26,006 results on '"Nathan, N."'
Search Results
2. Functional diversity among cardiolipin binding sites on the mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier
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Senoo, Nanami, Chinthapalli, Dinesh K, Baile, Matthew G, Golla, Vinaya K, Saha, Bodhisattwa, Oluwole, Abraham O, Ogunbona, Oluwaseun B, Saba, James A, Munteanu, Teona, Valdez, Yllka, Whited, Kevin, Sheridan, Macie S, Chorev, Dror, Alder, Nathan N, May, Eric R, Robinson, Carol V, and Claypool, Steven M
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- 2024
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3. From Stigma to Scarcity: On Interpersonal and Cognitive Sources of Vulnerability for Consumers in Poverty
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Cheek, Nathan N. and Shafir, Eldar
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- 2024
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4. Ultra-Early Diffuse Lung Disease in an Infant with Pathogenic Variant in Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase (TERT) Gene
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Visekruna J, Basa M, Grba T, Andjelkovic M, Pavlovic S, Nathan N, and Sovtic A
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cytomegalovirus (cmv) ,diffuse lung disease ,early-onset respiratory failure ,the tert gene variants ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
The pathogenic variants in the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene have been identified in adults with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, while their connection to childhood diffuse lung disease has not yet been described. Within this study, we present a case of a five-month-old, previously healthy infant, with early-onset respiratory failure. The clinical suspicion of diffuse lung disease triggered by cytomegalovirus (CMV) pneumonitis was based on clinical and radiological presentation. Multiorgan involvement was not confirmed. Considering the possible connection between CMV pneumonitis and early-onset respiratory failure, clinical exome sequencing was performed and a novel variant, classified as likely pathogenic in the TERT gene (c.280A>T, p.Lys94Ter) was detected. After segregation analysis yielded negative results, the de novo status of the variant was confirmed. Respiratory support, antiviral and anti-inflammatory therapy offered modest benefits, nevertheless, eighteen months after the initial presentation of disease, an unfavourable outcome occurred. In conclusion, severe viral pneumonia has the potential to induce extremely rare early-onset diffuse lung disease accompanied by chronic respiratory insufficiency. This is linked to pathogenic variants in the TERT gene. Our comprehensive presentation of the patient contributes to valuable insights into the intricate interplay of genetic factors, clinical presentations, and therapeutic outcomes in cases of early-onset respiratory failure.
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- 2024
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5. Development and evaluation of the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation to deliver Physical Activity in School Scale (COM-PASS)
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Verdonschot, A., Beauchamp, M. R., Brusseau, T. A., Chinapaw, M. J. M., Christiansen, L. B., Daly-Smith, A., Eather, N., Fairclough, S. J., Faulkner, G., Foweather, L., García-Hermoso, A., Ha, A. S., Harris, N., Jaakkola, T., Jago, R., Kennedy, S. G., Lander, N. J., Lonsdale, C., Manios, Y., Mazzoli, E., Murtagh, E., Nathan, N., Naylor, P. J., Noetel, M., O’Keeffe, B., Resaland, G. K., Ridgers, N. D., Ridley, K., Riley, N., Rosenkranz, R. R., Rosenkranz, S. K., Sääkslahti, A., Sczygiol, S. M., Skovgaard, T., van Sluijs, E. M. F., Smith, J. J., Smith, M., Stratton, G., Vidal-Conti, J., Webster, C. A., Young, E. S., and Lubans, D. R.
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- 2024
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6. Community perceptions, acceptability, and the durability of house screening interventions against exposure to malaria vectors in Nyimba district, Zambia
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Saili, Kochelani, de Jager, Christiaan, Masaninga, Freddie, Chisanga, Brian, Sinyolo, Andy, Chiwaula, Japhet, Chirwa, Jacob, Hamainza, Busiku, Chanda, Emmanuel, Bakyaita, Nathan N., and Mutero, Clifford Maina
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- 2024
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7. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis prescribing patterns for patients with orthopedic trauma: a clinical vignette survey
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Deborah M Stein, Elliott R Haut, Renan Castillo, Stephen Breazeale, Robert V O'Toole, Katherine P Frey, Nathan N O'Hara, Gerard P Slobogean, and Reza Firoozabadi
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Background A recent clinical trial suggested aspirin is a viable alternative to enoxaparin for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis in patients after orthopedic trauma. The initial impact of these findings on VTE prophylaxis prescribing is unknown. The study aimed to evaluate stated VTE prophylaxis prescribing patterns among clinicians who treat patients after orthopedic trauma.Methods For this clinical vignette survey, we recruited surgeons and advanced practice providers who prescribed VTE prophylaxis to patients with orthopedic trauma across 40 states. Clinicians were shown seven clinical vignettes describing hypothetical patients with orthopedic trauma based on their fracture type, treatment, VTE risk factors, additional injuries and health insurance status. We assessed the stated VTE prophylaxis medications prescribed in-hospital and at discharge, patient factors associated with changes in medication prescribing preferences and practice variation by specialty and provider training.Results Among the 287 respondents, the median age was 43 years (IQR, 38–50), and 154 (weighted average, 63%) were men. For in-hospital VTE prophylaxis, enoxaparin was prescribed in 83% of the presented scenarios, and aspirin was prescribed in 13% (p
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- 2024
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8. Venous thromboembolism testing practices after orthopaedic trauma: prophylaxis regimen does not influence testing patterns
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Bryce E. Haac, MD, Nathan N. O'Hara, PhD, MHA, Elliott R. Haut, MD, MPH, Theodore T. Manson, MD, Gerard P. Slobogean, MD, Robert V. O'Toole, MD, Deborah M. Stein, MD, MPH, ADAPT Investigators, Herman Johal, Richard Van Besien, Peter Z. Berger, George B. Reahl, Dimitrius Marinos, Yasmin Degani, Daniel Mascarenhas, Daniel Connelly, and Thomas M. Scalea
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Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Abstract. Objectives:. To determine venous thromboembolism (VTE) testing patterns in an orthopaedic trauma population and to evaluate for differences in VTE surveillance by prophylaxis regimen through a secondary analysis of the ADAPT trial. Design:. Prospective randomized trial. Setting:. Level I trauma center. Patients:. Three hundred twenty-nine adult (18 years and older) trauma patients presenting with an operative extremity fracture proximal to the metatarsals/carpals or any pelvic or acetabular fracture requiring VTE prophylaxis. Intervention:. VTE imaging studies recorded within 90 days post injury. Main Outcome Measurements:. Percentage of patients tested for VTE were compared between treatment groups using Fisher's exact test. Subsequently, multivariable regression was used to determine patient factors significantly associated with risk of receiving a VTE imaging study. Results:. Sixty-seven patients (20.4%) had VTE tests ordered during the study period. Twenty (29.9%) of these 67 patients with ordered VTE imaging tests had a positive finding. No difference in proportion of patients tested for VTE by prophylaxis regimen (18.8% on aspirin vs. 22.0% on LMWH, P = 0.50) was observed. Factors associated with increased likelihood of VTE testing included White race (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 2.61, 95% CI: 1.26–5.42), increased Injury Severity Score (aOR for every 1-point increase: 1.10, 95% CI: 1.05–1.15), and lower socioeconomic status based on the Area Deprivation Index (aOR for every 10-point increase: 1.14, 95% CI: 1.00–1.30). Conclusions:. VTE surveillance did not significantly differ by prophylaxis regimen. Patient demographic factors including race, injury severity, and socioeconomic status were associated with differences in VTE surveillance. Level of Evidence:. Level I, Therapeutic.
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- 2024
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9. Risk factors for infection in severe open tibial shaft fractures
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Johnson, Daniel J., O'Hara, Nathan N., Reider, Lisa, Gary, Joshua L., Obremskey, William, Quinnan, Stephen M., III, Paul Tornetta, Vallier, Heather A., Carroll, Eben A., and O'Toole, Robert V.
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- 2024
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10. Perturbations in mitochondrial metabolism associated with defective cardiolipin biosynthesis: An in-organello real-time NMR study
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Rua, Antonio J., Mitchell, Wayne, Claypool, Steven M., Alder, Nathan N., and Alexandrescu, Andrei T.
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- 2024
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11. Area Deprivation Index as a proxy for socioeconomic status in outpatient orthopaedic surgery patients – A prospective registry cross sectional study
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Kaveeshwar, Samir, Hasan, Sania, Polsky, Daniel, O'Hara, Nathan N., Honig, Evan L., Li, Sam, Shul, Craig, Jauregui, Julio, Henn, R. Frank, and Langhammer, Christopher G.
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- 2025
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12. Thicker-skinned but still human: People may think individuals in poverty are less vulnerable to harm even when ascribing them full humanity
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Cheek, Nathan N.
