2,263 results on '"Stone P"'
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2. An Introduction to the Semantics and Statistics Behind the Firearm Policy Debates.
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Stone, Elizabeth, Peta, Dawn, and Carrasco, Sharon-Vanairsdale
- Abstract
It is impossible to fully understand why the United States has consistently failed to protect its citizens from firearm violence until one understands some of the key discrepancies that exist at the center of the firearm policy debate. Differences in language, data categorization, and research related to firearms and their impacts in the United States contribute to confusion and debate between firearm policy advocates and opponents, ultimately stalling progress toward some common goals. As frontline health professionals, emergency nurses must be aware of these nuances in order to be informed advocates for the safety of their patients and their communities. Emergency nurses can use the information from this article to help inform screening and education related to firearm safety and injury prevention. They can also use this information to inform nursing research as well as local and national advocacy efforts related to firearm injuries and deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Firearm Safety and Injury Prevention.
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Peta, Dawn, Vanairsdale-Carrasco, Sharon, and Stone, Elizabeth
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- 2024
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4. Clinical Outcomes of Patients Experiencing Transient Loss of Pulse Pressure During High-Risk PCI with Impella.
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BASIR, MIR B., BENTLEY, DANA, TRUESDELL, ALEXANDER G., KUNKEL, KATHERINE, LEMOR, ALEJANDRO, MEGALY, MICHAEL, ALQARQAZ, MOHAMMAD, ALASWAD, KHALDOON, KHANDEWAL, AKSHAY, JORTBERG, ELISE, KALRA, SANJOG, KAKI, AMIR, BURKHOFF, DANIEL, MOSES, JEFFREY W., PINTO, DUANE S., STONE, GREGG W., and O'NEILL, WILLIAM W.
- Abstract
• Patients experiencing loss of pulse pressure (LOPP) during high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention (HR-PCI) are transiently dependent on mechanical circulatory support (MCS) devices. • LOPP during HR-PCI with Impella was common and occurred more frequently in patients with cardiomyopathy and low systolic blood pressure. LOPP was strongly associated with higher 90-day major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events, acute kidney injury, and mortality. • The ongoing randomized PROTECT-IV trial will determine whether Impella CP support during HR-PCI improves early and late clinical outcomes compared with the standard of care. The trial includes a right heart catheterization substudy that should help to define the role of invasive hemodynamics in stratifying and managing patients undergoing HR-PCI. Patients experiencing loss of pulse pressure (LOPP) during high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention (HR-PCI) are transiently dependent on mechanical circulatory support devices. We sought to define the frequency and clinic outcomes of patients who experience LOPP during HR-PCI. Patients enrolled in the PROTECT III study and had automated Impella controller logs capturing real-time hemodynamics were included in this analysis. A LOPP event was defined as a mean pulse pressure on Impella of <20 mm Hg for ≥5 seconds during PCI. Clinical characteristics and outcomes were then compared between those with and without LOPP. Logistic regression identified clinical and hemodynamic predictors of LOPP. We included 302 patients, of whom 148 patients (49%) experienced LOPP. Age, sex, and comorbidities were similar in patients with and without LOPP. Mean baseline systolic blood pressure (118.6 mm Hg vs 129.8 mm Hg; P <.001) and mean arterial pressure (86.9 mm Hg vs 91.6 mm Hg; P =.011) were lower in patients with LOPP, whereas heart rate (78 bpm vs 73 bpm; P =.012) was higher. Anatomical complexity was similar between groups. Patients with LOPP were more likely to experience major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (23.5% vs 8.8%; P =.002), acute kidney injury (10.1% vs 2.6%; P =.030), and death (20.2% vs 7.9%; P =.008) within 90 days. A low baseline systolic blood pressure and cardiomyopathy were the strongest predictors of LOPP (P =.003 and P =.001, respectively). LOPP on Impella during HR-PCI was common and occurred more frequently in patients with cardiomyopathy and a low systolic blood pressure. LOPP was strongly associated with higher 90-day major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events, acute kidney injury, and mortality. Condensed Abstract We sought to define the frequency and clinic outcomes of patients who experience LOPP during high-risk percutaneous coronary intervention (HR-PCI). We included 302 patients, of whom 148 (49%) experienced LOPP. Patients with LOPP were more likely to experience major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (23.5% vs 8.8%; P =.002), acute kidney injury (10.1% vs 2.6%; P =.030), and death (20.2% vs 7.9%; P =.008) within 90 days. A low baseline systolic blood pressure and cardiomyopathy were the strongest predictors of LOPP (P =.003 and P =.001, respectively). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Emerging Hybrid Intracoronary Imaging Technologies and Their Applications in Clinical Practice and Research.
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Tufaro, Vincenzo, Jaffer, Farouc A., Serruys, Patrick W., Onuma, Yoshinobu, van der Steen, Antonius F.W., Stone, Gregg W., Muller, James E., Marcu, Laura, Van Soest, Gijs, Courtney, Brian K., Tearney, Guillermo J., and Bourantas, Christos V.
- Abstract
Intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography are used with increasing frequency for the care of coronary patients and in research studies. These imaging tools can identify culprit lesions in acute coronary syndromes, assess coronary stenosis severity, guide percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and detect vulnerable plaques and patients. However, they have significant limitations that have stimulated the development of multimodality intracoronary imaging catheters, which provide improvements in assessing vessel wall pathology and guiding PCI. Prototypes combining 2 or even 3 imaging probes with complementary attributes have been developed, and several multimodality systems have already been used in patients, with near-infrared spectroscopy intravascular ultrasound–based studies showing promising results for the identification of high-risk plaques. Moreover, postmortem histology studies have documented that hybrid imaging catheters can enable more accurate characterization of plaque morphology than standalone imaging. This review describes the evolution in the field of hybrid intracoronary imaging; presents the available multimodality catheters; and discusses their potential role in PCI guidance, vulnerable plaque detection, and the assessment of endovascular devices and emerging pharmacotherapies targeting atherosclerosis. [Display omitted] • Novel hybrid intracoronary devices overcome limitations of standalone imaging for plaque characterization and PCI guidance. • The use of multimodality imaging may improve outcomes following interventional treatment in challenging clinical scenarios. • Large-scale studies are needed to determine the role of hybrid intracoronary imaging in guiding revascularization, vulnerable plaque detection, and cardiovascular risk stratification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Frailty means falling between the cracks: A qualitative study exploring emergency nurses' understanding of frailty and its use in informing clinical decision-making related to acuity, care, and disposition.
