18,882,242 results on '"Female"'
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2. Sleep, Fatigue, and Recovery Profiles of the Longest Solo Unsupported One-Way Polar Ski Journey Across Antarctica.
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Scheer, Volker, Chandi, Harpreet, Valero, Encarna, Thuany, Mabliny, Knechtle, Beat, and Steinach, Mathias
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MYALGIA ,MUSCLE fatigue ,RESEARCH funding ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,COOLDOWN ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERVIEWING ,INSOMNIA ,TRAVEL ,EXTREME sports ,SLEEP duration ,SKIING ,SLEEP ,ATHLETIC ability ,CASE studies ,SNOW ,TIME - Abstract
Purpose: Antarctic expeditions are exceptional physiological challenges. Sleep plays a critical role in athletic performance, recovery, and wellness, with sleep disturbances having a negative impact on health and performance. Methods: The authors investigated sleep, fatigue, and recovery profiles of the longest solo unsupported one-way polar ski journey across Antarctica. A 33-year-old woman covered 1484.53 km from Hercules Inlet to the South Pole, finishing at the Ross Ice Shelf, in 70 days and 16 hours. Questionnaires on sleep (Pittsburgh Insomnia Rating Scale and Karolinska Sleepiness Scale), fatigue (Subjective Assessment of Fatigue), recovery (Total Quality Recovery), and wellness were completed at different time points (before, during, and after the expedition). Results: Average daily sleep time was between 4 and 5 hours, increasing to 7 hours for the final part of the expedition. Satisfaction of sleep and lack of energy deteriorated as the expedition progressed, alongside signs of clinical insomnia. Fatigue and muscle soreness increased with increasing milage, with extreme levels and very poor recovery toward the end of the expedition. Despite this, the adventurer continued to perform on extremely high levels. Postexpedition scores returned to baseline, demonstrating the incredible adaptation and ability to recovery. The postexpedition interview showed that prior experience of an Antarctic expedition may have prepared the athlete and made her more resilient for this challenge. Conclusions: The data provide unique insights into Antarctic expeditions and may help us understand the limits of human performance when planning future expeditions of this nature. Female athletes are capable of extreme challenges, breaking established performance boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. High incidence and geographic distribution of cleft palate in Finland are associated with the IRF6 gene.
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Rahimov, Fedik, Nieminen, Pekka, Kumari, Priyanka, Juuri, Emma, Nikopensius, Tiit, Paraiso, Kitt, German, Jakob, Karvanen, Antti, Kals, Mart, Elnahas, Abdelrahman, Karjalainen, Juha, Kurki, Mitja, Palotie, Aarno, Heliövaara, Arja, Esko, Tõnu, Jukarainen, Sakari, Palta, Priit, Ganna, Andrea, Patni, Anjali, Mar, Daniel, Bomsztyk, Karol, Mathieu, Julie, Ruohola-Baker, Hannele, Visel, Axel, Fakhouri, Walid, Schutte, Brian, Cornell, Robert, and Rice, David
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Humans ,Finland ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Cleft Palate ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Incidence ,Gene Frequency ,Cleft Lip ,Female ,Male ,Estonia ,Alleles - Abstract
In Finland, the frequency of isolated cleft palate (CP) is higher than that of isolated cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P). This trend contrasts to that in other European countries but its genetic underpinnings are unknown. We conducted a genome-wide association study in the Finnish population and identified rs570516915, a single nucleotide polymorphism highly enriched in Finns, as strongly associated with CP (P = 5.25 × 10-34, OR = 8.65, 95% CI 6.11-12.25), but not with CL/P (P = 7.2 × 10-5), with genome-wide significance. The risk allele frequency of rs570516915 parallels the regional variation of CP prevalence in Finland, and the association was replicated in independent cohorts of CP cases from Finland (P = 8.82 × 10-28) and Estonia (P = 1.25 × 10-5). The risk allele of rs570516915 alters a conserved binding site for the transcription factor IRF6 within an enhancer (MCS-9.7) upstream of the IRF6 gene and diminishes the enhancer activity. Oral epithelial cells derived from CRISPR-Cas9 edited induced pluripotent stem cells demonstrate that the CP-associated allele of rs570516915 concomitantly decreases the binding of IRF6 and the expression level of IRF6, suggesting impaired IRF6 autoregulation as a molecular mechanism underlying the risk for CP.
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- 2024
4. Syntactic and semantic specialization in 9- to 10-year-old children during auditory sentence processing.
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Wang, Jin, Wagley, Neelima, Rice, Mabel, Gaab, Nadine, and Booth, James
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Developmental ,Multi-voxel pattern analysis ,Semantics ,Sentence processing ,Syntax ,Humans ,Child ,Semantics ,Male ,Female ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Mapping ,Comprehension ,Brain ,Speech Perception ,Language - Abstract
Prior literature has debated whether syntax is separable from semantics in the brain. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and multi-voxel pattern analysis, our previous studies investigated brain activity during morpho-syntactic versus semantic processing. These studies only detected semantic specialization in activation patterns and no syntactic specialization in 5- to 6-year-old and 7- to 8-year-old children. To examine if older children who have mastered morpho-syntactic skills would show specialization for syntax, the current study examined 64 9- to 10-year-old children using the same design and analyses. We observed that only the left IFG pars opercularis was sensitive to syntactic but not semantic information, supporting the hypothesis that this region serves as a core region for syntax. In addition, the left STG which has been implicated in the integration of semantics and syntax, as well as the left MTG and IFG pars triangularis which have been implicated in semantics, were sensitive to both semantic and syntactic information with no evidence of specialization. These findings suggest a lexicalized view of syntax, which argues that semantically sensitive regions are also critical regions for syntactic processing during language comprehension.
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- 2024
5. Initial feasibility cohort of temporally modulated pulsed proton re-irradiation (TMPPR) for recurrent high-grade intracranial malignancies.
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La Rosa, Alonso, Fellows, Zachary, Wroe, Andrew, Coutinho, Len, Pons, Eduardo, McAllister, Nicole, Tolakanahalli, Ranjini, Kutuk, Tugce, Hall, Matthew, Press, Robert, McDermott, Mike, Odia, Yazmin, Ahluwalia, Manmeet, Mehta, Minesh, Gutierrez, Alonso, and Kotecha, Rupesh
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CNS malignancies ,Pulsed-reduced dose rate ,Recurrence/progression ,Temporally modulated proton re-irradiation ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Proton Therapy ,Male ,Aged ,Female ,Re-Irradiation ,Brain Neoplasms ,Adult ,Feasibility Studies ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Radiotherapy ,Intensity-Modulated ,Treatment Outcome ,Cohort Studies - Abstract
Recurrent high-grade intracranial malignancies have a grim prognosis and uniform management guidelines are lacking. Re-irradiation is underused due to concerns about irreversible side effects. Pulsed-reduced dose rate radiotherapy (PRDR) aims to reduce toxicity while improving tumor control by exploiting dose-rate effects. We share our initial experience with temporally modulated pulsed proton re-irradiation (TMPPR), focusing on workflow, safety, feasibility, and outcomes for the first patient cohort. TMPPR was administered to patients with recurrent or progressive central nervous system malignancies using intensity modulated proton therapy with three fields. Patient and treatment data were collected, responses categorized using RANO assessment, and toxicities graded using CTCAE v5.0. Five patients received TMPPR between October 2022 and May 2023, with a median age of 54 years (Range: 32-72), and a median time from initial radiotherapy to re-RT of 23 months (Range 14-40). Treatment was completed without delay, with a median dose of 60 GyRBE in 30 fractions. Initial treatment response assessment showed complete (n = 1) or partial (n = 3) responses. Limited toxicity was observed, primarily grade 2 alopecia and one case of radiation necrosis graded at 2. This early experience demonstrates the feasibility of TMPPR delivery, highlighting the importance of prospective evaluations in the re-irradiation setting.
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- 2024
6. Incontinentia pigmenti underlies thymic dysplasia, autoantibodies to type I IFNs, and viral diseases.
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Rosain, Jérémie, Le Voyer, Tom, Liu, Xian, Gervais, Adrian, Polivka, Laura, Cederholm, Axel, Berteloot, Laureline, Parent, Audrey, Pescatore, Alessandra, Spinosa, Ezia, Minic, Snezana, Kiszewski, Ana, Tsumura, Miyuki, Thibault, Chloé, Esnaola Azcoiti, Maria, Martinovic, Jelena, Philippot, Quentin, Khan, Taushif, Marchal, Astrid, Charmeteau-De Muylder, Bénédicte, Bizien, Lucy, Deswarte, Caroline, Hadjem, Lillia, Fauvarque, Marie-Odile, Dorgham, Karim, Eriksson, Daniel, Falcone, Emilia, Puel, Mathilde, Ünal, Sinem, Geraldo, Amyrath, Le Floch, Corentin, Li, Hailun, Rheault, Sylvie, Muti, Christine, Bobrie-Moyrand, Claire, Welfringer-Morin, Anne, Fuleihan, Ramsay, Lévy, Romain, Roelens, Marie, Gao, Liwei, Materna, Marie, Pellegrini, Silvia, Piemonti, Lorenzo, Catherinot, Emilie, Goffard, Jean-Christophe, Fekkar, Arnaud, Sacko-Sow, Aissata, Soudée, Camille, Boucherit, Soraya, Neehus, Anna-Lena, Has, Cristina, Hübner, Stefanie, Blanchard-Rohner, Géraldine, Amador-Borrero, Blanca, Utsumi, Takanori, Taniguchi, Maki, Tani, Hiroo, Izawa, Kazushi, Yasumi, Takahiro, Kanai, Sotaro, Migaud, Mélanie, Aubart, Mélodie, Lambert, Nathalie, Gorochov, Guy, Picard, Capucine, Soudais, Claire, LHonneur, Anne-Sophie, Rozenberg, Flore, Milner, Joshua, Zhang, Shen-Ying, Vabres, Pierre, Trpinac, Dusan, Marr, Nico, Boddaert, Nathalie, Desguerre, Isabelle, Pasparakis, Manolis, Miller, Corey, Poziomczyk, Cláudia, Abel, Laurent, Okada, Satoshi, Jouanguy, Emmanuelle, Cheynier, Rémi, Zhang, Qian, Cobat, Aurélie, Béziat, Vivien, Boisson, Bertrand, Steffann, Julie, Fusco, Francesca, Ursini, Matilde, Hadj-Rabia, Smail, Bodemer, Christine, Bustamante, Jacinta, Luche, Hervé, Puel, Anne, Courtois, Gilles, Bastard, Paul, Landegren, Nils, Anderson, Mark, and Casanova, Jean-Laurent
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Humans ,Interferon Type I ,Female ,Autoantibodies ,Thymus Gland ,Child ,Incontinentia Pigmenti ,Child ,Preschool ,I-kappa B Kinase ,Virus Diseases ,Infant ,Adult ,Adolescent ,Young Adult - Abstract
Human inborn errors of thymic T cell tolerance underlie the production of autoantibodies (auto-Abs) neutralizing type I IFNs, which predispose to severe viral diseases. We analyze 131 female patients with X-linked dominant incontinentia pigmenti (IP), heterozygous for loss-of-function (LOF) NEMO variants, from 99 kindreds in 10 countries. Forty-seven of these patients (36%) have auto-Abs neutralizing IFN-α and/or IFN-ω, a proportion 23 times higher than that for age-matched female controls. This proportion remains stable from the age of 6 years onward. On imaging, female patients with IP have a small, abnormally structured thymus. Auto-Abs against type I IFNs confer a predisposition to life-threatening viral diseases. By contrast, patients with IP lacking auto-Abs against type I IFNs are at no particular risk of viral disease. These results suggest that IP accelerates thymic involution, thereby underlying the production of auto-Abs neutralizing type I IFNs in at least a third of female patients with IP, predisposing them to life-threatening viral diseases.
