11,052 results on '"Warren, G."'
Search Results
2. Microglia ameliorate delirium-like phenotypes in a murine model of acute ventilator-induced lung injury
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Landon Scott, Kevin D. Winzey, Debbie Moreira, Catherine Bresee, Jean‑Philippe Vit, Warren G. Tourtellotte, S. Ananth Karumanchi, and Shouri Lahiri
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Delirium ,Microglia ,Ventilator-induced lung injury ,Mechanical ventilation ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Delirium affects 50–85% of patients on mechanical ventilation and is associated with increased mortality, prolonged hospitalization, and a three-fold higher risk of dementia. Microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain, exhibit both neuroprotective and neurotoxic functions; however, their effects in mechanical ventilation-induced acute lung injury (VILI) are unknown. We hypothesize that in a model of short-term VILI, microglia play a neuroprotective role to ameliorate delirium-like phenotypes. Methods Microglia depletion (n = 18) was accomplished using an orally administered colony stimulating factor 1 receptor inhibitor, while controls received a vehicle diet (n = 18). We then compared extent of neuronal injury in the frontal cortex and hippocampus using cleaved caspase-3 (CC3) and multiple delirium-like behaviors in microglia depleted and non-microglia depleted male mice (C57BL/6 J aged 4–9 months) following VILI. Delirium-like behaviors were evaluated using the Open Field, Elevated Plus Maze, and Y-maze assays. We subsequently evaluated whether repopulation of microglia (n = 14 repopulation, 14 vehicle) restored the phenotypes. Results Frontal/hippocampal neuronal CC3 levels were significantly higher in microglia depleted VILI mice compared to vehicle-treated VILI controls (p
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- 2024
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3. Sustainability Evolved for Experts but Students Fell Behind: Teaching Interrelated Social, Economic and Environmental Goals
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Warren G. Lavey
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Purpose: While sustainability experts point to interrelated social, economic and environmental goals, students may think about sustainability primarily as natural resources. To prepare students to tackle global challenges to well-being, this paper aims to show that educators need to assess and address students' shortcomings in considering socioeconomic dimensions. Design/methodology/approach: This study coded essays on the meaning and components of sustainability written by 93 undergraduate and graduate students in environmental policy, business and engineering courses at US and Austrian universities. Then, the study reviewed a teaching strategy using diverse experts, case studies and assignments. Finally, the analysis evaluated students' final projects proposing sustainability legislation with social, economic and environmental dimensions. Findings: Students usually connect sustainability with limited natural resources affecting current and future generations, but seldom think that sustainability means acting on prominent socioeconomic challenges like poverty, food insecurity, pandemics and violence. Teaching in diverse courses through multidimensional case studies and legislation broadened and deepened students' understanding and preparedness to act. Originality/value: Despite experts' attention to the interconnected Sustainable Development Goals, educators and policymakers need information on whether students associate sustainability with socioeconomic challenges. Open-response questions can reveal gaps in the respondents' sustainability beliefs. In a wide range of courses, teaching can use diverse experts and multidimensional case studies and legislative assignments.
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- 2024
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4. Sustainability evolved for experts but students fell behind: teaching interrelated social, economic and environmental goals
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Lavey, Warren G.
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- 2024
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5. Identification of retinal oligomeric, citrullinated, and other tau isoforms in early and advanced AD and relations to disease status
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Shi, Haoshen, Mirzaei, Nazanin, Koronyo, Yosef, Davis, Miyah R., Robinson, Edward, Braun, Gila M., Jallow, Ousman, Rentsendorj, Altan, Ramanujan, V. Krishnan, Fert-Bober, Justyna, Kramerov, Andrei A., Ljubimov, Alexander V., Schneider, Lon S., Tourtellotte, Warren G., Hawes, Debra, Schneider, Julie A., Black, Keith L., Kayed, Rakez, Selenica, Maj-Linda B., Lee, Daniel C., Fuchs, Dieu-Trang, and Koronyo-Hamaoui, Maya
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- 2024
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6. Physiological responses of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) exposed to increased carbon dioxide and reduced seawater salinities
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Caneos, Warren G., Shrivastava, Jyotsna, Ndugwa, Moses, and De Boeck, Gudrun
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- 2024
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7. Current endometriosis care and opportunities for improvement
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Pickett, Charlotte, Foster, Warren G, and Agarwal, Sanjay K
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Pain Research ,Endometriosis ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,endometriosis ,chronic care model ,chronic pelvic pain ,healthcare costs ,multimodal management - Abstract
Endometriosis is a chronic disease associated with debilitating pain that affects many people assigned female at birth, from menarche through menopause, not just causing pain and infertility, but also negatively impacting quality of life, participation in daily activities, productivity and income. It is associated with increased incidence of obstetric and neonatal complications, depression, other chronic diseases, and substantial healthcare costs. Despite the profound negative impact of endometriosis on quality of life, current treatment options remain sub-optimal and many patients express dissatisfaction with current care. The prevailing acute-care, single-provider model in which the provider works in relative isolation and thus with limited therapeutic strategies readily available, proves inadequate for treating endometriosis. Patients would benefit from earlier diagnosis and referral to a center capable of providing a comprehensive and multi-modal management plan that utilizes a chronic care model. Often this can only be achieved through multidisciplinary teams of providers with expertise in endometriosis. Researchers need to agree on standardized core outcome measures, relevant to patients with endometriosis and the healthcare system as a whole. Only through increased education and recognition of endometriosis as a chronic disease can we achieve better treatment outcomes.
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- 2023
8. Release kinetics of metronidazole from 3D printed silicone scaffolds for sustained application to the female reproductive tract
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Herold, Sydney E, Kyser, Anthony J, Orr, Margaret G, Mahmoud, Mohamed Y, Lewis, Warren G, Lewis, Amanda L, Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M, and Frieboes, Hermann B
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Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Infectious Diseases ,Bioengineering ,3D printed scaffolds ,Metronidazole ,bacterial vaginosis ,drug release kinetics ,silicone scaffolds - Abstract
Sustained vaginal administration of antibiotics or probiotics has been proposed to improve treatment efficacy for bacterial vaginosis. 3D printing has shown promise for development of systems for local agent delivery. In contrast to oral ingestion, agent release kinetics can be fine-tuned by the 3D printing of specialized scaffold designs tailored for particular treatments while enhancing dosage effectiveness via localized sustained release. It has been challenging to establish scaffold properties as a function of fabrication parameters to obtain sustained release. In particular, the relationships between scaffold curing conditions, compressive strength, and drug release kinetics remain poorly understood. This study evaluates 3D printed scaffold formulation and feasibility to sustain the release of metronidazole, a commonly used antibiotic for BV. Cylindrical silicone scaffolds were printed and cured using three different conditions relevant to potential future incorporation of temperature-sensitive labile biologics. Compressive strength and drug release were monitored for 14d in simulated vaginal fluid to assess long-term effects of fabrication conditions on mechanical integrity and release kinetics. Scaffolds were mechanically evaluated to determine compressive and tensile strength, and elastic modulus. Release profiles were fitted to previous kinetic models to differentiate potential release mechanisms. The Higuchi, Korsmeyer-Peppas, and Peppas-Sahlin models best described the release, indicating similarity to release from insoluble or polymeric matrices. This study shows the feasibility of 3D printed silicone scaffolds to provide sustained metronidazole release over 14d, with compressive strength and drug release kinetics tuned by the fabrication parameters.