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Wolf, Lisa Adams, Delao, Altair, Clark, Paul R., Malsch, Aaron Joshua, Eagles, Debra, Oiyemhonlan, Brenda, Callihan, Michael, and Stone, Elizabeth L.
- Abstract
• Frailty is a central concept in geriatrics, but not well used in the ED. • Frailty comprises physical, social, cognitive, and access deficits. • Effective use of frailty tools requires training, time, and resources. Of this study was to understand emergency nurses' use of frailty to inform care, disposition decision-making, and further assessment. A qualitative, descriptive, exploratory approach was used. Field notes from group discussions held during a conference presession on frailty and post-session evaluation data were analyzed. Two common ideas threaded these discussions: frailty as vulnerability to "falling through the cracks" and that of an iceberg. Participants stressed the broad and expansive ramifications of frailty, and lack of structure/process to accurately describe, quantify, and utilize the concept. Participants described issues of physical and emotional/social fragility, including being unable to complete activities of daily living independently; also of concern were the patients' social determinants of health and financial challenges. The conceptual understanding of frailty encompassed physical, social, cognitive, and access deficits. Emergency nurses are aware of this concept and would conduct formal frailty screening if provided with training, time, and resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Left Atrial Improvement in Patients With Secondary Mitral Regurgitation and Heart Failure: The COAPT Trial.
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Pio, Stephan M., Medvedofsky, Diego, Delgado, Victoria, Stassen, Jan, Weissman, Neil J., Grayburn, Paul A., Kar, Saibal, Lim, D. Scott, Redfors, Björn, Snyder, Clayton, Zhou, Zhipeng, Alu, Maria C., Kapadia, Samir R., Lindenfeld, JoAnn, Abraham, William T., Mack, Michael J., Asch, Federico M., Stone, Gregg W., and Bax, Jeroen J.
- Abstract
Functional mitral regurgitation induces adverse effects on the left ventricle and the left atrium. Left atrial (LA) dilatation and reduced LA strain are associated with poor outcomes in heart failure (HF). Transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) of the mitral valve reduces heart failure hospitalization (HFH) and all-cause death in selected HF patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of LA strain improvement 6 months after TEER on the outcomes of patients enrolled in the COAPT (Cardiovascular Outcomes Assessment of the MitraClip Percutaneous Therapy for Heart Failure Patients With Functional Mitral Regurgitation) trial. The difference in LA strain between baseline and the 6-month follow-up was calculated. Patients with at least a 15% improvement in LA strain were labeled as "LA strain improvers." All-cause death and HFH were assessed between the 6- and 24-month follow-up. Among 347 patients (mean age 71 ± 12 years, 63% male), 106 (30.5%) showed improvement of LA strain at the 6-month follow-up (64 [60.4%] from the TEER + guideline-directed medical therapy [GDMT] group and 42 [39.6%] from the GDMT alone group). An improvement in LA strain was significantly associated with a reduction in the composite of death or HFH between the 6-month and 24-month follow-up, with a similar risk reduction in both treatment arms (P interaction = 0.27). In multivariable analyses, LA strain improvement remained independently associated with a lower risk of the primary composite endpoint both as a continuous variable (adjusted HR: 0.94 [95% CI: 0.89-1.00]; P = 0.03) and as a dichotomous variable (adjusted HR: 0.49 [95% CI: 0.27-0.89]; P = 0.02). The best outcomes were observed in patients treated with TEER in whom LA strain improved. In symptomatic HF patients with severe mitral regurgitation, improved LA strain at the 6-month follow-up is associated with subsequently lower rates of the composite endpoint of all-cause mortality or HFH, both after TEER and GDMT alone. (Cardiovascular Outcomes Assessment of the MitraClip Percutaneous Therapy for Heart Failure Patients With Functional Mitral Regurgitation [COAPT]; NCT01626079) [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Spinal column radiological factors associated with increased spinal cord intramedullary signal intensity − A study evaluating aging spinal cord's relation to spinal disc degeneration.
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Sial, Alisha W., Sima, Stone, Chen, Xiaolong, Saulys, Chris, Kuan, Jeff, Davies, Mark, and Diwan, Ashish D.
- Abstract
• Increased intramedullary signal intensity (IISI) can be a radiological feature of spinal cord degeneration. • The association of IISI to degeneration of the spinal column that protects the spinal cord remains unclear. • IISI was associated with increased age, facet joint degeneration, maximal spinal cord compression, rotational angle, posterior herniation width and decreasing Torg-Pavlov angle. • Radiological degenerative changes in the cervical spine are possible potential identifying predictors of spinal cord morphological changes in DCM, which may allow for early intervention strategies in the future. Increased intramedullary signal intensity (IISI) on T2 weighted MRI scan (T2WI) can be a radiological feature of spinal cord degeneration. However, the association of IISI to degeneration of the spinal column that protects the spinal cord remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of IISI and analyze the independent relationship between IISI and cervical degenerative parameters on X-ray and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A retrospective review of MRI, X-ray, and radiology data (n = 144) adult patients with both cervical MRI and X-ray scans was conducted. A total of 39 (27 %) patients with IISI was identified. The remaining 105 patients without IISI made up the control group. IISI was most frequent in C6-C7 cervical levels. The likelihood of having IISI was 1.947 (Exp(B) 1.947, 95 %CI [1.004–3.776]) times higher in segmental levels with facet joint degeneration. There was an increased likelihood of IISI within the spinal cord with increasing age (Exp(B) 1.034, 95 %CI [1.008–1.060]), maximum spinal cord compression (MSCC) (Exp(B) 1.038, 95 %CI [1.003–1.075]), rotational angle (Exp(B) 1.082, 95 %CI [1.020–1.148]) and posterior disc herniation width (Exp(B) 1.333, 95 %CI [1.017–1.747]) and decreasing Torg-Pavlov ratio (Exp(B) 0.010, 95 %CI [0.001–0.068]). IISI was independently associated with increased age, facet joint degeneration, MSCC, rotational angle, posterior herniation width and decreasing Torg-Pavlov angle. Radiological degenerative changes associated with IISI indicates a potential for identifying predictors of age related spinal cord morphological changes in DCM, which may allow for early intervention strategies in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Full digital workflow to resolve angled adjacent dental implants: A dental technique.
