serum 25-OHD concentration and insulin resistance., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
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239. Addition of B-Type Natriuretic Peptide to Existing Clinical Risk Scores Enhances Identification of Patients at Risk for Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence After Pulmonary Vein Isolation.
- Author
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Shaikh AY, Esa N, Martin-Doyle W, Kinno M, Nieto I, Floyd KC, Browning C, Ennis C, Donahue JK, Rosenthal LS, and McManus DD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Atrial Fibrillation blood, Catheter Ablation methods, Cohort Studies, Cryosurgery methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Preoperative Period, Prognosis, Recurrence, Risk Assessment, Treatment Outcome, Atrial Fibrillation surgery, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain blood, Pulmonary Veins surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Predicting which patients will be free from atrial fibrillation (AF) after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) remains challenging. Clinical risk prediction scores show modest ability to identify patients at risk for AF recurrence after PVI. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is associated with risk for incident and recurrent AF but is not currently included in existing AF risk scores. We sought to evaluate the incremental benefit of adding preoperative BNP to existing risk scores for predicting AF recurrence during the 6 months after PVI., Methods: One hundred sixty-one patients with paroxysmal or persistent AF underwent an index PVI procedure between 2010 and 2013; 77 patients (48%) had late AF recurrence after PVI (>3 months post-PVI) over the 6-month follow-up period., Results: A BNP greater than or equal to 100 pg/dL (P=0.01) and AF recurrence within 3 months after PVI (P<0.001) were associated with late AF recurrence in multivariate analyses. Addition of BNP to existing clinical risk scores significantly improved the areas under the curve for each score, with an integrated discrimination improvement of 0.08 (P=0.001) and a net reclassification improvement of 60% (P=0.001) for all risk scores., Conclusions: Circulating BNP levels are independently associated with late AF recurrence after PVI. Inclusion of BNP significantly improves the discriminative ability of CHADS2, CHA2DS2-VASc, R2CHADS2, and the HATCH score in predicting clinically significant, late AF recurrence after PVI and should be incorporated in decision-making algorithms for management of AF. B-R2CHADS2 is the best score model for prediction of late AF recurrence.
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- 2015
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240. Atypical development of white matter microstructure of the corpus callosum in males with autism: a longitudinal investigation.
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Travers BG, Tromp do PM, Adluru N, Lange N, Destiche D, Ennis C, Nielsen JA, Froehlich AL, Prigge MB, Fletcher PT, Anderson JS, Zielinski BA, Bigler ED, Lainhart JE, and Alexander AL
- Abstract
Background: The corpus callosum is the largest white matter structure in the brain, and it is the most consistently reported to be atypical in diffusion tensor imaging studies of autism spectrum disorder. In individuals with typical development, the corpus callosum is known to undergo a protracted development from childhood through young adulthood. However, no study has longitudinally examined the developmental trajectory of corpus callosum in autism past early childhood., Methods: The present study used a cohort sequential design over 9 years to examine age-related changes of the corpus callosum in 100 males with autism and 56 age-matched males with typical development from early childhood (when autism can first be reliably diagnosed) to mid-adulthood (after development of the corpus callosum has been completed) (3 to 41 years of age)., Results: The group with autism demonstrated a different developmental trajectory of white matter microstructure in the anterior corpus callosum's (genu and body) fractional anisotropy, which suggests atypical brain maturation in these regions in autism. When analyses were broken down by age group, atypical developmental trajectories were present only in the youngest participants (10 years of age and younger). Significant main effects for group were found in terms of decreased fractional anisotropy across all three subregions of the corpus callosum (genu, body, and splenium) and increased mean diffusivity, radial diffusivity, and axial diffusivity in the posterior corpus callosum., Conclusions: These longitudinal results suggest atypical early childhood development of the corpus callosum microstructure in autism that transitions into sustained group differences in adolescence and adulthood. This pattern of results provides longitudinal evidence consistent with a growing number of published studies and hypotheses regarding abnormal brain connectivity across the life span in autism.