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- 2025
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13. Community perceptions, acceptability, and the durability of house screening interventions against exposure to malaria vectors in Nyimba district, Zambia
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Kochelani Saili, Christiaan de Jager, Freddie Masaninga, Brian Chisanga, Andy Sinyolo, Japhet Chiwaula, Jacob Chirwa, Busiku Hamainza, Emmanuel Chanda, Nathan N. Bakyaita, and Clifford Maina Mutero
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Community perceptions ,Acceptability ,Durability ,House screening ,Malaria ,Mosquitoes ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background House screening remains conspicuously absent in national malaria programs despite its recognition by the World Health Organization as a supplementary malaria vector-control intervention. This may be attributed, in part, to the knowledge gap in screen durability or longevity in local climatic conditions and community acceptance under specific cultural practices and socio-economic contexts. The objectives of this study were to assess the durability of window and door wire mesh screens a year after full house screening and to assess the acceptability of the house screening intervention to the participants involved. Methods This study was conducted in Nyimba district, Zambia and used both quantitative and qualitative methods of data collection and analysis. Both direct observation and questionnaires were employed to assess the durability of the screens and the main reasons for damage. Findings on damage were summarized as percentages. Focus group discussions were used to assess people’s knowledge, perceptions, and acceptability of the closing eaves and house screening intervention. Deductive coding and inductive coding were used to analyse the qualitative data. Results A total of 321 out of 400 (80.3%) household owners of screened houses were interviewed. Many window screens (90.3%) were intact. In sharp contrast, most door screens were torn (n = 150; 46.7%) or entirely removed (n = 55; 17.1%). Most doors (n = 114; 76%) had their wire mesh damaged or removed on the bottom half. Goats (25.4%), rust (17.6%) and children (17.1%) were cited most as the cause of damage to door screens. The focus group discussion elicited positive experiences from the participants following the closing of eaves and screening of their windows and doors, ranging from sleeping peacefully due to reduced mosquito biting and/or nuisance and having fewer insects in the house. Participants linked house screening to reduced malaria in their households and community. Conclusion This study demonstrated that in rural south-east Zambia, closing eaves and screening windows and doors was widely accepted. Participants perceived that house screening reduced human-vector contact, reduced the malaria burden and nuisance biting from other potentially disease carrying insects. However, screened doors are prone to damage, mainly by children, domestic animals, rust, and termites.
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- 2024
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14. Do superficial infections increase the risk of deep infections in tibial plateau and plafond fractures?
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Patterson, Joseph T., O’Hara, Nathan N., Scharfstein, Daniel O., Castillo, Renan C., O’Toole, Robert V., and Firoozabadi, Reza
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- 2023
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15. Do the results of the OXYGEN trial change if analyzed as “as-treated?”: A secondary analysis of the OXYGEN trial
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Saiz, Augustine M., Carlini, Anthony R., Castillo, Renan C., Joshi, Manjari, Huang, Yanjie, Murray, Clinton K., Bosse, Michael J., Dagal, Arman, Gary, Joshua L., Karunakar, Madhav A., Weaver, Michael J., Obremskey, William, McKinley, Todd O., Altman, Gregory T., D'Alleyrand, Jean-Claude G., Firoozabadi, Reza, Collins, Susan C., Agel, Julie, Taylor, Tara J., Stall, Alec C., Paryavi, Ebrahim, O'Hara, Nathan N., O'Toole, Robert V., and Warner, Stephen J.
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- 2024
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16. The Luzon Campaign 1945: MacArthur Returns
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Nathan N. Prefer
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- 2024
17. What outcomes do patients value after orthopaedic trauma: A best-worst scaling choice experiment
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Parry, Joshua A., Patterson, Joseph T., and O'Hara, Nathan N.
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- 2024
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18. Biomolecular condensates of Chlorocatechol 1,2-Dioxygenase as prototypes of enzymatic microreactors for the degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
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Evangelista, Nathan N., Micheletto, Mariana C., Kava, Emanuel, Mendes, Luis F.S., and Costa-Filho, Antonio J.
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- 2024
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19. Evaluation of the Acute flaccid paralysis surveillance indicators in Zambia from 2015–2021: a retrospective analysis
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Bessing, Barnabas, Dagoe, Edward A., Tembo, Deborah, Mwangombe, Alice, Kanyanga, Muzala K., Manneh, Fadinding, Matapo, Belem B., Bobo, Patricia M., Chipoya, Musole, Eboh, Victor A., Kayeye, Princess L., Masumbu, Penelope K., Muzongwe, Chilweza, Bakyaita, Nathan N., Zomahoun, Delayo, and Tuma, Jude N.
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- 2023
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20. The reported impact of non-communicable disease investment cases in 13 countries
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Alexey Kulikov, Douglas Webb, Dudley Tarlton, Toker Ergüder, Henrik Khachatryan, Nicholas Banatvala, Anna Kontsevaya, Bekir Keskinkilic, John Juliard Go, Diana Andreasyan, Roy Small, Aliina Altymysheva, Giuseppe Troisi, Roman Chestnov, Erwin Arthur Phillips, Taraleen Malcolm, Hero Kol, Nargiza Khodjaeva, Mussie Gebremichael, Addisu Worku Tessema, Asmamaw Bezabeh Workneh, Tamu Davidson, Michelle Harris, Nurgul Ibraeva, Aigul Nurmatova, Krisada Hanbunjerd, Sushera Bunluesin, Olivia Nieveras, Banu Ekinci, Oyoo Charles Akiya, Hafisa Kasule, Aidah Nakanjako, Shukhrat Shukurov, Nazokat Kasymova, Patrick Banda, Ernest Kakoma, Nathan N Bakyaita, Nadia Putoud, and Scott Chiossi
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are a leading health and development challenge worldwide. Since 2015, WHO and the United Nations Development Programme have provided support to governments to develop national NCD investment cases to describe the socioeconomic dimensions of NCDs. To assess the impact of the investment cases, semistructured interviews and a structured process for gathering written feedback were conducted between July and October 2022 with key informants in 13 countries who had developed a national NCD investment case between 2015 and 2020. Investment cases describe: (1) the social and economic costs of NCDs, including their distribution and projections over time; (2) priority areas for scaled up action; (3) the cost and returns from investing in WHO-recommended measures to prevent and manage NCDs; and (4) the political dimensions of NCD responses. While no country had implemented all the recommendations set out in their investment case reports, actions and policy changes attributable to the investment cases were identified, across (1) governance; (2) financing; and (3) health service access and delivery. The pathways of these changes included: (1) stronger collaboration across government ministries and partners; (2) advocacy for NCD prevention and control; (3) grounding efforts in nationally owned data and evidence; (4) developing mutually embraced ‘language’ across health and finance; and (5) elevating the priority accorded to NCDs, by framing action as an investment rather than a cost. The assessment also identified barriers to progress on the investment case implementation, including the influence of some private sector entities on sectors other than health, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and changes in senior political and technical government officials. The results suggest that national NCD investment cases can significantly contribute to catalysing the prevention and control of NCDs through strengthening governance, financing, and health service access and delivery.
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- 2024
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21. Deep Surgical Site Infection after Fracture Has a Profound Effect on Functional Outcomes
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Ida Leah Gitajn, MD, MS, Paul M. Werth, PhD, Anthony R. Carlini, MS, Michael J. Bosse, MD, Joshua L. Gary, MD, Reza Firoozabadi, MD, MA, William Obremskey, MD, MPH, Todd O. McKinley, MD, Renan C. Castillo, PhD, Robert V. O’Toole, MD, and METRC, Edward R. Westrick, Eben A. Carroll, James Brett Goodman, Martha B. Holden, Anna N. Miller, Amanda Spraggs-Hughes, PhD, Michael L. Brennan, Paul Tornetta, III, Michael J. Weaver, Marilyn Heng, Patrick M. Osborn, Jessica C. Rivera, Clinton K. Murray, Joseph E. Kimmel, Charles Moon, Joseph R. Hsu, Madhav A. Karunakar, Laurence B. Kempton, Rachel B. Seymour, Stephen H. Sims, Christine Churchill, Rachel M. Reilly, Robert D. Zura, Cameron Howes, Hassan Mir, Emily A. Wagstrom, Brian Mullis, Jeffrey O. Anglen, Leilani S. Mullis, Karl D. Shively, Greg E. Gaski, Roman M. Natoli, Anthony Sorkin, Walter Virkus, Robert A. Hymes, Michael A. Holzman, A. Stephen Malekzadeh, Jeff E. Schulman, Cary C. Schwartzbach, Olivia C. Lee, Peter C. Krause, Massimo "Max" Morandi, Andrew Choo, John W. Munz, Sterling Boutte, Matthew C. Galpin, H. Michael Frisch, Adam M. Kaufman, C. Michael LeCroy, Christopher S. Smith, Alec C. Stall, Andrea Horne, Jason W. Nascone, Nathan N. O'Hara, Ebrahim Paryavi, Marcus F. Sciadini, Yasmin Degani, Andrea L. Howe, Roman Hayda, Andrew R. Evans, Debra L. Sietsema, Stanislaw P. Stawicki, Thomas Wojda, Michael J. Gardner, Julius A. Bishop, Saqib Rehman, Cyrus Caroom, Elizabeth Sheridan, Theodore Miclau, Saam Morshed, Thomas F. Higgins, Justin M. Haller, Paul E. Matuszewski, Arun Aneja, Raymond D. Wright, Jr., Patrick F. Bergin, Eldrin Bhanat, Matt L. Graves, John Morellato, Clay A. Spitler, David Teague, William Ertl, Jaimo Ahn, Patrick Hesketh, Gele B. Moloney, John C. Weinlein, Boris A. Zelle, Animesh Agarwal, Ravi A. Karia, Ashoke Sathy, Drew T. Sanders, David B. Weiss, Seth R. Yarboro, Veronica Lester-Ballard, Eric D. McVey, Arman Dagal, Michael Githens, Conor Kleweno, Julie Agel, Paul S. Whiting, Natasha M. Simske, Alexander B. Siy, Basem Attum, Eduardo Burgos, Vamshi Gajari, Andres Rodriguez-Buitrago, Manish Sethi, Rajesh R. Tummuru, Jean-Claude G. D'Alleyrand, Lauren E. Allen, Susan C. Collins, Yanjie Huang, and Tara J. Taylor