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- 2023
9. DREADD agonist compound 21 causes acute diuresis in wild-type mice
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Bryce MacIver, Ali Wu, Warren G. Hill, and Weiqun Yu
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compound 21 ,diuresis ,glomerular filtration rate ,antagonism ,smooth muscle contractility ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
The targeted activation or inhibition of specific cell populations using chemogenetics allows the precise dissection of cellular signaling and function. Designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs (DREADDs) is a chemogenetic platform initially developed by mutating human muscarinic receptors to be unresponsive to endogenous acetylcholine but exclusively activated by an “inert” designer drug. Compound 21 (C21) is a new and potent DREADD agonist; however, radioligand assays from a recent report indicated its ability to bind to endogenous G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), including muscarinic M1–3 receptors. Whether this binding causes off-target effects is unclear. Renal innervation is important for the regulation of renal function, and the advent of chemogenetic tools provides significant opportunities for the mechanistic understanding of renal innervation and function. GPCRs such as adrenergic and muscarinic receptors play a role in renal function; thus, a careful pharmacological characterization of C21 in renal function is a prerequisite for this approach. Unexpectedly, an infusion of 1.0 mg/kg C21 in anesthetized mice caused an ∼4-fold increase in urine output and correspondingly increased the glomerular filtration rate (GFR), suggesting a C21-mediated acute diuretic effect. This acute diuresis effect was further confirmed in awake mice using voiding spot assays. The exact molecular mechanism for C21-mediated diuresis is unclear; however, we demonstrated by in vitro myography that C21 can effectively inhibit bladder smooth muscle contraction by antagonizing M3 receptors at the micromolar level, causing increased voiding size in vivo. In summary, C21 functions as a GPCR antagonist and has significant dose-dependent off-target effects in the renal system.
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- 2024
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10. Low booster uptake in cancer patients despite health benefits
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Jane C. Figueiredo, Julia Levy, So Yung Choi, Alexander M. Xu, Noah M. Merin, Omid Hamid, Tucker Lemos, Nathalie Nguyen, Maimoona Nadri, Alma Gonzalez, Simeon Mahov, Justin M. Darrah, Jun Gong, Ronald L. Paquette, Alain C. Mita, Robert A. Vescio, Sarah J. Salvy, Inderjit Mehmi, Andrew E. Hendifar, Ronald Natale, Warren G. Tourtellotte, V. Krishnan Ramanujan, Carissa A. Huynh, Kimia Sobhani, Karen L. Reckamp, and Akil A. Merchant
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Disease ,Patient social context ,Immunity ,Cancer ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Patients with cancer are at increased risk of death from COVID-19 and have reduced immune responses to SARS-CoV2 vaccines, necessitating regular boosters. We performed comprehensive chart reviews, surveys of patients attitudes, serology for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and T cell receptor (TCR) β sequencing for cellular responses on a cohort of 982 cancer patients receiving active cancer therapy accrued between November-3-2020 and Mar-31-2023. We found that 92 · 3% of patients received the primer vaccine, 70 · 8% received one monovalent booster, but only 30 · 1% received a bivalent booster. Booster uptake was lower under age 50, and among African American or Hispanic patients. Nearly all patients seroconverted after 2+ booster vaccinations (>99%) and improved cellular responses, demonstrating that repeated boosters could overcome poor response to vaccination. Receipt of booster vaccinations was associated with a lower risk of all-cause mortality (HR = 0 · 61, p = 0 · 024). Booster uptake in high-risk cancer patients remains low and strategies to encourage booster uptake are needed.
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- 2024
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11. Proprioceptive acuity for landmarks on the hand and digits
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Darling, Warren G., Zuck, Bennett I., Mikhail, Lavena, and Adhikari, Jharna
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- 2024
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12. Focus on Fathers: Exploring the Parenting Experiences of Fathers Using a Large Population-Level Sample
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Wade, Catherine M., Matthews, Jan, Forbes, Faye, Vertkas, Laura, Burn, Matthew, and Cann, Warren G.
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Background: Fathers' mental health, parenting practices and co-parenting relationships have a powerful effect on child development. The paucity of research on the parenting strengths and support needs of fathers of children across childhood and adolescence compels the current study addressing the parenting experiences of a large sample of fathers of birth to 18-year-old children. Objective: The study aims address: (1) differences in the views of mothers and fathers regarding their parenting practices, sense of parenting efficacy, mental health and the co-parenting relationship; (2) investigation of factors affecting fathers' mental health; (3) exploration of fathers' views about the co-parenting relationship; and (4) examination of influences on fathers' parenting. Methods: The study involves secondary analysis of data collected from the first wave of the Australian "Parenting Today in Victoria" study, conducted in 2016 (N = 2600 mothers and fathers) involving 1044 fathers (40% of the sample) recruited through random dialling of landline and mobile numbers to produce a representative sample of parents of children 0-18 years. Results: Results demonstrate a positive picture of fathering at a population level -- most reported (a) high levels of parenting self-efficacy, (b) using positive parenting strategies, (c) talking to their children directly when their children experience problems, and (d) feeling supported by their parenting partner in their role as fathers. Nevertheless, important areas of need are identified. Fathers' reports of mental health challenges were associated with reduced parenting sense of efficacy and reduced opportunities for positive father-child interactions. While most fathers reported good partner support, this was often in contrast to mothers' views. Conclusions: These results from one of the largest surveys of fathers of its kind provide credible insights into the experiences and support needs of fathers, with clear implications for policy makers and service providers responsible for designing and delivering supports for fathers.
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- 2023
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13. Low booster uptake in cancer patients despite health benefits
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Figueiredo, Jane C., Levy, Julia, Choi, So Yung, Xu, Alexander M., Merin, Noah M., Hamid, Omid, Lemos, Tucker, Nguyen, Nathalie, Nadri, Maimoona, Gonzalez, Alma, Mahov, Simeon, Darrah, Justin M., Gong, Jun, Paquette, Ronald L., Mita, Alain C., Vescio, Robert A., Salvy, Sarah J., Mehmi, Inderjit, Hendifar, Andrew E., Natale, Ronald, Tourtellotte, Warren G., Ramanujan, V. Krishnan, Huynh, Carissa A., Sobhani, Kimia, Reckamp, Karen L., and Merchant, Akil A.
