49 results on '"Balmer, J."'
Search Results
2. Publisher Correction: Live-cell three-dimensional single-molecule tracking reveals modulation of enhancer dynamics by NuRD
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Basu, S., Shukron, O., Hall, D., Parutto, P., Ponjavic, A., Shah, D., Boucher, W., Lando, D., Zhang, W., Reynolds, N., Sober, L. H., Jartseva, A., Ragheb, R., Ma, X., Cramard, J., Floyd, R., Balmer, J., Drury, T. A., Carr, A. R., Needham, L.-M., Aubert, A., Communie, G., Gor, K., Steindel, M., Morey, L., Blanco, E., Bartke, T., Di Croce, L., Berger, I., Schaffitzel, C., Lee, S. F., Stevens, T. J., Klenerman, D., Hendrich, B. D., Holcman, D., and Laue, E. D.
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- 2024
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3. Publisher Correction: Live-cell three-dimensional single-molecule tracking reveals modulation of enhancer dynamics by NuRD
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Basu, S., primary, Shukron, O., additional, Hall, D., additional, Parutto, P., additional, Ponjavic, A., additional, Shah, D., additional, Boucher, W., additional, Lando, D., additional, Zhang, W., additional, Reynolds, N., additional, Sober, L. H., additional, Jartseva, A., additional, Ragheb, R., additional, Ma, X., additional, Cramard, J., additional, Floyd, R., additional, Balmer, J., additional, Drury, T. A., additional, Carr, A. R., additional, Needham, L.-M., additional, Aubert, A., additional, Communie, G., additional, Gor, K., additional, Steindel, M., additional, Morey, L., additional, Blanco, E., additional, Bartke, T., additional, Di Croce, L., additional, Berger, I., additional, Schaffitzel, C., additional, Lee, S. F., additional, Stevens, T. J., additional, Klenerman, D., additional, Hendrich, B. D., additional, Holcman, D., additional, and Laue, E. D., additional
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- 2023
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4. PERCEPTIONS ON USE OF A SHARED DECISION-MAKING GUIDE AMONG MINORITIZED PATIENTS WITH ASTHMA
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Nyenhuis, S., primary, Riley, I., additional, Gardner, D., additional, Balmer, J., additional, Nelson, M., additional, Chadha, C. Anderson, additional, Carter, J., additional, and Simone, L., additional
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- 2023
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5. The Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex NuRD Is Built from Preformed Catalytically Active Sub-modules
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Zhang, W., Aubert, A., Gomez de Segura, J.M., Karuppasamy, M., Basu, S., Murthy, A.S., Diamante, A., Drury, T.A., Balmer, J., Cramard, J., Watson, A.A., Lando, D., Lee, S.F., Palayret, M., Kloet, S.L., Smits, A.H., Deery, M.J., Vermeulen, M., Hendrich, B., Klenerman, D., Schaffitzel, C., Berger, I., and Laue, E.D.
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- 2016
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6. Floristic response to landscape context in vascular plant communities in Eucalyptus obliqua and Eucalyptus regnans wet forest, southern Tasmania
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Balmer, J
- Abstract
Theories developed within the paradigm of landscape ecology propose that biodiversity within any given patch will be influenced by the surrounding landscape context (LC). Here LC is defined as the vegetation or land covers surrounding the site. This thesis used empirical vascular plant abundance data from the Huon forest district in southern Tasmania to test the hypothesis that LC influences the floristic composition and successional trajectory of patches within Eucalyptus obliqua and E. regnans wet forest. Secondary objectives included measuring the spatial and temporal variation in LC of the study area and its association with timber harvesting; describing differences in the response to LC between species and plant groups; comparing the effect size of plant responses to LC with other environmental predictors; finding the spatial and temporal scale at which plants respond most strongly to LC; and determining whether the effect of LC varied in response to disturbance regime differences. Most studies in landscape ecology have explored the effects of fragmentation on native vegetation in an agricultural matrix. In contrast, forest patches sampled in this study comprised native forest of various ages and successional stages within intact to variegated landscapes (sensu McIntyre and Hobbs 1999) in a frontier region dedicated substantially to timber production. Variation in LC was investigated for the study region using a new metric: the Landscape Context Index (LCI). This metric provided a relative scale of vegetation maturity in areas surrounding any given 50 x 50 m pixel, measured in 500 m, 1 km and 2 km radii. LCI was mapped for three years (1947, 1985 and 2009). The average LCI score was lower in 1985 than 1947, and was lower again in 2009. The greatest declines in LCI score were associated with timber harvesting, although in settled areas conversion to plantations was also an important contributor to LC score decline. The extreme reductions in LCI score observed in the period between 1947 and 1985 were not observed in the second period, possibly due in part to the mitigating effect of the Forest Practices Code, which resulted in changes to timber harvesting practices, including increased dispersal and reduced size of clearfelled patches. Distance to the nearest mature forest edge (DMFE), was used as a surrogate for mature forest influence, a component of LC. Between 15 to 200 m DMFE, there was an observed gradient in assemblage variation, species richness and diversity in all three age classes of silvicultural regrowth forest studied (4‚Äö-9, 22‚Äö-28, and 41‚Äö-45 years since regeneration). These trends were mainly driven by declines in richness and cover of mature forest affiliated species. Factors considered likely to contribute to differences in plant species response to LC are their sensitivity to micro-climatic variation (influenced by proximity to mature forest, and topography) and macroclimatic variation, their capacity to persist through disturbance, and their dispersal mode. Individual species abundance models for both mature forest affiliated species and pioneer species were stronger (e.g. 38 out of 56 common species using beta regression modelling) when they included both LC metrics and site environmental variables. Although LC was important in explaining variance in species abundance, it typically contributed less to model strength than other environmental predictors, such as soil, climate, topography and disturbance history. Abundance of most pioneer species was associated negatively with mature forest metrics, while the abundance of mature forest affiliated species was associated positively with these metrics. There was little evidence that plant species with bird or wind dispersed seed or that had seed able to persist through disturbance in the soil or in woody capsules were any less associated with LC metrics than species sensitive to disturbance with shorter dispersal capacity. It is therefore possible that such species were responding indirectly to LC through inter species competition, or because they were dependent on animal species sensitive to LC for their pollination or dispersal. LC effects on site micro-climate, soil and browsing pressure, which all vary with distance from edges of mature forest could also be influencing the distribution of species in ways that are associated with the distance from and proportion of mature forest in the landscape. Auto-correlation between LC metrics and site history are other factors that may be contributing to the observed responses of all plant species to LC metrics. There was only equivocal support for the hypothesis that floristic responses within regrowth forests are more strongly associated with the LC of the patch at the time that they were last disturbed rather than current LC. Interpretation of the response of vegetation to both the spatial and temporal scale of LC was hampered by the strong autocorrelation in LC scores between scales, and by the sampling methods chosen. The balance of evidence suggests that the LC in the years following disturbance and prior to canopy closure strongly influence the trajectory rate of succession, however colonization and extinction within sites may occur infrequently at any time so that later successional stages are still likely to be influenced by LC at all times. An interactive effect between proximity to mature forest and fire frequency was observed within secondary regrowth forests, such that patches burnt twice or more since 1898 exhibited greater assemblage differences with distance from the boundary compared with forest burnt only once. This was evidence that the response to LC is partly dependent on disturbance regimes at the site and that succession towards mature forest occurs more slowly in frequently disturbed patches. There was also a poor representation of the dominant rainforest trees and epiphytic ferns in regrowth forest that has colonized abandoned pastures (old fields), irrespective of the LC. Barriers to the colonization by rainforest tree species within old field regrowth may include the maintenance of more open canopy structure for longer periods than typical in uncleared regrowth forest disturbed by single fire events. An examination of all results in conjunction with those of other empirical studies suggest that successional trajectories in the species composition of wet eucalypt forests may be altered by changes in landscape configurations in response to silvicultural practices and changes in climate and associated fire regimes. Given the association between LC and succession in forest patches, the observed reductions in mean LCI scores across the study region may signal that recovery from the effects of wildfire, extreme climate events, and harvesting may be slower at the site level. If so, then current LC patterns reflect a reduction in resilience at the landscape scale. Predicted changes in climate and associated fire regimes may make local extinctions more likely in areas of low LCI score. In the context of landscape planning, although dispersal and pollination distances for most vascular plants is best measured in tens of metres rather than kilometres, landscape planning at 500 m to one kilometre may be sufficient to avoid local extinctions at finer scales and thereby prevent range contractions. Silvicultural methods and land management practices that may avert future losses in landscape resilience are discussed.
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- 2023
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7. BRIDGING GAPS IN ASTHMA CARE AMONG NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES: UTILITY OF COLLABORATIVE PATIENT-PROVIDER SESSIONS
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Kobernick, A., Carter, J., Nelson, M., Napolitan, C., Simone, L., and Balmer, J.
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Native American (NA) communities are disproportionately affected by asthma and face numerous barriers to care. This study evaluated a collaborative learning model for uncovering and bridging gaps in optimal asthma treatment.
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- 2024
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8. Stammzelltherapie für Netzhauterkrankungen
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Balmer, J., Stanzel, B.V., and Fischer, M.D.