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Conejo, Julian, Han, Sean, Atria, Pablo J., Stone-Hirsh, Leslie, Dubin, Jay, and Blatz, Markus B.
- Abstract
The digital acquisition, fabrication process, and delivery of computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacture (CAD-CAM) implant-supported restorations on angled adjacent implants are described. The proximal surface of a scan post was modified for correct adaptation, permitting an accurate digital scan of adjacent implants in 1 step. Definitive screw-retained splinted implant-supported restorations were designed and milled in a zirconia material and delivered with a combined extraoral and intraoral cementation protocol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Regional Arch Measurements Differ Between Imaging Modalities in Infants With Aortic Coarctation.
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Iguidbashian, John, Malone, LaDonna J., Browne, Lorna P., Nguyen, Michael, Frank, Benjamin, Schafer, Michal, Campbell, David N., Mitchell, Max B., Jaggers, James, and Stone, Matthew L.
- Abstract
Aortic arch measurements provide a framework for surgical decision-making in neonatal aortic coarctation, specifically in the determination of approach for arch repair by lateral thoracotomy vs median sternotomy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate our experience with transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and computed tomography angiography (CTA) in the preoperative evaluation of infants with aortic coarctation, specifically comparing arch dimensions as a function of imaging modality. Imaging data were reviewed for all infants undergoing surgical repair of aortic coarctation at our institution from 2012 to 2022. Infants with both TTE and CTA evaluations were included. Aortic measurements were compared at predefined anatomic regions including ascending aorta, proximal arch, distal arch, and isthmus. During the study period, 372 infants underwent surgical coarctation repair; 72 (19.4%) infants had TTE and CTA arch evaluations preoperatively. Significant discrepancies between imaging modalities were defined by poor correlation coefficients and absolute measurement differences and were most prominent in the proximal aortic arch (R
2 = 0.23 [−4.4 to 3.2 mm]) and isthmus regions (R2 = 0.11 [−4.2 to 1.7 mm]). Improved correlation was demonstrated in the ascending aorta (R2 = 0.63) and distal aortic arch (R2 = 0.54). Significant variability exists between TTE- and CTA-derived aortic measurements in infants with coarctation, with proximal arch measurements demonstrating the poorest correlation. This anatomic location represents a commonly used arch region for the determination of approach for repair of neonatal aortic coarctation. Thus, these findings have important implications for current preoperative surgical decision-making paradigms and future prospective study to minimize the risk of residual or recurrent arch obstruction. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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11. Considerable variation in current coronoid height and fracture measurement techniques: a systematic review.
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Joshi, Mithun A., Bains, Niall J.J., Stone, Andrew J.M., Wells, Lucy J., and Phadnis, Joideep S.
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Coronoid fractures usually occur in the presence of a significant osseoligamentous injury to the elbow. Fracture size and location correlate with degree of instability and many authors have attempted to analyze the effect of fracture variation on decision making and outcome. There remains no standardized technique for measuring coronoid height or fracture size. The aim of this study was to appraise the literature regarding techniques for coronoid height measurement in order to understand variation. Preferred Reporting Items of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines were followed. A search was performed to identify studies with either a description of coronoid height, fracture size, or bone loss using the terms (Coronoid) AND (Measurement) OR (Size) OR (Height). Articles were shortlisted by screening for topic relevance based on title, abstract and, if required, full-text review. Exclusion criteria were non-English articles, those on nonhuman species or parts other than the ulna coronoid process, and studies that included patients with pre-existing elbow pathology. Shortlisted articles were grouped based on study type, imaging modality, measurement technique, and measurement parameter as well as its location along the coronoid. Thirty out of the initially identified 494 articles met the inclusion criteria. Twenty-one articles were clinical studies, 8 were cadaveric studies, and 1 combined patients as well as cadavers. A variety of imaging modalities (plain radiographs, 2-dimensional computed tomography [CT], 3-dimensional CT, magnetic resonance imaging or a combination of these) were used with CT scan (either 2-dimensional images or 3-dimensional reconstructions or both) being the most common modality used by 21 studies. Measurement technique also varied from uniplanar linear measurements in 15 studies to multiplanar area and volumetric measurements in 6 studies to techniques describing various angles and indices as an indirect measure of coronoid height in 8 studies. Across the 30 shortlisted studies, 19 different measurement techniques were identified. Fifteen studies measured normal coronoid height while the other 15 measured intact coronoid and/or fracture fragment height. The location of this measurement was also variable between studies with measurements at the apex of the coronoid in 24/30 (80%) of studies. Measurement accuracy was assessed by only 1 study. A total of 12/30 (40%) studies reported on the interobserver and intraobserver reliability of their measurement technique. The systemic review demonstrated considerable variability between studies that report coronoid height or fracture size measurements. This variability makes comparison of coronoid height or fracture measurements and recommendations based on these between studies unreliable. There is need for development of a consistent, easy to use, and reproducible technique for coronoid height and bone loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Appropriateness of care: Asymptomatic carotid stenosis including transcarotid artery revascularization.
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Columbo, Jesse A. and Stone, David H.