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- 2024
7. Perinatal Caffeine Administration Improves Outcomes in an Ovine Model of Neonatal Hypoxia-Ischemia.
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Mike, Jana, White, Yasmine, Ha, Janica, Iranmahboub, Ariana, Hawkins, Cheryl, Hutchings, Rachel, Vento, Christian, Manzoor, Hadiya, Wang, Aijun, Goudy, Brian, Vali, Payam, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Gobburu, Jogarao, Long-Boyle, Janel, Fineman, Jeffrey, Ferriero, Donna, and Maltepe, Emin
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caffeine ,developing countries ,gray matter ,hypoxia-ischemia ,brain ,sheep ,Animals ,Caffeine ,Hypoxia-Ischemia ,Brain ,Sheep ,Female ,Animals ,Newborn ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Male ,Pregnancy ,Citrates - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy disproportionately affects low- and middle-income countries, where ≈96% of affected infants reside. The current standard of care, therapeutic hypothermia, is frequently ineffective in this setting, likely because injury may be occurring earlier during labor. Here, we studied the pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy of perinatal caffeine administration in near-term lambs following global ischemic injury to support the development of earlier treatment strategies targeting the fetus in utero as well as the infant postnatally. METHODS: Ewes were randomly assigned to receive either 1 g IV caffeine citrate or placebo before delivery and placental transport assessed. Near-term lambs (141-143 days) of both sexes were subjected to severe global hypoxia-ischemia utilizing an acute umbilical cord occlusion model. Lambs that received caffeine in utero also received 20 mg/kg IV caffeine citrate following resuscitation and 10 mg/(kg·d) IV for 2 days. An additional cohort received 60 mg/kg followed by 30 mg/(kg·d) (low dose versus high dose) postnatally. Biochemical, histological, and neurological outcome measures in lambs were assessed over a 6-day period. RESULTS: Perinatal caffeine administration demonstrated excellent placental transport kinetics and was well tolerated with lamb plasma levels comparable to those targeted in neonates with apnea of prematurity. Caffeine administration resulted in a systemic immunomodulatory effect, evidenced by significant reductions in proinflammatory IP-10 levels. Treated lambs demonstrated improved neurodevelopmental outcomes, while histological analysis revealed that caffeine reduced gray matter injury and attenuated inflammation in the cingulate and parasagittal cortex. This neuroprotective effect was greater and via a different mode of action than we previously reported for azithromycin. A higher caffeine dosing regimen demonstrated significant toxicity. CONCLUSIONS: Perinatal caffeine administration is well tolerated, attenuates systemic and brain inflammation, and contributes to improvements in histological and neurological outcomes in an ovine model of neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
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- 2024
8. Preliminary Characterisation of Immune Cell Populations in the Oral Mucosa of a Small Cohort of Healthy Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris)
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Soltero‐Rivera, Maria, Bailey, Myles, Blandino, Andrew, Arzi, Boaz, and Vapniarsky, Natalia
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Veterinary Sciences ,Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Animals ,Mouth Mucosa ,Macrophages ,Dogs ,Male ,Female ,B-Lymphocytes ,Immunohistochemistry ,Dendritic Cells ,Myeloid Cells ,canine ,oral immunology ,oral mucosa ,veterinary dentistry ,Developmental Biology ,Veterinary sciences - Abstract
Pre-determined anatomical locations in the oral cavity were biopsied, and their histomorphology was characterised using haematoxylin and eosin staining (H&E). The most abundant cell type was of dendritic morphology. Lymphocyte foci were not evident in the palatoglossal folds or the gingiva. Immunohistochemical staining (IHC) for validated leukocyte markers followed, including CD3, CD20, CD79α, CD204, and Iba1. Consistent with H&E findings, CD204 immunoreactivity predominated amongst all niches. With the exception of the alveolar mucosa and palatoglossal folds, we also demonstrate a significant difference in the population of macrophages by region for only the Iba1 antigen (p
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- 2024
9. Shifts in the spatiotemporal profile of inflammatory phenotypes of innate immune cells in the rat brain following acute intoxication with the organophosphate diisopropylfluorophosphate
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Andrew, Peter M, MacMahon, Jeremy A, Bernardino, Pedro N, Tsai, Yi-Hua, Hobson, Brad A, Porter, Valerie A, Huddleston, Sydney L, Luo, Audrey S, Bruun, Donald A, Saito, Naomi H, Harvey, Danielle J, Brooks-Kayal, Amy, Chaudhari, Abhijit J, and Lein, Pamela J
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Biomedical Imaging ,Rare Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Epilepsy ,Neurological ,Animals ,Male ,Female ,Isoflurophate ,Rats ,Rats ,Sprague-Dawley ,Brain ,Cholinesterase Inhibitors ,Immunity ,Innate ,Microglia ,Phenotype ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Microfilament Proteins ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Time Factors ,Astrocytes ,Nerve agent ,Pesticide ,Seizures ,Status epilepticus ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Acute intoxication with cholinesterase inhibiting organophosphates (OP) can produce life-threatening cholinergic crisis and status epilepticus (SE). Survivors often develop long-term neurological consequences, including spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS) and impaired cognition. Numerous studies implicate OP-induced neuroinflammation as a pathogenic mechanism contributing to these chronic sequelae; however, little is known about the inflammatory phenotype of innate immune cells in the brain following acute OP intoxication. Thus, the aim of this study was to characterize the natural history of microglial and astrocytic inflammatory phenotypes following acute intoxication with the OP, diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP). Adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats were administered a single dose of DFP (4 mg/kg, sc) followed by standard medical countermeasures. Within minutes, animals developed benzodiazepine-resistant SE as determined by monitoring seizures using a modified Racine scale. At 1, 3, 7, 14, and 28 d post-exposure (DPE), neuroinflammation was assessed using translocator protein (TSPO) positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In both sexes, we observed consistently elevated radiotracer uptake across all examined brain regions and time points. A separate group of animals was euthanized at these same time points to collect tissues for immunohistochemical analyses. Colocalization of IBA-1, a marker for microglia, with iNOS or Arg1 was used to identify pro- and anti-inflammatory microglia, respectively; colocalization of GFAP, a marker for astrocytes, with C3 or S100A10, pro- and anti-inflammatory astrocytes, respectively. We observed shifts in the inflammatory profiles of microglia and astrocyte populations during the first month post-intoxication, largely in hyperintense inflammatory lesions in the piriform cortex and amygdala regions. In these areas, iNOS+ proinflammatory microglial cell density peaked at 3 and 7 DPE, while anti-inflammatory Arg1+ microglia cell density peaked at 14 DPE. Pro- and anti-inflammatory astrocytes emerged within 7 DPE, and roughly equal ratios of C3+ pro-inflammatory and S100A10+ anti-inflammatory astrocytes persisted at 28 DPE. In summary, microglia and astrocytes adopted mixed inflammatory phenotypes post-OP intoxication, which evolved over one month post exposure. These activated cell populations were most prominent in the piriform and amygdala areas and were more abundant in males compared to females. The temporal relationship between microglial and astrocytic responses suggests that initial microglial activity may influence delayed, persistent astrocytic responses. Further, our findings identify putative windows for inhibition of OP-induced neuroinflammatory responses in both sexes to evaluate the therapeutic benefit of anti-inflammation in this context.
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- 2024
10. Platelet releasates mitigate the endotheliopathy of trauma.
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Gallagher, Lauren, LaCroix, Ian, Fields, Alexander, Mitra, Sanchayita, Argabright, Amy, DAlessandro, Angelo, Erickson, Christopher, Nunez-Garcia, Brenda, Herrera-Rodriguez, Kimberly, Chou, Yu, Stocker, Benjamin, Ramser, Benjamin, Thielen, Otto, Hallas, William, Silliman, Christopher, Kornblith, Lucy, and Cohen, Mitchell
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Humans ,Blood Platelets ,Wounds and Injuries ,Male ,Adult ,Female ,Platelet Activation ,Endothelium ,Vascular ,Metabolomics ,Endothelial Cells - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Platelets are well known for their roles in hemostasis, but they also play a key role in thromboinflammatory pathways by regulating endothelial health, stimulating angiogenesis, and mediating host defense through both contact dependent and independent signaling. When activated, platelets degranulate releasing multiple active substances. We hypothesized that the soluble environment formed by trauma platelet releasates (TPR) attenuates thromboinflammation via mitigation of trauma induced endothelial permeability and metabolomic reprogramming. METHODS: Blood was collected from injured and healthy patients to generate platelet releasates and plasma in parallel. Permeability of endothelial cells when exposed to TPR and plasma (TP) was assessed via resistance measurement by electric cell-substrate impedance sensing (ECIS). Endothelial cells treated with TPR and TP were subjected to mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. RESULTS: TP increased endothelial permeability, whereas TPR decreased endothelial permeability when compared with untreated cells. When TP and TPR were mixed ex vivo, TPR mitigated TP-induced permeability, with significant increase in AUC compared with TP alone. Metabolomics of TPR and TP demonstrated disrupted redox reactions and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. CONCLUSION: Trauma platelet releasates provide endothelial barrier protection against TP-induced endothelial permeability. Our findings highlight a potential beneficial action of activated platelets on the endothelium in injured patients through disrupted redox reactions and increased antioxidants. Our findings support that soluble signaling from platelet degranulation may mitigate the endotheliopathy of trauma. The clinical implications of this are that activated platelets may prove a promising therapeutic target in the complex integration of thrombosis, endotheliopathy, and inflammation in trauma.
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- 2024
11. Multi-level alignment processes in the sustainment of a youth substance use treatment model following a federal implementation initiative: A mixed method study.
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Wright, Blanche, González, Isabelle, Chen, Monica, Aarons, Gregory, Hunter, Sarah, Godley, Mark, Purtle, Jonathan, and Dopp, Alex
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Evidence-based practice ,Financing/funding ,Mixed method ,Sustainment ,Youth substance use ,Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Adolescent ,COVID-19 ,United States ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Male ,Female ,Qualitative Research - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Government agencies have identified evidence-based practice (EBP) dissemination as a pathway to high-quality behavioral health care for youth. However, gaps remain about how to best sustain EBPs in treatment organizations in the U.S., especially in resource-constrained settings like publicly-funded youth substance use services. One important, but understudied, determinant of EBP sustainment is alignment: the extent to which multi-level factors that influence sustainment processes and outcomes are congruent, consistent, and/or coordinated. This study examined the role of alignment in U.S. states efforts to sustain the Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach (A-CRA), an EBP for youth substance use disorders, during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: In this mixed methods study, the qualitative investigation preceded and informed the quantitative investigation. We interviewed state administrators and providers (i.e., supervisors and clinicians) from 15 states that had completed a federal A-CRA implementation grant; providers also completed surveys. The sample included 50 providers from 35 treatment organizations that reported sustaining A-CRA when the COVID-19 pandemic began, and 20 state administrators. In qualitative thematic analyses, we applied the EPIS (Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, Sustainment) framework to characterize alignment processes that interviewees described as influential on sustainment. We then used survey items to quantitatively explore the associations described in qualitative themes, using bivariate linear regressions. RESULTS: At the time of interview, staff from 80 % of the treatment organizations (n = 28), reported sustaining A-CRA. Providers from both sustainer and non-sustainer organizations, as well as state administrators, described major sources of misalignment when state agencies ceased technical assistance post-grant, and because limited staff capacity conflicted with A-CRAs training model, which was perceived as time-intensive. Participants described the pandemic as exacerbating preexisting challenges, including capacity issues. Sustainer organizations reported seeking new funding to help sustain A-CRA. Quantitative associations between self-rated extent of sustainment and other survey items mostly followed the pattern predicted from the qualitative findings. CONCLUSIONS: The COVID-19 pandemic amplified longstanding A-CRA sustainment challenges, but treatment organizations already successfully sustaining A-CRA pre-pandemic largely continued. There are missed opportunities for state-level actors to coordinate with providers on the shared goal of EBP sustainment. A greater focus on alignment processes in research and practice could help states and providers strengthen sustainability planning.
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- 2024
12. Friendship Network and School Socialization Correlates of Adolescent Ethnic-Racial Identity Development.
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Kornienko, Olga, Umaña-Taylor, Adriana, Hernández, Maciel, and Ha, Thao
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Ethnic-racial identity exploration ,Ethnic-racial identity negative affect ,Ethnic-racial identity resolution ,Friend networks ,Peer ethnic-racial socialization ,School ethnic-racial socialization ,Adolescent ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Adolescent Development ,Ethnicity ,Friends ,Interpersonal Relations ,Peer Group ,Schools ,Social Identification ,Socialization ,Southwestern United States ,Racial Groups - Abstract
Ethnic-racial identity (ERI) development is consequential for youth adjustment and includes exploration, resolution, and affect about the meaning of ones ethnic-racial group membership. Little is known about how identity-relevant experiences, such as ethnic-racial socialization and discrimination in peer relationships and school contexts, catalyze adolescent ERI development. The present study examines how identity-relevant experiences in friend and school contexts (i.e., proportion of same-ethnoracial friends, cultural socialization among friends, friends ERI dimensions, friends experiences of ethnoracial discrimination, and school promotion of cultural competence and critical consciousness) are associated with ERI development. A multivariate path model with a sample from four southwestern U.S. schools (N = 717; 50.5% girls; Mage = 13.76; 32% Latinx, 31.5% Multiethnic, 25.7% White, 11% other) was used to test these associations. Findings showed that friend and school predictors of ERI did not differ between early and middle adolescents, but significant differences and similarities emerged in some of these associations between ethnoracially minoritized and White youth. Specifically, friend cultural socialization was positively associated with ERI exploration for ethnoracially minoritized youth only, whereas school critical consciousness socialization was positively linked with ERI exploration only for White youth. Friend cultural socialization and friend networks levels of ERI resolution were positively associated with ERI resolution across both ethnoracial groups. These friend and school socialization associations were documented above and beyond significant contributions of personal ethnoracial discrimination to ERI exploration and negative affect for both ethnoracially minoritized and White youth. These findings expand our understanding of how friend and school socialization mechanisms are associated with adolescent ERI development, which is vital to advancing developmental theory and fostering developmental competences for youth to navigate their multicultural yet socially stratified and inequitable world.
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- 2024
13. Change in Biomarker Profile After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy is Prognostic and Common Among Patients with HER2+ Breast Cancer.
