36 results on '"Stroup C"'
Search Results
2. Eocene to Oligocene provenance and drainage in extensional basinsof southwest Montana and east-central Idaho
- Author
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Stroup, C. N., Link, P. K., Janecke, Susanne U., Fanning, C. M., and Yaxley, G. M.
- Subjects
extensional basin ,Montana ,Idaho ,Oligocene ,Detachment faults and metamorphic core complexes ,Eocene - Published
- 2008
3. Engineering Nanotechnology: The Top Down Approach
- Author
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Hocken, Robert J., primary, Fesperman, R., additional, Overcash, J., additional, Ozturk, O., additional, and Stroup, C., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The complete BRCA2 gene and mutations in chromosome 13q-linked kindreds
- Author
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Tavtigian, S.V., primary, Simard, J., additional, Rommens, J., additional, Couch, F., additional, Shattuck-Eidens, D., additional, Neuhausen, S., additional, Merajver, S., additional, Thorlacius, S., additional, Offit, K., additional, Stoppa-Lyonnet, D., additional, Belanger, C., additional, Bell, R., additional, Berry, S., additional, Bogden, R., additional, Chen, Q., additional, Davis, T., additional, Dumont, M., additional, Frye, C., additional, Hattier, T., additional, Jammulapati, S., additional, Janecki, T., additional, Jiang, P., additional, Kehrer, R., additional, Leblanc, J.-F., additional, Mitchell, J.T., additional, McArthur-Morrison, J., additional, Nguyen, K., additional, Peng, Y., additional, Samson, C., additional, Schroeder, M., additional, Snyder, S.C., additional, Steele, L., additional, Stringfellow, M., additional, Stroup, C., additional, Swedlund, B., additional, Swense, J., additional, Teng, D., additional, Thomas, A., additional, Tran, T., additional, Tranchant, M., additional, Weaver-Feldhaus, J., additional, Wong, A.K.C., additional, Shizuya, H., additional, Eyfjord, J.E., additional, Cannon-Albright, L., additional, Labrie, F., additional, Skolnick, M.H., additional, Weber, B., additional, Kamb, A., additional, and Goldgar, D.E., additional
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A Retrospective Pollution History of Southern California.
- Author
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Summers, J., Stroup, C., and Dickens, V.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The influence of natural and anthropogenic environmental change on white perch stock status in the Choptank River, Maryland
- Author
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Summers, J. Kevin, primary, Richkus, William A., additional, Stroup, C. Foster, additional, and Rugolo, Louis J., additional
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Transmission Research and Design with the Field as a Laboratory.
- Author
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Andrews, F. E. and Stroup, C. L.
- Published
- 1930
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Design and Operating Features of an Expulsion Arrester Without Follow Current.
- Author
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Stroup, C. L., Vitkus, Alex, and Westrom, A. C.
- Published
- 1957
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The human body burden of mirex in the southeastern United States
- Author
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Kutz, F. W., Strassman, S. C., Stroup, C. R., Carra, J. S., Leininger, C. C., Watts, D. L., and Sparacino, C. M.
- Abstract
Mirex is an organochlorine chemical with pesticidal and other industrial usages. Biologically, mirex was used as an insecticide for the control of imported fire ants in large areas of the southeastern United States. Evidence of mirex exposure in a national survey of chemicals in adipose tissue led to a more intensive survey of the general population in treated counties of the southeastern United States. Forty sites were selected randomly from 8 southeastern states where mirex was used widescale to combat fire ants; a total of 624 adipose tissue specimens were collected from these 40 sites. Tissue specimens were prepared by a modified Mills-Onley-Gather procedure and analyzed for mirex and selected other organochlorine compounds by electron-capture gas chromatography. Positive residue findings were confirmed by combined gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Weighted statistical analysis of the data was conducted to estimate the level of mirex in the study area. It was estimated that 10.2% of the population of southern United States had quantifiable levels of mirex in adipose tissue. The estimated geometric mean of the quantifiable residue amounts was 0.286 ppm (lipid basis). Statistical tests of association and regression were used to investigate possible relationships between the presence and levels of mirex, and the Census Division or state of tissue-specimen collection, by age, race, and sex. These analyses indicated that region or location of tissue specimen collection (assumed to be area of residence) strongly related to both the presence of mirex residue and the amount of mirex residue detected. This may be correlated with the amount of mirex applied for fire ant control or with some other exposure patterns in different regions.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The effect of organic matter type and organic carbon content on Rock-Eval hydrogen index in oil shales and source rocks
- Author
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Hartman-Stroup, C, primary
- Published
- 1987
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11. Abridgment of transmission research and design with the field as a laboratory
- Author
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Andrews, F. E., primary and Stroup, C. L., additional
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- 1930
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- View/download PDF
12. The Coefficient of Haze as a Measure of Particulate Elemental Carbon
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Wolff, G. T., Stroup, C. M., and Stroup, D. P.
- Subjects
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AIR quality indexes - Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The human body burden of mirex in the southeastern United States
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Carra, J. S., Sparacino, C. M., Strassman, S. C., Kutz, F. W., Leininger, C. C., Watts, D. L., and Stroup, C. R.
- Subjects
MIREX ,ORGANOCHLORINE compounds ,INSECTICIDES - Published
