16 results on '"Alberto M Odor"'
Search Results
2. Asynchronous Telepsychiatry: A Component of Stepped Integrated Care
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Jay H. Shore, Donald M. Hilty, Steven Chan, Robert M. McCarron, Alberto M Odor, Alvaro Gonzalez, Glen L. Xiong, Michelle Burke Parish, Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, Lorin M Scher, Andres F Sciolla, and Ana-Maria Iosif
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Adult ,Research design ,Telemedicine ,020205 medical informatics ,Health Informatics ,02 engineering and technology ,Telehealth ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Health Information Management ,Nursing ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Humans ,Medicine ,Referral and Consultation ,Aged ,Original Research ,Psychiatry ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Telepsychiatry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Integrated care ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Patient Satisfaction ,Research Design ,Asynchronous communication ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Objective: Integrated behavioral healthcare models typically involve a range of consultation options for mental healthcare. Asynchronous telepsychiatry (ATP) consults may be an additional potential choice, so we are conducting a 5-year clinical trial comparing ATP with synchronous telepsychiatry (STP) consultations. Methods: Patients referred by primary care providers are randomly assigned to one of the two treatment groups, ATP or STP. Clinical outcome, satisfaction, and economic data are being collected from patients for 2 years at 6-month intervals. Results: Baseline characteristics for the first 158 patients and case examples of ATP are presented. Conclusion: Implementing ATP in existing integrated behavioral healthcare models could make mental healthcare more efficient.
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- 2018
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3. Comparing the 5-Year Diabetes Outcomes of Sleeve Gastrectomy and Gastric Bypass
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Douglas S. Bell, Molly B. Conroy, Donald T. Hess, Michelle R. Lent, Bipan Chan, Andrea Cook, Jennifer L. Kraschnewski, David O. Meltzer, Matthew F. Daley, David G. Schlundt, Howard S. Gordon, Alberto M Odor, Christina C. Wee, Jane Anau, Nirav K. Desai, Roy Pardee, Jamy D. Ard, Andrew O. Odegaard, Rhonda G. Kost, Thomas H. Inge, Laura J. Rasmussen-Torvik, Joe Nadglowski, Casie Horgan, William Richardson, Stephanie L. Fitzpatrick, Cynthia A. Blalock, Ana Emiliano, Corrigan L. McBride, Stavra A. Xanthakos, Elizabeth Nauman, R. Yates Coley, Gabrielle Purcell, Marc P. Michalsky, Lindsay G. Cowell, Neely Williams, John H. Holmes, Meredith C. Duke, Michael A. Edwards, Erin D. Roe, Elisha Malanga, Julie Tice, Sameer Malhotra, Steven R. Smith, Caroline M. Apovian, Cheri Janning, Joseph Vitello, Jeanne M. Clark, Ali Tavakkoli, Sengwee Toh, Robert T. Greenlee, Roni Zeiger, Anita P. Courcoulas, Daniel B. Jones, Robert J. Wellman, Lydia A. Bazzano, Kathleen M. McTigue, Jessica L. Sturtevant, David Arterburn, Jing Bian, Michael A. Horberg, Elizabeth Cirelli, Jefferey S. Brown, Jay Desai, James C. McClay, Andrea J. Cook, Karen J. Coleman, Kirk W. Reichard, and Sameer B. Murali
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Adult ,Male ,Sleeve gastrectomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastric Bypass ,Bariatric Surgery ,Type 2 diabetes ,030230 surgery ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gastrectomy ,Interquartile range ,Weight loss ,Patient-Centered Care ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Glycemic ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Importance Bariatric surgery can lead to substantial improvements in type 2 diabetes (T2DM), but outcomes vary across procedures and populations. It is unclear which bariatric procedure has the most benefits for patients with T2DM. Objective To evaluate associations of bariatric surgery with T2DM outcomes. Design, Setting, and Participants This cohort study was conducted in 34 US health system sites in the National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network Bariatric Study. Adult patients with T2DM who had bariatric surgery between January 1, 2005, and September 30, 2015, were included. Data analysis was conducted from April 2017 to August 2019. Interventions Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) or sleeve gastrectomy (SG). Main Outcome and Measures Type 2 diabetes remission, T2DM relapse, percentage of total weight lost, and change in glycosylated hemoglobin (hemoglobin A1c). Results