20 results on '"C. Woodside"'
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2. Management of Upper Extremities in Tetraplegia: Current Concepts
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Michael S. Bednar and Julie C Woodside
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Arthrodesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tendon Transfer ,Tenodesis ,Quadriplegia ,Upper Extremity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Tendon transfer ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Functional electrical stimulation ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Tetraplegia ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,Upper extremity surgery ,Hand surgery ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Hand ,Tendon ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Individuals with tetraplegia face many obstacles with activities of daily living. Although approximately 65% to 75% of individuals with tetraplegia would benefit from upper extremity surgery that could make many of their activities of daily living more spontaneous, only 14% of patients who are surgical candidates undergo tendon transfer procedures. A good surgical candidate has an injury at one of the cervical spine levels and an International Classification for Surgery of the Hand in Tetraplegia group of 1 or better, has functional goals, and is committed to the postoperative rehabilitation process. Surgery primarily consists of tendon transfers, tenodesis, and arthrodesis to restore elbow extension and hand pinch, grasp, and release. Nerve transfers and functional electrical stimulation are also options for treatment.
- Published
- 2018
3. Court Appointed Experts in the Breast Implant Litigation: Current Developments and Historical Bases
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Robert A. Carpenter, Frank C. Woodside, M. Gabrielle Hils, and Frederick M. Erny
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business.industry ,Law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Liability ,Trier of fact ,Medicine ,Toxicology ,business ,Discretion ,media_common - Abstract
Recently, in the multidistrict breast implant litigation, Judge Pointer entered a series of orders relating to the establishment of a Federal Evidence Rule 706 science panel. In re: Silicone Gel Breast Implant Products Liability Litigation, MDL 926, CV92-P-10000-S (N.D. Ala.). Judge Pointer's Order No. 31 specifies that appointments are to be made on a national basis for potential use in all federal courts and as permitted in state courts. Federal Evidence Rule 706 gives a district court the authority to appoint experts to provide helpful testimony. The policy justification behind Rule 706 is to guarantee that the trier of fact has access to impartial experts. The parties to the litigation, however, must be informed of the court appointed experts' opinions in advance and be given the opportunity to depose and cross-examine any expert. Once those requirements are satisfied, all other aspects of appointing the experts are left to the sound discretion of the trial judge. In fact, bias or qualification of experts may not be considered when the Court appoints experts. Bias or qualification may affect not only the weight of the experts' opinions but also the admissibility of their testimony. Parties confronted with harmful testimony presented by court appointed experts may want to challenge the admissibility of that testimony. This is particularly true in multidistrict proceedings where the opinions issued by a science panel could affect multiple cases. Although Rule 706 has notbeen used with any frequency in the past, that could be changing as Rule 706 and court appointed experts are playing important roles in a number of recent high profile cases. Furthermore, when used properly Rule 706 poses little threat to the American trial system and the adversarial process. This article discusses Federal Evidence Rule 706, its history and structure, and several recent cases involving court appointed experts to demonstrate the development and impact that experts, particularly scientific experts, are having in modern courts.