- Abstract
Carotid artery stenosis is one of the most common diagnoses treated by vascular specialists in the United States. The optimal management of carotid stenosis remains controversial, however, with notable variation surrounding diagnostic imaging modalities, longitudinal surveillance, medical therapies, and procedural interventions. Data from high-quality randomized controlled trials and observational studies form the foundation for current management paradigms and societal guidelines that inform clinical practice. Presently, a diagnosis of carotid disease is most often established with duplex ultrasound and supplemental cross-sectional imaging using computed tomography or magnetic resonance angiography as needed to provide additional anatomic information. All patients with documented occlusive disease should receive goal-directed medical therapy with antiplatelet agents and a lipid-reduction strategy, most commonly with a statin. Those with severe carotid stenosis and an acceptable life expectancy may be considered for carotid artery revascularization. The proceduralist should optimally consider a shared decision-making approach in which the tradeoffs of revascularization can be carefully considered with the patient to optimize informed therapeutic decision making. In current practice, three distinct procedure options exist to treat carotid artery stenosis, including carotid endarterectomy, transfemoral carotid artery stenting, and transcarotid artery revascularization. It should be noted that each procedure, although often used interchangeably in most clinical settings, carry technical nuances and outcome disparities. In this review, each of these topics are explored and various approaches are outlined surrounding the appropriate use of treatments for patients with asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Assessment of Mobility Trajectories Using Wearable Inertial Sensors During Autologous Hematopoietic Cell Transplant.
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Skiba, Meghan B., El-Gohary, Mahmoud, Horak, Fay, Dieckmann, Nathan F., Guidarelli, Carolyn, Meyers, Gabrielle, Hayes-Lattin, Brandon, and Winters-Stone, Kerri
- Abstract
This study aimed to characterize mobility patterns using wearable inertial sensors and serial assessment across autologous hematopoietic cell transplant (autoHCT) and investigate the relation between mobility and perceived function in patients with hematologic cancer. Prospective longitudinal study. Hospital adult transplant clinic followed by discharge. 78 patients with hematological cancer receiving autoHCT. Mobility was measured across 3 clinical phases (pretransplant, pre-engraftment, and post-engraftment) in using inertial sensors worn during prescribed performance tests in the hospital. Perceived function was assessed using validated provider-reported (Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group [ECOG] Performance Status Scale) and patient-reported [European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire [EORTC QLQ-C30]) measures. Trajectories of 5 selected mobility characteristics (turn duration, gait speed, stride time variability, double support time, and heel strike angle) across the clinical phases were also evaluated using piecewise linear mixed-effects models. Using Principal Components Analysis, 4 mobility patterns were identified pretransplant: Gait Limitation, Sagittal Sway, Coronal Sway , and Balance Control. Gait Limitation measured pretransplant was significantly inversely associated with perceived function reported by the provider- (β = -0.11; 95% CI: -0.19, -0.02) and patient- (β = -4.85; 95% CI: -7.72, -1.99) post-engraftment in age-adjusted linear regression models. Mobility characteristics demonstrated immediate declines early pre-engraftment with stabilization by late pre-engraftment. Patients with hematological cancer experiencing gait limitations pretransplant are likely to have worse perceived function post-engraftment. Mobility declines in early phases post-transplant and may not fully recover, indicating an opportunity for timely rehabilitation referrals. Wearable inertial sensors can be used to identify early mobility problems and patients who may be at risk for future functional decline who may be candidates for early physical rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Impact of Chronic Kidney Disease on Outcomes Following Vascular Procedures in the Vascular Quality Initiative.
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Caron, Elisa, Yadavalli, Sai Divya, Jabbour, Gabriel, Gomez-Mayorga, Jorge L., Davis, Roger B., Patel, Virendra, Stone, David H., Conrad, Mark F., and Schermerhorn, Marc L.
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- 2024
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15. Calcified Nodule in Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Therapeutic Challenges.
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Shin, Doosup, Karimi Galougahi, Keyvan, Spratt, James C., Maehara, Akiko, Collet, Carlos, Barbato, Emanuele, Ribichini, Flavio L., Gonzalo, Nieves, Sakai, Koshiro, Mintz, Gary S., Stone, Gregg W., Shlofmitz, Evan, Shlofmitz, Richard A., Jeremias, Allen, and Ali, Ziad A.
- Abstract
Calcified nodules (CNs) are among the most challenging lesions to treat in contemporary percutaneous coronary intervention. CNs may be divided into 2 subtypes, eruptive and noneruptive, which have distinct histopathological and prognostic features. An eruptive CN is a biologically active lesion with a disrupted fibrous cap and possibly adherent thrombus, whereas a noneruptive CN has an intact fibrous cap and no adherent thrombus. The use of intravascular imaging may allow differentiation between the 2 subtypes, thus potentially guiding treatment strategy. Compared with noneruptive CNs, eruptive CNs are more likely to be deformable, resulting in better stent expansion, but are paradoxically associated with worse clinical outcomes, in part because of their frequent initial presentation as an acute coronary syndrome and subsequent reprotrusion of the CN into the vessel lumen through the stent struts. Pending the results of ongoing studies, a tailored therapeutic approach based on the distinct features of the different CNs may be of value. [Display omitted] • Calcified nodules are among the most challenging lesions to treat with contemporary percutaneous coronary intervention. • There are 2 subtypes of calcified nodules, eruptive and noneruptive, which have distinct histopathological and prognostic features. • The use of intravascular imaging enables differentiation of the 2 subtypes of calcified nodules in daily practice, which may help determine the optimal treatment strategy. • Pending the results of ongoing studies, a tailored therapeutic approach based on the distinct features of the different calcified nodules may be recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Co-design of an intervention to optimize mammographic screening participation in women with obesity and/or physical disabilities.
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McBride, K.A., O'Fee, A., Hogan, S., Stewart, E., Madeley, C., Wilkes, J., Wylie, E., White, A., Hickey, M., and Stone, J.
