649 results on '"Nguyen R"'
Search Results
402. Late presentation of generalised bullous pemphigoid-like reaction in a patient treated with pembrolizumab for metastatic melanoma.
- Author
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Parakh S, Nguyen R, Opie JM, and Andrews MC
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Melanoma secondary, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Time Factors, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized adverse effects, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological adverse effects, Drug Eruptions etiology, Melanoma therapy, Pemphigoid, Bullous chemically induced, Skin Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Dermatological toxicity is one of the most commonly reported immune-related adverse events in patients receiving checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy. We report the gradual development of a widespread bullous pemphigoid-like reaction in a metastatic melanoma patient 8 months after commencing treatment with the programmed-death-1 (PD-1) inhibitor pembrolizumab, requiring prolonged corticosteroid therapy. This case highlights the potential for insidious and late development of severe cutaneous toxicity following PD-1 inhibitor therapy and suggests that even prolonged immunosuppression may not necessarily compromise the efficacy of PD-1 inhibition in advanced melanoma., (© 2016 The Australasian College of Dermatologists.)
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- 2017
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403. Bidirectional Control of Anxiety-Related Behaviors in Mice: Role of Inputs Arising from the Ventral Hippocampus to the Lateral Septum and Medial Prefrontal Cortex.
- Author
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Parfitt GM, Nguyen R, Bang JY, Aqrabawi AJ, Tran MM, Seo DK, Richards BA, and Kim JC
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- Animals, Behavior, Animal physiology, Clozapine analogs & derivatives, Clozapine pharmacology, Hippocampus drug effects, Male, Mice, Neural Pathways physiology, Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Techniques, Prefrontal Cortex drug effects, Septal Nuclei drug effects, Anxiety physiopathology, Hippocampus physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Septal Nuclei physiology
- Abstract
Anxiety is an adaptive response to potentially threatening situations. Exaggerated and uncontrolled anxiety responses become maladaptive and lead to anxiety disorders. Anxiety is shaped by a network of forebrain structures, including the hippocampus, septum, and prefrontal cortex. In particular, neural inputs arising from the ventral hippocampus (vHPC) to the lateral septum (LS) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) are thought to serve as principal components of the anxiety circuit. However, the role of vHPC-to-LS and vHPC-to-mPFC signals in anxiety is unclear, as no study has directly compared their behavioral contribution at circuit level. We targeted LS-projecting vHPC cells and mPFC-projecting vHPC cells by injecting the retrogradely propagating canine adenovirus encoding Cre recombinase into the LS or mPFC, and injecting a Cre-responsive AAV (AAV8-hSyn-FLEX-hM3D or hM4D) into the vHPC. Consequences of manipulating these neurons were examined in well-established tests of anxiety. Chemogenetic manipulation of LS-projecting vHPC cells led to bidirectional changes in anxiety: activation of LS-projecting vHPC cells decreased anxiety whereas inhibition of these cells produced opposite anxiety-promoting effects. The observed anxiety-reducing function of LS-projecting cells was in contrast with the function of mPFC-projecting cells, which promoted anxiety. In addition, double retrograde tracing demonstrated that LS- and mPFC-projecting cells represent two largely anatomically distinct cell groups. Altogether, our findings suggest that the vHPC houses discrete populations of cells that either promote or suppress anxiety through differences in their projection targets. Disruption of the intricate balance in the activity of these two neuron populations may drive inappropriate behavioral responses seen in anxiety disorders.
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- 2017
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404. Early Prenatal Phthalate Exposure, Sex Steroid Hormones, and Birth Outcomes.
- Author
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Sathyanarayana S, Butts S, Wang C, Barrett E, Nguyen R, Schwartz SM, Haaland W, and Swan SH
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- Adult, Chromatography, Liquid, Cryptorchidism epidemiology, Disorders of Sex Development epidemiology, Female, Humans, Hypospadias epidemiology, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Male, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, First, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects blood, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Testicular Hydrocele epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Estradiol blood, Estrone blood, Phthalic Acids urine, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects epidemiology, Testosterone blood, Urogenital Abnormalities epidemiology
- Abstract
Context: Adequate sex steroid hormone concentrations are essential for normal fetal genital development in early pregnancy. Our previous study demonstrated an inverse relationship between third-trimester di-2-ethyl hexyl phthalate exposure and total testosterone (TT) concentrations. Here, we examine early-pregnancy phthalates, sex steroid hormone concentrations, and newborn reproductive outcomes., Design: We examined associations between urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations in early pregnancy and serum free testosterone (FT), TT, estrone (E1), and estradiol (E2) in 591 woman/infant dyads in The Infant Development and Environment Study; we also examined relationships between hormones and newborn genital outcomes using multiple regression models with covariate adjustment., Results: E1 and E2 concentrations were 15% to 30% higher in relation to 1-unit increases in log monoisobutyl phthalate (MiBP), mono-2-ethyl hexyl phthalate, and mono-2-ethyl-5-oxy-hexyl phthalate concentrations, and E2 was 15% higher in relation to increased log monobenzyl phthalate (MBzP). FT concentrations were 12% lower in relation to 1-unit increases in log mono(carboxynonyl) phthalate (MCNP) and mono-2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl phthalate concentrations. Higher maternal FT was associated with a 25% lower prevalence of having a male genital abnormality at birth., Conclusions: The positive relationships between MiBP, MBzP, and DEHP metabolites and E1/E2 are unique and suggest a positive estrogenic effect in early pregnancy. The inverse relationship between MCNP and DEHP metabolites and serum FT supports previous work examining phthalate/testosterone relationships later in pregnancy. Higher FT in relation to a 25% lower prevalence of male genital abnormalities confirms the importance of testosterone in early fetal development., (Copyright © 2017 by the Endocrine Society)
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- 2017
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405. Pharmacist-based health coaching: A new model of pharmacist-patient care.
- Author
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Lonie JM, Austin Z, Nguyen R, Gill I, and Tsingos-Lucas C
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- Communication, Counseling methods, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Medication Adherence, Medication Therapy Management organization & administration, Motivational Interviewing methods, Professional Role, Health Behavior, Patient Care methods, Pharmaceutical Services organization & administration, Pharmacists organization & administration
- Abstract
This paper describes a provider-patient communication process, which although not new to health care in general, is new to the pharmacy profession. Health coaching is a technique that empowers patients to make lasting health behavior changes that improve overall well-being. It provides patients with health care implementation options that better suit their lifestyle and abilities. Health coaching programs have the potential to foster better health outcomes, especially with patients who are chronically ill or represent an at risk population for medication non-adherence (e.g. elderly, patients on psychotropic medications). Other health professions (e.g. nursing and medicine) have had success with the implementation of health coaching models. For example, nurse coaching is recognized by the American Nurse Association and recent statistics show 3.1 million nurses in the U.S.A are also trained in nurse coaching. The pharmacy profession has yet to tap the patient-related benefits of health coaching. This commentary will discuss (i) The theoretical foundations of health coaching (ii) Distinctions between health coaching, motivational interviewing and traditional medication therapy counseling (iii) Training necessary for health coaching; and (iv) How pharmacists can use health coaching in practice., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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406. Simplified point-of-care ultrasound protocol to confirm central venous catheter placement: A prospective study.
- Author
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Wilson SP, Assaf S, Lahham S, Subeh M, Chiem A, Anderson C, Shwe S, Nguyen R, and Fox JC
- Abstract
Background: The current standard for confirmation of correct supra-diaphragmatic central venous catheter (CVC) placement is with plain film chest radiography (CXR). We hypothesized that a simple point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) protocol could effectively confirm placement and reduce time to confirmation., Methods: We prospectively enrolled a convenience sample of patients in the emergency department and intensive care unit who required CVC placement. Correct positioning was considered if turbulent flow was visualized in the right atrium on sub-xiphoid, parasternal or apical cardiac ultrasound after injecting 5 cc of sterile, non-agitated, normal saline through the CVC., Results: Seventy-eight patients were enrolled. POCUS had a sensitivity of 86.8% (95% CI 77.1%-93.5%) and specificity of 100% (95% CI 15.8%-100.0%) for identifying correct central venous catheter placement. Median POCUS and CXR completion were 16 minutes (IQR 10-29) and 32 minutes (IQR 19-45), respectively., Conclusion: Ultrasound may be an effective tool to confirm central venous catheter placement in instances where there is a delay in obtaining a confirmatory CXR., Competing Interests: The authors declare there is no competing interest related to the study, authors, other individuals or organizations.
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- 2017
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407. Innovations in Medication Preparation Safety and Wastage Reduction: Use of a Workflow Management System in a Pediatric Hospital.
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Davis SJ, Hurtado J, Nguyen R, Huynh T, Lindon I, Hudnall C, and Bork S
- Abstract
Background: USP <797> regulatory requirements have mandated that pharmacies improve aseptic techniques and cleanliness of the medication preparation areas. In addition, the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) recommends that technology and automation be used as much as possible for preparing and verifying compounded sterile products. Objective: To determine the benefits associated with the implementation of the workflow management system, such as reducing medication preparation and delivery errors, reducing quantity and frequency of medication errors, avoiding costs, and enhancing the organization's decision to move toward positive patient identification (PPID). Methods: At Texas Children's Hospital, data were collected and analyzed from January 2014 through August 2014 in the pharmacy areas in which the workflow management system would be implemented. Data were excluded for September 2014 during the workflow management system oral liquid implementation phase. Data were collected and analyzed from October 2014 through June 2015 to determine whether the implementation of the workflow management system reduced the quantity and frequency of reported medication errors. Data collected and analyzed during the study period included the quantity of doses prepared, number of incorrect medication scans, number of doses discontinued from the workflow management system queue, and the number of doses rejected. Data were collected and analyzed to identify patterns of incorrect medication scans, to determine reasons for rejected medication doses, and to determine the reduction in wasted medications. Results: During the 17-month study period, the pharmacy department dispensed 1,506,220 oral liquid and injectable medication doses. From October 2014 through June 2015, the pharmacy department dispensed 826,220 medication doses that were prepared and checked via the workflow management system. Of those 826,220 medication doses, there were 16 reported incorrect volume errors. The error rate after the implementation of the workflow management system averaged 8.4%, which was a 1.6% reduction. After the implementation of the workflow management system, the average number of reported oral liquid medication and injectable medication errors decreased to 0.4 and 0.2 times per week, respectively. Conclusion: The organization was able to achieve its purpose and goal of improving the provision of quality pharmacy care through optimal medication use and safety by reducing medication preparation errors. Error rates decreased and the workflow processes were streamlined, which has led to seamless operations within the pharmacy department. There has been significant cost avoidance and waste reduction and enhanced interdepartmental satisfaction due to the reduction of reported medication errors.
