115 results on '"Spencer SK"'
Search Results
2. Analgesic and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory use in relation to nonmelanoma skin cancer: a population-based case-control study.
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Torti DC, Christensen BC, Storm CA, Fortuny J, Perry AE, Zens MS, Stukel T, Spencer SK, Nelson HH, Karagas MR, Torti, Dorothea C, Christensen, Brock C, Storm, Craig A, Fortuny, Joan, Perry, Ann E, Zens, Michael S, Stukel, Therese, Spencer, Steven K, Nelson, Heather H, and Karagas, Margaret R
- Abstract
Background: Aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are potentially chemopreventive.Objective: We examined the relation between NSAID use and nonmelanoma skin cancer in a population-based case-control study.Methods: NSAID and analgesic use was analyzed in 1484 participants: 535 with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), 487 with basal cell carcinoma (BCC), and 462 control subjects.Results: Use of NSAIDs, particularly aspirin, was associated with a reduced odds ratio (OR) of SCC, especially tumors positive for p53 (OR 0.29; 95% confidence interval 0.11-0.79) or with PTCH loss of heterozygosity (OR 0.35; 95% confidence interval 0.13-0.96). Although not considered a NSAID, decreased ORs of both basal cell carcinoma and SCC were observed in relation to use of paracetamol (acetaminophen). Risk of BCC was unrelated to NSAID use.Limitations: Self-reported drug use was a limitation.Conclusions: This study supports the hypothesis that NSAIDs, aspirin in particular, may reduce risk of SCC and may affect specific molecular subtypes of SCC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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3. Use of streptogramin growth promoters in poultry and isolation of streptogramin-resistant Enterococcus faecium from humans.
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Kieke AL, Borchardt MA, Kieke BA, Spencer SK, Vandermause MF, Smith KE, Jawahir SL, Belongia EA, and Marshfield Enterococcal Study Group
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Virginiamycin use in poultry selects for Enterococcus faecium with cross-resistance to quinupristin-dalfopristin, a drug for vancomycin-resistant E. faecium in humans. We conducted an epidemiologic study of poultry exposures as risk factors for human carriage of quinupristin-dalfopristin-resistant E. faecium. METHODS: Rectal or fecal samples for E. faecium testing were obtained from 567 newly admitted hospital patients and 100 healthy vegetarians. Participants were interviewed regarding poultry exposure. Retail poultry washes (160 conventional and 26 antibiotic free) were also tested for the presence of E. faecium. Constitutive and inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance were assessed in E. faecium isolates, and resistance genes were identified by polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: E. faecium was isolated from 105 patients, 65 vegetarians, and 77 conventional and 23 antibiotic-free poultry washes. Constitutive quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance was absent in human E. faecium, but 56% of conventional poultry isolates were quinupristin-dalfopristin resistant. Inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance was more common in samples from patients than in those from vegetarians and in washes of conventional than antibiotic-free poultry. Higher poultry consumption was associated with inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance. vatE was present in 38% of E. faecium isolates from patients and none from vegetarians. Touching raw poultry was associated with the presence of vatE. CONCLUSIONS: Poultry exposure is associated with a quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance gene and inducible quinupristin-dalfopristin resistance in human fecal E. faecium. The continued use of virginiamycin may increase the potential for streptogramin-resistant E. faecium infection in humans. Copyright © 2006 Infectious Diseases Society of America [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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4. Genus ß human papillomaviruses and incidence of basal cell and squamous cell carcinomas of skin: population based case-control study.
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Karagas MR, Waterboer T, Li Z, Nelson HH, Michael KM, Bavinck JNB, Perry AE, Spencer SK, Daling J, Green AC, Pawlita M, and New Hampshire Skin Cancer Study Group
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- 2010
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5. Report from a text-based blood pressure monitoring prospective cohort trial among postpartum women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.
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Moustafa ASZ, Yimer W, Perry A, Solis L, Belk S, Morris R, Spencer SK, Rana S, and Wallace K
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Adult, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Telemedicine methods, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Pre-Eclampsia, Text Messaging, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory methods, Postpartum Period, Patient Education as Topic methods, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced
- Abstract
Background: Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are a main cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in the United States and worldwide, and it is estimated that approximately 60% of maternal deaths in the United States occur during the postpartum period. The utilization of telehealth modalities such as home blood pressure monitoring has shown improvement in blood pressure control and adherence with follow up visits. Our study sought to determine if standardized education improved patient hypertension knowledge and if this when combined with home blood pressure telemonitoring increased participants' postpartum self-blood pressure monitoring and postpartum visit attendance., Methods: This is an Institutional Review Board approved prospective cohort study conducted at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. Women with a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy who met the inclusion criteria and provided written informed consent to participate were enrolled. Participants received a baseline pre-education questionnaire designed to assess their knowledge of their hypertensive diagnosis, hypertension management, and postpartum preeclampsia (PreE). Participants then received standard education, a blood pressure monitor, and were scheduled a follow-up visit during the first 10 days following discharge. Remote home blood pressure monitoring was performed via text messages and voice calls for 6-weeks postpartum. At the conclusion of the study, participants repeated their original questionnaire., Results: 250 women provided informed consent to participate in the study and were included in this analysis. Relative to the baseline survey, there was a significant increase (p = 0.0001) in the percentage of correct responses. There was not an association between study engagement and percentage of correct responses on end of study questionnaire (p = 0.33) or postpartum visit attendance (p = 0.69). Maternal age was found to drive study engagement, even when adjusted for community-level distress (p = 0.03) and maternal race (p = 0.0002)., Conclusion: Implementing a standardized postpartum education session was associated with improvement in patient's knowledge. Further studies are needed with more longitudinal follow up to assess if this program would also result in improved long-term outcomes and decreased hospital readmission rates., Trial Registration: NCT04570124., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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6. Maternal immune suppression during pregnancy does not prevent abnormal behavior in offspring.
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Griffin A, Bowles T, Solis L, Railey T, Beauti S, Robinson R, Spencer SK, Shaffery JP, and Wallace K
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- Pregnancy, Humans, Male, Female, Abatacept, Hippocampus, HELLP Syndrome, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced, Pre-Eclampsia
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Background: Offspring of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are at an increased risk of developing neurodevelopmental and neurobehavioral disorders compared to offspring from non-affected pregnancies. Using rodent models of Preeclampsia (PreE; new onset of hypertension after 20 weeks gestation) and HELLP (hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets), we studied the behavioral outcome of their offspring in adolescence., Methods: A subset of dams received Orencia, a T-cell activation inhibitor, as T cells have been associated with the induction of hypertension and inflammation during pregnancy. We hypothesized that offspring from hypertensive dams would experience adverse behavioral outcomes in social, cognitive, locomotor, and anxiety tests, and offspring from dams treated with Orencia would demonstrate less adverse behaviors., Results: Male offspring of PreE + Orencia dams (p < 0.05) and female offspring from HELLP + Orencia dams (p < 0.05) spent more time playing compared to normal pregnant offspring. All offspring from hypertensive and Orencia-treated dams performed worse on the Barnes Maze test compared to normal pregnant. We also measured adult (postnatal day > 60) myelin basic protein (MBP) and NeuN expression in both the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. In the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, there was no difference in expression of either MBP or NeuN in all groups regardless of sex., Conclusion: The results from this study suggest that offspring of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy have behavioral changes, specifically cognitive differences. This study has shown that there is a sex dependent difference in offspring neurobehavioral development, influenced in part by the type of hypertensive disorder of pregnancy, and alterations in the maternal immune system., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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7. Rebuttal to Correspondence on "The Environmental Microbiology Minimum Information (EMMI) Guidelines: qPCR and dPCR Quality and Reporting for Environmental Microbiology".
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Borchardt MA, Boehm AB, Salit M, Spencer SK, Wigginton KR, and Noble RT
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- 2023
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8. Community intervention trial for estimating risk of acute gastrointestinal illness from groundwater-supplied non-disinfected drinking water.
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Borchardt MA, Kieke BA Jr, Spencer SK, Lambertini E, Burch TR, and Loge FJ
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Water Supply, Disinfection, Enterovirus B, Human, Drinking Water, Groundwater
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By community intervention in 14 non-disinfecting municipal water systems, we quantified sporadic acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) attributable to groundwater. Ultraviolet (UV) disinfection was installed on all supply wells of intervention communities. In control communities, residents continued to drink non-disinfected groundwater. Intervention and control communities switched treatments by moving UV disinfection units at the study midpoint (crossover design). Study participants (n = 1,659) completed weekly health diaries during four 12-week surveillance periods. Water supply wells were analyzed monthly for enteric pathogenic viruses. Using the crossover design, groundwater-borne AGI was not observed. However, virus types and quantity in supply wells changed through the study, suggesting that exposure was not constant. Alternatively, we compared AGI incidence between intervention and control communities within the same surveillance period. During Period 1, norovirus contaminated wells and AGI attributable risk from well water was 19% (95% CI, -4%, 36%) for children <5 years and 15% (95% CI, -9%, 33%) for adults. During Period 3, echovirus 11 contaminated wells and UV disinfection slightly reduced AGI in adults. Estimates of AGI attributable risks from drinking non-disinfected groundwater were highly variable, but appeared greatest during times when supply wells were contaminated with specific AGI-etiologic viruses.
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- 2023
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9. Addition to "The Environmental Microbiology Minimum Information (EMMI) Guidelines: qPCR and dPCR Quality and Reporting for Environmental Microbiology".
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Borchardt MA, Boehm AB, Salit M, Spencer SK, Wigginton KR, and Noble RT
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- 2023
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10. Indoxyl Sulfate Administration during Pregnancy Contributes to Renal Injury and Increased Blood-Brain Barrier Permeability.
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Griffin A, Berry B, Spencer SK, Bowles T, and Wallace K
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- Rats, Pregnancy, Animals, Female, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Indican metabolism, Kidney metabolism, Permeability, Blood-Brain Barrier metabolism, Acute Kidney Injury
- Abstract
Rates of pregnancy-related acute kidney injury (PR-AKI) have increased in the U.S over the past two decades, but how PR-AKI affects the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is understudied. AKI is associated with increased amounts of uremic toxins, like indoxyl sulfate (I.S), whose chronic administration leads to BBB and cognitive changes. This study's objective was to determine if (1) PR-AKI increases I.S and (2) if administration of I.S during pregnancy elicits renal injury and/or increases BBB permeability. From gestational day (GD) 11 to GD19, Sprague Dawley rats were given either 100 or 200 mg/kg body-weight dose of I.S. PR-AKI was induced on GD18 via 45 min bilateral renal ischemic reperfusion surgery. On GD18, metabolic cage metrics and metabolic waste was collected and on GD19 blood pressure, and BBB permeability (by Evan's Blue infusion) were measured. I.S and creatinine were measured in both urine and circulation, respectively. One-way ANOVA or student t-tests were performed using GraphPad Prism with a p < 0.05 significance. I.S and PR-AKI led to oliguria. I.S administration led to increased BBB permeability compared to normal pregnant and PR-AKI animals. These results suggest that I.S administration during pregnancy leads to increased BBB permeability and evidence of renal injury comparable to PR-AKI animals.