- Published
- 1998
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4. Obese Rats Show Prolonged Changes in Thermogenic Properties of Brown Fat in Response to an Acute Immune Challenge
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Megan M Sheppard, Joanna Pohl, Giamal N Luheshi, and Barbara C Woodside
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- 2011
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5. Effects of estradiol on immediate early gene expression associated with ovulation in lactating rats: role of nutritional status
- Author
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Alfonso Abizaid, Garth Service, and Barbara C Woodside
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Ovulation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ovariectomy ,Nutritional Status ,Endogeny ,Stimulation ,Cell Count ,Gonadotropin-releasing hormone ,Biology ,Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Lactation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Molecular Biology ,Genes, Immediate-Early ,media_common ,Neurons ,Analysis of Variance ,Estradiol ,General Neuroscience ,Postpartum Period ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Immunohistochemistry ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Preoptic area ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Luteinizing hormone ,Immediate early gene ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
In rats, food restriction during lactation extends lactational infertility, an effect that is in part due to attenuated luteinizing hormone (LH) responses to the positive feedback effects of estradiol (E2). In cycling rats, rising endogenous E2 levels not only induce a surge in LH release, but also increase the expression of the immediate early gene Fos in the anteroventral preoptic area (AVPV) and within gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons. This experiment examined whether the induction of Fos expression in the AVPV and within GnRH neurons after E2 treatment varied with stage of lactation and nutritional status. Brains of estrogen-treated ad lib fed and food-restricted lactating rats were processed for Fos or Fos/GnRH immunocytochemistry on days 15, 20, or 25 postpartum (pp). Cell counts from both labeling studies showed that on day 15 pp, neuronal activation in the AVPV and within GnRH neurons was low and did not differ between ad lib fed and food-restricted dams. On day 20 pp, levels of Fos-like immunoreactivity (FOS-IR) in the AVPV remained low in all dams but were significantly higher in ad lib fed dams. By day 25 pp, the ability of E2 to induce FOS-IR in the AVPV of food-restricted dams remained compromised. The proportion of GnRH cells expressing FOS-IR following E2 stimulation was restored to baseline levels by day 20 pp regardless of the nutritional status of the dam. These results show that the effects of E2 on neuronal events that correlate with the LH surge, are attenuated during lactation. Furthermore, food restriction during lactation selectively alters neuronal activation in the AVPV suggesting that this area integrates nutritional information to regulate LH release.
- Published
- 2003
6. A modeling approach to state estimation in systems with switching parameters
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K. Giridharagopal, C. Woodside, and Bernard Pagurek
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Extended Kalman filter ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Filter (video) ,Control theory ,Filtering problem ,State vector ,Fast Kalman filter ,Kalman filter ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Alpha beta filter ,Invariant extended Kalman filter ,Computer Science Applications ,Mathematics - Abstract
This paper describes a novel approach to the problems of state estimation in linear, discrete-time systems which switch randomly between two sets of parameters, indicated by a random switching variable. A non-linear approximate model for the switching variable is developed and used for the joint estimation of the state vector and the switching variable via a single extended Kalman filter. The performance of the filter is compared with that of other suboptimal filters known to date. The proposed approach provides comparable accuracy, and saves computational effort in systems of order three or more. In large systems the computational effort is halved.
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- 1978
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7. Engineering Calculation of Overflow Probabilities in Buffers with Markov-Interrupted Service
- Author
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E. Ho and C. Woodside
- Subjects
Markov chain ,Computer science ,Real-time computing ,Markov process ,symbols.namesake ,symbols ,Probability distribution ,Fading ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Algorithm ,Queue ,Buffer overflow ,Communication channel ,Probability measure ,Data transmission - Abstract
Interrupted service, which may occur in fading radio channels, in low-priority channels which can be preempted or in systems with failures may make severe demands on buffer size if overflow is to be avoided. This paper analyzes a buffer with a Markov-interrupted timeslotted server, generalizing earlier work on independent random interruptions. An equivalent service distribution is defined for use in an approximate M/G/1 model, which in turn gives buffer probabilities and overflow probabilities. For very small overflow probabilities, the necessary buffer size is found from a further analytic approximation to the tail of the buffer size distribution. The accuracy of the two approximations together is good, shown by an example of a fading radio channel.
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- 1987
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8. The effect of buffering strategies on protocol execution performance
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J. R. Montealegre and C. Woodside
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Class (computer programming) ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Distributed computing ,Checksum ,Local area network ,Range (statistics) ,Throughput ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Protocol (object-oriented programming) ,On-Protocol ,Computer network - Abstract
The execution workload of a protocol often limits the data communications throughput in local area and wide area networks. The handling of buffers is one of the implementation factors that affects the execution workload of a protocol implementation: if possible, copying of user data should be avoided. Two buffer cut-through strategies for avoiding copying higher-level data are described, with some of the mechanisms necessary to implement them. The resulting execution workload in a transport protocol (similar to the ISO class 4 protocol) is studied in detail. Individual protocol actions are modeled for a wide range of data-stream parameters. The improvement when copying is avoided is shown to be relatively insensitive to the parameter values and to be as high as 80% when the checksum is not computed at the transport level. >
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- 1989
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9. Singular arcs occurring in optimal electric steel refining
- Author
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J. Pauksens, Bernard Pagurek, A. Ogale, and C. Woodside
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Electric steel ,Mathematical optimization ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Computation ,Mathematical analysis ,MathematicsofComputing_NUMERICALANALYSIS ,State (functional analysis) ,Computer Science Applications ,Constraint (information theory) ,Arc (geometry) ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Nonlinear model ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Gradient descent ,business ,MathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS ,Refining (metallurgy) - Abstract
A second-order nonlinear model of steel refining in an electric are furnace is formulated and optimized. Iterative computation using steepest descent shows the existence of an optimal singular arc, which is then found more precisely by directly applying necessary conditions for such an arc. When a soft (penalty-function) constraint on state is replaced by a hard constraint, a state-constrained arc is found which corresponds directly to the singular arc. The dependence of the singular arc on problem parameters is explored.