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- 2015
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9. Differences in Treatment Decision-Making and Use Among White and Black Individuals with Asthma: Results from a Nationwide Survey
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Nyenhuis, S.M., primary, Foggs, M.B., additional, Winders, T.A., additional, Gardner, D.D., additional, Nelson, M., additional, Balmer, J., additional, Carter, J., additional, and Simone, L., additional
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- 2022
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10. Sustainable branding strategy via celebrity corporate brand
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Hambali, A, Alwi, S, and Balmer, J
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- 2020
11. Management of Corporate Identity for the pursuit of sustained CSR implement
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Tourky, M, Alwi, S, Shaalan, A, and Balmer, J
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- 2020
12. Current-use halogenated and organophosphorous flame retardants: A review of their presence in Arctic ecosystems
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Vorkamp, K. (Katrin), Balmer, J. (Jennifer), Hung, H. (Hayley), Letcher, R.J. (Robert J.), Rigét, F.F. (Frank F.), de Wit, C.A. (Cynthia A.), Vorkamp, K. (Katrin), Balmer, J. (Jennifer), Hung, H. (Hayley), Letcher, R.J. (Robert J.), Rigét, F.F. (Frank F.), and de Wit, C.A. (Cynthia A.)
- Abstract
Since the ban of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDD), other flame retardants may be increasingly used. Thirty-one current-use halogenated (HFRs) and 24 organophosphorous flame retardants (PFRs) have been sought in Arctic ecosystems so far. Air measurements provide evidence of long-range atmospheric transport for the majority of these compounds, with much higher concentrations for PFRs than for HFRs. Some HFRs, i.e. bis(2-ethylhexyl)-tetrabromophthalate (BEH-TEBP), 2-ethylhexyl-2,3,4,5-tetrabromobenzoate (EH-TBB) and hexabromobenzene (HBBz), had air concentrations comparable to those of PBDEs in some studies. Complementary data for seawater and ice indicate dry deposition of HFRs, while net volatilization from seawater was observed for some PFRs. Studies in the marine environment indicate a wide presence of HFRs in marine biota, but generally at low levels, i.e. typically lower than those of PBDEs. Exceptions exist, namely 2,4,6-tribromophenyl 2,3-dibromopropyl ether (TBP-DBPE) and decabromodiphenyl ethane (DBDPE), which were found in concentrations comparable to PBDEs in some species. The same was the case for 2,4,6-tribromophenyl allyl ether (TBP-AE) in a study from the terrestrial environment. PFRs generally had low concentrations in biota, probably due to metabolic transformation of PFR triesters, as suggested by in vitro studies. Elevated PFR concentrations occurred in some individuals, generally indicating a larger variability of PFR
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- 2019
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13. The use and utility of surrogates in biodiversity monitoring programmes
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Sato, Chloe F., Westgate, M.J., Barton, P.S., Foster, C.N., O'Loughlin, L.S., Pierson, J.C., Balmer, J., Chapman, J., Catt, G., Detto, T., Hawcroft, A., Kavanagh, R.P., Marshall, D., McKay, M., Moseby, K., Perry, M., Robinson, D., Schroder, M., Tuft, K., Lindenmayer, D.B., Sato, Chloe F., Westgate, M.J., Barton, P.S., Foster, C.N., O'Loughlin, L.S., Pierson, J.C., Balmer, J., Chapman, J., Catt, G., Detto, T., Hawcroft, A., Kavanagh, R.P., Marshall, D., McKay, M., Moseby, K., Perry, M., Robinson, D., Schroder, M., Tuft, K., and Lindenmayer, D.B.
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- 2019
14. How Do Different Service Employees Deliver the Brand to Consumers? An Abstract
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Boukis, A. Kaminakis, K. Papastathopoulos, A. Punjaisri, K. Balmer, J.
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An important aspect of service employees’ performance is related to their ability to demonstrate brand-congruent behaviour, given that customers’ brand experience is a function of their encounter with them (Akdeniz & Calantone, 2015). An extensive amount of work in the area examines how frontline employees affect customers’ experience with the brand (Xie et al., 2014), and scholars examine a variety of organizational, interpersonal and intrapersonal factors which affect employees’ ability to deliver the brand consistently (e.g. Dean et al., 2016). Much of the published work espousing the importance of employees assumes that employees share a common understanding of their role, despite evidence showing that individuals may frame their work quite differently and have different motives when it comes to fulfilling various work-related objectives. Second, current internal branding conceptualizations view employees as a homogenous group of stakeholders who respond to the firm’s internal branding efforts in an unvarying way (Punjaisri et al., 2009). These assumptions are inaccurate, as interpersonal variations among individuals need to be taken into account when examining each employee’s ability to meet existing brand delivery standards when interacting with customers (Di Mascio, 2010). Without accommodating these intrapersonal variations into existing internal branding frameworks, managerial insights cannot be uniformly applied to entire service staff. This study departs from investigating traditional service employee management models which implicitly assume that all employees share homogeneous brand perceptions and introduces an individual-level perspective in the internal branding literature. This perspective is unique in that it accounts for intrapersonal variations among frontline employees and illustrates how different types of employee respond to the firm’s human resource management practices and how they deliver the brand to consumers. This study extends the service employee and the internal branding literature in introducing an individual-level perspective which takes into account intrapersonal variations of frontline employees when delivering the brand to consumers. Drawing from schema theory (Daft & Weick, 1984) and action identification theory (Vallacher & Wegner, 1987), a typology of service employees is introduced by exploring how each of these types perceives the firm’s brand and how they understand their role in the brand delivery process. Building on these findings, this study empirically confirms that the role of various human resource management practices (i.e. training, coaching) is not equally effective for all types of employees and also that employees’ responses to the firm’s efforts (i.e. brand mindfulness, brand attachment) vary significantly depending on their perceptions of the firm’s brand. Results also indicate that different employee types’ responses affect their extra-role brand-related behaviour (as captured by brand development and brand resilience) in different ways. © 2018, Academy of Marketing Science.
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- 2018
15. Editorial [Corporate Brands: Ignored, Accepted and Now Celebrated]
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Chen, W and Balmer, J
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- 2017
16. Amplifying brain neuroblasts contribute to central complex development in Drosophila melanogaster
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Balmer, J, Lichtneckert, R, Bello, B, and Reichert, H
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- 2016
17. Presence of the Gpr179(nob5) allele in a C3H-derived transgenic mouse
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Balmer J, Ji R, Ta, Ray, Selber F, Gassmann M, Ns, Peachey, Ronald Gregg, Enzmann V, University of Zurich, and Enzmann, Volker
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Male ,Mice, Inbred C3H ,Retinal Bipolar Cells ,Gene Expression ,Mice, Transgenic ,10081 Institute of Veterinary Physiology ,2731 Ophthalmology ,Founder Effect ,Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled ,Disease Models, Animal ,Mice ,Mutagenesis, Insertional ,Night Blindness ,Electroretinography ,Animals ,Humans ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Female ,Transgenes ,Erythropoietin ,Alleles ,Crosses, Genetic ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
PURPOSE: To identify the mutation responsible for an abnormal electroretinogram (ERG) in a transgenic mouse line (tg21) overexpressing erythropoietin (Epo). The tg21 line was generated on a mixed (C3H; C57BL/6) background and lacked the b-wave component of the ERG. This no-b-wave (nob) ERG is seen in other mouse models with depolarizing bipolar cell (DBC) dysfunction and in patients with the complete form of congenital stationary night blindness (cCSNB). We determined the basis for the nob ERG phenotype and screened C3H mice for the mutation to evaluate whether this finding is important for the vision research community. METHODS: ERGs were used to examine retinal function. The retinal structure of the transgenic mice was investigated using histology and immunohistochemistry. Inverse PCR was performed to identify the insertion site of the Epo transgene in the mouse genome. Affected mice were backcrossed to follow the inheritance pattern of the nob ERG phenotype. Quantitative real-time PCR (qRT PCR), Sanger sequencing, and immunohistochemistry were used to identify the mutation causing the defect. Additional C3H sublines were screened for the detected mutation. RESULTS: Retinal histology and blood vessel structure were not disturbed, and no loss of DBCs was observed in the tg21 nob mice. The mutation causing the nob ERG phenotype is inherited independently of the tg21 transgene. The qRT PCR experiments revealed that the nob ERG phenotype reflected a mutation in Gpr179, a gene involved in DBC signal transduction. PCR analysis confirmed the presence of the Gpr179(nob5) insertional mutation in intron 1 of Gpr179. Screening for mutations in other C3H-derived lines revealed that C3H.Pde6b(+) mice carry the Gpr179 (nob5) allele whereas C3H/HeH mice do not. CONCLUSIONS: We identified the presence of the Gpr179(nob5) mutation causing DBC dysfunction in a C3H-derived transgenic mouse line. The nob phenotype is not related to the presence of the transgene. The Gpr179(nob5) allele can be added to the list of background alleles that impact retinal function in commonly used mouse lines. By providing primers to distinguish between Gpr179 mutant and wild-type alleles, this study allows investigators to monitor for the presence of the Gpr179(nob5) mutation in other mouse lines derived from C3H.
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- 2016
18. The Internet of Total Corporate Communications, Quaternary Corporate Communications and The Corporate Marketing Internet Revolution
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Balmer, J. M. T. and Yen, D.
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his is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Marketing Management on 25/11/2016, available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0267257X.2016.1255440 The advent of what we call, “The Corporate Marketing Internet Revolution” necessitates a radical rethinking of marketing practice and scholarship. As such, mindful of the importance of the internet, and in particular, the Internet of Things (IoT) phenomena this article formally introduces and elucidates the Internet of Total Corporate Communications (IoTCC) notion. Moreover, it particularises the nature and importance of quaternary (fourth-order) total corporate communications. To date, the total corporate communications effects of the Corporate Internet Marketing Revolution has not been accorded importance in the extant literature. As such, this article seeks to address this omission.
