keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600904/concussion-history-and-virtual-reality-metrics-predict-core-or-lower-extremity-injury-occurrence-among-high-school-athletes
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gary B Wilkerson, Kimberly R Wynn, Paige W Dill, Shellie Acocello, Lynette M Carlson, Jennifer Hogg
INTRODUCTION: A history of concussion is recognized as a risk factor for musculoskeletal injury, which is likely associated with physiological effects that warrant better understanding. This study aimed to assess the potential of measurements obtained from an immersive virtual reality (VR) test to identify a subtle perceptual-motor impairment that may be prospectively associated with the occurrence of a core or lower extremity sprain or strain. METHODS: A cohort of 68 high school athletes (41 female soccer players and 27 male football players) provided survey responses and completed an immersive VR test several days prior to the initiation of preseason practice sessions...
2024: Frontiers in sports and active living
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38596229/the-world-s-consumption-of-free-web-based-otolaryngology-head-and-neck-surgery-educational-resources-a-global-assessment-of-video-usage-trends
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amelia S Lawrence, David J Fei-Zhang, Leslie C Hassett, Matthew L Carlson, Joshua P Wiedermann
OBJECTIVES: Online educational platforms with open access have seen a growing adoption in the field of medical education. However, the extent of their global usage is still unclear. To fill this knowledge gap, our objective is to examine the usage patterns of two renowned open-access resources in Otolaryngology. This includes identifying the most sought-after topics and understanding the demographics of their users. METHODS: Retrospective study of web analytics data between 2016 and 2021 extracted from the Headmirror...
April 2024: Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593494/stimulus-shapes-strategy-effects-of-stimulus-characteristics-and-individual-differences-in-academic-achievement-on-the-neural-mechanisms-engaged-during-the-n-back-task
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel R Leopold, Hyojeong Kim, Kenneth W Carlson, Mikaela A Rowe, Boman R Groff, Moriah P Major, Erik G Willcutt, Laurie E Cutting, Marie T Banich
This fMRI study of 126 youth explored whether the neural mechanisms underlying the N-back task, commonly used to examine executive control over the contents of working memory, are associated with individual differences in academic achievement in reading and math. Moreover, the study explored whether these relationships occur regardless of the nature of the stimulus being manipulated in working memory (letters, numbers, nonsense shapes) or whether these relationships are specific to achievement domain and stimulus type (i...
March 27, 2024: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588602/future-directions-the-phenomenology-of-irritable-mood-and-outbursts-hang-together-or-hang-separately-1
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabrielle A Carlson, Robert R Althoff, Manpreet Kaur Singh
Recognition of the importance of irritable mood and outbursts has been increasing over the past several decades. This "Future Directions" aims to develop a set of recommendations for future research emphasizing that irritable mood and outbursts "hang together," but have important distinctions and thus also need to "hang separately." Outbursts that are the outcome of irritable mood may be quite different from outbursts that are the trigger or driving force that make youth and his/her environment miserable. What, then, is the relation between irritable mood and outbursts? As the field currently stands, we not only cannot answer this question, but we may also lack the tools to effectively do so...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38585801/the-laminar-organization-of-cell-types-in-macaque-cortex-and-its-relationship-to-neuronal-oscillations
#25
M J Lichtenfeld, A G Mulvey, H Nejat, Y S Xiong, B M Carlson, B A Mitchell, D Mendoza-Halliday, J A Westerberg, R Desimone, A Maier, J H Kaas, A M Bastos
UNLABELLED: The canonical microcircuit (CMC) has been hypothesized to be the fundamental unit of information processing in cortex. Each CMC unit is thought to be an interconnected column of neurons with specific connections between excitatory and inhibitory neurons across layers. Recently, we identified a conserved spectrolaminar motif of oscillatory activity across the primate cortex that may be the physiological consequence of the CMC. The spectrolaminar motif consists of local field potential (LFP) gamma-band power (40-150 Hz) peaking in superficial layers 2 and 3 and alpha/beta-band power (8-30 Hz) peaking in deep layers 5 and 6...