- Published
- 2015
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241. How to eliminate the "perverse incentive" in medicine: health savings accounts.
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Ennis C
- Subjects
- Humans, Health Care Costs, Health Services Accessibility, Hospitalization economics, Insurance, Health economics
- Published
- 2015
242. Constructing cardiovascular fitness knowledge in physical education.
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Zhang T, Chen A, Chen S, Hong D, Loflin J, and Ennis C
- Abstract
In physical education, it has become necessary for children to learn kinesiological knowledge for understanding the benefits of physical activity and developing a physically active lifestyle. This study was conducted to determine the extent to which cognitive assignments about healthful living and fitness contributed to knowledge growth on cardiorespiratory fitness and health. Fourth grade students ( N = 616) from 15 randomly sampled urban elementary schools completed 34 cognitive assignments related to the cardiorespiratory physical activities they were engaged in across 10 lessons. Performance on the assignments were analyzed in relation to their knowledge gain measured using a standardized knowledge test. A multivariate discriminant analysis revealed that the cognitive assignments contributed to knowledge gain but the contribution varied assignment by assignment. A multiple regression analysis indicated that students' assignment performance by lesson contributed positively to their knowledge growth scores. A content analysis based on the constructivist learning framework showed that observing-reasoning assignments contributed the most to knowledge growth. Analytical and analytical-application assignments contributed less than the constructivist theories would predict.
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- 2014
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243. Effect of eplerenone on insulin action in essential hypertension: a randomised, controlled, crossover study.
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McMurray EM, Wallace IR, Ennis C, Hunter SJ, Atkinson AB, and Bell PM
- Subjects
- Blood Glucose analysis, Cross-Over Studies, Double-Blind Method, Eplerenone, Essential Hypertension, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Spironolactone pharmacology, Hypertension metabolism, Insulin pharmacology, Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Spironolactone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
An association exists between hyperaldosteronism, hypertension and impaired insulin action. Eplerenone is a selective mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist; however, little is known about its effects on insulin action. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of eplerenone on insulin action in hypertensive adults, using the hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp. A randomised, controlled, double-blind, crossover design was employed. After a 6-week washout period, hypertensive, non-diabetic patients were treated with either eplerenone 25 mg twice daily or doxazosin 2 mg twice daily for 12 weeks. After each treatment period, insulin action was assessed by a hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp, with isotope dilution methodology. After washout, treatment groups were crossed over. Fifteen patients completed the study. There were no differences in fasting glucose, or fasting insulin between treatment with eplerenone or doxazosin. The measure of overall insulin sensitivity, exogenous glucose infusion rates during the last 30 min of the clamp, was similar with both treatments; 23.4 (3.9) μmol kg(-1) min(-1) after eplerenone and 23.3 (3.6) μmol kg(-1) min(-1) after doxazosin (P=0.83). Isotopically determined fasting endogenous glucose production rates were similar after both treatments (eplerenone 9.4 (0.6) μmol kg(-1) min(-1) vs doxazosin 10.6 (0.7) μmol kg(-1) min(-1)). There was a trend for lower endogenous glucose production rates during hyperinsulinaemia following eplerenone compared with doxazosin (2.0 (0.8) μmol kg(-1) min(-1) vs 4.1 (0.9) μmol kg(-1) min(-1)). There was no difference in insulin stimulated peripheral glucose utilisation rates after treatment with eplerenone or doxazosin (25.4 (3.6) μmol kg(-1) min(-1) vs 27.0 (3.9) μmol kg(-1) min(-1)). This study gives reassuring evidence of the neutral effect of eplerenone on insulin action in hypertensive, non-diabetic patients.
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- 2014
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244. Alternative metrics for real-ear-to-coupler difference average values in children.