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- 2023
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11. Microbial source tracking and land use associations for antibiotic resistance genes in private wells influenced by human and livestock fecal sources.
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Burch TR, Stokdyk JP, Firnstahl AD, Kieke BA Jr, Cook RM, Opelt SA, Spencer SK, Durso LM, and Borchardt MA
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- Animals, Humans, Cattle, Livestock, Feces, Drug Resistance, Microbial genetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Manure
- Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance is a growing public health problem that requires an integrated approach among human, agricultural, and environmental sectors. However, few studies address all three components simultaneously. We investigated the occurrence of five antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and the class 1 integron gene (intI1) in private wells drawing water from a vulnerable aquifer influenced by residential septic systems and land-applied dairy manure. Samples (n = 138) were collected across four seasons from a randomized sample of private wells in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. Measurements of ARGs and intI1 were related to microbial source tracking (MST) markers specific to human and bovine feces; they were also related to 54 risk factors for contamination representing land use, rainfall, hydrogeology, and well construction. ARGs and intI1 occurred in 5%-40% of samples depending on target. Detection frequencies for ARGs and intI1 were lowest in the absence of human and bovine MST markers (1%-30%), highest when co-occurring with human and bovine markers together (11%-78%), and intermediate when co-occurring with just one type of MST marker (4%-46%). Gene targets were associated with septic system density more often than agricultural land, potentially because of the variable presence of manure on the landscape. Determining ARG prevalence in a rural setting with mixed land use allowed an assessment of the relative contribution of human and bovine fecal sources. Because fecal sources co-occurred with ARGs at similar rates, interventions intended to reduce ARG occurrence may be most effective if both sources are considered., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Environmental Quality published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.)
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- 2023
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12. No association between perinatal mood disorders and hypertensive pregnancies.
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Araji S, Griffin A, Kassahun-Yimer W, Dixon L, Spencer SK, Belk S, Ohaegbulam G, and Wallace K
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Mental health disorders such as anxiety and/or depression are the most common mental health disorders seen among reproductive aged women and can increase during pregnancy. Many sociodemographic risk factors have been associated with anxiety and/or depression in pregnancy, which can lead to adverse maternal and infant outcomes including the risk of a hypertensive pregnancy. The current study prospectively examined self-reported anxiety, depression and stress in pregnant women without a history of fetal loss or mood disorders beginning at 20-26 weeks. At each study visit, circulating immune factors associated with perinatal mood disorders were measured in blood samples that were collected. A total of 65 women were eligible for data analysis, 26 of which had hypertensive pregnancies. There was not a significant difference in self-reported depression, anxiety or stress between hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and normotensive women. Black women were more likely to have a hypertensive pregnancy and develop a perinatal mood disorder compared to non-black women. Both the inflammatory cytokines interleukin-17 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha were increased in patients with perinatal mood disorders. However, additional research is needed in a larger sample to truly understand the relationship between these factors along with the underlying etiologies and the associated outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Araji, Griffin, Kassahun-Yimer, Dixon, Spencer, Belk, Ohaegbulam and Wallace.)
- Published
- 2022
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13. Statewide Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment for Waterborne Viruses, Bacteria, and Protozoa in Public Water Supply Wells in Minnesota.
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Burch TR, Stokdyk JP, Rice N, Anderson AC, Walsh JF, Spencer SK, Firnstahl AD, and Borchardt MA
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- Bacteria, Humans, Minnesota, Risk Assessment, Water Microbiology, Water Supply, Water Wells, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Viruses
- Abstract
Infection risk from waterborne pathogens can be estimated via quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) and forms an important consideration in the management of public groundwater systems. However, few groundwater QMRAs use site-specific hazard identification and exposure assessment, so prevailing risks in these systems remain poorly defined. We estimated the infection risk for 9 waterborne pathogens based on a 2-year pathogen occurrence study in which 964 water samples were collected from 145 public wells throughout Minnesota, USA. Annual risk across all nine pathogens combined was 3.3 × 10
-1 (95% CI: 2.3 × 10-1 to 4.2 × 10-1 ), 3.9 × 10-2 (2.3 × 10-2 to 5.4 × 10-2 ), and 1.2 × 10-1 (2.6 × 10-2 to 2.7 × 10-1 ) infections person-1 year-1 for noncommunity, nondisinfecting community, and disinfecting community wells, respectively. Risk estimates exceeded the U.S. benchmark of 10-4 infections person-1 year-1 in 59% of well-years, indicating that the risk was widespread. While the annual risk for all pathogens combined was relatively high, the average daily doses for individual pathogens were low, indicating that significant risk results from sporadic pathogen exposure. Cryptosporidium dominated annual risk, so improved identification of wells susceptible to Cryptosporidium contamination may be important for risk mitigation.- Published
- 2022
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14. Fate and seasonality of antimicrobial resistance genes during full-scale anaerobic digestion of cattle manure across seven livestock production facilities.
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Burch TR, Firnstahl AD, Spencer SK, Larson RA, and Borchardt MA
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- Anaerobiosis, Animals, Cattle, Drug Resistance, Bacterial genetics, Genes, Bacterial, Livestock genetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Manure
- Abstract
Anaerobic digestion has been suggested as an intervention to attenuate antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in livestock manure but supporting data have typically been collected at laboratory scale. Few studies have quantified ARG fate during full-scale digestion of livestock manure. We sampled untreated manure and digestate from seven full-scale mesophilic dairy manure digesters to assess ARG fate through each system. Samples were collected biweekly from December through August (i.e., winter, spring, and summer; n = 235 total) and analyzed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction for intI1, erm(B), sul1, tet(A), and tet(W). Concentrations of intI1, sul1, and tet(A) decreased during anaerobic digestion, but their removal was less extensive than expected based on previous laboratory studies. Removal for intI1 during anaerobic digestion equaled 0.28 ± 0.03 log
10 units (mean ± SE), equivalent to only 48% removal and notable given intI1's role in horizontal gene transfer and multiple resistance. Furthermore, tet(W) concentrations were unchanged during anaerobic digestion (p > 0.05), and erm(B) concentrations increased by 0.52 ± 0.03 log10 units (3.3-fold), which is important given erythromycin's status as a critically important antibiotic for human medicine. Seasonal log10 changes in intI1, sul1, and tet(A) concentrations were ≥50% of corresponding log10 removals by anaerobic digestion, and variation in ARG and intI1 concentrations among digesters was quantitatively comparable to anaerobic digestion effects. These results suggest that mesophilic anaerobic digestion may be limited as an intervention for ARGs in livestock manure and emphasize the need for multiple farm-level interventions to attenuate antibiotic resistance., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Environmental Quality published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.)- Published
- 2022
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15. Evidence of Anxiety, Depression and Learning Impairments following Prenatal Hypertension.
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Wallace K, Bowles T, Griffin A, Robinson R, Solis L, Railey T, Shaffery JP, Araji S, and Spencer SK
- Abstract
Background: Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, such as Preeclampsia (PreE) and HELLP (hemolysis, elevated liver enzyme, low platelet) syndrome, affects approximately 5-10% of pregnancies and increases the risk of women developing disorders, such as anxiety or depression, in the postpartum period. Using preclinical rodent models, we set out to determine whether rats with a history of PreE or HELLP had evidence of anxiety, depression or cognitive impairment and whether immune suppression during pregnancy prevented these changes in mood and/or cognition., Methods: Timed-pregnant rats were infused with sFlt-1 and/or sEng to induce PreE or HELLP beginning on gestational day 12. After delivery, a battery of validated behavioral assays was used to assess post-partum depression, anxiety and learning., Results: There was no negative effect on maternal pup interaction due to PreE or HELLP; however, hypertensive dams spent more time immobile in the forced swim test ( p < 0.0001). Hypertensive dams also spent less time in the open area of the open field ( p = 0.001). There were no significant changes in recognition memory ( p = 0.08); however, spatial learning was impaired in hypertensive dams ( p = 0.003). Immobility time in the forced swim test was positively correlated with increased circulating S100B ( p = 0.04), while increased time spent in the outer zones of the open field was negatively correlated with BDNF levels ( p < 0.0001)., Conclusion: The results from this study suggest that hypertensive pregnancy disorders are associated with depression, anxiety and learning impairments in the post-partum period.
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- 2022
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16. Male HELLP pups experience sensorimotor delays and reduced body weight.
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Griffin A, Spencer SK, Bowles T, Solis L, Robinson R, Ramarao S, and Wallace K
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- Body Weight, Female, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Reflex, Righting, HELLP Syndrome, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
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Offspring of Preeclampsia (PreE) and HELLP Syndrome are at an increased risk of developing neurodevelopmental disorders. In the current study we sought to determine if offspring from experimental models of PreE and HELLP had evidence of early onset neurodevelopmental delay. Offspring from PreE, HELLP and normal pregnant dams were assessed in a battery of sensorimotor tests beginning on postnatal day (PND) 3. Male HELLP offspring showed altered behavior in the surface righting reflex on PND 3 and cliff avoidance task from PND 3-6 relative to other groups. Results suggest that there are sex differences in offspring born to dams with PreE and HELLP., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2021
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17. Optical Properties of Water for Prediction of Wastewater Contamination, Human-Associated Bacteria, and Fecal Indicator Bacteria in Surface Water at Three Watershed Scales.
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Corsi SR, De Cicco LA, Hansen AM, Lenaker PL, Bergamaschi BA, Pellerin BA, Dila DK, Bootsma MJ, Spencer SK, Borchardt MA, and McLellan SL
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- Bacteria, Environmental Monitoring, Feces, Humans, Sewage, Water, Wastewater, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
Relations between spectral absorbance and fluorescence properties of water and human-associated and fecal indicator bacteria were developed for facilitating field sensor applications to estimate wastewater contamination in waterways. Leaking wastewater conveyance infrastructure commonly contaminates receiving waters. Methods to quantify such contamination can be time consuming, expensive, and often nonspecific. Human-associated bacteria are wastewater specific but require discrete sampling and laboratory analyses, introducing latency. Human sewage has fluorescence and absorbance properties different than those of natural waters. To assist real-time field sensor development, this study investigated optical properties for use as surrogates for human-associated bacteria to estimate wastewater prevalence in environmental waters. Three spatial scales were studied: Eight watershed-scale sites, five subwatershed-scale sites, and 213 storm sewers and open channels within three small watersheds (small-scale sites) were sampled (996 total samples) for optical properties, human-associated bacteria, fecal indicator bacteria, and, for selected samples, human viruses. Regression analysis indicated that bacteria concentrations could be estimated by optical properties used in existing field sensors for watershed and subwatershed scales. Human virus occurrence increased with modeled human-associated bacteria concentration, providing confidence in these regressions as surrogates for wastewater contamination. Adequate regressions were not found for small-scale sites to reliably estimate bacteria concentrations likely due to inconsistent local sanitary sewer inputs.
