27 results on '"R. Waid"'
Search Results
2. Grand Rounds
- Author
-
G. Fayolle, W. Levick, R. Lajiness-O'Neill, P. Fastenau, S. Briskin, N. Bass, M. Silva, E. Critchfield, R. Nakase-Richardson, J. Hertza, A. Loughan, R. Perna, S. Northington, S. Boyd, A. Anderson, S. Peery, M. Chafetz, M. Maris, A. Ramezani, C. Sylvester, K. Goldberg, M. Constantinou, M. Karekla, J. Hall, M. Edwards, V. Balldin, A. Strutt, V. Pavlik, C. Marquez de la Plata, M. Cullum, l. lacritz, J. Reisch, P. Massman, D. Royall, R. Barber, S. Younes, A. Wiechmann, S. O'Bryant, K. Patel, J. Suhr, S. Chari, J. Yokoyama, B. Bettcher, A. Karydas, B. Miller, J. Kramer, R. Zec, S. Fritz, S. Kohlrus, R. Robbs, T. Ala, K. Gifford, N. Cantwell, R. Romano, A. Jefferson, A. Holland, S. Newton, J. Bunting, M. Coe, J. Carmona, D. Harrison, A. Puente, D. Terry, C. Faraco, C. Brown, A. Patel, A. Watts, A. Kent, J. Siegel, S. Miller, W. Ernst, G. Chelune, J. Holdnack, J. Sheehan, K. Duff, O. Pedraza, J. Crawford, L. Miller, V. Hobson Balldin, H. Benavides, L. Johnson, L. Tshuma, N. Dezhkam, L. Hayes, C. Love, B. Stephens, F. Webbe, K. Mulligan, K. Dunham, S. Shadi, C. Sofko, R. Denney, S. Rolin, J. Sibson, S. Ogbeide, M. Glover, A. Warchol, B. Hunter, C. Nichols, C. Riccio, M. Cohen, A. Dennison, T. Wasserman, S. Schleicher-Dilks, M. Adler, C. Golden, T. Olivier, B. LeMonda, J. McGinley, A. Pritchett, L. Chang, C. Cloak, E. Cunningham, G. Lohaugen, J. Skranes, T. Ernst, E. Parke, N. Thaler, L. Etcoff, D. Allen, P. Andrews, S. McGregor, R. Daniels, N. Hochsztein, E. Miles-Mason, Y. Granader, M. Vasserman, W. MacAllister, B. Casto, K. Patrick, F. Hurewitz, D. Chute, A. Booth, C. Koch, G. Roid, N. Balkema, J. Kiefel, L. Bell, A. Maerlender, T. Belkin, J. Katzenstein, C. Semerjian, V. Culotta, E. Band, R. Yosick, T. Burns, A. Arenivas, D. Bearden, K. Olson, K. Jacobson, S. Ubogy, C. Sterling, E. Taub, A. Griffin, T. Rickards, G. Uswatte, D. Davis, K. Sweeney, A. Llorente, A. Boettcher, B. Hill, D. Ploetz, J. Kline, M. Rohling, J. O'Jile, K. Holler, V. Petrauskas, J. Long, J. Casey, T. Duda, S. Hodsman, S. Stricker, S. Martner, R. Hansen, F. Ferraro, R. Tangen, A. Hanratty, M. Tanabe, E. O'Callaghan, B. Houskamp, L. McDonald, L. Pick, D. Guardino, T. Pietz, K. Kayser, R. Gray, A. Letteri, A. Crisologo, G. Witkin, J. Sanders, M. Mrazik, A. Harley, M. Phoong, T. Melville, D. La, R. Gomez, L. Berthelson, J. Robbins, E. Lane, P. Rahman, L. Konopka, A. Fasfous, D. Zink, N. Peralta-Ramirez, M. Perez-Garcia, S. Su, G. Lin, T. Kiely, A. Schatzberg, J. Keller, J. Dykstra, M. Feigon, L. Renteria, M. Fong, L. Piper, E. Lee, J. Vordenberg, C. Contardo, S. Magnuson, N. Doninger, L. Luton, D. Drane, A. Phelan, W. Stricker, A. Poreh, F. Wolkenberg, J. Spira, J. DeRight, R. Jorgensen, L. Fitzpatrick, S. Crowe, S. Woods, K. Doyle, E. Weber, M. Cameron, J. Cattie, C. Cushman, I. Grant, K. Blackstone, D. Moore, B. Roberg, M. Somogie, J. Thelen, C. Lovelace, J. Bruce, A. Gerstenecker, B. Mast, I. Litvan, D. Hargrave, R. Schroeder, W. Buddin, L. Baade, R. Heinrichs, J. Boseck, K. Berry, E. Koehn, A. Davis, B. Meyer, B. Gelder, Z. Sussman, P. Espe-Pfeifer, M. Musso, A. Barker, G. Jones, W. Gouvier, V. Johnson, L. Zaytsev, M. Freier-Randall, G. Sutton, E. Ringdahl, J. Olsen, D. Byrd, M. Rivera-Mindt, R. Fellows, S. Morgello, V. Wheaton, S. Jaehnert, C. Ellis, H. Olavarria, J. Loftis, M. Huckans, P. Pimental, J. Frawley, M. Welch, K. Jennette, E. Rinehardt, M. Schoenberg, L. Strober, H. Genova, G. Wylie, J. DeLuca, N. Chiaravalloti, E. Ibrahim, A. Seiam, S. Bohlega, H. Lloyd, M. Goldberg, J. Marceaux, R. Fallows, K. McCoy, N. Yehyawi, E. Luther, R. Hilsabeck, R. Fulton, P. Stevens, S. Erickson, P. Dodzik, R. Williams, J. Dsurney, L. Najafizadeh, J. McGovern, F. Chowdhry, A. Acevedo, A. Bakhtiar, N. Karamzadeh, F. Amyot, A. Gandjbakhche, M. Haddad, M. Johnson, J. Wade, L. Harper, A. Barghi, V. Mark, G. Christopher, D. Marcus, M. Spady, J. Bloom, A. Zimmer, M. Miller, D. Schuster, H. Ebner, B. Mortimer, G. Palmer, M. Happe, J. Paxson, B. Jurek, J. Graca, J. Meyers, R. Lange, T. Brickell, L. French, G. Iverson, J. Shewchuk, B. Madler, M. Heran, J. Brubacher, B. Ivins, M. Baldassarre, T. Paper, A. Herrold, A. Chin, D. Zgaljardic, K. Oden, M. Lambert, S. Dickson, R. Miller, P. Plenger, E. Sutherland, C. Glatts, P. Schatz, K. Walker, N. Philip, S. McClaughlin, S. Mooney, E. Seats, V. Carnell, J. Raintree, D. Brown, C. Hodges, E. Amerson, C. Kennedy, J. Moore, C. Ferris, T. Roebuck-Spencer, A. Vincent, C. Bryan, D. Catalano, A. Warren, K. Monden, S. Driver, P. Chau, R. Seegmiller, M. Baker, S. Malach, J. Mintz, R. Villarreal, A. Peterson, S. Leininger, C. Strong, J. Donders, V. Merritt, G. Vargas, A. Rabinowitz, P. Arnett, E. Whipple, M. Schultheis, K. Robinson, D. Iacovone, R. Biester, D. Alfano, M. Nicholls, P. Klas, E. Jeffay, K. Zakzanis, M. Vandermeer, M. Womble, E. Corley, C. Considine, N. Fichtenberg, J. Harrison, M. Pollock, A. Mouanoutoua, A. Brimager, P. Lebby, K. Sullivan, S. Edmed, K. Kieffer, M. McCarthy, L. Wiegand, H. Lindsey, M. Hernandez, Y. Noniyeva, Y. Lapis, M. Padua, J. Poole, B. Brooks, C. McKay, W. Meeuwisse, C. Emery, A. Mazur-Mosiewicz, E. Sherman, M. Kirkwood, J. Gunner, A. Miele, G. Silk-Eglit, J. Lynch, R. McCaffrey, J. Stewart, J. Tsou, D. Scarisbrick, R. Chan, A. Bure-Reyes, L. Cortes, S. Gindy, C. Biddle, D. Shah, P. Jaberg, R. Moss, M. Horner, K. VanKirk, C. Dismuke, T. Turner, W. Muzzy, M. Dunnam, G. Warner, K. Donnelly, J. Donnelly, J. Kittleson, C. Bradshaw, M. Alt, S. Margolis, E. Ostroy, K. Higgins, K. Eng, S. Akeson, J. Wall, J. Davis, J. Hansel, B. Wang, R. Gervais, M. Greiffenstein, J. Denning, E. VonDran, E. Campbell, C. Brockman, G. Teichner, R. Waid, B. Buican, P. Armistead-Jehle, J. Bailie, A. Dilay, M. Cottingham, C. Boyd, S. Asmussen, J. Neff, S. Schalk, L. Jensen, J. DenBoer, S. Hall, E. Holcomb, B. Axelrod, G. Demakis, C. Rimland, J. Ward, M. Ross, M. Bailey, A. Stubblefield, J. Smigielski, J. Geske, V. Karpyak, C. Reese, G. Larrabee, L. Allen, M. Celinski, J. Gilman, C. LaDuke, D. DeMatteo, K. Heilbrun, T. Swirsky-Sacchetti, A. Dedman, K. Withers, T. Deneen, J. Fisher, B. Spray, R. Savage, H. Wiener, J. Tyer, V. Ningaonkar, B. Devlin, R. Go, V. Sharma, R. Fontanetta, C. Calderon, S. Coad, R. Fontaneta, M. Vertinski, R. Verbiest, J. Snyder, J. Kinney, A. Rach, J. Young, E. Crouse, D. Schretlen, J. Weaver, A. Buchholz, B. Gordon, S. Macciocchi, R. Seel, R. Godsall, J. Brotsky, A. DiRocco, E. Houghton-Faryna, E. Bolinger, C. Hollenbeck, J. Hart, B. Lee, G. Strauss, J. Adams, D. Martins, L. Catalano, J. Waltz, J. Gold, G. Haas, L. Brown, J. Luther, G. Goldstein, E. Kelley, C. Raba, L. Trettin, H. Solvason, R. Buchanan, D. Baldock, J. Etherton, T. Phelps, S. Richmond, B. Tapscott, S. Thomlinson, L. Cordeiro, G. Wilkening, M. Parikh, L. Graham, M. Grosch, L. Hynan, M. Weiner, C. Cullum, C. Menon, L. Lacritz, M. Castro-Couch, F. Irani, A. Houshyarnejad, M. Norman, F. Fonseca, B. Browne, J. Alvarez, Y. Jiminez, V. Baez, C. Resendiz, B. Scott, G. Farias, M. York, V. Lozano, M. Mahoney, M. Hernandez