- 1985
14. Global surveillance of trends in cancer survival 2000-14 (concord-3): analysis of individual records for 37 513 025 patients diagnosed with one of 18 cancers from 322 population-based registries in 71 countries
- Author
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Claudia Allemani, Tomohiro Matsuda, Veronica Di Carlo, Rhea Harewood, Melissa Matz, Maja Nikšić, Audrey Bonaventure, Mikhail Valkov, Christopher J Johnson, Jacques Estève, Olufemi J Ogunbiyi, Gulnar Azevedo e Silva, Wan-Qing Chen, Sultan Eser, Gerda Engholm, Charles A Stiller, Alain Monnereau, Ryan R Woods, Otto Visser, Gek Hsiang Lim, Joanne Aitken, Hannah K Weir, Michel P Coleman, S Bouzbid, M Hamdi-Chérif, Z Zaidi, K Meguenni, D Regagba, S Bayo, T Cheick Bougadari, S S Manraj, A Fabowale, O J Ogunbiyi, D Bradshaw, N I M Somdyala, I Kumcher, F Moreno, G H Calabrano, S B Espinola, B Carballo Quintero, R Fita, M C Diumenjo, W D Laspada, S G Ibañez, C A Lima, P C F De Souza, K Del Pino, C Laporte, M P Curado, J C de Oliveira, C L A Veneziano, D B Veneziano, M R D O Latorre, L F Tanaka, M S Rebelo, M O Santos, G Azevedo e Silva, J C Galaz, M Aparicio Aravena, J Sanhueza Monsalve, D A Herrmann, S Vargas, V M Herrera, C J Uribe, L E Bravo, L S Garcia, N E Arias-Ortiz, D Morantes, D M Jurado, M C Yépez Chamorro, S Delgado, M Ramirez, Y H Galán Alvarez, P Torres, F Martínez-Reyes, L Jaramillo, R Quinto, J, M Mendoza, P Cueva, J G Yépez, B Bhakkan, J Deloumeaux, C Joachim, J Macni, R Carrillo, J Shalkow Klincovstein, R Rivera Gomez, E Poquioma, G Tortolero-Luna, D Zavala, R Alonso, E Barrios, A Eckstrand, C Nikiforuk, R R Woods, G Noonan, D Turner, E Kumar, B Zhang, F R McCrate, S Ryan, M MacIntyre, N Saint-Jacques, D E Nishri, C A McClure, K A Vriends, S Kozie, H Stuart-Panko, T Freeman, J T George, J T Brockhouse, D K O'Brien, A Holt, L Almon, S Kwong, C Morris, R Rycroft, L Mueller, C E Phillips, H Brown, B Cromartie, A G Schwartz, F Vigneau, G M Levin, B Wohler, R Bayakly, K C Ward, S L Gomez, M McKinley, R Cress, M D Green, K Miyagi, C J Johnson, L P Ruppert, C F Lynch, B Huang, T C Tucker, D Deapen, L Liu, M C Hsieh, X C Wu, M Schwenn, S T Gershman, R C Knowlton, G Alverson, G E Copeland, S Bushhouse, D B Rogers, J Jackson-Thompson, D Lemons, H J Zimmerman, M Hood, J Roberts-Johnson, J R Rees, B Riddle, K S Pawlish, A Stroup, C Key, C Wiggins, A R Kahn, M J Schymura, S Radhakrishnan, C Rao, L K Giljahn, R M Slocumb, R E Espinoza, F Khan, K G Aird, T Beran, J J Rubertone, S J Slack, L Garcia, D L Rousseau, T A Janes, S M Schwartz, S W Bolick, D M Hurley, M A Whiteside, P Miller-Gianturco, M A Williams, K Herget, C Sweeney, A T Johnson, M B Keitheri Cheteri, P Migliore Santiago, S E Blankenship, S Farley, R Borchers, R Malicki, J R Espinoza, J Grandpre, H K Weir, R Wilson, B K Edwards, A Mariotto. Y Lei, N Wang, J S Chen, Y Zhou, Y T He, G H Song, X P Gu, D Mei, H J Mu, H M Ge, T H Wu, Y Y Li, D L Zhao, F Jin, J H Zhang, F D Zhu, Q Junhua, Y L Yang, C X Jiang, W Biao, J Wang, Q L Li, H Yi, X Zhou, J Dong, W Li, F X Fu, S Z Liu, J G Chen, J Zhu, Y H Li, Y Q Lu, M Fan, S Q Huang, G P Guo, H Zhaolai, K Wei, W Q Chen, H Zeng, A V Demetriou, W K Mang, K C Ngan, A C Kataki, M Krishnatreya, P A Jayalekshmi, P Sebastian, A Nandakumar, R Malekzadeh, G Roshandel, L Keinan-Boker, B G Silverman, H Ito, H Nakagawa, M Sato, F Tobori, I Nakata, N Teramoto, M Hattori, Y Kaizaki, F Moki, H Sugiyama, M Utada, M Nishimura, K Yoshida, K Kurosawa, Y Nemoto, H Narimatsu, M Sakaguchi, S Kanemura, M Naito, R Narisawa, I Miyashiro, K Nakata, S Sato, M Yoshii, I Oki, N Fukushima, A Shibata, K Iwasa, C Ono, T Matsuda, O Nimri, K W Jung, Y J Won, E Alawadhi, A Elbasmi, A Ab Manan, F Adam, E Sanjaajmats, U Tudev, C Ochir, A M Al Khater, M M El Mistiri, G H Lim, Y Y Teo, C J Chiang, W C Lee, R Buasom, S Sangrajrang, S Kamsaard, S Wiangnon, K Daoprasert, D Pongnikorn, A Leklob, S Sangkitipaiboon, S L Geater, H Sriplung, O Ceylan, I Kög, O Dirican, T Köse, T Gurbuz, F E Karaşahin, D Turhan, U Aktaş, Y Halat, S Eser, C I Yakut, M Altinisik, Y Cavusoglu, A Türkköylü, N Üçüncü, M Hackl, A A Zborovskaya, O V Aleinikova, K Henau, L Van Eycken, Z Valerianova, M R Yordanova, M Šekerija, L Dušek, M Zvolský, G Engholm, H Storm, K Innos, M Mägi, N Malila, K Seppä, J Jégu, M Velten, E Cornet, X Troussard, A M Bouvier, A V Guizard, V Bouvier, G Launoy, P Arveux, M Maynadié, M Mounier, A S Worono, M Daoulas, M Robaszkiewicz, J Clavel, S Goujon, B Lacour, I Baldi, C Pouchieu, B Amadeo, G Coureau, A Monnereau, S Orazio, P M Preux, F Rharbaoui, E Marrer, B Trétarre, M Colonna, P Delafosse, K Ligier, S Plouvier, A Cowppli-Bony, F Molinié, S Bara, O Ganry, B Lapôtre- Ledoux, P Grosclaude, N Bossard, Z Uhry, F Bray, M Piñeros, J Estève, R Stabenow, H Wilsdorf-Köhler, A Eberle, S Luttmann, I Löhden, A L Nennecke, J Kieschke, E Sirri, K Emrich, S R Zeissig, B Holleczek, N Eisemann, A Katalinic, R A Asquez, V Kumar, E Petridou, E J Ólafsdóttir, L Tryggvadóttir, K Clough-Gorr, P M Walsh, H Sundseth, G Mazzoleni, F Vittadello, E Coviello, F Cuccaro, R Galasso, G Sampietro, A Giacomin, M Magoni, A Ardizzone, A D'Argenzio, M Castaing, G Grosso, A M Lavecchia, A Sutera Sardo, G Gola, L Gatti, P Ricci, S Ferretti, D Serraino, A Zucchetto, M V Celesia, R A Filiberti, F Pannozzo, A Melcarne, F Quarta, A G Russo, G Carrozzi, C Cirilli, L Cavalieri d'Oro, M Rognoni, M Fusco, M F Vitale, M Usala, R Cusimano, W Mazzucco, M Michiara, P Sgargi, L Boschetti, E Borciani, P Seghini, M M Maule, F Merletti, R Tumino, P Mancuso, M Vicentini, T Cassetti, R Sassatelli, F Falcini, S Giorgetti, A L Caiazzo, R Cavallo, R Cesaraccio, D R Pirino, M L Contrino, F Tisano, A C Fanetti, S Maspero, S Carone, A Mincuzzi, G Candela, T Scuderi, M A Gentilini, S Pier, S Rosso, A Barchielli, A Caldarella, F Bianconi, F Stracci, P Contiero, G Tagliabue, M Rugge, M Zorzi, S Beggiato, A Brustolin, F Berrino, G Gatta, M Sant, C Buzzoni, L Mangone, R Capocaccia, R De Angelis, R Zanetti, A Maurina, S Pildava, N Lipunova, I Vincerževskienė, D Agius, N Calleja, S Siesling, O Visser, Larønningen, B Møller, A Dyzmann-Sroka, M Trojanowski, S Góźdź, R Mężyk, T Mierzwa, L Molong, J Rachtan, S Szewczyk, J Błaszczyk, K Kępska, B Kościańska, K Tarocińska, M Zwierko, K Drosik, K M Maksimowicz, E Purwin-Porowska, E Reca, J Wójcik-Tomaszewska, A Tukiendorf, M Grądalska-Lampart, A U Radziszewska, A Gos, M Talerczyk, M Wyborska, J A Didkowska, U Wojciechowska, M Bielska-Lasota, G Forjaz de Lacerda, R A Rego, J Bastos, M A Silva, L Antunes, J Laranja Pontes, A Mayer-da-Silva, A