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- 2021
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18. The Environmental Microbiology Minimum Information (EMMI) Guidelines: qPCR and dPCR Quality and Reporting for Environmental Microbiology.
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Borchardt MA, Boehm AB, Salit M, Spencer SK, Wigginton KR, and Noble RT
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- Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Reproducibility of Results, Environmental Microbiology
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Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and digital PCR (dPCR) methods have revolutionized environmental microbiology, yielding quantitative organism-specific data of nucleic acid targets in the environment. Such data are essential for characterizing interactions and processes of microbial communities, assessing microbial contaminants in the environment (water, air, fomites), and developing interventions (water treatment, surface disinfection, air purification) to curb infectious disease transmission. However, our review of recent qPCR and dPCR literature in our field of health-related environmental microbiology showed that many researchers are not reporting necessary and sufficient controls and methods, which would serve to strengthen their study results and conclusions. Here, we describe the application, utility, and interpretation of the suite of controls needed to make high quality qPCR and dPCR measurements of microorganisms in the environment. Our presentation is organized by the discrete steps and operations typical of this measurement process. We propose systematic terminology to minimize ambiguity and aid comparisons among studies. Example schemes for batching and combining controls for efficient work flow are demonstrated. We describe critical reporting elements for enhancing data credibility, and we provide an element checklist in the Supporting Information. Additionally, we present several key principles in metrology as context for laboratories to devise their own quality assurance and quality control reporting framework. Following the EMMI guidelines will improve comparability and reproducibility among qPCR and dPCR studies in environmental microbiology, better inform engineering and public health actions for preventing disease transmission through environmental pathways, and for the most pressing issues in the discipline, focus the weight of evidence in the direction toward solutions.
- Published
- 2021
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19. Sources and Risk Factors for Nitrate and Microbial Contamination of Private Household Wells in the Fractured Dolomite Aquifer of Northeastern Wisconsin.
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Borchardt MA, Stokdyk JP, Kieke BA Jr, Muldoon MA, Spencer SK, Firnstahl AD, Bonness DE, Hunt RJ, and Burch TR
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- Animals, Calcium Carbonate, Canada, Cattle, Environmental Monitoring, Magnesium, Nitrates analysis, Risk Factors, Water Wells, Wisconsin, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Groundwater, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
Background: Groundwater quality in the Silurian dolomite aquifer in northeastern Wisconsin, USA, has become contentious as dairy farms and exurban development expand., Objectives: We investigated private household wells in the region, determining the extent, sources, and risk factors of nitrate and microbial contamination., Methods: Total coliforms, Escherichia coli , and nitrate were evaluated by synoptic sampling during groundwater recharge and no-recharge periods. Additional seasonal sampling measured genetic markers of human and bovine fecal-associated microbes and enteric zoonotic pathogens. We constructed multivariable regression models of detection probability (log-binomial) and concentration (gamma) for each contaminant to identify risk factors related to land use, precipitation, hydrogeology, and well construction., Results: Total coliforms and nitrate were strongly associated with depth-to-bedrock at well sites and nearby agricultural land use, but not septic systems. Both human wastewater and cattle manure contributed to well contamination. Rotavirus group A, Cryptosporidium , and Salmonella were the most frequently detected pathogens. Wells positive for human fecal markers were associated with depth-to-groundwater and number of septic system drainfield within 229 m . Manure-contaminated wells were associated with groundwater recharge and the area size of nearby agricultural land. Wells positive for any fecal-associated microbe, regardless of source, were associated with septic system density and manure storage proximity modified by bedrock depth. Well construction was generally not related to contamination, indicating land use, groundwater recharge, and bedrock depth were the most important risk factors., Discussion: These findings may inform policies to minimize contamination of the Silurian dolomite aquifer, a major water supply for the U.S. and Canadian Great Lakes region. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP7813.
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- 2021
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20. Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment for Contaminated Private Wells in the Fractured Dolomite Aquifer of Kewaunee County, Wisconsin.
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Burch TR, Stokdyk JP, Spencer SK, Kieke BA Jr, Firnstahl AD, Muldoon MA, and Borchardt MA
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- Animals, Calcium Carbonate, Cattle, Magnesium, Risk Assessment, Water Wells, Wisconsin epidemiology, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Groundwater
- Abstract
Background: Private wells are an important source of drinking water in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. Due to the region's fractured dolomite aquifer, these wells are vulnerable to contamination by human and zoonotic gastrointestinal pathogens originating from land-applied cattle manure and private septic systems., Objective: We determined the magnitude of the health burden associated with contamination of private wells in Kewaunee County by feces-borne gastrointestinal pathogens., Methods: This study used data from a year-long countywide pathogen occurrence study as inputs into a quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) to predict the total cases of acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) caused by private well contamination in the county. Microbial source tracking was used to associate predicted cases of illness with bovine, human, or unknown fecal sources., Results: Results suggest that private well contamination could be responsible for as many as 301 AGI cases per year in Kewaunee County, and that 230 and 12 cases per year were associated with a bovine and human fecal source, respectively. Furthermore, Cryptosporidium parvum was predicted to cause 190 cases per year, the most out of all 8 pathogens included in the QMRA., Discussion: This study has important implications for land use and water resource management in Kewaunee County and informs the public health impacts of consuming drinking water produced in other similarly vulnerable hydrogeological settings. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP7815.
- Published
- 2021
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21. Acute kidney injury during pregnancy leads to increased sFlt-1 and sEng and decreased renal T regulatory cells in pregnant rats with HELLP syndrome.
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Szczepanski J, Spencer SK, Griffin A, Bowles T, Williams JM, Kyle PB, Dumas JP, Araji S, and Wallace K
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- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Biomarkers blood, Biomarkers urine, Birth Weight, Blood Pressure, Endoglin genetics, Female, Kidney Diseases pathology, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 genetics, Endoglin metabolism, HELLP Syndrome, Kidney cytology, Kidney Diseases etiology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 metabolism
- Abstract
Background: The incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI) during pregnancy precedes a high maternal mortality rate of 20-40%. AKI during pregnancy has multiple etiologies; however, the more common are maternal hypertensive disorders, which include preeclampsia and HELLP (hemolysis, elevated liver enzyme, low platelet) syndrome. Therefore, we sought to assess the impact of AKI on blood pressure, kidney injury, and anti-angiogenic factors during pregnancies with and without HELLP syndrome., Methods: On gestational day (GD) 12, mini-osmotic pumps were inserted into a subset of normal pregnant (NP) rats infusing 4.7 μg/kg soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt-1) and 7 μg/kg soluble endoglin (sEng) to induce HELLP syndrome. On GD18, the renal pedicles were occluded for 45 min to induce AKI via bilateral ischemia reperfusion in a subset of NP (n = 18) or HELLP (n = 20) rats. Control NP (n = 20) and HELLP (n = 20) rats underwent a SHAM surgery on GD18. Plasma, urine, and maternal organs were saved for further analysis. Renal injury was assessed via renal histopathology, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), T cell infiltration, and assessment of kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL). Data was measured via two-way analysis of variance with Tukey's test for post hoc analysis., Results: Blood pressures were increased in HELLP+AKI rats (p = 0.0001); both NP+AKI and HELLP+AKI rats had increased lactate dehydrogenase (p < 0.0001) and aspartate aminotransferase levels (p < 0.0001), and decreased platelet levels (p < 0.001) vs. NP rats. HELLP+AKI (p = 0.002) and HELLP rats (p = 0.0002) had evidence of renal fibrosis vs. NP rats. GFR was decreased in HELLP+AKI (p = 0.01) rats vs. NP rats. Urinary KIM-1 was increased in NP+AKI rats vs. NP (p = 0.003) and HELLP rats (p = 0.01). HELLP+AKI rats had increased urinary KIM-1 vs. NP (p = 0.0008) and HELLP rats (p = 0.004) and increased NGAL vs. HELLP rats (p = 0.002). HELLP+AKI rats had increased sFlt-1 (p = 0.009) vs. NP rats. NP+AKI (p = 0.02) and HELLP+AKI (p = 0.007) rats had increased sEng vs. NP rats. CD3
+ CD4+ T cells were significantly increased in HELLP+AKI rats vs. NP (p = 0.0002) and NP+AKI (p = 0.05) rats. T regulatory cells were significantly decreased in HELLP+AKI (p = 0.03) and NP+AKI (p = 0.02) rats vs. NP rats; there were no changes between groups in T helper 17 cells (p = 0.34)., Conclusion: The findings in this study suggest that AKI during pregnancy contributes to increased blood pressure and biochemical markers for HELLP syndrome, creates an anti-angiogenic imbalance, and exacerbates kidney injury as shown on histopathology, GFR, and kidney injury markers.- Published
- 2020
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22. Assessment of Obstructive Sleep Apnoea and Sleeping Laterality by Evaluating Upper Eyelid Distraction: A Prospective, Comparative Polysomnographic Study.
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Ting RJE, Singh N, Ling M, Spencer SK, Khan MA, Desai A, Agar A, and Francis IC
- Abstract
Objective Our goal was to evaluate upper eyelid laxity by digital distraction, with the aim to determine sleeping laterality and the likelihood of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), and correlate these findings with polysomnography (PSG). Design We conducted a prospective, single-centre multidisciplinary study in a large sleep and respiratory department and an ophthalmology department within a tertiary referral university teaching hospital. Methods Patients with known OSA were evaluated using techniques based on the Lateralising Eyelid Sleep Compression (LESC) study. Upper eyelid laxity was assessed by two masked investigators, and the eyelid side with greater laxity was regarded as indicative of that patient's sleeping laterality: 'investigator-detected sleeping laterality' (ID SL). Each patient was then asked about the laterality of his or her accustomed sleeping position: 'patient-reported sleeping laterality' (PR SL). PSG was conducted according to the standard protocol of the Department of Sleep and Respiratory Medicine (DSRM). 'Polysomnography-detected sleeping laterality' (PSG SL) permitted the extraction of sleep positional data by two masked sleep scientists. Results The reliability of the LESC technique for diagnosing ID SL was demonstrated to be statistically significant (p<0.01). Upper eyelid laxity was significantly greater on the patients' sleeping side (t=6.340, df=45, p<0.01, two-tailed). There was a significant correlation between PR SL and ID SL (r
s =0.33). However, PSG SL did not correlate with sleeping laterality compared with both ID SL and PR SL. Conclusion This study confirms that there is a statistically significant correlation of sleeping laterality with increasing upper eyelid laxity in OSA. Counterintuitively, PSG SL correlated poorly with ID SL and PR SL. This may likely be explained by the technical limitations implicit in current PSG techniques., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2020, Ting et al.)- Published
- 2020
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23. Fas ligand neutralization attenuates hypertension, endothelin-1, and placental inflammation in an animal model of HELLP syndrome.