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- 1970
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10. Medical-legal analysis and considerations in product liability cases involving pharmaceutical companies
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F C, Woodside, A P, Grunes, and J A, Comodeca
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Drug Industry ,United States Food and Drug Administration ,Expert Testimony ,United States ,Ethics, Professional - Published
- 1989
11. Will what you tell insurance investigators be kept secret?
- Author
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F C, Woodside and J, Grote
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Malpractice ,Insurance, Liability ,Confidentiality ,United States - Abstract
Information gathered for your defense could end up in the plaintiff's hands, under some recent court rulings.
- Published
- 1980
12. Litigation bias
- Author
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F C, Woodside and D R, Lydon
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Jurisprudence ,Humans ,Tampons, Surgical ,Female ,Epidemiologic Methods ,Shock, Septic - Published
- 1983
13. Free choice and uncertainty in policy optimization with an econometric model
- Author
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C. Woodside
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Set (abstract data type) ,Econometric model ,Work (electrical) ,Confidence set ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Optimal control ,Mathematical economics - Abstract
The use of dynamic optimization should be to guide, not to command the economic policymaker. This paper develops previous work on the Bank of Canada's national econometric model RDX2, to define an indifference set for the optimal policy based on a confidence set for selected model disturbances and a sensitivity analysis of the calculated optimum. Within the indifference set a policy may be chosen on other grounds, and still represent whatever wisdom is embodied in the model and the optimization.
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- 1972
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14. A medium-density genetic linkage map of the bovine genome
- Author
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John L. Williams, M. Zanotti, Brian W. Kirkpatrick, Ingrid Olsaker, F. Collins, M. Kessler, R A McGraw, Micha Ron, S. Nakane, N. Flavin, Johannes A. Lenstra, Stephen J. Kemp, B A Konfortov, D.J. Hulme, Claus Jørgensen, Takashi Hirano, L. Cooper, D. E. Moody, B. Leyhe, Sean Ennis, William Barendse, Sirkka-Liisa Varvio, Christa Kühn, Isaac J. Nijman, Johannes Buitkamp, Qiang Gao, Johanna Vilkki, K. Easterday, U. Thieven, James E. Womack, Y. Sugimoto, A. Van De Weghe, Barbara Harlizius, Riikka Velmala, W. Coppettiers, I. Martin Burriel, Michel Georges, S. A. Aleyasin, M. Band, A. Rando, A. Shalom, Rosemarie Weikard, Luca Ferretti, Daniel Pomp, B G D Urquhart, Georg Erhardt, Hubert Levéziel, M. D. Bishop, Harris A. Lewin, Silja Kostia, R. D. Drinkwater, H. S. Sun, Pilar Zaragoza, Morris Agaba, B. Denys, L. Lil, R. Gurung, Keren Byrne, J R Miller, Dag Inge Våge, C. Elduque, S. M. Armitage, Jay Hetzel, Alan J. Teale, André Eggen, C. Woodside, Stephen S. Moore, G. Hawkins, Daniel Vaiman, ProdInra, Migration, Unité de recherche Génétique Biochimique et Cytogénétique (LGBC), and Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)
- Subjects
Genetics ,Male ,Bacterial artificial chromosome ,[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Genetic Linkage ,Chromosome Mapping ,Locus (genetics) ,[SDV.GEN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics ,Biology ,Bovine genome ,Mice ,Genetic linkage ,Centromere ,Animals ,Humans ,Human genome ,Cattle ,Female ,Gene ,Synteny - Abstract
A cattle genetic linkage map was constructed which covers more than 95 percent of the bovine genome at medium density. Seven hundred and forty six DNA polymorphisms were genotyped in cattle families which comprise 347 individuals in full sibling pedigrees. Seven hundred and three of the loci are linked to at least one other locus. All linkage groups are assigned to chromosomes, and all are orientated with regards to the centromere. There is little overall difference in the lengths of the bull and cow linkage maps although there are individual differences between maps of chromosomes. One hundred and sixty polymorphisms are in or near genes, and the resultant genome-wide comparative analyses indicate that while there is greater conservation of synteny between cattle and humans compared with mice, the conservation of gene order between cattle and humans is much less than would be expected from the conservation of synteny. This map provides a basis for high-resolution mapping of the bovine genome with physical resources such as Yeast and Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes as well as providing the underpinning for the interpolation of information from the Human Genome Project.