Miranda, L M Blaga, D Coza, Russia: M Y Valkov, L Gusenkova, O Lazarevich, O Prudnikova, D M Vjushkov, A G Egorova, A E Orlov, L A Kudyakov, L V Pikalova, J Adamcik, C Safaei Diba, M Primic-Žakelj, V Zadnik, N Larrañaga, A Lopez de Munain, A A Herrera, R Redondas, R Marcos-Gragera, M L Vilardell Gil, E Molina, M J Sánchez Perez, P Franch Sureda, M Ramos Montserrat, M D Chirlaque, C Navarro, E E Ardanaz, M M Guevara, R Fernández-Delgado, R Peris-Bonet, M Carulla, J Galceran, C Alberich, M Vicente-Raneda, S Khan, D Pettersson, P Dickman, I Avelina, K Staehelin, B Camey, C Bouchardy, R Schaar, H Frick, C Herrmann, J L Bulliard, M Maspoli-Conconi, C E Kuehni, S M Redmond, A Bordoni, L Ortelli, A Chiolero, I Konzelmann, K L Matthes, S Rohrmann, Broggio, J Rashbass, D Fitzpatrick, A Gavin, D I Clark, A J Deas, D W Huws, C White, C Allemani, A Bonaventure, M P Coleman, V Di Carlo, R Harewood, M Matz, L Montel, M Nikšić, B Rachet, A D Turculeț, R Stephens, C A Stiller, E Chalker, H Phung, R Walton, H You, S Guthridge, F Johnson, J Aitken, P Gordon, K D'Onise, K Priest, B C Stokes, A Venn, H Farrugia, V Thurs eld, J Dowlin, D Currow, J Hendrix, C Lewis, Tıp Fakültesi, Bordeaux population health (BPH), Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut de Santé Publique, d'Épidémiologie et de Développement (ISPED)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and Claudia Allemani, Tomohiro Matsuda, Veronica Di Carlo, Rhea Harewood, Melissa Matz, Maja Nikšić, Audrey Bonaventure, Mikhail Valkov, Christopher J Johnson, Jacques Estève, Olufemi J Ogunbiyi, Gulnar Azevedo e Silva, Wan-Qing Chen, Sultan Eser, Gerda Engholm, Charles A Stiller, Alain Monnereau, Ryan R Woods, Otto Visser, Gek Hsiang Lim, Joanne Aitken, Hannah K Weir, Michel P Coleman, S Bouzbid, M Hamdi-Chérif, Z Zaidi, K Meguenni, D Regagba, S Bayo, T Cheick Bougadari, S S Manraj, A Fabowale, O J Ogunbiyi, D Bradshaw, N I M Somdyala, I Kumcher, F Moreno, G H Calabrano, S B Espinola, B Carballo Quintero, R Fita, M C Diumenjo, W D Laspada, S G Ibañez, C A Lima, P C F De Souza, K Del Pino, C Laporte, M P Curado, J C de Oliveira, C L A Veneziano, D B Veneziano, M R D O Latorre, L F Tanaka, M S Rebelo, M O Santos, G Azevedo e Silva, J C Galaz, M Aparicio Aravena, J Sanhueza Monsalve, D A Herrmann, S Vargas, V M Herrera, C J Uribe, L E Bravo, L S Garcia, N E Arias-Ortiz, D Morantes, D M Jurado, M C Yépez Chamorro, S Delgado, M Ramirez, Y H Galán Alvarez, P Torres, F Martínez-Reyes, L Jaramillo, R Quinto, J, M Mendoza, P Cueva, J G Yépez, B Bhakkan, J Deloumeaux, C Joachim, J Macni, R Carrillo, J Shalkow Klincovstein, R Rivera Gomez, E Poquioma, G Tortolero-Luna, D Zavala, R Alonso, E Barrios, A Eckstrand, C Nikiforuk, R R Woods, G Noonan, D Turner, E Kumar, B Zhang, F R McCrate, S Ryan, M MacIntyre, N Saint-Jacques, D E Nishri, C A McClure, K A Vriends, S Kozie, H Stuart-Panko, T Freeman, J T George, J T Brockhouse, D K O'Brien, A Holt, L Almon, S Kwong, C Morris, R Rycroft, L Mueller, C E Phillips, H Brown, B Cromartie, A G Schwartz, F Vigneau, G M Levin, B Wohler, R Bayakly, K C Ward, S L Gomez, M McKinley, R Cress, M D Green, K Miyagi, C J Johnson, L P Ruppert, C F Lynch, B Huang, T C Tucker, D Deapen, L Liu, M C Hsieh, X C Wu, M Schwenn, S T Gershman, R C Knowlton, G Alverson, G E Copeland, S Bushhouse, D B Rogers, J Jackson-Thompson, D Lemons, H J Zimmerman, M Hood, J Roberts-Johnson, J R Rees, B Riddle, K S Pawlish, A Stroup, C Key, C Wiggins, A R Kahn, M J Schymura, S Radhakrishnan, C Rao, L K Giljahn, R M Slocumb, R E Espinoza, F Khan, K G Aird, T Beran, J J Rubertone, S J Slack, L Garcia, D L Rousseau, T A Janes, S M Schwartz, S W Bolick, D M Hurley, M A Whiteside, P Miller-Gianturco, M A Williams, K Herget, C Sweeney, A T Johnson, M B Keitheri Cheteri, P Migliore Santiago, S E Blankenship, S Farley, R Borchers, R Malicki, J R Espinoza, J Grandpre, H K Weir, R Wilson, B K Edwards, A Mariotto. Y Lei, N Wang, J S Chen, Y Zhou, Y T He, G H Song, X P Gu, D Mei, H J Mu, H M Ge, T H Wu, Y Y Li, D L Zhao, F Jin, J H Zhang, F D Zhu, Q Junhua, Y L Yang, C X Jiang, W Biao, J Wang, Q L Li, H Yi, X Zhou, J Dong, W Li, F X Fu, S Z Liu, J G Chen, J Zhu, Y H Li, Y Q Lu, M Fan, S Q Huang, G P Guo, H Zhaolai, K Wei, W Q Chen, H Zeng, A V Demetriou, W K Mang, K C Ngan, A C Kataki, M Krishnatreya, P A Jayalekshmi, P Sebastian, A Nandakumar, R Malekzadeh, G Roshandel, L Keinan-Boker, B G Silverman, H Ito, H Nakagawa, M Sato, F Tobori, I Nakata, N Teramoto, M Hattori, Y Kaizaki, F Moki, H Sugiyama, M Utada, M Nishimura, K Yoshida, K Kurosawa, Y Nemoto, H Narimatsu, M Sakaguchi, S Kanemura, M Naito, R Narisawa, I Miyashiro, K Nakata, S Sato, M Yoshii, I Oki, N Fukushima, A Shibata, K Iwasa, C Ono, T Matsuda, O Nimri, K W Jung, Y J Won, E Alawadhi, A Elbasmi, A Ab Manan, F Adam, E Sanjaajmats, U Tudev, C Ochir, A M Al Khater, M M El Mistiri, G H Lim, Y Y Teo, C J Chiang, W C Lee, R Buasom, S Sangrajrang, S Kamsaard, S Wiangnon, K Daoprasert, D Pongnikorn, A Leklob, S Sangkitipaiboon, S L Geater, H Sriplung, O Ceylan, I Kög, O Dirican, T Köse, T Gurbuz, F E Karaşahin, D Turhan, U Aktaş, Y Halat, S Eser, C I Yakut, M Altinisik, Y Cavusoglu, A Türkköylü, N Üçüncü, M Hackl, A A Zborovskaya, O V Aleinikova, K Henau, L Van Eycken, Z Valerianova, M R Yordanova, M Šekerija, L Dušek, M Zvolský, G Engholm, H Storm, K Innos, M Mägi, N Malila, K Seppä, J Jégu, M Velten, E Cornet, X Troussard, A M Bouvier, A V Guizard, V Bouvier, G Launoy, P Arveux, M Maynadié, M Mounier, A S Worono, M Daoulas, M Robaszkiewicz, J Clavel, S Goujon, B Lacour, I Baldi, C Pouchieu, B Amadeo, G Coureau, A Monnereau, S Orazio, P M Preux, F Rharbaoui, E Marrer, B Trétarre, M Colonna, P Delafosse, K Ligier, S Plouvier, A Cowppli-Bony, F Molinié, S Bara, O Ganry, B Lapôtre- Ledoux, P Grosclaude, N Bossard, Z Uhry, F Bray, M Piñeros, J Estève, R Stabenow, H Wilsdorf-Köhler, A Eberle, S Luttmann, I Löhden, A L Nennecke, J Kieschke, E Sirri, K Emrich, S R Zeissig, B Holleczek, N Eisemann, A Katalinic, R A Asquez, V Kumar, E Petridou, E J Ólafsdóttir, L Tryggvadóttir, K Clough-Gorr, P M Walsh, H Sundseth, G Mazzoleni, F Vittadello, E Coviello, F Cuccaro, R Galasso, G Sampietro, A Giacomin, M Magoni, A Ardizzone, A D'Argenzio, M Castaing, G Grosso, A M Lavecchia, A Sutera Sardo, G Gola, L Gatti, P Ricci, S Ferretti, D Serraino, A Zucchetto, M V Celesia, R A Filiberti, F Pannozzo, A Melcarne, F Quarta, A G Russo, G Carrozzi, C Cirilli, L Cavalieri d'Oro, M Rognoni, M Fusco, M F Vitale, M Usala, R Cusimano, W Mazzucco, M Michiara, P Sgargi, L