11 results on '"Ganzhorn S"'
Search Results
2. Spatial genetic structure ofManilkara maxima(Sapotaceae), a tree species from the Brazilian Atlantic forest
- Author
-
Ganzhorn, S. M., primary, Thomas, W. W., additional, Gaiotto, F. A., additional, and Lewis, J. D., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. BIOLOGY
- Author
-
Kim, J. H., primary, Song, H. B., additional, Kim, D. H., additional, Park, K. D., additional, Kim, J. H., additional, Lee, B. J., additional, Khatua, S., additional, Kalkan, E., additional, Brown, R., additional, Pearlman, M., additional, Vats, T., additional, Abela, L., additional, Fiaschetti, G., additional, Shalaby, T., additional, Grunder, E., additional, Ma, M., additional, Grahlert, J., additional, Baumgartner, M., additional, Siler, U., additional, Nonoguchi, N., additional, Ohgaki, H., additional, Grotzer, M., additional, Adachi, J.-i., additional, Suzuki, T., additional, Fukuoka, K., additional, Yanagisawa, T., additional, Mishima, K., additional, Koga, T., additional, Matsutani, M., additional, Nishikawa, R., additional, Sardi, I., additional, Giunti, L., additional, Bresci, C., additional, Cardellicchio, S., additional, Da Ros, M., additional, Buccoliero, A. M., additional, Farina, S., additional, Arico, M., additional, Genitori, L., additional, Massimino, M., additional, Filippi, L., additional, Erdreich-Epstein, A., additional, Zhou, H., additional, Ren, X., additional, Schur, M., additional, Davidson, T. B., additional, Ji, L., additional, Sposto, R., additional, Asgharzadeh, S., additional, Tong, Y., additional, White, E., additional, Murugesan, M., additional, Nimmervoll, B., additional, Wang, M., additional, Marino, D., additional, Ellison, D., additional, Finkelstein, D., additional, Pounds, S., additional, Malkin, D., additional, Gilbertson, R., additional, Eden, C., additional, Ju, B., additional, Phoenix, T., additional, Poppleton, H., additional, Lessman, C., additional, Taylor, M., additional, la Marca, G., additional, Malvagia, S., additional, Fratoni, V., additional, Giovannini, M. G., additional, Giangaspero, F., additional, Badiali, M., additional, Gleize, V., additional, Paris, S., additional, Moi, L., additional, Elhouadani, S., additional, Arcella, A., additional, Morace, R., additional, Antonelli, M., additional, Buttarelli, F., additional, Mokhtari, K., additional, Sanson, M., additional, Smith, S., additional, Ward, J., additional, Wilson, M., additional, Rahman, C., additional, Rose, F., additional, Peet, A., additional, Macarthur, D., additional, Grundy, R., additional, Rahman, R., additional, Venkatraman, S., additional, Birks, D., additional, Balakrishnan, I., additional, Alimova, I., additional, Harris, P., additional, Patel, P., additional, Foreman, N., additional, Vibhakar, R., additional, Wu, H., additional, Zhou, Q., additional, Wang, D., additional, Wang, G., additional, Dang, D., additional, Pencreach, E., additional, Nguyen, A., additional, Guerin, E., additional, Lasthaus, C., additional, Guenot, D., additional, Entz-Werle, N., additional, Unland, R., additional, Schlosser, S., additional, Farwick, N., additional, Plagemann, T., additional, Richter, G., additional, Juergens, H., additional, Fruehwald, M., additional, Chien, C.-L., additional, Lee, Y.-H., additional, Lin, C.-I., additional, Hsieh, J.-Y., additional, Lin, S.-C., additional, Wong, T.-T., additional, Ho, D. M.-T., additional, Wang, H.-W., additional, Lagah, S., additional, Tan, I.