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Gibbens J, Spencer SK, Solis L, Bowles T, Kyle PB, Szczepanski JL, Dumas JP, Robinson R, and Wallace K
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- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Fas Ligand Protein blood, Female, HELLP Syndrome blood, HELLP Syndrome immunology, HELLP Syndrome physiopathology, Immunoglobulin G, Placenta immunology, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Treatment Outcome, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha blood, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 blood, Antibodies, Neutralizing therapeutic use, Endothelin-1 blood, Fas Ligand Protein immunology, HELLP Syndrome drug therapy, Placenta physiopathology
- Abstract
Neutralization of FasL is linked to suppression of hypertension, placental inflammation, and endothelin system activation in an animal model of hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets (HELLP) syndrome. During HELLP syndrome the placenta has been reported to serve as the primary source of Fas ligand (FasL), which has an impact on inflammation and hypertension during pregnancy and is dysregulated in women with severe preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome. We hypothesize that neutralization of FasL during pregnancy in an animal model of HELLP syndrome decreases inflammation and placental apoptosis, improves endothelial damage, and improves hypertension. On gestational day (GD) 12 , rats were chronically infused with placental antiangiogenic factors sFlt-1 and sEng to induce HELLP syndrome. To neutralize FasL, MFL4 or FasL antibody was infused into a subset of HELLP or normal pregnant rats on GD13. IgG infusion into another group of NP and HELLP rats on GD13 was used as a control for FasL antibody, and all rats were euthanized on GD19 after blood pressure measurement. Plasma and placentas were collected to assess inflammation, apoptosis, and the degree of placental debris activation of endothelial cells. Administration of MFL4 to HELLP rats significantly decreased blood pressure compared with untreated HELLP rats and HELLP rats infused with IgG and improved the biochemistry of HELLP syndrome. Both circulating and placental FasL were significantly attenuated in response to MFL4 infusion, as were levels of placental and circulating TNFα when compared with untreated HELLP rats and HELLP rats infused with IgG. Endothelial cells exposed to placental debris and media from HP + MFL4 rats secreted significantly less endothelin-1 compared with stimulated endothelial cells from HELLP placentas. Neutralization of FasL is associated with decreased MAP and improvement in placental inflammation and endothelial damage in an animal model of HELLP syndrome.
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- 2020
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24. Viral, bacterial, and protozoan pathogens and fecal markers in wells supplying groundwater to public water systems in Minnesota, USA.
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Stokdyk JP, Firnstahl AD, Walsh JF, Spencer SK, de Lambert JR, Anderson AC, Rezania LW, Kieke BA Jr, and Borchardt MA
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- Animals, Environmental Monitoring, Feces, Humans, Minnesota, Water Microbiology, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Groundwater
- Abstract
Drinking water supply wells can be contaminated by a broad range of waterborne pathogens. However, groundwater assessments frequently measure microbial indicators or a single pathogen type, which provides a limited characterization of potential health risk. This study assessed contamination of wells by testing for viral, bacterial, and protozoan pathogens and fecal markers. Wells supplying groundwater to community and noncommunity public water systems in Minnesota, USA (n = 145) were sampled every other month over one or two years and tested using 23 qPCR assays. Eighteen genetic targets were detected at least once, and microbiological contamination was widespread (96% of 145 wells, 58% of 964 samples). The sewage-associated microbial indicators HF183 and pepper mild mottle virus were detected frequently. Human or zoonotic pathogens were detected in 70% of wells and 21% of samples by qPCR, with Salmonella and Cryptosporidium detected more often than viruses. Samples positive by qPCR for adenovirus (HAdV), enterovirus, or Salmonella were analyzed by culture and for genotype or serotype. qPCR-positive Giardia and Cryptosporidium samples were analyzed by immunofluorescent assay (IFA), and IFA and qPCR concentrations were correlated. Comparisons of indicator and pathogen occurrence at the time of sampling showed that total coliforms, HF183, and Bacteroidales-like HumM2 had high specificity and negative predictive values but generally low sensitivity and positive predictive values. Pathogen-HF183 ratios in sewage have been used to estimate health risks from HF183 concentrations in surface water, but in our groundwater samples Cryptosporidium oocyst:HF183 and HAdV:HF183 ratios were approximately 10,000 times higher than ratios reported for sewage. qPCR measurements provided a robust characterization of microbiological water quality, but interpretation of qPCR data in a regulatory context is challenging because few studies link qPCR measurements to health risk., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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25. Legacy Artwork in Pediatric Oncology: The Impact on Bereaved Caregivers' Psychological Functioning and Grief.
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Schaefer MR, Spencer SK, Barnett M, Reynolds NC, and Madan-Swain A
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Art Therapy methods, Bereavement, Caregivers psychology, Child Mortality, Grief, Neoplasms psychology, Parents psychology, Stress, Psychological therapy
- Abstract
Background: Legacy-making (i.e., a way for patients with terminal illness to create or do something for others as a means of remembrance) is rising in popularity in palliative medicine, although only one study has examined its impact in a pediatric population. Objective: In response to the gaps in literature, this study (1) examines the impact of legacy artwork on bereaved caregivers' psychological functioning and grief and (2) compares caregivers' perceptions of support provided by the hospital throughout their child's cancer journey between the intervention and control groups. Methods: Forty-four caregivers whose children died of cancer completed a demographic questionnaire specifically created for this study, the Brief Symptom Inventory-18, and the Prolonged Grief Disorder-13. They also answered questions regarding supportive services provided to them toward the end of the child's life, at the time of death, and after the child's death. Those caregivers who endorsed participating in legacy artwork were identified as the intervention group, whereas those who did not were classified as the control group. Results: There were no significant differences in psychological functioning among caregivers who participated in legacy artwork versus those who did not participate. However, caregivers who created legacy artwork with their child reported significantly less symptoms of prolonged grief and a greater perception of support from health care providers compared with caregivers who did not engage in this activity. Conclusion: Although preliminary, these findings suggest that legacy artwork may have the potential to improve grief and overall satisfaction of support from the hospital in bereaved caregivers.
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- 2019
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26. Cryptosporidium Incidence and Surface Water Influence of Groundwater Supplying Public Water Systems in Minnesota, USA.
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Stokdyk JP, Spencer SK, Walsh JF, de Lambert JR, Firnstahl AD, Anderson AC, Rezania LW, and Borchardt MA
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- Incidence, Minnesota, Water, Water Supply, Cryptosporidium, Groundwater
- Abstract
Regulations for public water systems (PWS) in the U.S. consider Cryptosporidium a microbial contaminant of surface water supplies. Groundwater is assumed free of Cryptosporidium unless surface water is entering supply wells. We determined the incidence of Cryptosporidium in PWS wells varying in surface water influence. Community and noncommunity PWS wells ( n = 145) were sampled ( n = 964) and analyzed for Cryptosporidium by qPCR and immunofluorescence assay (IFA). Surface water influence was assessed by stable isotopes and the expert judgment of hydrogeologists using site-specific data. Fifty-eight wells (40%) and 107 samples (11%) were Cryptosporidium-positive by qPCR, and of these samples 67 were positive by IFA. Cryptosporidium concentrations measured by qPCR and IFA were significantly correlated ( p < 0.001). Cryptosporidium incidence was not associated with surface water influence as assessed by stable isotopes or expert judgment. We successfully sequenced 45 of the 107 positive samples to identify species, including C. parvum (41), C. andersoni (2), and C. hominis (2), and the predominant subtype was C. parvum IIa A17G2R1. Assuming USA regulations for surface water-supplied PWS were applicable to the study wells, wells positive for Cryptosporidium by IFA would likely be required to add treatment. Cryptosporidium is not uncommon in groundwater, even when surface water influence is absent.
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- 2019
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27. Peripheral Anti-Angiogenic Imbalance during Pregnancy Impairs Myogenic Tone and Increases Cerebral Edema in a Rodent Model of HELLP Syndrome.
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Bean C, Spencer SK, Pabbidi MR, Szczepanski J, Araji S, Dixon S, and Wallace K
- Abstract
Using an animal model of hemolysis elevated liver enzymes low platelets (HELLP) that has systemic inflammation and neuroinflammation we wanted to determine if blood brain barrier (BBB) permeability, cerebral edema, vascular tone, and occludin expression were altered in pregnant rats. Anti-angiogenic proteins sFlt-1 and sEng (4.7 and 7 µg/kg/day, respectively) were chronically infused into normal pregnant (NP) rats beginning on gestational day 12 via a mini-osmotic pump. On gestational day 19, blood pressure was measured via a carotid catheter and brains were collected. BBB permeability was assessed in select brain regions from rats infused with 0.5 mg/mL Texas Red Dextran and phenylephrine. Occludin, sFlt-1, and sEng were analyzed via western blot or ELISA. Infusion of sFlt-1 and sEng into NP rats increased hemolysis and liver enzymes, and decreased platelets and led to hypertension. HELLP rats had significant impairment in the myogenic response and increased BBB permeability in the posterior cortex and brainstem. Brain water content in the posterior cortex was increased and sEng protein expression in the brainstem was significantly increased in HELLP rats. The results from this study suggest that a peripheral anti-angiogenic imbalance during pregnancy is associated with decreased myogenic tone, vasogenic edema, and an increase in BBB permeability, but not anti-angiogenic imbalance in the brain.
- Published
- 2018
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28. Sharpening the focus on ophthalmology teaching: perceptions of medical students and junior medical officers.