Boschetti, E Borciani, P Seghini, M M Maule, F Merletti, R Tumino, P Mancuso, M Vicentini, T Cassetti, R Sassatelli, F Falcini, S Giorgetti, A L Caiazzo, R Cavallo, R Cesaraccio, D R Pirino, M L Contrino, F Tisano, A C Fanetti, S Maspero, S Carone, A Mincuzzi, G Candela, T Scuderi, M A Gentilini, S Pier, S Rosso, A Barchielli, A Caldarella, F Bianconi, F Stracci, P Contiero, G Tagliabue, M Rugge, M Zorzi, S Beggiato, A Brustolin, F Berrino, G Gatta, M Sant, C Buzzoni, L Mangone, R Capocaccia, R De Angelis, R Zanetti, A Maurina, S Pildava, N Lipunova, I Vincerževskienė, D Agius, N Calleja, S Siesling, O Visser, Larønningen, B Møller, A Dyzmann-Sroka, M Trojanowski, S Góźdź, R Mężyk, T Mierzwa, L Molong, J Rachtan, S Szewczyk, J Błaszczyk, K Kępska, B Kościańska, K Tarocińska, M Zwierko, K Drosik, K M Maksimowicz, E Purwin-Porowska, E Reca, J Wójcik-Tomaszewska, A Tukiendorf, M Grądalska-Lampart, A U Radziszewska, A Gos, M Talerczyk, M Wyborska, J A Didkowska, U Wojciechowska, M Bielska-Lasota, G Forjaz de Lacerda, R A Rego, J Bastos, M A Silva, L Antunes, J Laranja Pontes, A Mayer-da-Silva, A Miranda, L M Blaga, D Coza, Russia: M Y Valkov, L Gusenkova, O Lazarevich, O Prudnikova, D M Vjushkov, A G Egorova, A E Orlov, L A Kudyakov, L V Pikalova, J Adamcik, C Safaei Diba, M Primic-Žakelj, V Zadnik, N Larrañaga, A Lopez de Munain, A A Herrera, R Redondas, R Marcos-Gragera, M L Vilardell Gil, E Molina, M J Sánchez Perez, P Franch Sureda, M Ramos Montserrat, M D Chirlaque, C Navarro, E E Ardanaz, M M Guevara, R Fernández-Delgado, R Peris-Bonet, M Carulla, J Galceran, C Alberich, M Vicente-Raneda, S Khan, D Pettersson, P Dickman, I Avelina, K Staehelin, B Camey, C Bouchardy, R Schaar, H Frick, C Herrmann, J L Bulliard, M Maspoli-Conconi, C E Kuehni, S M Redmond, A Bordoni, L Ortelli, A Chiolero, I Konzelmann, K L Matthes, S Rohrmann, Broggio, J Rashbass, D Fitzpatrick, A Gavin, D I Clark, A J Deas, D W Huws, C White, C Allemani, A Bonaventure, M P Coleman, V Di Carlo, R Harewood, M Matz, L Montel, M Nikšić, B Rachet, A D Turculeț, R Stephens, C A Stiller, E Chalker, H Phung, R Walton, H You, S Guthridge, F Johnson, J Aitken, P Gordon, K D'Onise, K Priest, B C Stokes, A Venn, H Farrugia, V Thurs eld, J Dowlin, D Currow, J Hendrix, C Lewis
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0301 basic medicine ,Universal Health Coverage ,population-based registries ,Relative Survival ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata ,Cancer -- Treatment ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Population Surveillance ,Registries ,Survival Rate ,Medicine (all) ,0302 clinical medicine ,cancer survival ,education.field_of_study ,Relative survival ,EPICENE ,General Medicine ,3. Good health ,trend ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Public-Health ,cancer surveillance ,Liver cancer ,survival ,cancer registry ,CONCORD-3 ,Cure ,Childhood-Cancer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,population-based cancer registries ,Womens Cancers ,Population ,Medicine (all),cancer survival, population-based cancer registries ,Socio-culturale ,United-States ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,Cancer epidemiology ,medicine ,Nordic-Countries ,Cancer -- Mortality ,education ,Survival rate ,Cancer prevention ,Alternative Approach ,business.industry ,Public health ,Cancer ,Cancer -- Patients -- Long-term care ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,High-Income Countries ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Eser, Sultan (Balikesir Author), Background In 2015, the second cycle of the CONCORD programme established global surveillance of cancer survival as a metric of the effectiveness of health systems and to inform global policy on cancer control. CONCORD-3 updates the worldwide surveillance of cancer survival to 2014. Methods CONCORD-3 includes individual records for 37.5 million patients diagnosed with cancer during the 15-year period 2000-14. Data were provided by 322 population-based cancer registries in 71 countries and territories, 47 of which provided data with 100% population coverage. The study includes 18 cancers or groups of cancers: oesophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, liver, pancreas, lung, breast (women), cervix, ovary, prostate, and melanoma of the skin in adults, and brain tumours, leukaemias, and lymphomas in both adults and children. Standardised quality control procedures were applied; errors were rectified by the registry concerned. We estimated 5-year net survival. Estimates were age-standardised with the International Cancer Survival Standard weights.Findings For most cancers, 5-year net survival remains among the highest in the world in the USA and Canada, in Australia and New Zealand, and in Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. For many cancers, Denmark is closing the survival gap with the other Nordic countries. Survival trends are generally increasing, even for some of the more lethal cancers: in some countries, survival has increased by up to 5% for cancers of the liver, pancreas, and lung. For women diagnosed during 2010-14, 5-year survival for breast cancer is now 89.5% in Australia and 90.2% in the USA, but international differences remain very wide, with levels as low as 66.1% in India. For gastrointestinal cancers, the highest levels of 5-year survival are seen in southeast Asia: in South Korea for cancers of the stomach (68.9%), colon (71.8%), and rectum (71.1%); in Japan for oesophageal cancer (36.0%); and in Taiwan for liver cancer (27.9%). By contrast, in the same world region, survival is generally lower than elsewhere for melanoma of the skin (59.9% in South Korea, 52.1% in Taiwan, and 49.6% in China), and for both lymphoid malignancies (52.5%, 50.5%, and 38.3%) and myeloid malignancies (45.9%, 33.4%, and 24.8%). For children diagnosed during 2010-14, 5-year survival for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia ranged from 49.8% in Ecuador to 95.2% in Finland. 5-year survival from brain tumours in children is higher than for adults but the global range is very wide (from 28.9% in Brazil to nearly 80% in Sweden and Denmark). Interpretation The CONCORD programme enables timely comparisons of the overall effectiveness of health systems in providing care for 18 cancers that collectively represent 75% of all cancers diagnosed worldwide every year. It contributes to the evidence base for global policy on cancer control. Since 2017, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has used findings from the CONCORD programme as the official benchmark of cancer survival, among their indicators of the quality of health care in 48 countries worldwide. Governments must recognise population-based cancer registries as key policy tools that can be used to evaluate both the impact of cancer prevention strategies and the effectiveness of health systems for all patients diagnosed with cancer., American Cancer Society Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Swiss Re Swiss Cancer Research foundation Swiss Cancer League Institut National du Cancer La Ligue Contre le Cancer Rossy Family Foundation US National Cancer Institute Susan G Komen Foundation