- Abstract
Mammographic breast screening/rescreening rates are suboptimal for women with obesity and/or physical disabilities. This study describes development of an intervention framework targeting obesity- and disability-related barriers to improve participation. Mixed methods combined a systematic review with first-person perspectives to optimise screening engagement among women with obesity and/or physical disabilities. Phase 1 (systematic review) was conducted following the PRISMA framework. Phase 2 involved in-depth interviews with n = 8 women with lived experience of obesity and/or physical disabilities. An inductive coding approach was applied to the data which was then combined with Phase 1 results to develop the intervention framework. Six studies were included in the systematic review. Tailored education based on individual risk increased willingness to undergo mammographic screening. Recommendations to improve the screening experience included partnerships with consumers, targeted messaging, and enhanced professional development for breast screening staff. Participants also identified strategies to improve the uptake of screening and the experience itself. Development and evaluation of interventions informed by frameworks like the one developed in this study are needed to improve engagement in screening to promote regular participation among women with physical disabilities and/or obesity. Successful implementation of practice interventions co-designed by women with obesity and/or physical disabilities are likely to improve their breast screening participation. Enhanced training of radiographers aimed at upskilling in empathetic communication around required manoeuvring and potentially longer screening times for clients with obesity and/or physical disabilities may encourage more positive client practitioner interactions. Client information aimed at women with obesity should include information on how to prepare for the appointment and explain there may be equipment limitations compromising imaging which may not be completed at an initial appointment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Comparative Prognostic Utility of Coronary CT and Invasive Angiography: Insights From the ISCHEMIA Trial.
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Leipsic, Jonathon, Ben Zekry, Sagit, Tzimas, Georgios, Broderick, Samuel, Mancini, G.B. John, Hague, Cameron J., Budoff, Matt J., Rockhold, Frank W., Chaitman, Bernard R., Kirby, Ruth, Stone, Gregg W., Ali, Ziad A., Min, James K., Hochman, Judith S., Maron, David J., and Reynolds, Harmony R.
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- 2024
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18. Hypertension, microvascular obstruction and infarct size in patients with STEMI undergoing PCI: Pooled analysis from 7 cardiac magnetic resonance imaging studies.
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Mehdipoor, Ghazaleh, Redfors, Björn, Chen, Shmuel, Gkargkoulas, Fotios, Zhang, Zixuan, Patel, Manesh R., Granger, Christopher B., Ohman, E. Magnus, Maehara, Akiko, Eitel, Ingo, Ben-Yehuda, Ori, de Waha-Thiele, Suzanne, Thiele, Holger, and Stone, Gregg W.
- Abstract
Mortality after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is increased in patients with hypertension. The mechanisms underlying this association are uncertain. We sought to investigate whether patients with STEMI and prior hypertension have greater microvascular obstruction (MVO) and infarct size (IS) compared with those without hypertension. We pooled individual patient data from 7 randomized trials of patients with STEMI undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in whom cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was performed within 1 month after reperfusion. The associations between hypertension and MVO, IS, and mortality were assessed in multivariable adjusted models. Among 2174 patients (61.3 ± 12.6 years, 76% male), 1196 (55.0%) had hypertension. Patients with hypertension were older, more frequently diabetic and had more extensive coronary artery disease than those without hypertension. MVO and IS measured as percent LV mass were not significantly different in patients with and without hypertension (adjusted differences 0.1, 95% CI -0.3 to 0.6, P =. 61 and -0.2, 95% CI -1.5 to 1.2, P =. 80, respectively). Hypertension was associated with a higher unadjusted risk of 1-year death (hazard ratio [HR] 2.28, 95% CI 1.44-3.60, P <.001), but was not independently associated with higher mortality after multivariable adjustment (adjusted HR 1.04, 95% CI 0.60-1.79, P =. 90). In this large-scale individual patient data pooled analysis, hypertension was not associated with larger IS or MVO after primary PCI for STEMI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Frequency and Clinical Implications of Referrals to Heart Failure Among Patients with Peripartum Cardiomyopathy.
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Qureshi, Natasha, Kontorovich, Amy, Veledar, Emir, Tlachi, Pilar, Feltovich, Helen, Mancini, Donna M., Barghash, Maya, Stone, Joanne, Bianco, Angela, Shaw, Leslee J., and Lala, Anuradha
- Abstract
Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a rare but significant cause of new-onset heart failure (HF) during the peri- and post-partum periods. Advances in GDMT for HF with reduced ventricular function have led to substantial improvements in survival and quality of life, yet few studies examine the longitudinal care received by patients with PPCM. The aim of this research is to address this gap by retrospectively characterizing patients with PPCM across a multihospital health system and investigating the frequency of cardiology and HF specialty referrals. Understanding whether surveillance and medical management differ among patients referred to HF will help to underscore the importance of referring patients with PPCM to HF specialists for optimal care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Imaging 3.0: A scoping review.
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Alami Idrissi, Yassine, Virador, Gabriel M., Singh, Rahul B., Rao, Dinesh, Stone, Jeffrey A., and Sandhu, Sukhwinder J.S.
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We aim to provide a comprehensive summary of the current body of literature concerning the Imaging 3.0 initiative and its implications for patient care within the field of radiology. We offer a thorough analysis of the literature pertaining to the Imaging 3.0 initiative, emphasizing the practical application of the five pillars of the program, their cost-effectiveness, and their benefits in patient management. By doing so, we hope to illustrate the impact the Imaging 3.0 Initiative can have on the future of radiology and patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Noninvasive Imaging of Vulnerable Plaque: One More Piece of the Puzzle.
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Stone, Gregg W. and Power, David A.
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[Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Granzyme K– and amphiregulin-expressing cytotoxic T cells and activated extrafollicular B cells are potential drivers of IgG4-related disease.
