1,294 results on '"Pavan, S."'
Search Results
2. Acid Degradable Zinc Oxide Nanoparticle Loaded Etoposide Nanoformulation for Targeting Lung Adenocarcinoma via Drug Metabolism and Crosstalk Between Angiogenesis and Akt Pathways
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Pavan, S. R. and Prabhu, Ashwini
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- 2024
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3. A cell state-specific metabolic vulnerability to GPX4-dependent ferroptosis in glioblastoma
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Banu, Matei A, Dovas, Athanassios, Argenziano, Michael G, Zhao, Wenting, Sperring, Colin P, Cuervo Grajal, Henar, Liu, Zhouzerui, Higgins, Dominique MO, Amini, Misha, Pereira, Brianna, Ye, Ling F, Mahajan, Aayushi, Humala, Nelson, Furnari, Julia L, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Zandkarimi, Fereshteh, Nguyen, Trang TT, Teasley, Damian, Wu, Peter B, Hai, Li, Karan, Charles, Dowdy, Tyrone, Razavilar, Aida, Siegelin, Markus D, Kitajewski, Jan, Larion, Mioara, Bruce, Jeffrey N, Stockwell, Brent R, Sims, Peter A, and Canoll, Peter
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- 2024
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4. Ground Supports for Temporary Roadways in Highly Weathered Rock Mass
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Pobbu, P. K., Pavan, S., Madavi, R. P., Porathur, J. L., Jagapthal, V. K., Bezaeva, Natalia S., Series Editor, Gomes Coe, Heloisa Helena, Series Editor, Nawaz, Muhammad Farrakh, Series Editor, Gorai, Amit Kumar, editor, Ram, Sahendra, editor, Bishwal, Ram Manohar, editor, and Bhowmik, Santanu, editor
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- 2025
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5. Novel pH responsive hesperidin nanoformulation exerts anticancer activity on lung adenocarcinoma cells by targeting Akt/mTOR and MEK/ERK pathways
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Pavan, S. R. and Prabhu, Ashwini
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- 2024
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6. Acute Spinal Cord Injury and Spinal Trauma
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Higgins, Dominique M. O., primary, Upadhyayula, Pavan S., additional, Argenziano, Michael, additional, and McCormick, Paul, additional
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- 2024
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7. Quality of Popular Online Resources About Vestibular Migraine
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Oren Wei, Pavan S. Krishnan, Jenny X. Chen, Wesley W. Schoo, John P. Carey, and Desi P. Schoo
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actionability ,Flesch‐Kincaid Grade Level (FKGL) ,Flesch Reading Ease (FRE) ,health literacy ,Internet ,patient education ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Objective To evaluate the readability, understandability, actionability, and accuracy of online resources covering vestibular migraine (VM). Study Design Cross‐sectional descriptive study design. Setting Digital collection of websites appearing on Google search. Methods Google searches were conducted to identify common online resources for VM. We examined readability using the Flesch Reading Ease (FRE) and Flesch‐Kincaid Grade Level scores, understandability and actionability using the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT), and accuracy by comparing the website contents to the consensus definition of “probable vestibular migraine.” Results Eleven of the most popular websites were analyzed. Flesch‐Kincaid Grade Level averaged at a 13th‐grade level (range: 9th‐18th). FRE scores averaged 35.5 (range: 9.1‐54.4). No website had a readability grade level at the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality recommended 5th‐grade level or an equivalent FRE score of 90 or greater. Understandability scores varied ranging from 49% to 88% (mean 70%). Actionability scores varied more, ranging from 12% to 87% (mean 44%). There was substantial inter‐rater agreement for both PEMAT understandability scoring (mean κ = 0.76, SD = 0.08) and actionability scoring (mean κ = 0.65, SD = 0.08). Three sites included all 3 “probable vestibular migraine” diagnostic criteria as worded in the consensus statement. Conclusion The quality of online resources for VM is poor overall in terms of readability, actionability, and agreement with diagnostic criteria.
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- 2024
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8. Enhancement of electrochemical reversibility in Poly 3-hexylthiophene layers for flexible dynamic glass windows applications
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Aruna, P., Prema Kumar, G.P., Sindhu, S., Ravishankar, R., Singh, Nikkita, Meghana, R., Rao, Pavan S., Mahadeva Raju, G.K., and Joseph, C.M.
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- 2024
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9. Benign and Malignant Tumors of the Pineal Region
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Upadhyayula, Pavan S., Neira, Justin A., Miller, Michael L., Bruce, Jeffrey N., Crusio, Wim E., Series Editor, Dong, Haidong, Series Editor, Radeke, Heinfried H., Series Editor, Rezaei, Nima, Series Editor, Steinlein, Ortrud, Series Editor, Xiao, Junjie, Series Editor, and Hanaei, Sara, editor
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- 2023
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10. ERK1/2 phosphorylation predicts survival following anti-PD-1 immunotherapy in recurrent glioblastoma
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Arrieta, Víctor A, Chen, Andrew X, Kane, J Robert, Kang, Seong Jae, Kassab, Cynthia, Dmello, Crismita, Zhao, Junfei, Burdett, Kirsten B, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Lee-Chang, Catalina, Shilati, Joseph, Jaishankar, Dinesh, Chen, Li, Gould, Andrew, Zhang, Daniel, Yuan, Jinzhou, Zhao, Wenting, Ling, Xiaoyang, Burks, Jared K, Laffleur, Brice, Amidei, Christina, Bruce, Jeffrey N, Lukas, Rimas V, Yamaguchi, Jonathan T, Cieremans, David, Rothschild, Gerson, Basu, Uttiya, McCord, Matthew, Brat, Daniel J, Zhang, Hui, Cooper, Lee AD, Zhang, Bin, Sims, Peter, Cloughesy, Tim F, Prins, Robert, Canoll, Peter, Stupp, Roger, Heimberger, Amy B, Horbinski, Craig, Iwamoto, Fabio M, Rabadan, Raul, and Sonabend, Adam M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Cancer ,Brain Cancer ,Brain Disorders ,Immunotherapy ,Genetics ,Precision Medicine ,Rare Diseases ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Glioblastoma ,Humans ,MAP Kinase Signaling System ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Phosphorylation ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Only a subset of recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM) responds to anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. Previously, we reported enrichment of BRAF/PTPN11 mutations in 30% of rGBM that responded to PD-1 blockade. Given that BRAF and PTPN11 promote MAPK/ERK signaling, we investigated whether activation of this pathway is associated with response to PD-1 inhibitors in rGBM, including patients that do not harbor BRAF/PTPN11 mutations. Here we show that immunohistochemistry for ERK1/2 phosphorylation (p-ERK), a marker of MAPK/ERK pathway activation, is predictive of overall survival following adjuvant PD-1 blockade in two independent rGBM patient cohorts. Single-cell RNA-sequencing and multiplex immunofluorescence analyses revealed that p-ERK was mainly localized in tumor cells and that high-p-ERK GBMs contained tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells and microglia with elevated expression of MHC class II and associated genes. These findings indicate that ERK1/2 activation in rGBM is predictive of response to PD-1 blockade and is associated with a distinct myeloid cell phenotype.