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- 2024
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14. Targeting NADPH Oxidase as an Approach for Diabetic Bladder Dysfunction
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Tammyris Helena Rebecchi Silveira, Fábio Henrique Silva, Warren G. Hill, Edson Antunes, and Mariana G. de Oliveira
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NADPH oxidase ,redox signaling ,urinary bladder ,incontinence ,micturition ,urology ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Diabetic bladder dysfunction (DBD) is the most prevalent complication of diabetes mellitus (DM), affecting >50% of all patients. Currently, no specific treatment is available for this condition. In the early stages of DBD, patients typically complain of frequent urination and often have difficulty sensing when their bladders are full. Over time, bladder function deteriorates to a decompensated state in which incontinence develops. Based on studies of diabetic changes in the eye, kidney, heart, and nerves, it is now recognized that DM causes tissue damage by altering redox signaling in target organs. NADPH oxidase (NOX), whose sole function is the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), plays a pivotal role in other well-known and bothersome diabetic complications. However, there is a substantial gap in understanding how NOX controls bladder function in health and the impact of NOX on DBD. The current review provides a thorough overview of the various NOX isoforms and their roles in bladder function and discusses the importance of further investigating the role of NOXs as a key contributor to DBD pathogenesis, either as a trigger and/or an effector and potentially as a target.
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- 2024
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15. Classical and nonclassical effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme: How increased ACE enhances myeloid immune function
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Bernstein, Kenneth E., Cao, DuoYao, Shibata, Tomohiro, Saito, Suguru, Bernstein, Ellen A., Nishi, Erika, Yamashita, Michifumi, Tourtellotte, Warren G., Zhao, Tuantuan V., and Khan, Zakir
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- 2024
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16. Newt A1 cell-derived extracellular vesicles promote mammalian nerve growth
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Middleton, Ryan C., Liao, Ke, Liu, Weixin, de Couto, Geoff, Garcia, Nahuel, Antes, Travis, Wang, Yizhou, Wu, Di, Li, Xinling, Tourtellotte, Warren G., and Marbán, Eduardo
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- 2023
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17. Dichotomy between freshwater and heat flux effects on oceanic conveyor belt stability and global climate
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Hu, Aixue, Meehl, Gerald A., Abe-Ouchi, Ayako, Han, Weiqing, Otto-Bliesner, Bette, He, Feng, Wu, Tongwen, Rosenbloom, Nan, Strand, Warren G., and Edwards, James
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- 2023
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18. Real-world characteristics of women with endometriosis-related pain entering a multidisciplinary endometriosis program
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Agarwal, Sanjay K, Antunez-Flores, Oscar, Foster, Warren G, Hermes, Ashwaq, Golshan, Shahrokh, Soliman, Ahmed M, Arnold, Amanda, and Luna, Rebecca
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Endometriosis ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pain Research ,Health Services ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Dysmenorrhea ,Dyspareunia ,Female ,Humans ,Pelvic Pain ,Retrospective Studies ,Pain ,Real-word evidence ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Nursing ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundWomen with endometriosis are commonly treated by their sole provider. In this single-provider model of care, women frequently report long diagnostic delays, unresolved pelvic pain, multiple laparoscopic surgeries, sequential consultations with numerous providers, and an overall dissatisfaction with care. The emergence of multidisciplinary endometriosis centers aims to reduce diagnostic delays, improve pain management, and promote patient satisfaction; however, baseline data at the time of presentation to a multidisciplinary center are lacking.MethodsA real-world, retrospective, single-site, cross-sectional study of women with surgically confirmed and/or clinically diagnosed endometriosis generated baseline data for a planned longitudinal assessment of multidisciplinary care of endometriosis. The primary objective was to determine the proportion of patients experiencing mild, moderate, or severe pain for dysmenorrhea, non-menstrual pelvic pain (NMPP), and dyspareunia at entry into a multidisciplinary endometriosis clinic. Also explored were relationships between pain scores and clinical endpoints obtained from electronic medical records.ResultsMore than half (59%) of the study participants (n = 638) reported experiencing pelvic pain for ≥ 5 years. Pain intensity was highest for patients reporting dysmenorrhea, followed by NMPP, and dyspareunia. Significant correlations were observed between total pelvic pain and patient age (r = -0.22, p
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- 2021
19. Testicular ACE regulates sperm metabolism and fertilization through the transcription factor PPARγ
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Shibata, Tomohiro, Bhat, Shabir A., Cao, DuoYao, Saito, Suguru, Bernstein, Ellen A., Nishi, Erika, Medenilla, Juliet D., Wang, Erica T., Chan, Jessica L., Pisarska, Margareta D., Tourtellotte, Warren G., Giani, Jorge F., Bernstein, Kenneth E., and Khan, Zakir
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- 2024
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20. Sub-millimeter resolution SiPM-based neutron anger camera
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Loyd, M., Khaplanov, A., Sedov, V., Beal, J., Visscher, T., Donahue, C., Montcalm, C., Warren, G., Butz, R., Boone, C., Hart, C., Riedel, R., and Diawara, Y.
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- 2024
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21. Current endometriosis care and opportunities for improvement
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Charlotte Pickett, Warren G Foster, and Sanjay K Agarwal
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endometriosis ,chronic care model ,chronic pelvic pain ,healthcare costs ,multimodal management ,Reproduction ,QH471-489 ,Gynecology and obstetrics ,RG1-991 - Abstract
Endometriosis is a chronic disease associated with debilitating pain that affects many people assigned female at birth, from menarche through menopause, not just causing pain and infertility but also negatively impacting quality of life, participation in daily activities, productivity, and income. It is associated with increased incidence of obstetric and neonatal complications, anxiety, other chronic diseases, and substantial healthcare costs. Despite the profound negative impact of endometriosis on quality of life, current treatment options remain suboptimal and many patients express dissatisfaction with current care. The prevailing acute-care, single-provider model in which the provider works in relative isolation and thus with limited diagnostic and therapeutic strategies readily available proves inadequate for treating endometriosis. Patients would benefit from earlier diagnosis and referral to a center capable of providing a comprehensive and multimodal management plan that utilizes a chronic care model. Often this can only be achieved through multidisciplinary teams of providers with expertise in endometriosis. The authors acknowledge that many low- and middle-income countries do not have the resources to support such centers but could still benefit from any breakthroughs in treatment they bring about. Researchers need to agree on standardized core outcome measures, relevant to patients with endometriosis and the healthcare system as a whole. Only through increased societal and healthcare provider education and recognition of endometriosis as a chronic disease can we achieve better treatment outcomes.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Newt A1 cell-derived extracellular vesicles promote mammalian nerve growth
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Ryan C. Middleton, Ke Liao, Weixin Liu, Geoff de Couto, Nahuel Garcia, Travis Antes, Yizhou Wang, Di Wu, Xinling Li, Warren G. Tourtellotte, and Eduardo Marbán
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Newts have the extraordinary ability to fully regenerate lost or damaged cardiac, neural and retinal tissues, and even amputated limbs. In contrast, mammals lack these broad regenerative capabilities. While the molecular basis of newts’ regenerative ability is the subject of active study, the underlying paracrine signaling factors involved remain largely uncharacterized. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) play an important role in cell-to-cell communication via EV cargo-mediated regulation of gene expression patterns within the recipient cells. Here, we report that newt myogenic precursor (A1) cells secrete EVs (A1EVs) that contain messenger RNAs associated with early embryonic development, neuronal differentiation, and cell survival. Exposure of rat primary superior cervical ganglion (SCG) neurons to A1EVs increased neurite outgrowth, facilitated by increases in mitochondrial respiration. Canonical pathway analysis pinpointed activation of NGF/ERK5 signaling in SCG neurons exposed to A1EV, which was validated experimentally. Thus, newt EVs drive neurite growth and complexity in mammalian primary neurons.