March 30, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38585744/uncovering-microstructural-architecture-from-histology
#26
Marios Georgiadis, Franca Auf der Heiden, Hamed Abbasi, Loes Ettema, Jeffrey Nirschl, Hossein Moein Taghavi, Moe Wakatsuki, Andy Liu, William Hai Dang Ho, Mackenzie Carlson, Michail Doukas, Sjors A Koppes, Stijn Keereweer, Raymond A Sobel, Kawin Setsompop, Congyu Liao, Katrin Amunts, Markus Axer, Michael Zeineh, Miriam Menzel
UNLABELLED: Microstructural tissue organization underlies the complex connectivity of the brain and controls properties of connective, muscle, and epithelial tissue. However, discerning microstructural architecture with high resolution for large fields of view remains prohibitive. We address this challenge with computational scattered light imaging (ComSLI), which exploits the anisotropic light scattering of aligned structures. Using a rotating lightsource and a high-resolution camera, ComSLI determines fiber architecture with micrometer resolution from histological sections across preparation and staining protocols...
March 29, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38582763/phage-specific-immunity-impairs-efficacy-of-bacteriophage-targeting-vancomycin-resistant-enterococcus-in-a-murine-model
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia D Berkson, Claire E Wate, Garrison B Allen, Alyxandria M Schubert, Kristin E Dunbar, Michael P Coryell, Rosa L Sava, Yamei Gao, Jessica L Hastie, Emily M Smith, Charlotte R Kenneally, Sally K Zimmermann, Paul E Carlson
Bacteriophage therapy is a promising approach to address antimicrobial infections though questions remain regarding the impact of the immune response on clinical effectiveness. Here, we develop a mouse model to assess phage treatment using a cocktail of five phages from the Myoviridae and Siphoviridae families that target Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus gut colonization. Phage treatment significantly reduces fecal bacterial loads of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus. We also characterize immune responses elicited following administration of the phage cocktail...
April 6, 2024: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38582199/radial-artery-access-for-peripheral-vascular-interventions-a-review-of-the-literature
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carolyn Song, Sarah J Carlson
OBJECTIVE: Percutaneous radial artery access for lower extremity arterial interventions has increased in popularity in recent years. The purpose of this review is to summarize available data regarding its safety and efficacy. METHODS: Studies related to the use of the percutaneous radial artery access for peripheral artery intervention were identified in a search of the PubMed database. Outcomes evaluated were access complications and technical success. RESULTS: Thirteen studies that evaluated patients undergoing percutaneous radial artery access with peripheral interventions were reviewed...
April 4, 2024: Annals of Vascular Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38581271/cerebral-autoregulation-spreading-depolarization-and-implications-for-targeted-therapy-in-brain-injury-and-ischemia
#29
REVIEW
Andrew P Carlson, Andrew R Mayer, Chad Cole, Harm J van der Horn, Joshua Marquez, Taylor C Stevenson, C William Shuttleworth
Cerebral autoregulation is an intrinsic myogenic response of cerebral vasculature that allows for preservation of stable cerebral blood flow levels in response to changing systemic blood pressure. It is effective across a broad range of blood pressure levels through precapillary vasoconstriction and dilation. Autoregulation is difficult to directly measure and methods to indirectly ascertain cerebral autoregulation status inherently require certain assumptions. Patients with impaired cerebral autoregulation may be at risk of brain ischemia...
April 8, 2024: Reviews in the Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38579199/identification-of-complier-and-noncomplier-average-causal-effects-in-the-presence-of-latent-missing-at-random-lmar-outcomes-a-unifying-view-and-choices-of-assumptions
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Trang Quynh Nguyen, Michelle C Carlson, Elizabeth A Stuart
The study of treatment effects is often complicated by noncompliance and missing data. In the one-sided noncompliance setting where of interest are the complier and noncomplier average causal effects, we address outcome missingness of the latent missing at random type (LMAR, also known as latent ignorability). That is, conditional on covariates and treatment assigned, the missingness may depend on compliance type. Within the instrumental variable (IV) approach to noncompliance, methods have been proposed for handling LMAR outcome that additionally invoke an exclusion restriction-type assumption on missingness, but no solution has been proposed for when a non-IV approach is used...
April 5, 2024: Biostatistics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38576319/timing-of-alveolar-bone-graft-and-barriers-to-care
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth E Bushong, Darin Patmon, Hanna Pfershy, Cuyler Huffman, Anna Carlson, John Girotto
OBJECTIVE: The current standard timing for alveolar bone grafting (ABG) occurs during mixed dentition, typically between the ages of six and twelve. A delay in receiving this operation is associated with an increase in graft loss and an overall thinner maxilla. This study aims to determine whether socioeconomic barriers are associated with a delay in timely ABG. DESIGN: A retrospective analysis of patients who received ABG at our institution since 2012. Patient demographics, cleft classifications, operative details, and surgical dates were examined...