A total of 9710 patients were included (median [interquartile range] follow-up time, 2.7 [2.9] years; 7051 female patients [72.6%]; mean [SD] age, 49.8 [10.5] years; mean [SD] BMI, 49.0 [8.4]; 6040 white patients [72.2%]). Weight loss was significantly greater with RYGB than SG at 1 year (mean difference, 6.3 [95% CI, 5.8-6.7] percentage points) and 5 years (mean difference, 8.1 [95% CI, 6.6-9.6] percentage points). The T2DM remission rate was approximately 10% higher in patients who had RYGB (hazard ratio, 1.10 [95% CI, 1.04-1.16]) than those who had SG. Estimated adjusted cumulative T2DM remission rates for patients who had RYGB and SG were 59.2% (95% CI, 57.7%-60.7%) and 55.9% (95% CI, 53.9%-57.9%), respectively, at 1 year and 86.1% (95% CI, 84.7%-87.3%) and 83.5% (95% CI, 81.6%-85.1%) at 5 years postsurgery. Among 6141 patients who experienced T2DM remission, the subsequent T2DM relapse rate was lower for those who had RYGB than those who had SG (hazard ratio, 0.75 [95% CI, 0.67-0.84]). Estimated relapse rates for those who had RYGB and SG were 8.4% (95% CI, 7.4%-9.3%) and 11.0% (95% CI, 9.6%-12.4%) at 1 year and 33.1% (95% CI, 29.6%-36.5%) and 41.6% (95% CI, 36.8%-46.1%) at 5 years after surgery. At 5 years, compared with baseline, hemoglobin A1cwas reduced 0.45 (95% CI, 0.27-0.63) percentage points more for patients who had RYGB vs patients who had SG. Conclusions and Relevance In this large multicenter study, patients who had RYGB had greater weight loss, a slightly higher T2DM remission rate, less T2DM relapse, and better long-term glycemic control compared with those who had SG. These findings can help inform patient-centered surgical decision-making.
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- 2020
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4. Transcultural Psychiatry Made Simple—Asynchronous Telepsychiatry as an Approach to Providing Culturally Relevant Care
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Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, Enrique Ochoa, Ana-Maria Iosif, Donald M. Hilty, Michelle Burke Parish, Glen L. Xiong, Alberto M Odor, Richard Sanchez, Robert McCaron, Najia Nafiz, and Kesha Patrice
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Telemedicine ,Health Informatics ,Telehealth ,Cohen's kappa ,Health Information Management ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,Cultural Competency ,Medical diagnosis ,Language translation ,Psychiatry ,Original Research ,Observer Variation ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Telepsychiatry ,Hispanic or Latino ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Family medicine ,Female ,Transcultural Psychiatry ,business - Abstract
Objective: To examine the feasibility and diagnostic reliability of asynchronous telepsychiatry (ATP) consultations in Spanish and ATP consultation with Spanish-to-English translation. Subjects and Methods: Twenty-four interviews of Spanish-speaking patients were videorecorded by a bilingual clinician who also collected patient history data and gave the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I) to each patient. The ATP data (video of the interview and patient history) were forwarded for psychiatric consultation and a diagnostic assessment by the investigators. The ATP data were then examined separately by two Spanish-speaking psychiatrists, before being translated into English and then re-examined by two English-speaking psychiatrists. Agreement between the expert diagnoses of the investigators and the diagnoses from the Spanish consultations, the Spanish-to-English translated consultations, and the SCID-I results was assessed using kappa statistics. Results: We found acceptable levels of agreement for major diagnostic groupings among the Spanish- and English-speaking psychiatrists. Kappa values for diagnostic agreement between the expert and the translated consultations, the original language consultations, and the SCID-I were at least 0.52 (percentage agreement, 79%) and higher. Conclusions: ATP consultations in Spanish, and those translated from Spanish to English, are feasible, and broad diagnostic reliability was achieved. The ATP process allows for rapid language translation. This approach could be useful across national boundaries and in numerous ethnic groups. Cross-language ATP may also offer significant benefits over the use of real-time interpreting services and has the potential to improve the quality of care by allowing for the addition of culturally relevant information.
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- 2013
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5. Disruptive Innovation: The Future of Healthcare?