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Blumsack JT, Clark-Lewis S, Watts KM, Wilson MW, Ross ME, Soles L, and Ennis C
- Subjects
- Cephalometry, Child, Child, Preschool, Ear anatomy & histology, Female, Hearing Aids, Hearing Tests, Humans, Skull, Equipment Design, Hearing
- Abstract
Background: Ideally, individual real-ear-to-coupler difference (RECD) measurements are obtained for pediatric hearing instrument-fitting purposes. When RECD measurements cannot be obtained, age-related average RECDs based on typically developing North American children are used. Evidence suggests that these values may not be appropriate for populations of children with retarded growth patterns., Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine if another metric, such as head circumference, height, or weight, can be used for prediction of RECDs in children., Research Design: Design was a correlational study. For all participants, RECD values in both ears, head circumference, height, and weight were measured., Study Sample: The sample consisted of 68 North American children (ages 3-11 yr)., Data Collection and Analysis: Height, weight, head circumference, and RECDs were measured and were analyzed for both ears at 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000, 3000, 4000, and 6000 Hz. A backward elimination multiple-regression analysis was used to determine if age, height, weight, and/or head circumference are significant predictors of RECDs., Results: For the left ear, head circumference was retained as the only statistically significant variable in the final model. For the right ear, head circumference was retained as the only statistically significant independent variable at all frequencies except at 2000 and 4000 Hz. At these latter frequencies, weight was retained as the only statistically significant independent variable after all other variables were eliminated., Conclusions: Head circumference can be considered as a metric for RECD prediction in children when individual measurements cannot be obtained. In developing countries where equipment is often unavailable and stunted growth can reduce the value of using age as a metric, head circumference can be considered as an alternative metric in the prediction of RECDs., (American Academy of Audiology.)
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- 2014
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245. Occurrence, virulence genes and antibiotic resistance of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) from twelve bovine farms in the north-east of Ireland.
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Bolton DJ, Ennis C, and McDowell D
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases microbiology, DNA Primers genetics, Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli drug effects, Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli genetics, Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli pathogenicity, Escherichia coli Infections epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections microbiology, Feces microbiology, Humans, Ireland epidemiology, Microbial Sensitivity Tests veterinary, Phenotype, Prevalence, Serotyping veterinary, Zoonoses, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli isolation & purification, Escherichia coli Infections veterinary, Virulence Factors genetics
- Abstract
Cattle faecal samples (n = 480) were collected from a cluster of 12 farms, and PCR screened for the presence of the intimin gene (eae). Positive samples were cultured, and colonies were examined for the presence of eae and verocytotoxin (vtx) genes. Colonies which were positive for the intimin gene and negative for the verocytotoxin genes were further screened using PCR for a range of virulence factors including bfpA, espA, espB, tir ehxA, toxB, etpD, katP, saa, iha, lpfAO157/OI-141 and lpfAO157/OI-154. Of the 480 faecal samples, 5.8% (28/480) were PCR positive, and one isolate was obtained from each. All 28 isolates obtained were bfpA negative and therefore atypical EPEC (aEPEC). The serotypes detected included O2:H27, O8:H36, O15:H2, O49:H+, O84:H28, O105:H7 and O132:H34 but half of the isolates could not be serogrouped using currently available antisera. Twenty-two (79%) of the isolates carried the tir gene but only 25% were espB positive, and all other virulence genes tested for were scarce or absent. Several isolates showed intermediate resistance to ciprofloxacin, kanamycin, nalidixic acid, minocycline and tetracycline; full resistance to nalidixic acid or tetracycline with one isolate (O-:H8) displaying resistance to aminoglycosides (kanamycin and streptomycin), quinolones (nalidixic acid) and sulphonamides. This study provides further evidence that cattle are a potential source of aEPEC and add to the very limited data currently available on virulence genes and antibiotic resistance in this pathogenic E. coli group in animals., (© 2013 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
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- 2014
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246. Longitudinal processing speed impairments in males with autism and the effects of white matter microstructure.