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- 2017
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408. A Novel Multisensory Integration Task Reveals Robust Deficits in Rodent Models of Schizophrenia: Converging Evidence for Remediation via Nicotinic Receptor Stimulation of Inhibitory Transmission in the Prefrontal Cortex.
- Author
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Cloke JM, Nguyen R, Chung BY, Wasserman DI, De Lisio S, Kim JC, Bailey CD, and Winters BD
- Subjects
- Animals, In Vitro Techniques, Ketamine, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Rats, Rats, Long-Evans, Schizophrenia chemically induced, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid physiology, Isoxazoles pharmacology, Nicotinic Agonists pharmacology, Prefrontal Cortex drug effects, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Pyrrolidines pharmacology, Receptors, Nicotinic drug effects, Schizophrenic Psychology, Synaptic Transmission drug effects
- Abstract
Atypical multisensory integration is an understudied cognitive symptom in schizophrenia. Procedures to evaluate multisensory integration in rodent models are lacking. We developed a novel multisensory object oddity (MSO) task to assess multisensory integration in ketamine-treated rats, a well established model of schizophrenia. Ketamine-treated rats displayed a selective MSO task impairment with tactile-visual and olfactory-visual sensory combinations, whereas basic unisensory perception was unaffected. Orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) administration of nicotine or ABT-418, an α
4 β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) agonist, normalized MSO task performance in ketamine-treated rats and this effect was blocked by GABAA receptor antagonism. GABAergic currents were also decreased in OFC of ketamine-treated rats and were normalized by activation of α4 β2 nAChRs. Furthermore, parvalbumin (PV) immunoreactivity was decreased in the OFC of ketamine-treated rats. Accordingly, silencing of PV interneurons in OFC of PV-Cre mice using DREADDs (Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs) selectively impaired MSO task performance and this was reversed by ABT-418. Likewise, clozapine-N-oxide-induced inhibition of PV interneurons in brain slices was reversed by activation of α4 β2 nAChRs. These findings strongly imply a role for prefrontal GABAergic transmission in the integration of multisensory object features, a cognitive process with relevance to schizophrenia. Accordingly, nAChR agonism, which improves various facets of cognition in schizophrenia, reversed the severe MSO task impairment in this study and appears to do so via a GABAergic mechanism. Interactions between GABAergic and nAChR receptor systems warrant further investigation for potential therapeutic applications. The novel behavioral procedure introduced in the current study is acutely sensitive to schizophrenia-relevant cognitive impairment and should prove highly valuable for such research., Significance Statement: Adaptive behaviors are driven by integration of information from different sensory modalities. Multisensory integration is disrupted in patients with schizophrenia, but little is known about the neural basis of this cognitive symptom. Development and validation of multisensory integration tasks for animal models is essential given the strong link between functional outcome and cognitive impairment in schizophrenia. We present a novel multisensory object oddity procedure that detects selective multisensory integration deficits in a rat model of schizophrenia using various combinations of sensory modalities. Moreover, converging data are consistent with a nicotinic-GABAergic mechanism of multisensory integration in the prefrontal cortex, results with strong clinical relevance to the study of cognitive impairment and treatment in schizophrenia., (Copyright © 2016 the authors 0270-6474/16/3612571-16$15.00/0.)- Published
- 2016
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409. Effects of epinephrine on cerebral oxygenation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation: A prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Deakin CD, Yang J, Nguyen R, Zhu J, Brett SJ, Nolan JP, Perkins GD, Pogson DG, and Parnia S
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Epinephrine administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared, Vasoconstrictor Agents administration & dosage, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Cerebrovascular Circulation drug effects, Epinephrine adverse effects, Heart Arrest drug therapy, Oxygen Consumption drug effects, Vasoconstrictor Agents adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Epinephrine has been presumed to improve cerebral oxygen delivery during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), but animal and registry studies suggest that epinephrine-induced capillary vasoconstriction may decrease cerebral capillary blood flow and worsen neurological outcome. The effect of epinephrine on cerebral oxygenation (rSO
2 ) during CPR has not been documented in the clinical setting., Methods: rSO2 was measured continuously using cerebral oximetry in patients with in-hospital cardiac arrest. During CPR, time event markers recorded the administration of 1mg epinephrine. rSO2 values were analysed for a period beginning 5min before and ending 5min after the first epinephrine administration., Results: A total of 56 epinephrine doses were analysed in 36 patients during CPR. The average rSO2 value in the 5-min following epinephrine administration was 1.40% higher (95% CI=0.41-2.40%; P=0.0059) than in the 5-min period before epinephrine administration. However, there was no difference in the overall rate of change of rSO2 when comparing the 5-min period before, with the 5-min period immediately after a single bolus dose of epinephrine (0.88%/min vs 1.07%/min respectively; P=0.583), There was also no difference in the changes in rSO2 at individual 1, 2, 3, or 4-min time windows before and after a bolus dose of epinephrine (P=0.5827, 0.2371, 0.2082, and 0.6707 respectively)., Conclusions: A bolus of 1mg epinephrine IV during CPR produced a small but clinically insignificant increase in rSO2 in the five minutes after administration. This is the first clinical data to demonstrate the effects of epinephrine on cerebral rSO2 during CPR., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2016
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410. Five-year experience with infliximab: Follow up of the product familiarisation program.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Braue A, Baker C, and Foley P
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- Adult, Aged, Dermatologic Agents adverse effects, Drug Resistance, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infliximab adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Dermatologic Agents therapeutic use, Infliximab therapeutic use, Psoriasis drug therapy
- Abstract
This 5-year retrospective analysis is of 22 patients who participated in the product familiarisation program (PFP) at St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne, prior to the listing of infliximab on the Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme. Criteria for inclusion were being an adult with chronic plaque psoriasis, having a psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) score of at least 15 with an inadequate response or intolerance to three of the following: phototherapy, acitretin, cyclosporin and methotrexate. Participants were infused with infliximab 5 mg/kg on the standard induction (weeks 0, 2 and 6) and maintenance (8-weekly) protocols. At each visit PASI and dermatology life quality index (DLQI) scores were recorded. Success was determined as the proportion of patients achieving at least a 75% improvement in the PASI score from baseline (PASI 75). At 60 months after commencement of therapy, 31% of patients remained on infliximab. Those who did retained PASI 75 with a DLQI of 0 or 1. Of those who ceased infliximab, nine did so due to loss of efficacy, three for personal reasons, two for serious adverse events and one was lost to follow up. Adverse events included non-melanoma skin cancers, infections and abnormal liver enzymes. Infliximab in the Australian context has proven to be a highly effective treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis, and patients who remained on the drug derived a high level of satisfaction, assessed both subjectively (DLQI) and objectively (PASI 75). The variable response indicates that psoriasis is a heterogeneous disease and investigation into potential patient selection for treatment in the future is warranted., (© 2015 The Australasian College of Dermatologists.)
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- 2016
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411. Successful re-introduction of vitamin B12 after using isotretinoin to treat severe acne medicamentosa.
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Lolatgis H, Su J, and Nguyen R
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- 2016
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412. The International Incidence of Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Nguyen R, Fiest KM, McChesney J, Kwon CS, Jette N, Frolkis AD, Atta C, Mah S, Dhaliwal H, Reid A, Pringsheim T, Dykeman J, and Gallagher C
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- Age Factors, Databases, Bibliographic statistics & numerical data, Humans, Incidence, Sex Factors, Brain Injuries, Traumatic epidemiology, Global Health
- Abstract
Background: Understanding the epidemiology of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is essential to shape public health policy, implement prevention strategies, and justify allocation of resources toward research, education, and rehabilitation in TBI. There is not, to our knowledge, a systematic review of population-based studies addressing the epidemiology of TBI that includes all subtypes. We performed a comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis of the worldwide incidence of TBI., Methods: A search was conducted on May 23, 2014, in Medline and EMBASE according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Abstracts were screened independently and in duplicate to identify original research. Study quality and ascertainment bias were assessed in duplicate using a previously published tool. Demographic data and incidence estimates from each study were recorded, along with stratification by age, gender, year of data collection, and severity., Results: The search strategy yielded 4944 citations. Two hundred and sixteen articles met criteria for full-text review; 144 were excluded. Hand searching resulted in ten additional articles. Eighty-two studies met all eligibility criteria. The pooled annual incidence proportion for all ages was 295 per 100,000 (95% confidence interval: 274-317). The pooled incidence rate for all ages was 349 (95% confidence interval: 96.2-1266) per 100,000 person-years. Incidence proportion and incidence rate were examined to see if associated with age, sex, country, or severity., Conclusions: We conclude that most TBIs are mild and most TBIs occur in males among the adult population. The incidence of TBI varies widely by ages and between countries. Despite being an important medical, economic, and social problem, the global epidemiology of TBI is still not well-characterized in the current literature. Understanding the incidence of TBI, particularly mild TBI, remains challenging because of nonstandardized reporting among neuroepidemiological studies.
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- 2016
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413. Two-Year-Old Boy With Leukocoria and Strabismus.
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Nguyen R, Wilson MW, Fernandez-Pineda I, Brennan RC, and Furman WL
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- Child, Preschool, Humans, Kidney Neoplasms surgery, Male, Treatment Outcome, Wilms Tumor surgery, Kidney Neoplasms diagnosis, Pupil Disorders etiology, Strabismus etiology, Wilms Tumor diagnosis
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- 2016
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414. Multifocal nerve lesions and LZTR1 germline mutations in segmental schwannomatosis.