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Zhang HH, Hepschke JL, Shulruf B, Francis IC, Spencer SK, Coroneo M, and Agar A
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Clinical Competence, Education, Medical, Undergraduate methods, Medical Staff, Hospital psychology, Ophthalmology education, Students, Medical psychology, Teaching standards
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Importance: Worldwide, ophthalmology teaching is being reduced or eliminated from medical school curricula. The current state of ophthalmic teaching in Australia is unknown., Background: To evaluate the perceptions of junior medical officers (JMOs) and medical students on ophthalmology teaching in Australian medical schools., Design: Survey-based cross-sectional study., Participants: A total of 838 JMOs and medical students from across Australia., Methods: Fifty-six hospitals and 20 medical schools across Australia were contacted. Hardcopy and online surveys were distributed to participants at consenting institutions, evaluating the characteristics of ophthalmology teaching received during medical school and participant confidence in basic ophthalmological clinical skills and knowledge. Factor analysis was performed on confidence scores., Main Outcome Measures: Likert scale confidence ratings, teaching methods encountered versus preferred., Results: Four hundred and thirty-two (51.6%) surveys were received from JMOs and 406 (48.4%) from medical students. The most common form of teaching received were lectures (71.3% JMOs, 65.5% medical students), while the most preferred type were hospital tutorials (37.7% JMOs, 61.6% medical students). Mean confidence in ophthalmology-specific skills and knowledge topics were not high for medical students (skills: 2.66/5, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.55-2.76; knowledge: 2.88/5, 95% CI = 2.80-2.96) and JMOs (skills: 2.52/5, 95% CI = 2.43-2.60; knowledge: 2.84/5, 95% CI = 2.77-2.91). Many participants voiced the need for more ophthalmology teaching, particularly clinically oriented opportunities., Conclusions and Relevance: JMOs and medical students do not show high levels of confidence in basic ophthalmological clinical skills and knowledge, and report inadequate emphasis on ophthalmology during medical school., (© 2018 Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists.)
- Published
- 2018
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29. Human-Associated Indicator Bacteria and Human-Specific Viruses in Surface Water: A Spatial Assessment with Implications on Fate and Transport.
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Lenaker PL, Corsi SR, McLellan SL, Borchardt MA, Olds HT, Dila DK, Spencer SK, and Baldwin AK
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- Bacteria, Environmental Monitoring, Feces, Humans, Wisconsin, Viruses, Water
- Abstract
Hydrologic, seasonal, and spatial variability of sewage contamination was studied at six locations within a watershed upstream from water reclamation facility (WRF) effluent to define relative loadings of sewage from different portions of the watershed. Fecal pollution from human sources was spatially quantified by measuring two human-associated indicator bacteria (HIB) and eight human-specific viruses (HSV) at six stream locations in the Menomonee River watershed in Milwaukee, Wisconsin from April 2009 to March 2011. A custom, automated water sampler, which included HSV filtration, was deployed at each location and provided unattended, flow-weighted, large-volume (30-913 L) sampling. In addition, wastewater influent samples were composited over discrete 7 day periods from the two Milwaukee WRFs. Of the 8 HSV, only 3 were detected, present in up to 38% of the 228 stream samples, while at least 1 HSV was detected in all WRF influent samples. HIB occurred more often with significantly higher concentrations than the HSV in stream and WRF influent samples ( p < 0.05). HSV yield calculations showed a loss from upstream to the most-downstream sub-watershed of the Menomonee River, and in contrast, a positive HIB yield from this same sub-watershed emphasizes the complexity in fate and transport properties between HSV and HIB. This study demonstrates the utility of analyzing multiple HSV and HIB to provide a weight-of-evidence approach for assessment of fecal contamination at the watershed level, provides an assessment of relative loadings for prioritizing areas within a watershed, and demonstrates how loadings of HSV and HIB can be inconsistent, inferring potential differences in fate and transport between the two indicators of human fecal presence.
- Published
- 2018
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30. Hypertension, Anxiety, and Blood-Brain Barrier Permeability Are Increased in Postpartum Severe Preeclampsia/Hemolysis, Elevated Liver Enzymes, and Low Platelet Count Syndrome Rats.
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Wallace K, Bean C, Bowles T, Spencer SK, Randle W, Kyle PB, and Shaffery J
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- Animals, Behavior, Animal physiology, Blood-Brain Barrier physiopathology, Capillary Permeability immunology, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Immunosuppressive Agents pharmacology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications diagnosis, Pregnancy Complications physiopathology, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Pregnancy Complications therapy, Prognosis, Rats, Abatacept pharmacology, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety immunology, Anxiety prevention & control, Depression diagnosis, Depression immunology, Depression prevention & control, HELLP Syndrome diagnosis, HELLP Syndrome physiopathology, HELLP Syndrome psychology, HELLP Syndrome therapy, Hypertension diagnosis, Hypertension etiology, Hypertension prevention & control, Pre-Eclampsia diagnosis, Pre-Eclampsia psychology, Puerperal Disorders diagnosis, Puerperal Disorders immunology, Puerperal Disorders prevention & control, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Hypertension and inflammation during pregnancy are suggested to contribute to the development of postpartum depression and anxiety. Using a rat model of severe preeclampsia and hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet count syndrome, which displays both hypertension and inflammation during pregnancy, we evaluated whether rats were prone to develop depression or anxiety in the postpartum period. On gestational day 12, miniosmotic pumps infusing sFlt-1 (soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1) and sEng (soluble endoglin) were placed into rats, a subset of these rats was infused with 2 mg/kg of Orencia (abatacept) the following day to determine whether immune suppression via T-cell depletion prevented any changes in maternal depression or anxiety-like behavior. All rats, including normal pregnant (NP) controls, delivered between gestational days 21 and 22. Postpartum severe preeclamptic rats buried significantly more marbles compared with NP rats ( P=0.002) and Orencia-treated rats ( P=0.05). Severe preeclamptic rats spent significantly more time in closed arms of the elevated plus maze compared with NP rats ( P=0.009) and Orencia-treated rats ( P=0.05). Severe preeclamptic rats were hypertensive compared with NP ( P=0.03) and Orencia-treated rats ( P=0.01). Finally, severe preeclamptic rats had increased blood-brain barrier permeability compared with NP rats ( P=0.03), which was reversed in Orencia-treated rats ( P=0.008). These results suggest that severe preeclampsia/hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelet count syndrome during pregnancy contributes to an increase in anxiety-like behavior, blood-brain barrier permeability, and hypertension in the postpartum. The current results suggest that T-cell suppression during pregnancy can also help prevent chronic hypertension and increased anxiety in the postpartum period.
- Published
- 2018
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31. Attenuation of oxidative stress and hypertension in an animal model of HELLP syndrome.
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Morris R, Spencer SK, Barnes A, Bowles T, Kyle PB, and Wallace K
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- Animals, Antioxidants metabolism, Arterial Pressure drug effects, Cyclic N-Oxides pharmacology, Cyclic N-Oxides therapeutic use, Disease Models, Animal, Endothelin A Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Endothelin A Receptor Antagonists therapeutic use, Female, Hypertension metabolism, Isoprostanes metabolism, Pregnancy, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Receptor, Endothelin A metabolism, Spin Labels, HELLP Syndrome metabolism, Hypertension complications, Hypertension drug therapy, Oxidative Stress drug effects
- Abstract
HELLP (hemolysis elevated liver enzyme low platelet) syndrome is associated with hypertension, inflammation, oxidative stress and endothelial activation. The objective of this study was to determine if oxygen scavenging or endothelin A receptor antagonism improved hypertension and oxidative stress. sFlt-1 and sEndoglin were infused via mini-osmotic pump into normal pregnant rats (NP) on gestational day 12 to create HELLP syndrome. On gestational day 18 arterial catheters were inserted and on gestational day 19 mean arterial pressure was analyzed in rats; serum, urine and tissues were collected for molecular analysis. HELLP rats had significantly increased MAP compared to control normal pregnant rats (P < 0.0005). Endothelin A receptor antagonism via ABT-627 and Tempol, superoxide dismutase mimetic, were administered to a subset of normal pregnant and HELLP rats beginning on gestational day 13 and attenuated mean arterial pressure in HELLP rats (P < 0.05; P < 0.005). There were no statistically significant differences in mean arterial pressure between NP+ET
A Receptor or NP+Tempol treated rats and NP rats (P = 0.22). Endothelin A receptor blockade significantly decreased HELLP induced isoprostane excretion (P < 0.0005), placental and hepatic reactive oxygen species (P < 0.05; P < 0.0005) and increased placental total antioxidant capacity (P < 0.005) compared to untreated HELLP rats. Similar results in isoprostane (P < 0.005), hepatic reactive oxygen species (P < 0.05) and placental total antioxidant capacity (P < 0.05) were seen in HELLP rats treated with Tempol or Endothelin A receptor antagonist vs. untreated HELLP rats. These data demonstrated a role for oxidative stress in contributing to the hypertension, placental and liver damage that is seen in HELLP syndrome., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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32. Arachidonic acid metabolites of CYP4A and CYP4F are altered in women with preeclampsia.
- Author
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Plenty NL, Faulkner JL, Cotton J, Spencer SK, Wallace K, LaMarca B, and Murphy SR
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- Cell Movement, Cell Proliferation, Female, Humans, Pre-Eclampsia pathology, Pregnancy, Trophoblasts metabolism, Trophoblasts pathology, Arachidonic Acid metabolism, Cytochrome P-450 CYP4A biosynthesis, Cytochrome P450 Family 4 biosynthesis, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Pre-Eclampsia metabolism
- Abstract
Few studies exist on cytochrome P450 (CYP450) metabolites of arachidonic acid (AA) pertaining to the pathophysiological events in pregnancy. We hypothesized that metabolism of AA via the CYP450 pathways is altered within the placenta in women with preeclampsia (PE) and contributes to the pathophysiology of the disease. Thus, placental vascular CYP450 enzyme expression and activity were measured in normal pregnant (NP) and preeclamptic (PE) patients. CYP450 isoform expression (CYP4A11, CYP4A22, CYP4F2, and CYP4F3) was found to be elevated within the placenta of women with PE compared to normal pregnant (NP) women and chronic hypertensive (CHTN) pregnant women. In addition, placental production of 20-HETE was significantly increased in PE women compared to both NP and CHTN women. Moreover, there was an imbalance in circulating 20-HETE:EETs in PE women. To examine whether alterations in CYP450 AA metabolism contribute to the altered placentation in PE, trophoblast function, proliferation and migration were assessed in the presence of exogenous 20-HETE and a 20-HETE specific synthesis inhibitor, HET0016. Trophoblast proliferation was significantly increased in the presence of 20-HETE (1 μM) and reduced with 20-HETE blockade by HET0016 (1 mM, 5 mM, and 10 mM). On the contrary, administration of exogenous 20-HETE (1 μM) significantly reduced trophoblast migration. In conclusion, metabolism of AA via CYP450 is altered in PE, and increased placental production of 20-HETE may contribute to the pathophysiology of the disease., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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33. Fate of Manure-Borne Pathogens during Anaerobic Digestion and Solids Separation.