- Author
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Travers BG, Bigler ED, Tromp do PM, Adluru N, Froehlich AL, Ennis C, Lange N, Nielsen JA, Prigge MB, Alexander AL, and Lainhart JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anisotropy, Child, Child Development, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Humans, Intelligence Tests, Linear Models, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Time Factors, Young Adult, Autistic Disorder pathology, Autistic Disorder psychology, Brain pathology, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Thinking
- Abstract
The present study used an accelerated longitudinal design to examine group differences and age-related changes in processing speed in 81 individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) compared to 56 age-matched individuals with typical development (ages 6-39 years). Processing speed was assessed using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-3rd edition (WISC-III) and the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-3rd edition (WAIS-III). Follow-up analyses examined processing speed subtest performance and relations between processing speed and white matter microstructure (as measured with diffusion tensor imaging [DTI] in a subset of these participants). After controlling for full scale IQ, the present results show that processing speed index standard scores were on average 12 points lower in the group with ASD compared to the group with typical development. There were, however, no significant group differences in standard score age-related changes within this age range. For subtest raw scores, the group with ASD demonstrated robustly slower processing speeds in the adult versions of the IQ test (i.e., WAIS-III) but not in the child versions (WISC-III), even though age-related changes were similar in both the ASD and typically developing groups. This pattern of results may reflect difficulties that become increasingly evident in ASD on more complex measures of processing speed. Finally, DTI measures of whole-brain white matter microstructure suggested that fractional anisotropy (but not mean diffusivity, radial diffusivity, or axial diffusivity) made significant but small-sized contributions to processing speed standard scores across our entire sample. Taken together, the present findings suggest that robust decreases in processing speed may be present in ASD, more pronounced in adulthood, and partially attributable to white matter microstructural integrity., (© 2013 Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2014
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247. Research management team (RMT): a model for research support services at Duke University.
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Snyder DC, Epps S, Beresford HF, Ennis C, Levens JS, Woody SK, Tcheng JE, Stacy MA, and Nahm M
- Subjects
- Academies and Institutes, Medical Informatics, North Carolina, Database Management Systems, Models, Theoretical, Research Support as Topic, Translational Research, Biomedical, Universities
- Abstract
Collecting and managing data for clinical and translational research presents significant challenges for clinical and translational researchers, many of whom lack needed access to data management expertise, methods, and tools. At many institutions, funding constraints result in differential levels of research informatics support among investigators. In addition, the lack of widely shared models and ontologies for clinical research informatics and health information technology hampers the accurate assessment of investigators' needs and complicates the efficient allocation of crucial resources for research projects, ultimately affecting the quality and reliability of research. In this paper, we present a model for providing flexible, cost-efficient institutional support for clinical and translational research data management and informatics, the research management team, and describe our initial experiences with deploying this model at our institution., (© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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248. The prevalence, distribution and characterization of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) serotypes and virulotypes from a cluster of bovine farms.
- Author
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Ennis C, McDowell D, and Bolton DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Feces microbiology, Immunomagnetic Separation, Ireland, Meat microbiology, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prevalence, Serotyping, Shiga Toxins classification, Shiga Toxins genetics, Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli classification, Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli genetics, Virulence Factors genetics, Cattle microbiology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli isolation & purification
- Abstract
Aims: To assess the prevalence of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) on a cluster of twelve beef farms in the north-east of Ireland., Methods and Results: Samples were screened for stx1 and stx2 using PCR. Positive samples were enriched in mTSB and STEC O157 isolated using immunomagnetic separation. Enrichment cultures were plated onto TBX agar to isolate non-O157 STEC. All isolates were serotyped and examined for a range of virulence genes and their antibiotic resistance phenotype determined. Eighty-four isolates of 33 different serotypes were cultured from the 13·7% of samples that were stx positive. The most prevalent serotype was O157:H7, the most common Shiga toxin was stx(2) , and a variety of virulence factor combinations was observed. O-:H-, O26:H11, O76:H34, O157:H7, O157:H16 and OX18:H+ also carried eaeA and hlyA genes. Twenty-nine per cent of strains were resistant to at least one antibiotic, 48% of which had multiple drug resistance (MDR) with O2:H32 displaying resistance to five antibiotics., Conclusions: The ubiquitous nature of STEC on beef farms, the detection of stx(+) eaeA(+) hlyA(+) in the serotypes O-:H-, O157:H16 and OX18:H+ in addition to O157:H7 and O26:H11 and the widespread distribution of antibiotic resistance are of public health concern as new virulent STEC strains are emerging., Significance and Impact of the Study: This study found no relationship between serotype and antibiotic resistance, therefore negating efforts to isolate serotypes using specific antibiotic supplemented media. The data presented provide further evidence of the emergence of new STEC virulotypes of potential public health significance., (© 2012 The Authors Journal of Applied Microbiology © 2012 The Society for Applied Microbiology.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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249. Diffusion tensor imaging in autism spectrum disorder: a review.