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- 2023
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23. Dichotomy between freshwater and heat flux effects on oceanic conveyor belt stability and global climate
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Aixue Hu, Gerald A. Meehl, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, Weiqing Han, Bette Otto-Bliesner, Feng He, Tongwen Wu, Nan Rosenbloom, Warren G. Strand, and James Edwards
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Geology ,QE1-996.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Abstract The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation is an important global-scale oceanic circulation, and its changes may be responsible for past abrupt climate change events. By using two versions of a coupled climate model, here we show that the stability of this circulation depends not only on the background climate, but also on the type of primary external forcing: freshwater vs. greenhouse gases. When freshwater forcing is dominant, hysteresis of this circulation (an abrupt collapse/reactivation) becomes possible only under simulated glacial conditions with closed Bering Strait. Under present day and future conditions, both freshwater and greenhouse gas forcings could collapse this circulation, but only greenhouse gas forcing produced a bi-stable equilibrium state comparable to abrupt climate change. Our results demonstrate that the Bering Strait status (open vs. closed) may facilitate or prohibit the existence of this circulation’s hysteresis, irrespective of the background climate conditions, but is directly related to the primary forcing.
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- 2023
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24. Metformin inhibition of mitochondrial ATP and DNA synthesis abrogates NLRP3 inflammasome activation and pulmonary inflammation
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Xian, Hongxu, Liu, Yuan, Rundberg Nilsson, Alexandra, Gatchalian, Raphaella, Crother, Timothy R, Tourtellotte, Warren G, Zhang, Yi, Aleman-Muench, German R, Lewis, Gavin, Chen, Weixuan, Kang, Sarah, Luevanos, Melissa, Trudler, Dorit, Lipton, Stuart A, Soroosh, Pejman, Teijaro, John, de la Torre, Juan Carlos, Arditi, Moshe, Karin, Michael, and Sanchez-Lopez, Elsa
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Prevention ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Lung ,Rare Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Animals ,COVID-19 ,Cytokines ,DNA ,Mitochondrial ,Humans ,Inflammasomes ,Interleukin-1beta ,Lipopolysaccharides ,Metformin ,Mice ,NLR Family ,Pyrin Domain-Containing 3 Protein ,Nucleoside-Phosphate Kinase ,Pneumonia ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,SARS-CoV-2 ,ARDS ,CMPK2 ,IL-1β ,IL-6 ,NLRP3 inflammasome ,inflammation ,metformin ,mitochondrial DNA ,Immunology - Abstract
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), an inflammatory condition with high mortality rates, is common in severe COVID-19, whose risk is reduced by metformin rather than other anti-diabetic medications. Detecting of inflammasome assembly in post-mortem COVID-19 lungs, we asked whether and how metformin inhibits inflammasome activation while exerting its anti-inflammatory effect. We show that metformin inhibited NLRP3 inflammasome activation and interleukin (IL)-1β production in cultured and alveolar macrophages along with inflammasome-independent IL-6 secretion, thus attenuating lipopolysaccharide (LPS)- and SARS-CoV-2-induced ARDS. By targeting electron transport chain complex 1 and independently of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) or NF-κB, metformin blocked LPS-induced and ATP-dependent mitochondrial (mt) DNA synthesis and generation of oxidized mtDNA, an NLRP3 ligand. Myeloid-specific ablation of LPS-induced cytidine monophosphate kinase 2 (CMPK2), which is rate limiting for mtDNA synthesis, reduced ARDS severity without a direct effect on IL-6. Thus, inhibition of ATP and mtDNA synthesis is sufficient for ARDS amelioration.
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- 2021
25. Mesh and layered electrospun fiber architectures as vehicles for Lactobacillus acidophilus and Lactobacillus crispatus intended for vaginal delivery
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Minooei, Farnaz, Kanukunta, Abhinav R., Mahmoud, Mohamed Y., Gilbert, Nicole M., Lewis, Warren G., Lewis, Amanda L., Frieboes, Hermann B., and Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M.
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- 2023
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26. Rapid-dissolving electrospun nanofibers for intra-vaginal antibiotic or probiotic delivery
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Minooei, Farnaz, Gilbert, Nicole M., Zhang, Longyun, Sarah NeCamp, Mary, Mahmoud, Mohamed Y., Kyser, Anthony J., Tyo, Kevin M., Watson, Walter H., Patwardhan, Ruta, Lewis, Warren G., Frieboes, Hermann B., Lewis, Amanda L., and Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M.
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- 2023
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27. Seroprevalence of antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 in healthcare workers: a cross-sectional study.