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Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Background:. Fracture-related infection is one of the most challenging complications in orthopaedic trauma surgery. However, the effect of infection on functional and pain-related outcomes has not been well established. The aims of this study were to evaluate functional recovery for patients with fracture and a deep surgical site infection compared with patients with fracture without infection and to evaluate whether pain severity, social support, and preinjury mental health have a moderating effect on the magnitude and direction of the relationship between deep surgical site infection and functional recovery. Methods:. This is a secondary retrospective cohort study using prospectively collected data from the VANCO trial (Local Antibiotic Therapy to Reduce Infection After Operative Treatment of Fractures at High Risk of Infection) and the OXYGEN (Supplemental Perioperative Oxygen to Reduce Surgical Site Infection After High Energy Fracture Surgery) trial. In this study, 2,116 patients with tibial plateau, pilon, or calcaneal fractures at high risk for infection were included. Patients were divided into cohorts of patients who experienced a deep surgical site infection and those who did not. The primary outcome measure was the functional outcome using the Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey (VR-12). Results:. After controlling for covariates, deep surgical site infection was independently associated with functional outcome, with a 3.3-point reduction in the VR-12 Physical Component Score, and pain severity was independently associated with functional outcome, with a 2.5-point reduction in the VR-12 Physical Component Score. Furthermore, the Brief Pain Inventory pain severity demonstrated an important moderating effect on the relationship between infection and functional outcome. In patients with lower pain scores, infection had a large negative impact on functional outcome, whereas, in patients with higher pain scores, infection had no significant impact on functional outcome. Furthermore, the functional outcome in the entire cohort remains at only 61% of baseline. Conclusions:. This study documents the negative impact of postoperative infection on functional recovery after injury, as well as the novel finding of pain severity as an important moderating factor. This study emphasizes not only the importance of developing effective interventions designed to reduce postoperative infection, but also the role that factors that moderate pain severity plays in limiting recovery of physical function. Level of evidence:. Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
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- 2024
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22. Evaluation of the Acute flaccid paralysis surveillance indicators in Zambia from 2015–2021: a retrospective analysis
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Barnabas Bessing, Edward A. Dagoe, Deborah Tembo, Alice Mwangombe, Muzala K. Kanyanga, Fadinding Manneh, Belem B. Matapo, Patricia M. Bobo, Musole Chipoya, Victor A. Eboh, Princess L. Kayeye, Penelope K. Masumbu, Chilweza Muzongwe, Nathan N. Bakyaita, Delayo Zomahoun, and Jude N. Tuma
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Acute Flaccid Paralysis ,Indicators ,Poliomyelitis ,Surveillance ,Zambia ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The resurgence of poliovirus infection in previously polio free regions and countries calls for renewed commitment to the global polio eradication efforts including strengthening of Acute Flaccid Paralysis (AFP) surveillance systems. Zambia is one of the countries substantially at risk for the importation of poliovirus infection from neighbouring countries including Malawi, Mozambique, and Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). This study describes a seven-year AFP surveillance, assesses the surveillance indicators, and highlights areas for improvement. Methods We conducted retrospective analysis of the routinely collected AFP surveillance data from January 2015 to December 2022. The AFP surveillance indicators performance was assessed using the World Health Organisation’s recommended minimum AFP surveillance indicators performance. Results Cumulatively, a total of 1715 AFP cases were reported over the study period. More than half, 891 (52%) of reported cases were aged
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- 2023
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23. Factors affecting job choice among physician anesthesia providers in Uganda: a survey of income composition, discrete choice experiment, and implications for the decision to work rurally
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Law, Tyler J, Subhedar, Shivani, Bulamba, Fred, O’Hara, Nathan N, Nabukenya, Mary T, Sendagire, Cornelius, Hewitt-Smith, Adam, Lipnick, Michael S, and Tumukunde, Janat
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Decent Work and Economic Growth ,Anesthesia ,Career Choice ,Humans ,Income ,Physicians ,Rural Health Services ,Uganda ,Rural ,Surgery ,Discrete choice experiment ,Salary ,Incentive ,Nursing ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems - Abstract
BackgroundOne of the biggest barriers to accessing safe surgical and anesthetic care is lack of trained providers. Uganda has one of the largest deficits in anesthesia providers in the world, and though they are increasing in number, they remain concentrated in the capital city. Salary is an oft-cited barrier to rural job choice, yet the size and sources of anesthesia provider incomes are unclear, and so the potential income loss from taking a rural job is unknown. Additionally, while salary augmentation is a common policy proposal to increase rural job uptake, the relative importance of non-monetary job factors in job choice is also unknown.MethodsA survey on income sources and magnitude, and a Discrete Choice Experiment examining the relative importance of monetary and non-monetary factors in job choice, was administered to 37 and 47 physician anesthesiologists in Uganda, between May-June 2019.ResultsNo providers worked only at government jobs. Providers earned most of their total income from a non-government job (50% of income, 23% of working hours), but worked more hours at their government job (36% of income, and 44% of working hours). Providers felt the most important job attributes were the quality of the facility and scope of practice they could provide, and the presence of a colleague (33% and 32% overall relative importance). These were more important than salary and living conditions (14% and 12% importance).ConclusionsNo providers accepted the salary from a government job alone, which was always augmented by other work. However, few providers worked only nongovernment jobs. Non-monetary incentives are powerful influencers of job preference, and may be leveraged as policy options to attract providers. Salary continues to be an important driver of job choice, and jobs with fewer income generating opportunities (e.g. private work in rural areas) are likely to need salary augmentation to attract providers.
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- 2021
24. Effect of Aspirin Versus Low-Molecular-Weight Heparin Thromboprophylaxis on Medication Satisfaction and Out-of-Pocket Costs: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial
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O’Hara, Nathan N., Frey, Katherine P., Stein, Deborah M., Levy, Joseph F., Slobogean, Gerard P., Castillo, Renan, Firoozabadi, Reza, Karunakar, Madhav A., Gary, Joshua L., Obremskey, William T., Seymour, Rachel B., Cuschieri, Joseph, Mullins, C. Daniel, O’Toole, Robert V., Carlini, Anthony R., Fowler, Brianna E., Taylor, Tara J., Wegener, Stephen T., Weston-Farber, Elias, Herndon, Steven Craig, Marvel, Debra, Jurkovich, Gregory J., Lee, Christopher, Malhotra, Ajai K., Riedel, Matthew D., DeCoster, Thomas A., Vercellotti, Gregory M., Wells, Jeffrey L., Westrick, Edward R., Bosse, Michael J., Christmas, A. Britton, Cunningham, Kyle William, Hsu, Joseph R., Huynh, Toan, Jacobs, David George, Kempton, Laurence B., Sims, Stephen H., Churchill, Christine, Carroll, Eben A., Babcock, Sharon, Miller, Preston R., Pilson, Holly T., Goodman, James Brett, Holden, Martha B., Weaver, Michael J., Esposito, John G., Goldhaber, Samuel Z., Heng, Marilyn, McGovern, Madeline M., Velmahos, George C., von Keudell, Arvind, Rivera, Jessica C., Gitajn, Ida Leah, Schneider, Prism S., Buckley, Richard E., Gallant, Jodi, McKay, Paula, Kleweno, Conor P., Agel, Julie, Natoli, Roman M., Gaski, Greg E., Heincelman, Carrie L., Jang, Yohan, Lopas, Luke A., McKinley, Todd O., Richard, Raveesh Daniel, Sorkin, Anthony T., Virkus, Walter, Hill, Lauren C., Hymes, Robert A., Holzman, Michael, Panjshiri, Farhanaz, Schulman, Jeff E., Ramsey, Lolita, Cuff, Jaslynn A.N., Haut, Elliott R., Warner, Stephen J., Cotton, Bryan A., Guevara, Keyla D., Claridge, Jeffrey A., Vallier, Heather A., Breslin, Mary A., Connelly, Daniel, Ghulam, Qasim M., Haac, Bryce E., LeBrun, Christopher T., Manson, Theodore T., Nascone, Jason, Pensy, Raymond A., Pollak, Andrew N., Udogwu, Ugochukwu N., Burke, Cynthia Elaine, Degani, Yasmin, DeLeon, Genaro A., Hannan, Zachary D., Healey, Kathleen M., Howe, Andrea L., Marinos, Dimitrius P., McKegg, Phillip C., McKibben, Natasha S., Zingas, Nicolas H., Evans, Andrew R., Askam, Brad M., Boulton, Christina, Weinlein, John C., Bergin, Patrick F., Bergin, Patrick F., Kutcher, Matthew E., Morellato, John, Nehete, Priyanka V., Yener, Ugur, Whiting, Paul S., Domes, Christopher, Kuhn, Gabrielle R., Gajari, Vamshi, Moreno-Diaz, Andres Fidel, Rodriguez-Baron, Elsa B., Rodriguez-Buitrago, Andres, Stinner, Daniel J., Trochez, Karen M., DePalo, Peter, Kennedy, Leah C., Lienhard, Karin, Martin, Ryan, Yee, Stephanie C., Leonard, Jordan, Arif, Hikmatullah, Brown, Krista, Deeter, Lakye Lenee, Sardesai, Neil, Bangura, Abdulai T., Demyanovich, Haley K., Eglseder, W. Andrew, Gupta, Jayesh, Isaac, Marckenley, Mulliken, Alexandra, Crisco, MJ., Lueckel, Stephanie N., Brown, Gregory A., Breazeale, Stephen, Fisher, Stephen N., Wild, Jason R., Beebe, Michael J., Khanna, Rajinder M., Brauer, Deborah, and Boyce, Robert H.