15. An Incremental Capacity-Allocation Algorithm for Voice/Data Networks
- Author
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C. Woodside
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Constraint (information theory) ,Mathematical optimization ,Voice data ,Time-division multiplexing ,Computer science ,Regular polygon ,Allocation algorithm ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Blocking (statistics) ,Separable space - Abstract
An algorithm is described by which TDM slots in many links of a network can be optimally allocated between voice and data. It is an adaptation of a convex-programming method due to Fox, by which a pool of resources is allocated to minimize a convex separable criterion function such as blocking probability for voice subject to a single convex separable constraint such as specified maximum mean delay to data. In our case the single pool of resources is the total of the available slots. The necessary adaptation of Fox's algorithm is described for the minimum blocking problem, and for minimum data delay subject to a blocking constraint.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
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16. The interpretation of time-domain models in the frequency domain
- Author
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C. Woodside
- Subjects
Control and Systems Engineering ,Computer science ,Frequency domain ,Discrete frequency domain ,Electronic engineering ,Time domain ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Algorithm ,Cross-spectrum ,Computer Science Applications ,Final value theorem ,Interpretation (model theory) - Published
- 1967
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17. ATM whole gene deletion in an Italian family with hereditary pancreatic cancer: Challenges to cancer risk prediction associated with an 11q22.3 microdeletion.
- Author
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Arts HH, Lynch L, Grafodatskaya D, Eng B, Malloy L, Duck J, White R, Woodside C, Bell K, Zbuk KM, and McCready E
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- Adenocarcinoma diagnosis, Adenocarcinoma pathology, Adult, Aged, Female, Gene Deletion, Heterozygote, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Italy, Male, Medical History Taking, Middle Aged, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology, Pedigree, Adenocarcinoma genetics, Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 11 genetics, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary genetics, Pancreatic Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Hereditary pancreatic cancer has been attributed to variants of several cancer predisposition genes including ATM. While heterozygous pathogenic variants in the ATM gene are implicated as a cause of familial breast and pancreatic cancers to our knowledge ATM whole gene deletions have not been previously reported. We describe a contiguous gene deletion of the ATM locus in a multi-generation family of Italian descent with a strong family history of pancreatic cancer. A deletion of one copy of the entire ATM gene was identified by routine panel testing and further characterized by chromosomal microarray analysis. An 11q22.3 microdeletion of approximately 960 kb was identified that is predicted to result in loss of 10 genes including ATM. The deletion was identified in two additional family members including a presymptomatic daughter and an affected sibling. A normal disomic complement of the 11q22.3 region was detected in a third family member with a history of prostate and pancreatic cancer. Additional family members were not available for testing. Given available evidence that ATM haploinsufficiency can increase cancer risk, we predict that the observed copy number loss has likely contributed to hereditary cancer in this family. However, absence of the familial microdeletion in at least one affected family member suggests that ATM deletions are unlikely the sole contributing factor influencing tumor development in affected individuals. This case highlights 11q22.3 microdeletions of the ATM gene region as a possible risk factor for hereditary cancer, including pancreatic cancer. The same case provides a further cautionary tale for over interpretation of cancer risk associated tumor suppressor microdeletions and suggests that the variant may not be sufficient for tumor development or may modify the cancer risks associated with other, yet unidentified hereditary cancer genes., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2020
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18. Clinical Next-Generation Sequencing Pipeline Outperforms a Combined Approach Using Sanger Sequencing and Multiplex Ligation-Dependent Probe Amplification in Targeted Gene Panel Analysis.