- Published
- 2016
19. Brand value co-creation with employees through the Leader-Member Exchange theory: the case of a corporate brand
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Punjaisri, K and Balmer, J
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Brand value co-creation ,Leader-member exchange ,Trust ,Brand identification - Abstract
Research Purpose: Employees, who are at the interface between customers and brands, play a crucial role in shaping consumers’ brand experiences that facilitate subjective and psychological meaning processes (Gambetti and Graffigna, 2015; Prahaland and Ramaswamy, 2004). The role of employees has been made more important as corporate branding involves multiple stakeholders who interact with employees across an organisation, whose behaviours influence and shape brand experiences of those stakeholders through their social interactions within the network. Hence, involving employees in brand value co-creation in the first instance could lead to positive brand experiences in different brand-stakeholder encounters.
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- 2016
20. What Can Pharmacological Models of Retinal Degeneration Tell Us?
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Reisenhofer, M. H., primary, Balmer, J. M., additional, and Enzmann, V., additional
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- 2017
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21. Corporate heritage brands in China: Consumer engagement with China’s most celebrated corporate heritage brand-Tong Ren Tang: 同仁堂
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Balmer, J and Chen, W
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China ,Traditional Chinese medicine ,Corporate heritage brands ,Corporate heritage ,Imperial China - Abstract
This study breaks new ground becomes it (i): considers a non-western (a Chinese) corporate heritage brand and (ii): for the first time within the corporate heritage brand/corporate heritage canon, adopts an explicit consumer perspective. . Significantly–taking an overt corporate heritage/corporate heritage brand stance- this empirical study reveals why a corporate heritage brand such as Tong Ren Tang (TRT) – founded in 1669-is highly meaningful to consumers from one generation to another. The researchers marshal the first four of Balmer’s (2013) criteria of corporate heritage entities in order to verify its corporate heritage credentials and explain its attractiveness to customers. As such, it was found that TRT is meaningfully linked to the past, present and prospective future (Balmer’s criterion of omni temporality); has durable and constant organisational traits (Balmer’s criterion of institutional trait consistency); has customer and stakeholder faithfulness for a minimum of three generations (Balmer’s criterion of tri-generational loyalty); and has acquired meaningful non corporate role identities vis-à-vis Chinese national identity and China’s imperial identity (Balmer’s criterion of augmented role identities). TRT was found to be attractive to consumers owing to its core and augmented role identities following Balmer’s (2013) augmented role identity theoretical perspective. These findings explain why Tong Ren Tang has endured and flourished from one generation to another and accounts for its celebrated status within China and the wider Chinese diaspora.
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- 2015
22. The Nucleosome Remodeling and Deacetylase Complex NuRD Is Built from Preformed Catalytically Active Sub-modules
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Zhang, W, Aubert, A., de Segura, J.M.G., Karuppasamy, M., Basu, S., Murthy, A.S., Diamante, A., Drury, T.A., Balmer, J., Cramard, J., Watson, A.A., Lando, D., Lee, S.F., Palayret, M., Kloet, S.L, Smits, A.H., Deery, M.J., Vermeulen, M., Hendrich, B., Klenerman, D., Schaffitzel, C., Berger, I., Laue, E.D., Zhang, W, Aubert, A., de Segura, J.M.G., Karuppasamy, M., Basu, S., Murthy, A.S., Diamante, A., Drury, T.A., Balmer, J., Cramard, J., Watson, A.A., Lando, D., Lee, S.F., Palayret, M., Kloet, S.L, Smits, A.H., Deery, M.J., Vermeulen, M., Hendrich, B., Klenerman, D., Schaffitzel, C., Berger, I., and Laue, E.D.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 159986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)
- Published
- 2016
23. Decadal-scale vegetation dynamics above the alpine treeline, Mount Rufus, Tasmania
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Harrison-Day, V, primary, Annandale, B, additional, Balmer, J, additional, and Kirkpatrick, JB, additional
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- 2016
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24. What Can Pharmacological Models of Retinal Degeneration Tell Us?
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H. Reisenhofer, M., M. Balmer, J., and Enzmann, V.
- Abstract
Animal models with pharmacologically induced retinal degeneration including sodium iodate (NaIO3) and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) have been extensively used in ophthalmic research to investigate retinal degeneration. NaIO3 induces degeneration of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) followed by photoreceptor (PRC) cell death, mimicking features of age-related macular degeneration. In contrast, MNU leads to rapid destruction of the PRCs only, enabling the use of the MNU model to investigate degeneration induced in retinitis pigmentosa. It has been shown that multiple cell death pathways are involved in the cell-specific effects of the toxins. Necrosis has been identified as the cause of the NaIO3-induced RPE loss. PRC degeneration in the described models is mainly induced by programmed cell death, indicated by the upregulation of conventional apoptosis initiator and effector caspases. However, recent research points to the additional involvement of caspase-independent processes as endoplasmic reticulum stresotheses concerning triggers of cell death, the use of pharmacological models is cs and calpain activation. Since there is still a substantial amount of contradictory hypontroversial. Thereby, the advantages of such models like the application reaching across species and strains as well as modulation of onset and severity of damage are not exploited to a full extent. Thus, the present review aims to give more insight into the involved cell death pathways and discusses recent findings in the most widely used retinal degeneration models. It might facilitate further studies aiming to develop putative therapeutic approaches for retinal degenerative diseases including combinatory treatment with cell death inhibitors and cell transplantation therapy.
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- 2017
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25. The impact of corporate heritage design and augmented role identities on customer satisfaction through experience : the case study of traditional London taxi
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Ozdemir, Bedri Munir, Balmer, J. M. T., and Chen, W.
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658.8 ,Corporate heritage design ,augmented role identity ,city role identity ,national role identity ,customer experience - Abstract
Purpose: The study aims to explore the relationship between corporate heritage design, augmented role identities and customer behaviour towards the well-known traditional London taxi. The study scrutinises whether the city and national role identities of London black cab positively resonate among the traditional London taxi users. Furthermore, the study examines if corporate heritage design plays a moderator role in the relationship between its perceived identities and user experience. Design/methodology/approach: This study is a deductive, case study based on positivist research philosophy. Before the main research, augmented identities of the traditional London cab revealed based on initial research with the secondary data. Then, a conceptual framework developed through the relevant literature. Various hypotheses were proposed via the conceptual framework. To test the proposed hypotheses, the research adopted an online survey research method to collect the required data. Surveys were collected via social media channels such as Facebook and Twitter. At the end of the data collection process, as a sample of 523 clean survey responses were received. Results: The data were analysed by using SPSS and Structural Equation Modelling software SPSS AMOS. Within the context of traditional London taxi, data analysis validated the saliency of both city and national role identity for customer satisfaction. In addition to that, the analysis confirmed the significance of corporate heritage design on customer perceptions and responses of multiple identities (Corporate ID, City Role ID, and National Role ID) attached to the London black cab. Originality/value: This study differentiates by exploring the antecedents and impacts of corporate heritage design. On top of that, the notion city role identity and its effects are introduced to extend the understanding of corporate heritage. The conceptual framework confirms the moderation of corporate heritage design on the relationship between corporate identity, city role identity, and national role identity and customer experience. The study also identifies the antecedents of corporate heritage design (Continuity, Familiarity, Functionality, and Aesthetic). Managerial Implications: The study shows that corporate heritage design is an essential tool to communicate added identities such as national and city identity. Companies acquiring corporate heritage design should maintain those unique design elements whilst updating their products or service to satisfy customers’ modern needs. The study also suggests that companies attributed to other identities (e.g. social, territorial, cultural etc.) could increase the customer experience and satisfaction via revealing and communicating those augmented role identities. Lastly, like the traditional London cab, certain corporate heritage assets could become a symbol of a city or territory. Hence city administrators should also consider protecting those corporate heritage symbols to promote and differentiate the cities.
- Published
- 2020
26. Culture heritage street and heritage brand tourism : case study of Beijing Dashilar Culture Heritage Street
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Liu, Lang, Chen, W., and Balmer, J. M. T.
- Abstract
Purpose: Derived from the corporate heritage brand theory, this research studies Beijing Dashilar Culture Heritage Street - one of the most famous culture streets in China. It intellectualises and addresses the crucial elements of corporate culture heritage street brand identity such as architecture and design, tourist convenience and traditional goods and services, which is supporting heritage brand identity theory by confirming the effect of key traits: symbol, design and style as well as product or service focus. Moreover, it proves the effect of corporate heritage brand experience of Dashilar visitors by which corporate culture heritage street brand identity towards to overall tourism satisfaction. This study also investigates the relationship between corporate culture heritage street brand identity and tourism satisfaction. Finally, it creatively establishes the moderating elements in these relationships, which are psychological cognitive awareness of history and culture. Design/methodology/approach: A conceptual research framework of corporate culture heritage street brand identity is developed from the literature review and pilot research analysis of secondary comments from well-known online platform TripAdvisor. Further semi-structured in-depth interviews were performed with volunteered participants who have actual Dashilar visiting experience for the research validity enhancement and questionnaire design. The main research method approach of this study is quantitative questionnaire survey which is adapted to examine the conceptual framework. To assuring the authenticity of this study, the the paper-based questionnaire survey was accomplished in Dashilar area in Beijing, China. In total, 654 questionnaires were collected, among which 609 valid questionnaires were used to test the hypotheses of this study. Findings: The data analysis results confirm the significant role of heritage brand identity on achieving and maintaining tourism satisfaction of a culture heritage street in China. This study finds that dimensions of corporate heritage brand identity such as symbol, design and style as well as product or services focus are actively empowering the corporate heritage brand identity. Additionally, this research reveals that corporate heritage street brand identity dimensions influence corporate heritage brand experience positively. Finally, history and culture awareness are essential to strengthen the relationship between culture heritage street brand identity and heritage brand experience, while positive heritage brand experience is the key to enhance tourism satisfaction. Originality/value: This is one of pioneer studies that researches on corporate heritage brand and tourism interdisciplinary with unique perspective considering culture heritage street as a corporate heritage brand. This is one of few groundbreaking studies advances the corporate heritage brand identity theory with a conceptual framework, which confirms the corporate heritage brand identity dimensions and their effects on heritage brand experience and tourism satisfaction. This study, additionally, clarified the moderation effect of psychological cognitive awareness (history and culture) and physical heritage band identity dimensions on the relationship between culture heritage street brand identity and heritage brand experience as well as tourism satisfaction. Managerial implications: The study acknowledged culture heritage street tourism potential for its sustainable development, which broadens the strategic vision of culture heritage management public institutions or enterprises. Moreover, illuminated culture heritage street brand identity dimensions in this study provide the further improvement directions (such as the use of symbol, design and style uniqueness development or authentic product and service orientation) for management strategy on achieving and maintaining the tourism satisfaction through brand experience development. The significance of history and culture awareness of culture heritage streets plays an important strategic role during the marketing communication and brand development of these streets with culture heritage.