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Koga, Risako, Maehara, Takashi, Aoyagi, Ryuichi, Munemura, Ryusuke, Murakami, Yuka, Doi, Atsushi, Kono, Michihito, Yamamoto, Hidetaka, Niiro, Hiroaki, Kiyoshima, Tamotsu, Tanabe, Mika, Nakano, Toshiaki, Matsukuma, Yuta, Kawano, Mitsuhiro, Stone, John H., Pillai, Shiv, Nakamura, Seiji, and Kawano, Shintaro
- Abstract
[Display omitted] IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD), an example of a type I immune disease, is an immune-mediated fibrotic disorder characterized by dysregulated resolution of severe inflammation and wound healing. However, truly dominant or pathognomonic autoantibodies related to IgG4-RD are not identified. We sought to perform single-cell RNA sequencing and T-cell receptor and B-cell receptor sequencing to obtain a comprehensive, unbiased view of tissue-infiltrating T and B cells. We performed unbiased single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis for the transcriptome and T-cell receptor sequencing and B-cell receptor sequencing on sorted CD3
+ T or CD19+ B cells from affected tissues of patients with IgG4-RD. We also conducted quantitative analyses of CD3+ T-cell and CD19+ B-cell subsets in 68 patients with IgG4-RD and 30 patients with Sjögren syndrome. Almost all clonally expanded T cells in these lesions were either Granzyme K (GZMK)-expressing CD4+ cytotoxic T cells or GZMK+ CD8+ T cells. These GZMK-expressing cytotoxic T cells also expressed amphiregulin and TGF-β but did not express immune checkpoints, and the tissue-infiltrating CD8+ T cells were phenotypically heterogeneous. MKI67+ B cells and IgD− CD27− CD11c− CXCR5− double-negative 3 B cells were clonally expanded and infiltrated affected tissue lesions. GZMK+ CD4+ cytotoxic T cells colocalized with MKI67+ B cells in the extrafollicular area from affected tissue sites. The above-mentioned cells likely participate in T-B collaborative events, suggesting possible avenues for targeted therapies. Our findings were validated using orthogonal approaches, including multicolor immunofluorescence and the use of comparator disease groups, to support the central role of cytotoxic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells expressing GZMK, amphiregulin, and TGF-β in the pathogenesis of inflammatory fibrotic disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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23. Home medication inventory method to assess over-the-counter (OTC) medication possession and use: A pilot study on the feasibility of in-person and remote modalities with older adults.
- Author
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Alamer, Khalid A., Holden, Richard J., Chui, Michelle A., Stone, Jamie A., and Campbell, Noll L.
- Abstract
There is a need for reproducible methods to measure over-the-counter (OTC) medication possession and use. This is because OTC medications are self-managed, variably monitored by healthcare professionals, and in certain populations such as older adults some OTC medications may introduce risk and cause more harm than benefit. (s): To develop and assess the feasibility of the Home Medication Inventory Method (HMIM), a novel method to measure possession and use of OTC medications. We benchmarked, adapted, and standardized prior approaches to medication inventory to develop a method capable of addressing the limitations of existing methods. We then conducted a pilot study of the HMIM among older adults. Eligible participants were aged ≥60 years, reported purchasing or considering purchasing OTC medication, and screened for normal cognition. Interviews were conducted both in person and remotely. When possible, photographs of all OTC medications were obtained with participant consent and completion times were recorded for both in-person and remote modalities. In total 51 participants completed the pilot study. Home medication inventories were conducted in-person (n = 15) and remotely (n = 36). Inventories were completed in a mean (SD) of 20.2 min (12.7), and 96 % of inventories completed within 45 min. A total of 390 OTC medications were possessed by participants, for a mean (SD) of 7.6 (6.3) per participant. No differences in duration of interviews or number of medications reported were identified between in-person and remote modalities. Anticholinergic medications, a class targeted in the pilot as potentially harmful to older adults, were possessed by 31 % of participants, and 14 % of all participants reported use of such a medication within the previous 2 weeks. Implementing the HMIM using in-person and remote modalities is a feasible and ostensibly reproducible method for collecting OTC medication possession and use information. Larger studies are necessary to further generalize HMIM feasibility and reliability in diverse populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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24. Parturition at term: induction, second and third stages of labor, and optimal management of life-threatening complications—hemorrhage, infection, and uterine rupture.
- Author
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Romero, Roberto, Sabo Romero, Virginia, Kalache, Karim D., and Stone, Joanne
- Subjects
THIRD stage of labor (Obstetrics) ,SECOND stage of labor (Obstetrics) ,UTERINE rupture ,PARTURITION ,INTRAPARTUM care ,INDUCED labor (Obstetrics) - Abstract
Childbirth is a defining moment in anyone's life, and it occurs 140 million times per year. Largely a physiologic process, parturition does come with risks; one mother dies every two minutes. These deaths occur mostly among healthy women, and many are considered preventable. For each death, 20 to 30 mothers experience complications that compromise their short- and long-term health. The risk of birth extends to the newborn, and, in 2020, 2.4 million neonates died, 25% in the first day of life. Hence, intrapartum care is an important priority for society. The American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology has devoted two special Supplements in 2023 and 2024 to the clinical aspects of labor at term. This article describes the content of the Supplements and highlights new developments in the induction of labor (a comparison of methods, definition of failed induction, new pharmacologic agents), management of the second stage, the value of intrapartum sonography, new concepts on soft tissue dystocia, optimal care during the third stage, and common complications that account for maternal death, such as infection, hemorrhage, and uterine rupture. All articles are available to subscribers and non-subscribers and have supporting video content to enhance dissemination and improve intrapartum care. Our hope is that no mother suffers because of lack of information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Epidemiology of bone injuries in elite athletics: A prospective 9-year cohort study.
- Author
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Kelly, Shane, Waring, Anthony, Stone, Ben, and Pollock, Noel
- Abstract
To describe bone injury patterns in elite track and field athletes. To investigate relationships between bone injury and athlete characteristics to inform future injury prevention strategies. Descriptive epidemiology study. Elite athletics training centres across the United Kingdom and internationally, observed between 2012 and 2020. 207 Olympic programme senior track and field athletes. Injury number, Incidence, Severity, Burden, Time Loss. There were 78 fractures during the study period. Gradual repetitive bone injuries were the most common type of injury mode. The foot, pelvis and the lumbar spine were the regions with the highest number of bone stress injuries. Stress fractures had a higher burden overall compared to stress reactions. Average return to full training was 67.4 days (±73.1) for stress reactions and 199 (±205.2) days for stress fractures. There was no relationship between bone injury type and age, sex, ethnicity, side dominance or event group. Bone stress injuries in athletics have a high severity and burden warranting continued efforts to prevent their occurrence and optimize management. Age, sex, ethnicity, side dominance and event region do not have any relationship with bone injury occurrence and are therefore unlikely to increase risk in this cohort. • Gradual repetitive injury of the foot was the most common bone injury in athletics. • Bone stress injuries in elite athletics have a high severity and burden. • All event groups are susceptible to bone injury. • Age, sex, ethnicity and event type have no relationship to bone injury rates. • Early identification of bone stress injury is key to minimising time loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. 5-year stroke rates in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation after watchman compared to direct oral anticoagulants.