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Tchou, Julia, Gottipati, Soumy, Goldbach, Macy, Baxter, Molly, Venters, Sara, Balassanian, Ron, Vohra, Poonam, Gonzalves, Diego, Ahmad, Zahra, Nayak, Anupma, Boughey, Judy, Mukhtar, Rita, and Chen, Yunn-Yi
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Humans ,Female ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Middle Aged ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Breast Neoplasms ,Follow-Up Studies ,Survival Rate ,Prognosis ,Neoplasm ,Residual ,Receptors ,Progesterone ,Adult ,Receptors ,Estrogen ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Triple Negative Breast Neoplasms ,Carcinoma ,Ductal ,Breast - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rates of pathologic complete response (pCR) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) for breast cancer have improved, especially among human epidermal growth factor 2-positive (HER2+) and triple-negative subtypes. The frequency and significance of biomarker profile change in residual disease are unclear. This study aimed to determine the rate of biomarker profile changes after NAC and the impact on clinical outcomes in a contemporary cohort. METHODS: Upon institutional review board approval, the study identified 634 consecutive patients treated with NAC between 2010 and 2022 at two academic institutions. The study cohort was focused on patients with residual disease who underwent biomarker profile retesting. Biomarker profile change for each subtype was compared across groups using Fisher-Irwin tests. Cox Proportional Hazards Model and Kaplan-Meier plots were performed to evaluate the association of changed versus unchanged biomarker profile with event-free survival. RESULTS: Biomarker retesting was performed for 259 (61.4 %) of 422 patients with residual disease. Biomarker profile change occurred in 18.1 % overall and was significantly higher among those with pre-NAC HER2+ disease (32.7 %, 17/52) than among those with HER2-disease (14.5 %, 30/207) (p = 0.004). Conversion of pre-NAC biomarker profiles of HR+HER2- and HR+HER2+ to triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) post-NAC may be associated with worse event-free survival, hazard ratios of 2.23 (95 % confidence interval [CI], 0.90-5.53; p = 0.08), trending toward significance, and 36.7 (95 % CI, 2.2-610.8; p = 0.01), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The results from one of the largest contemporary cohorts demonstrated that biomarker profile change in patients with residual disease after NAC was common. Furthermore, specific biomarker profile change in residual disease may have prognostic value. These findings strengthen the rationale for routine re-testing of biomarkers in residual disease after NAC.
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- 2024
14. Evaluating [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 for the treatment of soft-tissue sarcoma in mice.
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Taddio, Marco, Doshi, Suraj, Masri, Marwan, Jeanjean, Pauline, Hikmat, Firas, Gerlach, Alana, Nyiranshuti, Lea, Rosser, Ethan, Schaue, Dorthe, Besserer-Offroy, Elie, Carlucci, Giuseppe, Radu, Caius, Czernin, Johannes, Lückerath, Katharina, and Mona, Christine
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Actinium-225 ,FAPI-46 ,Fibroblast activation protein ,Immune checkpoint blockade ,Sarcoma ,Theranostic ,Animals ,Mice ,Sarcoma ,Endopeptidases ,Actinium ,Gelatinases ,Membrane Proteins ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Serine Endopeptidases ,Female ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors - Abstract
PURPOSE: Fibroblast Activation Protein (FAP) is an emerging theranostic target that is highly expressed on cancer-associated fibroblasts and on certain tumor cells including sarcoma. We investigated the anti-tumor efficacy of [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 as monotherapy or in combination with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in immunocompetent murine models of sarcoma sensitive or resistant to ICB. METHODS: [68Ga]Ga- and [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 were tested in subcutaneous FAP+ FSA fibrosarcoma bearing C3H/Sed/Kam mice. The efficacy of up to three cycles of 60 kBq [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 was evaluated as monotherapy and in combination with an anti-PD-1 antibody. Efficacy of [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 and/or ICB was further compared in FAP-overexpressing FSA (FSA-F) tumors that were sensitive to ICB or rendered ICB-resistant by tumor-induction in the presence of Abatacept. RESULTS: [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 was well tolerated up to 3 × 60 kBq but had minimal effect on FSA tumor growth. The combination of three cycles [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 and ICB resulted in growth delay in 55% of mice (6/11) and partial tumor regression in 18% (2/11) of mice. In FSA-F tumors with FAP overexpression, both [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 and ICB were effective without additional benefits from the combination. In locally immunosuppressed and ICB resistant FAP-F tumors, however, [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 restored responsiveness to ICB, resulting in significant tumor regression and tumor-free survival of 56% of mice in the combination group up to 60 days post treatment. CONCLUSION: [225Ac]Ac-FAPI-46 efficacy is correlated with tumoral FAP expression levels and can restore responsiveness to PD-1 ICB. These data illustrate that careful patient selection based on target expression and rationally designed combination therapies are critically important to maximize the therapeutic impact of FAP-targeting radioligands.
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- 2024
15. Reduction of APOE accounts for neurobehavioral deficits in fetal alcohol spectrum disorders.
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Hwang, Hye, Yamashita, Satoshi, Matsumoto, Yu, Ito, Mariko, Edwards, Alex, Sasaki, Junko, Dutta, Dipankar, Mohammad, Shahid, Yamashita, Chiho, Wetherill, Leah, Schwantes-An, Tae-Hwi, Abreu, Marco, Mahnke, Amanda, Mattson, Sarah, Foroud, Tatiana, Miranda, Rajesh, Chambers, Christina, Torii, Masaaki, and Hashimoto-Torii, Kazue
- Subjects
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders ,Animals ,Mice ,Female ,Humans ,Pregnancy ,Apolipoproteins E ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Male ,Brain ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Child ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Ethanol - Abstract
A hallmark of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) is neurobehavioral deficits that still do not have effective treatment. Here, we present that reduction of Apolipoprotein E (APOE) is critically involved in neurobehavioral deficits in FASD. We show that prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) changes chromatin accessibility of Apoe locus, and causes reduction of APOE levels in both the brain and peripheral blood in postnatal mice. Of note, postnatal administration of an APOE receptor agonist (APOE-RA) mitigates motor learning deficits and anxiety in those mice. Several molecular and electrophysiological properties essential for learning, which are altered by PAE, are restored by APOE-RA. Our human genome-wide association study further reveals that the interaction of PAE and a single nucleotide polymorphism in the APOE enhancer which chromatin is closed by PAE in mice is associated with lower scores in the delayed matching-to-sample task in children. APOE in the plasma is also reduced in PAE children, and the reduced level is associated with their lower cognitive performance. These findings suggest that controlling the APOE level can serve as an effective treatment for neurobehavioral deficits in FASD.
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- 2024
16. Distinct Indications for Adjuvant Therapy in Resected Invasive Mucinous Cystic Neoplasms of the Pancreas Compared with Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma.
- Author
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Wong, Paul, Pollini, Tommaso, Adam, Mohamed, Alseidi, Adnan, Corvera, Carlos, Hirose, Kenzo, Kirkwood, Kimberly, Nakakura, Eric, Thornblade, Lucas, and Maker, Ajay
- Subjects
Humans ,Female ,Male ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Carcinoma ,Pancreatic Ductal ,Aged ,Survival Rate ,Pancreatectomy ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Follow-Up Studies ,Prognosis ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Retrospective Studies ,Cystadenocarcinoma ,Mucinous - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical and adjuvant management of mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs) lacks formal guidelines and data is limited to institutional studies. Factors associated with receipt of adjuvant therapy and any associated impact on survival remain to be clarified. In the absence of other data, guidelines that recommend adjuvant chemotherapy for invasive pancreatic adenocarcinoma have been extrapolated to MCN. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The National Cancer Database (2004-2019) was utilized to identify all patients that underwent pancreatic resection for invasive MCNs. Patients that received neoadjuvant therapy or did not undergo lymphadenectomy were excluded. Patient, tumor, and treatment factors associated with survival were assessed. RESULTS: For 161 patients with invasive MCN, median overall survival (OS) was 133 months and 45% of patients received adjuvant therapy. Multivariable analysis demonstrated that poorly differentiated tumors [odds ratio (OR) 4.19, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.47-11.98; p = 0.008] and positive lymph node status (OR 2.67, 95% CI 1.02-6.98; p = 0.042) were independent predictors of receiving adjuvant therapy. Lymph node positivity [hazard ratio (HR) 2.90, 95% CI 1.47-5.73; p = 0.002], positive margins (HR 5.28, 95% CI 2.28-12.27; p
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- 2024
17. Integrating community health workers into HIV care clinics: a qualitative study with health system leaders and clinicians in the Southern United States.
- Author
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Fuller, Shannon, Arnold, Emily, Xavier, Jessica, Ibe, Chidinma, Steward, Wayne, Myers, Janet, Rebchook, Greg, and Koester, Kimberly
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Care integration ,Community health workers ,HIV ,Qualitative research ,Humans ,HIV Infections ,Community Health Workers ,Qualitative Research ,Mississippi ,Interviews as Topic ,Male ,Female ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Louisiana ,Capacity Building ,Leadership - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community health workers (CHWs) can support patient engagement in care for a variety of health conditions, including HIV. This paper reports on the experiences of HIV clinics and health departments that integrated CHWs into their health systems as part of a capacity-building initiative to address HIV-related disparities in the United States. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with key informants (n = 14) in two Ryan White HIV/AIDS program jurisdictions: Mississippi (jurisdiction covers the entire state) and the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. This work was part of a larger evaluation of an initiative that used a Learning Collaborative model to facilitate the implementation of evidence-informed interventions to address HIV care continuum gaps in four jurisdictions. The two jurisdictions that focused on integrating CHWs into HIV care clinics and support service agencies were selected for this sub-analysis. Interview participants included HIV clinic leaders and staff, health department leaders, and other Learning Collaborative leaders. Interview transcripts were coded and analyzed for themes related to the acceptability, feasibility, and perceived impact of CHW integration. RESULTS: Overall, participants expressed interest in having support from CHWs at HIV clinics and service agencies to assist with patient retention and engagement efforts. However, there were challenges integrating CHWs into existing systems (e.g., gaining access to electronic health records, changing policies to conduct home visits, and clarifying roles and scope of work). Negotiating contracts and accessing funding for CHW positions presented major challenges that often contributed to turnover and conflicts around scope of practice. When health departments leveraged existing funding streams to support CHW positions, the clinics and agencies where the CHWs worked had limited flexibility over the hiring process. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings reinforce the value and acceptability of CHWs as part of the workforce in HIV clinical and support service settings; however, integrating CHWs into clinics and service agencies required effort. Training the CHWs was not sufficient; other staff and clinicians had to understand the role of CHWs to facilitate their integration into health systems. Resources are needed to support organizations in incorporating CHWs effectively, and long-term, flexible sources of funding are necessary for these positions.
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- 2024
18. Placental lesions in systemic lupus erythematosus pregnancies associated with small for gestational age infants.
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Dhital, Rashmi, Jacobs, Marni, Smith, Chelsey, and Parast, Mana
- Subjects
SLE ,placental pathology ,pregnancy ,small for gestational age ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus ,Systemic ,Female ,Infant ,Small for Gestational Age ,Pregnancy ,Retrospective Studies ,Adult ,Placenta ,Pregnancy Complications ,Infant ,Newborn ,Placenta Diseases - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Up to a quarter of pregnant individuals with SLE have small for gestational age (SGA) infants. We aimed to characterize placental pathology associated with SGA infants in SLE. METHODS: We retrospectively analysed SLE deliveries with placental analysis at UCSD from November 2018 to October 2023, comparing SLE pregnancies resulting in SGA to those that did not, and additionally, to matched pregnancies with SGA but without SLE. RESULTS: Placental analysis was available only for 28/70 (40%) SLE deliveries, which had high rates of adverse outcomes (75%). All exhibited at least one histopathologic abnormality. Key findings distinguishing 12 SLE placentas resulting in SGA infants (vs.16 without) included small placental disc for gestational age (100% vs 56%, P = 0.01), placental disc infarct (50% vs 6%, P = 0.02) and increased perivillous fibrin deposition (PVFD, 58% vs 0%, P = 0.001). All seven SLE placentas with increased PVFD resulted in SGA infants. Compared with matched non-SLE pregnancies with SGA (n = 36), the only distinguishing placental lesion was a higher prevalence of increased PVFD in SLE-associated SGA (58% vs 22%, P = 0.03). CONCLUSION: The higher prevalence of increased PVFD in placentas of SLE-associated SGA may indicate a specific mechanism of placental injury leading to SGA in this context. Thus, its presence, particularly in context of SGA, should prompt providers to screen for an underlying autoimmune disease, including SLE. Systematic placental examination in context of SLE and associated autoimmune diseases could help evaluate responses to existing therapies, comparative studies of novel therapies and correlation to adverse outcomes.