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Ebinger, Joseph E, Botwin, Gregory J, Albert, Christine M, Alotaibi, Mona, Arditi, Moshe, Berg, Anders H, Binek, Aleksandra, Botting, Patrick, Fert-Bober, Justyna, Figueiredo, Jane C, Grein, Jonathan D, Hasan, Wohaib, Henglin, Mir, Hussain, Shehnaz K, Jain, Mohit, Joung, Sandy, Karin, Michael, Kim, Elizabeth H, Li, Dalin, Liu, Yunxian, Luong, Eric, McGovern, Dermot PB, Merchant, Akil, Merin, Noah, Miles, Peggy B, Minissian, Margo, Nguyen, Trevor Trung, Raedschelders, Koen, Rashid, Mohamad A, Riera, Celine E, Riggs, Richard V, Sharma, Sonia, Sternbach, Sarah, Sun, Nancy, Tourtellotte, Warren G, Van Eyk, Jennifer E, Sobhani, Kimia, Braun, Jonathan G, and Cheng, Susan
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Humans ,Antibodies ,Viral ,Bayes Theorem ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Health Personnel ,Los Angeles ,Female ,Male ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 Serological Testing ,infectious diseases ,public health ,Antibodies ,Viral ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveWe sought to determine the extent of SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence and the factors associated with seroprevalence across a diverse cohort of healthcare workers.DesignObservational cohort study of healthcare workers, including SARS-CoV-2 serology testing and participant questionnaires.SettingsA multisite healthcare delivery system located in Los Angeles County.ParticipantsA diverse and unselected population of adults (n=6062) employed in a multisite healthcare delivery system located in Los Angeles County, including individuals with direct patient contact and others with non-patient-oriented work functions.Main outcomesUsing Bayesian and multivariate analyses, we estimated seroprevalence and factors associated with seropositivity and antibody levels, including pre-existing demographic and clinical characteristics; potential COVID-19 illness-related exposures; and symptoms consistent with COVID-19 infection.ResultsWe observed a seroprevalence rate of 4.1%, with anosmia as the most prominently associated self-reported symptom (OR 11.04, p
- Published
- 2021
28. Cerebellar Contributions to Motor Impairments in People with Multiple Sclerosis
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Fietsam, Alexandra C., Darling, Warren G., Sosnoff, Jacob J., Workman, Craig D., Kamholz, John, and Rudroff, Thorsten
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- 2022
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29. Exclusive $\pi^+$ electroproduction off the proton from low to high -t
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Basnet, S., Huber, G. M., Li, W. B., Blok, H. P., Gaskell, D., Horn, T., Aniol, K., Arrington, J., Beise, E. J., Boeglin, W., Brash, E. J., Breuer, H., Chang, C. C., Christy, M. E., Ent, R., Gibson, E., Holt, R. J., Jin, S., Jones, M. K., Keppel, C. E., Kim, W., King, P. M., Kovaltchouk, V., Liu, J., Lolos, G. J., Mack, D. J., Margaziotis, D. J., Markowitz, P., Matsumura, A., Meekins, D., Miyoshi, T., Mkrtchyan, H., Niculescu, I., Okayasu, Y., Pentchev, L., Perdrisat, C., Potterveld, D., Punjabi, V., Reimer, P., Reinhold, J., Roche, J., Sarty, A., Smith, G. R., Tadevosyan, V., Tang, L. G., Tvaskis, V., Volmer, J., Vulcan, W., Warren, G., Wood, S. A., Xu, C., and Zheng, X.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Background: Measurements of exclusive meson production are a useful tool in the study of hadronic structure. In particular, one can discern the relevant degrees of freedom at different distance scales through these studies. Purpose: To study the transition between non-perturbative and perturbative Quantum Chromodyanmics as the square of four momentum transfer to the struck proton, -t, is increased. Method: Cross sections for the $^1$H(e,e'$\pi^+$)n reaction were measured over the -t range of 0.272 to 2.127 GeV$^2$ with limited azimuthal coverage at fixed beam energy of 4.709 GeV, Q$^2$ of 2.4 GeV$^2$ and W of 2.0 GeV at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) Hall C. Results: The -t dependence of the measured $\pi^+$ electroproduction cross section generally agrees with prior data from JLab Halls B and C. The data are consistent with a Regge amplitude based theoretical model, but show poor agreement with a Generalized Parton Distribution (GPD) based model. Conclusion: The agreement of cross sections with prior data implies small contribution from the interference terms, and the confirmation of the change in t-slopes between the low and high -t regions previously observed in photoproduction indicates the changing nature of the electroproduction reaction in our kinematic regime., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures Physical Review C, in press
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Unique Access to u-Channel Physics: Exclusive Backward-Angle Omega Meson Electroproduction
- Author
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Li, W. B., Huber, G. M., Blok, H. P., Gaskell, D., Horn, T., Semenov-Tian-Shansky, K., Pire, B., Szymanowski, L., Laget, J. -M., Aniol, K., Arrington, J., Beise, E. J., Boeglin, W., Brash, E. J., Breuer, H., Chang, C. C., Christy, M. E., Ent, R., Gibson, E. F., Holt, R. J., Jin, S., Jones, M. K., Keppel, C. E., Kim, W., King, P. M., Kovaltchouk, V., Liu, J., Lolos, G. J., Mack, D. J., Margaziotis, D. J., Markowitz, P., Matsumura, A., Meekins, D., Miyoshi, T., Mkrtchyan, H., Niculescu, I., Okayasu, Y., Pentchev, L., Perdrisat, C., Potterveld, D., Punjabi, V., Reimer, P. E., Reinhold, J., Roche, J., Roos, P. G., Sarty, A., Smith, Tadevosyan, V., Tang, L. G., Tvaskis, V., Volmer, J., Vulcan, W., Warren, G., Wood, S. A., Xu, C., and Zheng, X.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Backward-angle meson electroproduction above the resonance region, which was previously ignored, is anticipated to offer unique access to the three quark plus sea component of the nucleon wave function. In this letter, we present the first complete separation of the four electromagnetic structure functions above the resonance region in exclusive omega electroproduction off the proton, e + p -> e' + p + omega, at central Q^2 values of 1.60, 2.45 GeV^2 , at W = 2.21 GeV. The results of our pioneering -u ~ -u min study demonstrate the existence of a unanticipated backward-angle cross section peak and the feasibility of full L/T/LT/TT separations in this never explored kinematic territory. At Q^2 =2.45 GeV^2 , the observed dominance of sigma_T over sigma_L, is qualitatively consistent with the collinear QCD description in the near-backward regime, in which the scattering amplitude factorizes into a hard subprocess amplitude and baryon to meson transition distribution amplitudes (TDAs): universal non-perturbative objects only accessible through backward angle kinematics.
- Published
- 2019
31. Quantifying allowable motion to achieve safe dose escalation in pancreatic SBRT
- Author
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Ding, Yijun, Campbell, Warren G., Miften, Moyed, Vinogradskiy, Yevgeniy, Goodman, Karyn A., Schefter, Tracey E., and Jones, Bernard L.