Mejia, E. Pacheco, A. Homs, R. Ownby, J. Nici, J. Hom, J. Lutz, R. Dean, H. Finch, S. Pierce, J. Moses, S. Mann, J. Feinberg, A. Choi, M. Kaminetskaya, C. Pierce, M. Zacharewicz, B. Gavett, J. Horwitz, J. Ory, K. Carbuccia, L. Morra, S. Garcon, M. Lucas, P. Donovick, K. Whearty, K. Campbell, S. Camlic, D. Brinckman, L. Ehrhart, V. Weisser, J. Medaglia, A. Merzagora, G. Reckess, T. Ho, S. Testa, H. Woolery, C. Farcello, N. Klimas, J. Meyer, F. Barwick, K. Drayer, J. Galusha, A. Schmitt, R. Livingston, R. Stewart, L. Quarles, M. Pagitt, C. Barke, A. Baker, N. Baker, N. Cook, D. Ahern, S. Correia, L. Resnik, K. Barnabe, D. Gnepp, M. Benjamin, Z. Zlatar, A. Garcia, S. Harnish, B. Crosson, L. Vaughan, A. Fedio, J. Sexton, S. Cummings, A. Logemann, N. Lassiter, P. Fedio, A. Gremillion, D. Nemeth, T. Whittington, J. Reckow, C. Lewandowski, J. Cole, A. Lewandowski, J. Spector, L. Ford-Johnson, J. Lengenfelder, J. Sumowski, C. Morse, J. McKeever, L. Zhao, T. Leist, J. Marcinak, K. Piecora, K. Al-Khalil, P. Martin, L. Thompson, W. Kowalczyk, S. Golub, E. Lemann, J. Piehl, N. Rita, L. Moss, R. Nogin, C. Drapeau, S. Malm, L. Armstrong, R. Glidewell, W. Orr, G. Mears, C. Allen, E. Pierson, B. Kavanaugh, F. Tayim, S. Llanes, K. Poston, J. Beathard, P. Stolberg, W. Jones, J. Mayfield, J. Weller, P. Demireva, K. McInerney, T. Riddle, M. Primus, J. Highsmith, D. Everhart, K. Lehockey, S. Sullivan, S. Mandava, B. Murphy, L. Lalwani, M. Rosselli, R. Carrasco, S. Zuckerman, J. Brand, M. Rivera Mindt, S. Schaffer, K. Alper, O. Devinsky, W. Barr, K. Langer, J. Fraiman, J. Scagliola, E. Roman, A. Martinez, K. Konopacki, A. Juliano, D. Whiteside, G. Widmann, M. Franzwa, B. Sokal, E. Morgan, M. Bondi, L. Delano-Wood, R. Cormier, N. Cumley, M. Elek, M. Green, A. Kruger, L. Pacheco, G. Robinson, H. Welch, D. Parriott, S. Loe, L. Hughes, L. Natta, W. Quenicka, K. McGoldirck, T. Bennett, H. Soper, S. Collier, M. Connolly, M. Di Pinto, E. Handel, K. Davidson, E. Livers, S. Frantz, J. Allen, T. Jerard, S. Sakhai, S. Barney, K. McGoldrick, J. Sordahl, N. Torrence, and S. John
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,General Medicine - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. MatricS—A novel tool for monitoring professional role development in surgical disciplines
- Author
-
U. Necknig, H. Leyh, R. Waidelich, L. Gernhold, J. Kiesewetter, and M. Weidenbusch
- Subjects
medical education ,mentoring ,postgraduate ,role development ,CanMeds ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
IntroductionMentoring is an effective method for human resource development. Monitoring the process is important for individual mentee/mentor pairs as well as for program directors. Due to individual personality differences of both mentees and mentors and their respective interactions, it is challenging to monitor the individual development process of mentees in a structured manner. This study investigates to what extent a novel instrument, the mentee-based assessment tool for role development of interpersonal competencies in surgical professions (MatricS) can adequately monitor the professional role development process of residents during an established mentoring program.Material and methodsIn a prospective longitudinal study, the competence development of 31 mentees in two subsequent cohorts was assessed by a modified role matrix based on Canadian Medical Education Directives for Specialists. The evaluation focused on three defined roles (D, developer; N, networker; M, multiplicator) at three levels (private, employer-related, national/international) with four stages of development. For validation of mentee self-assessments, the assessments of the respective mentors were recorded alongside. For correlation analyses, Pearson coefficients were calculated, pre-post-comparisons were done by paired t-tests; significance was assumed at p 75% of all roles and levels.ConclusionThe role development process during mentoring can be reliably monitored by using MatricS. MatricS scores highly correlate between mentees and mentors, indicating that mentee self-assessments are suitable and sufficient for monitoring. These findings help to lessen the work burden on senior surgeons and thus can help to increase the acceptance of mentoring programs in surgical disciplines.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Neurocognitive performance, alcohol withdrawal, and effects of a combination of flumazenil and gabapentin in alcohol dependence