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- 2021
11. Giant tonsillolith presenting as an oropharyngeal mass
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Pavan S. Krishnan, Eve M.R. Bowers, and Christine M. D'Aguillo
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Tonsillolith ,Oropharynx ,Dysphagia ,Odynophagia ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
We present a case report of a 60-year-old female with a right-sided giant tonsillolith, presenting as an oropharyngeal mass. We document the patient's relevant history and clinical examination, imaging, and operative findings. Giant tonsilloliths should warrant surgical excision and tonsillectomy, with specimens sent for pathological examination to ensure that the oral cavity masses are indeed calcified material. The patient's condition significantly improved after removal of the mass.
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- 2024
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12. Emergent invariance and scaling properties in the collective return dynamics of a stock market.
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Hideyuki Miyahara, Hai Qian, Pavan S Holur, and Vwani Roychowdhury
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
A key metric to determine the performance of a stock in a market is its return over different investment horizons (τ). Several works have observed heavy-tailed behavior in the distributions of returns in different markets, which are observable indicators of underlying complex dynamics. Such prior works study return distributions that are marginalized across the individual stocks in the market, and do not track statistics about the joint distributions of returns conditioned on different stocks, which would be useful for optimizing inter-stock asset allocation strategies. As a step towards this goal, we study emergent phenomena in the distributions of returns as captured by their pairwise correlations. In particular, we consider the pairwise (between stocks i, j) partial correlations of returns with respect to the market mode, ci,j(τ), (thus, correcting for the baseline return behavior of the market), over different time horizons (τ), and discover two novel emergent phenomena: (i) the standardized distributions of the ci,j(τ)'s are observed to be invariant of τ ranging from from 1000min (2.5 days) to 30000min (2.5 months); (ii) the scaling of the standard deviation of ci,j(τ)'s with τ admits good fits to simple model classes such as a power-law τ-λ or stretched exponential function [Formula: see text] (λ, β > 0). Moreover, the parameters governing these fits provide a summary view of market health: for instance, in years marked by unprecedented financial crises-for example 2008 and 2020-values of λ (scaling exponent) are substantially lower. Finally, we demonstrate that the observed emergent behavior cannot be adequately supported by existing generative frameworks such as single- and multi-factor models. We introduce a promising agent-based Vicsek model that closes this gap.
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- 2024
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13. Substituting Gadolinium in Brain MRI Using DeepContrast
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Sun, Haoran, Liu, Xueqing, Feng, Xinyang, Liu, Chen, Zhu, Nanyan, Gjerswold-Selleck, Sabrina J., Wei, Hong-Jian, Upadhyayula, Pavan S., Mela, Angeliki, Wu, Cheng-Chia, Canoll, Peter D., Laine, Andrew F., Vaughan, J. Thomas, Small, Scott A., and Guo, Jia
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Cerebral blood volume (CBV) is a hemodynamic correlate of oxygen metabolism and reflects brain activity and function. High-resolution CBV maps can be generated using the steady-state gadolinium-enhanced MRI technique. Such a technique requires an intravenous injection of exogenous gadolinium based contrast agent (GBCA) and recent studies suggest that the GBCA can accumulate in the brain after frequent use. We hypothesize that endogenous sources of contrast might exist within the most conventional and commonly acquired structural MRI, potentially obviating the need for exogenous contrast. Here, we test this hypothesis by developing and optimizing a deep learning algorithm, which we call DeepContrast, in mice. We find that DeepContrast performs equally well as exogenous GBCA in mapping CBV of the normal brain tissue and enhancing glioblastoma. Together, these studies validate our hypothesis that a deep learning approach can potentially replace the need for GBCAs in brain MRI.
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- 2020
14. Dietary restriction of cysteine and methionine sensitizes gliomas to ferroptosis and induces alterations in energetic metabolism
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Upadhyayula, Pavan S., Higgins, Dominique M., Mela, Angeliki, Banu, Matei, Dovas, Athanassios, Zandkarimi, Fereshteh, Patel, Purvi, Mahajan, Aayushi, Humala, Nelson, Nguyen, Trang T. T., Chaudhary, Kunal R., Liao, Lillian, Argenziano, Michael, Sudhakar, Tejaswi, Sperring, Colin P., Shapiro, Benjamin L., Ahmed, Eman R., Kinslow, Connor, Ye, Ling F., Siegelin, Markus D., Cheng, Simon, Soni, Rajesh, Bruce, Jeffrey N., Stockwell, Brent R., and Canoll, Peter
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- 2023
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15. Semantics in the Era of Large-Language Models
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Holur, Pavan S
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Electrical engineering ,generative modeling ,large-language model ,natural language processing ,retrieval augmented generation ,semantics ,workspace - Abstract
Recent autoregressive generation models such as SoRA, GPT-4, LLaVa-next have made significant headway in modeling the short-range co-occurrence statistics in language – at the level of tokens or “word pieces” – and in vision at the pixel/region resolution. Empirically, these models are trained and evaluated by querying the model using a partial token sequence $t_1, \dots, t_{k-1}$, sampling the conditional distributions $P(t_k | t_1, \dots, t_{k-1})$ over multiple turns, and finally judging the quality (called the “Semantics”) of the resulting generated sequence of tokens $t_{k+1}, t_{k+2}, \dots$ in context of the original prompt. Such setups have proven to approach (and, in some cases, exceed) human performance at pre-existing NLP tasks such as Sentiment/Topic Classification, Sentence-level Similarity and Question-Answering and Short Story Completion. As the length demand of these token-by-token generations grows, the corresponding efforts to train and deploy these models – specifically, the sheer volume of the training data, and the computational demands to jointly condition on many input prompt tokens at once -- grow exponentially. Today, many models exceed 100B parameters, cannot be hosted locally and draw significant power. Thus, many efforts today seek alternate means by which to extend the range of Semantic consistency of these generation models.This thesis presents a method to address this problem by asking the following question: What if instead of attempting to model the long-range semantics directly, we identify the Semantic information for shorter prompts, and then stow away the Semantics as a representation beyond simple tokens. From here, these intermediate representations can be manipulated, aggregated and extended within an augmented representation space of lower complexity: a “Workspace”. The estimation of such a Workspace can be formulated as a State Space model: the intermediate representations of the Semantics constitute samples from an underlying latent state process (designed to satisfy Markovian assumptions) and the generated text segments constitute the observable short contexts. Over a series of works (chapters) that include such diverse applications as discovering author biases and intentions across internet-scale social media by piecing together the clues in individual posts, to DNA sequence alignment and assembly of short reads with respect to a much larger reference genome, we develop the cognitive theory of the Workspace and a computational implementation -- and demonstrate empirical success at existing and constructed tasks -- of such a Workspace for the text modality.
