4,615 results on '"Lane, D."'
Search Results
2. The multi-wavelength view of shocks in the fastest nova V1674 Her
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Sokolovsky, K. V., Johnson, T. J., Buson, S., Jean, P., Cheung, C. C., Mukai, K., Chomiuk, L., Aydi, E., Molina, B., Kawash, A., Linford, J. D., Mioduszewski, A. J., Rupen, M. P., Sokoloski, J. L., Williams, M. N., Steinberg, E., Vurm, I., Metzger, B. D., Page, K. L., Orio, M., Quimby, R. M., Shafter, A. W., Corbett, H., Bolzoni, S., DeYoung, J., Menzies, K., Romanov, F. D., Richmond, M., Ulowetz, J., Vanmunster, T., Williamson, G., Lane, D. J., Bartnik, M., Bellaver, M., Bruinsma, E., Dugan, E., Fedewa, J., Gerhard, C., Painter, S., Peterson, D. -M., Rodriguez, J. E., Smith, C., Sullivan, H., and Watson, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Classical novae are shock-powered multi-wavelength transients triggered by a thermonuclear runaway on an accreting white dwarf. V1674 Her is the fastest nova ever recorded (time to declined by two magnitudes is t_2=1.1 d) that challenges our understanding of shock formation in novae. We investigate the physical mechanisms behind nova emission from GeV gamma-rays to cm-band radio using coordinated Fermi-LAT, NuSTAR, Swift and VLA observations supported by optical photometry. Fermi-LAT detected short-lived (18 h) 0.1-100 GeV emission from V1674 Her that appeared 6 h after the eruption began; this was at a level of (1.6 +/- 0.4)x10^-6 photons cm^-2 s^-1. Eleven days later, simultaneous NuSTAR and Swift X-ray observations revealed optically thin thermal plasma shock-heated to kT_shock = 4 keV. The lack of a detectable 6.7 keV Fe K_alpha emission suggests super-solar CNO abundances. The radio emission from V1674 Her was consistent with thermal emission at early times and synchrotron at late times. The radio spectrum steeply rising with frequency may be a result of either free-free absorption of synchrotron and thermal emission by unshocked outer regions of the nova shell or the Razin-Tsytovich effect attenuating synchrotron emission in dense plasma. The development of the shock inside the ejecta is unaffected by the extraordinarily rapid evolution and the intermediate polar host of this nova., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted to MNRAS
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- 2023
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3. iSAYAW
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Simon, Christian Louie C., primary, Galvez, Camille Anne T., additional, Dalisay, Trisha Lane D., additional, Solomon, Jaycee D., additional, Isip, Cristian Lowie M., additional, Tolentino, Julius Ceazar G., additional, and Miranda, John Paul P., additional
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- 2024
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4. V392 Persei: a \gamma-ray bright nova eruption from a known dwarf nova
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Murphy-Glaysher, F. J., Darnley, M. J., Harvey, É. J., Newsam, A. M., Page, K. L., Starrfield, S., Wagner, R. M., Woodward, C. E., Terndrup, D. M., Kafka, S., Heras, T. Arranz, Berardi, P., Bertrand, E., Biernikowicz, R., Boussin, C., Boyd, D., Buchet, Y., Bundas, M., Coulter, D., Dejean, D., Diepvens, A., Dvorak, S., Edlin, J., Eenmae, T., Eggenstein, H., Fournier, R., Garde, O., Gout, J., Janzen, D., Jordanov, P., Kiiskinen, H., Lane, D., Larochelle, R., Leadbeater, R., Mankel, D., Martineau, G., Miller, I., Modic, R., Montier, J., Aimar, M. Morales, Muyllaert, E., Nogues, R. Naves, O'Keeffe, D., Oksanen, A., Pyatnytskyy, M., Rast, R., Rodgers, B., Perez, D. Rodriguez, Schorr, F., Schwendeman, E., Shadick, S., Sharpe, S., Alfaro, F. Soldán, Sove, T., Stone, G., Tordai, T., Venne, R., Vollmann, W., Vrastak, M., and Wenzel, K.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
V392 Persei is a known dwarf nova (DN) that underwent a classical nova eruption in 2018. Here we report ground-based optical, Swift UV and X-ray, and Fermi-LAT \gamma-ray observations following the eruption for almost three years. V392 Per is one of the fastest evolving novae yet observed, with a $t_2$ decline time of 2 days. Early spectra present evidence for multiple and interacting mass ejections, with the associated shocks driving both the \gamma-ray and early optical luminosity. V392 Per entered Sun-constraint within days of eruption. Upon exit, the nova had evolved to the nebular phase, and we saw the tail of the super-soft X-ray phase. Subsequent optical emission captured the fading ejecta alongside a persistent narrow line emission spectrum from the accretion disk. Ongoing hard X-ray emission is characteristic of a standing accretion shock in an intermediate polar. Analysis of the optical data reveals an orbital period of 3.230 \pm 0.003 days, but we see no evidence for a white dwarf (WD) spin period. The optical and X-ray data suggest a high mass WD, the pre-nova spectral energy distribution (SED) indicates an evolved donor, and the post-nova SED points to a high mass accretion rate. Following eruption, the system has remained in a nova-like high mass transfer state, rather than returning to the pre-nova DN low mass transfer configuration. We suggest that this high state is driven by irradiation of the donor by the nova eruption. In many ways, V392 Per shows similarity to the well-studied nova and DN GK Persei., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 20 pages including references, with 37 pages of supplementary material
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- 2022
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5. A new subspecies of 'Acrodipsas decima' miller and lane, 2004 (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Lycaeninae) from Northern Queensland
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Lane, D A and Moulds, M S
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- 2021
6. Records of 'Hypochrysops' C. and R. Felder, 1860 butterflies (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae: Lycaeninae) from Northern Torres Strait, Queensland
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Lane, D A, Hopkinson, M, and Moulds, M S
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- 2021
7. First account of the life history of the Hawkmoth 'Eurypteryx molucca' C. and R. Felder, 1874 (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae: Macroglossini)
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Lane, D A, Moulds, M S, and Hopkinson, M
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- 2021
8. Should Storage-Centric Tariffs be Extended to Commercial Flexible Demand?
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Smith, Lane D. and Kirschen, Daniel S.
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
Further electrification of the economy is expected to sharpen ramp rates and increase peak loads. Flexibility from the demand side, which new technologies might facilitate, can help these operational challenges. Electric utilities have begun implementing new tariffs and other mechanisms to encourage the deployment of energy storage. This paper examines whether making these new tariffs technology agnostic and extending them to flexible demand would significantly improve the procurement of operational flexibility. In particular, we consider how a commercial consumer might adjust its flexible demand when subject to Pacific Gas and Electric Company's storage-centric electric tariff. We show that extending this tariff to consumers with flexible demand would reduce the utility's net demand ramp rates during peak hours. If consumers have a high level of demand flexibility, this tariff also reduces the net demand during peak hours and decreases total electric bills when compared to the base tariff., Comment: Accepted to the 2022 IEEE Power and Energy Society (PES) General Meeting. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2105.07106
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- 2022
9. The association between paramedic service system hospital offload time and response time
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Blanchard, I. E., Williamson, T. S., Hagel, B. E., Niven, D. J., Lane, D. J., Dean, S., Shah, M. N., Lang, E. S., and Doig, C. J.
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- 2023
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10. Decadal stability in coral cover could mask hidden changes on reefs in the East Asian Seas
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Chan, Y. K. S., Affendi, Y. A., Ang, P. O., Baria-Rodriguez, M. V., Chen, C. A., Chui, A. P. Y., Giyanto, Glue, M., Huang, H., Kuo, C-Y., Kim, S. W., Lam, V. Y. Y., Lane, D. J. W., Lian, J. S., Lin, S. M. N. N., Lunn, Z., Nañola, Jr, C. L., Nguyen, V. L., Park, H. S., Suharsono, Sutthacheep, M., Vo, S. T., Vibol, O., Waheed, Z., Yamano, H., Yeemin, T., Yong, E., Kimura, T., Tun, K., Chou, L. M., and Huang, D.
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- 2023
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11. Effects of Empagliflozin‐Induced Glycosuria on Weight Gain, Food Intake and Metabolic Indicators in Mice Fed a High‐Fat Diet
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Anh T. Nguyen, Zachary Amigo, Kathleen McDuffie, Victoria C. MacQueen, Lane D. Bell, Lan K. Truong, Gloria Batchi, and Sara M. McMillin
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diabetes ,FGF21 ,metabolism ,SGLT2 inhibitor ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Background Sodium glucose‐linked transporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors promote glucose, and therefore calorie, excretion in the urine. Patients taking SGLT2 inhibitors typically experience mild weight loss, but the amount of weight loss falls short of what is expected based on caloric loss. Understanding the mechanisms responsible for this weight loss discrepancy is imperative, as strategies to improve weight loss could markedly improve type 2 diabetes management and overall metabolic health. Methods Two mouse models of diet‐induced obesity were administered the SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin in the food for 3 months. Urine glucose excretion, body weight, food intake and activity levels were monitored. In addition, serum hormone measurements were taken, and gene expression analyses were conducted. Results In both mouse models, mice receiving empagliflozin gained the same amount of body weight as their diet‐matched controls despite marked glucose loss in the urine. No changes in food intake, serum ghrelin concentrations or activity levels were observed, but serum levels of fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) decreased after treatment. A decrease in the levels of deiodinase 2 (Dio2) was also observed in the white adipose tissue, a primary target tissue of FGF21. Conclusion These findings suggest that compensatory metabolic adaptations, other than increased food intake or decreased physical activity, occur in response to SGLT2 inhibitor‐induced glycosuria that combats weight loss, and that reductions in FGF21, along with subsequent reductions in peripheral Dio2, may play a role.
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- 2024
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12. Impacts of Time-of-Use Rate Changes on the Electricity Bills of Commercial Consumers
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Smith, Lane D. and Kirschen, Daniel S.