April 4, 2024: Cleft Palate-craniofacial Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575791/fungal-sensitization-and-human-allergic-disease
#32
REVIEW
Scout Treadwell, Maxwell Green, Geetha Gowda, Estelle Levetin, John C Carlson
PURPOSE OF THE REVIEW: Fungal sensitizations have been associated with hypersensitivity reactions with variable levels of evidence available to link types of fungi with human disease. We conducted systematic reviews of the literature to identify the strength of evidence linking lesser-studied fungi for which there are commercially available extracts to identify populations in which they were useful in clinical practice. RECENT FINDINGS: Excluding five fungi for which hundreds of articles were identified, there are 54 articles on the remaining fungi with clinical data...
April 5, 2024: Current Allergy and Asthma Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572796/evolutionary-divergence-of-plasticity-in-brain-morphology-between-ecologically-divergent-habitats-of-trinidadian-guppies
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caleb J Axelrod, Yusan Yang, Eleanor Grant, Jorie Fleming, Isabel Stone, Bruce A Carlson, Swanne P Gordon
Phenotypic plasticity is critical for organismal performance and can evolve in response to natural selection. Brain morphology is often developmentally plastic, affecting animal performance in a variety of contexts. However, the degree to which plasticity of brain morphology evolves has rarely been explored. Here we use Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata), which are known for their repeated adaptation to high-predation (HP) and low-predation (LP) environments, to examine the evolution and plasticity of brain morphology...
April 4, 2024: Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572562/a-phase-i-study-of-pevonedistat-azacitidine-and-venetoclax-in-patients-with-relapsed-refractory-acute-myeloid-leukemia
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guru Subramanian Guru Murthy, Antoine N Saliba, Aniko Szabo, Alexandra Harrington, Sameem Abedin, Karen Carlson, Laura Michaelis, Lyndsey Runaas, Arielle Baim, Alex Hinman, Sonia Maldonado-Schmidt, Annapoorna Venkatachalam, Karen S Flatten, Kevin L Peterson, Paula A Schneider, Mark Litzow, Scott H Kaufmann, Ehab Atallah
Azacitidine/venetoclax is an active regimen in patients with newly diagnosed AML. However, primary or secondary resistance to azacitidine/venetoclax is an area of unmet need and overexpression of MCL-1 is suggested to be a potential resistance mechanism. Pevonedistat inhibits MCL-1 through activation of NOXA, and pevonedistat/azacitidine has previously shown activity in AML. To assess the tolerability and efficacy of adding pevonedistat to azacitidine/venetoclax in relapsed/refractory AML, we conducted a phase I multicenter openlabel study in 16 adults with relapsed/refractory AML...
April 4, 2024: Haematologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38571307/methylation-patterns-associated-with-c-reactive-protein-in-racially-and-ethnically-diverse-populations
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica I Lundin, Ulrike Peters, Yao Hu, Farah Ammous, Christy L Avery, Emelia J Benjamin, Joshua C Bis, Jennifer A Brody, Chris Carlson, Mary Cushman, Chris Gignoux, Xiuqing Guo, Jeff Haessler, Chris Haiman, Roby Joehanes, Silva Kasela, Eimear Kenny, Tuuli Lapalainien, Daniel Levy, Chunyu Liu, Yongmei Liu, Ruth J F Loos, Ake Lu, Tara Matise, Kari E North, Sungshim L Park, Scott M Ratliff, Alex Reiner, Stephen S Rich, Jerome I Rotter, Jennifer A Smith, Nona Sotoodehnia, Russell Tracy, David Van den Berg, Huichun Xu, Ting Ye, Wei Zhao, Laura M Raffield, Charles Kooperberg
Systemic low-grade inflammation is a feature of chronic disease. C-reactive protein (CRP) is a common biomarker of inflammation and used as an indicator of disease risk; however, the role of inflammation in disease is not completely understood. Methylation is an epigenetic modification in the DNA which plays a pivotal role in gene expression. In this study we evaluated differential DNA methylation patterns associated with blood CRP level to elucidate biological pathways and genetic regulatory mechanisms to improve the understanding of chronic inflammation...