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- 2024
16. Reproducible analysis of disease space via principal components using the novel R package syndRomics.
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Torres-Espín, Abel, Chou, Austin, Huie, J Russell, Kyritsis, Nikos, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, and Ferguson, Adam R
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R package ,computational biology ,disease pattern discovery ,medicine ,multivariate analysis ,none ,nonlinear PCA ,principal component analysis pca ,syndromics ,systems biology ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology - Abstract
Biomedical data are usually analyzed at the univariate level, focused on a single primary outcome measure to provide insight into systems biology, complex disease states, and precision medicine opportunities. More broadly, these complex biological and disease states can be detected as common factors emerging from the relationships among measured variables using multivariate approaches. 'Syndromics' refers to an analytical framework for measuring disease states using principal component analysis and related multivariate statistics as primary tools for extracting underlying disease patterns. A key part of the syndromic workflow is the interpretation, the visualization, and the study of robustness of the main components that characterize the disease space. We present a new software package, syndRomics, an open-source R package with utility for component visualization, interpretation, and stability for syndromic analysis. We document the implementation of syndRomics and illustrate the use of the package in case studies of neurological trauma data.
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- 2021
17. Reproducible analysis of disease space via principal components using the novel R package syndRomics
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Espín, Abel Torres, Chou, Austin, Huie, Russell, Kyritsis, Nikolaos, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, and Ferguson, Adam
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Computational Biology ,Humans ,Principal Component Analysis ,Public Health ,Software ,Syndrome ,R package ,computational biology ,disease pattern discovery ,medicine ,multivariate analysis ,none ,nonlinear PCA ,principal component analysis pca ,syndromics ,systems biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Biomedical data are usually analyzed at the univariate level, focused on a single primary outcome measure to provide insight into systems biology, complex disease states, and precision medicine opportunities. More broadly, these complex biological and disease states can be detected as common factors emerging from the relationships among measured variables using multivariate approaches. 'Syndromics' refers to an analytical framework for measuring disease states using principal component analysis and related multivariate statistics as primary tools for extracting underlying disease patterns. A key part of the syndromic workflow is the interpretation, the visualization, and the study of robustness of the main components that characterize the disease space. We present a new software package, syndRomics, an open-source R package with utility for component visualization, interpretation, and stability for syndromic analysis. We document the implementation of syndRomics and illustrate the use of the package in case studies of neurological trauma data.
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- 2021
18. Predictors of six-month inability to return to work in previously employed subjects after mild traumatic brain injury: A TRACK-TBI pilot study.
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Yue, John K, Phelps, Ryan Rl, Hemmerle, Debra D, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Winkler, Ethan A, Deng, Hansen, Chang, Diana, Vassar, Mary J, Taylor, Sabrina R, Schnyer, David M, Lingsma, Hester F, Puccio, Ava M, Yuh, Esther L, Mukherjee, Pratik, Huang, Michael C, Ngwenya, Laura B, Valadka, Alex B, Markowitz, Amy J, Okonkwo, David O, Manley, Geoffrey T, and TRACK-TBI Investigators
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TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Concussion ,disability ,mild traumatic brain injury ,post-concussion syndrome ,return to work ,Clinical Research ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Brain Disorders ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Neurosciences - Abstract
Return to work (RTW) is an important milestone of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) recovery. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether baseline clinical variables, three-month RTW, and three-month postconcussional symptoms (PCS) were associated with six-month RTW after mTBI. Adult subjects from the prospective multicenter Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury Pilot study with mTBI (Glasgow Coma Scale 13-15) who were employed at baseline, with completed three-and six-month RTW status, and three-month Acute Concussion Evaluation (ACE), were extracted. Univariate and multivariable analyses were performed for six-month RTW, with focus on baseline employment, three-month RTW, and three-month ACE domains (physical, cognitive, sleep, and/or emotional postconcussional symptoms (PCS)). Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals [CI] were reported. Significance was assessed at p < 0.05. In 152 patients aged 40.7 ± 15.0years, 72% were employed full-time at baseline. Three- and six-month RTW were 77.6% and 78.9%, respectively. At three months, 59.2%, 47.4%, 46.1% and 31.6% scored positive for ACE physical, cognitive, sleep, and emotional PCS domains, respectively. Three-month RTW predicted six-month RTW (OR = 19.80, 95% CI [7.61-51.52]). On univariate analysis, scoring positive in any three-month ACE domain predicted inability for six-month RTW (OR = 0.10-0.11). On multivariable analysis, emotional symptoms predicted inability to six-month RTW (OR = 0.19 [0.04-0.85]). Subjects who scored positive in all four ACE domains were more likely to be unable to RTW at six months (4 domains: 58.3%, vs. 0-to-3 domains: 9.5%; multivariable OR = 0.09 [0.02-0.33]). Three-month post-injury is an important time point at which RTW status and PCS should be assessed, as both are prognostic markers for six-month RTW. Clinicians should be particularly vigilant of patients who present with emotional symptoms, and patients with symptoms across multiple PCS categories, as these patients are at further risk of inability to RTW and may benefit from targeted evaluation and support.
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- 2021
19. Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury in the United States: Rural-Urban Disparities and Considerations
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Yue, John K, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Avalos, Lauro N, and Cage, Tene A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Childhood Injury ,Rural Health ,Unintentional Childhood Injury ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Neurosciences ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Health Services ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,concussion ,cost ,epidemiology ,health disparity ,rural ,traumatic brain injury ,underserved ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a primary cause of pediatric morbidity. The improved characterization of healthcare disparities for pediatric TBI in United States (U.S.) rural communities is needed to advance care. The PubMed database was queried using keywords (("brain/head trauma" OR "brain/head injury") AND "rural/underserved" AND "pediatric/child"). All qualifying articles focusing on rural pediatric TBI, including the subtopics epidemiology (N = 3), intervention/healthcare cost (N = 6), and prevention (N = 1), were reviewed. Rural pediatric TBIs were more likely to have increased trauma and head injury severity, with higher-velocity mechanisms (e.g., motor vehicle collisions). Rural patients were at risk of delays in care due to protracted transport times, inclement weather, and mis-triage to non-trauma centers. They were also more likely than urban patients to be unnecessarily transferred to another hospital, incurring greater costs. In general, rural centers had decreased access to mental health and/or specialist care, while the average healthcare costs were greater. Prevention efforts, such as mandating bicycle helmet use through education by the police department, showed improved compliance in children aged 5-12 years. U.S. rural pediatric patients are at higher risk of dangerous injury mechanisms, trauma severity, and TBI severity compared to urban. The barriers to care include protracted transport times, transfer to less-resourced centers, increased healthcare costs, missing data, and decreased access to mental health and/or specialty care during hospitalization and follow-up. Preventative efforts can be successful and will require an improved multidisciplinary awareness and education.