- Subjects
Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
Tumor motion plays a key role in the safe delivery of Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) for pancreatic cancer. The purpose of this study was to use tumor motion data measured in patients to establish limits on motion magnitude for safe delivery of pancreatic SBRT. Using 91 sets of pancreatic tumor motion data measured in patients, we calculated motion-convolved dose for 25 pancreatic cancer patients, and established the maximum amount of motion allowable while satisfying error thresholds on key dose metrics. In our patient cohort, the mean [min-max] allowable motion for 33/40/50 Gy to the PTV was 11.9 [6.3-22.4], 10.4 [5.2-19.1] and 9.0 [4.2-16.0] mm, respectively. Maximum allowable motion decreased as dose was escalated, and was smaller in patients with larger tumors. The effects of motion on pancreatic SBRT are highly variable between patients and there is potential to allow more motion in certain patients, even in dose-escalated scenarios. In our dataset, a conservative limit of 6.3 mm would ensure safe treatment of all patients treated to 33 Gy in 5 fractions., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, supplement included. Submitted to Practical Radiation Oncology
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Formulation and characterization of pressure-assisted microsyringe 3D-printed scaffolds for controlled intravaginal antibiotic release
- Author
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Kyser, Anthony J., Mahmoud, Mohamed Y., Herold, Sydney E., Lewis, Warren G., Lewis, Amanda L., Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M., and Frieboes, Hermann B.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Release kinetics of metronidazole from 3D printed silicone scaffolds for sustained application to the female reproductive tract
- Author
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Herold, Sydney E., Kyser, Anthony J., Orr, Margaret G., Mahmoud, Mohamed Y., Lewis, Warren G., Lewis, Amanda L., Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M., and Frieboes, Hermann B.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Glycan cross-feeding supports mutualism between Fusobacterium and the vaginal microbiota.
- Author
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Agarwal, Kavita, Robinson, Lloyd S, Aggarwal, Somya, Foster, Lynne R, Hernandez-Leyva, Ariel, Lin, Hueylie, Tortelli, Brett A, O'Brien, Valerie P, Miller, Liza, Kau, Andrew L, Reno, Hilary, Gilbert, Nicole M, Lewis, Warren G, and Lewis, Amanda L
- Subjects
Vagina ,Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Humans ,Mice ,Fusobacterium ,Gardnerella vaginalis ,Vaginosis ,Bacterial ,Sialic Acids ,Neuraminidase ,Polysaccharides ,Bacterial Proteins ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Symbiosis ,Gene Expression ,Female ,Microbiota ,Dysbiosis ,Inbred C57BL ,Vaginosis ,Bacterial ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Women with bacterial vaginosis (BV), an imbalance of the vaginal microbiome, are more likely to be colonized by potential pathogens such as Fusobacterium nucleatum, a bacterium linked with intrauterine infection and preterm birth. However, the conditions and mechanisms supporting pathogen colonization during vaginal dysbiosis remain obscure. We demonstrate that sialidase activity, a diagnostic feature of BV, promoted F. nucleatum foraging and growth on mammalian sialoglycans, a nutrient resource that was otherwise inaccessible because of the lack of endogenous F. nucleatum sialidase. In mice with sialidase-producing vaginal microbiotas, mutant F. nucleatum unable to consume sialic acids was impaired in vaginal colonization. These experiments in mice also led to the discovery that F. nucleatum may also "give back" to the community by reinforcing sialidase activity, a biochemical feature of human dysbiosis. Using human vaginal bacterial communities, we show that F. nucleatum supported robust outgrowth of Gardnerella vaginalis, a major sialidase producer and one of the most abundant organisms in BV. These results illustrate that mutually beneficial relationships between vaginal bacteria support pathogen colonization and may help maintain features of dysbiosis. These findings challenge the simplistic dogma that the mere absence of "healthy" lactobacilli is the sole mechanism that creates a permissive environment for pathogens during vaginal dysbiosis. Given the ubiquity of F. nucleatum in the human mouth, these studies also suggest a possible mechanism underlying links between vaginal dysbiosis and oral sex.
- Published
- 2020
35. Author Correction: Blood–brain barrier permeable nano immunoconjugates induce local immune responses for glioma therapy
- Author
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Galstyan, Anna, Markman, Janet L, Shatalova, Ekaterina S, Chiechi, Antonella, Korman, Alan J, Patil, Rameshwar, Klymyshyn, Dmytro, Tourtellotte, Warren G, Israel, Liron L, Braubach, Oliver, Ljubimov, Vladimir A, Mashouf, Leila A, Ramesh, Arshia, Grodzinski, Zachary B, Penichet, Manuel L, Black, Keith L, Holler, Eggehard, Sun, Tao, Ding, Hui, Ljubimov, Alexander V, and Ljubimova, Julia Y
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology - Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
36. Exclusive π+ electroproduction off the proton from low to high -t
- Author
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Basnet, S, Huber, GM, Li, WB, Blok, HP, Gaskell, D, Horn, T, Aniol, K, Arrington, J, Beise, EJ, Boeglin, W, Brash, EJ, Breuer, H, Chang, CC, Christy, ME, Ent, R, Gibson, E, Holt, RJ, Jin, S, Jones, MK, Keppel, CE, Kim, W, King, PM, Kovaltchouk, V, Liu, J, Lolos, GJ, MacK, DJ, Margaziotis, DJ, Markowitz, P, Matsumura, A, Meekins, D, Miyoshi, T, Mkrtchyan, H, Niculescu, I, Okayasu, Y, Pentchev, L, Perdrisat, C, Potterveld, D, Punjabi, V, Reimer, P, Reinhold, J, Roche, J, Sarty, A, Smith, GR, Tadevosyan, V, Tang, LG, Tvaskis, V, Volmer, J, Vulcan, W, Warren, G, Wood, SA, Xu, C, and Zheng, X
- Subjects
nucl-ex ,hep-ex - Abstract
Background: Measurements of exclusive meson production are a useful tool in the study of hadronic structure. In particular, one can discern the relevant degrees of freedom at different distance scales through these studies. Purpose: To study the transition between nonperturbative and perturbative quantum chromodynamics as the square of four-momentum transfer to the struck proton, -t, is increased. Method: Cross sections for the H1(e,e′π+)n reaction were measured over the -t range of 0.272 to 2.127 GeV2 with limited azimuthal coverage at fixed beam energy of 4.709 GeV, Q2 of 2.4 GeV2, and W of 2.0 GeV at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) Hall C. Results: The -t dependence of the measured π+ electroproduction cross section generally agrees with prior data from JLab Halls B and C. The data are consistent with a Regge amplitude-based theoretical model but show poor agreement with a generalized parton distribution-based model. Conclusion: The agreement of cross sections with prior data implies small contribution from the interference terms, and the confirmation of the change in t slopes between the low- and high - t regions previously observed in photoproduction indicates the changing nature of the electroproduction reaction in our kinematic regime.