December 2024: Epigenetics: Official Journal of the DNA Methylation Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565568/logic-programming-based-minimal-cut-sets-reveal-consortium-level-therapeutic-targets-for-chronic-wound-infections
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maxime Mahout, Ross P Carlson, Laurent Simon, Sabine Peres
Minimal Cut Sets (MCSs) identify sets of reactions which, when removed from a metabolic network, disable certain cellular functions. The traditional search for MCSs within genome-scale metabolic models (GSMMs) targets cellular growth, identifies reaction sets resulting in a lethal phenotype if disrupted, and retrieves a list of corresponding gene, mRNA, or enzyme targets. Using the dual link between MCSs and Elementary Flux Modes (EFMs), our logic programming-based tool aspefm was able to compute MCSs of any size from GSMMs in acceptable run times...
April 2, 2024: NPJ Systems Biology and Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38559169/synchrony-between-midbrain-gene-transcription-and-dopamine-terminal-regulation-is-modulated-by-chronic-alcohol-drinking
#37
Zahra Z Farahbakhsh, Katherine M Holleran, Jonathon P Sens, Steve C Fordahl, Madelyn I Mauterer, Alberto J López, Verginia C Cuzon Carlson, Drew D Kiraly, Kathleen A Grant, Sara R Jones, Cody A Siciliano
Alcohol use disorder is marked by disrupted behavioral and emotional states which persist into abstinence. The enduring synaptic alterations that remain despite the absence of alcohol are of interest for interventions to prevent relapse. Here, 28 male rhesus macaques underwent over 20 months of alcohol drinking interspersed with three 30-day forced abstinence periods. After the last abstinence period, we paired direct sub-second dopamine monitoring via ex vivo voltammetry in nucleus accumbens slices with RNA-sequencing of the ventral tegmental area...
March 17, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38553015/imaging-findings-post-stereotactic-radiosurgery-for-vestibular-schwannoma-a-primer-for-the-radiologist
#38
REVIEW
Girish Bathla, Parv M Mehta, John C Benson, Amit K Agrwal, Neetu Soni, Michael J Link, Matthew L Carlson, John I Lane
Non-invasive tumor control of vestibular schwannomas through stereotactic radiosurgery allows for high rates of long-term tumor control and has been used primarily for small and medium-sized vestibular schwannomas. The post-treatment imaging appearance of the tumor, temporal patterns of growth and treatment response, as well as extra-tumoral complications can often be both subtle or confusing and should be appropriately recognized. Herein, the authors present an imaging-based review of expected changes, as well as associated complications related to radiosurgery for vestibular schwannomas...
March 29, 2024: AJNR. American Journal of Neuroradiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551833/unraveling-sources-of-emission-heterogeneity-in-silicon-vacancy-color-centers-with-cryo-cathodoluminescence-microscopy
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel K Angell, Shuo Li, Hendrik Utzat, Matti L S Thurston, Yin Liu, Jeremy Dahl, Robert Carlson, Zhi-Xun Shen, Nicholas Melosh, Robert Sinclair, Jennifer A Dionne
Diamond color centers have proven to be versatile quantum emitters and exquisite sensors of stress, temperature, electric and magnetic fields, and biochemical processes. Among color centers, the silicon-vacancy (SiV[Formula: see text]) defect exhibits high brightness, minimal phonon coupling, narrow optical linewidths, and high degrees of photon indistinguishability. Yet the creation of reliable and scalable SiV[Formula: see text]-based color centers has been hampered by heterogeneous emission, theorized to originate from surface imperfections, crystal lattice strain, defect symmetry, or other lattice impurities...
April 2, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38548415/in-vitro-assays-to-evaluate-car-t-cell-cytotoxicity
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miao Cao, Robert D Carlson, Ross E Staudt, Adam E Snook
This chapter introduces four commonly used in vitro chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell cytotoxicity assays (lactate dehydrogenase release assay, 51 Cr release assay, IncuCyte live cell killing assay, and xCELLigence real-time analysis) and provides a detailed protocol for xCELLigence real-time analysis. Focusing on in vitro assays, this chapter starts with explaining the mechanisms and discussing the utilization of each assay to quantify T-cell-induced cytotoxicity. Due to the high-throughput quantification and straightforward workflow of xCELLigence real-time analysis, a protocol entailing reagents and equipment, a 3-day step-by-step procedure, and instructions for data analysis are provided...
2024: Methods in Cell Biology
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