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- 2020
20. B-Cell Lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2) and Regulation of Apoptosis after Traumatic Brain Injury: A Clinical Perspective
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Deng, Hansen, Yue, John K, Zusman, Benjamin E, Nwachuku, Enyinna L, Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Okonkwo, David O, and Puccio, Ava M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Childhood Injury ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Hematology ,Clinical Research ,Rare Diseases ,Lymphoma ,Cancer ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,Apoptosis ,Biomarkers ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Humans ,Lymphoma ,B-Cell ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Bcl-2 ,Bax ,Bcl-x(L) ,apoptosis ,programmed cell death ,traumatic brain injury ,Bcl-xL ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Background and Objectives: The injury burden after head trauma is exacerbated by secondary sequelae, which leads to further neuronal loss. B-cell lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2) is an anti-apoptotic protein and a key modulator of the programmed cell death (PCD) pathways. The current study evaluates the clinical evidence on Bcl-2 and neurological recovery in patients after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Materials and Methods: All studies in English were queried from the National Library of Medicine PubMed database using the following search terms: (B-cell lymphoma 2/Bcl-2/Bcl2) AND (brain injury/head injury/head trauma/traumatic brain injury) AND (human/patient/subject). There were 10 investigations conducted on Bcl-2 and apoptosis in TBI patients, of which 5 analyzed the pericontutional brain tissue obtained from surgical decompression, 4 studied Bcl-2 expression as a biomarker in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and 1 was a prospective randomized trial. Results: Immunohistochemistry (IHC) in 94 adults with severe TBI showed upregulation of Bcl-2 in the pericontusional tissue. Bcl-2 was detected in 36-75% of TBI patients, while it was generally absent in the non-TBI controls, with Bcl-2 expression increased 2.9- to 17-fold in TBI patients. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) positivity for cell death was detected in 33-73% of TBI patients. CSF analysis in 113 TBI subjects (90 adults, 23 pediatric patients) showed upregulation of Bcl-2 that peaked on post-injury day 3 and subsequently declined after day 5. Increased Bcl-2 in the peritraumatic tissue, rising CSF Bcl-2 levels, and the variant allele of rs17759659 are associated with improved mortality and better outcomes on the Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS). Conclusions: Bcl-2 is upregulated in the pericontusional brain and CSF in the acute period after TBI. Bcl-2 has a neuroprotective role as a pro-survival protein in experimental models, and increased expression in patients can contribute to improvement in clinical outcomes. Its utility as a biomarker and therapeutic target to block neuronal apoptosis after TBI warrants further evaluation.
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- 2020
21. The Role of Blood Biomarkers for Magnetic Resonance Imaging Diagnosis of Traumatic Brain Injury
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Yue, John K, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Avalos, Lauro N, Deng, Hansen, and Wang, Kevin KW
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Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Biomedical Imaging ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Area Under Curve ,Biomarkers ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,ROC Curve ,blood-based biomarkers ,diagnosis ,magnetic resonance imaging ,traumatic brain injury ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
Background and Objectives: The annual global incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is over 10 million. An estimated 29% of TBI patients with negative computed tomography (CT-) have positive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI+) findings. Judicious use of serum biomarkers with MRI may aid in diagnosis of CT-occult TBI. The current manuscript aimed to evaluate the diagnostic, therapeutic and risk-stratification utility of known biomarkers and intracranial MRI pathology. Materials and Methods: The PubMed database was queried with keywords (plasma OR serum) AND (biomarker OR marker OR protein) AND (brain injury/trauma OR head injury/trauma OR concussion) AND (magnetic resonance imaging/MRI) (title/abstract) in English. Seventeen articles on TBI biomarkers and MRI were included: S100 calcium-binding protein B (S100B; N = 6), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP; N = 3), GFAP/ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase-L1 (UCH-L1; N = 2), Tau (N = 2), neurofilament-light (NF-L; N = 2), alpha-synuclein (N = 1), and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor peptide (AMPAR; N = 1). Results: Acute GFAP distinguished CT-/MRI+ from CT-/MRI- (AUC = 0.777, 0.852 at 9-16 h). GFAP discriminated CT-/diffuse axonal injury (DAI+) from controls (AUC = 0.903). Tau correlated directly with number of head strikes and inversely with white matter fractional anisotropy (FA), and a cutoff > 1.5 pg/mL discriminated between DAI+ and DAI- (sensitivity = 74%/specificity = 69%). NF-L had 100% discrimination of DAI in severe TBI and correlated with FA. Low alpha-synuclein was associated with poorer functional connectivity. AMPAR cutoff > 0.4 ng/mL had a sensitivity of 91% and a specificity of 92% for concussion and was associated with minor MRI findings. Low/undetectable S100B had a high negative predictive value for CT/MRI pathology. UCH-L1 showed no notable correlations with MRI. Conclusions: An acute circulating biomarker capable of discriminating intracranial MRI abnormalities is critical to establishing diagnosis for CT-occult TBI and can triage patients who may benefit from outpatient MRI, surveillance and/or follow up with TBI specialists. GFAP has shown diagnostic potential for MRI findings such as DAI and awaits further validation. Tau shows promise in detecting DAI and disrupted functional connectivity. Candidate biomarkers should be evaluated within the context of analytical performance of the assays used, as well as the post-injury timeframe for blood collection relative to MRI abnormalities.
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- 2020
22. Dietary restriction of cysteine and methionine sensitizes gliomas to ferroptosis and induces alterations in energetic metabolism
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Pavan S. Upadhyayula, Dominique M. Higgins, Angeliki Mela, Matei Banu, Athanassios Dovas, Fereshteh Zandkarimi, Purvi Patel, Aayushi Mahajan, Nelson Humala, Trang T. T. Nguyen, Kunal R. Chaudhary, Lillian Liao, Michael Argenziano, Tejaswi Sudhakar, Colin P. Sperring, Benjamin L. Shapiro, Eman R. Ahmed, Connor Kinslow, Ling F. Ye, Markus D. Siegelin, Simon Cheng, Rajesh Soni, Jeffrey N. Bruce, Brent R. Stockwell, and Peter Canoll
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Science - Abstract
Diet intervention is emerging as an option to improve cancer therapy. Here, the authors show that a diet with restrictive cysteine and methionine synergizes with a ferroptosis inducer to increase cell death and survival in glioma preclinical models.