- Author
-
Joseph P, Schacht, Patrick K, Randall, L R, Waid, Alicia M, Baros, Patricia K, Latham, Tara M, Wright, Hugh, Myrick, and Raymond F, Anton
- Subjects
Adult ,Flumazenil ,Male ,Alcohol Drinking ,Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids ,Glutamic Acid ,Middle Aged ,Article ,Substance Withdrawal Syndrome ,Alcoholism ,Cognition ,Treatment Outcome ,Recurrence ,Humans ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Amines ,Gabapentin ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid - Abstract
Among some alcohol-dependent individuals, early alcohol abstinence is marked by alcohol withdrawal (AW), a phenomenon mediated by GABA and glutamate signaling. We previously reported that a combination of 2 medications that affect GABA and glutamate tone, gabapentin and flumazenil, more effectively reduced drinking among individuals with higher pretreatment AW (Anton et al., 2009). This study evaluated whether this finding is related to changes in neurocognitive performance, which is also affected by cortical GABA and glutamate tone.Neurocognitive performance was assessed at baseline and twice during the first week of treatment among 60 alcohol-dependent participants in the previously published clinical trial.AW was associated with poorer baseline performance on 4 of 8 measures, and individuals with higher baseline AW who received the gabapentin and flumazenil combination demonstrated greater improvement on a measure of response inhibition than those with lower AW or those who received a combination of placebos. Improvement in response inhibition during the first week and medication group interacted in their effect on subsequent drinking, such that improvement predicted greater abstinence only among individuals who received gabapentin and flumazenil. Improvement on other neurocognitive measures was neither differentially impacted by medication or baseline AW nor related to subsequent drinking.Taken together, these data suggest that acute AW accounts for a small proportion of variance in neurocognitive performance, that gabapentin and flumazenil slightly improve response inhibition during early abstinence, and that such improvement may somewhat reduce later drinking. However, these medications may not affect other neurocognitive domains.
- Published
- 2011
5. Neuropsychological performance deficits in adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder
- Author
-
D E, Johnson, J N, Epstein, L R, Waid, P K, Latham, K E, Voronin, and R F, Anton
- Abstract
Neuropsychological deficits in children diagnosed with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have been well documented utilizing various neuropsychological tests. Only recently has research begun to examine if similar deficits are present in adults with ADHD. A neuropsychological testing battery was constructed that assessed verbal learning and memory, psychomotor speed, and sustained attention--all demonstrated to be deficient in individuals with ADHD. Fifty-six self-referred nonmedicated adults with a DSM-IV diagnosis of ADHD and 38 normal comparison adults participated. ADHD adults demonstrated verbal and nonverbal memory deficits and decreased psychomotor speed compared to normal controls. Differences between ADHD and normal adults were not documented on traditional measures of executive functioning. A pattern of results emerged whereby ADHD adults' performance, particularly with regard to psychomotor speed, became more impaired as task complexity increased. This study's results largely corroborate similar neuropsychological testing results in ADHD children and recent ADHD adult findings, and support a frontal lobe dysfunction hypothesis of ADHD.