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Burch TR, Spencer SK, Borchardt SS, Larson RA, and Borchardt MA
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- Anaerobiosis, Animals, Cattle, Temperature, Viruses, Wisconsin, Bacteria isolation & purification, Bioreactors, Manure microbiology
- Abstract
Anaerobic digestion can inactivate zoonotic pathogens present in cattle manure, which reduces transmission of these pathogens from farms to humans through the environment. However, the variability of inactivation across farms and over time is unknown because most studies have examined pathogen inactivation under ideal laboratory conditions or have focused on only one or two full-scale digesters at a time. In contrast, we sampled seven full-scale digesters treating cattle manure in Wisconsin for 9 mo on a biweekly basis ( = 118 pairs of influent and effluent samples) and used real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction to analyze these samples for 19 different microbial genetic markers. Overall, inactivation of pathogens and fecal indicators was highly variable. When aggregated across digester and season, log-removal values for several representative microorganisms-bovine , -like CowM3, and bovine polyomavirus-were 0.78 ± 0.34, 0.70 ± 0.50, and 0.53 ± 0.58, respectively (mean ± SD). These log-removal values were up to two times lower than expected based on the scientific literature. Thus, our study indicates that full-scale anaerobic digestion of cattle manure requires optimization with regard to pathogen inactivation. Future studies should focus on identifying the potential causes of this suboptimal performance (e.g., overloading, poor mixing, poor temperature control). Our study also examined the fate of pathogens during manure separation and found that the majority of microbes we detected ended up in the liquid fraction of separated manure. This finding has important implications for the transmission of zoonotic pathogens through the environment to humans., (Copyright © by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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34. Sewage loading and microbial risk in urban waters of the Great Lakes.
- Author
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McLellan SL, Sauer EP, Corsi SR, Bootsma MJ, Boehm AB, Spencer SK, and Borchardt MA
- Abstract
Despite modern sewer system infrastructure, the release of sewage from deteriorating pipes and sewer overflows is a major water pollution problem in US cities, particularly in coastal watersheds that are highly developed with large human populations. We quantified fecal pollution sources and loads entering Lake Michigan from a large watershed of mixed land use using host-associated indicators. Wastewater treatment plant influent had stable concentrations of human Bacteroides and human Lachnospiraceae with geometric mean concentrations of 2.77 × 10
7 and 5.94 × 107 copy number (by quantitative PCR) per 100 ml, respectively. Human-associated indicator levels were four orders of magnitude higher than norovirus concentrations, suggesting that these human-associated bacteria could be sensitive indicators of pathogen risk. Norovirus concentrations in these same samples were used in calculations for quantitative microbial risk assessment. Assuming a typical recreational exposure to untreated sewage in water, concentrations of 7,800 copy number of human Bacteroides per 100 mL or 14,000 copy number of human Lachnospiraceae per 100 mL corresponded to an illness risk of 0.03. These levels were exceeded in estuarine waters during storm events with greater than 5 cm of rainfall. Following overflows from combined sewer systems (which must accommodate both sewage and stormwater), concentrations were 10-fold higher than under rainfall conditions. Automated high frequency sampling allowed for loads of human-associated markers to be determined, which could then be related back to equivalent volumes of untreated sewage that were released. Evidence of sewage contamination decreased as ruminant-associated indicators increased approximately one day post-storm, demonstrating the delayed impact of upstream agricultural sources on the estuary. These results demonstrate that urban areas are a diffuse source of sewage contamination to urban waters and that storm-driven release of sewage, particularly when sewage overflows occur, creates a serious though transient human health risk., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors have no competing interests to declare.- Published
- 2018
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35. Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment for Spray Irrigation of Dairy Manure Based on an Empirical Fate and Transport Model.
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Burch TR, Spencer SK, Stokdyk JP, Kieke BA Jr, Larson RA, Firnstahl AD, Rule AM, and Borchardt MA
- Subjects
- Risk Assessment, Agricultural Irrigation methods, Dairying, Manure microbiology, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
Background: Spray irrigation for land-applying livestock manure is increasing in the United States as farms become larger and economies of scale make manure irrigation affordable. Human health risks from exposure to zoonotic pathogens aerosolized during manure irrigation are not well understood., Objectives: We aimed to a ) estimate human health risks due to aerosolized zoonotic pathogens downwind of spray-irrigated dairy manure; and b ) determine which factors (e.g., distance, weather conditions) have the greatest influence on risk estimates., Methods: We sampled downwind air concentrations of manure-borne fecal indicators and zoonotic pathogens during 21 full-scale dairy manure irrigation events at three farms. We fit these data to hierarchical empirical models and used model outputs in a quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) to estimate risk [probability of acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI)] for individuals exposed to spray-irrigated dairy manure containing Campylobacter jejuni , enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC), or Salmonella spp., Results: Median risk estimates from Monte Carlo simulations ranged from 10
-5 to 10-2 and decreased with distance from the source. Risk estimates for Salmonella or EHEC-related AGI were most sensitive to the assumed level of pathogen prevalence in dairy manure, while risk estimates for C. jejuni were not sensitive to any single variable. Airborne microbe concentrations were negatively associated with distance and positively associated with wind speed, both of which were retained in models as a significant predictor more often than relative humidity, solar irradiation, or temperature., Conclusions: Our model-based estimates suggest that reducing pathogen prevalence and concentration in source manure would reduce the risk of AGI from exposure to manure irrigation, and that increasing the distance from irrigated manure (i.e., setbacks) and limiting irrigation to times of low wind speed may also reduce risk. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP283.- Published
- 2017
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36. Biological and clinical evidence for somatic mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 as predictive markers for olaparib response in high-grade serous ovarian cancers in the maintenance setting.
- Author
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Dougherty BA, Lai Z, Hodgson DR, Orr MCM, Hawryluk M, Sun J, Yelensky R, Spencer SK, Robertson JD, Ho TW, Fielding A, Ledermann JA, and Barrett JC
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers, Tumor, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous mortality, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous pathology, Female, Germ-Line Mutation, Humans, Maintenance Chemotherapy, Neoplasm Grading, Ovarian Neoplasms mortality, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Prognosis, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous drug therapy, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous genetics, Genes, BRCA1, Genes, BRCA2, Mutation, Ovarian Neoplasms drug therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms genetics, Phthalazines therapeutic use, Piperazines therapeutic use
- Abstract
To gain a better understanding of the role of somatic mutations in olaparib response, next-generation sequencing (NGS) of BRCA1 and BRCA2 was performed as part of a planned retrospective analysis of tumors from a randomized, double-blind, Phase II trial (Study 19; D0810C00019; NCT00753545) in 265 patients with platinum-sensitive high-grade serous ovarian cancer. BRCA1/2 loss-of-function mutations were found in 55% (114/209) of tumors, were mutually exclusive, and demonstrated high concordance with Sanger-sequenced germline mutations in matched blood samples, confirming the accuracy (97%) of tumor BRCA1/2 NGS testing. Additionally, NGS identified somatic mutations absent from germline testing in 10% (20/209) of the patients. Somatic mutations had >80% biallelic inactivation frequency and were predominantly clonal, suggesting that BRCA1/2 loss occurs early in the development of these cancers. Clinical outcomes between placebo- and olaparib-treated patients with somatic BRCA1/2 mutations were similar to those with germline BRCA1/2 mutations, indicating that patients with somatic BRCA1/2 mutations benefit from treatment with olaparib.
- Published
- 2017
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37. Hydrologic, land cover, and seasonal patterns of waterborne pathogens in Great Lakes tributaries.
- Author
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Lenaker PL, Corsi SR, Borchardt MA, Spencer SK, Baldwin AK, and Lutz MA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Environmental Monitoring, Humans, Hydrology, Rivers, Lakes, Seasons
- Abstract
Great Lakes tributaries are known to deliver waterborne pathogens from a host of sources. To examine the hydrologic, land cover, and seasonal patterns of waterborne pathogens (i.e. protozoa (2), pathogenic bacteria (4) human viruses, (8) and bovine viruses (8)) eight rivers were monitored in the Great Lakes Basin over 29 months from February 2011 to June 2013. Sampling locations represented a wide variety of land cover classes from urban to agriculture to forest. A custom automated pathogen sampler was deployed at eight sampling locations which provided unattended, flow-weighted, large-volume (120-1630 L) sampling. Human and bovine viruses and pathogenic bacteria were detected by real-time qPCR in 16%, 14%, and 1.4% of 290 samples collected while protozoa were never detected. The most frequently detected pathogens were: bovine polyomavirus (11%), and human adenovirus C, D, F (9%). Human and bovine viruses were present in 16.9% and 14.8% of runoff-event samples (n = 189) resulting from precipitation and snowmelt, and 13.9% and 12.9% of low-flow samples (n = 101), respectively, indicating multiple delivery mechanisms could be influential. Data indicated human and bovine virus prevalence was different depending on land cover within the watershed. Occurrence, concentration, and flux of human viruses were greatest in samples from the three sampling locations with greater than 25% urban influence than those with less than 25% urban influence. Similarly, occurrence, concentration, and flux of bovine viruses were greatest in samples from the two sampling locations with greater than 50 cattle/km
2 than those with less than 50 cattle/km2 . In seasonal analysis, human and bovine viruses occurred more frequently in spring and winter seasons than during the fall and summer. Concentration, occurrence, and flux in the context of hydrologic condition, seasonality, and land use must be considered for each watershed individually to develop effective watershed management strategies for pathogen reduction., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)- Published
- 2017
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38. Dysregulation of the Fas/FasL system in an experimental animal model of HELLP syndrome.
- Author
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Gibbens J, Morris R, Bowles T, Spencer SK, and Wallace K
- Subjects
- Animals, Atrasentan, Disease Models, Animal, Endoglin, Endothelin A Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Fas Ligand Protein blood, Fas Ligand Protein genetics, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, HELLP Syndrome blood, HELLP Syndrome chemically induced, HELLP Syndrome genetics, Liver drug effects, Placenta drug effects, Pregnancy, Pyrrolidines pharmacology, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Time Factors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1, fas Receptor blood, fas Receptor genetics, Fas Ligand Protein metabolism, HELLP Syndrome metabolism, Liver metabolism, Placenta metabolism, fas Receptor metabolism
- Abstract
Introduction: Placental FasL is up-regulated in women with HELLP (hemolysis elevated liver enzyme and low platelet) syndrome and has been proposed to contribute to the liver damage seen in these patients., Objective: This study aimed to determine if an experimental rodent model of HELLP also had dysregulation of Fas/FasL compared to normal pregnant (NP) rats. We also set out to determine if blockade of the endothelin system regulated Fas/FasL expression in HELLP rats., Study Design: On gestational day (GD) 12, sEng (7ug/kg) and sFlt-1 (4.7ug/kg) infusion began via mini-osmotic pump into NP rats. On GD19 plasma and tissue were collected and FasL and Fas were measured via enzyme linked immunosorbent assay and gene expression via real-time PCR., Results: HELLP rats had significantly more circulating and placental FasL compared to NP rats, whereas hepatic FasL was decreased and placental Fas was increased compared to NP rats. Administration of an endothelin A receptor antagonist (ET
A ) beginning on GD12 significantly decreased placental expression of Fas in HELLP rats. Liver mRNA transcript of Fas was significantly increased in HELLP rats compared to NP rats., Conclusion: These data suggest that rats in this experimental model of HELLP syndrome have abnormal expression of the Fas/FasL system. Future studies will examine the sources of Fas/FasL dysregulation in this model and if blockade could reduce some of the inflammation and hypertension associated with HELLP syndrome., (Copyright © 2017 International Society for the Study of Hypertension in Pregnancy. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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39. Meibomian gland dysfunction: azithromycin and objective improvement in outcomes in posterior blepharitis.