- Published
- 2018
27. Corporate heritage brand identity, customer experience and satisfaction : the case study of John Lewis Partnership
- Author
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Sammour, Ammar Abdellatif Taha, Chen, W., and Balmer, J.
- Subjects
658.8 ,Branding ,Heritage business ,Marketing communications ,Brand management ,Corporate identity - Abstract
Purpose: This research studies the relationship between corporate heritage brand identity and customer satisfaction of John Lewis Partnership (JLP) which is one of the most successful British retail heritage brands internationally. It conceptualizes and addresses the key factors of corporate heritage brand identity including brand price, quality, design, and symbol. It examines the corporate heritage brand experience of JLP customers through which corporate heritage brand identity influences customer satisfaction. It also establishes the moderating role of brand innovation, word of mouth and multiple time dimensions on these relationships. Design/methodology/approach: A conceptual framework of corporate heritage brand identity is developed from the literature review. To improve the validity of this study, semi-structured interviews were carried out with JLP managers, senior partners and their loyal customers recommended by JLP. These interviews have verified and advanced the hypotheses informed from the reviewed literature. This study mainly adopts the quantitative survey research method approach to test the conceptual framework. An online questionnaire was sent to JLP customers through social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Off-line paper-based survey questionnaires were collected from customers in JLP stores located in five cities in the UK (London, Manchester, Liverpool, Leicester and Southampton). In total, a sample of 596 clean questionnaire responses were collected and used for this study to test the developed hypotheses. Findings: Data analysis results have confirmed the dynamic and essential role of heritage brand identity on attaining and sustaining customers' satisfaction of a corporate heritage brand from the retailing industry in the UK. The results revealed that corporate heritage brand identity dimensions (price, quality, design and symbol) are effective in representing the strength of corporate heritage brand identity. The confirmed that the dimensions of the corporate heritage brand identities of this study are indicating positive impacts on corporate heritage brand experience according to the data analysis results. The findings also suggest that these brand experience dimensions (sensory, affective, behavioural and intellectual) have a positive influence on improving customer satisfaction. Additionally, brand innovation and the time stream in this study strengthens the relation between corporate heritage brand identity and corporate heritage brand experience. Furthermore, word of mouth and the prospect future of a corporate heritage brand are of significance to improve customers' satisfaction through positive heritage brand experience. Originality/value: This is one of the few attempts to develop a conceptual framework of corporate heritage brand identity. The conceptual framework has confirmed the multiple dimensions of corporate heritage brand identity (including brand price, quality, design and symbol) and their impact on customers' experience and satisfaction. This study also identified the moderating role of brand innovation, word of mouth and multiple time dimensions on the relationships between corporate heritage brand identity and customers' experience and satisfaction. This is one of the first attempts to study corporate heritage branding management in the retailing industry sector. Managerial implications: The corporate heritage brand identity dimensions identified from this study have the potential to help brand managers develop and augment their corporate heritage brand management strategy, especially for the retailing industry as revealed in this study. Marketers and brand managers need to be aware of their corporate heritage brand treats such as price, quality, design and symbol to satisfy and sustain their customers. The findings reflect the importance of sustaining the traits of corporate heritage brand and being responsive and innovative to the market on time. Additionally, the fundamental function of Word of Mouth (WOM) in extending the communication channels between a brand and customers. The findings confirmed that Time Streams have a central role in demonstrating the identity and sustainability of a corporate heritage brand.
- Published
- 2017
28. Introducing celebrity corporate brand : moving beyond endorsement and exploring its effect on corporate brand enhancement
- Author
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Hambali, Anisah, Alwi, S., Balmer, J., and Melewar, T.
- Subjects
658.8 ,Celebrity brand ,Human brand ,Personal brand ,Corporate brand loyalty - Abstract
Celebrity endorsement has received academic attention since the 1970s and it has widely been used by companies in their marcom (marketing communications) activities as an effective strategic tool to promote their brands, companies, products and services. Instead of only being appointed as endorsers, this new phenomenon sees how celebrities have changed their roles as human brands and are now better known as celebrity brands. Celebrities, as they are known today, are progressively becoming brands in their own right (i.e. celebrity brand), have their own value, owning their own products and/or services and businesses/companies (i.e. corporate brand), and endorsing other corporate brands too. Companies use celebrity endorsements to position and communicate their individual/product brand image to consumers at large. However, due to the changing marketing environment (from traditional to digital marketing), companies are finding that their communication through celebrity endorsements have become costly and less efficient when trying to project a coherent corporate image and reputation across various audiences. Rather, the new trending phenomenon of celebrity chefs may achieve the desired effect. Unlike other human brands such as CEOs, athletes or artists, which roles limit to either personal or corporate roles, celebrity chefs are unique as they encompass both. Furthermore, they also endorse other brands and corporate brands simultaneously, enabling them to project their own personal and corporate brand as well as the brand they are endorsing. Hence, this study's novelty lies in the exploration and development of the celebrity chef concept at both the product and corporate brand level of their 'own' and 'endorsed' activities (termed as celebrity corporate brand or CCB in this study); and operationalises the CCB concept. The study aims to investigate whether a change in the celebrity brand roles by addressing both traits (human personality) and states (brand personality) and by associating it at the corporate brand level, given the best contextual setting, is one of the possible ways to strategically use celebrity brand beyond endorsement in marcom activities. The study has three objectives, which are: 1) to explore the concept of celebrity brand at a corporate brand level, known as Celebrity Corporate Brand - CCB; 2) to investigate the impact of CCB on attitudinal (identification, image and reputation) and behavioural (loyalty) outcomes (termed as corporate brand enhancement); and 3) to develop a holistic conceptual model to understand the consumers attitudinal and behavioural response and association impact of celebrity brand at corporate brand level named as Celebrity Corporate Brand Association Impact on Corporate Brand Enhancement Model. A mixed method approach was employed by using qualitative data (netnography - Study1; and in depths interviews - Study 2) as well as quantitative data (population-based survey experiments - Study 3). A qualitative approach is used to explore the concept and dimensions of CCB, which is later used to assist the items and measure development for Study 3. Data collection was done covering samples selection from the United Kingdom and Malaysia. Random sampling is used to select respondents that fulfilled the criteria required for the study. The study finds that CCB represents and carries his Personal Brand, Product/Service Brand and Corporate Brand. CCB Product Brand refers to the celebrity chefs own developed products and services which are their foods, cookbooks, kitchen utensils. CCB Corporate Brand refers to the celebrity chefs' businesses, corporations and companies such as their restaurants, colleges and programs. CCB is further conceptualised through the CCB's Authentic and Functional Quality, CCB's Cognition and CCB's Personal Quality. The CCB's Philosophy also projects the celebrity's own corporate brand and endorsed activities. CCB Personal Brand refers to the celebrity chefs' traits such as their interpersonal skills and quality, symbolic value and authenticity; and their and their personality states such as enterprising and technical quality. Theoretically, the research is novel in four different ways: 1) it offers a fresh insight to scholars and practitioners in celebrity endorsement, human or celebrity brand, into how to address the new phenomena of changing consumer and celebrity roles by going beyond the celebrity endorsement concept (i.e. via CCB); 2) it explores, develops, defines and provides measures for the newly developed CCB concept; and 3) it extends the nascent literature on celebrity brand, which explores mainly at product brand level, to corporate brand level (celebrity with personal brand also owning corporate brand), and 4) it test CCB empirically and further investigates its relationship in terms of both attitudinal and behavioural outcomes in an effort to enhance corporate brand (corporate brand enhancement process). Previously, studies on celebrity endorsement only look at the use of celebrity as an endorser and discussion in this area is made based on the Source Model which only discusses the personality traits of the celebrities. In addressing the changing roles of celebrities (having personal brands, product brands and corporate brands), this study defines CCB by including both the celebrity brand personality traits and states and researching its impact on corporate brand enhancement. Furthermore, this study looks at both the attitudinal and behavioural outcome of the CCB on multiple stakeholders (celebrities, consumers and endorsed corporate brands). Methodologically, the study contributes in three ways: (1) a new context (celebrity chefs) is chosen to add new insights to celebrity branding literature; (2) approaching the research with three different studies, namely Study 1- netnography; Study 2 - in depths interviews; and Study 3 - population-based survey experiments; and (3) the inclusion of multiple stakeholders as the samples. Practically, the study proposes marketers to select a new type of celebrity: one that has a personal brand of their own, own product and/or corporate brand to increase the promotional marketing campaign success. Thus, both parties need to work together to build upon their brand strategy to ensure that the consumer identifies closely with them, thereby enhancing their image and reputation and subsequently increasing brand loyalty to the advantage of both parties. Interestingly, once CCB has built upon reputation, this guides the business and marketers to carefully select them in the hope of enhancing its corporate brand. The study's findings also demonstrate that it is essential to address various audiences in this new era by designing an appropriate positioning and communication strategy. The results will assist businesses and organisations in the context of defining and developing strategy alongside celebrity chefs (as the CCB) with their businesses and the endorsed corporate brands.