-L., additional, Malcolm, S., additional, Majani, Y., additional, van Vuurden, D. G., additional, Aronica, E., additional, Wedekind, L. E., additional, Hulleman, E., additional, Biesmans, D., additional, Bugiani, M., additional, Vandertop, W. P., additional, Kaspers, G. J. L., additional, Wurdinger, T., additional, Noske, D. P., additional, Van der Stoop, P. M., additional, Shukla, S., additional, Kuipers, G. K., additional, Slotman, B. J., additional, Cloos, J., additional, Sun, T., additional, Warrington, N., additional, Luo, J., additional, Ganzhorn, S., additional, Tabori, U., additional, Druley, T., additional, Gutmann, D., additional, Rubin, J., additional, Castelo-Branco, P., additional, Choufani, S., additional, Mack, S., additional, Galagher, D., additional, Zhang, C., additional, Lipman, T., additional, Zhukova, N., additional, Martin, D., additional, Merino, D., additional, Wasserman, J., additional, Samuel, C., additional, Alon, N., additional, Hitzler, J., additional, Wang, J. C. Y., additional, Keller, G., additional, Dirks, P. B., additional, Pfister, S., additional, Taylor, M. D., additional, Weksberg, R., additional, Leblond, P., additional, Meignan, S., additional, Dewitte, A., additional, Le Tinier, F., additional, Wattez, N., additional, Lartigau, E., additional, Lansiaux, A., additional, Hanson, R., additional, Gordon, I., additional, Zhao, S., additional, Camphausen, K., additional, Warren, K., additional, Warrington, N. M., additional, Gutmann, D. H., additional, Rubin, J. B., additional, Jaillet, M., additional, Kovacs, Z., additional, Martin-Fiori, E., additional, Bernasconi, M., additional, Werner, B., additional, Dyberg, C., additional, Baryawno, N., additional, Milosevic, J., additional, Wickstrom, M., additional, Northcott, P. A., additional, Kool, M., additional, Kogner, P., additional, Johnsen, J. I., additional, Reynolds, G., additional, Davies, N., additional, Arvanitis, T., additional, Zoghbi, A., additional, Meisterernst, M., additional, Fruehwald, M. C., additional, Kerl, K., additional, Orr, B., additional, Haffner, M., additional, Nelson, W., additional, Yegnasubramanian, S., additional, Eberhart, C., additional, Fotovati, A., additional, Abu-Ali, S., additional, Wang, P.-S., additional, Deleyrolle, L., additional, Lee, C., additional, Triscott, J., additional, Chen, J., additional, Franciosi, S., additional, Nakamura, Y., additional, Sugita, Y., additional, Uchiumi, T., additional, Kuwano, M., additional, Leavitt, B., additional, Singh, S., additional, Jury, A., additional, Jones, C., additional, Wakimoto, H., additional, Reynolds, B., additional, Pallen, C., additional, Dunn, S., additional, Fletcher, S., additional, Levine, J., additional, Li, M., additional, Kagawa, N., additional, Hirayama, R., additional, Chiba, Y., additional, Kijima, N., additional, Arita, H., additional, Kinoshita, M., additional, Hashimoto, N., additional, Izumoto, S., additional, Maruno, M., additional, and Yoshimine, T., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A feasibility study of the use of HIV self-tests in young men who have sex with men.
- Author
-
Schnall R, Liu J, Kuhns LM, Pearson C, Scott Batey D, Bruce J, Radix A, Belkind U, Hidalgo MA, Hirshfield S, Ganzhorn S, and Garofalo R
- Subjects
- Male, Adult, Humans, United States, Adolescent, Homosexuality, Male, Feasibility Studies, HIV Testing, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections prevention & control, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Studies on HIV self-testing (HIV-ST) have been limited to adults (age 18+). The study assessed use of HIV-ST among a diverse group of young men who have sex with men (YMSM) in the United States (US) and assessed differences in uptake by demographic characteristics and requirements for parental consent. This study demonstrated feasibility of HIV-ST for YMSM as young as 14 years of age, which suggests potential for increasing HIV testing in this young age group and promoting health equity.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Efficacy of an mHealth self-management intervention for persons living with HIV: the WiseApp randomized clinical trial.