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
Changes in the profile of prices in wholesale electricity markets prompt utilities to redesign their tariffs and adjust their time-of-use periods to ensure a more adequate cost recovery. However, changing the rate structures could adversely affect commercial consumers by increasing their electricity bills and hindering their ability to reduce costs using techniques like net energy metering. As time-of-use periods are adjusted, consumers will need to rely on the flexibility of distributed energy resources to achieve cost reductions. This paper explores the effect that Pacific Gas and Electric Company's redesigned rates have on the electricity bills of consumers with different demand profiles. Sensitivity analyses are conducted to examine the effect of asset sizing on reducing costs under each tariff., Comment: Accepted to the 2021 IEEE Power and Energy Society (PES) General Meeting
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- 2021
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13. Low-intensity conflict--in search of a paradigm
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Lane, D. Dennison, Col and Weisenbloom, Mark, LtCol
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LOW-INTENSITY CONFLICT ,STRATEGY - Abstract
illus bibliog
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- 1990
14. The influence of salinity and vegetation texture on the ecological roles of insects in tidal marshes in Louisiana
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Benjamin G. Aker, Claudia Husseneder, and Lane D. Foil
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biodiversity ,functional feeding groups ,salt marsh ,Spartina ,vegetation texture ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Tidal marsh insect communities are influenced by both salinity and aspects of vegetation texture (vegetation diversity, plant density, and architectural structure). These factors affect the abundances and intra‐ and interguild interactions of these insects and should result in broad‐scale variation in the distribution and ecological functioning of tidal marsh insect communities along these gradients. However, this assumption has not been tested within Gulf Coast marshes, and the insect communities and their ecological roles are not well known. This study identifies how family‐level insect biodiversity varies by salinity and which factors are most important in affecting the distribution of insect functional feeding groups within Louisiana's coastal marshes. Insect family diversity was found to decrease as salinity increased for several indices. Vegetation texture and the underlying salinity gradient were found to be important factors affecting the distribution of free‐living sucking, stem‐boring, parasitic, and filtering functional feeding groups.
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- 2023
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15. Risk profiles and incidence of cardiovascular events across different cancer types
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Mitchell, J.D., Laurie, M., Xia, Q., Dreyfus, B., Jain, N., Jain, A., Lane, D., and Lenihan, D.J.
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- 2023
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16. Stop and Go: Barriers and Facilitators to Care Home Research
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Ritchie, Leona A., Gordon, A. L., Penson, P. E., Lane, D. A., and Akpan, A.
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- 2023
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17. Academic Drift in Canadian Institutions of Higher Education: Research Mandates, Strategy, and Culture
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Trotter, Lane D. and Mitchell, Amy
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As with higher-education institutions around the world, British Columbia (BC) and Ontario are increasingly faced with demographic and market pressures that erode the traditional difference between the university and non-university sectors (i.e., colleges and institutes). Key components that ensure these provinces' institutions preserve their unique roles and differentiations in a changing context, partially driven by their governments, include research mandates, transparency in institutional governance, and strategic documents that resist the academic drift created by institutional isomorphism. Both governments are actively reshaping their post-secondary systems to align with national or regional economic needs, increasing access, streamlining degree completion, and responding to community pressure to have a university or a degree-granting institution. An analysis of the enabling legislation, government policy directives, and institutional documents of both provinces shows that there is a blurring in the distinction between colleges and universities, and the costs associated with this.
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- 2018
18. A preliminary report on the effect of gabapentin pretreatment on periprocedural pain during in‐office posterior nasal nerve cryoablation
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Steele, Toby O, Hoshal, Steven G, Kim, Minji, Gill, Amarbir S, Wilson, Machelle, Squires, Lane D, Strong, E Bradley, and Suh, Jeffrey D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Aged ,Ambulatory Care ,Analgesics ,Cryosurgery ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Female ,Gabapentin ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nasal Mucosa ,Nasal Surgical Procedures ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Pain ,Procedural ,Peripheral Nerves ,Preoperative Care ,rhinitis ,ClariFix ,gabapentin ,cryoablation ,posterior nasal nerve ,Immunology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPosterior nasal nerve (PNN) cryoablation is a novel surgical technique to address allergic and nonallergic rhinitis. Periprocedural pain has been reported after PNN cryoablation and there are no standardized protocols for optimal in-office local anesthesia. This study sought to evaluate the effect of gabapentin on patient discomfort following in-office PNN cryoablation.MethodsMulti-institutional prospective analysis of patients undergoing in-office PNN cryoablation for allergic or nonallergic rhinitis between March 2018 and April 2019. Patients received local anesthesia with or without 600 mg oral gabapentin 1 hour preprocedure. Rhinitis diagnosis, demographics, and baseline disease-specific quality of life (mini-Rhinoconjunctivitis Quality of Life Questionnaire [RQLQ] and Total Nasal Symptom Score [TNSS]) were recorded. Patient discomfort was measured by the pain visual analogue scale (VAS) posttreatment and rated 0 to 10 on an ordinal scale. Fisher's exact and Wilcoxon 2-sample tests were used to evaluate differences between the 2 groups.ResultsA total of 26 patients were enrolled (gabapentin n = 15, control = 11). Baseline TNSS scores in the gabapentin vs control group were median [25th percentile to 75th percentile]) 10 (7.5 to 11.0) and 9 (6.0 to 10.0) (p = 0.35). Baseline Mini-RQLQ scores in gabapentin vs control groups were 3.21 (2.0 to 4.0) and 2.92 (2.78 to 4.35) (p = 0.51). The median VAS pain scores at 5, 20, and 30 minutes in the gabapentin vs control group were 0.0 (0.0 to 2.0) vs 3.0 (1.0 to 4.0), 2.0 (0.0 to 3.0) vs 8.0 (6.0 to 10.0), and 1.0 (0.0 to 1.0) vs 5.0 (4.0 to 6.0) (p = 0.02, p = 0.0043, and p = 0.003, respectively).ConclusionPreprocedure gabapentin significantly reduces immediate and delayed postprocedural patient discomfort following PNN cryoablation.
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- 2020
19. Horn fly transcriptome data of ten populations from the southern United States with varying degrees and molecular mechanisms of pesticide resistance
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Kylie G. Bendele, Felix D. Guerrero, Kimberly H. Lohmeyer, Lane D. Foil, Richard P. Metz, and Charles D. Johnson