- Published
- 2003
6. Psychiatric disorders in patients with fibromyalgia. A multicenter investigation
- Author
-
S A, Epstein, G, Kay, D, Clauw, R, Heaton, D, Klein, L, Krupp, J, Kuck, V, Leslie, D, Masur, M, Wagner, R, Waid, and S, Zisook
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Fibromyalgia ,Personality Inventory ,Mental Disorders ,Sick Role ,Humans ,Female ,Comorbidity ,Middle Aged ,Somatoform Disorders ,Aged - Abstract
The authors conducted an investigation in four tertiary-care centers to determine if psychiatric comorbidity and psychological variables were predictive of functional impairment in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). Seventy-three individuals were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R, the Rand 36-item Health Survey (SF-36), and multiple self-report measures. The patients with FMS were found to have a high lifetime and current prevalence of major depression and panic disorder. The most common disorders were major depression (lifetime [L] = 68%, current [C] = 22%); dysthymia (10% [C only]); panic disorder (L = 16%, C = 7%); and simple phobia (L = 16%, C = 12%). The self-report scales revealed significant elevations in depression, anxiety, neuroticism, and hypochondriasis. Functional impairment on all measures of the SF-36 was severe (e.g., physical functioning = 45.5 and role limitations due to physical problems = 20.0). Stepwise multiple-regression analysis revealed that current anxiety was the only variable that predicted a significant proportion of the variance (29%) in SF-36 physical functioning. Thus, in this multicenter study, the persons with FMS exhibited marked functional impairment, high levels of some lifetime and current psychiatric disorders, and significant current psychological distress. Current anxiety level appears to be an important correlate of functional impairment in individuals with FMS.
- Published
- 1999
7. Effectiveness of a continuum of care using brief and partial hospitalization for agitated dementia patients
- Author
-
R R Sampson, A Meeks, M Stuckey, C Colenda, D L Bachman, L R Waid, Jacobo Mintzer, M Saladin, and L Lewis
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,South Carolina ,Day care ,Neuropsychological Tests ,law.invention ,Partial hospitalization ,Ambulatory care ,law ,Behavior Therapy ,Health care ,Activities of Daily Living ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Psychomotor Agitation ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Patient Care Team ,business.industry ,Aggression ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Ambulatory ,Physical therapy ,Psychotherapy, Brief ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Day Care, Medical - Abstract
Objective A behavioral intensive care unit was originally designed as a 21-day inpatient program for treating agitation among demented patients, one of the most common behavioral disorders in this group. Due to the need to dramatically reduce length of stay and create alternative care environments, the original model was modified into an integrated continuum of care blending inpatient and outpatient care and partial hospitalization that reduced hospitalization from 21 to an average of seven days. This quasiexperimental study compared the effectiveness of the inpatient and continuum-of-care programs and conducted cost analyses. Methods Subjects were inpatients diagnosed with both dementia and agitation. Outcomes of 68 patients treated in the inpatient program were compared with those of 110 patients treated in the continuum of care. The primary outcome measure was patients' score on the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory, which provides a total agitation score and scores on three factors describing agitated behavior--physically aggressive behavior, verbally aggressive behavior, and nonaggressive behavior. Results A statistically significant reduction in agitation was found for patients treated in both programs, with no significant difference in outcome between programs. Patients in both programs showed significant improvements in physical aggression, verbal aggression, and nonaggressive behavior. The cost-effectiveness analysis revealed clear advantages for the continuum-of-care program, especially in the area of aggressive behaviors. Conclusions The data suggest that the restructured program is an effective and economically feasible intervention.
- Published
- 1997
8. Cross-cultural perspectives: agitation in demented patients in the United States
- Author
-
J E, Mintzer, P, Nietert, K, Costa, and L R, Waid
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,United States ,White People ,Black or African American ,Aggression ,Alzheimer Disease ,Humans ,Dementia ,Female ,Mental Status Schedule ,Geriatric Assessment ,Psychomotor Agitation ,Aged - Published
- 1996
9. Platypnea-Orthodeoxia Syndrome: What Is the Driving Force?
- Author
-
Edwards, Adam L., primary, Cornatzer, Eric, additional, and Shelton, R. Waid, additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Chronic neurobehavioral deficits associated with decompression sickness: A case study
- Author
-
J. S. Hayes and L. R. Waid
- Subjects
Decompression sickness ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Inhibition of cholinergic, neurogenic, and non-cholinergic/non-neurogenic detrusor contractions by the Rac inhibitor EHT1864
- Author
-
B. Li, Q. Yu, X. Wang, A. Tamalunas, R. Waidelich, C.G. Stief, C. Gratzke, and M. Hennenberg
- Subjects
Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Inhibition of human prostate smooth muscle contraction by the integrin α2β1-selective inhibitor BTT3033 and the integrin-linked kinase inhibitor Cpd22
- Author
-
B. Li, X. Wang, R. Wang, B. Rutz, A. Ciotkowska, C. Gratzke, A. Tamalunas, R. Waidelich, C.G. Stief, and M. Hennenberg
- Subjects
Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The STK-16 inhibitor STK16-IN-1 inhibits non-neurogenic/non-adrenergic smooth muscle contractions in the human prostate and the human male detrusor
- Author
-
B. Li, Q. Yu, X. Wang, R. Wang, A. Tamalunas, B. Rutz, A. Ciotkowska, R. Waidelich, C.G. Stief, and M. Hennenberg