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Alberto M Odor, Najia Nafiz, Donald M. Hilty, Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, Michelle Burke Parish, Kesha Patrice, and Ana-Maria Iosif
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Psychiatry ,Geriatrics ,Physician-Patient Relations ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical education ,Telemedicine ,Medical Records Systems, Computerized ,business.industry ,Communication ,Telepsychiatry ,Specialty ,Health Informatics ,General Medicine ,Telehealth ,Health Information Management ,Nursing ,Asynchronous communication ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Disruptive innovation ,Nurse Practitioners ,business - Abstract
The traditional face-to-face doctor-patient relationship is the core of conventional medical practice. One key aspect of this changing relationship is the increasing dependency on asynchronous data collection in clinical consultations. Such electronic communications and data streams may be numeric, text-based, audio, digitized still pictures, video and radiologic, as well as emanating from multiple medical devices. While asynchronous medicine may be established in specialties like radiology and dermatology, there is little research regarding the use of asynchronous medicine in areas of medicine that traditionally rely on the physical doctor-patient interaction such as primary care, internal medicine, geriatrics, and psychiatry. The practice of psychiatry stands out as a discipline that is highly dependent on the quality of the physical meeting between the doctor and the patient, yet even in this specialty it is possible to utilize asynchronous medicine for some types of psychiatric consultations. Asynchronous medicine has the potential to be significantly disruptive to our current healthcare processes, as well as more clinically and economically efficient.
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- 2011
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6. Intraoperative Incidents and Complications in Primary Arthroscopic Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
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Arturo Almazán, José Clemente Ibarra, Antonio Miguel, and Alberto M Odor
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction ,Anterior cruciate ligament ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bone Screws ,Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting ,Tendons ,Arthroscopy ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Femur ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament ,Intraoperative Complications ,Retrospective Studies ,Fixation (histology) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,Endoscopy ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tissue Transplantation ,Orthopedic surgery ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Equipment Failure ,Range of motion ,business ,Hamstring - Abstract
Purpose: To analyze intraoperative incidents and complications in primary arthroscopic anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) with bone–patellar tendon–bone (BPTB) and quadruple hamstring semitendinosus and gracilis (STG) grafts. Methods: From January 1999 to June 2004, we performed 330 BPTB and 96 STG procedures. Intraoperative incidents and complications were recorded for each case. Results: Our overall intraoperative incident and complication rate was 9.6% and was higher in the STG group (13.5%) than in the BPTB group (8.7%). In the BPTB group, combined incidents and complications according to stage of the procedure consisted of graft harvesting, 4 cases (1.21%); tunnel placement, 9 cases (2.7%); and graft fixation, 15 cases (4.5%). In the STG group, combined incidents and complications included graft harvesting, 8 cases (8.3%); tunnel placement, 1 case (1%); graft fixation, 3 cases (3.1%); and others, 1 case (1%). In 4 patients (0.9%), we had to change the technique from BPTB to STG and vice versa. In 2 STG cases, conversion of the technique was required because of graft-related problems; in the third case, it was necessary because of fixation. One BPTB was converted to STG because the graft was completely transected as a result of improper screw fixation technique. Conclusions: None of the encountered incidents and complications had an adverse effect on final stability or on range of motion in operated knees. All incidents and complications were due to technical errors that occurred during graft harvesting, tunnel placement, or graft fixation. It is known that technical errors are preventable if careful surgical technique is followed. The surgeon must be well versed in various reconstruction techniques to be able to detect and resolve forthcoming incidents or complications. Backup implants are mandatory. Level of Evidence: IV, therapeutic case series.
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- 2006
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7. A novel sodium benzoate analog (CH-1) decreases blood ammonia levels in experimental hyperammonemia
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Ruben Cortez, Octavio Campollo, Javier Alvarez-Tostado, Juan Armendáriz-Borunda, Rosa Maria Muñoz, and Alberto M Odor
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Chemistry ,Sodium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Hyperammonemia ,medicine.disease ,Effective dose (pharmacology) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ammonia ,Infectious Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Pharmacokinetics ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Sodium benzoate ,Hepatic encephalopathy ,Benzoic acid - Abstract
Sodium benzoate has been used for the treatment of congenital hyperammonemic syndromes and hepatic encephalopathy for its ammonia lowering effect. A zinc-derivative of sodium benzoate (CH-1) with similar effects, is presented herein. We administered CH-1 at doses of 250, 500 and 1000 mg/kg body weight during 7 days to male Wistar rats after a portocaval shunt operation was performed as a model for experimental hyperammonemia. There was a decrease in blood ammonia levels in all groups receiving CH-1. A linear relationship (r=−0.487, P
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- 1999
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8. Document Analysis (DA) as a Sociotechnical Design Framework for HCI: A Novel Tele-psychiatric Service as a Case Study
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Alberto M Odor, Gunnar Hartvigsen, Niels Windfeld Lund, Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, and Bernt Ivar Olsen
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Service (systems architecture) ,Knowledge management ,Sociotechnical system ,Human–computer interaction ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Telepsychiatry ,Cognition ,Context (language use) ,Document analysis ,business ,Boundary (real estate) ,System model - Abstract
We present a novel sociotechnical analysis framework; a document model and a first attempt at utilizing it in an information systems design context. We argue document analysis (DA) to be a holistic framework that encompasses technical, cognitive and social aspects of the system and may act as boundary objects to communicate the system model effectively between stakeholders, designers and engineers.