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Haematobia irritans ,Horn fly ,Illumina sequencing ,Insecticide resistance ,Transcriptome ,Pesticide resistance ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Haematobia irritans irritans (Linnaeus, 1758: Diptera: Muscidae), the horn fly, is an external parasite of penned and pastured livestock that causes a major economic impact on cattle production worldwide. Pesticides such as synthetic pyrethroids and organophosphates are routinely used to control horn flies; however, resistance to these chemicals has become a concern in several countries. To further elucidate the molecular mechanisms of resistance in horn fly populations, we sequenced the transcriptomes of ten populations of horn flies from the southern US possessing varying degrees of pesticide resistance levels to pyrethroids, organophosphates, and endosulfans. We employed an Illumina paired end HiSeq approach, followed by de novo assembly of the transcriptomes using CLC Genomics Workbench 8.0.1 De Novo Assembler using multiple kmers, and annotation using Blast2GO PRO version 5.2.5. The Gene Ontology biological process term Response to Insecticide was found in all the populations, but at an increased frequency in the populations with higher levels of insecticide resistance. The raw sequence reads are archived in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) and assembled population transcriptomes in the Transcriptome Shotgun Assembly (TSA) at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI).
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- 2023
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20. Standardised assessment of evidence supporting the adoption of mobile health solutions: A Clinical Consensus Statement of the ESC Regulatory Affairs Committee
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Caiani, E G, primary, Kemps, H, additional, Hoogendoorn, P, additional, Asteggiano, R, additional, Böhm, A, additional, Borregaard, B, additional, Boriani, G, additional, Brunner La Rocca, H P, additional, Casado-Arroyo, R, additional, Castelletti, S, additional, Christodorescu, R, additional, Cowie, M R, additional, Dendale, P, additional, Dunn, F, additional, Fraser, A G, additional, Lane, D A, additional, Locati, E T, additional, Małaczyńska-Rajpold, K, additional, Merșa, C, additional, Neubeck, L, additional, Parati, G, additional, Plummer, C, additional, Rosano, G, additional, Scherrenberg, M, additional, Smirthwaite, A, additional, and Szymanski, P, additional
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- 2024
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21. Adherence to the “Atrial fibrillation Better Care” (ABC) pathway in patients with atrial fibrillation and cancer: A report from the ESC-EHRA EURObservational Research Programme in atrial fibrillation (EORP-AF) General Long-Term Registry
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Boriani Chair, G., Lip, G.Y.H., Tavazzi, L., Maggioni, A.P., Dan, GA., Potpara, T., Nabauer, M., Marin, F., Kalarus, Z., Fauchier, L., Goda, A., Mairesse, G., Shalganov, T., Antoniades, L., Taborsky, M., Riahi, S., Muda, P., Bolao, I. García, Piot, O., Etsadashvili, K., Simantirakis, EN., Haim, M., Azhari, A., Najafian, J., Santini, M., Mirrakhimov, E., Kulzida, K., Erglis, A., Poposka, L., Burg, MR., Crijns, H., Erküner, Ö., Atar, D., Lenarczyk, R., Oliveira, M. Martins, Shah, D., Serdechnaya, E., Dan, G-A., Diker, E., Lane, D., Vitolo, Marco, Proietti, Marco, Malavasi, Vincenzo L., Bonini, Niccolo’, Romiti, Giulio Francesco, Imberti, Jacopo F., Fauchier, Laurent, Marin, Francisco, Nabauer, Michael, Potpara, Tatjana S., Dan, Gheorghe-Andrei, Kalarus, Zbigniew, Maggioni, Aldo Pietro, Lane, Deirdre A., Lip, Gregory Y H, and Boriani, Giuseppe
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- 2022
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22. Impact of diabetes on the management and outcomes in atrial fibrillation: an analysis from the ESC-EHRA EORP-AF Long-Term General Registry
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Boriani, G., Lip, G.Y.H., Tavazzi, L., Maggioni, A.P., Dan, G.-A., Potpara, T., Nabauer, M., Marin, F., Kalarus, Z., Goda, A., Mairesse, G., Shalganov, T., Antoniades, L., Taborsky, M., Riahi, S., Muda, P., García Bolao, I., Piot, O., Etsadashvili, K., Simantirakis, E., Haim, M., Azhari, A., Najafian, J., Santini, M., Mirrakhimov, E., Kulzida, K.A., Erglis, A., Poposka, L., Burg, M., Crijns, H., Erküner, Ö., Atar, D., Lenarczyk, R., Martins Oliveira, M., Shah, D., Serdechnaya, E., Diker, E., Lane, D., Zëra, E., Ekmekçiu, U., Paparisto, V., Tase, M., Gjergo, H., Dragoti, J., Ciutea, M., Ahadi, N., el Husseini, Z., Raepers, M., Leroy, J., Haushan, P., Jourdan, A., Lepiece, C., Desteghe, L., Vijgen, J., Koopman, P., Van Genechten, G., Heidbuchel, H., Boussy, T., De Coninck, M., Van Eeckhoutte, H., Bouckaert, N., Friart, A., Boreux, J., Arend, C., Evrard, P., Stefan, L., Hoffer, E., Herzet, J., Massoz, M., Celentano, C., Sprynger, M., Pierard, L., Melon, P., Van Hauwaert, B., Kuppens, C., Faes, D., Van Lier, D., Van Dorpe, A., Gerardy, A., Deceuninck, O., Xhaet, O., Dormal, F., Ballant, E., Blommaert, D., Yakova, D., Hristov, M., Yncheva, T., Stancheva, N., Tisheva, S., Tokmakova, M., Nikolov, F., Gencheva, D., Kunev, B., Stoyanov, M., Marchov, D., Gelev, V., Traykov, V., Kisheva, A., Tsvyatkov, H., Shtereva, R., Bakalska-Georgieva, S., Slavcheva, S., Yotov, Y., Kubíčková, M., Marni Joensen, A., Gammelmark, A., Hvilsted Rasmussen, L., Dinesen, P., Krogh Venø, S., Sorensen, B., Korsgaard, A., Andersen, K., Fragtrup Hellum, C., Svenningsen, A., Nyvad, O., Wiggers, P., May, O., Aarup, A., Graversen, B., Jensen, L., Andersen, M., Svejgaard, M., Vester, S., Hansen, S., Lynggaard, V., Ciudad, M., Vettus, R., Maestre, A., Castaño, S., Cheggour, S., Poulard, J., Mouquet, V., Leparrée, S., Bouet, J., Taieb, J., Doucy, A., Duquenne, H., Furber, A., Dupuis, J., Rautureau, J., Font, M., Damiano, P., Lacrimini, M., Abalea, J., Boismal, S., Menez, T., Mansourati, J., Range, G., Gorka, H., Laure, C., Vassalière, C., Elbaz, N., Lellouche, N., Djouadi, K., Roubille, F., Dietz, D., Davy, J., Granier, M., Winum, P., Leperchois-Jacquey, C., Kassim, H., Marijon, E., Le Heuzey, J., Fedida, J., Maupain, C., Himbert, C., Gandjbakhch, E., Hidden-Lucet, F., Duthoit, G., Badenco, N., Chastre, T., Waintraub, X., Oudihat, M., Lacoste, J., Stephan, C., Bader, H., Delarche, N., Giry, L., Arnaud, D., Lopez, C., Boury, F., Brunello, I., Lefèvre, M., Mingam, R., Haissaguerre, M., Le Bidan, M., Pavin, D., Le Moal, V., Leclercq, C., Beitar, T., Martel, I., Schmid, A., Sadki, N., Romeyer-Bouchard, C., Da Costa, A., Arnault, I., Boyer, M., Piat, C., Lozance, N., Nastevska, S., Doneva, A., Fortomaroska Milevska, B., Sheshoski, B., Petroska, K., Taneska, N., Bakrecheski, N., Lazarovska, K., Jovevska, S., Ristovski, V., Antovski, A., Lazarova, E., Kotlar, I., Taleski, J., Kedev, S., Zlatanovik, N., Jordanova, S., Bajraktarova Proseva, T., Doncovska, S., Maisuradze, D., Esakia, A., Sagirashvili, E., Lartsuliani, K., Natelashvili, N., Gumberidze, N., Gvenetadze, R., Gotonelia, N., Kuridze, N., Papiashvili, G., Menabde, I., Glöggler, S., Napp, A., Lebherz, C., Romero, H., Schmitz, K., Berger, M., Zink, M., Köster, S., Sachse, J., Vonderhagen, E., Soiron, G., Mischke, K., Reith, R., Schneider, M., Rieker, W., Boscher, D., Taschareck, A., Beer, A., Oster, D., Ritter, O., Adamczewski, J., Walter, S., Frommhold, A., Luckner, E., Richter, J., Schellner, M., Landgraf, S., Bartholome, S., Naumann, R., Schoeler, J., Westermeier, D., William, F., Wilhelm, K., Maerkl, M., Oekinghaus, R., Denart, M., Kriete, M., Tebbe, U., Scheibner, T., Gruber, M., Gerlach, A., Beckendorf, C., Anneken, L., Arnold, M., Lengerer, S., Bal, Z., Uecker, C., Förtsch, H., Fechner, S., Mages, V., Martens, E., Methe, H., Schmidt, T., Schaeffer, B., Hoffmann, B., Moser, J., Heitmann, K., Willems, S., Klaus, C., Lange, I., Durak, M., Esen, E., Mibach, F., Mibach, H., Utech, A., Gabelmann, M., Stumm, R., Ländle, V., Gartner, C., Goerg, C., Kaul, N., Messer, S., Burkhardt, D., Sander, C., Orthen, R., Kaes, S., Baumer, A., Dodos, F., Barth, A., Schaeffer, G., Gaertner, J., Winkler, J., Fahrig, A., Aring, J., Wenzel, I., Steiner, S., Kliesch, A., Kratz, E., Winter, K., Schneider, P., Haag, A., Mutscher, I., Bosch, R., Taggeselle, J., Meixner, S., Schnabel, A., Shamalla, A., Hötz, H., Korinth, A., Rheinert, C., Mehltretter, G., Schön, B., Schön, N., Starflinger, A., Englmann, E., Baytok, G., Laschinger, T., Ritscher, G., Gerth, A., Dechering, D., Eckardt, L., Kuhlmann, M., Proskynitopoulos, N., Brunn, J., Foth, K., Axthelm, C., Hohensee, H., Eberhard, K., Turbanisch, S., Hassler, N., Koestler, A., Stenzel, G., Kschiwan, D., Schwefer, M., Neiner, S., Hettwer, S., Haeussler-Schuchardt, M., Degenhardt, R., Sennhenn, S., Brendel, M., Stoehr, A., Widjaja, W., Loehndorf, S., Logemann, A., Hoskamp, J., Grundt, J., Block, M., Ulrych, R., Reithmeier, A., Panagopoulos, V., Martignani, C., Bernucci, D., Fantecchi, E., Diemberger, I., Ziacchi, M., Biffi, M., Cimaglia, P., Frisoni, J., Giannini, I., Boni, S., Fumagalli, S., Pupo, S., Di Chiara, A., Mirone, P., Pesce, F., Zoccali, C., Malavasi, V.L., Mussagaliyeva, A., Ahyt, B., Salihova, Z., Koshum-Bayeva, K., Kerimkulova, A., Bairamukova, A., Lurina, B., Zuzans, R., Jegere, S., Mintale, I., Kupics, K., Jubele, K., Kalejs, O., Vanhear, K., Cachia, M., Abela, E., Warwicker, S., Tabone, T., Xuereb, R., Asanovic, D., Drakalovic, D., Vukmirovic, M., Pavlovic, N., Music, L., Bulatovic, N., Boskovic, A., Uiterwaal, H., Bijsterveld, N., De