- Subjects
Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Physical Attractiveness, Romantic Love, and Equity Restoration in Dating Relationships
- Author
-
Joseph W. Critelli and Lewis R. Waid
- Subjects
Attractiveness ,Equity (economics) ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Equity theory ,Physical attractiveness ,Attraction ,Romance ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Psychology ,Interpersonal interaction ,Social psychology ,Dyad - Abstract
Measures of physical attractiveness, romantic love, and dominance were given to a sample of 123 dating couples. Contrary to expectation, attractive subjects were not loved more than those judged as less attractive. As suggested by equity theory, however, subjects who believed that their partners were the more attractive member of the dyad loved their partners more (p < .05) and indicated greater submission in their relationships (p < .01) than those who believed that they were the more attractive member. The results suggest that as the dating relationship progresses, the relative difference in attractiveness between partners may become a more important determinant of attraction than overall level of attractiveness.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Differences in Self-Monitoring of Expressive Behavior in Depressed and Nondepressed Individuals
- Author
-
Ann Burns Stricklin, Sara Rahaim, Lewis R. Waid, and Kevin J. Kennelly
- Subjects
03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social skills ,Self-monitoring ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,General Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,030227 psychiatry ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Recent research has indicated an association between depression and lack of social skill. The present investigation sought to extend these findings to the self-monitoring of expressive behavior by administering Snyder's (1974) Self-monitoring Scale and Beck's (1967) Depression Inventory to samples from two very different populations, community-residing women volunteers and psychiatric patients. It was predicted that nondepressed subjects would tend to be high in self-monitoring their expressive behavior, while depressed subjects would tend to monitor their expressive behavior less. Data from both samples supported this hypothesis and were discussed as evidence for the validity of the self-monitoring scale.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Behavioral, psychological, and historical correlates of MacAndrew scale scores among male alcoholics
- Author
-
Joseph P. Giacinto, Dean G. Kilpatrick, John C. Roitzsch, Lewis R. Waid, Patrick M. O'Neil, and William C. Miller
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Rod and frame test ,General Medicine ,Profile of mood states ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory ,medicine ,Sensation seeking ,Anxiety ,Personality test ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,MacAndrew scale ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Male alcoholic veterans (N=194) were divided into four groups on the basis of their scores on the MacAndrew scale (MAC) of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and compared on psychological and sociodemographic measures and self-reported alcohol, drug, and legal histories. Nineteen subjects scored in the “nonalcoholic” (NA) range of the MAC (i.e., false negatives, MAC≤23). Remaining subjects, scoring in the “alcoholic” range of the MAC, were divided into thirds by MAC scores (lowest third, L-MAC=24–28,n=53; middle third, M-MAC=29–31,n=63; highest third, H-MAC>31,n=59). Groups did not differ on age, any important sociodemographic variables, or scores on the Profile of Mood States, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Symptom Checklist-90, or Rod and Frame Test. Significant group differences were obtained on several MMPI scales. Lower MAC scores were associated with higher scores onL, K, D, andR, and lower scores onMa. There was also a tendency for subjects with lower MAC scores to score higher onSi. NA subjects began drinking and heavy drinking later than other subjects, although groups did not differ on duration, quantity, or frequency of drinking. Subjects with higher MAC scores more often reported drinking in bars, drinking liquor straight, alcohol-related job disruptions, and previous use of marijuana, hallucinogens, and barbiturates. Subjects with higher MAC scores had more often been arrested, convicted, fined, and jailed for alcohol-related offenses but not for other offenses. Results are examined with respect to MacAndrew's distinction between primary and secondary alcoholics and with respect to the possible relations of MAC to important person variables such as sensation seeking.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Computer Diagnosis and Discriminate Analysis Decision Schemes
- Author
-
J. Townes, R. Waid, K. Bryan, M. Huque, Samuel J. Dwyer, and A. W. Templeton
- Subjects
Heart Defects, Congenital ,Polynomial ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Diseases ,Heart disease ,Computers ,Heart malformation ,business.industry ,Pattern recognition ,Linear discriminant analysis ,medicine.disease ,Radiography ,Text mining ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Artificial intelligence ,Cluster analysis ,business - Abstract
Linear decision, clustering, and polynomial discriminate analysis decision schemes were used to distinguish normal from abnormal hearts in 907 cases. Heart disease was correctly diagnosed in 74 per cent. More significantly, when all cases of heart disease were grouped together and compared with normal hearts, the decision schemes diagnosed abnormalities correctly in 98 per cent. If adequate data can be collected, a computerized scheme can identify important measurements with diagnostic results similar to those achieved by a radiologist.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Giant Cell Carcinoma of the Lung
- Author
-
Shin, Myung S., Jackson, Larry K., Shelton, R. Waid, and Greene, Reginald E.