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- 2024
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25. Risk-stratified thromboprophylaxis effects of aspirin versus low-molecular-weight heparin in orthopedic trauma patients: A secondary analysis of the PREVENT CLOT trial
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OʼHara, Nathan N., OʼToole, Robert V., Frey, Katherine P., Castillo, Renan C., Cuschieri, Joseph, Haut, Elliott R., Slobogean, Gerard P., Firoozabadi, Reza, Christmas, A. Britton, Obremskey, William T., Carlini, Anthony R., Gaski, Greg E., Kutcher, Matthew E., Marvel, Debra, Stein, Deborah M., Levy, Joseph F., Wegener, Stephen T., Fowler, Brianna E., Taylor, Tara J., Weston-Farber, Elias, Herndon, Steven Craig, Jr., DeCoster, Thomas A., Jurkovich, Gregory J., Lee, Christopher, Malhotra, Ajai K., Riedel, Matthew D., Wells, Jeffrey L., Altman, Daniel T., Westrick, Edward R., Bosse, Michael J., Karunakar, Madhav A., Cunningham, Kyle W., Huynh, Toan, Jacobs, David G., Kempton, Laurence B., Phelps, Kevin D., Seymour, Rachel B., Sims, Stephen H., Churchill, Christine, Carroll, Eben A., Babcock, Sharon, Miller, Preston R., Pilson, Holly T., Goodman, James Brett, Weaver, Michael J., Esposito, John G., Goldhaber, Samuel Zachary, Heng, Marilyn, McGovern, Madeline M., Velmahos, George C., von Keudell, Arvind G., Rivera, Jessica C., Gitajn, Ida Leah, Schneider, Prism S., Buckley, Richard E., Johal, Herman S., Gallant, Jodi L., McKay, Paula, Kleweno, Conor P., Agel, Julie, Arif, Hikmatullah, McKinley, Todd O., Natoli, Roman M., Heincelman, Carrie L., Jang, Yohan, Lopas, Luke A., Mullis, Brian H., Richard, Raveesh D., Virkus, Walter, Hill, Lauren C., Hymes, Robert A., Holzman, Michael, Malekzadeh, A. Stephen, Panjshiri, Farhanaz, Schulman, Jeff E., Ramsey, Lolita, Ahn, James, Cuff, Jaslynn A. N., Gary, Joshua L., Warner, Stephen J., Cotton, Bryan A., Vallier, Heather A., Claridge, Jeffrey A., Breslin, Mary A., Cowley, R Adams, Connelly, Daniel, Eglseder, W. Andrew, Haac, Bryce E., Healey, Kathleen Marie, LeBrun, Christopher T., Manson, Theodore, McKibben, Natasha S., Mulliken, Alexandra, Nascone, Jason, Pensy, Raymond A., Pollak, Andrew N., Sciadini, Marcus F., Udogwu, Ugochukwu N., Zingas, Nicolas, Burke, Cynthia Elaine, DeLeon, Genaro A., Hannan, Zachary D., Howe, Andrea L., Marinos, Dimitrius P., McKegg, Phillip C., Evans, Andrew R., Askam, Brad M., Joseph, Bellal, Lowe, Jason, Weinlein, John C., Bergin, Patrick F., Bhanat, Eldrin L., Khanna, Rajinder, Morellato, John, Nehete, Priyanka V., Domes, Christopher, Whiting, Paul S., Goodspeed, David C., Kuhn, Gabrielle R., Guillamondegui, Oscar D., Moreno-Diaz, Andres Fidel, Stinner, Daniel J., Pritchett, Charles, Jr., and Trochez, Karen M.
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- 2024
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26. Correction: The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects
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Lukas Röseler, Lucia Weber, Katharina Helgerth, Elena Stich, Miriam Günther, Paulina Tegethoff, Felix Stefan Wagner, Elitza Ambrus, Martina Antunovic, F. Barrera-Lemarchand, Eliran Halali, Konstantinos Ioannidis, Oliver Genschow, Ryan McKay, Nir Milstein, D. C. Molden, Frank Papenmeier, Zoran Pavlović, Robin Rinn, Marie Luise Schreiter, M. F. Zimdahl, Eilish Allen, Štěpán Bahník, C. Bermeitinger, F. B. N. Blower, Hannah Luisa Bögler, P. Burgmer, Nathan N. Cheek, Linda Dorsch, Sabine Andrea Fels, Marie-Lena Frech, L. Freira, A. J. L. Harris, Bjoern Hartig, Jan A. Häusser, M. V. Hedgebeth, Maureen Henkel, D. Horvath, Roland Imhoff, Paula Intelmann, A. Klamar, Ella Knappe, L.-M. Köppel, Sabine Marie Krueger, S. Lagator, Florencia López Bóo, J. Navajas, J. K. Norem, Janina Novak, Y. Onuki, Elise Page, Jodie Pearton, Susanne Ponader, Tobias R. Rebholz, Adriana Rostekova, M. Sartorio, Sebastian Schindler, Christian Seida, D. R. Shanks, M.-C. Siems, M. Speekenbrink, P. Stäglich, Mara Starkulla, M. Stitz, Thomas Straube, K. Thies, Elias Thum, K. Ueda, M. Undorf, D. Urlichich, M. A. Vadillo, H. Wolf, A. Zhou, and A. Schütz
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anchor ,anchoring-and-adjustment ,assimilation ,judgment and decision making ,estimates ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This article details a correction to: Röseler, L., Weber, L., Helgerth, K., Stich, E., Günther, M., Tegethoff, P., … Schütz, A. (2022). The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects. Journal of Open Psychology Data, 10(1), 16. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/jopd.67
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- 2024
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27. Deep Surgical Site Infection after Fracture Has a Profound Effect on Functional Outcomes
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Gitajn, Ida Leah, Werth, Paul M., Carlini, Anthony R., Bosse, Michael J., Gary, Joshua L., Firoozabadi, Reza, Obremskey, William, McKinley, Todd O., Castillo, Renan C., O’Toole, Robert V., Westrick, Edward R., Carroll, Eben A., Goodman, James Brett, Holden, Martha B., Miller, Anna N., Spraggs-Hughes, Amanda, Brennan, Michael L., Tornetta, Paul, III, Weaver, Michael J., Heng, Marilyn, Osborn, Patrick M., Rivera, Jessica C., Murray, Clinton K., Kimmel, Joseph E., Moon, Charles, Hsu, Joseph R., Karunakar, Madhav A., Kempton, Laurence B., Seymour, Rachel B., Sims, Stephen H., Churchill, Christine, Reilly, Rachel M., Zura, Robert D., Howes, Cameron, Mir, Hassan, Wagstrom, Emily A., Mullis, Brian, Anglen, Jeffrey O., Mullis, Leilani S., Shively, Karl D., Gaski, Greg E., Natoli, Roman M., Sorkin, Anthony, Virkus, Walter, Hymes, Robert A., Holzman, Michael A., Malekzadeh, A. Stephen, Schulman, Jeff E., Schwartzbach, Cary C., Lee, Olivia C., Krause, Peter C., Morandi, Massimo 'Max', Choo, Andrew, Munz, John W., Boutte, Sterling, Galpin, Matthew C., Frisch, H. Michael, Kaufman, Adam M., LeCroy, C. Michael, Smith, Christopher S., Stall, Alec C., Horne, Andrea, Nascone, Jason W., OʼHara, Nathan N., Paryavi, Ebrahim, Sciadini, Marcus F., Degani, Yasmin, Howe, Andrea L., Hayda, Roman, Evans, Andrew R., Sietsema, Debra L., Stawicki, Stanislaw P., Wojda, Thomas, Gardner, Michael J., Bishop, Julius A., Rehman, Saqib, Caroom, Cyrus, Sheridan, Elizabeth, Miclau, Theodore, Morshed, Saam, Higgins, Thomas F., Haller, Justin M., Matuszewski, Paul E., Aneja, Arun, Wright, Raymond D., Jr., Bergin, Patrick F., Bhanat, Eldrin, Graves, Matt L., Morellato, John, Spitler, Clay A., Teague, David, Ertl, William, Ahn, Jaimo, Hesketh, Patrick, Moloney, Gele B., Weinlein, John C., Zelle, Boris A., Agarwal, Animesh, Karia, Ravi A., Sathy, Ashoke, Sanders, Drew T., Weiss, David B., Yarboro, Seth R., Lester-Ballard, Veronica, McVey, Eric D., Dagal, Arman, Githens, Michael, Kleweno, Conor, Agel, Julie, Whiting, Paul S., Simske, Natasha M., Siy, Alexander B., Attum, Basem, Burgos, Eduardo, Gajari, Vamshi, Rodriguez-Buitrago, Andres, Sethi, Manish, Tummuru, Rajesh R., DʼAlleyrand, Jean-Claude G., Allen, Lauren E., Collins, Susan C., Huang, Yanjie, and Taylor, Tara J.