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- 2013
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9. PsychVACS: a system for asynchronous telepsychiatry
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Ana-Maria Iosif, Najia Nafiz, Donald M. Hilty, Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, Alberto M Odor, and Michelle Burke Parish
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Information management ,Telemedicine ,Computer science ,Video Recording ,Health Informatics ,Pilot Projects ,computer.software_genre ,Communications system ,Physicians, Primary Care ,World Wide Web ,Resource (project management) ,Software ,Health Information Management ,Interview, Psychological ,Humans ,Referral and Consultation ,Internet ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Telepsychiatry ,General Medicine ,Workflow ,Asynchronous communication ,business ,computer - Abstract
To describe the technical development of an asynchronous telepsychiatry application, the Psychiatric Video Archiving and Communication System.A client-server application was developed in Visual Basic.Net with Microsoft(®) SQL database as the backend. It includes the capability of storing video-recorded psychiatric interviews and manages the workflow of the system with automated messaging.Psychiatric Video Archiving and Communication System has been used to conduct the first ever series of asynchronous telepsychiatry consultations worldwide. A review of the software application and the process as part of this project has led to a number of improvements that are being implemented in the next version, which is being written in Java.This is the first description of the use of video recorded data in an asynchronous telemedicine application. Primary care providers and consulting psychiatrists have found it easy to work with and a valuable resource to increase the availability of psychiatric consultation in remote rural locations.
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- 2011
10. A feasibility study of the use of asynchronous telepsychiatry for psychiatric consultations
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B.S. Michelle Burke Parish, Donald M. Hilty, Ana-Maria Iosif, Karen Haught, Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees, and Alberto M Odor
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Telemedicine ,Video Recording ,Medically Underserved Area ,California ,Medicine ,Humans ,Medical diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,Referral and Consultation ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Telepsychiatry ,Social environment ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Psychotherapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mood disorders ,Anxiety ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Psychiatric interview ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
838 Objective: This study examined the feasibility of conducting psychiatric consultations using asynchronous, or store-and-forward, videobased telepsychiatry. Methods: Video-recorded 20- to 30-minute assessments of 60 nonemergency, English-speaking adult patients in a medically underserved county in California were uploaded along with other patient data to a Webbased record. Two psychiatrists then used the record to provide psychiatric consultations to the referring primary care providers. Results: Eighty-five percent of patients received diagnoses of mood disorders, 32% diagnoses of substance use disorders, 53% diagnoses of anxiety disorders, and 5% other axis I diagnoses. Psychiatrists recommended short-term medication changes for 95% of the patients and provided guidelines for possible future changes. Conclusions: This study—the first study of asynchronous telepsychiatry to be published—demonstrated the feasibility of this approach. This type of assessment should not replace the face-to-face psychiatric interview, but it may be a very helpful additional process that improves access to care and expertise. (Psychiatric Services 61: 838–840, 2010)
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- 2010
11. Impairment by cyclosporin A of reperfusion-induced arrhythmias
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Julieta Pichardo, Gloria Contreras, Rosa M. López, Diana Arteaga, Edmundo Chávez, Alberto Aranda, Elizabeth García, and Alberto M Odor
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart disease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ischemia ,Blood Pressure ,Myocardial Reperfusion Injury ,Mitochondria, Heart ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Electrocardiography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Heart Rate ,Cyclosporin a ,Internal medicine ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,medicine ,Animals ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Creatine Kinase ,Chemotherapy ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,biology ,business.industry ,Myocardium ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,Heart ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Myocardial Contraction ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Coronary occlusion ,Cyclosporine ,biology.protein ,Female ,Creatine kinase ,business - Abstract
This study introduces the immunosuppressor, cyclosporin A, as a cardioprotective drug. This effect was analyzed during development of reperfusion/induced arrhythmias after 5-min period of coronary ligation in hearts of rats under anesthesia. The results indicate that cyclosporin, when given before coronary occlusion, at a dose of 20 mg/kg, effectively protects against the high incidence of arrhythmias and the fall in blood pressure induced by reperfusion. In addition, it inhibits the delivery of lactic dehydrogenase and creatine kinase enzymes to the plasma. We propose that the protective effect could be related with its well documented action to restrain Ca 2+ -induced damage of mitochondrial functions.