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Farschtschi S, Mautner VF, Pham M, Nguyen R, Kehrer-Sawatzki H, Hutter S, Friedrich RE, Schulz A, Morrison H, Jones DT, Bendszus M, and Bäumer P
- Subjects
- Adult, DNA Mutational Analysis, Female, Germ-Line Mutation, Humans, Lower Extremity innervation, Lumbosacral Plexus diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Upper Extremity innervation, Lower Extremity diagnostic imaging, Neurilemmoma diagnostic imaging, Neurilemmoma genetics, Neurofibromatoses diagnostic imaging, Neurofibromatoses genetics, Peripheral Nerves diagnostic imaging, Skin Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Skin Neoplasms genetics, Transcription Factors genetics, Upper Extremity diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Schwannomatosis is a genetic disorder characterized by the occurrence of multiple peripheral schwannomas. Segmental schwannomatosis is diagnosed when schwannomas are restricted to 1 extremity and is thought to be caused by genetic mosaicism. We studied 5 patients with segmental schwannomatosis through microstructural magnetic resonance neurography and mutation analysis of NF2, SMARCB1, and LZTR1. In 4 of 5 patients, subtle fascicular nerve lesions were detected in clinically unaffected extremities. Two patients exhibited LZTR1 germline mutations. This appears contrary to a simple concept of genetic mosaicism and suggests more complex and heterogeneous mechanisms underlying the phenotype of segmental schwannomatosis than previously thought. Ann Neurol 2016;80:625-628., (© 2016 American Neurological Association.)
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- 2016
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415. First Trimester Phthalate Exposure and Infant Birth Weight in the Infant Development and Environment Study.
- Author
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Sathyanarayana S, Barrett E, Nguyen R, Redmon B, Haaland W, and Swan SH
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- Adult, Child Development drug effects, Cohort Studies, Environment, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Male, Mothers, Multivariate Analysis, Pregnancy, Birth Weight drug effects, Maternal Exposure, Phthalic Acids adverse effects, Phthalic Acids urine, Pregnancy Trimester, First
- Abstract
Phthalate exposure is widespread among pregnant women but whether it is related to fetal growth and birth weight remains to be determined. We examined whether first trimester prenatal phthalate exposure was associated with birth weight in a pregnancy cohort study. We recruited first trimester pregnant women from 2010-2012 from four centers and analyzed mother/infant dyads who had complete urinary phthalate and birth record data (N = 753). We conducted multiple linear regression to examine if prenatal log specific gravity adjusted urinary phthalate exposure was related to birthweight in term and preterm (≤37 weeks) infants, stratified by sex. We observed a significant association between mono carboxy-isononyl phthalate (MCOP) exposure and increased birthweight in term males, 0.13 kg (95% CI 0.03, 0.23). In preterm infants, we observed a 0.49 kg (95% CI 0.09, 0.89) increase in birthweight in relation to a one log unit change in the sum of di-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) metabolite concentrations in females (N = 33). In summary, we observed few associations between prenatal phthalate exposure and birthweight. Positive associations may be attributable to unresolved confounding in term infants and limited sample size in preterm infants., Competing Interests: All authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2016
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416. Predictors of severe long-term toxicity after re-irradiation for head and neck cancer.
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Lee JY, Suresh K, Nguyen R, Sapir E, Dow JS, Arnould GS, Worden FP, Spector ME, Prince ME, McLean SA, Shuman AG, Malloy KM, Casper K, Bradford CR, Schipper MJ, and Eisbruch A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Survival Analysis, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: To identify predictive factors of severe long-term toxicity after re-irradiation of recurrent/persistent or second-primary head and neck cancer., Methods: Outcomes and treatment plans of patients who underwent modern IMRT based re-irradiation to the head and neck from 2008-2015 were reviewed. Co-variables including demographic, clinical and oncologic factors, as well as interval to re-irradiation and re-irradiated planning tumor volume (PTV) were analyzed as predictors of developing severe (CTCAE grade⩾3) long-term toxicity with death as a competing risk., Results: A total of 66 patients who met inclusion criteria were eligible for analysis. A median re-irradiation dose of 70Gy was delivered at a median of 37.5months after initial radiotherapy. Re-irradiation followed surgical resection in 25 (38%) patients, and concurrent chemotherapy was delivered to 41 (62%) patients. Median follow-up after re-irradiation was 23months and median overall survival was 22months (predicted 2year overall survival 49%). Of the 60 patients who survived longer than 3months after re-irradiation, 16 (25%) patients experienced severe long-term toxicity, with the majority (12 of 16) being feeding tube -dependent dysphagia. In multivariable analysis, shorter intervals to re-irradiation (<20months) and larger re-irradiated PTVs (>100cm(3)) were independent predictors of developing severe long-term toxicity. Patients with longer disease-free intervals and smaller PTVs had a 94% probability of being free of severe toxicity at two years., Conclusion: Selection of patients with longer re-irradiation intervals and requiring smaller re-irradiated PTVs can independently predict avoidance of severe long-term toxicity., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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417. The Role of Leukapheresis in the Current Management of Hyperleukocytosis in Newly Diagnosed Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.
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Nguyen R, Jeha S, Zhou Y, Cao X, Cheng C, Bhojwani D, Campbell P, Howard SC, Rubnitz J, Ribeiro RC, Sandlund JT, Gruber T, Inaba H, Pui CH, and Metzger ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Leukapheresis, Leukocytosis therapy, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma complications
- Abstract
Background: Hyperleukocytosis in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has been associated with early morbidity and mortality. The use of leukapheresis in these children treated with contemporary therapy remains controversial., Procedure: We analyzed clinical data from patients enrolled onto frontline protocols for ALL (Total Therapy XV and XVI) between 2003 and 2014. We documented adverse events within the first 14 days in patients with a white blood cell (WBC) count ≥200 × 10(9) /l and reviewed their management., Results: Fifty-three (7.8%) of 678 consecutive pediatric patients with newly diagnosed ALL presented with hyperleukocytosis (median WBC count 393 × 10(9) /l; range 200-1,014). Two deaths in patients without initial hyperleukocytosis occurred within the first 2 weeks from diagnosis secondary to bacterial sepsis. A total of 21 (40%) patients with ALL and hyperleukocytosis developed grade 3 or 4 adverse events regardless of the use of leukapheresis (P > 0.99 and P = 0.19). Sixteen of 53 (30%) patients with ALL received low-dose chemotherapy for leukocytoreduction initially. One-third of patients received urate oxidase, and none of the patients with hyperleukocytosis required hemodialysis., Conclusions: The early morbidity and mortality commonly associated with hyperleukocytosis in children with newly diagnosed ALL can be avoided with contemporary supportive care and conservative management possibly obviating the need for costly and potentially dangerous leukapheresis., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest., (© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2016
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418. Cerebral Oximetry During Cardiac Arrest: A Multicenter Study of Neurologic Outcomes and Survival.
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Parnia S, Yang J, Nguyen R, Ahn A, Zhu J, Inigo-Santiago L, Nasir A, Golder K, Ravishankar S, Bartlett P, Xu J, Pogson D, Cooke S, Walker C, Spearpoint K, Kitson D, Melody T, Chilwan M, Schoenfeld E, Richman P, Mills B, Wichtendahl N, Nolan J, Singer A, Brett S, Perkins GD, and Deakin CD
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain Ischemia etiology, Brain Ischemia mortality, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Female, Heart Arrest mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Oximetry, Patient Discharge, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Survival Rate, Treatment Outcome, United Kingdom, United States, Brain Ischemia diagnosis, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology, Heart Arrest physiopathology, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Cardiac arrest is associated with morbidity and mortality because of cerebral ischemia. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that higher regional cerebral oxygenation during resuscitation is associated with improved return of spontaneous circulation, survival, and neurologic outcomes at hospital discharge. We further examined the validity of regional cerebral oxygenation as a test to predict these outcomes., Design: Multicenter prospective study of in-hospital cardiac arrest., Setting: Five medical centers in the United States and the United Kingdom., Patients: Inclusion criteria are as follows: in-hospital cardiac arrest, age 18 years old or older, and prolonged cardiopulmonary resuscitation greater than or equal to 5 minutes. Patients were recruited consecutively during working hours between August 2011 and September 2014. Survival with a favorable neurologic outcome was defined as a cerebral performance category 1-2., Interventions: Cerebral oximetry monitoring., Measurements and Main Results: Among 504 in-hospital cardiac arrest events, 183 (36%) met inclusion criteria. Overall, 62 of 183 (33.9%) achieved return of spontaneous circulation, whereas 13 of 183 (7.1%) achieved cerebral performance category 1-2 at discharge. Higher mean ± SD regional cerebral oxygenation was associated with return of spontaneous circulation versus no return of spontaneous circulation (51.8% ± 11.2% vs 40.9% ± 12.3%) and cerebral performance category 1-2 versus cerebral performance category 3-5 (56.1% ± 10.0% vs 43.8% ± 12.8%) (both p < 0.001). Mean regional cerebral oxygenation during the last 5 minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation best predicted the return of spontaneous circulation (area under the curve, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.69-0.83); regional cerebral oxygenation greater than or equal to 25% provided 100% sensitivity (95% CI, 94-100) and 100% negative predictive value (95% CI, 79-100); regional cerebral oxygenation greater than or equal to 65% provided 99% specificity (95% CI, 95-100) and 93% positive predictive value (95% CI, 66-100) for return of spontaneous circulation. Time with regional cerebral oxygenation greater than 50% during cardiopulmonary resuscitation best predicted cerebral performance category 1-2 (area under the curve, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.70-0.88). Specifically, greater than or equal to 60% cardiopulmonary resuscitation time with regional cerebral oxygenation greater than 50% provided 77% sensitivity (95% CI,:46-95), 72% specificity (95% CI, 65-79), and 98% negative predictive value (95% CI, 93-100) for cerebral performance category 1-2., Conclusions: Cerebral oximetry allows real-time, noninvasive cerebral oxygenation monitoring during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Higher cerebral oxygenation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation is associated with return of spontaneous circulation and neurologically favorable survival to hospital discharge. Achieving higher regional cerebral oxygenation during resuscitation may optimize the chances of cardiac arrest favorable outcomes.
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- 2016
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419. Chemo-Enzymatic Synthesis of Oligoglycerol Derivatives.