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- 2023
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23. Anticancer Effects of Chitooligosaccharides
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Pavan, S. R., Venkatesan, Jayachandran, Kim, Se-Kwon, Prabhu, Ashwini, and Kim, Se-Kwon, editor
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- 2022
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24. An investigation of the influence of matrix properties and fibre–matrix interface behaviour on the mechanical performance of carbon fibre-reinforced PEKK and PEEK composites
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Ramaswamy, Karthik, Modi, Vedant, Rao, Pavan S., Martin, Pedro P., McCarthy, Conor T., and O'Higgins, Ronan M.
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- 2023
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25. Clinical Utility of Genomic Recurrence Risk Stratification in Early, Hormone-Receptor-Positive, Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Negative Breast Cancer: Real-World Experience
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Choucair, Khalil, Page, Seth J., Mattar, Bassam I., Dakhil, Christopher S., Nabbout, Nassim H., Deutsch, Jeremy M., Truong, Quoc V., Truong, Phu V., Moore, Dennis F., Jr., Cannon, Michael W., Kallail, K. James, Moore, Joseph A., Dakhil, Shaker R., Diab, Radwan, Kamran, Syed, and Reddy, Pavan S.
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- 2023
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26. Advanced cisplatin nanoformulations as targeted drug delivery platforms for lung carcinoma treatment: a review
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Pavan, S. R. and Prabhu, Ashwini
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- 2022
- Full Text
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27. The use of dynamic probing tests and cone penetration tests to verify the effectiveness of expanding polyurethane resin injections for ground improvement
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Dominijanni, A., primary, Gabassi, M., additional, Minardi, A., additional, and Pavan, S., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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28. Chronic convection-enhanced delivery of topotecan for patients with recurrent glioblastoma: a first-in-patient, single-centre, single-arm, phase 1b trial
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Spinazzi, Eleonora F, Argenziano, Michael G, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Banu, Matei A, Neira, Justin A, Higgins, Dominique M O, Wu, Peter B, Pereira, Brianna, Mahajan, Aayushi, Humala, Nelson, Al-Dalahmah, Osama, Zhao, Wenting, Save, Akshay V, Gill, Brian J A, Boyett, Deborah M, Marie, Tamara, Furnari, Julia L, Sudhakar, Tejaswi D, Stopka, Sylwia A, Regan, Michael S, Catania, Vanessa, Good, Laura, Zacharoulis, Stergios, Behl, Meenu, Petridis, Petros, Jambawalikar, Sachin, Mintz, Akiva, Lignelli, Angela, Agar, Nathalie Y R, Sims, Peter A, Welch, Mary R, Lassman, Andrew B, Iwamoto, Fabio M, D’Amico, Randy S, Grinband, Jack, Canoll, Peter, and Bruce, Jeffrey N
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- 2022
- Full Text
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29. Traumatic incudomalleolar dislocation in a pediatric patient
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Pavan S. Krishnan, Matthew M. Dedmon, and Austin S. Rose
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Ossicular chain dislocation ,Conductive hearing loss ,Temporal bone trauma ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
Ossicular chain dislocation with associated conductive hearing loss often warrants surgical intervention such as ossiculoplasty. We present a case report of a 9-year-old male with a left longitudinal temporal bone fracture with associated asymmetric widening of the incudomalleolar joint and secondary hemotympanum. We document the patient's relevant clinical examination, testing, and imaging during clinic visits 2 weeks and 10 weeks after the inciting traumatic event. The patient was improved with no major medical or surgical intervention upon evaluation during the last follow-up visit. We discuss incudomalleolar joint dislocations and benefits of observation despite noting potential ossicular dislocation on imaging following the inciting event.
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- 2023
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30. Assessment of NCD risk using Community Based Assessment Checklist among population in urban field practice area, ManikeswariKalaburagi Karnataka.
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Kalasker, Pavan S., Kolhar, Ullasini, N. K., Brunda, Nadaf, Saifan H., and Shivanand
- Subjects
- *
DISEASE risk factors , *COMMUNITY health workers , *MEDICAL sciences , *CHRONIC obstructive pulmonary disease , *CITY dwellers - Abstract
Background: Non-communicable diseases (NCD) like cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, cancer and chronic pulmonary obstructive diseases have become major public health challenges, increasing at rapid pace and responsible for 70% of premature deaths in India. It is necessary to develop cost effective, easily usable screening tool to identify high risk individuals in the population. Community Based Assessment Checklist (CBAC) is one such tool employed by health workers in primary health centres. Aim of our study was to estimate the NCD risk and find associated variables among adult population of Manikeshwari, an urban filed practice area of Gulbarga Institute of Medical science, Kalaburagi (GIMS) using CBAC as the screening tool. Materials & Methods: This was a descriptive, community based cross-sectional study conducted among 300 randomly selected adult participants with age 30 years conducted in urban field practice area Gulbarga institute of medical sciences, Kalaburagi, Karnataka. CBAC (community-based assessment checklist) was used to screen subjects and assign risk score to individuals. Result: 34% of subjects were found to be having NCD risk score of 4 and above, indicating close follow up as they were at increased risk of developing NCD. Age, gender, education, blood pressure and BMI were found to be statistically significant association with NCD risk score. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
31. IL-10 Signaling in the Tumor Microenvironment of Ovarian Cancer
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Batchu, Ramesh B., Gruzdyn, Oksana V., Kolli, Bala K., Dachepalli, Rajesh, Umar, Prem S., Rai, Sameer K., Singh, Namrata, Tavva, Pavan S., Weaver, Donald W., Gruber, Scott A., Crusio, Wim E., Series Editor, Dong, Haidong, Series Editor, Radeke, Heinfried H., Series Editor, Rezaei, Nima, Series Editor, Xiao, Junjie, Series Editor, and Birbrair, Alexander, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Trans-Oral Approach
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Mallur, Pavan S., Rosen, Clark A., Lee, Byung-Joo, editor, Kwon, Tack-Kyun, editor, and Rosen, Clark A., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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33. Acute Stroke Following Carotid Endarterectomy: Approach and Strategy
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Spinazzi, Eleonora Francesca, Upadhyayula, Pavan S., Shao, Belinda, Meyers, Philip M., Hui, Ferdinand K., editor, Spiotta, Alejandro M., editor, Alexander, Michael J., editor, Hanel, Ricardo A., editor, and Baxter, Blaise William, editor
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- 2021
- Full Text
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34. TEXT MY BP MEDS NOLA: A pilot study of text-messaging and social support to increase hypertension medication adherence