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- 1992
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12. High Resolution 3D Models for the Teaching of the American Sign Laguage
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Alberto M Odor
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American Sign Language ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Speech recognition ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,High resolution ,3d model ,Clothing ,language.human_language ,Age groups ,Human–computer interaction ,language ,Hearing impaired ,business - Abstract
Millions of Americans in all age groups are affected by deafness and impaired hearing. They communicate with others using the American Sign Language (ASL). Teaching is tutorial (person-to-person) or with limited video content. We believe that high resolution 3D models and their animations can be used to effectively teach the ASL, with the following advantages over the traditional teaching approach: a) signing can be played at varying speeds and as many times as necessary, b) being 3-D constructs, models can be viewed from diverse angles, c) signing can be applied to different characters (male, female, child, elderly, etc.), d) special editing like close-ups, picture-in-picture, and phantom movements, can make learning easier, and e) clothing, surrounding environment and lighting conditions can be varied to present the student to less than ideal situations.
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- 2009
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13. Alteration of cyclosporin-A pharmacokinetics after experimental spinal cord injury
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Rosa M. López, Gilberto Castañeda-Hernández, Antonio Ibarra, Francisco J. Flores-Murrieta, Dolores Correa, Roberto R. Kretschmer, Ignacio Madrazo, Hermelinda Salgado-Ceballos, Rebecca E. Franco-Bourland, Israel Grijalva, Alberto M Odor, Ana L. Espitia, and Gabriel Guízar-Sahagún
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medicine.medical_treatment ,Administration, Oral ,Biological Availability ,Pharmacology ,Lesion ,Pharmacokinetics ,Cyclosporin a ,medicine ,Animals ,Spinal cord injury ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Bioavailability ,Rats ,Transplantation ,Anesthesia ,Area Under Curve ,Cyclosporine ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Paraplegia ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Injections, Intraperitoneal ,Half-Life - Abstract
The pharmacokinetics of the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporin-A (CsA) were studied in rats submitted to spinal cord (SC) injury. A single CsA 10 mg/kg dose was given either intraperitoneally (i.p.) or orally to rats submitted to experimental SC injury at the T8 level. Twenty four hours after lesion (acute stage of SC injury) i.p. CsA bioavailability was increased, while t1/2 was prolonged. However, oral bioavailability was reduced. Seven weeks after lesion (chronic stage of SC injury) CsA bioavailability, by either route, was not significantly different from control values. Results indicate that parenteral CsA bioavailability is increased during the acute stage of SC lesion, probably due to an impaired elimination. Oral bioavailability, however, is decreased, since there is also an important reduction in gastrointestinal CsA absorption that overrides the effect of impaired elimination. Alterations in CsA pharmacokinetics appear to revert during the chronic stage of SC injury. Changes in CsA bioavailability, depending on the route of administration and on time, must be considered to design an adequate immunosuppressive treatment in SC injury.
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- 1996
14. Cross-Lingual Asynchronous Telepsychiatry: Disruptive Innovation?
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Alberto M Odor, Michelle Burke Parish, and Peter Mackinlay Yellowlees
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Psychiatry ,Cross lingual ,Telepsychiatry ,Applied psychology ,Video Recording ,Multilingualism ,Telemedicine ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Asynchronous communication ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Disruptive innovation ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2012
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15. Acute Spinal Cord Injury Alters the Bioavailability of Oral and Intraperitoneal Cyclosporine-A in Contused Rats
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A. L. Espitia, Francisco J. Flores-Murrieta, I. Madrazo, Alberto M Odor, R. Franco-Bourland, H. Salgado-Ceballos, Gabriel Guízar-Sahagún, Rosa M. López, Antonio Ibarra, I. Grijalva, Gilberto Castañeda-Hernández, and R. Kretschmer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Text mining ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Acute spinal cord injury ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Article ,Bioavailability ,Surgery - Published
- 1992
16. Sodium benzoate and lactulose for the treatment of hepatic encephalopathy
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Alberto M Odor, Rosa María Munñoz, Octavio Campollo, Ruben Cortez, and Marcos Gutiérrez
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Drug Synergism ,Benzoic Acid ,medicine.disease ,Benzoates ,Gastroenterology ,Lactulose ,Rats ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Hepatic Encephalopathy ,Internal medicine ,Sodium benzoate ,Animals ,Medicine ,Rats, Wistar ,business ,Hepatic encephalopathy ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1994
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