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Singh AK, Nguyen R, Galy N, Haag R, Sharma SK, and Len C
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- Enzymes, Immobilized, Esterification, Fungal Proteins, Glycerol chemical synthesis, Glycerol chemistry, Lipase chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis, Polymers chemistry
- Abstract
A cleaner and greener method has been developed and used to synthesize 14 different functionalized oligomer derivatives of glycerol in moderate 29%-39% yields over three steps. After successive regioselective enzymatic acylation of the primary hydroxyl groups, etherification or esterification of the secondary hydroxyl groups and chemoselective enzymatic saponification, the target compounds can efficiently be used as versatile building blocks in organic and supramolecular chemistry.
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- 2016
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420. Timing of prenatal phthalate exposure in relation to genital endpoints in male newborns.
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Martino-Andrade AJ, Liu F, Sathyanarayana S, Barrett ES, Redmon JB, Nguyen RH, Levine H, and Swan SH
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- Anthropometry, Female, Genitalia, Male abnormalities, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Time Factors, Environmental Exposure, Genitalia, Male drug effects, Maternal Exposure, Phthalic Acids toxicity, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
- Abstract
Prior studies report that penile size and male anogenital distance (AGD), sensitive markers of androgen action in utero, may be shortened by prenatal exposure to certain phthalates, including diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), but no human study has investigated the importance of exposure timing in these associations. The aim of this study was to examine the significance of exposure timing on the action of prenatal phthalates in particular DEHP, on male infant penile size and AGD. In The Infant Development and the Environment Study (TIDES) we measured penile width (PW) as well as anoscrotal distance (AGDAS ) and anopenile distance (AGPAP ) in newborn males. We modeled these endpoints in relation to phthalate metabolite concentrations in maternal urine samples collected in each trimester (T1, T2, and T3) in a subset of TIDES mothers (N = 168). PW was inversely associated with T2 oxidized DEHP metabolites, mono-2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl (MEOHP, β=-0.48; 95% confidence interval, -0.93, -0.02), MEHHP (-0.48; -0.92, -0.05), mono-2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl (MECPP, -0.51; -1.01, -0.004), although no appreciable associations were seen between PW and T1 and T3 DEHP metabolite concentrations in this subset. Concentrations of DEHP metabolites in T1 urine samples were inversely related to male AGD. For example, in T1 samples in this subset of women mono-2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl (MEHHP) was inversely associated with male AGDAP (β = -1.73; 95% confidence interval, -3.45, 0.0004). However, no appreciable associations were seen between AGD measures and any DEHP metabolite in T2 and T3 samples. These data suggest that DEHP exposure is inversely associated with AGD and PW, with PW primarily associated with T2 exposure and AGD associations seen only for T1 exposure, but no associations were found between T3 DEHP metabolites and any of these genital endpoints. These findings are consistent with data on critical windows in rodent studies, supporting the biological plausibility of these associations in humans., (© 2016 American Society of Andrology and European Academy of Andrology.)
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- 2016
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421. Correction: Targeted Isolation of Antibodies Directed against Major Sites of SIV Env Vulnerability.
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Mason RD, Welles HC, Adams C, Chakrabarti BK, Gorman J, Zhou T, Nguyen R, O'Dell S, Lusvarghi S, Bewley CA, Li H, Shaw GM, Sheng Z, Shapiro L, Wyatt R, Kwong PD, Mascola JR, and Roederer M
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005537.].
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- 2016
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422. Neurosensory Assessments of Concussion.
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Tommerdahl M, Dennis RG, Francisco EM, Holden JK, Nguyen R, and Favorov OV
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- Diagnostic Equipment statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Nervous System Diseases complications, Neuropsychological Tests statistics & numerical data, Students statistics & numerical data, Touch Perception, Young Adult, Brain Concussion classification, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Diagnostic Equipment standards, Nervous System Diseases diagnosis, Task Performance and Analysis
- Abstract
The purpose of this research was to determine if cortical metrics-a unique set of sensory-based assessment tools-could be used to characterize and differentiate concussed individuals from nonconcussed individuals. Cortical metrics take advantage of the somatotopic relationship between skin and cortex, and the protocols are designed to evoke interactions between adjacent cortical regions to investigate fundamental mechanisms that mediate cortical-cortical interactions. Student athletes, aged 18 to 22 years, were recruited into the study through an athletic training center that made determinations of postconcussion return-to-play status. Sensory-based performance tasks utilizing vibrotactile stimuli applied to tips of the index and middle fingers were administered to test an individual's amplitude discrimination, temporal order judgment, and duration discrimination capacity in the presence and absence of illusion-inducing conditioning stimuli. Comparison of the performances in the presence and absence of conditioning stimuli demonstrated differences between concussed and nonconcussed individuals. Additionally, mathematically combining results from the measures yields a unique central nervous system (CNS) profile that describes an individual's information processing capacity. A comparison was made of CNS profiles of concussed vs. nonconcussed individuals and demonstrated with 99% confidence that the two populations are statistically distinct. The study established solid proof-of-concept that cortical metrics have significant potential as a quantitative biomarker of CNS status., (Reprint & Copyright © 2016 Association of Military Surgeons of the U.S.)
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- 2016
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423. Targeted Isolation of Antibodies Directed against Major Sites of SIV Env Vulnerability.
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Mason RD, Welles HC, Adams C, Chakrabarti BK, Gorman J, Zhou T, Nguyen R, O'Dell S, Lusvarghi S, Bewley CA, Li H, Shaw GM, Sheng Z, Shapiro L, Wyatt R, Kwong PD, Mascola JR, and Roederer M
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Binding Sites, Epitopes immunology, HIV Antibodies isolation & purification, Humans, Neutralization Tests methods, Gene Products, env immunology, HIV Antibodies immunology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus immunology
- Abstract
The simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) challenge model of lentiviral infection is often used as a model to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) for studying vaccine mediated and immune correlates of protection. However, knowledge of the structure of the SIV envelope (Env) glycoprotein is limited, as is knowledge of binding specificity, function and potential efficacy of SIV antibody responses. In this study we describe the use of a competitive probe binding sort strategy as well as scaffolded probes for targeted isolation of SIV Env-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). We isolated nearly 70 SIV-specific mAbs directed against major sites of SIV Env vulnerability analogous to broadly neutralizing antibody (bnAb) targets of HIV-1, namely, the CD4 binding site (CD4bs), CD4-induced (CD4i)-site, peptide epitopes in variable loops 1, 2 and 3 (V1, V2, V3) and potentially glycan targets of SIV Env. The range of SIV mAbs isolated includes those exhibiting varying degrees of neutralization breadth and potency as well as others that demonstrated binding but not neutralization. Several SIV mAbs displayed broad and potent neutralization of a diverse panel of 20 SIV viral isolates with some also neutralizing HIV-2(7312A). This extensive panel of SIV mAbs will facilitate more effective use of the SIV non-human primate (NHP) model for understanding the variables in development of a HIV vaccine or immunotherapy.
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- 2016
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424. A practical gas chromatography flame ionization detection method for the determination of octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane, decamethylcyclopentasiloxane, and dodecamethylcyclohexasiloxane in silicone emulsions.
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Brothers HM Jr, Bovens E, Bruni A, Habitz TM, Hamachi T, Han Y, Ji Z, Kerbleski JJ, Letouche C, Lu YD, Nguyen R, Rivard ML, Qi X, Shoji M, Tanaka K, and Tecklenburg RE Jr
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- Emulsions, Flame Ionization, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry methods, Reproducibility of Results, Silicones chemistry, Siloxanes analysis
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A gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC-FID) method for analysis of D4, D5, and D6 cyclic siloxanes in silicone emulsions is described. Sample preparation involves breaking the emulsion with methanol and hexanes, and then analyzing the hexanes phase after derivatization with hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS). Silylation is performed to reduce the potential for formation of cyclic siloxanes during the course of the GC analysis. The accuracy of the method was verified by performing analyses on samples spiked with known levels of D4, D5 and D6 and by comparison to a referee method using atmospheric pressure chemical ionization liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry detection (APCI-LC-MS). Absolute differences of the results obtained between the two techniques were 0.03 weight percent or less, and relative differences were 15% or less. The reproducibility and ruggedness of the method was demonstrated by performing a global round robin test at four different geographic sites on four different types of silicone emulsions. The %RSDs obtained were less than 10% for all analytes and all emulsions examined., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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425. Refilling medications through an online patient portal: consistent improvements in adherence across racial/ethnic groups.
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Lyles CR, Sarkar U, Schillinger D, Ralston JD, Allen JY, Nguyen R, and Karter AJ
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- Adult, Aged, California, Female, Health Records, Personal, Humans, Male, Medical Order Entry Systems, Middle Aged, Racial Groups, Electronic Health Records, Electronic Prescribing, Medication Adherence ethnology
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Objective: Online patient portals are being widely implemented; however, no studies have examined whether portals influence health behaviors or outcomes similarly across patient racial/ethnic subgroups. We evaluated longitudinal changes in statin adherence to determine whether racial/ethnic minorities initiating use of the online refill function in patient portals had similar changes over time compared with Whites., Methods: We examined a retrospective cohort of diabetes patients who were existing patient portal users. The primary exposure was initiating online refill use (either exclusively for all statin refills or occasionally for some refills), compared with using the portal for other tasks (eg, exchanging secure messages with providers). The primary outcome was change in statin adherence, measured as the percentage of time a patient was without a supply of statins. Adjusted generalized estimating equation models controlled for race/ethnicity as a primary interaction term., Results: Fifty-eight percent of patient portal users were white, and all racial/ethnic minority groups had poorer baseline statin adherence compared with Whites. In adjusted difference-in-difference models, statin adherence improved significantly over time among patients who exclusively refilled prescriptions online, even after comparing changes over time with other portal users (4% absolute decrease in percentage of time without medication). This improvement was statistically similar across all racial/ethnic groups., Discussion: Patient portals may encourage or improve key health behaviors, such as medication adherence, for engaged patients, but further research will likely be required to reduce underlying racial/ethnic differences in adherence., Conclusion: In a well-controlled examination of diabetes patients' behavior when using a new online feature for their healthcare management, patient portals were linked to better medication adherence across all racial/ethnic groups., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2016
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426. Monitoring Resource Utilization in a Health Care Coordination Program.