- Author
-
Schnall R, Sanabria G, Jia H, Cho H, Bushover B, Reynolds NR, Gradilla M, Mohr DC, Ganzhorn S, and Olender S
- Subjects
- Humans, Medication Adherence, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Self-Management, HIV Infections drug therapy, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Importance: Progression of HIV disease, the transmission of the disease, and premature deaths among persons living with HIV (PLWH) have been attributed foremost to poor adherence to HIV medications. mHealth tools can be used to improve antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence in PLWH and have the potential to improve therapeutic success., Objective: To determine the efficacy of WiseApp, a user-centered design mHealth intervention to improve ART adherence and viral suppression in PLWH., Design, Setting, and Participants: A randomized (1:1) controlled efficacy trial of the WiseApp intervention arm (n = 99) versus an attention control intervention arm (n = 101) among persons living with HIV who reported poor adherence to their treatment regimen and living in New York City., Interventions: The WiseApp intervention includes the following components: testimonials of lived experiences, push-notification reminders, medication trackers, health surveys, chat rooms, and a "To-Do" list outlining tasks for the day. Both study arms also received the CleverCap pill bottle, with only the intervention group linking the pill bottle to WiseApp., Results: We found a significant improvement in ART adherence in the intervention arm compared to the attention control arm from day 1 (69.7% vs 48.3%, OR = 2.5, 95% CI 1.4-3.5, P = .002) to day 59 (51.2% vs 37.2%, OR = 1.77, 95% CI 1.0-1.6, P = .05) of the study period. From day 60 to 120, the intervention arm had higher adherence rates, but the difference was not significant. In the secondary analyses, no difference in change from baseline to 3 or 6 months between the 2 arms was observed for all secondary outcomes., Conclusions: The WiseApp intervention initially improved ART adherence but did not have a sustained effect on outcomes., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Do correlates of white matter features differ between older men and women living with human immunodeficiency virus?
- Author
-
Gordián-Arroyo A, Reame N, Gutierrez J, Liu J, Ganzhorn S, Igwe KC, Laing K, and Schnall R
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, HIV, Cross-Sectional Studies, Follicle Stimulating Hormone, Dehydroepiandrosterone, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, HIV Infections pathology
- Abstract
Objective: Given estrogen's role in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease progression and the higher rates of neurocognitive decline in affected women, the purpose of this study was to assess whether the relationship of white matter features and reproductive hormone levels differed between men versus women (sex as a moderator), controlling for selected cardiometabolic risk factors, HIV-related health indicators, and demographics in an aging population of persons living with HIV (PLWH)., Methods: Older PLWH (50 y and older; 44 women and 35 men; mean ± SD age, 59.8 ± 0.6 y; 55.7% women; 72.2% non-Hispanic Black) participated in a cross-sectional study involving a fasting blood draw and a demographic survey (visit 1) and a magnetic resonance imaging scan (visit 2) to determine white matter volume and white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume. Associations between reproductive hormones (follicle-stimulating hormone [FSH], estradiol, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate [DHEA-S]) and white matter features were assessed in linear regression models. Covariates were age, body mass index, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, current smoking status, CD4 count, and cranial size., Results: For white matter volume, a sexually dimorphic interaction was seen for DHEA-S (B = 21.23; P = 0.012) and observed for FSH (B = -22.97, P = 0.08) with a trend for significance after controlling for risk factors. In women, higher white matter volume was associated with higher DHEA-S (B = 13.89, P = 0.017) and lower FSH (B = 23.58, P = 0.01). No hormone associations were shown in men for white matter volume. For WMH volume, no significant interaction effects between sex and reproductive hormones were identified. For WMH, sex did not predict associations with reproductive hormones after controlling for risk factors., Conclusions: Although sexually dimorphic interactions of reproductive hormones and total white matter volume were demonstrated, our study findings do not support a role for sex-based differences in reproductive hormones as predictive correlates of WMH in a small sample of older PLWH., Competing Interests: Financial disclosure/conflicts of interest: Nancy Reame helped develop a perimenopause questionnaire survey for NextGenJane.com in 2020, served as a one-time consultant with Merk Pharmaceuticals regarding future trends in menopause research for a one-time presentation in 2022, and was reimbursed for travel expenses during 2019 and 2020 as a member of the National Academy of Medicine's Committee to Assess the Utility of Compounded Bioidential Hormone Therapy. The other authors have nothing to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 by The North American Menopause Society.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Smoking Cessation Mobile App for Persons Living With HIV: Preliminary Efficacy and Feasibility Study.