- Abstract
Giant cell carcinoma of the lung is an unusual form of pulmonary malignancy that follows an extremely aggressive clinical course. We report the clinical and roentgenographic manifestations of 14 patients with pathologically proven giant cell carcinoma of the lung, and compare our data to other reports in the literature. Our patients often presented with or developed constitutional or nonthoracic symptoms. This neoplasm was characterized by early evidence of widespread metastases. However, extension of tumor to the chest wall was not as frequent in our series as has been previously described. The survival from the time of diagnosis was extremely short. Any hope of successful treatment of this neoplasm depends on prompt, early diagnosis. Pulmonary giant cell carcinoma should be included in the differential diagnosis of large, round or oval, sharply outlined peripheral lung masses.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. ChemInform Abstract: CONTROLLED SYNTHESES AND STRUCTURES OF BIMETALLIC COMPLEXES OF TWO BIDENTATE PHOSPHINE-PHOSPHIDO LIGANDS
- Author
-
D. W. MEEK, R. WAID, K. D. TAU, R. M. KIRCHNER, and C. N. MORIMOTO
- Subjects
General Medicine - Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A common sense approach for treatment of myofascial pain-dysfunction syndrome
- Author
-
D J, Mishkin, J L, Fourrier, L R, Shelley, and L R, Waid
- Subjects
Humans ,Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction Syndrome - Published
- 1985
21. Case report of carbamazepine treatment of organic brain syndrome with psychotic features
- Author
-
R F, Anton, L R, Waid, M, Fossey, and P, AuBuchon
- Subjects
Male ,Carbamazepine ,Neurocognitive Disorders ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Neuropsychological Tests - Abstract
Impaired cognitive function in the presence of psychotic symptoms is often difficult to diagnose and treat. Carbamazepine, in a longitudinally controlled fashion, improved orientation, memory, and psychotic symptoms in a patient with previously diagnosed bipolar illness and multi-infarct dementia.
- Published
- 1986
22. The Mini-OTEC Test
- Author
-
R. Waid
- Subjects
Current (stream) ,Engineering ,Thermal efficiency ,Electric power system ,Ocean thermal energy conversion ,business.industry ,Marine technology ,Electric power ,Energy technology ,business ,Surface water ,Marine engineering - Abstract
MINI-OTEC is the first at-sea, closed-loop OTEC system using warm surface water and cold deep water to generate electrical power. The thermal resource and current environment at the test site, Keahole Point, Hawaii, are discussed. The OTEC power system and components are described as are the components of the ocean system. At-sea operating experience of an OTEC plant, including biofouling effects and countermeasure effectiveness, are the primary objectives of the project. The characteristics and loads of vortex-induced flow around the cold water pipe are described.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Examining effective communication in nursing practice during COVID-19: A large-scale qualitative study.
- Author
-
Simonovich SD, Spurlark RS, Badowski D, Krawczyk S, Soco C, Ponder TN, Rhyner D, Waid R, Aquino E, Lattner C, Wiesemann LM, Webber-Ritchey K, Li S, and Tariman JD
- Subjects
- Communication, Humans, Leadership, Pandemics, Qualitative Research, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to conduct a primary examination of the qualitative communication experiences of nurses during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States., Background: Ambiguity in ever-evolving knowledge on how to provide care during COVID-19. Remaining safe has created a sense of urgency, which has in turn created the need for organizations to quickly alter their operational plans and protocols to support measures that increase capacity and establish a culture of safe care and clear communication. However, no known study has described communication in nursing practice during COVID-19., Methods: Utilizing qualitative descriptive methodology, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 100 nurse participants from May to September 2020 and recorded for thematic analysis. The consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ), a 32-item checklist, were used to ensure detailed and comprehensive reporting of this qualitative study protocol., Findings: Study participants shared descriptions of how effective communication positively impacted patient care and nursing practice experiences during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. The thematic network analyses identified the importance of effective communication across three levels: (1) organizational leadership, (2) unit leadership and (3) nurse-to-nurse communication. Within this structure, three organizing themes, essential to effective communication, were described including (a) presence, (b) education and (c) emotional support., Conclusion: Examining existing crisis communication policies and procedures across healthcare organizations is imperative to maintain highly relevant, innovative, and data-driven policies and strategies that are fundamental to preserving quality patient care and supporting optimal nursing practice., Implications for Nursing Policy and Health Policy: Effective communication is critical to support nurses through extended periods of crisis. COVID-19 represents a unique contemporary challenge to the nursing workforce given the high stress and prolonged strain it has created for both human and healthcare supply resources. There is value in nurses' presence at local, unit level and organizational leadership levels to convey critical information that directly informs leadership decision-making during unprecedented emergencies such as the COVID-19 pandemic., (© 2021 International Council of Nurses.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Efficacy of a combination of flumazenil and gabapentin in the treatment of alcohol dependence: relationship to alcohol withdrawal symptoms.