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Popejoy LL, Jaddoo J, Sherman J, Howk C, Nguyen R, and Parker JC
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- Communication, Humans, Case Management, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Delivery of Health Care standards, Health Resources statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: This initial article describes the development of a health care coordination intervention and documentation system designed using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Care Coordination Atlas framework for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid-funded innovation project, Leveraging Information Technology to Guide High-Tech, High-Touch Care (LIGHT)., Primary Practice Setting(s): The study occurred at an academic medical center that serves 114 counties. Twenty-five registered nurse care managers (NCMs) were hired to work with 137 providers in 10 family community and internal medicine clinics., Methodology and Sample: Patients were allocated into one of the four tiers on the basis of their chronic medical conditions and health care utilization. Using a documentation system on the basis of the AHRQ domains developed for this study, time and touch data were calculated for 8,593 Medicare, Medicaid, or dual-eligible patients., Results: We discovered through the touch and time analysis that the majority of health care coordination activity occurred in the AHRQ domains of communication, assess needs and goals, and facilitate transitions, accounting for 79% of the NCM time and 61% of the touches. As expected, increasing tier levels resulted in increased use of NCM resources. Tier 3 accounted for roughly 16% of the patients and received 159 minutes/member (33% of total minutes), and Tier 4 accounted for 4% of patients and received 316 minutes/member (17% of all minutes). In contrast Tier 2, which did not require routine touches per protocol, had 5,507 patients (64%), and those patients received 5,246 hours of health care coordination, or 57 minutes/member, and took 48% of NCM time., Implications for Case Management: 1. The AHRQ Care Coordination Atlas offered a systematic way to build a documentation system that allowed for the extraction of data that was used to calculate the amount of time and the number of touches that NCMs delivered per member. 2. Using a framework to systematically guide the work of health care coordination helped NCMs to think strategically about the care being delivered, and has implications for improving coordination of care. 3. For the purpose of reimbursement and communication with payers about quality metrics, it is vital that the type of touches and amount of time spent in delivering care coordination be documented in a manner that can be easily retrieved to guide practice decisions.
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- 2015
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427. Urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations in relation to history of infertility and use of assisted reproductive technology.
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Alur S, Wang H, Hoeger K, Swan SH, Sathyanarayana S, Redmon BJ, Nguyen R, and Barrett ES
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- Adult, Biomarkers urine, Biotransformation, Diethylhexyl Phthalate adverse effects, Endocrine Disruptors adverse effects, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Pollutants adverse effects, Female, Humans, Infertility diagnosis, Infertility physiopathology, Multivariate Analysis, Predictive Value of Tests, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, First urine, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, United States, Urinalysis, Diethylhexyl Phthalate urine, Endocrine Disruptors urine, Environmental Pollutants urine, Fertility, Infertility therapy, Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
- Abstract
Objective: To examine urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations in pregnant women with planned pregnancies in relation to history of infertility and use of assisted reproductive technology (ART)., Design: Phthalate metabolite concentrations were measured in first-trimester urine samples collected from women participating in a prospective pregnancy cohort study., Setting: Prenatal clinics., Patient(s): A total of 750 women, of whom 86 had a history of infertility. Forty-one women used ART to conceive., Intervention(s): None., Main Outcome Measure(s): Primary outcomes were concentrations of four metabolites of diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) and their molar sum (∑DEHP). Multivariable analyses compared phthalate metabolite levels in [1] women reporting a history of infertility vs. those who did not (comparison group); and [2] those who used ART to conceive the index pregnancy vs. women with a history of infertility who did not use ART., Result(s): Among women with a history of infertility, ∑DEHP was significantly lower in women who conceived after ART compared with those who did not (geometric mean ratio: 0.83; 95% confidence interval 0.71-0.98). Similar significant associations were observed for all of the individual DEHP metabolites. There were no differences in DEHP metabolite concentrations between women with a history of infertility and the comparison group., Conclusion(s): Women who used ART to conceive had lower first-trimester phthalate metabolite concentrations than women with a history of infertility who did not use ART. Further research is needed to explore whether those pursuing fertility treatments take precautions to avoid exposure to environmental toxins, to improve treatment outcomes., (Copyright © 2015 American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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428. Withdrawn: An unusual urticarial eruption: familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome.
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Nguyen R, Robinson A, Nicholls K, Varigos G, and Dolianatis C
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- 2015
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429. Method to Reduce Muscle Fatigue During Transcutaneous Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation in Major Knee and Ankle Muscle Groups.
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Sayenko DG, Nguyen R, Hirabayashi T, Popovic MR, and Masani K
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- Adult, Aged, Ankle, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Knee, Male, Middle Aged, Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation adverse effects, Young Adult, Muscle Fatigue, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology, Spinal Cord Injuries physiopathology, Spinal Cord Injuries rehabilitation, Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Background: A critical limitation with transcutaneous neuromuscular electrical stimulation as a rehabilitative approach is the rapid onset of muscle fatigue during repeated contractions. We have developed a method called spatially distributed sequential stimulation (SDSS) to reduce muscle fatigue by distributing the center of electrical field over a wide area within a single stimulation site, using an array of surface electrodes., Objective: To extend the previous findings and to prove feasibility of the method by exploring the fatigue-reducing ability of SDSS for lower limb muscle groups in the able-bodied population, as well as in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI)., Methods: SDSS was delivered through 4 active electrodes applied to the knee extensors and flexors, plantarflexors, and dorsiflexors, sending a stimulation pulse to each electrode one after another with 90° phase shift between successive electrodes. Isometric ankle torque was measured during fatiguing stimulations using SDSS and conventional single active electrode stimulation lasting 2 minutes., Results: We demonstrated greater fatigue-reducing ability of SDSS compared with the conventional protocol, as revealed by larger values of fatigue index and/or torque peak mean in all muscles except knee flexors of able-bodied individuals, and in all muscles tested in individuals with SCI., Conclusions: Our study has revealed improvements in fatigue tolerance during transcutaneous neuromuscular electrical stimulation using SDSS, a stimulation strategy that alternates activation of subcompartments of muscles. The SDSS protocol can provide greater stimulation times with less decrement in mechanical output compared with the conventional protocol., (© The Author(s) 2014.)
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- 2015
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430. Quantitative associations of scalp and body subcutaneous neurofibromas with internal plexiform tumors in neurofibromatosis 1.
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Jett K, Nguyen R, Arman D, Birch P, Chohan H, Farschtschi S, Fuensterer C, Kluwe L, Friedman JM, and Mautner VF
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- Humans, Odds Ratio, Whole Body Imaging methods, Neurofibroma, Plexiform pathology, Neurofibromatosis 1 pathology, Scalp pathology, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Subcutaneous Tissue pathology, Tumor Burden physiology
- Abstract
Internal plexiform neurofibromas are a major cause of adverse outcomes in patients with neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1). We investigated the relationship of the numbers of subcutaneous neurofibromas of the scalp or body to internal plexiform tumor volume in 120 NF1 patients who had undergone whole body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We identified internal plexiform neurofibromas in 55% of patients, subcutaneous neurofibromas of the body in 75%, and subcutaneous neurofibromas of the scalp in 45%. The number of subcutaneous neurofibromas of the body and scalp were associated with each other (Spearman's Rho = 0.36; P < 0.001). The presence of internal tumors was associated with the presence (odds ratio [OR] = 4.38, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.04-9.86, P < 0.001) and number (OR = 1.06 per neurofibroma, 95% CI 1.02-1.13, P < 0.001) of subcutaneous neurofibromas of the scalp. The total internal tumor volume was associated with the number of subcutaneous neurofibromas of the body (OR = 1.00086 per neurofibroma, 1.000089-1.0016, P = 0.029) and of the scalp (OR = 1.056 per neurofibroma, 1.029-1.083, P < 0.0001). Numbers of subcutaneous neurofibromas of the scalp and body are associated with internal plexiform tumor burden in NF1. Recognition of these associations may improve clinical management by helping to identify patients who will benefit most from whole body MRI and more intense clinical surveillance., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2015
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431. An unusual urticarial eruption: Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome.
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Nguyen R, Robinson A, Nicholls K, Varigos G, and Dolianitis C
- Abstract
This is a case of a 26-year-old Caucasian woman with a lifelong history of an episodic urticaria associated with arthralgia, precipitated by exposure to cold. She had no other significant past medical history. She reported several family members with a history of very similar episodic eruptions without definitive diagnoses. An examination showed an urticarial eruption over her limbs with no other systemic findings. A baseline full blood examination, serology and autoimmune screen were normal. A skin biopsy was consistent with urticaria, with dermal oedema and a perivascular infiltrate. Following genetic testing, she was found to be heterozygous for a mutation, p.Ala439Val in the NLRP3 gene, known to cause familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome (FCAS), which typically presents with urticaria, conjunctivitis and arthralgia, as described in this patient. FCAS is one subtype of a group of conditions known as cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). CAPS are rare, autosomal dominant inherited conditions with a spectrum of phenotypes, characterised by increased interleukin-1β release with subsequent local and systemic proinflammatory and pyrogenic effects., (© 2015 The Australasian College of Dermatologists.)
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- 2015
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432. A genetic demographic analysis of Lake Malawi rock-dwelling cichlids using spatio-temporal sampling.
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Husemann M, Nguyen R, Ding B, and Danley PD
- Subjects
- Africa, Eastern, Animals, Bayes Theorem, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Frequency, Genetic Drift, Genotype, Lakes, Microsatellite Repeats, Molecular Sequence Data, Population Density, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Spatio-Temporal Analysis, Cichlids genetics, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
We estimated the effective population sizes (Ne ) and tested for short-term temporal demographic stability of populations of two Lake Malawi cichlids: Maylandia benetos, a micro-endemic, and Maylandia zebra, a widespread species found across the lake. We sampled a total of 351 individuals, genotyped them at 13 microsatellite loci and sequenced their mitochondrial D-loop to estimate genetic diversity, population structure, demographic history and effective population sizes. At the microsatellite loci, genetic diversity was high in all populations. Yet, genetic diversity was relatively low for the sequence data. Microsatellites yielded mean Ne estimates of 481 individuals (±99 SD) for M. benetos and between 597 (±106.3 SD) and 1524 (±483.9 SD) individuals for local populations of M. zebra. The microsatellite data indicated no deviations from mutation-drift equilibrium. Maylandia zebra was further found to be in migration-drift equilibrium. Temporal fluctuations in allele frequencies were limited across the sampling period for both species. Bayesian Skyline analyses suggested a recent expansion of M. zebra populations in line with lake-level fluctuations, whereas the demographic history of M. benetos could only be estimated for the very recent past. Divergence time estimates placed the origin of M. benetos within the last 100 ka after the refilling of the lake and suggested that it split off the sympatric M. zebra population. Overall, our data indicate that micro-endemics and populations in less favourable habitats have smaller Ne , indicating that drift may play an important role driving their divergence. Yet, despite small population sizes, high genetic variation can be maintained., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2015
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433. Orienting network dysfunction in progressive multiple sclerosis.