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Shah SA, Spencer SK, Tharmarajah B, and Francis IC
- Subjects
- Blepharitis, Eyelid Diseases, Humans, Tears, Azithromycin, Meibomian Glands
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
40. Detection of hepatitis E virus and other livestock-related pathogens in Iowa streams.
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Givens CE, Kolpin DW, Borchardt MA, Duris JW, Moorman TB, and Spencer SK
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- Animals, Iowa, Manure microbiology, Manure parasitology, Rivers microbiology, Rivers parasitology, Sus scrofa, Hepatitis E virus isolation & purification, Manure virology, Rivers virology
- Abstract
Manure application is a source of pathogens to the environment. Through overland runoff and tile drainage, zoonotic pathogens can contaminate surface water and streambed sediment and could affect both wildlife and human health. This study examined the environmental occurrence of gene markers for livestock-related bacterial, protozoan, and viral pathogens and antibiotic resistance in surface waters within the South Fork Iowa River basin before and after periods of swine manure application on agricultural land. Increased concentrations of indicator bacteria after manure application exceeding Iowa's state bacteria water quality standards suggest that swine manure contributes to diminished water quality and may pose a risk to human health. Additionally, the occurrence of HEV and numerous bacterial pathogen genes for Escherichia coli, Enterococcus spp., Salmonella sp., and Staphylococcus aureus in both manure samples and in corresponding surface water following periods of manure application suggests a potential role for swine in the spreading of zoonotic pathogens to the surrounding environment. During this study, several zoonotic pathogens were detected including Shiga-toxin producing E. coli, Campylobacter jejuni, pathogenic enterococci, and S. aureus; all of which can pose mild to serious health risks to swine, humans, and other wildlife. This research provides the foundational understanding required for future assessment of the risk to environmental health from livestock-related zoonotic pathogen exposures in this region. This information could also be important for maintaining swine herd biosecurity and protecting the health of wildlife near swine facilities., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2016
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41. Inhibition of T-cell activation attenuates hypertension, TNFα, IL-17, and blood-brain barrier permeability in pregnant rats with angiogenic imbalance.
- Author
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Bean C, Spencer SK, Bowles T, Kyle PB, Williams JM, Gibbens J, and Wallace K
- Subjects
- Abatacept therapeutic use, Angiogenesis Inhibitors administration & dosage, Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents therapeutic use, Capillary Permeability, Disease Models, Animal, Endoglin administration & dosage, Female, HELLP Syndrome drug therapy, Humans, Hypertension, Inflammation Mediators metabolism, Interleukin-17 metabolism, Lymphocyte Activation, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 administration & dosage, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 immunology, Blood-Brain Barrier, HELLP Syndrome immunology, Neovascularization, Pathologic, Pregnancy, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Problem: Angiogenic imbalance during pregnancy is associated with immune activation, hypertension, increased T cell infiltration, and neurological insults., Method of Study: On gestational day (GD) 12, timed-pregnant rats were infused with anti-angiogenic factors sFlt-1 and sEndoglin (4.7 and 7 μg/kg) to create HELLP syndrome via mini-osmotic pumps for 8 days, with a subset of these rats having Orencia (2 mg/kg) infused on GD13. On GD19, blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability was evaluated via Evan's Blue infusion, blood was collected for T-cell measurements, inflammatory cytokine secretion. Brain tissues were also collected to examine inflammatory cytokine infiltration., Results: T-cell attenuation with Orencia decreased circulating CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, circulating tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and IL-17, BBB permeability and significantly decreased biochemical evidence of HELLP compared to untreated HELLP rats., Conclusions: These data support the hypothesis that T cells have a critical role in contributing to the pathophysiology that is seen in angiogenic imbalance during pregnancy., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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42. Effects of Climate and Sewer Condition on Virus Transport to Groundwater.
- Author
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Gotkowitz MB, Bradbury KR, Borchardt MA, Zhu J, and Spencer SK
- Subjects
- Climate, Humans, Water Pollutants analysis, Environmental Monitoring, Groundwater virology, Viruses isolation & purification, Water Wells
- Abstract
Pathogen contamination from leaky sanitary sewers poses a threat to groundwater quality in urban areas, yet the spatial and temporal dimensions of this contamination are not well understood. In this study, 16 monitoring wells and six municipal wells were repeatedly sampled for human enteric viruses. Viruses were detected infrequently, in 17 of 455 samples, compared to previous sampling at these wells. Thirteen of the 22 wells sampled were virus-positive at least once. While the highest virus concentrations occurred in shallower wells, shallow and deep wells were virus-positive at similar rates. Virus presence in groundwater was temporally coincident, with 16 of 17 virus-positive samples collected in a six-month period. Detections were associated with precipitation and occurred infrequently during a prolonged drought. The study purposely included sites with sewers of differing age and material. The rates of virus detections in groundwater were similar at all study sites during this study. However, a relationship between sewer age and virus detections emerged when compared to data from an earlier study, conducted during high precipitation conditions. Taken together, these data indicate that sewer condition and climate affect urban groundwater contamination by human enteric viruses.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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43. Determining the 95% limit of detection for waterborne pathogen analyses from primary concentration to qPCR.
- Author
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Stokdyk JP, Firnstahl AD, Spencer SK, Burch TR, and Borchardt MA
- Subjects
- Polymerase Chain Reaction, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sensitivity and Specificity, Water, Limit of Detection, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
The limit of detection (LOD) for qPCR-based analyses is not consistently defined or determined in studies on waterborne pathogens. Moreover, the LODs reported often reflect the qPCR assay alone rather than the entire sample process. Our objective was to develop an approach to determine the 95% LOD (lowest concentration at which 95% of positive samples are detected) for the entire process of waterborne pathogen detection. We began by spiking the lowest concentration that was consistently positive at the qPCR step (based on its standard curve) into each procedural step working backwards (i.e., extraction, secondary concentration, primary concentration), which established a concentration that was detectable following losses of the pathogen from processing. Using the fraction of positive replicates (n = 10) at this concentration, we selected and analyzed a second, and then third, concentration. If the fraction of positive replicates equaled 1 or 0 for two concentrations, we selected another. We calculated the LOD using probit analysis. To demonstrate our approach we determined the 95% LOD for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, adenovirus 41, and vaccine-derived poliovirus Sabin 3, which were 11, 12, and 6 genomic copies (gc) per reaction (rxn), respectively (equivalent to 1.3, 1.5, and 4.0 gc L(-1) assuming the 1500 L tap-water sample volume prescribed in EPA Method 1615). This approach limited the number of analyses required and was amenable to testing multiple genetic targets simultaneously (i.e., spiking a single sample with multiple microorganisms). An LOD determined this way can facilitate study design, guide the number of required technical replicates, aid method evaluation, and inform data interpretation., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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44. Correction to Human and Bovine Viruses and Bacteria at Three Great Lakes Beaches: Environmental Variable Associations and Health Risk.
- Author
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Corsi SR, Borchardt MA, Carvin RB, Burch TR, Spencer SK, Lutz MA, McDermott CM, Busse KM, Kleinheinz GT, Feng X, and Zhu J
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Human and Bovine Viruses and Bacteria at Three Great Lakes Beaches: Environmental Variable Associations and Health Risk.
- Author
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Corsi SR, Borchardt MA, Carvin RB, Burch TR, Spencer SK, Lutz MA, McDermott CM, Busse KM, Kleinheinz GT, Feng X, and Zhu J
- Subjects
- Animals, Bacteria pathogenicity, Bathing Beaches, Campylobacter jejuni isolation & purification, Campylobacter jejuni pathogenicity, Cattle, Enterovirus isolation & purification, Enterovirus pathogenicity, Environmental Monitoring, Great Lakes Region, Humans, Risk Assessment methods, Salmonella isolation & purification, Salmonella pathogenicity, Seasons, Viruses pathogenicity, Water Microbiology, Bacteria isolation & purification, Lakes microbiology, Lakes virology, Viruses isolation & purification
- Abstract
Waterborne pathogens were measured at three beaches in Lake Michigan, environmental factors for predicting pathogen concentrations were identified, and the risk of swimmer infection and illness was estimated. Waterborne pathogens were detected in 96% of samples collected at three Lake Michigan beaches in summer, 2010. Samples were quantified for 22 pathogens in four microbial categories (human viruses, bovine viruses, protozoa, and pathogenic bacteria). All beaches had detections of human and bovine viruses and pathogenic bacteria indicating influence of multiple contamination sources at these beaches. Occurrence ranged from 40 to 87% for human viruses, 65-87% for pathogenic bacteria, and 13-35% for bovine viruses. Enterovirus, adenovirus A, Salmonella spp., Campylobacter jejuni, bovine polyomavirus, and bovine rotavirus A were present most frequently. Variables selected in multiple regression models used to explore environmental factors that influence pathogens included wave direction, cloud cover, currents, and water temperature. Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment was done for C. jejuni, Salmonella spp., and enteroviruses to estimate risk of infection and illness. Median infection risks for one-time swimming events were approximately 2 × 10(-5), 8 × 10(-6), and 3 × 10(-7) [corrected] for C. jejuni, Salmonella spp., and enteroviruses, respectively. Results highlight the importance of investigating multiple pathogens within multiple categories to avoid underestimating the prevalence and risk of waterborne pathogens.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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46. Hypertension in an Animal Model of HELLP Syndrome is Associated With Activation of Endothelin 1.