- Author
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Schenkel LC, Kerkhof J, Stuart A, Reilly J, Eng B, Woodside C, Levstik A, Howlett CJ, Rupar AC, Knoll JHM, Ainsworth P, Waye JS, and Sadikovic B
- Subjects
- Alleles, Cohort Studies, DNA Copy Number Variations, DNA, Mitochondrial, Gene Library, Genes, BRCA1, Genes, BRCA2, Genetic Testing standards, Genotype, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Humans, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Mutation, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms genetics, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Genetic Testing methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing standards, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction standards, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques standards, Sequence Analysis, DNA standards
- Abstract
Advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) have facilitated parallel analysis of multiple genes enabling the implementation of cost-effective, rapid, and high-throughput methods for the molecular diagnosis of multiple genetic conditions, including the identification of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in high-risk patients for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. We clinically validated a NGS pipeline designed to replace Sanger sequencing and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis and to facilitate detection of sequence and copy number alterations in a single test focusing on a BRCA1/BRCA2 gene analysis panel. Our custom capture library covers 46 exons, including BRCA1 exons 2, 3, and 5 to 24 and BRCA2 exons 2 to 27, with 20 nucleotides of intronic regions both 5' and 3' of each exon. We analyzed 402 retrospective patients, with previous Sanger sequencing and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification results, and 240 clinical prospective patients. One-hundred eighty-three unique variants, including sequence and copy number variants, were detected in the retrospective (n = 95) and prospective (n = 88) cohorts. This standardized NGS pipeline demonstrated 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity, uniformity, and high-depth nucleotide coverage per sample (approximately 7000 reads per nucleotide). Subsequently, the NGS pipeline was applied to the analysis of larger gene panels, which have shown similar uniformity, sample-to-sample reproducibility in coverage distribution, and sensitivity and specificity for detection of sequence and copy number variants., (Copyright © 2016 American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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19. Factors affecting the delivery of HIV/AIDS prevention programs by community-based organizations.
- Author
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Chillag K, Bartholow K, Cordeiro J, Swanson S, Patterson J, Stebbins S, Woodside C, and Sy F
- Subjects
- Community Participation, Efficiency, Organizational, Humans, Preventive Health Services standards, Program Evaluation methods, Community Health Services organization & administration, HIV Infections prevention & control, Preventive Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Community based organizations (CBOs) play a frontline role in HIV/AIDS prevention activities. CBOs face formidable challenges to effective delivery of HIV prevention services including client characteristics such as homelessness and CBO characteristics such as limited resources and staff turnover. Despite these obstacles, CBOs are generally well positioned to deliver services to specific high-risk populations because they understand their local communities and are connected to the groups they serve. [C1]This qualitative study illustrates that structural, sociocultural, organizational, and individual client factors both facilitate and act as barriers to delivery of HIV prevention services. These challenges and successes help identify critical technical assistance needs.
- Published
- 2002
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20. Role of the nutritional status of the litter and length and frequency of mother-litter contact bouts in prolonging lactational diestrus in rats.
- Author
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Woodside C and Jans JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Temperature Regulation physiology, Body Weight physiology, Energy Intake physiology, Energy Metabolism physiology, Female, Food Deprivation physiology, Maternal Behavior physiology, Pregnancy, Psychophysiology, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Social Environment, Diestrus physiology, Lactation physiology, Nutritional Status, Sucking Behavior physiology
- Abstract
Food restricting lactating rat dams over the first 2 weeks of lactation results in a prolongation of the period of lactational diestrus. Such food restriction has not only a direct effect on the dam but also the pups are undernourished, and the pattern of dam-litter contact is also changed. In a series of studies, we investigated the effects of nursing undernourished pups and the change in dam-litter interaction on the prolongation of lactational diestrus. While nursing undernourished pups in the last 2 weeks of lactation is sufficient to extend lactational diestrus in ad lib-fed dams nursing well-nourished pups in the last 2 weeks of lactation is not necessary for the prolongation of lactational diestrus seen in food-restricted dams. Further, neither nursing underfed pups nor increased nest time in the first 2 weeks postpartum are necessary factors for the prolongation of lactational diestrus in food-restricted dams.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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