Groot, J., Neefs, J., van den Berg, N., Piersma, F., Wilde, A., Hagens, V., Van Es, J., Van Opstal, J., Van Rennes, B., Verheij, H., Breukers, W., Tjeerdsma, G., Nijmeijer, R., Wegink, D., Binnema, R., Said, S., Philippens, S., van Doorn, W., Szili-Torok, T., Bhagwandien, R., Janse, P., Muskens, A., van Eck, M., Gevers, R., van der Ven, N., Duygun, A., Rahel, B., Meeder, J., Vold, A., Holst Hansen, C., Engset, I., Dyduch-Fejklowicz, B., Koba, E., Cichocka, M., Sokal, A., Kubicius, A., Pruchniewicz, E., Kowalik-Sztylc, A., Czapla, W., Mróz, I., Kozlowski, M., Pawlowski, T., Tendera, M., Winiarska-Filipek, A., Fidyk, A., Slowikowski, A., Haberka, M., Lachor-Broda, M., Biedron, M., Gasior, Z., Kołodziej, M., Janion, M., Gorczyca-Michta, I., Wozakowska-Kaplon, B., Stasiak, M., Jakubowski, P., Ciurus, T., Drozdz, J., Simiera, M., Zajac, P., Wcislo, T., Zycinski, P., Kasprzak, J., Olejnik, A., Harc-Dyl, E., Miarka, J., Pasieka, M., Ziemińska-Łuć, M., Bujak, W., Śliwiński, A., Grech, A., Morka, J., Petrykowska, K., Prasał, M., Hordyński, G., Feusette, P., Lipski, P., Wester, A., Streb, W., Romanek, J., Woźniak, P., Chlebuś, M., Szafarz, P., Stanik, W., Zakrzewski, M., Kaźmierczak, J., Przybylska, A., Skorek, E., Błaszczyk, H., Stępień, M., Szabowski, S., Krysiak, W., Szymańska, M., Karasiński, J., Blicharz, J., Skura, M., Hałas, K., Michalczyk, L., Orski, Z., Krzyżanowski, K., Skrobowski, A., Zieliński, L., Tomaszewska-Kiecana, M., Dłużniewski, M., Kiliszek, M., Peller, M., Budnik, M., Balsam, P., Opolski, G., Tymińska, A., Ozierański, K., Wancerz, A., Borowiec, A., Majos, E., Dabrowski, R., Szwed, H., Musialik-Lydka, A., Leopold-Jadczyk, A., Jedrzejczyk-Patej, E., Koziel, M., Mazurek, M., Krzemien-Wolska, K., Starosta, P., Nowalany-Kozielska, E., Orzechowska, A., Szpot, M., Staszel, M., Almeida, S., Pereira, H., Brandão Alves, L., Miranda, R., Ribeiro, L., Costa, F., Morgado, F., Carmo, P., Galvao Santos, P., Bernardo, R., Adragão, P., Ferreira da Silva, G., Peres, M., Alves, M., Leal, M., Cordeiro, A., Magalhães, P., Fontes, P., Leão, S., Delgado, A., Costa, A., Marmelo, B., Rodrigues, B., Moreira, D., Santos, J., Santos, L., Terchet, A., Darabantiu, D., Mercea, S., Turcin Halka, V., Pop Moldovan, A., Gabor, A., Doka, B., Catanescu, G., Rus, H., Oboroceanu, L., Bobescu, E., Popescu, R., Dan, A., Buzea, A., Daha, I., Dan, G., Neuhoff, I., Baluta, M., Ploesteanu, R., Dumitrache, N., Vintila, M., Daraban, A., Japie, C., Badila, E., Tewelde, H., Hostiuc, M., Frunza, S., Tintea, E., Bartos, D., Ciobanu, A., Popescu, I., Toma, N., Gherghinescu, C., Cretu, D., Patrascu, N., Stoicescu, C., Udroiu, C., Bicescu, G., Vintila, V., Vinereanu, D., Cinteza, M., Rimbas, R., Grecu, M., Cozma, A., Boros, F., Ille, M., Tica, O., Tor, R., Corina, A., Jeewooth, A., Maria, B., Georgiana, C., Natalia, C., Alin, D., Dinu-Andrei, D., Livia, M., Daniela, R., Larisa, R., Umaar, S., Tamara, T., Ioachim Popescu, M., Nistor, D., Sus, I., Coborosanu, O., Alina-Ramona, N., Dan, R., Petrescu, L., Ionescu, G., Vacarescu, C., Goanta, E., Mangea, M., Ionac, A., Mornos, C., Cozma, D., Pescariu, S., Solodovnicova, E., Soldatova, I., Shutova, J., Tjuleneva, L., Zubova, T., Uskov, V., Obukhov, D., Rusanova, G., Isakova, N., Odinsova, S., Arhipova, T., Kazakevich, E., Zavyalova, O., Novikova, T., Riabaia, I., Zhigalov, S., Drozdova, E., Luchkina, I., Monogarova, Y., Hegya, D., Rodionova, L., Nevzorova, V., Lusanova, O., Arandjelovic, A., Toncev, D., Vukmirovic, L., Radisavljevic, M., Milanov, M., Sekularac, N., Zdravkovic, M., Hinic, S., Dimkovic, S., Acimovic, T., Saric, J., Radovanovic, S., Kocijancic, A., Obrenovic-Kircanski, B., Kalimanovska Ostric, D., Simic, D., Jovanovic, I., Petrovic, I., Polovina, M., Vukicevic, M., Tomasevic, M., Mujovic, N., Radivojevic, N., Petrovic, O., Aleksandric, S., Kovacevic, V., Mijatovic, Z., Ivanovic, B., Tesic, M., Ristic, A., Vujisic-Tesic, B., Nedeljkovic, M., Karadzic, A., Uscumlic, A., Prodanovic, M., Zlatar, M., Asanin, M., Bisenic, B., Vasic, V., Popovic, Z., Djikic, D., Sipic, M., Peric, V., Dejanovic, B., Milosevic, N., Backovic, S., Stevanovic, A., Andric, A., Pencic, B., Pavlovic-Kleut, M., Celic, V., Pavlovic, M., Petrovic, M., Vuleta, M., Petrovic, N., Simovic, S., Savovic, Z., Milanov, S., Davidovic, G., Iric-Cupic, V., Djordjevic, D., Damjanovic, M., Zdravkovic, S., Topic, V., Stanojevic, D., Randjelovic, M., Jankovic-Tomasevic, R., Atanaskovic, V., Antic, S., Simonovic, D., Stojanovic, M., Stojanovic, S., Mitic, V., Ilic, V., Petrovic, D., Deljanin Ilic, M., Ilic, S., Stoickov, V., Markovic, S., Mijatovic, A., Tanasic, D., Radakovic, G., Peranovic, J., Panic-Jelic, N., Vujadinovic, O., Pajic, P., Bekic, S., Kovacevic, S., García Fernandez, A., Perez Cabeza, A., Anguita, M., Tercedor Sanchez, L., Mau, E., Loayssa, J., Ayarra, M., Carpintero, M., Roldán Rabadan, I., Gil Ortega, M., Tello Montoliu, A., Orenes Piñero, E., Manzano Fernández, S., Marín, F., Romero Aniorte, A., Veliz Martínez, A., Quintana Giner, M., Ballesteros, G., Palacio, M., Alcalde, O., García-Bolao, I., Bertomeu Gonzalez, V., Otero-Raviña, F., García Seara, J., Gonzalez Juanatey, J., Dayal, N., Maziarski, P., Gentil-Baron, P., Koç, M., Onrat, E., Dural, I.E., Yilmaz, K., Özin, B., Tan Kurklu, S., Atmaca, Y., Canpolat, U., Tokgozoglu, L., Dolu, A.K., Demirtas, B., Sahin, D., Ozcan Celebi, O., Gagirci, G., Turk, U.O., Ari, H., Polat, N., Toprak, N., Sucu, M., Akin Serdar, O., Taha Alper, A., Kepez, A., Yuksel, Y., Uzunselvi, A., Yuksel, S., Sahin, M., Kayapinar, O., Ozcan, T., Kaya, H., Yilmaz, M.B., Kutlu, M., Demir, M., Gibbs, C., Kaminskiene, S., Bryce, M., Skinner, A., Belcher, G., Hunt, J., Stancombe, L., Holbrook, B., Peters, C., Tettersell, S., Shantsila, A., Senoo, K., Proietti, M., Russell, K., Domingos, P., Hussain, S., Partridge, J., Haynes, R., Bahadur, S., Brown, R., McMahon, S., McDonald, J., Balachandran, K., Singh, R., Garg, S., Desai, H., Davies, K., Goddard, W., Galasko, G., Rahman, I., Chua, Y., Payne, O., Preston, S., Brennan, O., Pedley, L., Whiteside, C., Dickinson, C., Brown, J., Jones, K., Benham, L., Brady, R., Buchanan, L., Ashton, A., Crowther, H., Fairlamb, H., Thornthwaite, S., Relph, C., McSkeane, A., Poultney, U., Kelsall, N., Rice, P., Wilson, T., Wrigley, M., Kaba, R., Patel, T., Young, E., Law, J., Runnett, C., Thomas, H., McKie, H., Fuller, J., Pick, S., Sharp, A., Hunt, A., Thorpe, K., Hardman, C., Cusack, E., Adams, L., Hough, M., Keenan, S., Bowring, A., Watts, J., Zaman, J., Goffin, K., Nutt, H., Beerachee, Y., Featherstone, J., Mills, C., Pearson, J., Stephenson, L., Grant, S., Wilson, A., Hawksworth, C., Alam, I., Robinson, M., Ryan, S., Egdell, R., Gibson, E., Holland, M., Leonard, D., Mishra, B., Ahmad, S., Randall, H., Hill, J., Reid, L., George, M., McKinley, S., Brockway, L., Milligan, W., Sobolewska, J., Muir, J., Tuckis, L., Winstanley, L., Jacob, P., Kaye, S., Morby, L., Jan, A., Sewell, T., Boos, C., Wadams, B., Cope, C., Jefferey, P., Andrews, N., Getty, A., Suttling, A., Turner, C., Hudson, K., Austin, R., Howe, S., Iqbal, R., Gandhi, N., Brophy, K., Mirza, P., Willard, E., Collins, S., Ndlovu, N., Subkovas, E., Karthikeyan, V., Waggett, L., Wood, A., Bolger, A., Stockport, J., Evans, L., Harman, E., Starling, J., Williams, L., Saul, V., Sinha, M., Bell, L., Tudgay, S., Kemp, S., Frost, L., Ingram, T., Loughlin, A., Adams, C., Adams, M., Hurford, F., Owen, C., Miller, C., Donaldson, D., Tivenan, H., Button, H., Nasser, A., Jhagra, O., Stidolph, B., Brown, C., Livingstone, C., Duffy, M., Madgwick, P., Roberts, P., Greenwood, E., Fletcher, L., Beveridge, M., Earles, S., McKenzie, D., Beacock, D., Dayer, M., Seddon, M., Greenwell, D., Luxton, F., Venn, F., Mills, H., Rewbury, J., James, K., Roberts, K., Tonks, L., Felmeden, D., Taggu, W., Summerhayes, A., Hughes, D., Sutton, J., Felmeden, L., Khan, M., Walker, E., Norris, L., O'Donohoe, L., Mozid, A., Dymond, H., Lloyd-Jones, H., Saunders, G., Simmons, D., Coles, D., Cotterill, D., Beech, S., Kidd, S., Wrigley, B., Petkar, S., Smallwood, A., Jones, R., Radford, E., Milgate, S., Metherell, S., Cottam, V., Buckley, C., Broadley, A., Wood, D., Allison, J., Rennie, K., Balian, L., Howard, L., Pippard, L., Board, S., Pitt-Kerby, T., Ding, Wern Yew, Kotalczyk, Agnieszka, Boriani, Giuseppe, Marin, Francisco, Blomström-Lundqvist, Carina, Potpara, Tatjana S., Fauchier, Laurent, and Lip, Gregory.Y.H.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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23. A Systematic Review of Primary Temporal Bone Mucosal Melanoma
- Author
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Young, Kurtis, Arkfeld, Daniel V., Ogasawara, Christian T., and Squires, Lane D.