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Daphne P. Ferdinand, Tina K. Reddy, Madeline R. Wegener, Pavan S. Guduri, John J. Lefante, Saihariharan Nedunchezhian, and Keith C. Ferdinand
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Hypertension ,Disparities ,Text-messaging ,Medication adherence ,Community-clinical linkages ,Social determinants of health ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Study objective: Non-Hispanic Black (NHB) adults have high hypertension (HTN) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden. Medication nonadherence limits control and self-measured blood pressure (SMBP) improves diagnosis and adherence. This predominantly NHB cohort pilot, via community-clinical linkages, with uncontrolled HTN and low adherence, utilized bidirectional electronic messaging (BEM) with team-care, to assess medication adherence, quality of life, and BP. Setting: Academic clinic and community sources. Design: Recruitment included: uncontrolled HTN (BP ≥130/80 mm Hg), low adherence (Krousel-Wood Medication Adherence Scale (K-Wood-MAS-4) ≥1 score), and smartphone access. Participants and interventions: Participants (N = 36) received validated Bluetooth-enabled BP devices, synced to smartphones, via a secured cloud-based application. Main outcome measures: Demographics, adherence scores, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) health-related quality of life (HRQOL-14), BP, body mass index (BMI), 8 weeks daily BEM, SMBP and text reminders were obtained. Results: Age was 58.7 ± 12.8 years; BMI 34.8 ± 7.9; 63.9 % female; 88.9 % self-identified NHB adults; 72.2 % with obesity; 74.3 % with diabetes. K-Wood-MAS-4 adherence composite score improved: 2.19 to 1.58 (median −0.5, p = 0.0001). Systolic BP decreased by 10.5 ± 20.0 mm Hg (median −11.0, p = 0.0027). QOL did not significantly change. Mean 7-day average SBP/DBP differences were −4.94 ± 16.82 (median −3.5, p = 0.0285) and −0.17 ± 7.42 (median 0, p = 0.7001), respectively. Social support with taking BP medication was: “yes” (n = 19); 143.8 mm Hg to 131.5 mm Hg (median −12.5, p = 0.0198) and “no” (n = 14); 142.32 mm Hg to 130.25 mm Hg (median −4.0, p = 0.0771). Conclusions: Community-clinical linkages and SMBP with BEM significantly improved medication adherence and SBP without modifying pharmacotherapy.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Anterior Versus Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion: Perioperative Risk Factors and 30-Day Outcomes.
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Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Curtis, Erik I, Yue, John K, Sidhu, Nikki, and Ciacci, Joseph D
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Rehabilitation ,Patient Safety ,Cardiovascular ,6.4 Surgery ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,anterior lumbar interbody fusion ,ACS-NSQIP ,posterior lumbar interbody fusion ,lumbar spine surgery ,early complications ,surgical outcomes ,transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion ,degenerative disc disease ,low back pain ,operation time ,Neurosciences ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundOperative management of lower back pain often necessitates anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) or transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF). Specific pathoanatomic advantages and indications exist for both approaches, and few studies to date have characterized comparative early outcomes.MethodsAdult patients undergoing elective ALIF or TLIF operations were abstracted from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) years 2011-2014. Univariate analyses were performed by surgery cohort for each outcome and adjusted for demographic/clinical variables (age ≥ 65, sex, race, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists physical classification score, functional status, inpatient/outpatient status, smoking, hypertension, Charlson Comorbidity Index) using multivariable regression. Means, standard errors, mean differences (B), odds ratios (ORs), and associated 95% confidence intervals (CIs) are reported. Significance was assessed at P < .05.ResultsOf 8263 subjects (ALIF: 4325, TLIF: 3938), ALIF subjects were younger, less obese, less physically impaired, and had significantly lower rates of hypertension, diabetes, coagulopathy, and previous cardiac surgery. On multivariable analysis, ALIF associated with shorter operative time (B = -11.80 minutes, 95% CI [-16.48, -7.12]; P < .001). Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion was associated with increased incidence of urinary tract infections (UTIs; OR = 1.57, 95% CI [1.10, 2.26]; P = .013) and of blood transfusions (OR = 1.19, 95% CI [1.04, 1.37]; P = .012). Multivariate analysis also demonstrated TLIF associated with shorter hospital length of stay (B = -0.27 days, 95% CI [-0.54, -0.01]; P = .041), and fewer cases of pneumonia (OR = 0.55, 95% CI [0.32, 0.94]; P = .029) and prolonged ventilator dependency (OR = 0.33, 95% CI [0.12, 0.84]; P = .021).ConclusionsComparatively, ALIF patients experienced decreased operative time and decreased incidence of postoperative UTIs and blood transfusions. Anterior lumbar interbody fusion patients were more likely to suffer postoperative pulmonary complications and longer hospital stays. Our data support the notion that both anterior and transforaminal surgical approaches perform comparably in context of 30-day perioperative outcomes.
- Published
- 2018
36. Apolipoprotein E Epsilon 4 Genotype, Mild Traumatic Brain Injury, and the Development of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy.
- Author
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Deng, Hansen, Ordaz, Angel, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Gillis-Buck, Eva M, Suen, Catherine G, Melhado, Caroline G, Mohammed, Nebil, Lam, Troy, and Yue, John K
- Subjects
apolipoprotein E ,chronic traumatic encephalopathy ,concussion ,genetic risk factors ,mild traumatic brain injury ,neurodegenerative disorders ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Injury - Traumatic brain injury ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Injury - Trauma - (Head and Spine) ,Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects - Abstract
The annual incidence of mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) is 3.8 million in the USA with 10⁻15% experiencing persistent morbidity beyond one year. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative disease characterized by accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau, can occur with repetitive MTBI. Risk factors for CTE are challenging to identify because injury mechanisms of MTBI are heterogeneous, clinical manifestations and management vary, and CTE is a postmortem diagnosis, making prospective studies difficult. There is growing interest in the genetic influence on head trauma and development of CTE. Apolipoprotein epsilon 4 (APOE-ε4) associates with many neurologic diseases, and consensus on the ε4 allele as a risk factor is lacking. This review investigates the influence of APOE-ε4 on MTBI and CTE. A comprehensive PubMed literature search (1966 to 12 June 2018) identified 24 unique reports on the topic (19 MTBI studies: 8 athletic, 5 military, 6 population-based; 5 CTE studies: 4 athletic and military, 1 leucotomy group). APOE-ε4 genotype is found to associate with outcomes in 4/8 athletic reports, 3/5 military reports, and 5/6 population-based reports following MTBI. Evidence on the association between APOE-ε4 and CTE from case series is equivocal. Refining modalities to aid CTE diagnosis in larger samples is needed in MTBI.