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- 2024
19. Holding the Belief That Gender Roles Can Change Reduces Womens Work-Family Conflict.
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Townsend, Charlotte, Kray, Laura, and Russell, Alexandra
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COVID-19 ,gender differences ,gender roles ,mindsets ,work–family conflict ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Adult ,Gender Role ,COVID-19 ,Young Adult ,Women ,Working ,Work-Life Balance ,Conflict ,Psychological ,Students ,Job Satisfaction ,SARS-CoV-2 - Abstract
Across four studies (N = 1544), we examined the relationship between individuals gender role mindsets, or beliefs about the malleability versus fixedness of traditional gender roles, and work-family conflict. We found that undergraduate women (but not men) business students holding a fixed, compared to growth, gender role mindset anticipated more work-family conflict. Next, we manipulated gender role mindset and demonstrated a causal link between womens growth mindsets (relative to fixed mindsets and control conditions) and reduced work-family conflict. We showed mechanistically that growth gender role mindsets unburden women from prescriptive gender roles, reducing work-family conflict. Finally, during COVID-19, we demonstrated a similar pattern among working women in high-achieving dual-career couples. We found an indirect effect of womens gender role mindset on job and relationship satisfaction, mediated through work-family conflict. Our preregistered studies suggest that holding the belief that gender roles can change mitigates womens work-family conflict.
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- 2024
20. NAB2::STAT6 fusions and genome-wide DNA methylation profiling: Predictors of patient outcomes in meningeal solitary fibrous tumors.
- Author
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Eschbacher, Kathryn, Tran, Quynh, Moskalev, Evgeny, Jenkins, Sarah, Fritchie, Karen, Stoehr, Robert, Caron, Alissa, Link, Michael, Brown, Paul, Guajardo, Andrew, Brat, Daniel, Wu, Ashley, Santagata, Sandro, Louis, David, Brastianos, Priscilla, Kaplan, Alexander, Alexander, Brian, Rossi, Sabrina, Ferrarese, Fabio, Raleigh, David, Nguyen, Minh, Gross, John, Velazquez Vega, Jose, Rodriguez, Fausto, Perry, Arie, Martinez-Lage, Maria, Orr, Brent, Haller, Florian, and Giannini, Caterina
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CNS WHO grade ,NAB2::STAT6 ,TERT ,meningeal solitary fibrous tumor ,solitary fibrous tumor ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Solitary Fibrous Tumors ,DNA Methylation ,STAT6 Transcription Factor ,Adult ,Repressor Proteins ,Aged ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Aged ,80 and over ,Child ,Prognosis ,Telomerase - Abstract
Meningeal solitary fibrous tumors (SFT) are rare and have a high frequency of local recurrence and distant metastasis. In a cohort of 126 patients (57 female, 69 male; mean age at surgery 53.0 years) with pathologically confirmed meningeal SFTs with extended clinical follow-up (median 9.9 years; range 15 days-43 years), we performed extensive molecular characterization including genome-wide DNA methylation profiling (n = 80) and targeted TERT promoter mutation testing (n = 98). Associations were examined with NAB2::STAT6 fusion status (n = 101 cases; 51 = ex5-7::ex16-17, 26 = ex4::ex2-3; 12 = ex2-3::exANY/other and 12 = no fusion) and placed in the context of 2021 Central Nervous System (CNS) WHO grade. NAB2::STAT6 fusion breakpoints (fusion type) were significantly associated with metastasis-free survival (MFS) (p = 0.03) and, on multivariate analysis, disease-specific survival (DSS) when adjusting for CNS WHO grade (p = 0.03). DNA methylation profiling revealed three distinct clusters: Cluster 1 (n = 38), Cluster 2 (n = 22), and Cluster 3 (n = 20). Methylation clusters were significantly associated with fusion type (p
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- 2024
21. Growth modulation response in vertebral body tethering depends primarily on magnitude of concave vertebral body growth.
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Louer, Craig, Upasani, Vidyadhar, Hurry, Jennifer, Nian, Hui, Farnsworth, Christine, Newton, Peter, Parent, Stefan, and El-Hawary, Ron
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3D ,Growth modulation ,Remodeling ,Scoliosis ,Vertebral body tethering ,Humans ,Scoliosis ,Female ,Vertebral Body ,Male ,Child ,Adolescent ,Imaging ,Three-Dimensional ,Spine ,Treatment Outcome ,Follow-Up Studies ,Spinal Fusion - Abstract
PURPOSE: There is variability in clinical outcomes with vertebral body tethering (VBT) partly due to a limited understanding of the growth modulation (GM) response. We used the largest sample of patients with 3D spine reconstructions to characterize the vertebra and disc morphologic changes that accompany growth modulation during the first two years following VBT. METHODS: A multicenter registry was used to identify idiopathic scoliosis patients who underwent VBT with 2 years of follow-up. Calibrated biplanar X-rays obtained at longitudinal timepoints underwent 3D reconstruction to obtain precision morphological measurements. GM was defined as change in instrumented coronal angulation from post-op to 2-years. RESULTS: Fifty patients (mean age: 12.5 ± 1.3yrs) were analyzed over a mean of 27.7 months. GM was positively correlated with concave vertebra height growth (r = 0.57, p 10°) experienced an additional 1.6 mm (229% increase) of mean concave vertebra growth during study period compared to the Poor Modulators (GM
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- 2024
22. Factors Associated with Usage of Oral-PrEP among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya, Assessed by Self-Report and a Point-of-Care Urine Tenofovir Immunoassay.
- Author
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Shah, Pooja, Spinelli, Matthew, Irungu, Erastus, Kabuti, Rhoda, Ngurukiri, Pauline, Babu, Hellen, Kungu, Mary, Champions, The, Nyabuto, Chrispo, Mahero, Anne, Devries, Karen, Kyegombe, Nambusi, Medley, Graham, Gafos, Mitzy, Seeley, Janet, Weiss, Helen, Kaul, Rupert, Gandhi, Monica, Beattie, Tara, and Kimani, Joshua
- Subjects
Adolescent girls and young women ,Female sex workers ,HIV prevention ,Hierarchical modelling ,Kenya ,PrEP ,Humans ,Female ,Sex Workers ,Kenya ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Adult ,HIV Infections ,Tenofovir ,Self Report ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Medication Adherence ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Administration ,Oral ,Point-of-Care Testing ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Stigma - Abstract
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is highly effective at reducing HIV acquisition. We aimed to estimate usage of oral-PrEP, and factors associated with adherence among female sex workers (FSWs) in Nairobi, Kenya, using a novel point-of-care urine tenofovir lateral flow assay (LFA). The Maisha Fiti study randomly selected FSWs from Sex Worker Outreach Program clinics in Nairobi. Data were collected from 1003 FSWs from June-October 2019, including surveys on self-reported oral-PrEP adherence. Adherence was also measured using the LFA for HIV-negative FSWs currently taking oral-PrEP. Informed by a social-ecological theoretical framework, we used hierarchical multivariable logistic regression models to estimate associations between individual, interpersonal/community, and structural/institutional-level factors and either self-reported or LFA-assessed adherence. Overall, 746 HIV-negative FSWs aged 18-40 participated in the study, of whom 180 (24.1%) self-reported currently taking oral-PrEP. Of these, 56 (31.1%) were adherent to oral-PrEP as measured by LFA. In the multivariable analyses, associations with currently taking oral-PrEP included having completed secondary education, high alcohol/substance use, feeling empowered to use PrEP, current intimate partner, no recent intimate partner violence, having support from sex worker organisations, experiencing sex work-related stigma, and seeking healthcare services despite stigma. Associations with oral-PrEP LFA-measured adherence measured included having only primary education, experience of childhood emotional violence, belonging to a higher wealth tertile, and being nulliparous. Oral-PrEP adherence, measured by self-report or objectively, is low among FSWs in Nairobi. Programs to improve oral-PrEP usage among FSWs should work to mitigate social and structural barriers and involve collaboration between FSWs, healthcare providers and policymakers.
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- 2024
23. Sex Disparities in Opioid Prescription and Administration on a Hospital Medicine Service.
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Yang, Nancy, Fang, Margaret, and Rambachan, Aksharananda
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Hospital medicine ,Opioid prescription ,Sex disparities ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Middle Aged ,Adult ,Aged ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians ,Hospitalization ,Drug Prescriptions ,Sex Factors ,Healthcare Disparities ,Pain Management - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Decisions to prescribe opioids to patients depend on many factors, including illness severity, pain assessment, and patient age, race, ethnicity, and gender. Gender and sex disparities have been documented in many healthcare settings, but are understudied in inpatient general medicine hospital settings. OBJECTIVE: We assessed for differences in opioid administration and prescription patterns by legal sex in adult patient hospitalizations from the general medicine service at a large urban academic center. DESIGNS, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This study included all adult patient hospitalizations discharged from the acute care inpatient general medicine services at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Helen Diller Medical Center at Parnassus Heights from 1/1/2013 to 9/30/2021. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: The primary outcomes were (1) average daily inpatient opioids received and (2) days of opioids prescribed on discharge. For both outcomes, we first performed logistic regression to assess differences in whether or not any opioids were administered or prescribed. Then, we performed negative binomial regression to assess differences in the amount of opioids given. We also performed all analyses on a subgroup of hospitalizations with pain-related diagnoses. RESULTS: Our study cohort included 48,745 hospitalizations involving 27,777 patients. Of these, 24,398 (50.1%) hospitalizations were female patients and 24,347 (49.9%) were male. Controlling for demographic, clinical, and hospitalization-level variables, female patients were less likely to receive inpatient opioids compared to male patents (adjusted OR 0.87; 95% CI 0.82, 0.92) and received 27.5 fewer morphine milligram equivalents per day on average (95% CI - 39.0, - 16.0). When considering discharge opioids, no significant differences were found between sexes. In the subgroup analysis of pain-related diagnoses, female patients received fewer inpatient opioids. CONCLUSIONS: Female patients were less likely to receive inpatient opioids and received fewer opioids when prescribed. Future work to promote equity should identify strategies to ensure all patients receive adequate pain management.
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- 2024
24. IGLON5 Frequency in Idiopathic REM Sleep Behavior Disorder: A Multicenter Study.
- Author
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Postuma, Ronald, Vorasoot, Nisa, St Louis, Erik, Pelletier, Amélie, Lim, Miranda, Elliott, Jonathan, Gagnon, Jean-Francois, Gan-Or, Ziv, Forsberg, Leah, Fields, Julie, Ross, Owen, Singer, Wolfgang, Huddleston, Daniel, Bliwise, Donald, Avidan, Alon, Howell, Michael, Schenck, Carlos, McLeland, Jennifer, Davis, Albert, Criswell, Susan, Videnovic, Aleksandar, During, Emmanuel, Miglis, Mitchell, Boeve, Bradley, Ju, Yo-El, and McKeon, Andrew
- Subjects
Humans ,REM Sleep Behavior Disorder ,Male ,Female ,Autoantibodies ,Aged ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Neuronal ,Middle Aged ,Cohort Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Idiopathic/isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) has been strongly linked to neurodegenerative synucleinopathies such as Parkinson disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, and multiple system atrophy. However, there have been increasing reports of RBD as a presenting feature of serious and treatable autoimmune syndromes, particularly IGLON5. This studys objective was to investigate the frequency of autoantibodies in a large cohort of participants with iRBD. METHODS: Participants were enrolled in the North American Prodromal Synucleinopathy cohort with polysomnography-confirmed iRBD, free of parkinsonism and dementia. Plasma samples were systematically screened for the autoantibodies IGLON5, DPPX, LGI1, and CASPR2 using plasma IgG cell-based assay. Positive or equivocal results were confirmed by repeat testing, plus tissue-based indirect immunofluorescence assay for IGLON5. RESULTS: Of 339 samples analyzed, 3 participants (0.9%) had confirmed positive IGLON5 autoantibodies in the cell-based assay, which were confirmed by the tissue-based assay. An additional participant was positive for CASPR2 with low titer by cell-based assay only (of lower clinical certainty). These cases exhibited a variety of symptoms including dream enactment, cognitive decline, autonomic dysfunction, and motor symptoms. In 1 IGLON5 case and the CASPR2 case, evolution was suggestive of typical synucleinopathy, suggesting the possibility that findings were incidental. However, 2 participants with IGLON5 died before diagnosis was clinically suspected, with a final clinical picture highly suggestive of autoimmune disease. DISCUSSION: Our finding that nearly 1% of a large iRBD cohort may have a serious but potentially treatable autoantibody syndrome has important clinical implications. In particular, it raises the question of whether autoantibody testing for IGLON-5-IgG should be widely implemented for participants with iRBD, considering the difficulty in diagnosis of autoimmune diseases, their response to treatment, and the potential for rapid disease progression. However, any routine testing protocol will also have to consider costs and potential adverse effects of false-positive findings. TRIAL REGISTRATION INFORMATION: NCT03623672.
- Published
- 2024
25. Choline Metabolites and 15-Year Risk of Incident Diabetes in a Prospective Cohort of Adults: Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study.