- Published
- 2019
37. Exclusive π+ electroproduction off the proton from low to high −t
- Author
-
Basnet, S, Huber, GM, Li, WB, Blok, HP, Gaskell, D, Horn, T, Aniol, K, Arrington, J, Beise, EJ, Boeglin, W, Brash, EJ, Breuer, H, Chang, CC, Christy, ME, Ent, R, Gibson, E, Holt, RJ, Jin, S, Jones, MK, Keppel, CE, Kim, W, King, PM, Kovaltchouk, V, Liu, J, Lolos, GJ, Mack, DJ, Margaziotis, DJ, Markowitz, P, Matsumura, A, Meekins, D, Miyoshi, T, Mkrtchyan, H, Niculescu, I, Okayasu, Y, Pentchev, L, Perdrisat, C, Potterveld, D, Punjabi, V, Reimer, P, Reinhold, J, Roche, J, Sarty, A, Smith, GR, Tadevosyan, V, Tang, LG, Tvaskis, V, Volmer, J, Vulcan, W, Warren, G, Wood, SA, Xu, C, and Zheng, X
- Subjects
Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,nucl-ex ,hep-ex ,Nuclear and plasma physics - Abstract
Background: Measurements of exclusive meson production are a useful tool in the study of hadronic structure. In particular, one can discern the relevant degrees of freedom at different distance scales through these studies. Purpose: To study the transition between nonperturbative and perturbative quantum chromodynamics as the square of four-momentum transfer to the struck proton, -t, is increased. Method: Cross sections for the H1(e,e′π+)n reaction were measured over the -t range of 0.272 to 2.127 GeV2 with limited azimuthal coverage at fixed beam energy of 4.709 GeV, Q2 of 2.4 GeV2, and W of 2.0 GeV at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) Hall C. Results: The -t dependence of the measured π+ electroproduction cross section generally agrees with prior data from JLab Halls B and C. The data are consistent with a Regge amplitude-based theoretical model but show poor agreement with a generalized parton distribution-based model. Conclusion: The agreement of cross sections with prior data implies small contribution from the interference terms, and the confirmation of the change in t slopes between the low- and high - t regions previously observed in photoproduction indicates the changing nature of the electroproduction reaction in our kinematic regime.
- Published
- 2019
38. Fabrication and characterization of bioprints with Lactobacillus crispatus for vaginal application
- Author
-
Kyser, Anthony J., Masigol, Mohammadali, Mahmoud, Mohamed Y., Ryan, Mark, Lewis, Warren G., Lewis, Amanda L., Frieboes, Hermann B., and Steinbach-Rankins, Jill M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. GnRH Agonists and Antagonists in Endometriosis and Adenomyosis Therapy
- Author
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Anglin, H. Paige, Foster, Warren G., Agarwal, Sanjay K., and Oral, Engin, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Acuity of Proprioceptive Localization Varies with Body Region
- Author
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Darling, Warren G. and Yem, Joshua
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Prevalence of Use and Perceived Effectiveness of Medical, Surgical, and Alternative Therapies for Endometriosis Pain in Canadians
- Author
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Gholiof, Mahsa, Adamson-De Luca, Emma, Foster, Warren G., Leyland, Nicholas A., Bridge-Cook, Philippa, Leonardi, Mathew, and Wessels, Jocelyn M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Influence of Variability in Meridional Overturning on Global Ocean Circulation
- Author
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Hu, Aixue, Meehl, Gerald A., Rosenbloom, Nan, Molina, Maria J., and Strand, Warren G.
- Published
- 2021
43. Release kinetics of metronidazole from 3D printed silicone scaffolds for sustained application to the female reproductive tract
- Author
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Sydney E. Herold, Anthony J. Kyser, Margaret G. Orr, Mohamed Y. Mahmoud, Warren G. Lewis, Amanda L. Lewis, Jill M. Steinbach-Rankins, and Hermann B. Frieboes
- Subjects
Metronidazole ,3D printed scaffolds ,Silicone scaffolds ,Drug release kinetics ,Bacterial vaginosis ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Sustained vaginal administration of antibiotics or probiotics has been proposed to improve treatment efficacy for bacterial vaginosis. 3D printing has shown promise for development of systems for local agent delivery. In contrast to oral ingestion, agent release kinetics can be fine-tuned by the 3D printing of specialized scaffold designs tailored for particular treatments while enhancing dosage effectiveness via localized sustained release. It has been challenging to establish scaffold properties as a function of fabrication parameters to obtain sustained release. In particular, the relationships between scaffold curing conditions, compressive strength, and drug release kinetics remain poorly understood. This study evaluates 3D printed scaffold formulation and feasibility to sustain the release of metronidazole, a commonly used antibiotic for BV. Cylindrical silicone scaffolds were printed and cured using three different conditions relevant to potential future incorporation of temperature-sensitive labile biologics. Compressive strength and drug release were monitored for 14d in simulated vaginal fluid to assess long-term effects of fabrication conditions on mechanical integrity and release kinetics. Scaffolds were mechanically evaluated to determine compressive and tensile strength, and elastic modulus. Release profiles were fitted to previous kinetic models to differentiate potential release mechanisms. The Higuchi, Korsmeyer-Peppas, and Peppas-Sahlin models best described the release, indicating similarity to release from insoluble or polymeric matrices. This study shows the feasibility of 3D printed silicone scaffolds to provide sustained metronidazole release over 14d, with compressive strength and drug release kinetics tuned by the fabrication parameters.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. High proprioceptive acuity in slow and fast hand movements
- Author
-
Yoss, Abby L., Zuck, Bennett I., Yem, Joshua A., and Darling, Warren G.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Separated Kaon Electroproduction Cross Section and the Kaon Form Factor from 6 GeV JLab Data
- Author
-
Carmignotto, M., Ali, S., Aniol, K., Arrington, J., Barrett, B., Beise, E. J., Blok, H. P., Boeglin, W., Brash, E. J., Breuer, H., Chang, C. C., Christy, M. E., Dittmann, A., Ent, R., Fenker, H., Gaskell, D., Gibson, E., Holt, R. J., Horn, T., Huber, G. M., Jin, S., Jones, M. K., Keppel, C. E., Kim, W., King, P. M., Kovaltchouk, V., Liu, J., Lolos, G. J., Mack, D. J., Margaziotis, D. J., Markowitz, P., Matsumura, A., Meekins, D., Miyoshi, T., Mkrtchyan, H., Niculescu, G., Niculescu, I., Okayasu, Y., Pegg, I., Pentchev, L., Perdrisat, C., Potterveld, D., Punjabi, V., Reimer, P. E., Reinhold, J., Roche, J., Sarty, A., Smith, G. R., Tadevosyan, V., Tang, L. G., Trotta, R., Tvaskis, V., Vargas, A., Vidakovic, S., Volmer, J., Vulcan, W., Warren, G., Wood, S. A., Xu, C., and Zheng, X.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The $^{1}H$($e,e^\prime K^+$)$\Lambda$ reaction was studied as a function of the Mandelstam variable $-t$ using data from the E01-004 (FPI-2) and E93-018 experiments that were carried out in Hall C at the 6 GeV Jefferson Lab. The cross section was fully separated into longitudinal and transverse components, and two interference terms at four-momentum transfers $Q^2$ of 1.00, 1.36 and 2.07 GeV$^2$. The kaon form factor was extracted from the longitudinal cross section using the Regge model by Vanderhaeghen, Guidal, and Laget. The results establish the method, previously used successfully for pion analyses, for extracting the kaon form factor. Data from 12 GeV Jefferson Lab experiments are expected to have sufficient precision to distinguish between theoretical predictions, for example recent perturbative QCD calculations with modern parton distribution amplitudes. The leading-twist behavior for light mesons is predicted to set in for values of $Q^2$ between 5-10 GeV$^2$, which makes data in the few GeV regime particularly interesting. The $Q^2$ dependence at fixed $x$ and $-t$ of the longitudinal cross section we extracted seems consistent with the QCD factorization prediction within the experimental uncertainty.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Unique Access to u-Channel Physics: Exclusive Backward-Angle Omega Meson Electroproduction