- Published
- 2017
29. The corporate identity, architecture, and identification triad : theoretical insights
- Author
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Foroudi, Mohammad Mahdi, Balmer, J., and Chen, W.
- Subjects
659.2 - Abstract
This thesis informed by a single case study and adopting a multi-internal stakeholder perspective of a middle-ranked and London-based Business School, constitutes an explanatory investigation of the corporate identity, architecture, identification triad and their antecedents. The dissertation draws on social identity and attribution theories. This doctoral research focuses on a contemporary phenomenon within a real-life context. Based on the multi-disciplinary approach, the research generated four empirical insights; (i) a favourable Business School corporate identity has a commensurate influence on architecture; (ii) a favourable Business School corporate identity has a commensurate influence on stakeholders; (iii) a favourable Business School architecture increases identification with the Business School; and (iv) specifically, a favourable Business School corporate identity impacts on the Business School architecture on five dimensions. This study resulted in the introduction of a validated conceptual framework and the resultant theoretical framework details the corporate identity, architecture and identification dynamic as it pertains to a middle ranking Business School. The research is significant in that although corporate identity, architecture, and identification have been acknowledged as a significant area of research in marketing, corporate identity and design literatures, their relationships have remained vague. Extant studies lack a firm theoretical underpinning. As such, this thesis makes a theoretical contribution to our understanding of the corporate identity, architecture, and identification triad. A survey-based single case study research design marshalling explanatory research involving data collection comprised semi-structured interviews, focus groups and a collection of visual data in the preliminary stage of this research. This along with a review of the literature informed the conceptual framework. The conceptual framework was examined via the insights from 309 questionnaires. Structural equation modelling with AMOS was conducted to again insight into the various influences and relationships in relation to the corporate identity, architecture and identification triad. Most of the hypotheses underpinning the conceptual framework were confirmed apart from 1 which was an unexpected relationship between corporate visual identity and symbolic artifacts/decor and 3 unexpected relationships between the philosophy, mission and value and architecture components. Management implications from this research are as follows: (i) corporate identity should be managed strategically, and should be in alignment with the identity elements (company’s corporate an entity’s visual identity, communication, and philosophy, mission and value); (ii) an entity’s architecture should be managed strategically, and should be in alignment with other visual identity elements (decor and artifacts/symbolic artifacts, spatial layout and functionality/physical structure, and ambient conditions/physical stimuli); (iii) corporate identity/architecture gap should be constantly and carefully managed; (iv) architecture/identification (emotional attachment) gap should be regularly monitored. Moreover, this thesis provides policy/management recommendations to multiple substantive areas in higher education in the UK. In other words, a clear understanding of the dimensions of the relevant concepts can assist managers in policy development to develop a coherent policy for managing favourable corporate identity and architecture which can influence stakeholders’ identification. In addition, the findings of this study may support and shape business policy.
- Published
- 2015
30. The Rho regulator Myosin IXb enables nonlymphoid tissue seeding of protective CD8 T cells
- Author
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Mykhailo Vladymyrov, Ruth Lyck, Michael Sixt, Xenia Ficht, Alba Diz-Muñoz, Jasmin Balmer, Martin Bähler, Ingrid de Vries, Bettina Stolp, Matteo Iannacone, Jens V. Stein, Federica Moalli, Amleto Fiocchi, Doron Merkler, Michael Hubert Stoffel, Mario Kreutzfeldt, Akitaka Ariga, James Sharpe, Philipp Germann, Moalli, F., Ficht, X., Germann, P., Vladymyrov, M., Stolp, B., De Vries, I., Lyck, R., Balmer, J., Fiocchi, A., Kreutzfeldt, M., Merkler, D., Iannacone, M., Ariga, A., Stoffel, M. H., Sharpe, J., Bahler, M., Sixt, M., Diz-Munoz, A., and Stein, J. V.
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,rho GTP-Binding Proteins ,Lymphoid Tissue ,530 Physics ,T cell ,Immunology ,Receptors, Lymphocyte Homing ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,610 Medicine & health ,ddc:616.07 ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Myosins ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Cell Movement ,Cell polarity ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Animals ,Cytoskeleton ,Cells, Cultured ,Research Articles ,Cell Proliferation ,Epidermis (botany) ,Chemistry ,Cell growth ,Immunity ,Cell Polarity ,Cell biology ,Extracellular Matrix ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Epidermis ,CD8 ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Moalli et al. combine in vitro CD8+ T cell motility analysis with intravital imaging of mouse tissues to identify the actomyosin regulator Myo9b as a central player for nonlymphoid tissue infiltration during adaptive immune responses by facilitating crossing of tissue barriers., T cells are actively scanning pMHC-presenting cells in lymphoid organs and nonlymphoid tissues (NLTs) with divergent topologies and confinement. How the T cell actomyosin cytoskeleton facilitates this task in distinct environments is incompletely understood. Here, we show that lack of Myosin IXb (Myo9b), a negative regulator of the small GTPase Rho, led to increased Rho-GTP levels and cell surface stiffness in primary T cells. Nonetheless, intravital imaging revealed robust motility of Myo9b−/− CD8+ T cells in lymphoid tissue and similar expansion and differentiation during immune responses. In contrast, accumulation of Myo9b−/− CD8+ T cells in NLTs was strongly impaired. Specifically, Myo9b was required for T cell crossing of basement membranes, such as those which are present between dermis and epidermis. As consequence, Myo9b−/− CD8+ T cells showed impaired control of skin infections. In sum, we show that Myo9b is critical for the CD8+ T cell adaptation from lymphoid to NLT surveillance and the establishment of protective tissue–resident T cell populations.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Culture heritage street and heritage brand tourism
- Author
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Liu, Lang, Chen, W, and Balmer, J M T
- Abstract
This thesis was submitted for the award of Doctor of Philosophy and was awarded by Brunel University London Purpose: Derived from the corporate heritage brand theory, this research studies Beijing Dashilar Culture Heritage Street – one of the most famous culture streets in China. It intellectualises and addresses the crucial elements of corporate culture heritage street brand identity such as architecture and design, tourist convenience and traditional goods and services, which is supporting heritage brand identity theory by confirming the effect of key traits: symbol, design and style as well as product or service focus. Moreover, it proves the effect of corporate heritage brand experience of Dashilar visitors by which corporate culture heritage street brand identity towards to overall tourism satisfaction. This study also investigates the relationship between corporate culture heritage street brand identity and tourism satisfaction. Finally, it creatively establishes the moderating elements in these relationships, which are psychological cognitive awareness of history and culture. Design/methodology/approach: A conceptual research framework of corporate culture heritage street brand identity is developed from the literature review and pilot research analysis of secondary comments from well-known online platform TripAdvisor. Further semi-structured in-depth interviews were performed with volunteered participants who have actual Dashilar visiting experience for the research validity enhancement and questionnaire design. The main research method approach of this study is quantitative questionnaire survey which is adapted to examine the conceptual framework. To assuring the authenticity of this study, the the paper-based questionnaire survey was accomplished in Dashilar area in Beijing, China. In total, 654 questionnaires were collected, among which 609 valid questionnaires were used to test the hypotheses of this study. Findings: The data analysis results confirm the significant role of heritage brand identity on achieving and maintaining tourism satisfaction of a culture heritage street in China. This study finds that dimensions of corporate heritage brand identity such as symbol, design and style as well as product or services focus are actively empowering the corporate heritage brand identity. Additionally, this research reveals that corporate heritage street brand identity dimensions influence corporate heritage brand experience positively. Finally, history and culture awareness are essential to strengthen the relationship between culture heritage street brand identity and heritage brand experience, while positive heritage brand experience is the key to enhance tourism satisfaction. Originality/value: This is one of pioneer studies that researches on corporate heritage brand and tourism interdisciplinary with unique perspective considering culture heritage street as a corporate heritage brand. This is one of few groundbreaking studies advances the corporate heritage brand identity theory with a conceptual framework, which confirms the corporate heritage brand identity dimensions and their effects on heritage brand experience and tourism satisfaction. This study, additionally, clarified the moderation effect of psychological cognitive awareness (history and culture) and physical heritage band identity dimensions on the relationship between culture heritage street brand identity and heritage brand experience as well as tourism satisfaction. Managerial implications: The study acknowledged culture heritage street tourism potential for its sustainable development, which broadens the strategic vision of culture heritage management public institutions or enterprises. Moreover, illuminated culture heritage street brand identity dimensions in this study provide the further improvement directions (such as the use of symbol, design and style uniqueness development or authentic product and service orientation) for management strategy on achieving and maintaining the tourism satisfaction through brand experience development. The significance of history and culture awareness of culture heritage streets plays an important strategic role during the marketing communication and brand development of these streets with culture heritage.