- Published
- 2022
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24. Cardiac troponins and adverse outcomes in European patients with atrial fibrillation: A report from the ESC-EHRA EORP atrial fibrillation general long-term registry
- Author
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Boriani, G., Lip, G.Y.H., Tavazzi, L., Maggioni, A.P., Dan, G-A., Potpara, T., Nabauer, M., Marin, F., Kalarus, Z., Fauchier, L., Goda, A., Mairesse, G., Shalganov, T., Antoniades, L., Taborsky, M., Riahi, S., Muda, P., García Bolao, I., Piot, O., Etsadashvili, K., Haim, M., Azhari, A., Najafian, J., Santini, M., Mirrakhimov, E., Kulzida, K., Erglis, A., Poposka, L., Burg, M.R., Crijns, H., Erküner, Ö., Atar, D., Lenarczyk, R., Martins Oliveira, M., Shah, D., Serdechnaya, E., Diker, E., Zëra, E., Ekmekçiu, U., Paparisto, V., Tase, M., Gjergo, H., Dragoti, J., Ciutea, M., Ahadi, N., el Husseini, Z., Raepers, M., Leroy, J., Haushan, P., Jourdan, A., Lepiece, C., Desteghe, L., Vijgen, J., Koopman, P., Van Genechten, G., Heidbuchel, H., Boussy, T., De Coninck, M., Van Eeckhoutte, H., Bouckaert, N., Friart, A., Boreux, J., Arend, C., Evrard, P., Stefan, L., Hoffer, E., Herzet, J., Massoz, M., Celentano, C., Sprynger, M., Pierard, L., Melon, P., Van Hauwaert, B., Kuppens, C., Faes, D., Van Lier, D., Van Dorpe, A., Gerardy, A., Deceuninck, O., Xhaet, O., Dormal, F., Ballant, E., Blommaert, D., Yakova, D., Hristov, M., Yncheva, T., Stancheva, N., Tisheva, S., Tokmakova, M., Nikolov, F., Gencheva, D., Kunev, B., Stoyanov, M., Marchov, D., Gelev, V., Traykov, V., Kisheva, A., Tsvyatkov, H., Shtereva, R., Bakalska-Georgieva, S., Slavcheva, S., Yotov, Y., Kubíčková, M., Marni Joensen, A., Gammelmark, A., Hvilsted Rasmussen, L., Dinesen, P., Krogh Venø, S., Sorensen, B., Korsgaard, A., Andersen, K., Fragtrup Hellum, C., Svenningsen, A., Nyvad, O., Wiggers, P., May, O., Aarup, A., Graversen, B., Jensen, L., Andersen, M., Svejgaard, M., Vester, S., Hansen, S., Lynggaard, V., Ciudad, M., Vettus, R., Maestre, A., Castaño, S., Cheggour, S., Poulard, J., Mouquet, V., Leparrée, S., Bouet, J., Taieb, J., Doucy, A., Duquenne, H., Furber, A., Dupuis, J., Rautureau, J., Font, M., Damiano, P., Lacrimini, M., Abalea, J., Boismal, S., Menez, T., Mansourati, J., Range, G., Gorka, H., Laure, C., Vassalière, C., Elbaz, N., Lellouche, N., Djouadi, K., Roubille, F., Dietz, D., Davy, J., Granier, M., Winum, P., Leperchois-Jacquey, C., Kassim, H., Marijon, E., Le Heuzey, J., Fedida, J., Maupain, C., Himbert, C., Gandjbakhch, E., Hidden-Lucet, F., Duthoit, G., Badenco, N., Chastre, T., Waintraub, X., Oudihat, M., Lacoste, J., Stephan, C., Bader, H., Delarche, N., Giry, L., Arnaud, D., Lopez, C., Boury, F., Brunello, I., Lefèvre, M., Mingam, R., Haissaguerre, M., Le Bidan, M., Pavin, D., Le Moal, V., Leclercq, C., Beitar, T., Martel, I., Schmid, A., Sadki, N., Romeyer-Bouchard, C., Da Costa, A., Arnault, I., Boyer, M., Piat, C., Lozance, N., Nastevska, S., Doneva, A., Fortomaroska Milevska, B., Sheshoski, B., Petroska, K., Taneska, N., Bakrecheski, N., Lazarovska, K., Jovevska, S., Ristovski, V., Antovski, A., Lazarova, E., Kotlar, I., Taleski, J., Kedev, S., Zlatanovik, N., Jordanova, S., Bajraktarova Proseva, T., Doncovska, S., Maisuradze, D., Esakia, A., Sagirashvili, E., Lartsuliani, K., Natelashvili, N., Gumberidze, N., Gvenetadze, R., Gotonelia, N., Kuridze, N., Papiashvili, G., Menabde, I., Glöggler, S., Napp, A., Lebherz, C., Romero, H., Schmitz, K., Berger, M., Zink, M., Köster, S., Sachse, J., Vonderhagen, E., Soiron, G., Mischke, K., Reith, R., Schneider, M., Rieker, W., Boscher, D., Taschareck, A., Beer, A., Oster, D., Ritter, O., Adamczewski, J., Walter, S., Frommhold, A., Luckner, E., Richter, J., Schellner, M., Landgraf, S., Bartholome, S., Naumann, R., Schoeler, J., Westermeier, D., William, F., Wilhelm, K., Maerkl, M., Oekinghaus, R., Denart, M., Kriete, M., Tebbe, U., Scheibner, T., Gruber, M., Gerlach, A., Beckendorf, C., Anneken, L., Arnold, M., Lengerer, S., Bal, Z., Uecker, C., Förtsch, H., Fechner, S., Mages, V., Martens, E., Methe, H., Schmidt, T., Schaeffer, B., Hoffmann, B., Moser, J., Heitmann, K., Willems, S., Klaus, C., Lange, I., Durak, M., Esen, E., Mibach, F., Mibach, H., Utech, A., Gabelmann, M., Stumm, R., Ländle, V., Gartner, C., Goerg, C., Kaul, N., Messer, S., Burkhardt, D., Sander, C., Orthen, R., Kaes, S., Baumer, A., Dodos, F., Barth, A., Schaeffer, G., Gaertner, J., Winkler, J., Fahrig, A., Aring, J., Wenzel, I., Steiner, S., Kliesch, A., Kratz, E., Winter, K., Schneider, P., Haag, A., Mutscher, I., Bosch, R., Taggeselle, J., Meixner, S., Schnabel, A., Shamalla, A., Hötz, H., Korinth, A., Rheinert, C., Mehltretter, G., Schön, B., Schön, N., Starflinger, A., Englmann, E., Baytok, G., Laschinger, T., Ritscher, G., Gerth, A., Dechering, D., Eckardt, L., Kuhlmann, M., Proskynitopoulos, N., Brunn, J., Foth, K., Axthelm, C., Hohensee, H., Eberhard, K., Turbanisch, S., Hassler, N., Koestler, A., Stenzel, G., Kschiwan, D., Schwefer, M., Neiner, S., Hettwer, S., Haeussler-Schuchardt, M., Degenhardt, R., Sennhenn, S., Brendel, M., Stoehr, A., Widjaja, W., Loehndorf, S., Logemann, A., Hoskamp, J., Grundt, J., Block, M., Ulrych, R., Reithmeier, A., Panagopoulos, V., Martignani, C., Bernucci, D., Fantecchi, E., Diemberger, I., Ziacchi, M., Biffi, M., Cimaglia, P., Frisoni, J., Giannini, I., Boni, S., Fumagalli, S., Pupo, S., Di Chiara, A., Mirone, P., Pesce, F., Zoccali, C., Malavasi, V.L., Mussagaliyeva, A., Ahyt, B., Salihova, Z., Koshum-Bayeva, K., Kerimkulova, A., Bairamukova, A., Lurina, B., Zuzans, R., Jegere, S., Mintale, I., Kupics, K., Jubele, K., Kalejs, O., Vanhear, K., Burg, M., Cachia, M., Abela, E., Warwicker, S., Tabone, T., Xuereb, R., Asanovic, D., Drakalovic, D., Vukmirovic, M., Pavlovic, N., Music, L., Bulatovic, N., Boskovic, A., Uiterwaal, H., Bijsterveld, N., De Groot, J., Neefs, J., van den Berg, N., Piersma, F., Wilde, A., Hagens, V., Van Es, J., Van Opstal, J., Van Rennes, B., Verheij, H., Breukers, W., Tjeerdsma, G., Nijmeijer, R., Wegink, D., Binnema, R., Said, S., Philippens, S., van Doorn, W., Szili-Torok, T., Bhagwandien, R., Janse, P., Muskens, A., van Eck, M., Gevers, R., van der Ven, N., Duygun, A., Rahel, B., Meeder, J., Vold, A., Holst Hansen, C., Engset, I., Dyduch-Fejklowicz, B., Koba, E., Cichocka, M., Sokal, A., Kubicius, A., Pruchniewicz, E., Kowalik-Sztylc, A., Czapla, W., Mróz, I., Kozlowski, M., Pawlowski, T., Tendera, M., Winiarska-Filipek, A., Fidyk, A., Slowikowski, A., Haberka, M., Lachor-Broda, M., Biedron, M., Gasior, Z., Kołodziej, M., Janion, M., Gorczyca-Michta, I., Wozakowska-Kaplon, B., Stasiak, M., Jakubowski, P., Ciurus, T., Drozdz, J., Simiera, M., Zajac, P., Wcislo, T., Zycinski, P., Kasprzak, J., Olejnik, A., Harc-Dyl, E., Miarka, J., Pasieka, M., Ziemińska-Łuć, M., Bujak, W., Śliwiński, A., Grech, A., Morka, J., Petrykowska, K., Prasał, M., Hordyński, G., Feusette, P., Lipski, P., Wester, A., Streb, W., Romanek, J., Woźniak, P., Chlebuś, M., Szafarz, P., Stanik, W., Zakrzewski, M., Kaźmierczak, J., Przybylska, A., Skorek, E., Błaszczyk, H., Stępień, M., Szabowski, S., Krysiak, W., Szymańska, M., Karasiński, J., Blicharz, J., Skura, M., Hałas, K., Michalczyk, L., Orski, Z., Krzyżanowski, K., Skrobowski, A., Zieliński, L., Tomaszewska-Kiecana, M., Dłużniewski, M., Kiliszek, M., Peller, M., Budnik, M., Balsam, P., Opolski, G., Tymińska, A., Ozierański, K., Wancerz, A., Borowiec, A., Majos, E., Dabrowski, R., Szwed, H., Musialik-Lydka, A., Leopold-Jadczyk, A., Jedrzejczyk-Patej, E., Koziel, M., Mazurek, M., Krzemien-Wolska, K., Starosta, P., Nowalany-Kozielska, E., Orzechowska, A., Szpot, M., Staszel, M., Almeida, S., Pereira, H., Brandão Alves, L., Miranda, R., Ribeiro, L., Costa, F., Morgado, F., Carmo, P., Galvao Santos, P., Bernardo, R., Adragão, P., Ferreira da Silva, G., Peres, M., Alves, M., Leal, M., Cordeiro, A., Magalhães, P., Fontes, P., Leão, S., Delgado, A., Costa, A., Marmelo, B., Rodrigues, B., Moreira, D., Santos, J., Santos, L., Terchet, A., Darabantiu, D., Mercea, S., Turcin Halka, V., Pop