- Author
-
Li, WB, Huber, GM, Blok, HP, Gaskell, D, Horn, T, Semenov-Tian-Shansky, K, Pire, B, Szymanowski, L, Laget, J-M, Aniol, K, Arrington, J, Beise, EJ, Boeglin, W, Brash, EJ, Breuer, H, Chang, CC, Christy, ME, Ent, R, Gibson, EF, Holt, RJ, Jin, S, Jones, MK, Keppel, CE, Kim, W, King, PM, Kovaltchouk, V, Liu, J, Lolos, GJ, Mack, DJ, Margaziotis, DJ, Markowitz, P, Matsumura, A, Meekins, D, Miyoshi, T, Mkrtchyan, H, Niculescu, I, Okayasu, Y, Pentchev, L, Perdrisat, C, Potterveld, D, Punjabi, V, Reimer, PE, Reinhold, J, Roche, J, Roos, PG, Sarty, A, Smith, GR, Tadevosyan, V, Tang, LG, Tvaskis, V, Volmer, J, Vulcan, W, Warren, G, Wood, SA, Xu, C, and Zheng, X
- Subjects
Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Jefferson Lab Fπ Collaboration ,Mathematical Sciences ,Engineering ,General Physics ,Mathematical sciences ,Physical sciences - Abstract
Backward-angle meson electroproduction above the resonance region, which was previously ignored, is anticipated to offer unique access to the three quark plus sea component of the nucleon wave function. In this Letter, we present the first complete separation of the four electromagnetic structure functions above the resonance region in exclusive ω electroproduction off the proton, ep→e^{'}pω, at central Q^{2} values of 1.60, 2.45 GeV^{2}, at W=2.21 GeV. The results of our pioneering -u≈-u_{min} study demonstrate the existence of a unanticipated backward-angle cross section peak and the feasibility of full L/T/LT/TT separations in this never explored kinematic territory. At Q^{2}=2.45 GeV^{2}, the observed dominance of σ_{T} over σ_{L}, is qualitatively consistent with the collinear QCD description in the near-backward regime, in which the scattering amplitude factorizes into a hard subprocess amplitude and baryon to meson transition distribution amplitudes: universal nonperturbative objects only accessible through backward-angle kinematics.
- Published
- 2019
47. Blood–brain barrier permeable nano immunoconjugates induce local immune responses for glioma therapy
- Author
-
Galstyan, Anna, Markman, Janet L, Shatalova, Ekaterina S, Chiechi, Antonella, Korman, Alan J, Patil, Rameshwar, Klymyshyn, Dmytro, Tourtellotte, Warren G, Israel, Liron L, Braubach, Oliver, Ljubimov, Vladimir A, Mashouf, Leila A, Ramesh, Arshia, Grodzinski, Zachary B, Penichet, Manuel L, Black, Keith L, Holler, Eggehard, Sun, Tao, Ding, Hui, Ljubimov, Alexander V, and Ljubimova, Julia Y
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Brain Disorders ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Biotechnology ,Cancer ,Brain Cancer ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Animals ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Immunological ,Biopolymers ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Brain Neoplasms ,CTLA-4 Antigen ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Female ,Glioma ,Humans ,Immunoconjugates ,Malates ,Mice ,Nanoconjugates ,Permeability ,Physarum polycephalum ,Polymers ,Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor ,Treatment Outcome - Abstract
Brain glioma treatment with checkpoint inhibitor antibodies to cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (a-CTLA-4) and programmed cell death-1 (a-PD-1) was largely unsuccessful due to their inability to cross blood-brain barrier (BBB). Here we describe targeted nanoscale immunoconjugates (NICs) on natural biopolymer scaffold, poly(β-L-malic acid), with covalently attached a-CTLA-4 or a-PD-1 for systemic delivery across the BBB and activation of local brain anti-tumor immune response. NIC treatment of mice bearing intracranial GL261 glioblastoma (GBM) results in an increase of CD8+ T cells, NK cells and macrophages with a decrease of regulatory T cells (Tregs) in the brain tumor area. Survival of GBM-bearing mice treated with NIC combination is significantly longer compared to animals treated with single checkpoint inhibitor-bearing NICs or free a-CTLA-4 and a-PD-1. Our study demonstrates trans-BBB delivery of tumor-targeted polymer-conjugated checkpoint inhibitors as an effective GBM treatment via activation of both systemic and local privileged brain tumor immune response.
- Published
- 2019
48. Forming One Body with All Things: Organicism and the Pursuit of an Embodied Theory of Mind
- Author
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Frisina, Warren G.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Lessons from four decades of monitoring vegetation and fire : maintaining diversity and resilience in Florida's uplands
- Author
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Abrahamson, Warren G., Abrahamson, Christy R., and Keller, Matthew A.
- Published
- 2021
50. Neural network dose models for knowledge-based planning in pancreatic SBRT
- Author
-
Campbell, Warren G., Miften, Moyed, Olsen, Lindsey, Stumpf, Priscilla, Schefter, Tracey, Goodman, Karyn A., and Jones, Bernard L.
- Subjects
Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for pancreatic cancer requires a skillful approach to deliver ablative doses to the tumor while limiting dose to the highly sensitive duodenum, stomach, and small bowel. Here, we develop knowledge-based artificial neural network dose models (ANN-DMs) to predict dose distributions that would be approved by experienced physicians. Using dose distributions calculated by a commercial treatment planning system (TPS), physician-approved treatment plans were used to train ANN-DMs that could predict physician-approved dose distributions based on a set of geometric parameters (vary from voxel to voxel) and plan parameters (constant across all voxels for a given patient). Differences between TPS and ANN-DM dose distributions were used to evaluate model performance. ANN-DM design, including neural network structure and parameter choices, were evaluated to optimize dose model performance. Mean dose errors were less than 5% at all distances from the PTV, and mean absolute dose errors were on the order of 5%, but no more than 10%. Dose-volume histogram errors demonstrated good model performance above 25 Gy, but much larger errors were seen at lower doses. ANN-DM dose distributions showed excellent overall agreement with TPS dose distributions, and accuracy was substantially improved when each physician's treatment approach was taken into account by training their own dedicated models. In this manner, one could feasibly train ANN-DMs that could predict the dose distribution desired by a given physician for a given treatment site., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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