- Published
- 2018
32. Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Exposures.
- Author
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Hirzel KL and Balmer J
- Subjects
- Humans, Incineration, Military Personnel, Veterans, Occupational Exposure adverse effects
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Use of electronic cigarettes among U.S. Military service members - prevalence and associated risk factors.
- Author
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Gill AA, Alford B, Balmer J, Lutz EA, Glogower FD, and Palm CK
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems, Military Personnel, Vaping
- Abstract
Background: Decreased physical fitness, loss of vision and hearing, and increased risk of chronic diseases are significant primary and secondary implications associated with the health of U.S. Military Service members who use tobacco, including electronic cigarettes. Despite the medical and non-medical costs to the U.S. Department of Defense and potential adverse health effects to Service members, electronic cigarette use is on the rise., Methods: U.S. Military Service members who completed their Periodic Health Assessment, a standardized, electronic, logic-based tool, from July 2018 to July 2019 were eligible. This exploratory study examines the prevalence and significant risk factors associated with self-reported use of electronic cigarettes, as well as determines if tobacco use varies by sex and Service branch, through use of Chi-square analysis and logistic regression., Results: U.S. Military Service members 17-70 years old were included in this study ( N = 1.12 M), with 80% of study participants being male and 20% female. Exposure to secondhand smoke (OR: 2.12, 95% CI: 2.15-2.22) and screening positive for hazardous drinking (OR: 2.70, 95% CI: 2.64-2.76) were found to show the greatest increase in odds of using electronic cigarettes, with similar findings after stratification by sex and Service branch. Stratification by Service branch revealed further differences in the association between electronic cigarette use and various demographic, military, lifestyle, and health characteristics., Conclusion: Electronic cigarette use is increasing across the United States. U.S. Service members have unique risk factors and patterns of tobacco use. Despite tobacco use having potential adverse effects on military readiness, its use remains prevalent in this population. Our findings identify opportunities for the U.S. Department of Defense to review tobacco policy and availability and accessibility of cessation services to promote quitting tobacco, especially electronic cigarettes.
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
34. Accurate end systole detection in dicrotic notch-less arterial pressure waveforms.
- Author
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Balmer J, Smith R, Pretty CG, Desaive T, Shaw GM, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure, Hemodynamics, Pulse Wave Analysis, Swine, Systole, Arterial Pressure, Arteries
- Abstract
Identification of end systole is often necessary when studying events specific to systole or diastole, for example, models that estimate cardiac function and systolic time intervals like left ventricular ejection duration. In proximal arterial pressure waveforms, such as from the aorta, the dicrotic notch marks this transition from systole to diastole. However, distal arterial pressure measures are more common in a clinical setting, typically containing no dicrotic notch. This study defines a new end systole detection algorithm, for dicrotic notch-less arterial waveforms. The new algorithm utilises the beta distribution probability density function as a weighting function, which is adaptive based on previous heartbeats end systole locations. Its accuracy is compared with an existing end systole estimation method, on dicrotic notch-less distal pressure waveforms. Because there are no dicrotic notches defining end systole, validating which method performed better is more difficult. Thus, a validation method is developed using dicrotic notch locations from simultaneously measured aortic pressure, forward projected by pulse transit time (PTT) to the more distal pressure signal. Systolic durations, estimated by each of the end systole estimates, are then compared to the validation systolic duration provided by the PTT based end systole point. Data comes from ten pigs, across two protocols testing the algorithms under different hemodynamic states. The resulting mean difference ± limits of agreement between measured and estimated systolic duration, of [Formula: see text] versus [Formula: see text], for the new and existing algorithms respectively, indicate the new algorithms superiority.
- Published
- 2021
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35. Incorporating pulse wave velocity into model-based pulse contour analysis method for estimation of cardiac stroke volume.
- Author
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Smith R, Balmer J, Pretty CG, Mehta-Wilson T, Desaive T, Shaw GM, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure, Cardiac Output, Heart Rate, Humans, Stroke Volume, Swine, Hemodynamics, Pulse Wave Analysis
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Stroke volume (SV) and cardiac output (CO) are important metrics for hemodynamic management of critically ill patients. Clinically available devices to continuously monitor these metrics are invasive, and less invasive methods perform poorly during hemodynamic instability. Pulse wave velocity (PWV) could potentially improve estimation of SV and CO by providing information on changing vascular tone. This study investigates whether using PWV for parameter identification of a model-based pulse contour analysis method improves SV estimation accuracy., Methods: Three implementations of a 3-element windkessel pulse contour analysis model are compared: constant-Z, water hammer, and Bramwell-Hill methods. Each implementation identifies the characteristic impedance parameter (Z) differently. The first method identifies Z statically and does not use PWV, and the latter two methods use PWV to dynamically update Z. Accuracy of SV estimation is tested in an animal trial, where interventions induce severe hemodynamic changes in 5 pigs. Model-predicted SV is compared to SV measured using an aortic flow probe., Results: SV percentage error had median bias and [(IQR); (2.5th, 97.5th percentiles)] of -0.5% [(-6.1%, 4.7%); (-50.3%, +24.1%)] for the constant-Z method, 0.6% [(-4.9%, 6.2%); (-43.4%, +29.3%)] for the water hammer method, and 0.8% [(-6.5, 8.6); (-37.1%, +47.6%)] for the Bramwell-Hill method., Conclusion: Incorporating PWV for dynamic Z parameter identification through either the Bramwell-Hill equation or the water hammer equation does not appreciably improve the 3-element windkessel pulse contour analysis model's prediction of SV during hemodynamic changes compared to the constant-Z method., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2020
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36. When Civilians Deploy With the Military.
- Author
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Balmer J
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Military Health, Occupational Health, United States, Occupational Health Nursing methods, United States Department of Defense
- Abstract
Each year, thousands of civilian workers deploy with active duty service members to support contingency operations, often in harsh environmental conditions. Occupational health nurses aware of these challenges can implement programs to protect the health and safety of this at-risk worker population.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Updated Tuberculosis Screening Guidelines for Health Care Personnel.
- Author
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Foster-Chang S and Balmer J
- Subjects
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Mass Screening, Occupational Exposure, Tuberculosis transmission, United States, Health Personnel, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Tuberculosis prevention & control
- Abstract
Updated Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines for tuberculosis (TB) screening of U.S. health care personnel may change practice.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Clinically applicable model-based method, for physiologically accurate flow waveform and stroke volume estimation.
- Author
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Balmer J, Pretty CG, Davidson S, Mehta-Wilson T, Desaive T, Smith R, Shaw GM, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Aorta physiology, Cardiac Output physiology, Humans, Swine, Systole, Models, Biological, Stroke Volume physiology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Cardiovascular dysfunction can be more effectively monitored and treated, with accurate, continuous, stroke volume (SV) and/or cardiac output (CO) measurements. Since direct measurements of SV/CO are highly invasive, clinical measures are often discrete, or if continuous, can require recalibration with a discrete SV measurement after hemodynamic instability. This study presents a clinically applicable, non-additionally invasive, physiological model-based, SV and CO measurement method, which does not require recalibration during or after hemodynamic instability., Methods and Results: The model's ability to predict flow profiles and SV is assessed in an animal trial, using endotoxin to induce sepsis in 5 pigs. Mean percentage error between beat-to-beat SV measured from an aortic flow probe and estimated by the model was -2%, while 90% of estimations fell within -24.2% and +27.9% error. Error between estimated and measured changes in mean SV following interventions was less than 30% for 4 out of the 5 pigs. Correlations between model estimated and probe measured flow, for each pig and hemodynamic interventions, was r
2 = 0.58 - 0.96, with 21 of the 25 pig intervention stages having r2 > 0.80., Conclusion: The results demonstrate the model accurately estimates and tracks changes in flow profiles and resulting SV, without requiring model recalibration., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Blood pressure waveform contour analysis for assessing peripheral resistance changes in sepsis.
- Author
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Davidson S, Pretty C, Balmer J, Desaive T, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Aorta pathology, Arterial Pressure, Computer Systems, Endotoxins chemistry, Escherichia coli, Femoral Artery physiopathology, Femur pathology, Intensive Care Units, Male, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Oxygen, Pressure, Reproducibility of Results, Swine, Vascular Resistance, Vena Cava, Superior physiopathology, Blood Pressure physiology, Monitoring, Physiologic instrumentation, Sepsis diagnosis, Sepsis physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: This paper proposes a methodology for helping bridge the gap between the complex waveform information frequently available in an intensive care unit and the simple, lumped values favoured for rapid clinical diagnosis and management. This methodology employs a simple waveform contour analysis approach to compare aortic, femoral and central venous pressure waveforms on a beat-by-beat basis and extract lumped metrics pertaining to the pressure drop and pressure-pulse amplitude attenuation as blood passes through the various sections of systemic circulation., Results: Validation encompasses a comparison between novel metrics and well-known, analogous clinical metrics such as mean arterial and venous pressures, across an animal model of induced sepsis. The novel metric O
fe → vc , the direct pressure offset between the femoral artery and vena cava, and the clinical metric, ΔMP, the difference between mean arterial and venous pressure, performed well. However, Ofe → vc reduced the optimal average time to sepsis detection after endotoxin infusion from 46.2 min for ΔMP to 11.6 min, for a slight increase in false positive rate from 1.8 to 6.2%. Thus, the novel Ofe → vc provided the best combination of specificity and sensitivity, assuming an equal weighting to both, of the metrics assessed., Conclusions: Overall, the potential of these novel metrics in the detection of diagnostic shifts in physiological behaviour, here driven by sepsis, is demonstrated.- Published
- 2018
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40. Hexavalent Chromium.