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- 2018
15. Chemicals identified in human biological media
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Stroup, C
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- 1981
16. Determination of organic chemicals in human whole blood: Preliminary method development for volatile organics
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Stroup, C [Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC (USA)]
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- 1988
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17. Avoidable admissions after minimally invasive hysterectomy.
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Manorot A, Uppal S, de Bear O, Stroup C, Dalton L, Rolston A, McCool K, Reynolds RK, McLean K, Siedel J, and Straubhar AM
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Risk Factors, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Hysterectomy adverse effects, Hysterectomy methods, Hysterectomy statistics & numerical data, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures statistics & numerical data, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures methods
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Objective: To determine the rate of avoidable admissions following anticipated same-day discharge for patients undergoing minimally invasive hysterectomy and to identify risk factors associated with such admissions., Methods: A retrospective review was performed of patients who underwent a minimally invasive hysterectomy between March 2019 and July 2021 for a suspected gynecologic malignancy at a single tertiary care center. Pre-operatively, patients were assessed for same-day discharge versus planned admission. Reasons for day-of-surgery admission despite anticipated same-day discharge were categorized as anesthesia-related, system issues, intra-operative factors, post-operative pain, and social factors. Patients deemed not candidates for same-day discharge were defined as planned admissions. Indications were categorized as necessary or potentially avoidable. Descriptive and comparative statistics were used to summarize the cohort., Results: In total, 372 patients were identified: 261 (70.2%) anticipated same-day discharges and 111 (29.8%) planned admissions. Of anticipated same-day discharges, 230/261 (88.1%) were successfully discharged, while 31/261 (11.9%) required admission. Reasons for unplanned admissions were anesthesia-related (14/31, 45.2%), system issues (7/31, 22.6%), intra-operative factors (5/31, 16.1%), post-operative pain (3/31, 9.7%), and social factors (2/31, 6.5%). Among the 111 pre-operatively planned admissions, 81 (73.0%) were necessary due to comorbidities or surgical complexity, while 30 (27.0%) were potentially avoidable because patients could have been optimized for same-day discharge. Opportunities for optimization pre-operatively included comorbidities (13/30, 43.3%), system issues (8/30, 26.7%), social factors (6/30, 20.0%), and provider preference (3/30, 10.0%)., Conclusion: Most patients undergoing minimally invasive hysterectomy can be safely discharged the same day. Potentially avoidable admissions were primarily related to patient comorbidities that can be better optimized pre-operatively., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© IGCS and ESGO 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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18. Patient reported opioid usage following vulvar surgery in gynecologic oncology.
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Tondo-Steele K, Stroup C, Uppal S, and Straubhar A
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Background: There remains a paucity of data for vulvar surgery outcomes in gynecologic oncology in the era of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) ®. As such, the primary objective is to assess the impact of patient and procedural factors on patient reported postoperative opioid usage following vulvar surgery. Secondary objective is to create a tailored opioid prescribing algorithm for this population., Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed of patients who underwent vulvar surgery for a gynecologic malignancy between 3/2019-7/2022. Covariates of interest included a history of risk factors for opioid usage, age, anatomic location of the vulvar resection, radicality of surgery, groin dissection, use of postoperative non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and complications. Logistic regression models evaluated the effects that sociodemographic characteristics and procedural factors have on opioid usage. Linear regression models were created to determine prescribing guidelines., Results: A total of 100 patients were included. Following surgery, 35 patients (35 %) were not sent home with an opioid prescription, 39 patients (39 %) reported using at least one opioid pill from their prescription, and 26 patients (26 %) reported not using any opioid pills from their prescription. In the regression models, patient age (p < 0.006) had a significant impact on opioid use, while all other factors did not. Contraindications to NSAIDs did not have a statistically significant impact (p = 0.1) but was deemed clinically meaningful and included in the final model. Proposed opioid prescribing guidelines were created., Conclusion: In conclusion, most patients after vulvar surgery require little to no opioids. Identifiable preoperative factors can aid providers to manage postoperative pain while minimizing unnecessary opioid prescriptions., Competing Interests: 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., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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19. Small bite fascial closure technique reduces incisional hernia rates in gynecologic oncology patients.