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- 2024
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28. Can an Orthopedic Hip Fracture Simulator Advance Orthopedic Residents’ Hip Fracture Fixation Skills to an Expert Level?
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Weber, Annie, O'Hara, Nathan N., Slobogean, Gerard P., Henn, R. Frank, III, O'Toole, Robert V., and Sciadini, Marcus F.
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- 2024
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29. Socioeconomic status is associated with greater hazard of post-discharge mortality than race, gender, and ballistic injury mechanism in a young, healthy, orthopedic trauma population
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Hartline, Jacob, Cosgrove, Christopher T., O'Hara, Nathan N., Ghulam, Qasim M., Hannan, Zachary D., O'Toole, Robert V., Sciadini, Marcus F., and Langhammer, Christopher G.
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- 2024
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30. A biophysical and statistical modeling paradigm for connecting neural physiology and function
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Glasgow, Nathan G., Chen, Yu, Korngreen, Alon, Kass, Robert E., and Urban, Nathan N.
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- 2023
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31. Fix or Replace? Patient Preferences for the Treatment of Geriatric Lower Extremity Fractures: A Discrete Choice Experiment
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John T. Richards MD, Nathan N. O’Hara PhD, MHA, Kathleen Healy MD, Nicolas Zingas MD, Natasha McKibben MD, Caroline Benzel MD, Gerard P. Slobogean MD, MPH, Robert V. O’Toole MD, and Marcus F. Sciadini MD
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Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Introduction When considering treatment options for geriatric patients with lower extremity fractures, little is known about which outcomes are prioritized by patients. This study aimed to determine the patient preferences for outcomes after a geriatric lower extremity fracture. Materials and Methods We administered a discrete choice experiment survey to 150 patients who were at least 60 years of age and treated for a lower extremity fracture at a Level I trauma center. The discrete choice experiment presented study participants with 8 sets of hypothetical outcome comparisons, including joint preservation (yes or no), risk of reoperation at 6 months and 24 months, postoperative weightbearing status, disposition, and function as measured by return to baseline walking distance. We estimated the relative importance of these potential outcomes using multinomial logit modeling. Results The strongest patient preference was for maintained function after treatment (59%, P < .001), followed by reoperation within 6 months (12%, P < .001). Although patients generally favored joint preservation, patients were willing to change their preference in favor of joint replacement if it increased function (walking distance) by 13% (SE, 66%). Reducing the short-term reoperation risk (12%, P < .001) was more important to patients than reducing long-term reoperation risk (4%, P = .33). Disposition and weightbearing status were lesser priorities to patients (9%, P < .001 and 7%, P < .001, respectively). Discussion After a lower extremity fracture, geriatric patients prioritized maintained walking function. Avoiding short-term reoperation was more important than avoiding long-term reoperation. Joint preservation through fracture fixation was the preferred treatment of geriatric patients unless arthroplasty or arthrodesis provides a meaningful functional benefit. Hospital disposition and postoperative weightbearing status were less important to patients than the other included outcomes. Conclusions Geriatric patients strongly prioritize function over other outcomes after a lower extremity fracture.
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- 2024
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32. Choosing, rejecting, and closely replicating, 30 years later: A commentary on Chandrashekar et al.
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Eldar Shafir and Nathan N. Cheek
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choice ,rejection ,compatibility ,accentuation ,replication ,Social Sciences ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In a ‘very close replication’ study using the same attributes as the original, Chandrashekar et al. (2021) report a failure to replicate some choose–reject problems documented in Shafir (1993). We find that several of the original attributes have changed their valence three decades later, and we compose new versions with updated attributes that fully replicate Shafir’s (1993) original findings. Despite their apparent exactitude, ‘very close replications’ across contexts or time, when stimuli may have changed their meaning or valence, can be highly misleading, further exacerbating replication concerns.
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- 2024
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33. Editorial: Targeting signals in protein trafficking and transport
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Markus Kunze, Nathan N. Alder, Inhwan Hwang, Guillaume Roussel, and Andrey L. Karamyshev
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protein transport ,targeting signals ,mitochondria ,chloroplasts ,endoplasmic reticulum ,peroxisomes ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Published
- 2023
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34. Implementing stakeholder engagement to explore alternative models of consent: An example from the PREP-IT trials.
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Pechero, Guillermo, Pfaff, Branden, Rao, Mayank, Pogorzelski, David, McKay, Paula, Spicer, Ella, Howe, Andrea, Demyanovich, Haley K, Sietsema, Debra L, McTague, Michael F, Ramsey, Lolita, Holden, Martha, Rudnicki, Joshua, Wells, Jeff, Medeiros, Michelle, Slobogean, Gerard P, Sprague, Sheila, PREP-IT Investigators, Wells, Jeffrey, Bhandari, Mohit, Steering Committee, Adjudication Committee, Data and Safety Monitoring Committee, Research Methodology Core, Patient Centred Outcomes Core, Orthopaedic Surgery Core, Operating Room Core, Infectious Disease Core, Military Core, PREP-IT Clinical Sites, O'Toole, Robert V, D'Alleyrand, Jean-Claude, Eglseder, Andrew, Johnson, Aaron, Langhammer, Christopher, Lebrun, Christopher, Manson, Theodore, Nascone, Jason, Paryavi, Ebrahim, Pensy, Raymond, Pollak, Andrew, Sciadini, Marcus, Degani, Yasmin, O'Hara, Nathan N, Joseph, Katherine, Camara, Megan, Aqueous-PREP and PREPARE, Aqueous-PREP, and PREPARE
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PREP-IT Investigators ,Steering Committee ,Adjudication Committee ,Data and Safety Monitoring Committee ,Research Methodology Core ,Patient Centred Outcomes Core ,Orthopaedic Surgery Core ,Operating Room Core ,Infectious Disease Core ,Military Core ,PREP-IT Clinical Sites ,Aqueous-PREP and PREPARE ,Aqueous-PREP ,PREPARE ,Cluster randomized crossover ,Consent ,Deferred consent ,Patient advisors ,Stakeholder engagement ,Trial design - Abstract
IntroductionCluster randomized crossover trials are often faced with a dilemma when selecting an optimal model of consent, as the traditional model of obtaining informed consent from participant's before initiating any trial related activities may not be suitable. We describe our experience of engaging patient advisors to identify an optimal model of consent for the PREP-IT trials. This paper also examines surrogate measures of success for the selected model of consent.MethodsThe PREP-IT program consists of two multi-center cluster randomized crossover trials that engaged patient advisors to determine an optimal model of consent. Patient advisors and stakeholders met regularly and reached consensus on decisions related to the trial design including the model for consent. Patient advisors provided valuable insight on how key decisions on trial design and conduct would be received by participants and the impact these decisions will have.ResultsPatient advisors, together with stakeholders, reviewed the pros and cons and the requirements for the traditional model of consent, deferred consent, and waiver of consent. Collectively, they agreed upon a deferred consent model, in which patients may be approached for consent after their fracture surgery and prior to data collection. The consent rate in PREP-IT is 80.7%, and 0.67% of participants have withdrawn consent for participation.DiscussionInvolvement of patient advisors in the development of an optimal model of consent has been successful. Engagement of patient advisors is recommended for other large trials where the traditional model of consent may not be optimal.
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- 2021
35. PREVENTion of CLots in Orthopaedic Trauma (PREVENT CLOT): a randomised pragmatic trial protocol comparing aspirin versus low-molecular-weight heparin for blood clot prevention in orthopaedic trauma patients.
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O'Toole, Robert V, Stein, Deborah M, Frey, Katherine P, O'Hara, Nathan N, Scharfstein, Daniel O, Slobogean, Gerard P, Taylor, Tara J, Haac, Bryce E, Carlini, Anthony R, Manson, Theodore T, Sudini, Kuladeep, Mullins, C Daniel, Wegener, Stephen T, Firoozabadi, Reza, Haut, Elliott R, Bosse, Michael J, Seymour, Rachel B, Holden, Martha B, Gitajn, Ida Leah, Goldhaber, Samuel Z, Eastman, Alexander L, Jurkovich, Gregory J, Vallier, Heather A, Gary, Joshua L, Kleweno, Conor P, Cuschieri, Joseph, Marvel, Debra, Castillo, Renan C, and METRC
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METRC ,orthopaedic & trauma surgery ,thromboembolism ,trauma management ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
IntroductionPatients who sustain orthopaedic trauma are at an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), including fatal pulmonary embolism (PE). Current guidelines recommend low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) for VTE prophylaxis in orthopaedic trauma patients. However, emerging literature in total joint arthroplasty patients suggests the potential clinical benefits of VTE prophylaxis with aspirin. The primary aim of this trial is to compare aspirin with LMWH as a thromboprophylaxis in fracture patients.Methods and analysisPREVENT CLOT is a multicentre, randomised, pragmatic trial that aims to enrol 12 200 adult patients admitted to 1 of 21 participating centres with an operative extremity fracture, or any pelvis or acetabular fracture. The primary outcome is all-cause mortality. We will evaluate non-inferiority by testing whether the intention-to-treat difference in the probability of dying within 90 days of randomisation between aspirin and LMWH is less than our non-inferiority margin of 0.75%. Secondary efficacy outcomes include cause-specific mortality, non-fatal PE and deep vein thrombosis. Safety outcomes include bleeding complications, wound complications and deep surgical site infections.Ethics and disseminationThe PREVENT CLOT trial has been approved by the ethics board at the coordinating centre (Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health) and all participating sites. Recruitment began in April 2017 and will continue through 2021. As both study medications are currently in clinical use for VTE prophylaxis for orthopaedic trauma patients, the findings of this trial can be easily adopted into clinical practice. The results of this large, patient-centred pragmatic trial will help guide treatment choices to prevent VTE in fracture patients.Trial registration numberNCT02984384.