- Author
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Sprinkles, Jessica, Lulla, Anju, Hullings, Autumn, Trujillo-Gonzalez, Isis, Klatt, Kevin, Jacobs, David, Shah, Ravi, Murthy, Venkatesh, Howard, Annie, Gordon-Larsen, Penny, and Meyer, Katie
- Subjects
Humans ,Choline ,Adult ,Male ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Betaine ,Methylamines ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Risk Factors ,Young Adult ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Adolescent - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The potential for choline metabolism to influence the development of diabetes has received increased attention. Previous studies on circulating choline metabolites and incident diabetes have been conducted in samples of older adults, often with a high prevalence of risk factors. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Participants were from year 15 of follow-up (2000-2001) in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study (n = 3,133, aged 33-45 years) with plasma choline metabolite (choline, betaine, and trimethylamine N-oxide [TMAO]) data. We quantified associations between choline metabolites and 15-year risk of incident diabetes (n = 387) among participants free of diabetes at baseline using Cox proportional hazards regression models adjusted for sociodemographics, health behaviors, and clinical variables. RESULTS: Betaine was inversely associated with 15-year risk of incident diabetes (hazard ratio 0.76 [95% CI 0.67, 0.88] per 1-SD unit betaine), and TMAO was positively associated with 15-year risk of incident diabetes (1.11 [1.01, 1.22] per 1-SD unit). Choline was not significantly associated with 15-year risk of incident diabetes (1.05 [0.94, 1.16] per 1-SD). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings are consistent with other published literature supporting a role for choline metabolism in diabetes. Our study extends the current literature by analyzing a racially diverse population-based cohort of early middle-aged individuals in whom preventive activities may be most relevant.
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- 2024
26. Lifetime HIV testing among three samples of adults with histories of incarceration in Southern California
- Author
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Ojeda, Victoria D, Jaeger, Melissa B, Hiller-Venegas, Sarah, Parker, Tamara, Lyles, Maurice, Castillo, Silvia, Vega, Gustavo, Moreno, Melissa, Schuler, Briana, Groneman, Arthur, Berliant, Emily, Romero, Natalie, Edwards, Todd M, Jimenez, Cielo, Lister, Zephon, Barksdale, Jerrica, Bazzi, Angela, Gaines, Tommi, and Gilmer, Todd
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Health Disparities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Social Determinants of Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Minority Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Women's Health ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,California ,Adult ,HIV Infections ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Prisoners ,HIV Testing ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Prevalence ,Middle Aged ,Hispanic or Latino ,Mass Screening ,Incarceration ,HIV testing ,probation ,formerly incarcerated ,justice impacted ,parole ,Black or African American ,SDG 16: Peace ,justice and strong institutions ,SDG 17: Partnerships for the goals ,SDG 3: Good health and well-being ,SDG 4: Quality education ,SDG 5: Gender equality ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ABSTRACTJustice-impacted persons may inconsistently access HIV testing. This cross-sectional secondary analysis investigates lifetime HIV testing prevalence among adults with prior histories of incarceration in Southern California, United States, participating in health-focused programming (n = 3 studies). Self-reported demographic and lifetime HIV testing data were collected between 2017-2023; descriptive analyses were conducted. Across the three samples, at least 74% of participants were male; Latino and African American individuals accounted for nearly two-thirds of participants. Lifetime HIV testing ranged from 72.8% to 84.2%. Males were significantly more likely than females to report never being tested in two samples and accounted for >95% of those never tested. No statistically significant differences in testing were observed by race/ethnicity. Single young adults (ages 18-26) were less likely than their partnered peers to report testing. HIV testing is critical for ensuring that individuals access prevention and treatment. HIV testing among justice-impacted adults in this study was higher than in the general population, potentially due to opt-out testing in correctional settings. Nevertheless, these findings underscore the importance of implementing targeted interventions to reduce structural (e.g., health insurance, access to self-testing kits) and social barriers (e.g., HIV stigma) to increase HIV testing among justice-impacted males and single young adults.
- Published
- 2024
27. Exploring the Impact of COVID-19 Restrictions on Nursing Home Residents, Families, and Staffs Perceptions of Bioethical Principles: A Qualitative Study.
- Author
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Ge, Yimin, Xu, Shengjia, Capron, Alexander, Keller, Michelle, and Hlávka, Jakub
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COVID-19 ,bioethics ,long-term services and supports ,nursing homes ,policy ,qualitative methods ,Humans ,Nursing Homes ,COVID-19 ,Qualitative Research ,Male ,Female ,Family ,Aged ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Middle Aged ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Adult ,Interviews as Topic ,Bioethical Issues ,Homes for the Aged ,Infection Control - Abstract
In this study, we employed a pre-interview survey and conducted interviews with nursing home staff members and residents/family members to understand their perceptions of whether the COVID-19 restrictions fulfilled obligations to nursing home residents under various principles, including autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, and privacy. We conducted 20 semi-structured interviews with staff members from 14 facilities, and 20 with residents and/or family members from 13 facilities. We used a qualitative descriptive study design and thematic analysis methodology to analyze the interviews. Findings from the pre-interview survey indicated that, compared to nursing home staff, residents and their families perceived lower adherence to bioethics principles during the pandemic. Qualitative analysis themes included specific restrictions, challenges, facility notifications, consequences, communication, and relationships between staff and residents/family members. Our study exposes the struggle to balance infection control with respecting bioethical principles in nursing homes, suggesting avenues for improving processes and policies during public health emergencies.
- Published
- 2024
28. Multiple Myeloma Risk and Outcomes Are Associated with Pathogenic Germline Variants in DNA Repair Genes.
- Author
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Thibaud, Santiago, Subaran, Ryan, Newman, Scott, Lagana, Alessandro, Melnekoff, David, Bodnar, Saoirse, Ram, Meghana, Soens, Zachry, Genthe, William, Brander, Tehilla, Mouhieddine, Tarek, Van Oekelen, Oliver, Houldsworth, Jane, Cho, Hearn, Richard, Shambavi, Richter, Joshua, Rodriguez, Cesar, Rossi, Adriana, Sanchez, Larysa, Chari, Ajai, Moshier, Erin, Jagannath, Sundar, Parekh, Samir, and Onel, Kenan
- Subjects
Humans ,Multiple Myeloma ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Female ,DNA Repair ,Male ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,Adult - Abstract
First-degree relatives of patients with multiple myeloma are at increased risk for the disease, but the contribution of pathogenic germline variants (PGV) in hereditary cancer genes to multiple myeloma risk and outcomes is not well characterized. To address this, we analyzed germline exomes in two independent cohorts of 895 and 786 patients with multiple myeloma. PGVs were identified in 8.6% of the Discovery cohort and 11.5% of the Replication cohort, with a notable presence of high- or moderate-penetrance PGVs (associated with autosomal dominant cancer predisposition) in DNA repair genes (3.6% and 4.1%, respectively). PGVs in BRCA1 (OR = 3.9, FDR < 0.01) and BRCA2 (OR = 7.0, FDR < 0.001) were significantly enriched in patients with multiple myeloma when compared with 134,187 healthy controls. Five of the eight BRCA2 PGV carriers exhibited tumor-specific copy number loss in BRCA2, suggesting somatic loss of heterozygosity. PGVs associated with autosomal dominant cancer predisposition were associated with younger age at diagnosis, personal or familial cancer history, and longer progression-free survival after upfront high-dose melphalan and autologous stem-cell transplantation (P < 0.01). Significance: Our findings suggest up to 10% of patients with multiple myeloma may have an unsuspected cancer predisposition syndrome. Given familial implications and favorable outcomes with high-dose melphalan and autologous stem-cell transplantation in high-penetrance PGV carriers, genetic testing should be considered for young or newly diagnosed patients with a personal or family cancer history. See related commentary by Walker, p. 375.
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- 2024
29. Twenty Years of Sustained Improvement in Quality of Care and Outcomes for Patients Hospitalized With Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack: Data From The Get With The Guidelines-Stroke Program.
- Author
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Xian, Ying, Li, Shen, Jiang, Tian, Beon, Chandler, Poudel, Remy, Thomas, Kathie, Reeves, Mathew, Smith, Eric, Saver, Jeffrey, Sheth, Kevin, Messé, Steven, Schwamm, Lee, and Fonarow, Gregg
- Subjects
acute ischemic stroke ,intracerebral hemorrhage ,outcomes ,quality of care ,transient ischemic attack ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Male ,Ischemic Attack ,Transient ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Quality Improvement ,Stroke ,Ischemic Stroke ,Hospitalization ,Quality of Health Care ,Guideline Adherence ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Registries - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Get With The Guidelines-Stroke program is a quality improvement initiative designed to enhance adherence to evidence-based stroke care. Since its inception in 2003, over 2800 hospitals in the United States have participated in the program. METHODS: We examined patient characteristics, adherence to performance measures, and in-hospital outcomes in patients hospitalized for acute ischemic stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracerebral hemorrhage, and transient ischemic attack in The Get With The Guidelines-Stroke hospitals from 2003 through 2022. We quantified temporal changes in performance measure adherence and clinical outcomes over time. Performance measure denominators consisted of patients who were eligible, excluding those with contraindications. RESULTS: Over the 20 years of the program, a total of 7837 849 stroke cases (median age 71 years, 51.0% female; 69.2% ischemic strokes, 3.9% SAHs, 11.5% ICHs, and 15.3% TIAs) were entered into the registry. Except for antithrombotics at discharge, in which the baseline performance was >92%, there was sustained improvement in all performance metrics regardless of type of cerebrovascular event (P
- Published
- 2024
30. Developmental Changes in How Head Orientation Structures Infants’ Visual Attention
- Author
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Franchak, John M, Smith, Linda, and Yu, Chen
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Humans ,Attention ,Infant ,Male ,Female ,Child Development ,Visual Perception ,Eye Movements ,Eye-Tracking Technology ,Child ,Preschool ,Head Movements ,Head ,attention development ,eye tracking ,face perception ,sustained attention ,visual attention ,Cognitive Sciences ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Most studies of developing visual attention are conducted using screen-based tasks in which infants move their eyes to select where to look. However, real-world visual exploration entails active movements of both eyes and head to bring relevant areas in view. Thus, relatively little is known about how infants coordinate their eyes and heads to structure their visual experiences. Infants were tested every 3 months from 9 to 24 months while they played with their caregiver and three toys while sitting in a highchair at a table. Infants wore a head-mounted eye tracker that measured eye movement toward each of the visual targets (caregiver's face and toys) and how targets were oriented within the head-centered field of view (FOV). With age, infants increasingly aligned novel toys in the center of their head-centered FOV at the expense of their caregiver's face. Both faces and toys were better centered in view during longer looking events, suggesting that infants of all ages aligned their eyes and head to sustain attention. The bias in infants' head-centered FOV could not be accounted for by manual action: Held toys were more poorly centered compared with non-held toys. We discuss developmental factors-attentional, motoric, cognitive, and social-that may explain why infants increasingly adopted biased viewpoints with age.
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- 2024
31. Family conflict and less parental monitoring were associated with greater screen time in early adolescence
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Al‐shoaibi, Abubakr AA, Zamora, Gabriel, Chu, Jonathan, Patel, Khushi P, Ganson, Kyle T, Testa, Alexander, Jackson, Dylan B, Tapert, Susan F, Baker, Fiona C, and Nagata, Jason M
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Pediatric ,Humans ,Screen Time ,Adolescent ,Female ,Male ,Child ,Family Conflict ,Prospective Studies ,Parenting ,Video Games ,Parent-Child Relations ,Adolescent Behavior ,adolescent ,digital technology ,family conflict ,parenting ,social media ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics - Abstract
AimThe current study investigated the prospective relationships between parental monitoring, family conflict, and screen time across six screen time modalities in early adolescents in the USA.MethodsWe utilised prospective cohort data of children (ages 10-14 years) from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (years baseline to Year 2 of follow-up; 2016-2020; N = 10 757). Adjusted coefficients (B) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated using mixed-effect models with robust standard errors.ResultsA higher parental monitoring score was associated with less total screen time (B = -0.37, 95% CI -0.58, -0.16), with the strongest associations being with video games and YouTube videos. Conversely, a higher family conflict score was associated with more total screen time (B = 0.08, 95% CI 0.03, 0.12), with the strongest associations being with YouTube videos, video games, and watching television shows/movies in Years 1 and 2.ConclusionThe current study found that greater parental monitoring was associated with less screen time, while greater family conflict was linked to more screen time. These results may inform strategies to reduce screen time in adolescence, such as improving communication between parents and their children to strengthen family relationships.