- Author
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Balmer J
- Subjects
- Humans, Industry, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Occupational Health Nursing, Chromium adverse effects, Occupational Health
- Abstract
Hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] is a chemical used in many industries and has the potential to cause negative health effects. Occupational health nurses can intervene to protect workers from the health hazards associated with Cr(VI).
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Structural characterization of four different naturally occurring porcine collagen membranes suitable for medical applications.
- Author
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Maurer T, Stoffel MH, Belyaev Y, Stiefel NG, Vidondo B, Küker S, Mogel H, Schäfer B, and Balmer J
- Subjects
- Animals, Elastin chemistry, Optical Imaging, Biocompatible Materials chemistry, Collagen chemistry, Membranes, Artificial, Swine
- Abstract
Collagen is the main structural element of connective tissues, and its favorable properties make it an ideal biomaterial for regenerative medicine. In dental medicine, collagen barrier membranes fabricated from naturally occurring tissues are used for guided bone regeneration. Since the morphological characteristics of collagen membranes play a crucial role in their mechanical properties and affect the cellular behavior at the defect site, in-depth knowledge of the structure is key. As a base for the development of novel collagen membranes, an extensive morphological analysis of four porcine membranes, including centrum tendineum, pericardium, plica venae cavae and small intestinal submucosa, was performed. Native membranes were analyzed in terms of their thickness. Second harmonic generation and two-photon excitation microscopy of the native membranes showed the 3D architecture of the collagen and elastic fibers, as well as a volumetric index of these two membrane components. The surface morphology, fiber arrangement, collagen fibril diameter and D-periodicity of decellularized membranes were investigated by scanning electron microscopy. All the membrane types showed significant differences in thickness. In general, undulating collagen fibers were arranged in stacked layers, which were parallel to the membrane surface. Multiphoton microscopy revealed a conspicuous superficial elastic fiber network, while the elastin content in deeper layers varied. The elastin/collagen volumetric index was very similar in the investigated membranes and indicated that the collagen content was clearly higher than the elastin content. The surface of both the pericardium and plica venae cavae and the cranial surface of the centrum tendineum revealed a smooth, tightly arranged and crumpled morphology. On the caudal face of the centrum tendineum, a compact collagen arrangement was interrupted by clusters of circular discontinuities. In contrast, both surfaces of the small intestinal submucosa were fibrous, fuzzy and irregular. All the membranes consisted of largely uniform fibrils displaying the characteristic D-banding. This study reveals similarities and relevant differences among the investigated porcine membranes, suggesting that each membrane represents a unique biomaterial suitable for specific applications., Competing Interests: Geistlich Pharma AG provided the salary of TM and covered the costs related to 2-photonmicroscopy. Geistlich (BS, NS) was further involved in the experimental design, data analysis, decision to publish and in the preparation of the manuscript. Internal institutional resources (government funding) covered personnel costs (JB, MHS, HM, BV, SK) as well as the expenses for laboratory consumables and scanning electron microscopy. There was no additional external funding received for this study. The authors declare no competing interests. None of the institutions involved has filed a patent application or is considering to do so. The University of Bern (Veterinary Anatomy) and Geistlich Pharma AG adopted a Research Collaboration Agreement. The commercial affiliation does not alter the authors’ adherence to all the PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
- Published
- 2018
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42. Pre-ejection period, the reason why the electrocardiogram Q-wave is an unreliable indicator of pulse wave initialization.
- Author
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Balmer J, Pretty C, Davidson S, Desaive T, Kamoi S, Pironet A, Morimont P, Janssen N, Lambermont B, Shaw GM, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Aorta physiology, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases physiopathology, Hemodynamics, Reproducibility of Results, Sus scrofa, Electrocardiography, Pulse Wave Analysis methods
- Abstract
Objective: Pulse wave velocity measurements are an indicator of arterial stiffness and possible cardiovascular dysfunction. It is usually calculated by measuring the pulse transit time (PTT) over a known distance through the arteries. In animal studies, reliable PTT measures can be obtained using two pressure catheters. However, such direct, invasive methods are undesirable in clinical settings. A less invasive alternative measure of PTT is pulse arrival time (PAT), the time between the Q-wave of an electrocardiogram (ECG) and the arrival of the foot of the beats pressure waveform at one pressure catheter. Since the Q-wave signifies the start of ventricular contraction, PAT includes the pre-ejection period (PEP), a time where no blood is ejected. Thus, inter- or intra- subject variation in PEP could result in poor correlation between pulse arrival time (PAT) and the desired pulse transit time (PTT)., Approach: This study looks at the relationship between PAT and PTT, over a range of common critical care therapies and determines the effect of PEP on PAT as a possible surrogate of PTT in a critical care environment. The analysis uses data from five porcine experiments, where ECG, aortic arch and abdominal aortic pressure were measured simultaneously, over a range of induced hemodynamic conditions., Results: The resulting correlations of PAT verse PTT varied within pigs and across interventions (r
2 = 0.32-0.69), and across pigs (r2 = 0.05-0.60). Variability was due to three main causes. First, the interventions themselves effect PEP and PTT differently, second, pig specific response to the interventions, and third, inter- and intra- pig variability in PEP, independent of PTT., Significance: The overall analysis shows PAT is an unreliable measure of PTT and a poor surrogate under clinical interventions common in a critical care setting, due to intra- and inter- subject variability in PEP.- Published
- 2018
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43. The Rho regulator Myosin IXb enables nonlymphoid tissue seeding of protective CD8 + T cells.
- Author
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Moalli F, Ficht X, Germann P, Vladymyrov M, Stolp B, de Vries I, Lyck R, Balmer J, Fiocchi A, Kreutzfeldt M, Merkler D, Iannacone M, Ariga A, Stoffel MH, Sharpe J, Bähler M, Sixt M, Diz-Muñoz A, and Stein JV
- Subjects
- Animals, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes cytology, Cell Movement, Cell Polarity, Cell Proliferation, Cells, Cultured, Disease Models, Animal, Epidermis pathology, Epidermis virology, Extracellular Matrix metabolism, Immunity, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Lymphoid Tissue metabolism, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Myosins deficiency, Receptors, Lymphocyte Homing metabolism, rho GTP-Binding Proteins metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Myosins metabolism
- Abstract
T cells are actively scanning pMHC-presenting cells in lymphoid organs and nonlymphoid tissues (NLTs) with divergent topologies and confinement. How the T cell actomyosin cytoskeleton facilitates this task in distinct environments is incompletely understood. Here, we show that lack of Myosin IXb (Myo9b), a negative regulator of the small GTPase Rho, led to increased Rho-GTP levels and cell surface stiffness in primary T cells. Nonetheless, intravital imaging revealed robust motility of Myo9b
-/- CD8+ T cells in lymphoid tissue and similar expansion and differentiation during immune responses. In contrast, accumulation of Myo9b-/- CD8+ T cells in NLTs was strongly impaired. Specifically, Myo9b was required for T cell crossing of basement membranes, such as those which are present between dermis and epidermis. As consequence, Myo9b-/- CD8+ T cells showed impaired control of skin infections. In sum, we show that Myo9b is critical for the CD8+ T cell adaptation from lymphoid to NLT surveillance and the establishment of protective tissue-resident T cell populations., (© 2018 Moalli et al.)- Published
- 2018
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44. Proof of concept non-invasive estimation of peripheral venous oxygen saturation.
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Khan M, Pretty CG, Amies AC, Balmer J, Banna HE, Shaw GM, and Geoffrey Chase J
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Circulation, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Oximetry instrumentation, Oxygen metabolism, Photoplethysmography instrumentation, Veins metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Pulse oximeters continuously monitor arterial oxygen saturation. Continuous monitoring of venous oxygen saturation (SvO
2 ) would enable real-time assessment of tissue oxygen extraction (O2 E) and perfusion changes leading to improved diagnosis of clinical conditions, such as sepsis., Methods: This study presents the proof of concept of a novel pulse oximeter method that utilises the compliance difference between arteries and veins to induce artificial respiration-like modulations to the peripheral vasculature. These modulations make the venous blood pulsatile, which are then detected by a pulse oximeter sensor. The resulting photoplethysmograph (PPG) signals from the pulse oximeter are processed and analysed to develop a calibration model to estimate regional venous oxygen saturation (SpvO2 ), in parallel to arterial oxygen saturation estimation (SpaO2 ). A clinical study with healthy adult volunteers (n = 8) was conducted to assess peripheral SvO2 using this pulse oximeter method. A range of physiologically realistic SvO2 values were induced using arm lift and vascular occlusion tests. Gold standard, arterial and venous blood gas measurements were used as reference measurements. Modulation ratios related to arterial and venous systems were determined using a frequency domain analysis of the PPG signals., Results: A strong, linear correlation (r2 = 0.95) was found between estimated venous modulation ratio (RVen ) and measured SvO2 , providing a calibration curve relating measured RVen to venous oxygen saturation. There is a significant difference in gradient between the SpvO2 estimation model (SpvO2 = 111 - 40.6*R) and the empirical SpaO2 estimation model (SpaO2 = 110 - 25*R), which yields the expected arterial-venous differences. Median venous and arterial oxygen saturation accuracies of paired measurements between pulse oximeter estimated and gold standard measurements were 0.29 and 0.65%, respectively, showing good accuracy of the pulse oximeter system., Conclusions: The main outcome of this study is the proof of concept validation of a novel pulse oximeter sensor and calibration model to assess peripheral SvO2 , and thus O2 E, using the method used in this study. Further validation, improvement, and application of this model can aid in clinical diagnosis of microcirculation failures due to alterations in oxygen extraction.- Published
- 2017
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45. Improved pressure contour analysis for estimating cardiac stroke volume using pulse wave velocity measurement.