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- 2021
36. Managing work flow in high enrolling trials: The development and implementation of a sampling strategy in the PREPARE trial
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Pogorzelski, David, Nguyen, Uyen, McKay, Paula, Thabane, Lehana, Camara, Megan, Ramsey, Lolita, Seymour, Rachel, Goodman, J Brett, McGee, Sheketha, Fraifogl, Joanne, Hudgins, Andrea, Tanner, Stephanie L, Bhandari, Mohit, Slobogean, Gerard P, Sprague, Sheila, Committee:, on behalf of the PREP-IT Investigators Executive, Wells, Jeffrey, Committee, Steering, D'Alleyrand, Jean-Claude, Harris, Anthony D, Mullins, Daniel C, Wood, Amber, Committee, Adjudication, Della Rocca, Gregory J, Hebden, Joan, Jeray, Kyle J, Marchand, Lucas, O'Hara, Lyndsay M, Zura, Robert, Committee, Data and Safety Monitoring, Gardner, Michael J, Blasman, Jenna, Davies, Jonah, Liang, Stephen, Taljaard, Monica, Core, Research Methodology, Devereaux, PJ, Guyatt, Gordon H, Heels-Ansdell, Diane, Core, Patient Centred Outcomes, Marvel, Debra, Palmer, Jana, Friedrich, Jeff, O'Hara, Nathan N, Grissom, Frances, Core, Orthopaedic Surgery, Gitajn, I Leah, Morshed, Saam, O'Toole, Robert V, Petrisor, Bradley A, Core, Room, Mossuto, Franca, Core, Infectious Disease, Joshi, Manjari G, Core, Fowler, Justin, Rivera, Jessica, Talbot, Max, Center, McMaster University Methods, Dodds, Shannon, Garibaldi, Alisha, Li, Silvia, Rojas, Alejandra, Scott, Taryn, Del Fabbro, Gina, Szasz, Olivia Paige, Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine Administrative, Howe, Andrea, Rudnicki, Joshua, Demyanovich, Haley, Little, Kelly, School of Pharmacy, The PATIENTS Program University of Maryland, Mullins, C Daniel, Medeiros, Michelle, Kettering, Eric, Hale, Diamond, Site, PREP-IT Clinical Sites Lead Clinical, Eglseder, Andrew, Johnson, Aaron, Langhammer, Christopher, Lebrun, Christopher, Manson, Theodore, Nascone, Jason, Paryavi, Ebrahim, and Pensy, Raymond
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Health Services ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,PREP-IT Investigators Executive Committee: ,Steering Committee ,Adjudication Committee ,Data and Safety Monitoring Committee ,Research Methodology Core ,Patient Centred Outcomes Core ,Orthopaedic Surgery Core ,Operating Room Core ,Infectious Disease Core ,Military Core ,McMaster University Methods Center ,University of Maryland School of Medicine Administrative Center ,University of Maryland School of Pharmacy ,The PATIENTS Program ,PREP-IT Clinical Sites: Lead Clinical Site ,Aqueous-PREP and PREPARE ,Aqueous-PREP ,PREPARE ,PREP-IT Investigators Executive Committee ,Cluster crossover ,Pragmatic ,Sampling ,Sampling framework ,Sampling strategy ,Work flow - Abstract
IntroductionPragmatic trials in comparative effectiveness research assess the effects of different treatment, therapeutic, or healthcare options in clinical practice. They are characterized by broad eligibility criteria and large sample sizes, which can lead to an unmanageable number of participants, increasing the risk of bias and affecting the integrity of the trial. We describe the development of a sampling strategy tool and its use in the PREPARE trial to circumvent the challenge of unmanageable work flow.MethodsGiven the broad eligibility criteria and high fracture volume at participating clinical sites in the PREPARE trial, a pragmatic sampling strategy was needed. Using data from PREPARE, descriptive statistics were used to describe the use of the sampling strategy across clinical sites. A Chi-square test was performed to explore whether use of the sampling strategy was associated with a reduction in the number of missed eligible patients.Results7 of 20 clinical sites (35%) elected to adopt a sampling strategy. There were 1539 patients excluded due to the use of the sampling strategy, which represents 30% of all excluded patients and 20% of all patients screened for participation. Use of the sampling strategy was associated with lower odds of missed eligible patients (297/4545 (6.5%) versus 341/3200 (10.7%) p
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- 2021
37. Risk factors for failure of manipulation under anesthesia in posttraumatic knee stiffness
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Robertson, Michael J., Zingas, Nicolas, Benzel, Caroline, O'Hara, Nathan N., O'Toole, Robert V., and Hempen, Eric
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- 2023
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38. Land side truck traffic modeling at container terminals by a stationary two-class queuing strategy with switching
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Wang, Jing, Huynh, Nathan N., and Pena, Edsel
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- 2022
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39. Interactions of amyloidogenic proteins with mitochondrial protein import machinery in aging-related neurodegenerative diseases
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Ashley L. Reed, Wayne Mitchell, Andrei T. Alexandrescu, and Nathan N. Alder
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mitochondria ,amyloids ,neurodegeneration ,protein import ,cryptic targeting ,targeting signals ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Most mitochondrial proteins are targeted to the organelle by N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequences (MTSs, or “presequences”) that are recognized by the import machinery and subsequently cleaved to yield the mature protein. MTSs do not have conserved amino acid compositions, but share common physicochemical properties, including the ability to form amphipathic α-helical structures enriched with basic and hydrophobic residues on alternating faces. The lack of strict sequence conservation implies that some polypeptides can be mistargeted to mitochondria, especially under cellular stress. The pathogenic accumulation of proteins within mitochondria is implicated in many aging-related neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases. Mechanistically, these diseases may originate in part from mitochondrial interactions with amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) or its cleavage product amyloid-β (Aβ), α-synuclein (α-syn), and mutant forms of huntingtin (mHtt), respectively, that are mediated in part through their associations with the mitochondrial protein import machinery. Emerging evidence suggests that these amyloidogenic proteins may present cryptic targeting signals that act as MTS mimetics and can be recognized by mitochondrial import receptors and transported into different mitochondrial compartments. Accumulation of these mistargeted proteins could overwhelm the import machinery and its associated quality control mechanisms, thereby contributing to neurological disease progression. Alternatively, the uptake of amyloidogenic proteins into mitochondria may be part of a protein quality control mechanism for clearance of cytotoxic proteins. Here we review the pathomechanisms of these diseases as they relate to mitochondrial protein import and effects on mitochondrial function, what features of APP/Aβ, α-syn and mHtt make them suitable substrates for the import machinery, and how this information can be leveraged for the development of therapeutic interventions.
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- 2023
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40. Patient preferences for physical therapy programs after a lower extremity fracture: a discrete choice experiment
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Robert V O'Toole, Nathan N O'Hara, Gerard P Slobogean, Natasha S McKibben, Lucas S Marchand, Haley K Demyanovich, Kathleen M Healey, Nicolas Zingas, and Katherine O'Connor
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To quantify patients’ preferences for physical therapy programmes after a lower extremity fracture and determine patient factors associated with preference variation.Design Discrete choice experiment.Setting Level I trauma centre.Participants One hundred fifty-one adult (≥18 years old) patients with lower extremity fractures treated operatively.Intervention Patients were given hypothetical scenarios and asked to select their preferred therapy course when comparing cost, mobility, long-term pain, session duration, and treatment setting.Main outcome measures A multinomial logit model was used to determine the relative importance and willingness to pay for each attribute.Results Mobility was of greatest relative importance (45%, 95% CI: 40% to 49%), more than cost (23%, 95% CI: 19% to 27%), long-term pain (19%, 95% CI: 16% to 23%), therapy session duration (12%, 95% CI: 9% to 5%) or setting (1%, 95% CI: 0.2% to 2%). Patients were willing to pay US$142 more per session to return to their preinjury mobility level (95% CI: US$103 to US$182). Willingness to pay for improved mobility was higher for women, patients aged 70 years and older, those with bachelor’s degrees or higher and those living in less-deprived areas. Patients were willing to pay US$72 (95% CI: US$50 to US$93) more per session to reduce pain from severe to mild. Patients were indifferent between formal and independent home therapy (willingness to pay: −US$12, 95% CI: −US$33 to US$9).Conclusions Patients with lower extremity fractures highly value recovering mobility and are willing to pay more for postoperative physical therapy programmes that facilitate returning to their pre-injury mobility level. These patient preferences might be useful when prescribing and designing new techniques for postoperative therapy.