Moldovan, A., Gabor, A., Doka, B., Catanescu, G., Rus, H., Oboroceanu, L., Bobescu, E., Popescu, R., Dan, A., Buzea, A., Daha, I., Dan, G., Neuhoff, I., Baluta, M., Ploesteanu, R., Dumitrache, N., Vintila, M., Daraban, A., Japie, C., Badila, E., Tewelde, H., Hostiuc, M., Frunza, S., Tintea, E., Bartos, D., Ciobanu, A., Popescu, I., Toma, N., Gherghinescu, C., Cretu, D., Patrascu, N., Stoicescu, C., Udroiu, C., Bicescu, G., Vintila, V., Vinereanu, D., Cinteza, M., Rimbas, R., Grecu, M., Cozma, A., Boros, F., Ille, M., Tica, O., Tor, R., Corina, A., Jeewooth, A., Maria, B., Georgiana, C., Natalia, C., Alin, D., Dinu-Andrei, D., Livia, M., Daniela, R., Larisa, R., Umaar, S., Tamara, T., Ioachim Popescu, M., Nistor, D., Sus, I., Coborosanu, O., Alina-Ramona, N., Dan, R., Petrescu, L., Ionescu, G., Vacarescu, C., Goanta, E., Mangea, M., Ionac, A., Mornos, C., Cozma, D., Pescariu, S., Solodovnicova, E., Soldatova, I., Shutova, J., Tjuleneva, L., Zubova, T., Uskov, V., Obukhov, D., Rusanova, G., Isakova, N., Odinsova, S., Arhipova, T., Kazakevich, E., Zavyalova, O., Novikova, T., Riabaia, I., Zhigalov, S., Drozdova, E., Luchkina, I., Monogarova, Y., Hegya, D., Rodionova, L., Nevzorova, V., Lusanova, O., Arandjelovic, A., Toncev, D., Vukmirovic, L., Radisavljevic, M., Milanov, M., Sekularac, N., Zdravkovic, M., Hinic, S., Dimkovic, S., Acimovic, T., Saric, J., Radovanovic, S., Kocijancic, A., Obrenovic-Kircanski, B., Kalimanovska Ostric, D., Simic, D., Jovanovic, I., Petrovic, I., Polovina, M., Vukicevic, M., Tomasevic, M., Mujovic, N., Radivojevic, N., Petrovic, O., Aleksandric, S., Kovacevic, V., Mijatovic, Z., Ivanovic, B., Tesic, M., Ristic, A., Vujisic-Tesic, B., Nedeljkovic, M., Karadzic, A., Uscumlic, A., Prodanovic, M., Zlatar, M., Asanin, M., Bisenic, B., Vasic, V., Popovic, Z., Djikic, D., Sipic, M., Peric, V., Dejanovic, B., Milosevic, N., Backovic, S., Stevanovic, A., Andric, A., Pencic, B., Pavlovic-Kleut, M., Celic, V., Pavlovic, M., Petrovic, M., Vuleta, M., Petrovic, N., Simovic, S., Savovic, Z., Milanov, S., Davidovic, G., Iric-Cupic, V., Djordjevic, D., Damjanovic, M., Zdravkovic, S., Topic, V., Stanojevic, D., Randjelovic, M., Jankovic-Tomasevic, R., Atanaskovic, V., Antic, S., Simonovic, D., Stojanovic, M., Stojanovic, S., Mitic, V., Ilic, V., Petrovic, D., Deljanin Ilic, M., Ilic, S., Stoickov, V., Markovic, S., Mijatovic, A., Tanasic, D., Radakovic, G., Peranovic, J., Panic-Jelic, N., Vujadinovic, O., Pajic, P., Bekic, S., Kovacevic, S., García Fernandez, A., Perez Cabeza, A., Anguita, M., Tercedor Sanchez, L., Mau, E., Loayssa, J., Ayarra, M., Carpintero, M., Roldán Rabadan, I., Gil Ortega, M., Tello Montoliu, A., Orenes Piñero, E., Manzano Fernández, S., Marín, F., Romero Aniorte, A., Veliz Martínez, A., Quintana Giner, M., Ballesteros, G., Palacio, M., Alcalde, O., García-Bolao, I., Bertomeu Gonzalez, V., Otero-Raviña, F., García Seara, J., Gonzalez Juanatey, J., Dayal, N., Maziarski, P., Gentil-Baron, P., Koç, M., Onrat, E., Dural, I.E., Yilmaz, K., Özin, B., Tan Kurklu, S., Atmaca, Y., Canpolat, U., Tokgozoglu, L., Dolu, A.K., Demirtas, B., Sahin, D., Ozcan Celebi, O., Gagirci, G., Turk, U.O., Ari, H., Polat, N., Toprak, N., Sucu, M., Akin Serdar, O., Taha Alper, A., Kepez, A., Yuksel, Y., Uzunselvi, A., Yuksel, S., Sahin, M., Kayapinar, O., Ozcan, T., Kaya, H., Yilmaz, M.B., Kutlu, M., Demir, M., Gibbs, C., Kaminskiene, S., Bryce, M., Skinner, A., Belcher, G., Hunt, J., Stancombe, L., Holbrook, B., Peters, C., Tettersell, S., Shantsila, A., Lane, D., Senoo, K., Proietti, M., Russell, K., Domingos, P., Hussain, S., Partridge, J., Haynes, R., Bahadur, S., Brown, R., McMahon, S., McDonald, J., Balachandran, K., Singh, R., Garg, S., Desai, H., Davies, K., Goddard, W., Galasko, G., Rahman, I., Chua, Y., Payne, O., Preston, S., Brennan, O., Pedley, L., Whiteside, C., Dickinson, C., Brown, J., Jones, K., Benham, L., Brady, R., Buchanan, L., Ashton, A., Crowther, H., Fairlamb, H., Thornthwaite, S., Relph, C., McSkeane, A., Poultney, U., Kelsall, N., Rice, P., Wilson, T., Wrigley, M., Kaba, R., Patel, T., Young, E., Law, J., Runnett, C., Thomas, H., McKie, H., Fuller, J., Pick, S., Sharp, A., Hunt, A., Thorpe, K., Hardman, C., Cusack, E., Adams, L., Hough, M., Keenan, S., Bowring, A., Watts, J., Zaman, J., Goffin, K., Nutt, H., Beerachee, Y., Featherstone, J., Mills, C., Pearson, J., Stephenson, L., Grant, S., Wilson, A., Hawksworth, C., Alam, I., Robinson, M., Ryan, S., Egdell, R., Gibson, E., Holland, M., Leonard, D., Mishra, B., Ahmad, S., Randall, H., Hill, J., Reid, L., George, M., McKinley, S., Brockway, L., Milligan, W., Sobolewska, J., Muir, J., Tuckis, L., Winstanley, L., Jacob, P., Kaye, S., Morby, L., Jan, A., Sewell, T., Boos, C., Wadams, B., Cope, C., Jefferey, P., Andrews, N., Getty, A., Suttling, A., Turner, C., Hudson, K., Austin, R., Howe, S., Iqbal, R., Gandhi, N., Brophy, K., Mirza, P., Willard, E., Collins, S., Ndlovu, N., Subkovas, E., Karthikeyan, V., Waggett, L., Wood, A., Bolger, A., Stockport, J., Evans, L., Harman, E., Starling, J., Williams, L., Saul, V., Sinha, M., Bell, L., Tudgay, S., Kemp, S., Frost, L., Ingram, T., Loughlin, A., Adams, C., Adams, M., Hurford, F., Owen, C., Miller, C., Donaldson, D., Tivenan, H., Button, H., Nasser, A., Jhagra, O., Stidolph, B., Brown, C., Livingstone, C., Duffy, M., Madgwick, P., Roberts, P., Greenwood, E., Fletcher, L., Beveridge, M., Earles, S., McKenzie, D., Beacock, D., Dayer, M., Seddon, M., Greenwell, D., Luxton, F., Venn, F., Mills, H., Rewbury, J., James, K., Roberts, K., Tonks, L., Felmeden, D., Taggu, W., Summerhayes, A., Hughes, D., Sutton, J., Felmeden, L., Khan, M., Walker, E., Norris, L., O'Donohoe, L., Mozid, A., Dymond, H., Lloyd-Jones, H., Saunders, G., Simmons, D., Coles, D., Cotterill, D., Beech, S., Kidd, S., Wrigley, B., Petkar, S., Smallwood, A., Jones, R., Radford, E., Milgate, S., Metherell, S., Cottam, V., Buckley, C., Broadley, A., Wood, D., Allison, J., Rennie, K., Balian, L., Howard, L., Pippard, L., Board, S., Pitt-Kerby, T., Vitolo, Marco, Malavasi, Vincenzo L., Proietti, Marco, Diemberger, Igor, Fauchier, Laurent, Marin, Francisco, Nabauer, Michael, Potpara, Tatjana S., Dan, Gheorghe-Andrei, Kalarus, Zbigniew, Tavazzi, Luigi, Maggioni, Aldo Pietro, Lane, Deirdre A., Lip, Gregory Y.H., and Boriani, Giuseppe
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- 2022
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25. Engagement personas in patients living with atrial fibrillation and multimorbidity, and their caregivers: results from the AFFIRMO international online survey
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Leo, D, primary, Trevisan, C, additional, Graffigna, G, additional, Bosio, C, additional, Lobban, T, additional, and Lane, D, additional
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- 2024
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26. Quality of life in patients with atrial fibrillation and multimorbidity, and their caregivers: results from the AFFIRMO international online survey
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Leo, D, primary, Trevisan, C, additional, Ravelli, A, additional, Graffigna, G, additional, Bosio, C, additional, Lobban, T, additional, and Lane, D, additional
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- 2024
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27. Effects of Empagliflozin‐Induced Glycosuria on Weight Gain, Food Intake and Metabolic Indicators in Mice Fed a High‐Fat Diet
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Nguyen, Anh T., primary, Amigo, Zachary, additional, McDuffie, Kathleen, additional, MacQueen, Victoria C., additional, Bell, Lane D., additional, Truong, Lan K., additional, Batchi, Gloria, additional, and McMillin, Sara M., additional
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- 2024
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28. Remote Assessment of Battery Degradation-Related Service Interruptions in an Energy Kiosk.
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Lane D. Smith, Henry Louie, Steve J. Szablya, and Dave Goldsmith
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- 2020
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29. High sensitivity to mass-ratio variation in deep molecular potentials
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Hanneke, D., Carollo, R. A., and Lane, D. A.