- Author
-
Schnall R, Liu J, Alvarez G, Porras T, Ganzhorn S, Boerner S, Huang MC, Trujillo P, and Cioe P
- Abstract
Background: The prevalence of smoking in the United States general population has gradually declined to the lowest rate ever recorded; however, this has not been true for persons with HIV., Objective: We conducted a pilot test to assess the feasibility and efficacy of the Lumme Quit Smoking mobile app and smartwatch combination with sensing capabilities to improve smoking cessation in persons with HIV., Methods: A total of 40 participants were enrolled in the study and randomly assigned 1:1 to the control arm, which received an 8-week supply of nicotine replacement therapy, a 30-minute smoking cessation counseling session, and weekly check-in calls with study staff, or to the intervention arm, which additionally received the Lumme Quit Smoking app and smartwatch., Results: Of the 40 participants enrolled, 37 completed the follow-up study assessments and 16 used the app every day during the 56-day period. During the 6-month recruitment and enrollment period, 122 people were screened for eligibility, with 67.2% (82/122) deemed ineligible. Smoking criteria and incompatible tech were the major reasons for ineligibility. There was no difference in the proportion of 7-day point prevalence abstinence by study arm and no significant decrease in exhaled carbon monoxide for the intervention and control arms separately. However, the average exhaled carbon monoxide decreased over time when analyzing both arms together (P=.02)., Conclusions: Results suggest excellent feasibility and acceptability of using a smoking sensor app among this smoking population. The knowledge gained from this research will enable the scientific community, clinicians, and community stakeholders to improve tobacco cessation outcomes for persons with HIV., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04808609; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04808609., (©Rebecca Schnall, Jianfang Liu, Gabriella Alvarez, Tiffany Porras, Sarah Ganzhorn, Samantha Boerner, Ming-Chun Huang, Paul Trujillo, Patricia Cioe. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 18.08.2022.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Establishing a usability cut-point for the health information technology usability evaluation scale (Health-ITUES).
- Author
-
Loh KP, Liu J, Ganzhorn S, Sanabria G, and Schnall R
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Information Technology, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Medical Informatics, Mobile Applications
- Abstract
Objective: The Health Information Technology Usability Evaluation Scale (Health-ITUES) is a validated and reliable instrument to evaluate usability of information technology (IT) tools. In this study, we aimed to establish the optimal cut-point of the Health-ITUES to identify usability of IT tools., Methods: Adult participants were recruited to a trial evaluating a mobile app for self-managing HIV. Participants completed the Health-ITUES at the 3- and 6-month follow-up. Health-ITUES is a 20-item questionnaire that assesses four subscales: impact, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, and user control. The total score ranged from 1 to 5 and a higher score indicates greater usability. App use was defined as the proportion of activities completed by participants in both study arms. The selection of an optimal cut-point involved a series of multiple linear regression models with 500 bootstrap replications to examine the relationship between the Health-ITUES total score and app use, controlling for potential covariates., Results: We included 158 participants; mean age was 49.7 years (SD 10.3), 71% were African American/Black, and 72% were non-Hispanic. Mean Health-ITUES total scores at 3 and 6 months were 4.39 (SD 0.75) and 4.43 (SD 0.75), respectively. App use completedby participants from baseline to the 3-month follow-up visits was 0.61 (SD 0.36, range 0-1.72) and from 3-month to the 6-month follow-up visits was 0.51 (SD 0.37). Participants who reported greater Health-ITUES total score completed more activities [β = 0.18, 95% Confidence Interval (CI) 0.10-0.27]. The optimal cut-point of 4.32 (95% CI: 4.25-4.56) yielded the lowest p-value to identify usability of IT tools., Conclusions: In this study of adults with HIV, we identified an optimal cut-point of 4.32 on the Health-ITUES total score to define usability. Further studies are needed to validate this cut-point., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The potential role of cocaine and heroin co-use in the opioid epidemic in the United States.