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- 2023
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41. People believe sexual harassment and domestic violence are less harmful for women in poverty
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Cheek, Nathan N., Bandt-Law, Bryn, and Sinclair, Stacey
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- 2023
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42. The impact of heterotopic ossification prophylaxis after surgical fixation of acetabular fractures: national treatment patterns and related outcomes
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Slobogean, Gerard P., Sprague, Sheila, Wells, Jeffrey, Bhandari, Mohit, Harris, Anthony D., Mullins, C. Daniel, Thabane, Lehana, Wood, Amber, Rocca, Gregory J. Della, Hebden, Joan, Jeray, Kyle J., Marchand, Lucas S., O'Hara, Lyndsay M., Zura, Robert, Lee, Christopher, Patterson, Joseph, Gardner, Michael J., Blasman, Jenna, Davies, Jonah, Liang, Stephen, Taljaard, Monica, Devereaux, PJ, Guyatt, Gordon H., Heels-Ansdell, Diane, Marvel, Debra, Wells, Jana Palmer Jeffrey, Friedrich, Jeff, O'Hara, Nathan N., Grissom, Frances, Gitajn, I. Leah, Morshed, Saam, O'Toole, Robert V., Petrisor, Bradley A., Mossuto, Franca, Joshi, Manjari G., D'Alleyrand, Jean-Claude, Fowler, Justin, Rivera, Jessica, Talbot, Max, Pogorzelski, David, Dodds, Shannon, Li, Silvia, Rojas, Alejandra, Fabbro, Gina Del, Szasz, Olivia Paige, McKay, Paula, Minea, Alexandra, Howe, Andrea, Demyanovich, Haley, Medeiros, Michelle, Polk, Genevieve, Kettering, Eric, Mahal, Nirmen, Eglseder, Andrew, Johnson, Aaron, Langhammer, Christopher, Lebrun, Christopher, Nascone, Jason, Pensy, Raymond, Pollak, Andrew, Sciadini, Marcus, Degani, Yasmin, Demyanovich, Haley K., Phipps, Heather, Hempen, Eric, Holler, Christine, Petrisor, Brad A., Johal, Herman, Ristevski, Bill, Williams, Dale, Denkers, Matthew, Rajaratnam, Krishan, Al-Asiri, Jamal, Gallant, Jodi, Pusztai, Kaitlyn, MacRae, Sarah, Renaud, Sara, Adams, John D., Beckish, Michael L., Bray, Christopher C., Brown, Timothy R., Cross, Andrew W., Dew, Timothy, Faucher, Gregory K., Gurich, Richard W., Jr, Lazarus, David E., Millon, S. John, Moody, M. Christian, Palmer, M. Jason, Porter, Scott E., Schaller, Thomas M., Sridhar, Michael S., Sanders, John L., Rudisill, L. Edwin, Jr, Garitty, Michael J., Poole, Andrew S., Sims, Michael L., Walker, Clark M., Carlisle, Robert, Hofer, Erin A., Huggins, Brandon, Hunter, Michael, Marshall, William, Ray, Shea B., Smith, Cory, Altman, Kyle M., Pichiotino, Erin, Quirion, Julia C., Loeffler, Markus F., Pichiotino, Erin R., Cole, Austin A., Maltz, Ethan J., Parker, Wesley, Ramsey, T. Bennett, Burnikel, Alex, Colello, Michael, Stewart, Russell, Wise, Jeremy, Anderson, Matthew, Eskew, Joshua, Judkins, Benjamin, Miller, James M., Tanner, Stephanie L., Snider, Rebecca G., Townsend, Christine E., Pham, Kayla H., Martin, Abigail, Robertson, Emily, Bray, Emily, Sykes, J. Wilson, Yoder, Krystina, Conner, Kelsey, Abbott, Harper, Natoli, Roman M., McKinley, Todd O., Virkus, Walter W., Sorkin, Anthony T., Szatkowski, Jan P., Mullis, Brian H., Jang, Yohan, Lopas, Luke A., Hill, Lauren C., Fentz, Courteney L., Diaz, Maricela M., Brown, Krista, Garst, Katelyn M., Denari, Emma W., Osborn, Patrick, Pierrie, Sarah, Herrera, Maria, Miclau, Theodore, Marmor, Meir, Matityahu, Amir, McClellan, R. Trigg, Shearer, David, Toogood, Paul, Ding, Anthony, Murali, Jothi, Naga, Ashraf El, Tangtiphaiboontana, Jennifer, Belaye, Tigist, Berhaneselase, Eleni, Pokhvashchev, Dmitry, Obremskey, William T, Jahangir, Amir Alex, Sethi, Manish, Boyce, Robert, Stinner, Daniel J., Mitchell, Phillip, Trochez, Karen, Rodriguez, Elsa, Pritchett, Charles, Hogan, Natalie, Moreno, A. Fidel, Hagen, Jennifer E., Patrick, Matthew, Vlasak, Richard, Krupko, Thomas, Talerico, Michael, Horodyski, Marybeth, Pazik, Marissa, Lossada-Soto, Elizabeth, Gary, Joshua L., Warner, Stephen J, Munz, John W., Choo, Andrew M., Achor, Timothy S., Routt, Milton L. “Chip”, Kutzler, Michael, Boutte, Sterling, Warth, Ryan J., Prayson, Michael, Venkatarayappa, Indresh, Horne, Brandon, Jerele, Jennifer, Clark, Linda, Boulton, Christina, Lowe, Jason, Ruth, John T., Askam, Brad, Seach, Andrea, Cruz, Alejandro, Featherston, Breanna, Carlson, Robin, Romero, Iliana, Zarif, Isaac, Dehghan, Niloofar, McKee, Michael, Jones, Clifford B, Sietsema, Debra L, Williams, Alyse, Dykes, Tayler, Guerra-Farfan, Ernesto, Tomas-Hernandez, Jordi, Teixidor-Serra, Jordi, Molero-Garcia, Vicente, Selga-Marsa, Jordi, Porcel-Vazquez, Juan Antonio, Andres-Peiro, Jose Vicente, Esteban-Feliu, Ignacio, Vidal-Tarrason, Nuria, Serracanta, Jordi, Nuñez-Camarena, Jorge, del Mar Villar-Casares, Maria, Mestre-Torres, Jaume, Lalueza-Broto, Pilar, Moreira-Borim, Felipe, Garcia-Sanchez, Yaiza, Marcano-Fernández, Francesc, Martínez-Carreres, Laia, Martí-Garín, David, Serrano-Sanz, Jorge, Sánchez-Fernández, Joel, Sanz-Molero, Matsuyama, Carballo, Alejandro, Pelfort, Xavier, Acerboni-Flores, Francesc, Alavedra-Massana, Anna, Anglada-Torres, Neus, Berenguer, Alexandre, Cámara-Cabrera, Jaume, Caparros-García, Ariadna, Fillat-Gomà, Ferran, Fuentes-López, Ruben, Garcia-Rodriguez, Ramona, Gimeno-Calavia, Nuria, Martínez-Álvarez, Marta, Martínez-Grau, Patricia, Pellejero-García, Raúl, Ràfols-Perramon, Ona, Peñalver, Juan Manuel, Domènech, Mònica Salomó, Soler-Cano, Albert, Velasco-Barrera, Aldo, Yela-Verdú, Christian, Bueno-Ruiz, Mercedes, Sánchez-Palomino, Estrella, Andriola, Vito, Molina-Corbacho, Matilde, Maldonado-Sotoca, Yeray, Gasset-Teixidor, Alfons, Blasco-Moreu, Jorge, Fernández-Poch, Núria, Rodoreda-Puigdemasa, Josep, Verdaguer-Figuerola, Arnau, Cueva-Sevieri, Heber Enrique, Garcia-Gimenez, Santiago, Viskontas, Darius G., Apostle, Kelly L., Boyer, Dory S., Moola, Farhad O., Perey, Bertrand H., Stone, Trevor B., Lemke, H. Michael, Spicer, Ella, Payne, Kyrsten, Hymes, Robert A., Schwartzbach, Cary C., Schulman, Jeff E., Malekzadeh, A. Stephen, Holzman, Michael A., Gaski, Greg E., Wills, Jonathan, Pilson, Holly, Carroll, Eben A., Halvorson, Jason J., Babcock, Sharon, Goodman, J. Brett, Holden, Martha B., Williams, Wendy, Hill, Taylor, Brotherton, Ariel, Romeo, Nicholas M., Vallier, Heather A, Vergon, Anna, Higgins, Thomas F., Haller, Justin M., Rothberg, David L., Olsen, Zachary M., McGowan, Abby V., Hill, Sophia, Dauk, Morgan K., Bergin, Patrick F., Russell, George V., Graves, Matthew L., Morellato, John, McGee, Sheketha L., Bhanat, Eldrin L., Yener, Ugur, Khanna, Rajinder, Nehete, Priyanka, Potter, Dr. David, VanDemark, Dr. Robert, III, Seabold, Kyle, Staudenmier, Nicholas, Coe, Marcus, Dwyer, Kevin, Mullin, Devin S., Chockbengboun, Theresa A., DePalo, Peter A., Sr., Phelps, Kevin, Bosse, Michael, Karunakar, Madhav, Kempton, Laurence, Sims, Stephen, Hsu, Joseph, Seymour, Rachel, Churchill, Christine, Mayfield, Ada, Sweeney, Juliette, Jaeblon, Todd, Beer, Robert, Bauer, Brent, Meredith, Sean, Talwar, Sneh, Domes, Christopher M., Gage, Mark J., Reilly, Rachel M., Paniagua, Ariana, Dupree, JaNell, Weaver, Michael J., von Keudell, Arvind G., Sagona, Abigail E., Mehta, Samir, Donegan, Derek, Horan, Annamarie, Dooley, Mary, Heng, Marilyn, Harris, Mitchel B., Lhowe, David W., Esposito, John G., Alnasser, Ahmad, Shannon, Steven F., Scott, Alesha N., Clinch, Bobbi, Weber, Becky, Beltran, Michael J., Archdeacon, Michael T., Sagi, Henry Claude, Wyrick, John D., Le, Theodore Toan, Laughlin, Richard T., Thomson, Cameron G., Hasselfeld, Kimberly, Lin, Carol A., Vrahas, Mark S., Moon, Charles N., Little, Milton T., Marecek, Geoffrey S., Dubuclet, Denice M., Scolaro, John A., Learned, James R., Lim, Philip K., Demas, Susan, Amirhekmat, Arya, Dela Cruz, Yan Marco, Boissonneault, Adam, O Hara, Nathan, Marchand, Lucas, Higgins, Thomas, Gitajn, Leah, Sharma, Ishani, O’Toole, Robert V, and Slobogean, Gerard
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- 2023
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43. Slug regulates the Dll4-Notch-VEGFR2 axis to control endothelial cell activation and angiogenesis.