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Straubhar AM, Stroup C, Manorot A, McCool K, Rolston A, Reynolds RK, McLean K, de Bear O, Siedel J, and Uppal S
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Fasciotomy methods, Cohort Studies, Incisional Hernia prevention & control, Incisional Hernia epidemiology, Genital Neoplasms, Female surgery
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Background: The potential for the technique of small bite fascial closure in mitigating incisional hernias in gynecologic oncology patients still needs to be investigated., Objective: To evaluate the impact of closure of small fascial bites compared with prior standard closure on incisional hernia rates in gynecologic oncology patients., Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study comparing patient outcomes before and after the intervention at a single institution at a comprehensive cancer center. Patients who underwent laparotomy with a vertical midline incision for a suspected or known gynecologic malignancy with a 1-year follow-up were included. The pre-intervention cohort (large bites) had 'mass' or modified running Smead-Jones closure. In contrast, the post-intervention cohort had fascial bites taken 5-8 mm laterally with no more than 5 mm travel (small bites) closure using a 2-0 polydioxanone suture.The primary outcome was the incisional hernias rate determined by imaging or clinical examination within the first year of follow-up. Patient factors and peri-operative variates of interest were investigated for their association with hernia formation through univariate and multivariate analyses. These included age, body mass index (BMI), smoking history, estimated blood loss, pre-operative albumin, American Society of Anesthesia (ASA) physical status classification, or treatment with chemotherapy post-operatively., Results: Of the 255 patients included, the total hernia rate was 12.5% (32/255 patients). Patient characteristics were similar in both cohorts. Small bite closure led to a significant reduction in hernia rates from 17.2% (22/128 patients) to 7.9% (10/127 patients), p=0.025. According to logistic regression modeling, small bite closure (OR=0.40, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.94, p=0.036) was independently associated with lower odds of hernia formation. Other factors associated with increased hernia rates were chemotherapy (OR=3.22, 95% CI 1.22 to 8.51, p=0.019) and obesity (OR=23.4, 95% CI 3.09 to 177, p=0.002). In obese patients, small bite closures led to maximal hernia rate reduction compared with large bites., Conclusions: The small bite closure technique effectively reduces hernia rates in gynecologic oncology patients undergoing midline laparotomy., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© IGCS and ESGO 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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20. Refugee Births and the Migrant Health Effect in Syracuse NY.
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Goble G, Formica M, Lane SD, Sous M, Stroup C, Rubinstein RA, and Shaw A
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- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, New York epidemiology, Cesarean Section, Refugees, Transients and Migrants, Emigrants and Immigrants
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Objectives: In Syracuse, NY among 5998 births in a 3-year period (2017-2019), 24% were to foreign-born women, among whom nearly 5% were refugees from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Somalia. The impetus for the study was to identify potential risk factors and birth outcomes of refugee women, other foreign-born women, and US born women to inform care., Methods: This study reviewed 3 years of births (2017-2019) in a secondary database of births in Syracuse, New York. Data reviewed included maternal demographics, natality, behavioral risk factors (e.g., drug use, tobacco use), employment, health insurance, and education., Results: In a logistic regression model controlling for race, education, insurance status, employment status, tobacco use and illicit drug use, compared to US born mothers, refugees (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.24-0.83) and other foreign born (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.47-0.85) had significantly fewer low birth weight births., Conclusion: The results of this study supported the "healthy migrant effect," a concept that refugees have fewer low birth weight (LBW) births, premature births, and cesarean section deliveries than US born women. This study adds to the literature on refugee births and the healthy migrant effect., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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21. Provider compliance with a tailored opioid prescribing calculator in gynecologic surgery.
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Straubhar AM, Stroup C, de Bear O, Dalton L, Rolston A, McCool K, Reynolds RK, McLean K, Siedel JH, and Uppal S
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- Humans, Female, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Gynecologic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Drug Prescriptions, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy
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Objective: To evaluate the impact a tailored opioid prescription calculator has on meeting individual patient opioid needs while avoiding opioid over prescriptions., Methods: Our group previously developed and published an opioid prescribing calculator incorporating patient risk factors (history of depression, anxiety, chronic opioid use, substance abuse disorder, and/or chronic pain) and type of surgery (laparotomy or laparoscopy). This calculator was implemented on 1/1/2021 and its impact on opioid prescriptions was evaluated until 12/31/21. The primary outcome of the present study is to determine prescriber compliance with the calculator (defined as not overprescribing from the number of pills indicated by the calculator). The secondary outcome is to determine the excess prescription rate (defined as proportion of patients reporting more than 3 pills remaining at 30 days post-surgery). Refill rates and pain related patient phone calls were collected. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the cohort., Results: Of the 355 patients included, 54.7% (N = 194) underwent laparoscopy and 45.4% (N = 161) underwent laparotomy. One hundred and forty-two patients (40%) had at least one risk factor for opioid usage. The median number of opioid pills prescribed following laparoscopy was 3 (range 0-15) and 6 (0-20) after laparotomy. The prescriber compliance was 88.2% and the excess prescription rate was 25.1% (N = 89 patients)., Conclusions: Our tailored opioid calculator has a high prescriber compliance. Implementation of this calculator led to a standardization of tailored opioid prescribing, while limiting the number of over prescriptions. A free web version of the calculator can be easily accessed at www.opioidcalculator.org., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Dr. Straubhar has a patent (W02019195097A1) issued outside of this work., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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22. Optimization of postoperative opioid prescriptions in gynecologic oncology: Striking a balance between opioid reduction and pain control.
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Straubhar AM, Dalton L, Rolston A, McCool K, De Bear O, Stroup C, Reynolds RK, McLean K, Siedel JH, and Uppal S
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Michigan, Middle Aged, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Practice Patterns, Physicians' standards, Quality Improvement, Retrospective Studies, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Genital Neoplasms, Female surgery, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy
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Objective: To implement a quality-improvement initiative to assess the impact various patient and procedural factors have on postoperative opioid use. To develop a tailored opioid prescribing algorithm for gynecologic oncology patients., Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed of patients who underwent a laparoscopy or laparotomy procedure for a suspected or known gynecologic malignancy between 3/2019-9/2020. Patients were assessed preoperatively for the presence of suspected risk factors for opioid misuse (depression, anxiety, chronic pain, current opioid use, or substance abuse). Patients completed a 30-day postoperative questionnaire assessing for total opioid pill use and refills requests. Multivariate models were developed to estimate the independent effect of sociodemographic characteristics, risk factors for opioid misuse and procedural factors on patient reported postoperative opioid use., Results: A total of 390 patients were analyzed. Thirty-nine percent (N = 151/390) of patients reported not using opioids after discharge and 5% (N = 20/390) received an opioid refill. For both minimally invasive procedures and laparotomy procedures, body mass index, comorbidities, intraoperative or postoperative complications and final diagnosis of malignancy were not associated with the amount of opioid consumption. However, younger age and history of risk factors for opioid misuse significantly impacted postoperative opioid use. In multivariate analysis, age (p = 0.038) and risk factors (p < 0.001) remained significant after controlling for other factors., Conclusions: Two out of every five patients did not use opioids after surgery. Younger patients and those with risk factors for opioid misuse need a tailored approach to prescribing opioids to balance the need for adequate pain control with the risk of misuse., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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23. Operationalizing the Concept of Critical Thinking for Student Learning Outcome Development.
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Cooke L, Stroup C, and Harrington C
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- Humans, Nursing Education Research, Nursing Evaluation Research, Curriculum, Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate organization & administration, Learning, Students, Nursing psychology, Thinking
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Background: Creating a curriculum that can effectively develop critical thinking skills is an elusive outcome for undergraduate nursing programs. Despite the best efforts of faculty, employers continue to note an inability of new graduates to apply critical thinking concepts that improve patient outcomes. The lack of an operational definition of critical thinking appears to be a key contributor to this issue., Method: A concept analysis was developed to identify a definition of critical thinking that allows for clear, measurable learning outcomes., Results: Despite extensive discussion within the literature, a consistent definition of critical thinking is lacking; instead, a rather extensive list exists of the attributes and antecedents consistently found in individuals who think critically., Conclusion: Curricular student learning outcomes framed around operational attributes can promote the development of critical thinking skills and improve patient outcomes. [J Nurs Educ. 2019;58(4):214-220.]., (Copyright 2019, SLACK Incorporated.)