- Author
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Morris R, Spencer SK, Kyle PB, Williams JM, Harris A, Owens MY, and Wallace K
- Subjects
- Animals, Atrasentan, Disease Models, Animal, Endoglin, Endothelin-1 blood, Female, HELLP Syndrome blood, HELLP Syndrome physiopathology, Hypertension physiopathology, Placenta metabolism, Pregnancy, Pyrrolidines pharmacology, Rats, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1 pharmacology, Endothelin-1 metabolism, HELLP Syndrome metabolism, Hypertension blood
- Abstract
Women with hypertensive forms of pregnancy such as hemolysis-elevated liver enzymes-low platelet syndrome have increased circulating endothelin 1; however, the relationship between hypertension and endothelin 1 has not been studied. Using an animal model, we sought to determine whether there was an increased activation/dysfunction of endothelin 1, the effect of endothelin 1 receptor-A blockade on hypertension and other manifestations of hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets syndrome. On gestational day 12, timed-pregnant rats were infused with soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt-1) and soluble endoglin (sEndoglin; 4.7 and 7 µg/kg) via mini-osmotic pumps for 8 days. A subset of rats were treated with receptor-A antagonist (ABT-627, 5mg/kg) for 8 days. Rats with hemolysis-elevated liver enzymes-low platelet syndrome had significantly increased hypertension (P = .0001), circulating endothelin 1 (P = .03), and a significant 3.3- and 7.2-fold increase in preproendothelin messenger RNA (mRNA) expression in the placenta and liver (P = .01 and .04). Urinary protein:creatinine ratio was significantly increased in these animals (P = .0007), and circulating factors from these rats stimulated a significant increase in endothelial cell secretion of endothelin 1 (P = .001) in an in vitro assay. Blockade of the endothelin 1 receptor A significantly decreased hypertension (P = .001), circulating endothelin 1, and interleukin 17 (P = .004 and .003), placental preproendothelin mRNA expression (P = .016), and urinary protein:creatinine ratio (P = .007) in rats with hemolysis-elevated liver enzymes-low platelet syndrome. Blockade of the endothelin 1 receptor A significantly decreased hemolysis (P = .009), liver enzymes (P = .011), and significantly increased platelet levels (P = .03) and decreased circulating CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes (P = .0004 and .0001) in rats infused with sFlt-1 and sEndoglin. These data support the hypothesis that endothelin 1 activation has a critical role in pathophysiology of as hemolysis-elevated liver enzymes-low platelet syndrome., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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47. Simultaneous Concentration of Bovine Viruses and Agricultural Zoonotic Bacteria from Water Using Sodocalcic Glass Wool Filters.
- Author
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Abd-Elmaksoud S, Spencer SK, Gerba CP, Tamimi AH, Jokela WE, and Borchardt MA
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Bacterial Load, Cattle, Dairying, Environmental Monitoring methods, Filtration, Flocculation, Glass chemistry, Reproducibility of Results, Viral Load, Wastewater virology, Zoonoses microbiology, Campylobacter jejuni isolation & purification, Coronavirus, Bovine isolation & purification, Diarrhea Viruses, Bovine Viral isolation & purification, Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli isolation & purification, Enterovirus, Bovine isolation & purification, Rotavirus isolation & purification, Wastewater microbiology
- Abstract
Infiltration and runoff from manured agricultural fields can result in livestock pathogens reaching groundwater and surface waters. Here, we measured the effectiveness of glass wool filters to simultaneously concentrate enteric viruses and bacteria of bovine origin from water. The recovery efficiencies were determined for bovine viral diarrhea virus types 1 and 2, bovine rotavirus group A, bovine coronavirus, poliovirus Sabin III, toxigenic Escherichia coli ,and Campylobacter jejuni seeded into water with three different turbidity levels (0.5, 215, and 447 NTU). Twenty liters of dechlorinated tap water (pH 7) were seeded with the test organisms, and then passed through a glass wool filter using a peristaltic pump (flow rate = 1 liter min(-1)). Retained organisms were eluted from the filters by passing beef extract-glycine buffer (pH 9.5) in the direction opposite of sample flow. Recovered organisms were enumerated by qPCR except for C. jejuni, which was quantified by culture. Mean recovery efficiencies ranged from 55 to 33% for the bacteria and 58 to 16% for the viruses. Using bootstrapping techniques combined with Analysis of Variance, recovery efficiencies were found to differ among the pathogen types tested at the two lowest turbidity levels; however, for a given pathogen type turbidity did not affect recovery except for C. jejuni. Glass wool filtration is a cost-effective method for concentrating several waterborne pathogens of bovine origin simultaneously, although recovery may be low for some specific taxa such as bovine viral diarrhea virus 1.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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48. Effects of dairy slurry on silage fermentation characteristics and nutritive value of alfalfa.
- Author
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Coblentz WK, Muck RE, Borchardt MA, Spencer SK, Jokela WE, Bertram MG, and Coffey KP
- Subjects
- Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Animals, Diet veterinary, Fermentation, Fertilizers adverse effects, Manure, Medicago sativa chemistry, Silage analysis, Fertilizers analysis, Medicago sativa metabolism, Nutritive Value
- Abstract
Dairy producers frequently ask questions about the risks associated with applying dairy slurry to growing alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.). Our objectives were to determine the effects of applying dairy slurry on the subsequent nutritive value and fermentation characteristics of alfalfa balage. Dairy slurry was applied to 0.17-ha plots of alfalfa; applications were made to the second (HARV1) and third (HARV2) cuttings during June and July of 2012, respectively, at mean rates of 42,400 ± 5271 and 41,700 ± 2397 L/ha, respectively. Application strategies included (1) no slurry, (2) slurry applied directly to stubble immediately after the preceding harvest, (3) slurry applied after 1 wk of post-ensiled regrowth, or (4) slurry applied after 2 wk of regrowth. All harvested forage was packaged in large, rectangular bales that were ensiled as wrapped balage. Yields of DM harvested from HARV1 (2,477 kg/ha) and HARV2 (781 kg/ha) were not affected by slurry application treatment. By May 2013, all silages appeared to be well preserved, with no indication of undesirable odors characteristic of clostridial fermentations. Clostridium tyrobutyricum, which is known to negatively affect cheese production, was not detected in any forage on either a pre- or post-ensiled basis. On a pre-ensiled basis, counts for Clostridium cluster 1 were greater for slurry-applied plots than for those receiving no slurry, and this response was consistent for HARV1 (4.44 vs. 3.29 log10 genomic copies/g) and HARV2 (4.99 vs. 3.88 log10 genomic copies/g). Similar responses were observed on a post-ensiled basis; however, post-ensiled counts also were greater for HARV1 (5.51 vs. 5.17 log10 genomic copies/g) and HARV2 (5.84 vs. 5.28 log10 genomic copies/g) when slurry was applied to regrowth compared with stubble. For HARV2, counts also were greater following a 2-wk application delay compared with a 1-wk delay (6.23 vs. 5.45 log10 genomic copies/g). These results suggest that the risk of clostridial fermentations in alfalfa silages is greater following applications of slurry. Based on pre- and post-ensiled clostridial counts, applications of dairy slurry on stubble are preferred (and less risky) compared with delayed applications on growing alfalfa., (Copyright © 2014 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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49. Serum protein profiling reveals baseline and pharmacodynamic biomarker signatures associated with clinical outcome in mCRC patients treated with chemotherapy ± cediranib.
- Author
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Pommier AJ, Shaw R, Spencer SK, Morgan SR, Hoff PM, Robertson JD, Barry ST, and Jürgensmeier JM
- Subjects
- Colorectal Neoplasms blood, Colorectal Neoplasms physiopathology, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Blood Proteins metabolism, Colorectal Neoplasms drug therapy, Quinazolines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: This study evaluated soluble serum proteins as biomarkers to subset patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) treated with chemotherapy±cediranib, a vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signalling inhibitor (VEGFi). Exploring biomarkers at pre- and on-treatment may identify patient subgroups showing clinical benefit on cediranib combination., Methods: Two hundred and seven serum proteins were analysed in 588 mCRC patients at pre- and on-treatment with chemotherapy (FOLFOX/CAPOX)±cediranib 20 mg. Patients were enrolled in the phase III trial HORIZON II. We correlated baseline biomarker signatures and pharmacodynamic (PD) biomarkers with PFS and OS., Results: We identified a baseline signature (BS) of 47 biomarkers that included VEGFA, VEGFD, VEGFR2, VEGFR3 and TIE-2, which defined two distinct subgroups of patients. Patients treated with chemotherapy plus cediranib who had 'high' BS had shorter PFS (HR=1.82, P=0.003) than patients with 'low' BS. This BS did not correlate with PFS of the patients treated with chemotherapy plus placebo. In addition, we identified a profile of 16 PD proteins on treatment associated with PFS (HR=0.58, P<0.001) and OS (HR=0.52, P<0.001) in patients treated with chemotherapy plus cediranib. This PD profile did not correlate with PFS and OS in patients treated with chemotherapy plus placebo., Conclusions: Serum proteins may represent relevant biomarkers to predict the outcome of patients treated with VEGFi-based therapies. We report a BS and PD biomarkers that may identify mCRC patients showing increased benefit of combining cediranib with chemotherapy. These exploratory findings need to be validated in future prospective studies.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Human and bovine viruses in the Milwaukee River watershed: hydrologically relevant representation and relations with environmental variables.
- Author
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Corsi SR, Borchardt MA, Spencer SK, Hughes PE, and Baldwin AK
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Humans, Viruses classification, Wisconsin, Environmental Monitoring, Rivers virology, Viruses growth & development, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
To examine the occurrence, hydrologic variability, and seasonal variability of human and bovine viruses in surface water, three stream locations were monitored in the Milwaukee River watershed in Wisconsin, USA, from February 2007 through June 2008. Monitoring sites included an urban subwatershed, a rural subwatershed, and the Milwaukee River at the mouth. To collect samples that characterize variability throughout changing hydrologic periods, a process control system was developed for unattended, large-volume (56-2800 L) filtration over extended durations. This system provided flow-weighted mean concentrations during runoff and extended (24-h) low-flow periods. Human viruses and bovine viruses were detected by real-time qPCR in 49% and 41% of samples (n=63), respectively. All human viruses analyzed were detected at least once including adenovirus (40% of samples), GI norovirus (10%), enterovirus (8%), rotavirus (6%), GII norovirus (1.6%) and hepatitis A virus (1.6%). Three of seven bovine viruses analyzed were detected including bovine polyomavirus (32%), bovine rotavirus (19%), and bovine viral diarrhea virus type 1 (5%). Human viruses were present in 63% of runoff samples resulting from precipitation and snowmelt, and 20% of low-flow samples. Maximum human virus concentrations exceeded 300 genomic copies/L. Bovine viruses were present in 46% of runoff samples resulting from precipitation and snowmelt and 14% of low-flow samples. The maximum bovine virus concentration was 11 genomic copies/L. Statistical modeling indicated that stream flow, precipitation, and season explained the variability of human viruses in the watershed, and hydrologic condition (runoff event or low-flow) and season explained the variability of the sum of human and bovine viruses; however, no model was identified that could explain the variability of bovine viruses alone. Understanding the factors that affect virus fate and transport in rivers will aid watershed management for minimizing human exposure and disease transmission., (Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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