- Subjects
Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
Molecular vibrational transitions are prime candidates for model-independent searches for variation of the proton-to-electron mass ratio. Searches for present-day variation achieve highest sensitivity with deep molecular potentials. We identify several high-sensitivity transitions in the deeply bound ${\rm O}_2^+$ molecular ion. These transitions are electric-dipole forbidden and thus have narrow linewidths. The most sensitive transitions take advantage of an accidental degeneracy between vibrational states in different electronic potentials. We suggest experimentally feasible routes to a measurement with uncertainty exceeding current limits on present-day variation in $m_p/m_e$.
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- 2016
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30. Temporal bone mucosal melanoma masquerading as otomastoiditis
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Kurtis Young, Daniel V. Arkfeld, and Lane D. Squires
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Temporal bone ,Melanoma ,Mucosal melanoma ,Nivolumab ,Ipilimumab ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
Background: Temporal bone mucosal melanoma (MM) is exceedingly rare and presents with nonspecific symptoms with an insidious progression. For these reasons, patients with temporal bone MM may experience delays in diagnosis. Here, we present a case of temporal bone MM initially masquerading as chronic otomastoiditis. Case presentation: A 68-year-old male veteran with history of lymphoma, basal cell carcinoma, chronic hepatitis B, and significant smoking history without any family history of melanoma presented to the ED with ear pain and epistaxis. The patient returned to the same ED 4 more times before being seen by our institution's otolaryngology department. Here, the patient reported total right-sided hearing loss and a new right-sided CNV3 paresthesia. On microscopy, a violaceous mass was noted behind the tympanic membrane, and confirmed on imaging. Transcanal biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of mucosal melanoma, and the patient was subsequently placed on ipilumumab/nivolumab therapy. After four months of immunotherapy and palliative care, the lesion was found to have enlarged, prompting additional radiotherapy. Conclusions: Temporal bone MM are often diagnosed later, with poorer survival outcomes when compared to their cutaneous equivalents. Surgical management is often limited by the presence of distant metastases and advanced locoregional involvement. Advancements in immunotherapeutic options are promising but limited to a few reports in the literature. Future research is required to better characterize the presentation, diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes of temporal bone MM.
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- 2022
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31. A comparison of intertidal metazoan biodiversity among different salinity zones of Louisiana coastal marshes
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Claudia Husseneder, Patrick Rayle, Benjamin G. Aker, W. Kelley Thomas, and Lane D. Foil
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18S metabarcoding ,next-generation sequencing ,environmental DNA ,meiofauna ,soil organisms ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Tidal marshes are among the most valuable, productive, and vulnerable ecosystems with high biodiversity. Louisiana’s saltmarshes are endangered by natural and man-made stressors, including oil pollution, saltwater intrusion, and land loss due to sea level rise and erosion. Freshwater diversions have been planned to restore sediment input from the Mississippi River to rebuild marsh habitats in South Louisiana. These proposed diversions will undoubtedly change salinity levels, which is a major controlling factor in the distribution of marsh organisms, including those in soil; however, detailed pre-event inventories are lacking. This study describes the diversity of metazoan meiofauna (organisms between 45 and 500 μm) and environmental DNA in marsh soil collected in 2018 from Barataria and Caillou Bay, Louisiana, across three salinity zones and four distances from the marsh edge. Diversity analyses using 18S rRNA gene metabarcodes identified salinity as a factor impacting soil metazoan composition. Nematoda and Mollusca were equally distributed across salinity zones. Gastrotricha, Bryozoa, Rotifera, and Platyhelminthes were more prevalent in low salinity while Kinorhyncha were not detected in low salinity. Annelida and insects were equally common in low and high salinity but less in mid salinity. Five nematodes (Eumonhystera filiformis, two Prismatolaimus spp., Anoplostoma sp., and Prodorylaimus sp.), two annelids (Marionina southerni and Dendronereis aestuarina), two platyhelminthes (Rhynchoscolex simplex and Olisthanella truncula), the gastrotrich Chaetonotus novenarius and four collembola and ostracods appear to be low salinity bioindicators and are expected to expand range with freshwater diversions. No frequently detected organisms were unique to mid or high salinity zones, but four Nematoda (Meleidogyne spartinae, Prochaetosoma sp., Halalaimus sp., and Dichromadora sp.), two Annelida (Alitta succinea and Namalycastis jaya), two Platyhelminthes (Macrostomum kepneri and Mesorhynchus terminostylis), and one Kinorhyncha (Echinoderes sp.) were never detected in low salinity zones. None of the frequently detected taxa were unique for a particular distance from the marsh edge or bay. This dataset will be useful as baseline for assessing how soil communities will change in response to salinity changes caused by freshwater diversions and saltwater intrusion as well as measuring the environmental impact of pollution and other stressors.
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- 2022
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32. Optoelectronic and spectroscopic characterization of vapour-transport grown Cu2ZnSnS4 single crystals
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Ng, TM, Weller, MT, Kissling, GP, Peter, LM, Dale, P, Babbe, F, De Wild, J, Wenger, B, Snaith, HJ, and Lane, D
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Macromolecular and Materials Chemistry ,Materials Engineering ,Interdisciplinary Engineering - Abstract
Single crystals of Cu2ZnSnS4 (CZTS) have been grown by iodine vapor transport with and without addition of NaI. Crystals with tin-rich copper-poor and with zinc-rich copper-poor stoichiometries were obtained. The crystals were characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, photocurrent spectroscopy and electroreflectance spectroscopy using electrolyte contacts as well as by spectroscopic ellipsometry, Raman spectroscopy and photoluminescence spectroscopy (PL)/decay. Near-resonance Raman spectra indicate that the CZTS crystals adopt the kesterite structure with near-equilibrium residual disorder. The corrected external quantum efficiency of the p-type crystals measured by photocurrent spectroscopy approaches 100% close to the bandgap energy, indicating efficient carrier collection. The bandgap of the CZTS crystals estimated from the external quantum efficiency spectrum measured using an electrolyte contact was found to be 1.64-1.68 eV. An additional sub-bandgap photocurrent response (Urbach tail) was attributed to sub bandgap defect states. The room temperature PL of the crystals was attributed to radiative recombination via tail states, with lifetimes in the nanosecond range. At high excitation intensities, the PL spectrum also showed evidence of direct band to band transitions at ∼1.6 eV with a shorter decay time. Electrolyte electroreflectance spectra and spectra of the third derivative of the optical dielectric constant in the bandgap region were fitted to two optical transitions at 1.71 and 1.81 eV suggesting a larger valence band splitting than predicted theoretically. The high values of the EER broadening parameters (192 meV) indicate residual disorder consistent with the existence of tail states.
- Published
- 2017
33. Was the decline of saltmarsh tabanid populations after the 2010 oil spill associated with change in the larval food web?
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Claudia Husseneder, Devika R. Bhalerao, and Lane D. Foil
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18S metagenomics ,biodiversity ,coastal ecology ,infauna ,sediment toxicity ,soil organisms ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Horse flies of the species Tabanus nigrovittatus and Tabanus acutus are native to coastal marshlands. Their larvae are apex invertebrate predators, and their development is dependent on the food web in the marsh sediment. Surveillance of T. nigrovittatus after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico showed population crashes of adult flies in southeast Louisiana marshes near oil landfall, but not in southwest Louisiana where oil did not reach. Sediment collection in 2011 from Louisiana marshes showed a near‐complete absence of larvae in the southeast yet high numbers in the southwest. We hypothesized that oil contamination destroyed critical components of the larval food web and/or residual toxicity led to larval death. We used 18S rRNA gene metagenomics to identify components of the food web in larval guts and sediment from southeast and southwest Louisiana marshes. Sediment oil contamination, biochemistry, and toxicity could not explain the lack of larvae in the southeast, because oiling at our high‐tide mark sites was low at the time of the study and toxicity was independent of sediment biochemistry. Hexapods were the main food web components in tabanid larval guts. Abundance of stink bug, vinegar fly, and mosquito species in the sediment was positively associated with the presence of larvae. However, these taxa were enriched in southeastern (near oil) versus southwestern (unoiled reference) sediment, and thus, lack of major food web components due to oiling could not explain lack of larva in the east. We conclude that the immediate crash in adult populations in oiled regions was the main cause for the absence of larvae the following year. While most saltmarsh arthropod groups had rebounded within a year after the oil spill, recovery of saltmarsh horse flies was ongoing for 5 years.
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- 2022
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34. Coordination of Behind-the-Meter Energy Storage and Building Loads: Optimization with Deep Learning Model.
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Yimin Chen, Vikas Chandan, Yunzhi Huang, M. Jan E. Alam, Osman Ahmed, and Lane D. Smith
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- 2019
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35. An annotated list of hawkmoths and butterflies (Lepidoptera) from Hammond Island, Torres Strait
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Lane, D A, Moulds, M S, and BioStor
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- 2015
36. MULTIVARIATE MORPHOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF TAXONOMIC RELATIONSHIPS IN ELEOCHARIS TENUIS (CYPERACEAE)
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Gibbons, Lane D. and McMullen, Conley K.
- Published
- 2019
37. Academic Freedom in Canadian Higher Education: Universities, Colleges, and Institutes Were Not Created Equal
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Hogan, Barry E. and Trotter, Lane D.
- Abstract
There has been substantial discussion, research, and debate about the role of academic freedom within higher education, primarily centered on the university model. Not as well documented or understood is the issue of academic freedom within colleges and institutes in Canada. In this paper, we examine the current state of academic freedom in colleges and institutes using a historical analysis of two Canadian provinces, British Columbia and Ontario. Beginning with an overview of academic freedom within universities, we then examine the development and evolution of colleges and institutes and discuss how or if academic freedom applies to them. We consider issues of collegiality, faculty engagement, and governance as they impact the concept and practice of academic freedom within these institutions. We also discuss the different origins, intents, roles, and governance models of universities in contrast to colleges and institutes, which are generally representative of the broader Canadian higher education landscape.