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- 2019
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24. Utility of Lung Clearance Index Testing as a Noninvasive Marker of Deployment-related Lung Disease.
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Krefft SD, Strand M, Smith J, Stroup C, Meehan R, and Rose C
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- Adult, Biomarkers, Biopsy, Cough etiology, Dyspnea etiology, Exercise Tolerance, Female, Functional Residual Capacity, Humans, Lung pathology, Lung Diseases complications, Lung Diseases pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Occupational Diseases complications, Occupational Diseases pathology, Pilot Projects, Pulmonary Ventilation, Respiratory Sounds etiology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, United States, Lung Diseases diagnosis, Lung Diseases physiopathology, Military Personnel, Occupational Diseases diagnosis, Occupational Diseases physiopathology
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Objective: The aim of this study was to determine utility and sensitivity of lung clearance index (LCI) testing as a marker of lung injury in symptomatic military deployers compared with healthy controls., Methods: We tested 24 healthy controls and 28 deployers with respiratory symptoms (17 of 28 with definite and 11 of 28 with probable deployment-related lung disease). We compared mean LCI scores between deployers and controls using t tests; adjusted tests were derived from multiple regression models., Results: Mean LCI scores were significantly higher (P = 0.001) in deployers [7.76, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 7.34 to 8.17] than controls (6.95, 95% CI 6.73 to 7.17). Adjusting for body mass index (BMI), smoking, and age, there were no significant differences (P = 0.10) between mean LCI scores in deployers (7.42, 95% CI 7.13 to 7.71) and controls (7.06, 95% CI 6.74 to 7.39)., Conclusions: The trend toward higher LCI scores in symptomatic deployers may be linked to underlying lung disease and/or BMI but requires further investigation in a larger population.
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- 2017
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25. Differences in sacral neuromodulation device infection rates based on preoperative antibiotic selection.
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Haraway AM, Clemens JQ, He C, Stroup C, Atiemo HO, and Cameron AP
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- Adult, Device Removal, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, Gentamicins therapeutic use, Humans, Lumbosacral Region, Male, Middle Aged, Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Staphylococcal Infections prevention & control, Surgical Wound Infection prevention & control, Vancomycin therapeutic use, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antibiotic Prophylaxis, Cefazolin therapeutic use, Cephalosporin Resistance, Implantable Neurostimulators adverse effects, Staphylococcal Infections microbiology, Surgical Wound Infection microbiology
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Introduction and Hypothesis: After SNM implantation the most significant complication that can occur is wound infection, which typically requires removal of all components. Such infections have been reported in 5-11 % of patients, but little is known about risk factors. The objective of this analysis is to determine our postoperative wound infection rate after SNM implantation, and examined various potential predictive factors. Our hypothesis is that perioperative antibiotic selection is related to the risk of infections., Methods: A retrospective review was performed of all patients who underwent SNM implantation by one of three surgeons from 2007 to 2010. Preoperative antibiotics were administered according to surgeon preference, and included cefazolin alone, vancomycin alone, or vancomycin with gentamicin. Predictors of wound infection were evaluated using multivariate techniques. Variables examined included preoperative antibiotic regimen, surgeon, location (outpatient surgery center vs university hospital), gender, comorbidities (diabetes mellitus, immunosuppression and smoking), history of urinary tract infections, and preoperative skin preparation., Results: A total of 136 patients underwent SNM implantation, and 8 (5.9 %) experienced infections that required device explantation. Cefazolin alone was less effective in preventing infection compared with the other antibiotic regimens (p = 0.03). The odds of having an infection in cefazolin-treated patients was 7.3 times that of other patients treated with another antibiotic regimen. Seven out of the eight infections with explant grew Staphylococcus aureus resistant to cephalosporins. None of the other variables proved to be a statistically significant contributor., Conclusions: Preoperative antibiotic selection was a significant factor in preventing subsequent infection and explantation following SNM placement.
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- 2013
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26. Lack of osteoradionecrosis of the mandible after intensity-modulated radiotherapy for head and neck cancer: likely contributions of both dental care and improved dose distributions.
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Ben-David MA, Diamante M, Radawski JD, Vineberg KA, Stroup C, Murdoch-Kinch CA, Zwetchkenbaum SR, and Eisbruch A
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Dental Prophylaxis methods, Female, Humans, Male, Mandibular Diseases epidemiology, Mandibular Diseases etiology, Middle Aged, Osteoradionecrosis epidemiology, Osteoradionecrosis etiology, Prevalence, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated standards, Retrospective Studies, Tooth Extraction, Dental Care, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Mandibular Diseases prevention & control, Osteoradionecrosis prevention & control, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess the prevalence and dosimetric and clinical predictors of mandibular osteoradionecrosis (ORN) in patients with head and neck cancer who underwent a pretherapy dental evaluation and prophylactic treatment according to a uniform policy and were treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT)., Methods and Materials: Between 1996 and 2005, all patients with head-and-neck cancer treated with parotid gland-sparing IMRT in prospective studies underwent a dental examination and prophylactic treatment according to a uniform policy that included extractions of high-risk, periodontally involved, and nonrestorable teeth in parts of the mandible expected to receive high radiation doses, fluoride supplements, and the placement of guards aiming to reduce electron backscatter off metal teeth restorations. The IMRT plans included dose constraints for the maximal mandibular doses and reduced mean parotid gland and noninvolved oral cavity doses. A retrospective analysis of Grade 2 or worse (clinical) ORN was performed., Results: A total of 176 patients had a minimal follow-up of 6 months. Of these, 31 (17%) had undergone teeth extractions before RT and 13 (7%) after RT. Of the 176 patients, 75% and 50% had received >or=65 Gy and >or=70 Gy to >or=1% of the mandibular volume, respectively. Falloff across the mandible characterized the dose distributions: the average gradient (in the axial plane containing the maximal mandibular dose) was 11 Gy (range, 1-27 Gy; median, 8 Gy). At a median follow-up of 34 months, no cases of ORN had developed (95% confidence interval, 0-2%)., Conclusion: The use of a strict prophylactic dental care policy and IMRT resulted in no case of clinical ORN. In addition to the dosimetric advantages offered by IMRT, meticulous dental prophylactic care is likely an essential factor in reducing ORN risk.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Lack of guanylyl cyclase C, the receptor for Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin, results in reduced polyp formation and increased apoptosis in the multiple intestinal neoplasia (Min) mouse model.