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Ayache SS, Palm U, Chalah MA, Nguyen R, Farhat WH, Créange A, and Lefaucheur JP
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- Adult, Aged, Cognition Disorders etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive complications, Attention physiology, Cognition Disorders physiopathology, Executive Function physiology, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive physiopathology, Orientation physiology
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- 2015
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434. Anogenital distance and penile width measurements in The Infant Development and the Environment Study (TIDES): methods and predictors.
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Sathyanarayana S, Grady R, Redmon JB, Ivicek K, Barrett E, Janssen S, Nguyen R, and Swan SH
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- Anal Canal anatomy & histology, Cohort Studies, Female, Genitalia, Female growth & development, Genitalia, Male growth & development, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Maternal Age, Penis anatomy & histology, Predictive Value of Tests, Pregnancy, Reference Values, Weights and Measures, Child Development physiology, Genitalia, Female anatomy & histology, Genitalia, Male anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Background: Anogenital distance (AGD) is an androgen responsive anatomic measurement that may have significant utility in clinical and epidemiological research studies. We describe development of standardized measurement methods and predictors of AGD outcomes., Methods: We examined infants born to 758 participants in The Infant Development and the Environment Study (TIDES cohort) in four clinical centers in 2011-2013. We developed and implemented a detailed training protocol that incorporated multiple quality control (QC) measures. In males, we measured anoscrotal distance (AGDAS), anopenile distance (AGDAP), and penile width (PW) and in females, anofourchette distance (AGDAF,) and anoclitoral distance (AGDAC). A single examiner obtained three repetitions of all measurements, and a second examiner obtained independent measurements for 14% of infants. We used the intra-rater ICC to assess within-examiner variability and the inter-rater ICC to assess between-examiner variability. We used multivariable linear regression to examine predictors of AGD outcomes including: gestational age at birth, birth weight, gestational age, several measures of body size, race, maternal age, and study center., Results: In the full TIDES cohort, including 758 mothers and children, significant predictors of AGD and PW included: age at exam, gestational age at birth, weight-for-length Z-score, maternal age and study center. In 371 males, the mean (SD) AGDAS, AGDAP, and PW were 24.7 (4.5), 49.6 (5.9), and 10.8 (1.3) mm, respectively. In 387 females, the mean (SD) AGDAF and AGDAC were 16.0 (3.2) mm and 36.7 (3.8) mm, respectively. The intra-examiner ICC and inter-examiner ICC averaged over all subjects and examiners were between 0.89-0.92 and 0.69-0.84 respectively., Conclusions: Our study confirms that with appropriate training and quality control measures, AGD and PW measurements can be performed reliably and accurately in male and female infants. In order for reliable interpretation, these measurements should be adjusted for appropriate covariates in epidemiologic analysis., (Copyright © 2015 Journal of Pediatric Urology Company. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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435. Anesthetic management of the patient with low ejection fraction.
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Chua JH and Nguyen R
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- Anesthesia adverse effects, Anesthesiology methods, Anesthetics adverse effects, Defibrillators, Implantable, Heart Failure surgery, Humans, Intra-Aortic Balloon Pumping, Perioperative Care methods, Anesthesia methods, Anesthetics administration & dosage, Heart Failure physiopathology
- Abstract
The number of patients with heart failure presenting for surgery continues to rise, and anesthesiologists are increasingly being called upon to provide quality, safe care in the operating room for patients with low ejection fraction (EF). Perioperative goals in the management of these patients include maintaining forward flow, promoting inotropy without inducing or exacerbating ischemia, and returning patients to their preoperative level of function after surgery. Oftentimes, these goals can be met with pharmacologic support, including the use of calcium channel blockers, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, and novel agents, such as nesiritide and levosimendan. Many patients with diminished EF have implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) in place. These devices can be complex to manage, and concern often arises regarding electromagnetic interference from monopolar cautery. Although simply placing a magnet on the device will often disable the antitachycardia interventions of an ICD, this is not always the case. The safest way to manage an ICD in the perioperative period is to interrogate and reprogram the device before and after surgery. Another helpful device in dealing with patients with low EF, particularly those in acute cardiogenic shock, is the intra-aortic balloon pump. These devices can serve a critical role in managing patients who have inadequate responses to pharmacologic therapy or in whom vasopressor and inotropic support are suboptimal because of concerns for increasing myocardial work. With full understanding of available pharmacologic agents, and an appreciation of the capabilities of ICDs and intra-aortic balloon pumps, anesthesiologists will be better equipped to meet the perioperative needs of the patient with low EF.
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- 2015
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436. Characterization of spinal findings in children and adults with neurofibromatosis type 1 enrolled in a natural history study using magnetic resonance imaging.
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Nguyen R, Dombi E, Akshintala S, Baldwin A, and Widemann BC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neurofibromatosis 1 epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Neurofibromatosis 1 pathology, Spine pathology
- Abstract
To characterize spinal abnormalities in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). NF1 patients with at least one spine MRI were selected from participants prospectively enrolled in the National Cancer Institute NF1 Natural History Study. Data were analyzed retrospectively. Ninety-seven patients (38 females, median age 14.2 years, standard deviation [SD] 7.6) had baseline imaging of the spine, and 26 patients (27 %) had one follow-up spine MRI (follow up time 2.5 years, SD 1.1, range 0.7-4.7). Seventy-eight patients (80 %) had spinal neurofibromas, with rising frequency from 70 % in patients younger than 10 years to 80 % in patients aged 10-18 years to 89 % in individuals older than 18 years of age. At baseline, 33/97 patients (34 %) had MRI changes consistent with spinal cord compression that was most prevalent at the cervical (43 %) and lumbar spine region (40 %). Seven of nine patients with progression of their spinal neurofibromas developed cord compression. Paraspinal plexiform neurofibromas (PNs) were present in 77/97 patients (79 %), of which 68 patients (88 %) had concomitant spinal neurofibromas. Spinal curvature abnormality was present in 50/97 patients (51 %, 20 females, median age 14.6 years, SD 7.6). Patients with paraspinal PNs had six-fold higher odds of developing spinal curvature abnormalities compared to patients without PN (OR = 5.9, 95 % CI 1.81 to 19.44, p = 0.0033). A total of 58/97 patients (60 %, median age 16.1 years, SD 7.8, range 4.8-48.2 years) presented with neurologic abnormalities that progressed in 12/26 patients (46 %). Substantial spinal neurofibroma and paraspinal PN burden was observed in our study population, which represents a selective group of patients with specifically more severe tumor involvement than the general NF1 population. Occurrence and progression of spinal neurofibromas on repeat evaluations highlight the need for longitudinal clinical monitoring in patients with known spinal disease.
- Published
- 2015
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437. Q and B values are critical measurements required for inter-instrument standardization and development of multicolor flow cytometry staining panels.
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Perfetto SP, Chattopadhyay PK, Wood J, Nguyen R, Ambrozak D, Hill JP, and Roederer M
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- Flow Cytometry methods, Humans, Flow Cytometry instrumentation, Flow Cytometry standards
- Abstract
Much of the complexity of multicolor flow cytometry experiments lies within the development of antibody staining panels and the standardization of instruments. In this article, we propose a theoretical metric and describe how measurements of sensitivity and resolution can be used to predict the success of panels, and ensure that performance across instruments is standardized (i.e., inter-instrument standardization). Sensitivity can be determined by summing two major contributors of background, background originating from the instrument (optical noise and electronic noise) and background due to the experimental conditions (i.e., Raman scatter, and spillover spreading arising from other fluorochromes in the panel). The former we define as Bcal and the latter we define as Bsos . The combination of instrument and experiment background is defined as Btot . Importantly, the Btot will affect the degree of panel separation, therefore the greater the degree of Btot the lower the separation potential. In contrast, resolution is a measure of separation between populations. Resolution is directly proportional to the number of photoelectrons generated per molecule of excited fluorochrome and is known as the "Q" value. Q and Btot values can be used to define the performance of each detector on an instrument and together they can be used to calculate a separation index. Hence, detectors with known Q and Btot values can be used to evaluate panel success based on the detector specific separation index. However, the current technologies do not enable measurements of Q and Btot values for all parameters, but new technology to allow these measurements will likely be introduced in the near future. Nonetheless, Q and Btot measurements can aid in panel development, and reveal sources of instrument-to-instrument variation in panel performance. In addition, Q and B values can form the basis for a comprehensive and versatile quality assurance program., (Published 2014 Wiley Periodicals Inc. This article is a US government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.)