- Author
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Khalid, Syed I., Sathianathan, Shyama, Thomson, Kyle B., McGuire, Laura Stone, Soni, Mona C., and Mehta, Ankit I.
- Abstract
The WATCHMAN device (Boston Scientific; Marlborough, MA, USA) is noninferior to warfarin in preventing ischemic strokes while reducing bleeding risks associated with long term anticoagulation in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (AFib). The device's performance compared to direct oral anticoagulants (DOAC) is less well known. To compare 5-year major bleeding and ischemic stroke rates in patients with nonvalvular AFib who received a WATCHMAN device or DOAC therapy after a major bleeding event. This retrospective, multicenter, 1:1 matched cohort study was derived from the PearlDiver Mariner database from 2010 to 2020. Patients with nonvalvular AFib on oral anticoagulation who had a major bleeding event were identified. Those who received either WATCHMAN or DOAC after resolution of the bleeding event were selected. The two groups were exactly matched 1:1 based on various comorbidities. Rates of ischemic stroke, transient ischemic attack (TIA), major bleeding, and hemorrhagic stroke were compared over 5 years. Each cohort consisted of 2248 patients after 1:1 matching. The mean CHADS2-VASC score was 4.81 ± 1.25. At 5 years, the WATCHMAN cohort had significantly lower rates of major bleeding events [OR 0.24 (0.21, 0.27)], TIAs [OR 0.75 (0.58, 0.95)], and ischemic strokes [OR 0.72 (0.61, 0.86)]. There was no significant difference in hemorrhagic strokes [OR 1.14 (0.83, 1.58)]. Even in a high-risk population, the WATCHMAN is comparable to DOAC therapy in the primary prevention of hemorrhagic strokes and may provide benefit in the rates of bleeding events, TIAs, and ischemic strokes. [Display omitted] • Atrial fibrillation increases individual stroke risk by up to 5 times. • Stroke risk can be mitigated with direct oral anticoagulant (DOACs) or the WATCHMAN device. • Ischemic stroke rates were lower with the WATCHMAN device compared to DOACs. • Major bleeding event rates were lower with the WATCHMAN device compared to DOACs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Engineering therapeutic monoclonal antibodies.
- Author
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Stone, Cosby A., Spiller, Benjamin W., and Smith, Scott A.
- Abstract
The use of human antibodies as biologic therapeutics has revolutionized patient care throughout fields of medicine. As our understanding of the many roles antibodies play within our natural immune responses continues to advance, so will the number of therapeutic indications for which an mAb will be developed. The great breadth of function, long half-life, and modular structure allow for nearly limitless therapeutic possibilities. Human antibodies can be rationally engineered to enhance their desired immune functions and eliminate those that may result in unwanted effects. Antibody therapeutics now often start with fully human variable regions, either acquired from genetically engineered humanized mice or from the actual human B cells. These variable genes can be further engineered by widely used methods for optimization of their specificity through affinity maturation, random mutagenesis, targeted mutagenesis, and use of in silico approaches. Antibody isotype selection and deliberate mutations are also used to improve efficacy and tolerability by purposeful fine-tuning of their immune effector functions. Finally, improvements directed at binding to the neonatal Fc receptor can endow therapeutic antibodies with unbelievable extensions in their circulating half-life. The future of engineered antibody therapeutics is bright, with the global mAb market projected to exhibit compound annual growth, forecasted to reach a revenue of nearly half a trillion dollars in 2030. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
28. Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Randomized Controlled Trials Infrequently Report on the Social Determinants of Health Factors of Their Patient Cohorts.
- Author
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Abed, Varag, Kapp, Sabryn, Bradley, Taylor, Homen, Dylan T., Landy, David C., Dasa, Vinod, Conley, Caitlin, and Stone, Austin V.
- Abstract
To describe the prevalence of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in orthopaedic sports medicine–related journals reporting on the social determinants of health (SDOH) of their patient cohorts, including factors receiving less attention, such as education level, employment status, insurance status, and socioeconomic status. The PubMed/MEDLINE database was used to search for RCTs between 2020 and 2022 from 3 high-impact orthopaedic sports medicine–related journals: American Journal of Sports Medicine , Arthroscopy , and Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery. The following information was extracted from each article: age, sex/gender, body mass index, year published, corresponding author country, and self-reported SDOH factors (race, ethnicity, education level, employment status, insurance status, and socioeconomic status). A total of 189 articles were analyzed. Articles originated from 34 different countries, with the United States (n = 66) producing the greatest number of articles. Overall, age (n = 186; 98.4%) and sex/gender (n = 184; 97.4%) were the factors most commonly reported, followed by body mass index (n = 112; 59.3%), race (n = 17; 9.0%), ethnicity (n = 10; 5.3%), employment status (n = 9; 4.8%), insurance status (n = 7; 3.7%), and education level (n = 5; 2.6%). Socioeconomic status was not reported in any of the articles analyzed. Articles from the United States report on SDOH factors more frequently than international articles, most notably race (24.2% vs 0.8%, respectively) and ethnicity (15.2% and 0%, respectively). RCTs from 3 high-impact orthopaedic sports medicine journals infrequently report on SDOH. Better understanding patient SDOH factors in RCTs is important to help orthopaedic surgeons and other practitioners best apply study results to their patients, as well as help researchers and our field ensure that research is being done transparently with relevance to as many patients as possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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29. Decision aids for patients with carotid stenosis.