- Author
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Mann EA, Steinbrecher KA, Stroup C, Witte DP, Cohen MB, and Giannella RA
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis, Caspase 3, Caspase 7, Caspases biosynthesis, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, Disease Models, Animal, Gene Expression Regulation, Intestinal Neoplasms veterinary, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Neoplasms, Second Primary veterinary, Polyps veterinary, Receptors, Enterotoxin, Receptors, Guanylate Cyclase-Coupled, Signal Transduction, Guanylate Cyclase genetics, Guanylate Cyclase physiology, Intestinal Neoplasms genetics, Intestinal Neoplasms physiopathology, Neoplasms, Second Primary genetics, Neoplasms, Second Primary physiopathology, Polyps genetics, Polyps physiopathology, Receptors, Peptide genetics, Receptors, Peptide physiology
- Abstract
Guanylyl cyclase C (GC-C), a transmembrane receptor for bacterial heat-stable enterotoxin and the mammalian peptides guanylin and uroguanylin, mediates intestinal ion secretion and affects intestinal cell growth via cyclic GMP signaling. In intestinal tumors, GC-C expression is maintained while guanylin and uroguanylin expression is lost, suggesting a role for GC-C activation in tumor formation or growth. We show by in situ hybridization that GC-C expression is retained in adenomas from multiple intestinal neoplasia (Apc(Min/+)) mice. In order to determine the in vivo role of GC-C in intestinal tumorigenesis, we generated Apc(Min/+) mice homozygous for a targeted deletion of the gene encoding GC-C and hypothesized that these mice would have increased tumor multiplicity and size compared to wild-type Apc(Min/+) mice on the same genetic background. In contrast, the absence of GC-C resulted in a reduction of median polyp number by 55%. There was no change in the median diameter of polyps, suggesting no effect on tumor growth. Somatic loss of the wild-type Apc allele, an initiating event in intestinal tumorigenesis, also occurred in polyps from GC-C-deficient Apc(Min/+) mice. We have found increased levels of apoptosis as well as increased caspase-3 and caspase-7 gene expression in the intestines of GC-C-deficient Apc(Min/+) mice compared with Apc(Min/+) mice. We propose that these alterations are a possible compensatory mechanism by which loss of GC-C signaling also affects tumorigenesis., (Published 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Developing indicators for emergency medical services (EMS) system evaluation and quality improvement: a statewide demonstration and planning project.
- Author
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Sobo EJ, Andriese S, Stroup C, Morgan D, and Kurtin P
- Subjects
- Adult, California, Child, Data Collection methods, Humans, Management Information Systems, Medical Record Linkage, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Pilot Projects, Ambulances standards, Emergency Medical Services standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Total Quality Management organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The state of California, like every other state, has no system for assessing the quality of prehospital emergency medical services (EMS) care. As part of a statewide project, a process was designed for the evaluation and quality improvement (QI) of EMS in California. Local EMS agency (LEMSA) representatives made a commitment to submit data from both the providers and the hospitals they work with., Indicator Selection and Development: For conditions such as cardiac chest complaints, standardized indicators had already been developed, but for many other areas of interest there was either little literature or little consensus in the literature. Definitional differences were often linked to local-practice protocol differences. A related comparison challenge lay in the fact that care protocols may differ across systems. Some aspects of care may not be offered at all, which may reflect resource shortages or variable medical direction., Data Collection Procedures: Each indicator was precisely defined, and definition sheets and data troubleshooting report forms were provided to participants in three data-collection rounds. Participants were given 1 month to collect the data, which consisted of summary-level elements (for example, average time to defibrillation for all patients 15 years or older who received defibrillation in 1998). Data were then aggregated, analyzed, and prepared for display in graphs and tables., Access and Measurement Issues: Numerous data collection problems were encountered. For example, not all participants could actually access data that they thought would be available. Linking data on patients as they travel through the continuum of EMS care (dispatch, field, hospital) and linking EMS data to hospital outcomes was also difficult. Yet even when data were easily available, challenges arose. The need for specificity, the potential misfit between definitions and the available data, and the challenges of data retrieval remained salient for the duration of the project and made cross-LEMSA and cross-provider comparison problematic., Recommendations and Lessons Learned: The project led to formal policy recommendations regarding development of a state-defined minimum data set of structure, process, and outcome indicators and their associated data elements; provision in the minimum data set for both local-level and statewide indicators; and provision of technical assistance at the local-provider level., Epilogue: Since the project's conclusion in June 2000, many regional and local EMS groups have begun to collect data on indicators. Many of the project's recommendations have been incorporated into the work plan of the state's System Review and Data Committee.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Teacher stress and health; examination of a model.
- Author
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DeFrank RS and Stroup CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Attitude to Health, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Job Satisfaction, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Somatoform Disorders psychology, Occupational Diseases psychology, Psychophysiologic Disorders psychology, Stress, Psychological complications, Teaching
- Abstract
Stress in teaching derives from a variety of sources, and evidence exists linking such stress to physical and mental health concerns. Detailed examination of the linkages among personal factors, job stress, job satisfaction and symptomatology have not been done in this occupation, however, and the present study examines a model interrelating these variables. A survey of 245 predominantly female elementary school teachers in southeast Texas suggested that demographic factors and teaching background do not influence stress, satisfaction or health concerns. However, while job stress was the strongest predictor of job satisfaction, this stress had no direct relationship with health problems, an unexpected finding. Write-in responses by teachers indicated additional sources of stress, many of which were environmental or policy-based in nature. The implications of these findings for future research and stress management interventions for teachers are discussed.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A pilot study on cholesterol screening in the school environment.
- Author
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Weinberg AD, Trost R, Chamberlain RM, and Hartman-Stroup C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Pilot Projects, School Health Services, Texas, Cholesterol blood, Mass Screening, Schools
- Abstract
A newly-developed analyzer measures total cholesterol from a single drop of blood and gives results within minutes. This procedure has made mass cholesterol screening inexpensive and less invasive than methods requiring a venipuncture blood sample, and it offers the opportunity for on-the-spot counseling and referral. In a pilot study, 610 high school students in the Victoria (Tex.) School District were screened for elevated cholesterol. Eighteen percent were found to have cholesterol levels above 180 mg/dl. Mean cholesterol values were higher for females than males, and higher for blacks and Hispanics than whites. Follow-up questionnaires indicated students and their parents understood the basic relationship between cholesterol and cardiovascular disease and how to modify their diet to reduce cholesterol intake. Telephone contact with parents of students with elevated cholesterol showed only about 27% of students with elevated cholesterol had visited a physician subsequent to the cholesterol testing.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Determination of organic chemicals in human whole blood: preliminary method development for volatile organics.
- Author
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Cramer PH, Boggess KE, Hosenfeld JM, Remmers JC, Breen JJ, Robinson PE, and Stroup C
- Subjects
- Chlorobenzenes blood, Chromatography, Gas, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Insecticides blood, Mass Spectrometry, Toluene analysis, Xylenes analysis, Benzene blood, Blood Chemical Analysis, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated blood, Methylene Chloride blood
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Pneumoperitoneum after gastroscopy.
- Author
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STROUP CK and PINE DK
- Subjects
- Abdomen, Gastroscopy complications, Insufflation, Pneumoperitoneum etiology
- Published
- 1958
33. THE GENERAL HOSPITAL--A VITAL LINK IN REHABILITATING ALCOHOLICS.
- Author
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CONOVER TS, STROUP CK, and KEATON WL
- Subjects
- Humans, Michigan, Alcoholics, Alcoholism, Hospitalization, Hospitals, General, Psychotherapy, Psychotherapy, Group, Rehabilitation
- Published
- 1963
34. Alcoholism and the masked diagnosis.
- Author
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STROUP CK
- Subjects
- Humans, Alcoholism
- Published
- 1958
35. Efficient office routines.
- Author
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STROUP CL
- Subjects
- Dentistry
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Medical management of alcoholics--the Hurley plan.
- Author
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Stroup CK, Sacks M, and Keaton WL
- Subjects
- Alcoholism drug therapy, Humans, Michigan, Psychotherapy, Group, Alcoholism therapy
- Published
- 1965
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