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Hultgren, Nan W, Fang, Jennifer S, Ziegler, Mary E, Ramirez, Ricardo N, Phan, Duc TT, Hatch, Michaela MS, Welch-Reardon, Katrina M, Paniagua, Antonio E, Kim, Lin S, Shon, Nathan N, Williams, David S, Mortazavi, Ali, and Hughes, Christopher CW
- Subjects
Endothelial Cells ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Mice ,Knockout ,Humans ,Mice ,Neovascularization ,Pathologic ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-2 ,Adaptor Proteins ,Signal Transducing ,Calcium-Binding Proteins ,Signal Transduction ,Female ,Male ,Receptors ,Notch ,Snail Family Transcription Factors ,Inbred C57BL ,Knockout ,Neovascularization ,Pathologic ,Adaptor Proteins ,Signal Transducing ,Receptors ,Notch - Abstract
Slug (SNAI2), a member of the well-conserved Snail family of transcription factors, has multiple developmental roles, including in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Here, we show that Slug is critical for the pathological angiogenesis needed to sustain tumor growth, and transiently necessary for normal developmental angiogenesis. We find that Slug upregulation in angiogenic endothelial cells (EC) regulates an EMT-like suite of target genes, and suppresses Dll4-Notch signaling thereby promoting VEGFR2 expression. Both EC-specific Slug re-expression and reduced Notch signaling, either by γ-secretase inhibition or loss of Dll4, rescue retinal angiogenesis in SlugKO mice. Conversely, inhibition of VEGF signaling prevents excessive angiogenic sprouting of Slug overexpressing EC. Finally, endothelial Slug (but not Snail) is activated by the pro-angiogenic factor SDF1α via its canonical receptor CXCR4 and the MAP kinase ERK5. Altogether, our data support a critical role for Slug in determining the angiogenic response during development and disease.
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- 2020
44. Perspective on optical imaging for functional assessment in musculoskeletal extremity trauma surgery.
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Gitajn, Ida L, Slobogean, Gerard P, Henderson, Eric R, von Keudell, Arvind G, Harris, Mitchel B, Scolaro, John A, O'Hara, Nathan N, Elliott, Jonathan T, Pogue, Brian W, and Jiang, Shudong
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Extremities ,Humans ,Musculoskeletal Diseases ,Indocyanine Green ,Orthopedic Procedures ,Prospective Studies ,Adult ,Aged ,Optical Imaging ,bone perfusion ,fluorescence imaging ,indocyanine green ,optical imaging ,orthopaedic surgery ,Clinical Research ,Bioengineering ,Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects ,Regenerative Medicine ,Biomedical Imaging ,Musculoskeletal ,Optics ,Optical Physics ,Biomedical Engineering ,Opthalmology and Optometry - Abstract
SignificanceExtremity injury represents the leading cause of trauma hospitalizations among adults under the age of 65 years, and long-term impairments are often substantial. Restoring function depends, in large part, on bone and soft tissue healing. Thus, decisions around treatment strategy are based on assessment of the healing potential of injured bone and/or soft tissue. However, at the present, this assessment is based on subjective clinical clues and/or cadaveric studies without any objective measure. Optical imaging is an ideal method to solve several of these issues.AimThe aim is to highlight the current challenges in assessing bone and tissue perfusion/viability and the potentially high impact applications for optical imaging in orthopaedic surgery.ApproachThe prospective will review the current challenges faced by the orthopaedic surgeon and briefly discuss optical imaging tools that have been published. With this in mind, it will suggest key research areas that could be evolved to help make surgical assessments more objective and quantitative.ResultsOrthopaedic surgical procedures should benefit from incorporation of methods to measure functional blood perfusion or tissue metabolism. The types of measurements though can vary in the depth of tissue sampled, with some being quite superficial and others sensing several millimeters into the tissue. Most of these intrasurgical imaging tools represent an ideal way to improve surgical treatment of orthopaedic injuries due to their inherent point-of-care use and their compatibility with real-time management.ConclusionWhile there are several optical measurements to directly measure bone function, the choice of tools can determine also the signal strength and depth of sampling. For orthopaedic surgery, real-time data regarding bone and tissue perfusion should lead to more effective patient-specific management of common orthopaedic conditions, requiring deeper penetrance commonly seen with indocyanine green imaging. This will lower morbidity and result in decreased variability associated with how these conditions are managed.
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- 2020
45. Comparing Two Medicines to Prevent Blood Clots after Treatment for Fractures – The PREVENT CLOT Study
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O’Toole, Robert, primary, Stein, Deborah, additional, Nathan N. O’Hara_, Nathan, additional, _Katherine P. Frey_, Katherine, additional, Tara J. Taylor_, Tara, additional, Daniel O. Scharfstein_, Daniel, additional, Anthony R. Carlini, Anthony, additional, Kuladeep Sudini_, Kuladeep, additional, Yasmin Degani, Yasmin, additional, _Gerard P. Slobogean_, Gerard, additional, _Elliott R. Haut, Elliott, additional, _William Obremskey_, William, additional, _ Reza Firoozabadi, Reza, additional, _Michael J. Bosse_, Michael, additional, _Samuel Z. Goldhaber, Samuel, additional, __Debra Marvel____, Debra, additional, and Castillo, Renan, additional
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- 2023
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46. Land side truck traffic modeling at container terminals by a stationary two-class queuing strategy with switching
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Jing Wang, Nathan N. Huynh, and Edsel Pena
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Two-class queuing model ,Switching policy ,Truck appointment system ,Marine container terminal ,Commerce ,HF1-6182 - Abstract
Purpose – This paper evaluates an alternative queuing concept for marine container terminals that utilize a truck appointment system (TAS). Instead of having all lanes providing service to trucks with appointments, this study considers the case where walk-in lanes are provided to serve those trucks with no appointments or trucks with appointments but arrived late due to traffic congestion. Design/methodology/approach – To enable the analysis of the proposed alternative queuing strategy, the queuing system is shown mathematically to be stationary. Due to the complexity of the model, a discrete event simulation (DES) model is used to obtain the average waiting number of trucks per lane for both types of service lanes: TAS-lanes and walk-in lanes. Findings – The numerical experiment results indicated that the considered queuing strategy is most beneficial when the utilization of the TAS lanes is expected to be much higher than that of the walk-in lanes. Originality/value – The novelty of this study is that it examines the scenario where trucks with appointments switch to the walk-in lanes upon arrival if the TAS-lane server is occupied and the walk-in lane server is not occupied. This queuing strategy/policy could reduce the average waiting time of trucks at marine container terminals. Approximation equations are provided to assist practitioners calculate the average truck queue length and the average truck queuing time for this type of queuing system.
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- 2022
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47. Developing a Utopian Model of Human-Technology Interaction: Collective Intelligence Applications in Support of Future Well-Being
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Soch, Nathan N., Hogan, Michael, Harney, Owen, Hanlon, Michelle, Brady, Catherine, and McGrattan, Liam
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- 2022
48. Does iliosacral screw removal reduce postoperative pain in unstable pelvic fracture patients? A matched prospective cohort study
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McKibben, Natasha S., Zingas, Nicolas H., Healey, Kathleen M., Benzel, Caroline A., Stockton, David J., Demyanovich, Haley, Slobogean, Gerard P., O'Toole, Robert V., Sciadini, Marcus F., and O'Hara, Nathan N.
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- 2023
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49. One Gospel: Paul's Use of the Abraham Story in Romans 4:1–25
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Nathan N. Hoff
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- 2023
50. A deep surgical site infection risk score for patients with open tibial shaft fractures treated with intramedullary nail
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Wilkinson, Brandon G., Bangura, Abdulai, Burke, Cynthia E., O'Connor, Katherine, Gupta, Jayesh, Demyanovich, Haley K., Healey, Kathleen, O'Hara, Nathan N., Schneiderman, Brian A., Nascone, Jason W., and O'Toole, Robert V.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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