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- 2024
32. Effects of Cannabis Use on Cigarette Smoking Cessation in LGBTQ+ Individuals
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Pang, Raina D, Schuler, Lucy A, Blosnich, John R, Allem, Jon-Patrick, and Kirkpatrick, Matthew G
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Cannabinoid Research ,Tobacco ,Cancer ,Substance Misuse ,Prevention ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Women's Health ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Adult ,Smoking Cessation ,Cigarette Smoking ,Middle Aged ,Marijuana Use ,California ,Young Adult ,Marijuana Smoking ,Substance Abuse ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveSexual and gender minority individuals are more likely to use tobacco and cannabis and have lower cigarette cessation. This study examined cannabis use associations with daily cigarettes smoked in sexual and gender minority individuals before and during a quit attempt.MethodParticipants included dual smoking same-sex/gender couples from California that were willing to make a quit attempt (individual n = 205, 68.3% female sex). Participants reported baseline past 30-day cannabis use and number of cigarettes smoked and cannabis use (yes/no) during 35 nightly surveys. Individuals with current cannabis use reported baseline cannabis use and/or nightly survey cannabis use. Multilevel linear models predicted number of cigarettes smoked by cannabis use.ResultsNumber of cigarettes decreased from before to during a quit attempt, but this decrease was smaller in individuals with current cannabis use compared to no current cannabis use (p < .001). In individuals with current cannabis use, number of cigarettes smoked was greater on days with cannabis use (p < .001). Furthermore, cannabis use that day increased overall number of cigarettes in those with relatively high overall cannabis use but only during a quit attempt in those with relatively low cannabis use (Within-Subject Cannabis Use × Between-Subject Cannabis Use × Quit Attempt interaction; p < .001).ConclusionsSexual and gender minority individuals with cannabis and cigarette use may have a harder time quitting smoking than those who do not use cannabis. For those with cannabis use, guidance on not using cannabis during a quit attempt may improve cigarette cessation outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
33. Self-assembled aldehyde dehydrogenase-activatable nano-prodrug for cancer stem cell-enriched tumor detection and treatment.
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Li, Bowen, Tian, Jianwu, Zhang, Fu, Wu, Chongzhi, Li, Zhiyao, Wang, Dandan, Zhuang, Jiahao, Chen, Siqin, Song, Wentao, Tang, Yufu, Ping, Yuan, and Liu, Bin
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Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Aldehyde Dehydrogenase ,Tretinoin ,Photosensitizing Agents ,Mice ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Prodrugs ,Tumor Microenvironment ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Mice ,Nude ,Female ,Neoplasms ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Mice ,Inbred BALB C ,Nanoparticles - Abstract
Cancer stem cells, characterized by high tumorigenicity and drug-resistance, are often responsible for tumor progression and metastasis. Aldehyde dehydrogenases, often overexpressed in cancer stem cells enriched tumors, present a potential target for specific anti-cancer stem cells treatment. In this study, we report a self-assembled nano-prodrug composed of aldehyde dehydrogenases activatable photosensitizer and disulfide-linked all-trans retinoic acid for diagnosis and targeted treatment of cancer stem cells enriched tumors. The disulfide-linked all-trans retinoic acid can load with photosensitizer and self-assemble into a stable nano-prodrug, which can be disassembled into all-trans retinoic acid and photosensitizer in cancer stem cells by high level of glutathione. As for the released photosensitizer, overexpressed aldehyde dehydrogenase catalyzes the oxidation of aldehydes to carboxyl under cancer stem cells enriched microenvironment, activating the generation of reactive oxygen species and fluorescence emission. This generation of reactive oxygen species leads to direct killing of cancer stem cells and is accompanied by a noticeable fluorescence enhancement for real-time monitoring of the cancer stem cells enriched microenvironment. Moreover, the released all-trans retinoic acid, as a differentiation agent, reduce the cancer stem cells stemness and improve the cancer stem cells enriched microenvironment, offering a synergistic effect for enhanced anti-cancer stem cells treatment of photosensitizer in inhibition of in vivo tumor growth and metastasis.
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- 2024
34. Oscillometric blood pressure measurements on smartphones using vibrometric force estimation.
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Barry, Colin, Xuan, Yinan, Fascetti, Ava, Moore, Alison, and Wang, Edward
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Humans ,Smartphone ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Oscillometry ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Blood Pressure ,Vibration ,Photoplethysmography ,Fingers ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult - Abstract
This paper proposes a smartphone-based method for measuring Blood Pressure (BP) using the oscillometric method. For oscillometry, it is necessary to measure (1) the pressure applied to the artery and (2) the local blood volume change. This is accomplished by performing an oscillometric measurement at the fingers digital artery, whereby a user presses down on the phones camera with steadily increasing force. The camera is used to capture the blood volume change using photoplethysmography. We devised a novel method for measuring the force applied of the finger without the use of specialized smartphone hardware with a technique called Vibrometric Force Estimation (VFE). The fundamental concept of VFE relies on a phenomenon where a vibrating object is dampened when an external force is applied on to it. This phenomenon can be recreated using the phones own vibration motor and measured using the phones Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU). A cross device reliability study with three smartphones of different manufacturers, shape, and prices results in similar force estimation performance across all smartphone models. In an N = 24 proof of concept study of the BP measurement, the smartphone technique achieves a mean absolute error of 9.21 mmHg and 7.77 mmHg of systolic and diastolic BP, respectively, compared to an FDA approved BP cuff. The vision for this technology is not necessarily to replace existing BP monitoring solutions, but rather to introduce a downloadable smartphone software application that could serve as a low-barrier hypertension screening measurement fit for widespread adoption.
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- 2024
35. Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation for C1q Deficiency: A Study on Behalf of the EBMT Inborn Errors Working Party.
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Buso, Helena, Adam, Etai, Arkwright, Peter, Bhattad, Sagar, Hamidieh, Amir, Behfar, Maryam, Belot, Alexandre, Benezech, Sarah, Chan, Alice, Crow, Yanick, Dvorak, Christopher, Flinn, Aisling, Kapoor, Urvi, Lankester, Arjan, Kobayashi, Masao, Matsumura, Risa, Mottaghipisheh, Hadi, Okada, Satoshi, Ouachee, Marie, Parvaneh, Nima, Ramprakash, Stalin, Satwani, Prakash, Sharafian, Samin, Triaille, Clément, Wynn, Robert, Movahedi, Nasim, Ziaee, Vahid, Williams, Eleri, Slatter, Mary, and Gennery, Andrew
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Allogeneic HSCT ,C1q deficiency ,SLE ,Humans ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Female ,Male ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Adolescent ,Complement C1q ,Infant ,Retrospective Studies ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Adult - Abstract
C1q deficiency is a rare inborn error of immunity characterized by increased susceptibility to infections and autoimmune manifestations mimicking SLE, with an associated morbidity and mortality. Because C1q is synthesized by monocytes, to date, four patients treated with allogeneic HSCT have been reported, with a positive outcome in three. We conducted an international retrospective study to assess the outcome of HSCT in C1q deficiency. Eighteen patients, fourteen previously unreported, from eleven referral centres, were included. Two patients had two HSCTs, thus 20 HSCTs were performed in total, at a median age of 10 years (range 0.9-19). Indications for HSCT were autoimmune manifestations not controlled by ongoing treatment in seventeen, and early development of MALT lymphoma in one patient. Overall survival (OS) was 71% and event-free survival was 59% at two years (considering an event as acute GvHD ≥ grade III, disease recurrence and death). In eleven patients HSCT led to resolution of autoimmune features and discontinuation of immunosuppressive treatments (follow-up time range 3-84 months). Five patients died due to transplant-related complications. Patients with a severe autoimmune phenotype, defined as neurological and/or renal involvement, had the worst OS (40% vs 84%; p = 0.034). Reviewing data of 69 genetically confirmed C1q deficient patients, we found that anti-Ro antibodies are associated with neurologic involvement, and anti-RNP and anti-DNA antibodies with renal involvement. In conclusion, HSCT may be a valid curative option for C1q deficiency, but careful selection of patients, with an accurate assessment of risk and benefit, is mandatory.
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- 2024
36. Systems biology approaches identify metabolic signatures of dietary lifespan and healthspan across species.
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Hilsabeck, Tyler, Narayan, Vikram, Wilson, Kenneth, Carrera, Enrique, Raftery, Daniel, Promislow, Daniel, Brem, Rachel, Campisi, Judith, and Kapahi, Pankaj
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Longevity ,Animals ,Humans ,Systems Biology ,Male ,Female ,Drosophila melanogaster ,Metabolomics ,Caloric Restriction ,Diet ,Species Specificity ,Drosophila ,Genetic Variation - Abstract
Dietary restriction (DR) is a potent method to enhance lifespan and healthspan, but individual responses are influenced by genetic variations. Understanding how metabolism-related genetic differences impact longevity and healthspan are unclear. To investigate this, we used metabolites as markers to reveal how different genotypes respond to diet to influence longevity and healthspan traits. We analyzed data from Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP) strains raised under AL and DR conditions, combining metabolomic, phenotypic, and genome-wide information. We employed two computational and complementary methods across species-random forest modeling within the DGRP as our primary analysis and Mendelian randomization in human cohorts as a secondary analysis. We pinpointed key traits with cross-species relevance as well as underlying heterogeneity and pleiotropy that influence lifespan and healthspan. Notably, orotate was linked to parental age at death in humans and blocked the DR lifespan extension in flies, while threonine supplementation extended lifespan, in a strain- and sex-specific manner. Thus, utilizing natural genetic variation data from flies and humans, we employed a systems biology approach to elucidate potential therapeutic pathways and metabolomic targets for diet-dependent changes in lifespan and healthspan.
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- 2024
37. Breath-hold capacities and circadian dive rhythmicity shape optimal foraging strategies in a polar marine mammal, the Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii).
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Shero, Michelle, Costa, Daniel, Burns, Jennifer, and Goetz, Kimberly
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Animals ,Diving ,Seals ,Earless ,Circadian Rhythm ,Breath Holding ,Antarctic Regions ,Feeding Behavior ,Male ,Female - Abstract
Air-breathing vertebrates must balance their response to diel shifts in prey accessibility with physiological thresholds and the need to surface after each dive. Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii) dive behaviors were tracked across the year under rapidly-changing light regimes in the Ross Sea, Antarctica ( ~ 75-77°S). This provides a natural experiment with free-living seals experiencing 24-hrs of light (Polar Day), light/dark cycling, and continuous darkness (Polar Night). The Weddell seals temporal niche switches from nocturnal diving in the summer to diurnality for the remainder of the year. Rhythmicity in dive efforts (depth, duration, post-dive surface recuperation, bottom time, and exceeding physiologic thresholds) is stronger and more closely circadian during times of the year with light/dark cycling compared with Polar Day or Night. With light/dark cycling, animals also make the most extreme dives (those that far exceed the calculated aerobic dive limit, cADL) significantly earlier than solar noon. Offsetting the longest dives that require longer surface recuperation times from mid-day allows animals to maximize total dive time under high-light conditions conducive for visual hunting. We identify an optimal foraging strategy to exploit a diel preyscape in a highly-seasonal environment, while balancing tradeoffs imposed by physiological thresholds in a diving mammal.
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- 2024
38. CytoNet: an efficient dual attention based automatic prediction of cancer sub types in cytology studies.
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Ilyas, Naveed, Naseer, Farhat, Khan, Anwar, Raja, Aamir, Lee, Yong-Moon, Park, Jae, and Lee, Boreom
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Humans ,Neural Networks ,Computer ,Neoplasms ,Diagnosis ,Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Algorithms ,Cytodiagnosis ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted - Abstract
Computer-assisted diagnosis (CAD) plays a key role in cancer diagnosis or screening. Whereas, current CAD performs poorly on whole slide image (WSI) analysis, and thus fails to generalize well. This research aims to develop an automatic classification system to distinguish between different types of carcinomas. Obtaining rich deep features in multi-class classification while achieving high accuracy is still a challenging problem. The detection and classification of cancerous cells in WSI are quite challenging due to the misclassification of normal lumps and cancerous cells. This is due to cluttering, occlusion, and irregular cell distribution. Researchers in the past mostly obtained the hand-crafted features while neglecting the above-mentioned challenges which led to a reduction of the classification accuracy. To mitigate this problem we proposed an efficient dual attention-based network (CytoNet). The proposed network is composed of two main modules (i) Efficient-Net and (ii) Dual Attention Module (DAM). Efficient-Net is capable of obtaining higher accuracy and enhancing efficiency as compared to existing Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). It is also useful to obtain the most generic features as it has been trained on ImageNet. Whereas DAM is very robust in obtaining attention and targeted features while negating the background. In this way, the combination of an efficient and attention module is useful to obtain the robust, and intrinsic features to obtain comparable performance. Further, we evaluated the proposed network on two well-known datasets (i) Our generated thyroid dataset (ii) Mendeley Cervical dataset (Hussain in Data Brief, 2019) with enhanced performance compared to their counterparts. CytoNet demonstrated a 99% accuracy rate on the thyroid dataset in comparison to its counterpart. The precision, recall, and F1-score values achieved on the Mendeley Cervical dataset are 0.992, 0.985, and 0.977, respectively. The code implementation is available on GitHub. https://github.com/naveedilyas/CytoNet-An-Efficient-Dual-Attention-based-Automatic-Prediction-of-Cancer-Sub-types-in-Cytol.
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- 2024
39. Rezafungin versus caspofungin for patients with candidaemia or invasive candidiasis in the intensive care unit: pooled analyses of the ReSTORE and STRIVE randomised trials.