- Author
-
Goodwin RD, Moeller SJ, Zhu J, Yarden J, Ganzhorn S, and Williams JM
- Subjects
- Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Child, Heroin, Humans, Opioid Epidemic, United States epidemiology, Cocaine, Drug Overdose drug therapy, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Epidemics
- Abstract
Introduction: Opioid/heroin use is an epidemic in the United States (US). Polysubstance use dramatically increases risk of adverse overdose outcomes, versus use of a single substance. Co-use of heroin and cocaine, known as "speedballing," is associated with higher risk of overdose than use of either alone. It is not known whether co-use relative to use of either alone has increased in the US in recent years at a national level. If so, this may be one contributing factor to the increasing fatality rate associated with the US opioid epidemic. This study investigated the prevalence of use of each and co-use of heroin and cocaine from 2002 to 2017 in the US., Methods: Data were drawn from the 2002 to 2017 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) to estimate prevalence of past-month heroin use, cocaine use, and co-use of heroin and cocaine among Americans ages 12 and older., Results: From 2002 to 2017, cocaine use (without heroin) (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 0.971, 95% confidence interval (0.963, 0.979)) declined overall, though a subsequent quadratic analysis suggested that it began increasing in 2011. In contrast, heroin and cocaine co-use (AOR = 1.062 (1.027, 1.099)) and heroin use (without cocaine) (AOR = 1.101 (1.070, 1.133)) linearly increased from 2002 to 2017., Conclusions: Screening, outreach, clinical treatment, and first responders should be aware of increasing patterns of polysubstance use and the potential implications of co-use of heroin and cocaine on first responders' intervention and the potential role of increasing exposure to multiple substances on overdose outcomes in the US., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Preliminary Results from a Pragmatic Clinical Trial of MyPEEPS Mobile to Improve HIV Prevention Behaviors in Young Men.
- Author
-
Schnall R, Kuhns L, Pearson C, Bruce J, Batey DS, Radix A, Belkind U, Hidalgo MA, Hirshfield S, Ganzhorn S, and Garofalo R
- Subjects
- Health Behavior, Homosexuality, Male, Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Risk-Taking, Sexual Behavior, HIV Infections prevention & control, Mobile Applications
- Abstract
Our study team developed the MyPEEPS Mobile App for improving HIV prevention behaviors in diverse young men. We conducted a randomized controlled trial and evaluated the preliminary outcomes in the first half (N=350) of our intended study sample. Higher self-efficacy for HIV prevention behaviors (p=0.0042) and more recent HIV tests in the past 3 months (p=0.0156) were reported by the intervention group compared to control. Numbers of condomless anal sex acts were lower among the intervention group for both insertive anal sex acts (p=0.0283) and receptive anal sex acts (p=0.0001). Preliminary results indicate that some sexual risk behaviors were reduced among the intervention group in the preliminary analytic sample.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The cyclic AMP pathway is a sex-specific modifier of glioma risk in type I neurofibromatosis patients.
- Author
-
Warrington NM, Sun T, Luo J, McKinstry RC, Parkin PC, Ganzhorn S, Spoljaric D, Albers AC, Merkelson A, Stewart DR, Stevenson DA, Viskochil D, Druley TE, Forys JT, Reilly KM, Fisher MJ, Tabori U, Allen JC, Schiffman JD, Gutmann DH, and Rubin JB
- Subjects
- Animals, Astrocytes metabolism, Astrocytes pathology, Female, Glioma genetics, Humans, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Neurofibromatosis 1 genetics, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Signal Transduction, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Glioma metabolism, Neurofibromatosis 1 metabolism
- Abstract
Identifying modifiers of glioma risk in patients with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1) could help support personalized tumor surveillance, advance understanding of gliomagenesis, and potentially identify novel therapeutic targets. Here, we report genetic polymorphisms in the human adenylate cyclase gene adenylate cyclase 8 (ADCY8) that correlate with glioma risk in NF1 in a sex-specific manner, elevating risk in females while reducing risk in males. This finding extends earlier evidence of a role for cAMP in gliomagenesis based on results in a genetically engineered mouse model (Nf1 GEM). Thus, sexually dimorphic cAMP signaling might render males and females differentially sensitive to variation in cAMP levels. Using male and female Nf1 GEM, we found significant sex differences exist in cAMP regulation and in the growth-promoting effects of cAMP suppression. Overall, our results establish a sex-specific role for cAMP regulation in human gliomagenesis, specifically identifying ADCY8 as a modifier of glioma risk in NF1., (©2014 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.