- Author
-
Anton RF, Myrick H, Baros AM, Latham PK, Randall PK, Wright TM, Stewart SH, Waid R, and Malcolm R
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Alcohol Drinking prevention & control, Alcoholism psychology, Amines adverse effects, Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids adverse effects, Double-Blind Method, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Flumazenil adverse effects, GABA Modulators adverse effects, Gabapentin, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Logistic Models, Male, Medication Adherence, Middle Aged, Patient Selection, Sleep drug effects, Substance Withdrawal Syndrome psychology, Temperance, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid adverse effects, Alcoholism drug therapy, Amines administration & dosage, Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids administration & dosage, Flumazenil administration & dosage, GABA Modulators administration & dosage, Substance Withdrawal Syndrome drug therapy, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid administration & dosage
- Abstract
Improved treatment of alcohol dependence is a high priority, including defining subtypes that might respond differently. We evaluated a medication combination of intravenous flumazenil (FMZ) and oral gabapentin (GBP) in alcoholics who did and did not exhibit pretreatment alcohol withdrawal (AW) symptoms. Sixty alcohol-dependent individuals (44 with low AW and 16 with high AW) were randomized to receive FMZ (2 mg of incremental bolus for 20 minutes for 2 consecutive days) and GBP (up to 1200 mg nightly for 39 days) or their inactive placebos. Alcohol withdrawal was measured for the first 2 days, and drinking, sleep parameters, and adverse events were monitored during weekly evaluations, along with behavioral counseling sessions. Percent days abstinent (PDA) during treatment and time to first heavy drinking (TFHD) day were primary outcome variables. There was an interaction between the pretreatment AW status and the medication group on PDA (P = 0.0006) and TFHD (P = 0.06). Those in the high AW group had more PDA and more TFHD if treated with active medications, whereas those in the low AW group had more PDA and more TFHD if treated with placebo. This interaction remained for those totally abstinent (P = 0.03) and was confirmed by percent carbohydrate-deficient transferrin values. In addition, the pattern of response remained up to 8 weeks after treatment. In addition, in those with high AW, greater improvement in AW symptoms was observed in the active medication group compared with the placebo group. These results suggest a differential response to FMZ/GBP treatment, depending on pretreatment AW status that should be taken into account during future treatment trials.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and substance use: symptom pattern and drug choice.
- Author
-
Clure C, Brady KT, Saladin ME, Johnson D, Waid R, and Rittenbury M
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Alcoholism epidemiology, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity epidemiology, Cocaine-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
While there has been much recent interest in the relationship between attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and substance use disorders (SUDs), little has been reported about ADHD diagnostic subtypes, persistence of symptoms from childhood into adulthood, and substance of choice in individuals with substance use disorders (SUD+) and comorbid ADHD. To examine the prevalence and subtypes of ADHD in a group of SUD+ individuals, 136 inpatients with an SUD diagnosis (cocaine vs. alcohol vs. cocaine/alcohol) were administered a structured interview for ADHD. Of the SUD+ individuals, 32% met criteria for ADHD, and 35% of those with a childhood diagnosis of ADHD continued to have clinically significant symptoms into adulthood. There were no significant differences in the percentage of ADHD between the SUD+ groups divided by drug choice. Of ADHD subtypes, subjects with combined and inattentive types were significantly more likely to have symptoms continue into adulthood (p < or = .05) than the hyperactive/impulsive subtype. Patients with cocaine use were more likely to have ADHD in childhood only when compared to the alcohol or cocaine-alcohol groups. The findings of this study indicate that ADHD is prevalent in treatment-seeking substance users without difference in prevalence or subtype by drug choice.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Psychiatric disorders in patients with fibromyalgia. A multicenter investigation.
- Author
-
Epstein SA, Kay G, Clauw D, Heaton R, Klein D, Krupp L, Kuck J, Leslie V, Masur D, Wagner M, Waid R, and Zisook S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Comorbidity, Female, Fibromyalgia rehabilitation, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Personality Inventory, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Sick Role, Somatoform Disorders psychology, Fibromyalgia psychology, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Somatoform Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
The authors conducted an investigation in four tertiary-care centers to determine if psychiatric comorbidity and psychological variables were predictive of functional impairment in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). Seventy-three individuals were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R, the Rand 36-item Health Survey (SF-36), and multiple self-report measures. The patients with FMS were found to have a high lifetime and current prevalence of major depression and panic disorder. The most common disorders were major depression (lifetime [L] = 68%, current [C] = 22%); dysthymia (10% [C only]); panic disorder (L = 16%, C = 7%); and simple phobia (L = 16%, C = 12%). The self-report scales revealed significant elevations in depression, anxiety, neuroticism, and hypochondriasis. Functional impairment on all measures of the SF-36 was severe (e.g., physical functioning = 45.5 and role limitations due to physical problems = 20.0). Stepwise multiple-regression analysis revealed that current anxiety was the only variable that predicted a significant proportion of the variance (29%) in SF-36 physical functioning. Thus, in this multicenter study, the persons with FMS exhibited marked functional impairment, high levels of some lifetime and current psychiatric disorders, and significant current psychological distress. Current anxiety level appears to be an important correlate of functional impairment in individuals with FMS.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Computer diagnosis and discriminate analysis decision schemes.
- Author
-
Templeton AW, Bryan K, Waid R, Townes J, Huque M, and Dwyer SJ
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted, Humans, Radiography, Computers, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnostic imaging, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.