- Published
- 2018
37. Machine Learning (ML) Methods to Identify Data Breaches
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H. L., Gururaj, primary, M. R., Pooja, additional, and Kumar, Pavan S. P., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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38. Emerging Challenges in Cyber Security
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M. R., Pooja, primary, H. L., Gururaj, additional, and Kumar, Pavan S. P., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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39. HIDDEN CIPHER POLICY ATTRIBUTE BASED ENCRYPTION WITH FAST DECRYPTION ON PERSONAL HEALTH RECORDS
- Author
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Reddy, Dr. M. Sravan kumar, primary, Snehitha, K., additional, Anish, V., additional, Dharani, G V S, additional, and Pavan, S., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Substituting Gadolinium in Brain MRI Using DeepContrast.
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Haoran Sun, Xueqing Liu 0002, Xinyang Feng, Chen Liu 0020, Nanyan Zhu, Sabrina J. Gjerswold-Selleck, Hong-Jian Wei, Pavan S. Upadhyayula, Angeliki Mela, Cheng-Chia Wu, Peter D. Canoll, Andrew F. Laine, J. Thomas Vaughan, Scott A. Small, and Jia Guo
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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41. Design and Development for Image Transmission Through Low Powered Wireless Networks Using Color Space Conversion Module
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Sridhar, C. S., Mahadevan, G., Khadar Basha, S. K., Shobha, B. N., Pavan, S., Xhafa, Fatos, Series Editor, Raj, Jennifer S., editor, Bashar, Abul, editor, and Ramson, S. R. Jino, editor
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Long-term voice changes after thyroidectomy: Results from a validated survey
- Author
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Li, Chun, Lopez, Betzamel, Fligor, Scott, Broekhuis, Jordan M., Maeda, Anthony, Duncan, Sarah, Chen, Hao Wei, Choudhary, Anam, Budwani, Simran, Hasselgren, Per-Olof, Mowschenson, Peter, Mallur, Pavan S., and James, Benjamin C.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Stem cells and chronic spinal cord injury: Overview
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Digma, Leonardino A., primary, Upadhyayula, Pavan S., additional, Martin, Joel R., additional, and Ciacci, Joseph D., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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44. Focused Ultrasound-Mediated Blood-Brain Barrier Opening Increases Delivery and Efficacy of Etoposide for Glioblastoma Treatment
- Author
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Wei, Hong-Jian, Upadhyayula, Pavan S., Pouliopoulos, Antonios N., Englander, Zachary K., Zhang, Xu, Jan, Chia-Ing, Guo, Jia, Mela, Angeliki, Zhang, Zhiguo, Wang, Tony J.C., Bruce, Jeffrey N., Canoll, Peter D., Feldstein, Neil A., Zacharoulis, Stergios, Konofagou, Elisa E., and Wu, Cheng-Chia
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis of the Brainstem as a Clinical Entity.
- Author
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Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Yang, Jason, Yue, John K, and Ciacci, Joseph D
- Subjects
brainstem ,measles ,neurodegeneration ,neuroimaging ,subacute sclerosing panencephalitis - Abstract
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare progressive neurological disorder of early adolescence caused by persistent infection of the measles virus, which remains prevalent worldwide despite an effective vaccine. SSPE is a devastating disease with a characteristic clinical course in subcortical white matter; however, atypical presentations of brainstem involvement may be seen in rare cases. This review summarizes reports to date on brainstem involvement in SSPE, including the clinical course of disease, neuroimaging presentations, and guidelines for treatment. A comprehensive literature search was performed for English-language publications with keywords "subacute sclerosing panencephalitis" and "brainstem" using the National Library of Medicine PubMed database (March 1981-September 2017). Eleven articles focusing on SSPE of the brainstem were included. Predominant brainstem involvement remains uncharacteristic of SSPE, which may lead to misdiagnosis and poor outcome. A number of case reports have demonstrated brainstem involvement associated with other intracranial lesions commonly presenting in later SSPE stages (III and IV). However, brainstem lesions can appear in all stages, independent of higher cortical structures. The varied clinical presentations complicate diagnosis from a neuroimaging perspective. SSPE of the brainstem is a rare but important clinical entity. It may present like canonical SSPE or with unique clinical features such as absence seizures and pronounced ataxia. While SSPE generally progresses to the brainstem, it can also begin with a primary focus of infection in the brainstem. Awareness of varied SSPE presentations can aid in early diagnosis as well as guide management and treatment.
- Published
- 2017
46. Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors for Treating Neurocognitive and Neuropsychiatric Disorders Following Traumatic Brain Injury: An Evaluation of Current Evidence.
- Author
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Yue, John K, Burke, John F, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Winkler, Ethan A, Deng, Hansen, Robinson, Caitlin K, Pirracchio, Romain, Suen, Catherine G, Sharma, Sourabh, Ferguson, Adam R, Ngwenya, Laura B, Stein, Murray B, Manley, Geoffrey T, and Tarapore, Phiroz E
- Subjects
cognition ,depression ,meta-analysis ,postconcussive disorder ,selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,sleep disturbance ,traumatic brain injury ,Injury - Traumatic brain injury ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Injury - Trauma - (Head and Spine) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Mental health ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
The prevalence of neuropsychiatric disorders following traumatic brain injury (TBI) is 20%-50%, and disorders of mood and cognition may remain even after recovery of neurologic function is achieved. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) block the reuptake of serotonin in presynaptic cells to lead to increased serotonergic activity in the synaptic cleft, constituting first-line treatment for a variety of neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric disorders. This review investigates the utility of SSRIs in treating post-TBI disorders. In total, 37 unique reports were consolidated from the Cochrane Central Register and PubMed (eight randomized-controlled trials (RCTs), nine open-label studies, 11 case reports, nine review articles). SSRIs are associated with improvement of depressive but not cognitive symptoms. Pooled analysis using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale demonstrate a significant mean decrease of depression severity following sertraline compared to placebo-a result supported by several other RCTs with similar endpoints. Evidence from smaller studies demonstrates mood improvement following SSRI administration with absent or negative effects on cognitive and functional recovery. Notably, studies on SSRI treatment effects for post-traumatic stress disorder after TBI remain absent, and this represents an important direction of future research. Furthermore, placebo-controlled studies with extended follow-up periods and concurrent biomarker, neuroimaging and behavioral data are necessary to delineate the attributable pharmacological effects of SSRIs in the TBI population.