- Published
- 2014
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438. Parvalbumin and GAD65 interneuron inhibition in the ventral hippocampus induces distinct behavioral deficits relevant to schizophrenia.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Morrissey MD, Mahadevan V, Cajanding JD, Woodin MA, Yeomans JS, Takehara-Nishiuchi K, and Kim JC
- Subjects
- Action Potentials, Animals, Clozapine analogs & derivatives, Clozapine pharmacology, GABAergic Neurons metabolism, Glutamate Decarboxylase genetics, Glutamate Decarboxylase metabolism, Hippocampus cytology, Hippocampus metabolism, Interneurons drug effects, Interneurons metabolism, Locomotion, Mice, Parvalbumins genetics, Parvalbumins metabolism, Receptor, Muscarinic M4 agonists, Schizophrenia metabolism, Synaptic Potentials, GABAergic Neurons physiology, Hippocampus physiology, Interneurons physiology, Maze Learning, Neural Inhibition, Reflex, Startle, Schizophrenia physiopathology
- Abstract
Hyperactivity within the ventral hippocampus (vHPC) has been linked to both psychosis in humans and behavioral deficits in animal models of schizophrenia. A local decrease in GABA-mediated inhibition, particularly involving parvalbumin (PV)-expressing GABA neurons, has been proposed as a key mechanism underlying this hyperactive state. However, direct evidence is lacking for a causal role of vHPC GABA neurons in behaviors associated with schizophrenia. Here, we probed the behavioral function of two different but overlapping populations of vHPC GABA neurons that express either PV or GAD65 by selectively inhibiting these neurons with the pharmacogenetic neuromodulator hM4D. We show that acute inhibition of vHPC GABA neurons in adult mice results in behavioral changes relevant to schizophrenia. Inhibiting either PV or GAD65 neurons produced distinct behavioral deficits. Inhibition of PV neurons, affecting ∼80% of the PV neuron population, robustly impaired prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle reflex (PPI), startle reactivity, and spontaneous alternation, but did not affect locomotor activity. In contrast, inhibiting a heterogeneous population of GAD65 neurons, affecting ∼40% of PV neurons and 65% of cholecystokinin neurons, increased spontaneous and amphetamine-induced locomotor activity and reduced spontaneous alternation, but did not alter PPI. Inhibition of PV or GAD65 neurons also produced distinct changes in network oscillatory activity in the vHPC in vivo. Together, these findings establish a causal role for vHPC GABA neurons in controlling behaviors relevant to schizophrenia and suggest a functional dissociation between the GABAergic mechanisms involved in hippocampal modulation of sensorimotor processes., (Copyright © 2014 the authors 0270-6474/14/3414948-13$15.00/0.)
- Published
- 2014
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439. Comparison of virtual bronchoscopy to fiber-optic bronchoscopy for assessment of inhalation injury severity.
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Kwon HP, Zanders TB, Regn DD, Burkett SE, Ward JA, Nguyen R, Necsoiu C, Jordan BS, York GE, Jimenez S, Chung KK, Cancio LC, Morris MJ, and Batchinsky AI
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Sensitivity and Specificity, Severity of Illness Index, Smoke Inhalation Injury diagnostic imaging, Swine, Bronchoscopy, Lung diagnostic imaging, Smoke Inhalation Injury diagnosis, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Abstract
Purpose: Compare virtual bronchoscopy (VB) to fiberoptic bronchoscopy (FOB) for scoring smoke inhalation injury (SII)., Methods: Swine underwent computerized tomography (CT) with VB and FOB before (0) and 24 and 48 h after SII. VB and FOB images were scored by 5 providers off line., Results: FOB and VB scores increased over time (p<0.001) with FOB scoring higher than VB at 0 (0.30±0.79 vs. 0.03±0.17), 24 h (4.21±1.68 vs. 2.47±1.50), and 48h (4.55±1.83 vs. 1.94±1.29). FOB and VB showed association with PaO2-to-FiO2 ratios (PFR) with areas under receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC): for PFR≤300, VB 0.830, FOB 0.863; for PFR≤200, VB 0.794, FOB 0.825; for PFR≤100, VB 0.747, FOB 0.777 (all p<0.001). FOB showed 80.3% specificity, 77% sensitivity, 88.8% negative-predictive value (NPV), and 62.3% positive-predictive value (PPV) for PFR≤300 and VB showed 67.2% specificity, 85.5% sensitivity, 91.3% NPV, and 53.4% PPV., Conclusions: VB provided similar injury severity scores to FOB, correlated with PFR, and reliably detected airway narrowing. VB performed during admission CT may be a useful screening tool specifically to demonstrate airway narrowing induced by SII., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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440. Impact of wait times on spinal cord stimulation therapy outcomes.
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Kumar K, Rizvi S, Nguyen R, Abbas M, Bishop S, and Murthy V
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Electric Stimulation Therapy methods, Electrodes, Implanted, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Measurement methods, Retrospective Studies, Time, Treatment Outcome, Pain Management, Spinal Cord physiology, Spinal Cord Stimulation
- Abstract
Objective: Presently, the long-term success rate of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) ranges from 47% to 74%. SCS efficacy is inversely proportional to the passage of time between development of chronic pain syndrome and time of implantation. To improve outcomes, implantation should be performed early. This study identifies sources of delay and offers suggestions for improvement., Methods: A retrospective analysis of 437 SCS patients examines delays to accessing SCS at various points in the referral stream, from initial diagnosis, family physician, and various specialist treatments, to implantation. Analysis of variance evaluated the effect of age, sex, treating specialty, and their interactions on implantation delay. A multiple linear regression model was developed to assess factors contributing to implantation delay., Results: From time of onset of chronic pain to implantation, patients endured a delay of 65.4 ± 2.04 months. Initial physician contact occurred at a mean of 3.4 ± 0.12 months after development of pain syndrome. Family physicians managed cases for 11.9 ± 0.45 months and various specialists for an additional 39.8 ± 1.22 months. Neurosurgeons were quickest to refer to an implant physician (average wait-time 32.28 ± 2.64 months), while orthopedic surgeons and nonimplanting anesthesiologists took the longest, contributing to wait times of 51.60 ± 5.04 months and 58.08 ± 5.76 months, respectively. Once the decision for implantation was made, the implanting physician required 3.31 ± 0.09 months to organize the procedure. A gradual decline in wait times was observed from 1980 to present., Conclusion: To improve SCS success rates, physicians involved in the treatment for chronic pain should refer these cases early to an implant physician once failure of medical management becomes apparent., (© 2013 World Institute of Pain.)
- Published
- 2014
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441. Distribution of normal human left ventricular myofiber stress at end diastole and end systole: a target for in silico design of heart failure treatments.
- Author
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Genet M, Lee LC, Nguyen R, Haraldsson H, Acevedo-Bolton G, Zhang Z, Ge L, Ordovas K, Kozerke S, and Guccione JM
- Subjects
- Diastole physiology, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Models, Cardiovascular, Systole physiology, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Ventricular Remodeling physiology, Heart physiopathology, Heart Failure physiopathology, Myofibrils physiology
- Abstract
Ventricular wall stress is believed to be responsible for many physical mechanisms taking place in the human heart, including ventricular remodeling, which is frequently associated with heart failure. Therefore, normalization of ventricular wall stress is the cornerstone of many existing and new treatments for heart failure. In this paper, we sought to construct reference maps of normal ventricular wall stress in humans that could be used as a target for in silico optimization studies of existing and potential new treatments for heart failure. To do so, we constructed personalized computational models of the left ventricles of five normal human subjects using magnetic resonance images and the finite-element method. These models were calibrated using left ventricular volume data extracted from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and validated through comparison with strain measurements from tagged MRI (950 ± 170 strain comparisons/subject). The calibrated passive material parameter values were C0 = 0.115 ± 0.008 kPa and B0 = 14.4 ± 3.18; the active material parameter value was Tmax = 143 ± 11.1 kPa. These values could serve as a reference for future construction of normal human left ventricular computational models. The differences between the predicted and the measured circumferential and longitudinal strains in each subject were 3.4 ± 6.3 and 0.5 ± 5.9%, respectively. The predicted end-diastolic and end-systolic myofiber stress fields for the five subjects were 2.21 ± 0.58 and 16.54 ± 4.73 kPa, respectively. Thus these stresses could serve as targets for in silico design of heart failure treatments., (Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
442. Question 2: Is a lumbar puncture necessary in an afebrile newborn infant with localised skin and soft tissue infection?
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Nguyen R, Bhat R, and Teshome G
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Meningitis diagnosis, Skin Diseases, Infectious diagnosis, Soft Tissue Infections diagnosis, Spinal Puncture methods
- Published
- 2014
443. Core-shell inversion by pH modulation in dynamic covalent micelles.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Jouault N, Zanirati S, Rawiso M, Allouche L, Fuks G, Buhler E, and Giuseppone N
- Abstract
Dynamic covalent surfactants have been obtained by the reversible condensation of a hydrophobic aldehyde (ended by an ionic tip) with various neutral polyethylene glycol based hydrophilic amines. In water, the duality between the two hydrophilic domains (charged and neutral) leads to their segregation when the surfactants are self-assembled within micelles. Depending on the number of polyethylene glycol units, a core-shell inversion leading to a switching orientation of the ionic tips from the inside to the outside of the micelles has been demonstrated by a combination of scattering techniques. In competition experiments, when several amines of different pKas and hydrophilic polyethylene glycol chains are competing for the same aldehyde, it becomes possible to trigger this core-shell inversion by pH modulation and associated dynamic constitutional reorganization.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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444. Relationship between whole-body tumor burden, clinical phenotype, and quality of life in patients with neurofibromatosis.
- Author
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Merker VL, Bredella MA, Cai W, Kassarjian A, Harris GJ, Muzikansky A, Nguyen R, Mautner VF, and Plotkin SR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity diagnosis, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity psychology, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Sheath Neoplasms complications, Neurilemmoma complications, Neurofibromatoses complications, Neurofibromatosis 1 diagnostic imaging, Neurofibromatosis 1 pathology, Neurofibromatosis 2 diagnostic imaging, Neurofibromatosis 2 pathology, Pain complications, Pain Measurement, Radiography, Skin Neoplasms complications, Surveys and Questionnaires, Tumor Burden, Young Adult, Nerve Sheath Neoplasms psychology, Neurilemmoma psychology, Neurofibromatoses psychology, Neurofibromatosis 1 psychology, Neurofibromatosis 2 psychology, Quality of Life psychology, Skin Neoplasms psychology
- Abstract
Patients with neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1), NF2, and schwannomatosis share a predisposition to develop multiple nerve sheath tumors. Previous studies have demonstrated that patients with NF1 and NF2 have reduced quality of life (QOL), but no studies have examined the relationship between whole-body tumor burden and QOL in these patients. We administered a QOL questionnaire (the SF-36) and a visual analog pain scale (VAS) to a previously described cohort of adult neurofibromatosis patients undergoing whole-body MRI. One-sample t-tests were used to compare norm-based SF-36 scores to weighted population means. Spearman correlation coefficients and multiple linear regression analyses controlling for demographic and disease-specific clinical variable were used to relate whole-body tumor volume to QOL scales. Two hundred forty-five patients (142 NF1, 53 NF2, 50 schwannomatosis) completed the study. Subjects showed deficits in selected subscales of the SF-36 compared to adjusted general population means. In bivariate analysis, increased tumor volume was significantly associated with pain in schwannomatosis patients, as measured by the SF-36 bodily pain subscale (rho = -0.287, P = 0.04) and VAS (rho = 0.34, P = 0.02). Regression models for NF2 patients showed a positive relationship between tumor burden and increased pain, as measured by the SF-36 (P = 0.008). Patients with NF1, NF2, and schwannomatosis suffer from reduced QOL, although only pain shows a clear relationship to patient's overall tumor burden. These findings suggest that internal tumor volume is not a primary contributor to QOL and emphasize the need for comprehensive treatment approaches that go beyond tumor-focused therapies such as surgery by including psychosocial interventions., (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
445. Reducing muscle fatigue during transcutaneous neuromuscular electrical stimulation by spatially and sequentially distributing electrical stimulation sources.