- Published
- 2013
38. Tropism, pathology, and transmission of equine parvovirus-hepatitis
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Joy Ellen Tomlinson, Mason Jager, Alyssa Struzyna, Melissa Laverack, Lisa Ann Fortier, Edward Dubovi, Lane D. Foil, Peter D. Burbelo, Thomas J. Divers, and Gerlinde R. Van de Walle
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Theiler’s disease ,serum hepatitis ,horse fly ,stem cells ,vertical transmission ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACTEquine parvovirus-hepatitis (EqPV-H) has recently been associated with cases of Theiler's disease, a form of fulminant hepatic necrosis in horses. To assess whether EqPV-H is the cause of Theiler's disease, we first demonstrated hepatotropism by PCR on tissues from acutely infected horses. We then experimentally inoculated horses with EqPV-H and 8 of 10 horses developed hepatitis. One horse showed clinical signs of liver failure. The onset of hepatitis was temporally associated with seroconversion and a decline in viremia. Liver histology and in situ hybridization showed lymphocytic infiltrates and necrotic EqPV-H-infected hepatocytes. We next investigated potential modes of transmission. Iatrogenic transmission via allogeneic stem cell therapy for orthopedic injuries was previously suggested in a case series of Theiler's disease, and was demonstrated here for the first time. Vertical transmission and mechanical vectoring by horse fly bites could not be demonstrated in this study, potentially due to limited sample size. We found EqPV-H shedding in oral and nasal secretions, and in feces. Importantly, we could demonstrate EqPV-H transmission via oral inoculation with viremic serum. Together, our findings provide additional information that EqPV-H is the likely cause of Theiler's disease and that transmission of EqPV-H occurs via both iatrogenic and natural routes.
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- 2020
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39. Dog bites of the head and neck: an evaluation of a common pediatric trauma and associated treatment
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O'Brien, Daniel C, Andre, Tyler B, Robinson, Aaron D, Squires, Lane D, and Tollefson, Travis T
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Animals ,Bites and Stings ,California ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Dogs ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Injury Severity Score ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neck Injuries ,Retrospective Studies ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Clinical sciences ,Dentistry - Abstract
PurposeTo identify which patients and canines are involved in dog bites of the head and neck, and how they impact health systems.Materials and methodsThis is a single center, retrospective cohort study conducted from January 2012 to June 2013 in an academic, tertiary care center situated between multiple suburban and urban communities. Patients were identified by queried search for all bite-related diagnoses codes.Results334 unique dog bites were identified, of which 101 involved the head and neck. The mean patient age was 15.1±18.1years. Of the more than 8 different breeds identified, one-third were caused by pit bull terriers and resulted in the highest rate of consultation (94%) and had 5 times the relative rate of surgical intervention. Unlike all other breeds, pit bull terriers were relatively more likely to attack an unknown individual (+31%), and without provocation (+48%). Injuries of the head and neck had an average follow-up of 1.26±2.4 visits, and average specialty follow-up of 3.1±3.5 visits.ConclusionsThe patients most likely to suffer dog bite injuries of the head and neck are children. Although a number of dog breeds were identified, the largest group were pit bull terriers, whose resultant injuries were more severe and resulted from unprovoked, unknown dogs. More severe injuries required a greater number of interventions, a greater number of inpatient physicians, and more outpatient follow-up encounters. Healthcare utilization and costs associated with dog bites warrant further investigation.
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- 2015
40. Anchors for the Cosmic Distance Scale: the Cepheids U Sgr, CF Cas and CEab Cas
- Author
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Majaess, D., Carraro, G., Bidin, C. Moni, Bonatto, C., Berdnikov, L., Balam, D., Moyano, M., Gallo, L., Turner, D., Lane, D., Gieren, W., Borissova, J., Kovtyukh, V., and Beletsky, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
New and existing X-ray, UBVJHKsW(1-4), and spectroscopic observations were analyzed to constrain fundamental parameters for M25, NGC 7790, and dust along their sight-lines. The star clusters are of particular importance given they host the classical Cepheids U Sgr, CF Cas, and the visual binary Cepheids CEa and CEb Cas. Precise results from the multiband analysis, in tandem with a comprehensive determination of the Cepheids' period evolution (dP/dt) from ~140 years of observations, helped resolve concerns raised regarding the clusters and their key Cepheid constituents. Specifically, distances derived for members of M25 and NGC 7790 are 630+-25 pc and 3.40+-0.15 kpc, respectively., Comment: To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Anchors for the Cosmic Distance Scale: the Cepheid QZ Normae in the Open Cluster NGC 6067
- Author
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Majaess, D., Sturch, L., Bidin, C. Moni, Soto, M., Gieren, W., Cohen, R., Mauro, F., Geisler, D., Bonatto, C., Borissova, J., Minniti, D., Turner, D., Lane, D., Madore, B., Carraro, G., and Berdnikov, L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Cepheids are key to establishing the cosmic distance scale. Therefore it's important to assess the viability of QZ Nor, V340 Nor, and GU Nor as calibrators for Leavitt's law via their purported membership in the open cluster NGC 6067. The following suite of evidence confirms that QZ Nor and V340 Nor are members of NGC 6067, whereas GU Nor likely lies in the foreground: (i) existing radial velocities for QZ Nor and V340 Nor agree with that established for the cluster (-39.4+-1.2 km/s) to within 1 km/s, whereas GU Nor exhibits a markedly smaller value; (ii) a steep velocity-distance gradient characterizes the sight-line toward NGC 6067, thus implying that objects sharing common velocities are nearly equidistant; (iii) a radial profile constructed for NGC 6067 indicates that QZ Nor is within the cluster bounds, despite being 20' from the cluster center; (iv) new BVJH photometry for NGC 6067 confirms the cluster lies d=1.75+-0.10 kpc distant, a result that matches Wesenheit distances computed for QZ Nor/V340 Nor using the Benedict et al. (2007, HST parallaxes) calibration. QZ Nor is a cluster Cepheid that should be employed as a calibrator for the cosmic distance scale., Comment: To appear in ApSS
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. System Dynamics Mapping of Acute Patient Flows
- Author
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Lane, D. C., Husemann, E., Taylor, Simon, Series editor, and Kunc, Martin, editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Optical and X-ray Variability of the Peculiar Cataclysmic Variable FS Aur with a Magnetic and Freely Precessing White Dwarf
- Author
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Neustroev, V., Tovmassian, G., Zharikov, S., Sjoberg, G., Heras, T. Arranz, Lake, P. B., Lane, D., Lubcke, G., and Henden, A. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present preliminary results of long-term monitoring of the peculiar cataclysmic variable FS Aurigae conducted during the 2010-2011 observational season. The multicolor observations revealed, for the first time in photometric data, the precession period of the white dwarf, previously seen only spectroscopically. This is best seen in the (B-I) color index and reflects the spectral energy distribution variability. Analysis of X-ray observations made with Chandra and Swift, also revealed the existence of both the orbital and precession periods in the light curve. We also show that the long-term variability of FS Aur and the character of its outburst activity may be caused by variations in the mass transfer rate from the secondary star as the result of eccentricity modulation of a close binary orbit induced by the presence of a third body on a circumbinary orbit., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the workshop "Golden Age of Cataclysmic Variables and Related Objects", Palermo, Italy (12-17 September, 2011)
- Published
- 2011
44. A Formal Mentorship Program Improves Quality and Access
- Author
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Lane, D R and Kituara, J
- Published
- 2014
45. The life history of the hawk moth Macroglossum insipida papuanum Rothschild and Jordan, 1903 (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae)
- Author
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Hasenpusch, J, Lane, D A, Moulds, M S, and BioStor
- Published
- 2012
46. Non-adherence to prescribed medications in ambulatory patients with heart failure assessed using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- Author
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Sze, S, primary, Lane, D, additional, Krishnan, S, additional, Clark, A L, additional, Gupta, P, additional, and Squire, I B, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Dementia risk among patients with atrial fibrillation treated with non-vitamin K vs. vitamin-K oral anticoagulants
- Author
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Sagris, D, primary, Ntaios, G, additional, Harrison, S, additional, Buckley, B, additional, Underhill, P, additional, Lane, D, additional, and Lip, G Y H, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Objective measures of non-adherence in cardiometabolic diseases: a review focused on urine biochemical screening
- Author
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Lane D, Patel P, Khunti K, and Gupta P
- Subjects
Adherence ,biochemical test ,cardiovascular disease ,diabetes mellitus ,LC-MS/MS ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Dan Lane,1,2 Prashanth Patel,2,3 Kamlesh Khunti,1 Pankaj Gupta2,3 1Leicester Diabetes Centre, University of Leicester, Leicester General Hospital, Leicester, UK; 2Department of Chemical Pathology and Metabolic Diseases, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester, UK; 3Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK Abstract: Cardiometabolic diseases are among the most prevalent and harmful conditions worldwide. They are complex, comorbid conditions that require polypharmacy – a known contributor to non-adherence in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes mellitus (DM). Suboptimal adherence is associated with poor disease control, which increases the risk of hospitalizations, mortality, and preventable financial implications. However, until recently, the lack of a gold standard for non-adherence testing in cardiometabolic diseases has been the major barrier for understanding true prevalence and mortality consequences. Recent European guidelines have endorsed biochemical testing as the preferred measure for non-adherence in CVD, with urinary screening methods being the most clinically widespread. The diagnostic and therapeutic benefits incurred to health service resources by use of biochemical non-adherence testing are vast, as hospitalizations and associated economic burdens are reduced, and tailored therapies are increased. However, biochemical testing can only signify a snap shot of adherence behavior, and true adherence may be skewed by pharmacokinetic factors. This review summarizes current literature regarding the prevalence, impact, and reasons of non-adherence in cardiometabolic disease. The benefits of current adherence diagnostic tools have been appraised, where urine in biochemical testing has been focused upon and evaluated against other matrices. Keywords: adherence, biochemical test, cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, LC-MS/MS
- Published
- 2019
49. THREE NEW ANDEAN SPECIES OF AULONEMIA (POACEAE: BAMBUSOIDEAE: BAMBUSEAE) WITH SHEATH AURICLES
- Author
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Judziewicz, Emmet J, Geisthardt, Eric J, Gibbons, Lane D, Ziegler, Dain C, Zueger, Michael J, Sepsenwol, Sol, and BioStor
- Published
- 2011
50. Photo-Crosslinkable Polymeric Coatings Providing Chemically Versatile Reactive Surfaces on Various Substrates
- Author
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Seungyeon Choi, Lane D. Yutzy, Yun Hee Ko, Jin-Kyun Lee, Jangwook P. Jung, and Myungwoong Kim
- Subjects
General Chemical Engineering ,Materials Chemistry ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2023
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