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- 2017
47. Circadian variability of the initial Glasgow Coma Scale score in traumatic brain injury patients.
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Yue, John K, Robinson, Caitlin K, Winkler, Ethan A, Upadhyayula, Pavan S, Burke, John F, Pirracchio, Romain, Suen, Catherine G, Deng, Hansen, Ngwenya, Laura B, Dhall, Sanjay S, Manley, Geoffrey T, and Tarapore, Phiroz E
- Subjects
CAD ,coronary artery disease ,CCI ,Charlson Comorbidity Index ,CI ,confidence interval ,COPD ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,CRSD ,circadian rhythm sleep disorder ,Circadian ,ED ,emergency department ,Emergency department ,GABA ,gamma-aminobutyric acid ,GCS ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Hospital admission ,ICD-9 ,International Classification of Diseases ,9th Revision ,ICU ,intensive care unit ,IQR ,interquartile range ,ISS ,injury severity score ,MVA ,motor vehicle accident ,NSP ,National Sample Program ,NTDB ,National Trauma Data Bank ,Neurologic deficit ,OR ,odds ratio ,REM ,rapid eye movement ,RHT ,reticulohypothalamic tract ,SCN ,suprachiasmatic nucleus ,SD ,standard deviation ,SE ,standard error ,TBI ,traumatic brain injury ,Traumatic brain injury ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Clinical Research ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
IntroductionThe Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score is the primary method of assessing consciousness after traumatic brain injury (TBI), and the clinical standard for classifying TBI severity. There is scant literature discerning the influence of circadian rhythms or emergency department (ED) arrival hour on this important clinical tool.MethodsRetrospective cohort analysis of adult patients suffering blunt TBI using the National Sample Program of the National Trauma Data Bank, years 2003-2006. ED arrival GCS score was characterized by midday (10 a.m.-4 p.m.) and midnight (12 a.m.-6 a.m.) cohorts (N=24548). Proportions and standard errors are reported for descriptive data. Multivariable regressions using odds ratios (OR), mean differences (B), and their associated 95% confidence intervals [CI] were performed to assess associations between ED arrival hour and GCS score. Statistical significance was assessed at p
- Published
- 2017
48. An Investigation of corrosion of friction welded and post-weld heat-treated AA6061/SiC/graphite hybrid composites
- Author
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Jadamuni Senthilkumar, Pavan S. M. Kumar, and Manickam Balasubramanian
- Subjects
corrosion ,aluminium ,friction welding ,pwht ,hybrid composite. ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
The aluminium-based hybrid metal matrix composites have noteworthy applications in sub-sea installations, structures of deep-sea crawlers, submarine parts, engine cylinders, drum brakes etc., as they possess high strength, corrosion resistance, chemical, and dimensional stability. In this investigation, the pitting corrosion behaviour of friction welded and post-weld heat-treated AA6061/SiC/graphite hybrid composites were analysed. The corrosion rates of AW (as welded), ST (Solution treated), STA (Solution treated and Aged), and AA (Artificially Aged) weld joints were experimentally determined. The corrosion behaviour has been discussed in light of microstructure. The experimental results revealed that the STA joints exhibited better corrosion resistance characteristics as compared to AW, AA, and ST joints. The corrosion rate was high for AW joints, followed by AA and ST joints, respectively. Taking into account the corrosion rates of AW and STA joints, the STA joints have a corrosion rate 34.6% lesser than that of AW joints. A comparison of AA and ST with STA joints reveals that the rate of corrosion for STA joints was 31.1% lesser than that of AA joints and 28.8% lesser than that of ST joints. A lower corrosion rate was observed for STA joints as compared to AA, AW, and ST joints.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Single-cell characterization of macrophages in glioblastoma reveals MARCO as a mesenchymal pro-tumor marker
- Author
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Andrew X. Chen, Robyn D. Gartrell, Junfei Zhao, Pavan S. Upadhyayula, Wenting Zhao, Jinzhou Yuan, Hanna E. Minns, Athanassios Dovas, Jeffrey N. Bruce, Anna Lasorella, Antonio Iavarone, Peter Canoll, Peter A. Sims, and Raul Rabadan
- Subjects
Glioblastoma ,Single-cell RNA-seq ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Macrophages ,Medicine ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Macrophages are the most common infiltrating immune cells in gliomas and play a wide variety of pro-tumor and anti-tumor roles. However, the different subpopulations of macrophages and their effects on the tumor microenvironment remain poorly understood. Methods We combined new and previously published single-cell RNA-seq data from 98,015 single cells from a total of 66 gliomas to profile 19,331 individual macrophages. Results Unsupervised clustering revealed a pro-tumor subpopulation of bone marrow-derived macrophages characterized by the scavenger receptor MARCO, which is almost exclusively found in IDH1-wild-type glioblastomas. Previous studies have implicated MARCO as an unfavorable marker in melanoma and non-small cell lung cancer; here, we find that bulk MARCO expression is associated with worse prognosis and mesenchymal subtype. Furthermore, MARCO expression is significantly altered over the course of treatment with anti-PD1 checkpoint inhibitors in a response-dependent manner, which we validate with immunofluorescence imaging. Conclusions These findings illustrate a novel macrophage subpopulation that drives tumor progression in glioblastomas and suggest potential therapeutic targets to prevent their recruitment.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Vision Threatening Raised Intracranial Pressure Associated with Recreational Nitrous Oxide Use.
- Author
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Goel, Aimee, Khatkar, Pavan S., Hepschke, Jenny L., Zisakis, Athanasios, and Mollan, Susan P.
- Subjects
- *
NITROUS oxide , *INTRACRANIAL pressure , *PSYCHOLOGICAL manifestations of general diseases , *INTRACRANIAL hypertension , *DRUGS of abuse - Abstract
Nitrous oxide is used as an anaesthetic and analgesic agent in the medical setting and is known to cause raised intracranial pressure. The use of nitrous oxide recreationally for the drug's euphoric and relaxant properties has been linked to multiple neurological and psychiatric sequelae including neuropathy, myelopathy, and psychosis. We describe a case of a young person who declared heavy nitrous oxide use resulting in vision-threatening papilloedema secondary to raised intracranial pressure. He underwent emergency lumbar drainage alongside high-dose acetazolamide and parenteral vitamin B12 injections. To our knowledge, there have yet to be other reports of cases where heavy nitrous oxide use has caused secondary pseudotumor cerebri syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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