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Honoré, Patrick, Girardis, Massimo, Kollef, Marin, Cornely, Oliver, Thompson, George, Bassetti, Matteo, Soriano, Alex, Huang, Haihui, Vazquez, Jose, Kullberg, Bart, Pappas, Peter, Manamley, Nick, Sandison, Taylor, Pullman, John, and Nseir, Saad
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Candidaemia ,Intensive care unit ,Invasive candidiasis ,Rezafungin ,Humans ,Caspofungin ,Echinocandins ,Intensive Care Units ,Antifungal Agents ,Male ,Candidiasis ,Invasive ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Candidemia ,Lipopeptides ,Aged ,Double-Blind Method ,Adult - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rezafungin is an echinocandin approved in the US and EU to treat candidaemia and/or invasive candidiasis. This post-hoc, pooled analysis of the Phase 2 STRIVE and Phase 3 ReSTORE trials assessed rezafungin versus caspofungin in patients with candidaemia and/or invasive candidiasis (IC) in the intensive care unit (ICU) at randomisation. METHODS: STRIVE and ReSTORE were randomised double-blind trials in adults with systemic signs and mycological confirmation of candidaemia and/or IC in blood or a normally sterile site ≤ 96 h before randomisation. Data were pooled for patients in the ICU at randomisation who received intravenous rezafungin (400 mg loading dose then 200 mg once weekly) or caspofungin (70 mg loading dose then 50 mg once daily) for ≤ 4 weeks. Outcomes were Day 30 all-cause mortality (primary outcome), Day 5 and 14 mycological eradication, time to negative blood culture, mortality attributable to candidaemia/invasive candidiasis, safety, and pharmacokinetics. RESULTS: Of 294 patients in STRIVE/ReSTORE, 113 were in the ICU at randomisation (rezafungin n = 46; caspofungin n = 67). At baseline, ~ 30% of patients in each group had impaired renal function and/or an Acute Physiologic Assessment and Chronic Health Evaluation II score ≥ 20. One patient (in the caspofungin group) was neutropenic at baseline. Day 30 all-cause mortality was 34.8% for rezafungin versus 25.4% for caspofungin. Day 5 and 14 mycological eradication was 78.3% and 71.7% for rezafungin versus 59.7% and 65.7% for caspofungin, respectively. Median time to negative blood culture was 18 (interquartile range, 12.6-43.0) versus 38 (interquartile range, 15.9-211.3) h for rezafungin versus caspofungin (stratified log-rank P = 0.001; nominal, not adjusted for multiplicity). Candidaemia/IC-attributable deaths occurred in two rezafungin patients versus one caspofungin patient. Safety profiles were similar between groups. Overall, 17.4% (rezafungin) versus 29.9% (caspofungin) of patients discontinued due to treatment-emergent adverse events. Rezafungin exposure following the initial 400-mg dose was comparable between patients in the ICU at randomisation (n = 50) and non-ICU patients (n = 117). CONCLUSIONS: Rezafungin was well tolerated and efficacious in critically ill, mainly non-neutropenic patients with candidaemia and/or IC. This analysis provides additional insights into the efficacy and safety of rezafungin in the ICU population.
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- 2024
40. Disease response in rheumatoid arthritis across four biologic therapies associates with improvement in paraoxonase-1 activity and oxylipins.
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Razmjou, Amir, Kremer, Joel, Pappas, Dimitrios, Curtis, Jeffrey, Wang, Jennifer, Shahbazian, Ani, Elashoff, David, Guo, Rong, Meriwether, David, Sulaiman, Dawoud, OConnor, Ellen, Reddy, Srinivasa, and Charles-Schoeman, Christina
- Subjects
arthritis ,rheumatoid ,biological therapy ,cardiovascular diseases ,Humans ,Aryldialkylphosphatase ,Arthritis ,Rheumatoid ,Oxylipins ,Female ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Antirheumatic Agents ,Biomarkers ,Aged ,Treatment Outcome ,Adult ,Antibodies ,Monoclonal ,Humanized ,Biological Therapy ,Rituximab ,Severity of Illness Index ,Abatacept ,Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Paraoxonase-1 (PON1) is a high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-associated enzyme, that has been implicated as a biomarker of cardiovascular risk in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We aimed to investigate how different biologic therapies affect levels of PON1 and oxylipins. METHODS: 1213 adult patients with RA in the Comparative Effectiveness Registry to study Therapies for Arthritis and Inflammatory CoNditions cohort study with moderate-to-high disease activity (Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) >10) who initiated a new biologic (tocilizumab (TCZ), n=296; abatacept, n=374; tumour necrosis factor inhibitors, n=427; rituximab, n=116) were followed prospectively with serum specimens analysed for PON1 activity by arylesterase (ARYL), lactonase (LAC) and PON assays at baseline and after 6 months of biologic therapy. A targeted panel of oxylipins was evaluated by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry in a subset of patients with the lowest and highest 6-month Disease Activity Score 28 (DAS28)-C reactive protein (CRP) responses in each treatment group. RESULTS: PON1 activity generally increased in the entire cohort after 6 months of new biologic therapy, showing the greatest, most consistent increases in the TCZ group. Increases in all three PON1 domains associated with significant decreases in disease activity in DAS28-CRP/CDAI (p
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- 2024
41. Subjective well-being across the life course among non-industrialized populations.
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Gurven, Michael, Buoro, Yoann, Rodriguez, Daniel, Sayre, Katherine, Trumble, Benjamin, Pyhälä, Aili, Kaplan, Hillard, Angelsen, Arild, Stieglitz, Jonathan, and Reyes-García, Victoria
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Humans ,Male ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Adult ,Aged ,Rural Population ,Aging ,Quality of Life ,Young Adult - Abstract
Subjective well-being (SWB) is often described as being U-shaped over adulthood, declining to a midlife slump and then improving thereafter. Improved SWB in later adulthood has been considered a paradox given age-related declines in health and social losses. While SWB has mostly been studied in high-income countries, it remains largely unexplored in rural subsistence populations lacking formal institutions that reliably promote social welfare. Here, we evaluate the age profile of SWB among three small-scale subsistence societies (n = 468; study 1), forest users from 23 low-income countries (n = 6987; study 2), and Tsimane horticulturalists (n = 1872; study 3). Across multiple specifications, we find variability in SWB age profiles. In some cases, we find no age-related differences in SWB or even inverted U-shapes. Adjusting for confounders reduces observed age effects. Our findings highlight variability in average well-being trajectories over the life course. Ensuring successful aging will require a greater focus on cultural and socioecological determinants of individual trajectories.
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- 2024
42. Bone-marrow macrophage-derived GPNMB protein binds to orphan receptor GPR39 and plays a critical role in cardiac repair
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Ramadoss, Sivakumar, Qin, Juan, Tao, Bo, Thomas, Nathan E, Cao, Edward, Wu, Rimao, Sandoval, Daniel R, Piermatteo, Ann, Grunddal, Kaare V, Ma, Feiyang, Li, Shen, Sun, Baiming, Zhou, Yonggang, Wan, Jijun, Pellegrini, Matteo, Holst, Birgitte, Lusis, Aldons J, Gordts, Philip LSM, and Deb, Arjun
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Medical Physiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Cells ,Cultured ,Macrophages ,Myocytes ,Cardiac ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Mice ,Knockout ,Humans ,Mice ,Myocardial Infarction ,Ventricular Dysfunction ,Left ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Eye Proteins ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Receptors ,G-Protein-Coupled ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Regeneration ,Signal Transduction ,Protein Binding ,Ventricular Function ,Left ,Female ,Male ,Heart Failure - Abstract
Glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B (GPNMB) is a type I transmembrane protein initially identified in nonmetastatic melanomas and has been associated with human heart failure; however, its role in cardiac injury and function remains unclear. Here we show that GPNMB expression is elevated in failing human and mouse hearts after myocardial infarction (MI). Lineage tracing and bone-marrow transplantation reveal that bone-marrow-derived macrophages are the main source of GPNMB in injured hearts. Using genetic loss-of-function models, we demonstrate that GPNMB deficiency leads to increased mortality, cardiac rupture and rapid post-MI left ventricular dysfunction. Conversely, increasing circulating GPNMB levels through viral delivery improves heart function after MI. Single-cell transcriptomics show that GPNMB enhances myocyte contraction and reduces fibroblast activation. Additionally, we identified GPR39 as a receptor for circulating GPNMB, with its absence negating the beneficial effects. These findings highlight a pivotal role of macrophage-derived GPNMBs in post-MI cardiac repair through GPR39 signaling.
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- 2024
43. Molecular identification and antimicrobial resistance patterns of enterobacterales in community urinary tract infections among indigenous women in Ecuador: addressing microbiological misidentification.
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Bastidas-Caldes, Carlos, Hernández-Alomía, Fernanda, Almeida, Miguel, Ormaza, Mirian, Boada, Josué, Graham, Jay, Calvopiña, Manuel, and Castillejo, Pablo
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E. coli ,Shigella spp. ,16S rRNA ,Indigenous women ,RecA ,RpoB ,UTI ,Humans ,Urinary Tract Infections ,Female ,Ecuador ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Adult ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Indigenous Peoples ,Drug Resistance ,Bacterial ,Middle Aged ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Young Adult ,Enterobacteriaceae Infections ,Community-Acquired Infections - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotic resistance of Enterobacterales poses a major challenge in the treatment of urinary tract infections (UTIs). In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), standard microbiological (i.e. urine culture and simple disk diffusion test) methods are considered the gold standard for bacterial identification and drug susceptibility testing, while PCR and DNA sequencing are less commonly used. In this study, we aimed to re-identifying Enterobacterales as the primary bacterial agents responsible for urinary tract infections (UTIs) by comparing the sensitivity and specificity of traditional microbiological methods with advanced molecular techniques for the detection of uropathogens in indigenous women from Otavalo, Ecuador. METHODS: A facility-based cross-sectional study was conducted from October 2021 to February 2022 among Kichwa-Otavalo women. Pathogens from urine samples were identified using culture and biochemical typing. Morphological identification was doble-checked through PCR and DNA sequencing of 16S, recA, and rpoB molecular barcodes. The isolates were subjected to antimicrobial susceptibility-testing using disk diffusion test. RESULTS: This study highlighted a 32% misidentification rate between biochemical and molecular identification. Using traditional methods, E. coli was 26.19% underrepresented meanwhile Klebsiella oxytoca was overrepresented by 92.86%. Furthermore, the genera Pseudomonas, Proteus, and Serratia were confirmed to be E. coli and Klebsiella spp. by molecular method, and one Klebsiella spp. was reidentified as Enterobacter spp. The susceptibility profile showed that 59% of the isolates were multidrug resistant strains and 31% produced extended spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs). Co-trimoxazole was the least effective antibiotic with 61% of the isolates resistant. Compared to previous reports, resistance to nitrofurantoin and fosfomycin showed an increase in resistance by 25% and 15%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Community-acquired UTIs in indigenous women in Otavalo were primarily caused by E. coli and Klebsiella spp. Molecular identification (16S/rpoB/recA) revealed a high rate of misidentification by standard biochemical and microbiological techniques, which could lead to incorrect antibiotic prescriptions. UTI isolates in this population displayed higher levels of resistance to commonly used antibiotics compared with non-indigenous groups. Accurate identification of pathogens causing UTIs and their antibiotic susceptibility in local populations is important for local antibiotic prescribing guidelines.
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- 2024
44. A retrospective analysis using comorbidity detecting algorithmic software to determine the incidence of International Classification of Diseases (ICD) code omissions and appropriateness of Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG) code modifiers.
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Gabel, Eilon, Gal, Jonathan, Grogan, Tristan, and Hofer, Ira
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Algorithms ,Clinical coding ,Diagnosis-related groups ,International classification of diseases ,Medical informatics applications ,Humans ,International Classification of Diseases ,Diagnosis-Related Groups ,Algorithms ,Retrospective Studies ,Comorbidity ,Software ,Electronic Health Records ,Male ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Adult - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mechanism for recording International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and diagnosis related groups (DRG) codes in a patients chart is through a certified medical coder who manually reviews the medical record at the completion of an admission. High-acuity ICD codes justify DRG modifiers, indicating the need for escalated hospital resources. In this manuscript, we demonstrate that value of rules-based computer algorithms that audit for omission of administrative codes and quantifying the downstream effects with regard to financial impacts and demographic findings did not indicate significant disparities. METHODS: All study data were acquired via the UCLA Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicines Perioperative Data Warehouse. The DataMart is a structured reporting schema that contains all the relevant clinical data entered into the EPIC (EPIC Systems, Verona, WI) electronic health record. Computer algorithms were created for eighteen disease states that met criteria for DRG modifiers. Each algorithm was run against all hospital admissions with completed billing from 2019. The algorithms scanned for the existence of disease, appropriate ICD coding, and DRG modifier appropriateness. Secondarily, the potential financial impact of ICD omissions was estimated by payor class and an analysis of ICD miscoding was done by ethnicity, sex, age, and financial class. RESULTS: Data from 34,104 hospital admissions were analyzed from January 1, 2019, to December 31, 2019. 11,520 (32.9%) hospital admissions were algorithm positive for a disease state with no corresponding ICD code. 1,990 (5.8%) admissions were potentially eligible for DRG modification/upgrade with an estimated lost revenue of $22,680,584.50. ICD code omission rates compared against reference groups (private payors, Caucasians, middle-aged patients) demonstrated significant p-values
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- 2024
45. Remyelination protects neurons from DLK-mediated neurodegeneration.
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Duncan, Greg, Ingram, Sam, Emberley, Katie, Hill, Jo, Cordano, Christian, Abdelhak, Ahmed, McCane, Michael, Jenks, Jennifer, Jabassini, Nora, Ananth, Kirtana, Ferrara, Skylar, Stedelin, Brittany, Sivyer, Benjamin, Aicher, Sue, Scanlan, Thomas, Watkins, Trent, Mishra, Anusha, Nelson, Jonathan, Green, Ari, and Emery, Ben
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Animals ,Remyelination ,Neurons ,Mice ,Demyelinating Diseases ,Apoptosis ,MAP Kinase Kinase Kinases ,Phosphorylation ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Myelin Sheath ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Male ,Oligodendroglia ,Axons ,Female ,Microglia - Abstract
Chronic demyelination and oligodendrocyte loss deprive neurons of crucial support. It is the degeneration of neurons and their connections that drives progressive disability in demyelinating disease. However, whether chronic demyelination triggers neurodegeneration and how it may do so remain unclear. We characterize two genetic mouse models of inducible demyelination, one distinguished by effective remyelination and the other by remyelination failure and chronic demyelination. While both demyelinating lines feature axonal damage, mice with blocked remyelination have elevated neuronal apoptosis and altered microglial inflammation, whereas mice with efficient remyelination do not feature neuronal apoptosis and have improved functional recovery. Remyelination incapable mice show increased activation of kinases downstream of dual leucine zipper kinase (DLK) and phosphorylation of c-Jun in neuronal nuclei. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic disruption of DLK block c-Jun phosphorylation and the apoptosis of demyelinated neurons. Together, we demonstrate that remyelination is associated with neuroprotection and identify DLK inhibition as protective strategy for chronically demyelinated neurons.