- Author
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Sayenko DG, Nguyen R, Popovic MR, and Masani K
- Subjects
- Adult, Ankle physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Muscle Contraction, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle Fatigue, Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Purpose: A critical limitation with transcutaneous neuromuscular electrical stimulation is the rapid onset of muscle fatigue. We have previously demonstrated that spatially distributed sequential stimulation (SDSS) shows a drastically greater fatigue-reducing ability compared to a single active electrode stimulation (SES). The purposes of this study were to investigate (1) the fatigue-reducing ability of SDSS in more detail focusing on the muscle contractile properties and (2) the mechanism of this effect using array-arranged electromyogram (EMG)., Methods: SDSS was delivered through four active electrodes applied to the plantarflexors, sending a stimulation pulse to each electrode one after another with 90° phase shift between successive electrodes. In the first experiment, the amount of exerted ankle torque and the muscle contractile properties were investigated during a 3 min fatiguing stimulation. In the second experiment, muscle twitch potentials with SDSS and SES stimulation electrode setups were compared using the array-arranged EMG., Results: The results demonstrated negligible torque decay during SDSS in contrast to considerable torque decay during SES. Moreover, small changes in the muscle contractile properties during the fatiguing stimulation using SDSS were observed, while slowing of muscle contraction and relaxation was observed during SES. Further, the amplitude of the M-waves at each muscle portion was dependent on the location of the stimulation electrodes during SDSS., Conclusion: We conclude that SDSS is more effective in reducing muscle fatigue compared to SES, and the reason is that different sets of muscle fibers are activated alternatively by different electrodes.
- Published
- 2014
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446. Use of the refill function through an online patient portal is associated with improved adherence to statins in an integrated health system.
- Author
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Sarkar U, Lyles CR, Parker MM, Allen J, Nguyen R, Moffet HH, Schillinger D, and Karter AJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Drug Utilization, Female, Humans, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Male, Middle Aged, Dyslipidemias drug therapy, Health Records, Personal, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors administration & dosage, Internet, Medication Adherence statistics & numerical data, Pharmaceutical Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Online patient portals are being widely implemented, but their impact on health behaviors are not well-studied., Objective: To determine whether statin adherence improved after initiating use of the portal refill function., Research Design: Observational cohort study within an integrated health care delivery system., Subjects: Diabetic patients on statins who had registered for online portal access by 2010. A total of 8705 subjects initiated the online refill function use within the study window, including "exclusive" and "occasional" users (ie, requesting all vs. some refills online, respectively). Using risk-set sampling, we temporally matched 9055 reference group patients who never used online refills., Measures: We calculated statin adherence before and after refill function initiation, assessed as percent time without medications (nonadherence defined as a gap of >20%). Secondary outcome was dyslipidemia [low-density lipoprotein (LDL)≥ 100]. Difference-in-differences regression models estimated pre-post changes in nonadherence and dyslipidemia, comparing refill function users to the reference group and adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, medications, frequency of portal use, and outpatient visits., Results: In unadjusted examinations, nonadherence decreased only among patients initiating occasional or exclusive use of the refill function (26%-24% and 22%-15%, respectively). In adjusted models, nonadherence declined by an absolute 6% (95% confidence interval, 4%-7%) among exclusive users, without significant changes among occasional users. Similar LDL decreases were also seen among exclusive users., Conclusions: Compared with portal users who did not refill medications online, adherence to statin medications and LDL levels improved among diabetic patients who initiated and exclusively used the patient portal for refills, suggesting that wider adoption of online refills may improve adherence.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
447. Benign whole body tumor volume is a risk factor for malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors in neurofibromatosis type 1.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Jett K, Harris GJ, Cai W, Friedman JM, and Mautner VF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Statistics, Nonparametric, Young Adult, Neurofibromatosis 1 complications, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms complications, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms pathology, Tumor Burden
- Abstract
The purpose of this study is to determine whether benign whole body tumor volume of plexiform neurofibromas (PNs) is a risk factor for malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) in individuals with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). Thirty-one NF1 patients with MPNSTs and 62 age- and sex-matched NF1 patients without MPNSTs, who had undergone whole body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were analyzed for benign whole body tumor volume. Mann-Whitney U test, Wilcoxon signed ranks test, Fisher's exact test (two-tailed), and logistic regression analysis were used for statistical analysis. Sixteen percent of all patients with MPNST did not have internal PN. The median whole body benign tumor volume in patients with PN was 352.0 mL among the MPNST group and 3.8 mL in the comparison group (p < 0.001). When the patients were stratified by age as younger or older than 30 years (median age of MPNST diagnosis), the median benign whole body tumor volume was 693.0 mL in MPNST patients and 0.0 mL in control patients younger than 30 years (p < 0.001). The mean number of PNs in MPNST patients was 2.8 (range 0-13, median 2.0) and 1.4 (range 0-13, median 1.0) in patients without MPNST (p = 0.001). The risk of MPNST development increased 0.2 % with each additional mL of benign PN volume (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 1.002, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.001-1.003, p = 0.005) and was higher in patients younger than 30 years (adjusted OR = 1.007, 95 % CI 1.002-1.012, p = 0.003). Higher numbers of PNs, larger whole body benign tumor volume, and younger age are important risk factors for MPNST. We identified a subgroup of patients with MPNST without internal PN on MRI and the lack of correlation of MPNST development with tumor burden in older patients. These findings may alter our belief that all MPNSTs arise from pre-existing PNs and suggest that surveillance MRI based on clinical suspicion may be warranted in older patients, respectively.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
448. A 2-year-old boy with knee pain, fever, and multiple birthmarks.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Kim J, Shet N, Janne d'Othée BM, and Greene CL
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Femoral Neoplasms complications, Hemangioma complications, Humans, Male, Muscle Neoplasms complications, Skin Neoplasms complications, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis, Arthralgia etiology, Femoral Neoplasms diagnosis, Fever of Unknown Origin etiology, Hemangioma diagnosis, Knee Joint, Muscle Neoplasms diagnosis
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
449. Cardiac characterization of 16 patients with large NF1 gene deletions.
- Author
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Nguyen R, Mir TS, Kluwe L, Jett K, Kentsch M, Mueller G, Kehrer-Sawatzki H, Friedman JM, and Mautner VF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Echocardiography, Female, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnosis, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Gene Deletion, Genes, Neurofibromatosis 1, Heart Defects, Congenital etiology, Neurofibromatosis 1 complications, Neurofibromatosis 1 genetics
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to characterize cardiac features of patients with neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1) and large deletions of the NF1 gene region. The study participants were 16 patients with large NF1 deletions and 16 age- and sex-matched NF1 patients without such deletions. All the patients were comprehensively characterized clinically and by echocardiography. Six of 16 NF1 deletion patients but none of 16 non-deletion NF1 patients have major cardiac abnormalities (p = 0.041). Congenital heart defects (CHDs) include mitral insufficiency in two patients and ventricular septal defect, aortic stenosis, and aortic insufficiency in one patient each. Three deletion patients have hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Two patients have intracardiac tumors. NF1 patients without large deletions have increased left ventricular (LV) diastolic posterior wall thickness (p < 0.001) and increased intraventricular diastolic septal thickness (p = 0.001) compared with a healthy reference population without NF1, suggestive of eccentric LV hypertrophy. CHDs and other cardiovascular anomalies are more frequent among patients with large NF1 deletion and may cause serious clinical complications. Eccentric LV hypertrophy may occur in NF1 patients without whole gene deletions, but the clinical significance of this finding is uncertain. All patients with clinical suspicion for NF1 should be referred to a cardiologist for evaluation and surveillance., (© 2012 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
450. Comparison between p16 INK4A immunohistochemistry and human papillomavirus polymerase chain reaction assay in oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma.
- Author
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Argyris PP, Kademani D, Pambuccian SE, Nguyen R, Tosios KI, and Koutlas IG
- Subjects
- Aged, Alphapapillomavirus genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, DNA, Viral analysis, Female, Genotype, Gingival Neoplasms virology, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Mandibular Neoplasms virology, Maxillary Neoplasms virology, Palatal Neoplasms virology, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Alphapapillomavirus isolation & purification, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell virology, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16 analysis, Mouth Neoplasms virology, Papillomavirus Infections diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: Oral papillary squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is a histologic variant of SCC with a growth pattern suggesting human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of HPV genotypes in OPSCC., Materials and Methods: All cases with a histologic diagnosis of OPSCC from 1993 through 2008 were retrieved and confirmed. Immunohistochemical evaluation for the surrogate marker p16(INK4A) and HPV polymerase chain reaction were performed in tissue and DNA derived from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue., Results: Forty-four patients with confirmed OPSCC (mean age, 71.96 yr; female-to-male ratio, 1.75:1) comprised the study population. The most common site of involvement was the gingiva followed by the palate and buccal mucosa. Forty cases exhibited an invasive component, 1 was noninvasive, and in 3 cases invasion could not be confirmed owing to suboptimal thickness of the biopsy. Paraffin tissue blocks were available in 41 cases. Twenty-three cases (56.1%) exhibited positive p16(INK4A) staining, which was primarily weak to moderate with a generally focal pattern. Polymerase chain reaction assays were negative for HPV DNA in all cases., Conclusions: In this study, there was a clinical predilection of OPSCC in older women, with most cases occurring in the masticatory mucosa. Weak to moderate and focal p16(INK4A) staining was appreciated in contrast to reported staining properties in genital and oropharyngeal PSCC. Failure of the polymerase chain reaction assay to exhibit transcriptionally active HPV genotypes suggests that HPV is not associated with OPSCC tumorigenesis., (Copyright © 2013 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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