- Author
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Travers BG, Adluru N, Ennis C, Tromp do PM, Destiche D, Doran S, Bigler ED, Lange N, Lainhart JE, and Alexander AL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anisotropy, Brain growth & development, Brain pathology, Child, Functional Laterality, Humans, Nerve Fibers, Myelinated pathology, Child Development Disorders, Pervasive pathology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods
- Abstract
White matter tracts of the brain allow neurons and neuronal networks to communicate and function with high efficiency. The aim of this review is to briefly introduce diffusion tensor imaging methods that examine white matter tracts and then to give an overview of the studies that have investigated white matter integrity in the brains of individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). From the 48 studies we reviewed, persons with ASD tended to have decreased fractional anisotropy and increased mean diffusivity in white matter tracts spanning many regions of the brain but most consistently in regions such as the corpus callosum, cingulum, and aspects of the temporal lobe. This decrease in fractional anisotropy was often accompanied by increased radial diffusivity. Additionally, the review suggests possible atypical lateralization in some white matter tracts of the brain and a possible atypical developmental trajectory of white matter microstructure in persons with ASD. Clinical implications and future research directions are discussed., (© 2012 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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250. On the chemical processing of hydrocarbon surfaces by fast oxygen ions.
- Author
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Ennis C, Yuan H, Sibener SJ, and Kaiser RI
- Subjects
- Ions chemistry, Kinetics, Particle Size, Surface Properties, Ethane chemistry, Ethylenes chemistry, Methane chemistry, Oxygen chemistry, Polyethylene chemistry
- Abstract
Solid methane (CH(4)), ethane (C(2)H(6)), and ethylene (C(2)H(4)) ices (thickness: 120 ± 40 nm; 10 K), as well as high-density polyethylene (HDPE: [C(2)H(4)](n)) films (thickness: 130 ± 20 nm; 10, 100, and 300 K), were irradiated with mono-energetic oxygen ions (Φ ~ 6 × 10(15) cm(-2)) of a kinetic energy of 5 keV to simulate the exposure of Solar System hydrocarbon ices and aerospace polymers to oxygen ions sourced from the solar wind and planetary magnetospheres. On-line Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) was used to identify the following O(+) induced reaction pathways in the solid-state: (i) ethane formation from methane ice via recombination of methyl (CH(3)) radicals, (ii) ethane conversion back to methane via methylene (CH(2)) retro-insertion, (iii) ethane decomposing to acetylene via ethylene through successive hydrogen elimination steps, and (iv) ethylene conversion to acetylene via hydrogen elimination. No changes were observed in the irradiated PE samples via infrared spectroscopy. In addition, mass spectrometry detected small abundances of methanol (CH(3)OH) sublimed from the irradiated methane and ethane condensates during controlled heating. The detection of methanol suggests an implantation and neutralization of the oxygen ions within the surface where atomic oxygen (O) then undergoes insertion into a C-H bond of methane. Atomic hydrogen (H) recombination in forming molecular hydrogen and recombination of implanted oxygen atoms to molecular oxygen (O(2)) are also inferred to proceed at high cross-sections. A comparison of the reaction rates and product yields to those obtained from experiments involving 5 keV electrons, suggests that the chemical alteration of the hydrocarbon ice samples is driven primarily by electronic stopping interactions and to a lesser extent by nuclear interactions., (This journal is © the Owner Societies 2011)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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