- Author
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Kamoi S, Pretty C, Balmer J, Davidson S, Pironet A, Desaive T, Shaw GM, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Animals, Computer Simulation, Heart Function Tests methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Swine, Vascular Stiffness physiology, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure Determination methods, Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods, Models, Cardiovascular, Pulse Wave Analysis methods, Stroke Volume physiology
- Abstract
Background: Pressure contour analysis is commonly used to estimate cardiac performance for patients suffering from cardiovascular dysfunction in the intensive care unit. However, the existing techniques for continuous estimation of stroke volume (SV) from pressure measurement can be unreliable during hemodynamic instability, which is inevitable for patients requiring significant treatment. For this reason, pressure contour methods must be improved to capture changes in vascular properties and thus provide accurate conversion from pressure to flow., Methods: This paper presents a novel pressure contour method utilizing pulse wave velocity (PWV) measurement to capture vascular properties. A three-element Windkessel model combined with the reservoir-wave concept are used to decompose the pressure contour into components related to storage and flow. The model parameters are identified beat-to-beat from the water-hammer equation using measured PWV, wave component of the pressure, and an estimate of subject-specific aortic dimension. SV is then calculated by converting pressure to flow using identified model parameters. The accuracy of this novel method is investigated using data from porcine experiments (N = 4 Pietrain pigs, 20-24.5 kg), where hemodynamic properties were significantly altered using dobutamine, fluid administration, and mechanical ventilation. In the experiment, left ventricular volume was measured using admittance catheter, and aortic pressure waveforms were measured at two locations, the aortic arch and abdominal aorta., Results: Bland-Altman analysis comparing gold-standard SV measured by the admittance catheter and estimated SV from the novel method showed average limits of agreement of ±26% across significant hemodynamic alterations. This result shows the method is capable of estimating clinically acceptable absolute SV values according to Critchely and Critchely., Conclusion: The novel pressure contour method presented can accurately estimate and track SV even when hemodynamic properties are significantly altered. Integrating PWV measurements into pressure contour analysis improves identification of beat-to-beat changes in Windkessel model parameters, and thus, provides accurate estimate of blood flow from measured pressure contour. The method has great potential for overcoming weaknesses associated with current pressure contour methods for estimating SV.
- Published
- 2017
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46. Minimally invasive, patient specific, beat-by-beat estimation of left ventricular time varying elastance.
- Author
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Davidson S, Pretty C, Pironet A, Kamoi S, Balmer J, Desaive T, and Chase JG
- Subjects
- Arterial Pressure, Electrocardiography, Feasibility Studies, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Systole physiology, Time Factors, Electric Capacitance, Patient-Specific Modeling, Ventricular Function, Left
- Abstract
Background: The aim of this paper was to establish a minimally invasive method for deriving the left ventricular time varying elastance (TVE) curve beat-by-beat, the monitoring of which's inter-beat evolution could add significant new data and insight to improve diagnosis and treatment. The method developed uses the clinically available inputs of aortic pressure, heart rate and baseline end-systolic volume (via echocardiography) to determine the outputs of left ventricular pressure, volume and dead space volume, and thus the TVE curve. This approach avoids directly assuming the shape of the TVE curve, allowing more effective capture of intra- and inter-patient variability., Results: The resulting TVE curve was experimentally validated against the TVE curve as derived from experimentally measured left ventricular pressure and volume in animal models, a data set encompassing 46,318 heartbeats across 5 Piétrain pigs. This simulated TVE curve was able to effectively approximate the measured TVE curve, with an overall median absolute error of 11.4% and overall median signed error of -2.5%., Conclusions: The use of clinically available inputs means there is potential for real-time implementation of the method at the patient bedside. Thus the method could be used to provide additional, patient specific information on intra- and inter-beat variation in heart function.
- Published
- 2017
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47. Transplanted photoreceptor precursors transfer proteins to host photoreceptors by a mechanism of cytoplasmic fusion.
- Author
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Singh MS, Balmer J, Barnard AR, Aslam SA, Moralli D, Green CM, Barnea-Cramer A, Duncan I, and MacLaren RE
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Integrases genetics, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate physiology, Recombination, Genetic physiology, Regeneration, Retina cytology, X Chromosome genetics, Y Chromosome genetics, Cell Fusion, Cytoplasm physiology, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate transplantation, Retina physiology, Retinal Degeneration therapy
- Abstract
Photoreceptor transplantation is a potential future treatment for blindness caused by retinal degeneration. Photoreceptor transplantation restores visual responses in end-stage retinal degeneration, but has also been assessed in non-degenerate retinas. In the latter scenario, subretinal transplantation places donor cells beneath an intact host outer nuclear layer (ONL) containing host photoreceptors. Here we show that host cells are labelled with the donor marker through cytoplasmic transfer-94±4.1% of apparently well-integrated donor cells containing both donor and host markers. We detect the occurrence of Cre-Lox recombination between donor and host photoreceptors, and we confirm the findings through FISH analysis of X and Y chromosomes in sex-discordant transplants. We do not find evidence of nuclear fusion of donor and host cells. The artefactual appearance of integrated donor cells in host retinas following transplantation is most commonly due to material transfer from donor cells. Understanding this novel mechanism may provide alternate therapeutic strategies at earlier stages of retinal degeneration.
- Published
- 2016
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48. Retinal Cell Death Caused by Sodium Iodate Involves Multiple Caspase-Dependent and Caspase-Independent Cell-Death Pathways.
- Author
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Balmer J, Zulliger R, Roberti S, and Enzmann V
- Subjects
- Animals, Caspases genetics, Iodates toxicity, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Necrosis, Retinal Degeneration etiology, Retinal Pigment Epithelium drug effects, Apoptosis, Caspases metabolism, Retinal Degeneration metabolism, Retinal Pigment Epithelium metabolism
- Abstract
Herein, we have investigated retinal cell-death pathways in response to the retina toxin sodium iodate (NaIO3) both in vivo and in vitro. C57/BL6 mice were treated with a single intravenous injection of NaIO3 (35 mg/kg). Morphological changes in the retina post NaIO3 injection in comparison to untreated controls were assessed using electron microscopy. Cell death was determined by TdT-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining. The activation of caspases and calpain was measured using immunohistochemistry. Additionally, cytotoxicity and apoptosis in retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells, primary retinal cells, and the cone photoreceptor (PRC) cell line 661W were assessed in vitro after NaIO3 treatment using the ApoToxGlo™ assay. The 7-AAD/Annexin-V staining was performed and necrostatin (Nec-1) was administered to the NaIO3-treated cells to confirm the results. In vivo, degenerating RPE cells displayed a rounded shape and retracted microvilli, whereas PRCs featured apoptotic nuclei. Caspase and calpain activity was significantly upregulated in retinal sections and protein samples from NaIO3-treated animals. In vitro, NaIO3 induced necrosis in RPE cells and apoptosis in PRCs. Furthermore, Nec-1 significantly decreased NaIO3-induced RPE cell death, but had no rescue effect on treated PRCs. In summary, several different cell-death pathways are activated in retinal cells as a result of NaIO3.
- Published
- 2015
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49. Multiple programmed cell death pathways are involved in N-methyl-N-nitrosourea-induced photoreceptor degeneration.
- Author
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Reisenhofer M, Balmer J, Zulliger R, and Enzmann V
- Subjects
- Alkylating Agents, Animals, Calpain metabolism, Caspases metabolism, Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone BiP, Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, Humans, In Situ Nick-End Labeling, Injections, Intraperitoneal, Methylnitrosourea, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate drug effects, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate metabolism, RNA, Messenger genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Retinal Degeneration chemically induced, Retinal Degeneration genetics, Transcription Factor CHOP genetics, Apoptosis, Disease Models, Animal, Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate ultrastructure, Retinal Degeneration pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To identify programmed cell death (PCD) pathways involved in N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU)-induced photoreceptor (PR) degeneration., Methods: Adult C57BL/6 mice received a single MNU i.p. injection (60 mg/kg bodyweight), and were observed over a period of 7 days. Degeneration was visualized by H&E overview staining and electron microscopy. PR cell death was measured by quantifying TUNEL-positive cells in the outer nuclear layer (ONL). Activity measurements of key PCD enzymes (calpain, caspases) were used to identify the involved cell death pathways. Furthermore, the expression level of C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) and glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78), key players in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-induced apoptosis, was analyzed using quantitative real-time PCR., Results: A decrease in ONL thickness and the appearance of apoptotic PR nuclei could be detected beginning 3 days post-injection (PI). This was accompanied by an increase of TUNEL-positive cells. Significant upregulation of activated caspases (3, 9, 12) was found at different time periods after MNU injection. Additionally, several other players of nonconventional PCD pathways were also upregulated. Consequently, calpain activity increased in the ONL, with a maximum on day 7 PI and an upregulation of CHOP and GRP78 expression beginning on day 1 PI was found., Conclusions: The data indicate that regular apoptosis is the major cause of MNU-induced PR cell death. However, alternative PCD pathways, including ER stress and calpain activation, are also involved. Knowledge about the mechanisms involved in this mouse model of PR degeneration could facilitate the design of putative combinatory therapeutic approaches.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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