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- 2024
46. Reproducibility of consecutive automated telemetric noctodiurnal IOP profiles as determined by an intraocular implant.
- Author
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van den Bosch, Jacqueline, Pennisi, Vincenzo, Rao, Harsha, Mansouri, Kaweh, Weinreb, Robert, Thieme, Hagen, Hoffmann, Michael, and Choritz, Lars
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glaucoma ,intraocular pressure ,telemedicine ,Humans ,Intraocular Pressure ,Glaucoma ,Open-Angle ,Reproducibility of Results ,Tonometry ,Ocular ,Female ,Male ,Telemetry ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Circadian Rhythm ,Glaucoma Drainage Implants ,Aged ,80 and over - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intraocular pressure (IOP) monitoring in glaucoma management is evolving with novel devices. We investigated the reproducibility of 24 hour profiles on two consecutive days and after 30 days of self-measurements via telemetric IOP monitoring. METHODS: Seven primary patients with open-angle glaucoma previously implanted with a telemetric IOP sensor in one eye underwent automatic measurements throughout 24 hours on two consecutive days (day 1 and day 2). Patients wore an antenna adjacent to the study eye connected to a reader device to record IOP every 5 min. Also, self-measurements in six of seven patients were collected for a period of 30 days. Analysis included calculation of hourly averages to correlate time-pairs of day 1 versus day 2 and the self-measurements vers day 2. RESULTS: The number of IOP measurements per patient ranged between 151 and 268 on day 1, 175 and 268 on day 2 and 19 and 1236 during 30 days of self-measurements. IOP time-pairs of automatic measurements on day 1 and day 2 were significantly correlated at the group level (R=0.83, p
- Published
- 2024
47. Beat-AML 2024 ELN-refined risk stratification for older adults with newly diagnosed AML given lower-intensity therapy.
- Author
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Hoff, Fieke, Blum, William, Huang, Ying, Welkie, Rina, Swords, Ronan, Traer, Elie, Stein, Eytan, Lin, Tara, Archer, Kellie, Patel, Prapti, Collins, Robert, Baer, Maria, Duong, Vu, Arellano, Martha, Stock, Wendy, Odenike, Olatoyosi, Redner, Robert, Kovacsovics, Tibor, Deininger, Michael, Zeidner, Joshua, Olin, Rebecca, Smith, Catherine, Foran, James, Schiller, Gary, Curran, Emily, Koenig, Kristin, Heerema, Nyla, Chen, Timothy, Martycz, Molly, Stefanos, Mona, Marcus, Sonja, Rosenberg, Leonard, Druker, Brian, Levine, Ross, Burd, Amy, Yocum, Ashley, Borate, Uma, Mims, Alice, Byrd, John, and Madanat, Yazan
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Humans ,Leukemia ,Myeloid ,Acute ,Aged ,Female ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Prognosis ,Risk Assessment ,Mutation ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols - Abstract
Although the 2022 European LeukemiaNet (ELN) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) risk classification reliably predicts outcomes in younger patients treated with intensive chemotherapy, it is unclear whether it applies to adults ≥60 years treated with lower-intensity treatment (LIT). We aimed to test the prognostic impact of ELN risk in patients with newly diagnosed (ND) AML aged ≥60 years given LIT and to further refine risk stratification for these patients. A total of 595 patients were included: 11% had favorable-, 11% intermediate-, and 78% had adverse-risk AML. ELN risk was prognostic for overall survival (OS) (P < .001) but did not stratify favorable- from intermediate-risk (P = .71). Within adverse-risk AML, the impact of additional molecular abnormalities was further evaluated. Multivariable analysis was performed on a training set (n = 316) and identified IDH2 mutation as an independent favorable prognostic factor, and KRAS, MLL2, and TP53 mutations as unfavorable (P < .05). A mutation score was calculated for each combination of these mutations, assigning adverse-risk patients to 2 risk groups: -1 to 0 points (Beat-AML intermediate) vs 1+ points (Beat-AML adverse). In the final refined risk classification, ELN favorable- and intermediate-risk were combined into a newly defined Beat-AML favorable-risk group, in addition to mutation scoring within the ELN adverse-risk group. This approach redefines risk for older patients with ND AML and proposes refined Beat-AML risk groups with improved discrimination for OS (2-year OS, 48% vs 33% vs 11%, respectively; P < .001), providing patients and providers additional information for treatment decision-making.
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- 2024
48. Prenatal Exposure to Source-Specific Fine Particulate Matter and Autism Spectrum Disorder.
- Author
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Luglio, David, Kleeman, Michael, Yu, Xin, Lin, Jane, Chow, Ting, Martinez, Mayra, Chen, Zhanghua, Chen, Jiu-Chiuan, Eckel, Sandrah, Schwartz, Joel, Lurmann, Frederick, McConnell, Rob, Xiang, Anny, and Rahman, Md
- Subjects
PM2.5 ,air pollution sources ,autism spectrum disorders ,gasoline ,pregnancy ,prenatal exposures ,Particulate Matter ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Female ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Air Pollutants ,Adult ,California ,Retrospective Studies ,Maternal Exposure ,Vehicle Emissions - Abstract
In this study, associations between prenatal exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) from 9 sources and development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) were assessed in a population-based retrospective pregnancy cohort in southern California. The cohort included 318,750 mother-child singleton pairs. ASD cases (N = 4559) were identified by ICD codes. Source-specific PM2.5 concentrations were estimated from a chemical transport model with a 4 × 4 km2 resolution and assigned to maternal pregnancy residential addresses. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the hazard ratios (HR) of ASD development for each individual source. We also adjusted for total PM2.5 mass and in a separate model for all other sources simultaneously. Increased ASD risk was observed with on-road gasoline (HR [CI]: 1.18 [1.13, 1.24]), off-road gasoline (1.15 [1.12, 1.19]), off-road diesel (1.08 [1.05, 1.10]), food cooking (1.05 [1.02, 1.08]), aircraft (1.04 [1.01, 1.06]), and natural gas combustion (1.09 [1.06, 1.11]), each scaled to standard deviation increases in concentration. On-road gasoline and off-road gasoline were robust for other pollutant groups. PM2.5 emitted from different sources may have different impacts on ASD. The results also identify PM source mixtures for toxicological investigations that may provide evidence for future public health policies.
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- 2024
49. Gene-Specific Effects on Brain Volume and Cognition of TMEM106B in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration.
- Author
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Vandebergh, Marijne, Ramos, Eliana, Corriveau-Lecavalier, Nick, Ramanan, Vijay, Kornak, John, Mester, Carly, Kolander, Tyler, Brushaber, Danielle, Staffaroni, Adam, Geschwind, Daniel, Wolf, Amy, Kantarci, Kejal, Gendron, Tania, Petrucelli, Leonard, Van den Broeck, Marleen, Wynants, Sarah, Baker, Matthew, Borrego-Écija, Sergi, Appleby, Brian, Barmada, Sami, Bozoki, Andrea, Clark, David, Darby, R, Dickerson, Bradford, Domoto-Reilly, Kimiko, Fields, Julie, Galasko, Douglas, Ghoshal, Nupur, Graff-Radford, Neill, Grant, Ian, Honig, Lawrence, Hsiung, Ging-Yuek, Huey, Edward, Irwin, David, Knopman, David, Kwan, Justin, Léger, Gabriel, Litvan, Irene, Masdeu, Joseph, Mendez, Mario, Onyike, Chiadi, Pascual, Belen, Pressman, Peter, Ritter, Aaron, Roberson, Erik, Snyder, Allison, Sullivan, Anna, Tartaglia, Maria, Wint, Dylan, Heuer, Hilary, Forsberg, Leah, Boxer, Adam, Rosen, Howard, Boeve, Bradley, and Rademakers, Rosa
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Humans ,Female ,Male ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration ,Aged ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Brain ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Gray Matter ,Cognition ,Organ Size ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: TMEM106B has been proposed as a modifier of disease risk in FTLD-TDP, particularly in GRN pathogenic variant carriers. Furthermore, TMEM106B has been investigated as a disease modifier in the context of healthy aging and across multiple neurodegenerative diseases. The objective of this study was to evaluate and compare the effect of TMEM106B on gray matter volume and cognition in each of the common genetic FTD groups and in patients with sporadic FTD. METHODS: Participants were enrolled through the ARTFL/LEFFTDS Longitudinal Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (ALLFTD) study, which includes symptomatic and presymptomatic individuals with a pathogenic variant in C9orf72, GRN, MAPT, VCP, TBK1, TARDBP, symptomatic nonpathogenic variant carriers, and noncarrier family controls. All participants were genotyped for the TMEM106B rs1990622 SNP. Cross-sectionally, linear mixed-effects models were fitted to assess an association between TMEM106B and genetic group interaction with each outcome measure (gray matter volume and UDS3-EF for cognition), adjusting for education, age, sex, and CDR+NACC-FTLD sum of boxes. Subsequently, associations between TMEM106B and each outcome measure were investigated within the genetic group. For longitudinal modeling, linear mixed-effects models with time by TMEM106B predictor interactions were fitted. RESULTS: The minor allele of TMEM106B rs1990622, linked to a decreased risk of FTD, associated with greater gray matter volume in GRN pathogenic variant carriers under the recessive dosage model (N = 82, beta = 3.25, 95% CI [0.37-6.19], p = 0.034). This was most pronounced in the thalamus in the left hemisphere (beta = 0.03, 95% CI [0.01-0.06], p = 0.006), with a retained association when considering presymptomatic GRN pathogenic variant carriers only (N = 42, beta = 0.03, 95% CI [0.01-0.05], p = 0.003). The minor allele of TMEM106B rs1990622 also associated with greater cognitive scores among all C9orf72 pathogenic variant carriers (N = 229, beta = 0.36, 95% CI [0.05-0.066], p = 0.021) and in presymptomatic C9orf72 pathogenic variant carriers (N = 106, beta = 0.33, 95% CI [0.03-0.63], p = 0.036), under the recessive dosage model. DISCUSSION: We identified associations of TMEM106B with gray matter volume and cognition in the presence of GRN and C9orf72 pathogenic variants. The association of TMEM106B with outcomes of interest in presymptomatic GRN and C9orf72 pathogenic variant carriers could additionally reflect TMEM106Bs effect on divergent pathophysiologic changes before the appearance of clinical symptoms.
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- 2024
50. Quantitative ultrasound assessment of fatty infiltration of the rotator cuff muscles using backscatter coefficient.
- Author
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Toto-Brocchi, Marco, Wu, Yuanshan, Jerban, Saeed, Han, Aiguo, Andre, Michael, Shah, Sameer, and Chang, Eric
- Subjects
Magnetic resonance imaging ,Muscular atrophy ,Rotator cuff ,Shoulder ,Ultrasonography ,Humans ,Ultrasonography ,Male ,Female ,Rotator Cuff ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Adipose Tissue ,Adult ,Aged - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To prospectively evaluate ultrasound backscatter coefficients (BSCs) of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscles and compare with Goutallier classification on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS: Fifty-six participants had shoulder MRI exams and ultrasound exams of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscles. Goutallier MRI grades were determined and BSCs were measured. Group means were compared and the strength of relationships between the measures were determined. Using binarized Goutallier groups (0-2 versus 3-4), areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUROCs) were calculated. The nearest integer cutoff value was determined using Youdens index. RESULTS: BSC values were significantly different among most Goutallier grades for the supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscles (both p
- Published
- 2024
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