- Author
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Krafcik, Brianna M., Jarmel, Isabel A., Beach, Jocelyn M., Suckow, Bjoern D., Stableford, Jennifer A., Stone, David H., Goodney, Philip P., and Columbo, Jesse A.
- Abstract
Shared decision-making tools have been underused by clinicians in real-world practice. Changes to the National Coverage Determination by Medicare for carotid stenting greatly expand the coverage for patients, but simultaneously require a shared decision-making interaction that involves the use of a validated tool. Accordingly, our objective was to evaluate the currently available decision aids for carotid stenosis. We conducted a review of the literature for published work on decision aids for the treatment of carotid disease. Four publications met inclusion criteria. We found the format of the decision aid impacted patient comprehension and decision making, although patient characteristics also played a role in the therapeutic decisions made. Notably, none of the available decision aids included the widely adopted transcarotid artery revascularization as an option. Further work is needed in the development of a widespread validated decision aid instrument for patients with carotid stenosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Cutaneous lupus erythematosus: Expanding clinical trial eligibility criteria based on quality of life data.
- Author
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Faden, Daniella F., Xie, Lillian, Stone, Caroline J., Lopes Almeida Gomes, Lais, Eldaboush, Ahmed, Ricco, Cristina, Feng, Rui, and Werth, Victoria P.
- Published
- 2024
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31. A United States stillbirth prevention bundle.
- Author
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Silver, Robert M. and Stone, Joanne L.
- Subjects
STILLBIRTH - Published
- 2024
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32. Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine Position Statement: Extending Medicaid coverage for 12 months postpartum.
- Author
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Stone, Jordan and Chandrasekaran, Suchitra
- Subjects
OBSTETRICS ,MEDICAID ,MEDICAID eligibility ,PUERPERIUM ,MATERNAL mortality - Abstract
Position: The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine supports federal and state policies that expand Medicaid eligibility and extend Medicaid coverage through 12 months postpartum to address the maternal morbidity and mortality crisis and improve health equity. Access to coverage is essential to optimize maternal health following pregnancy and childbirth and avoid preventable causes of maternal morbidity and mortality that extend throughout the first year postpartum. The Society opposes policies such as work requirements or limitations on coverage for undocumented individuals that unnecessarily impose restrictions on Medicaid eligibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Association of outcomes in point-of-care lung ultrasound for bronchiolitis in the pediatric emergency department.
- Author
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Smith, Jaron A., Stone, Bethsabee S., Shin, Jiwoong, Yen, Kenneth, Reisch, Joan, Fernandes, Neil, and Cooper, Michael C.
- Abstract
Acute bronchiolitis (AB) is the most common lower respiratory tract infection in infants. Objective scoring tools and plain film radiography have limited application, thus diagnosis is clinical. The role of point-of-care lung ultrasound (LUS) is not well established. We sought to characterize LUS findings in infants presenting to the pediatric ED diagnosed with AB, and to identify associations between LUS and respiratory support (RS) at 12 and 24 h, maximum RS during hospitalization, disposition, and hospital length of stay (LOS). Infants ≤12 months presenting to the ED and diagnosed with AB were enrolled. LUS was performed at the bedside by a physician. Lungs were divided into 12 segments and scanned, then scored and summated (min. 0, max. 36) in real time accordingly: 0 - A lines with <3 B lines per lung segment. 1 - ≥3 B lines per lung segment, but not consolidated. 2 - consolidated B lines, but no subpleural consolidation. 3 - subpleural consolidation with any findings scoring 1 or 2. Chart review was performed for all patients after discharge. RS was categorized accordingly: RS (room air), low RS (wall O2 or heated high flow nasal cannula <1 L/kg), and high RS (heated high flow nasal cannula ≥1 L/kg or positive pressure). 82 subjects were enrolled. Regarding disposition, the mean (SD) LUS scores were: discharged 1.18 (1.33); admitted to the floor 4.34 (3.62); and admitted to the ICU was 10.84 (6.54). For RS, the mean (SD) LUS scores at 12 h were: no RS 1.56 (1.93), low RS 4.34 (3.51), and high RS 11.94 (6.17). At 24 h: no RS 2.11 (2.35), low RS 4.91 (3.86), and high RS 12.64 (6.48). Maximum RS: no RS 1.22 (1.31), low RS 4.11 (3.61), and high RS 10.45 (6.16). Mean differences for all dispositions and RS time points were statistically significant (p < 0.05, CI >95%). The mean (SD) hospital LOS was 84.5 h (SD 62.9). The Pearson correlation coefficient (r) comparing LOS and LUS was 0.489 (p < 0.0001). Higher LUS scores for AB were associated with increased respiratory support, longer LOS, and more acute disposition. The use of bedside LUS in the ED may assist the clinician in the management and disposition of patient's diagnosed with AB. • Bronchiolitis is a clinical diagnosis; labs and imaging currently play a limited role. • Assessment of disposition and prediction of outcomes are often challenging. • Bronchiolitis is typically diagnosed and managed in the emergency department. • Point-of-care lung ultrasound in the emergency department may help assess and predict severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
34. Adapting a community pharmacy intervention to improve medication safety.
- Author
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Berbakov, Maria E., Hoffins, Emily L., Stone, Jamie A., Gilson, Aaron M., Chladek, Jason S., Watterson, Taylor L., Lehnbom, Elin C., Moon, Jukrin, Holden, Richard J., Jacobson, Nora, Shiyanbola, Olayinka O., Welch, Lauren L., Walker, Kenneth D., Gollhardt, Joel D., and Chui, Michelle A.
- Abstract
Community pharmacies are an ideal location to address challenges of over-the-counter medication safety, yet many successful interventions are only tested in a few pharmacies without expansion, creating unrealized opportunities to improve patient care on a larger scale. Scaling up to numerous pharmacies can be challenging because each community pharmacy has unique needs and layouts and requires individualized adaptation. This paper reports techniques for (a) adapting a community pharmacy intervention to fit the unique physical layout and patient needs of health system pharmacy sites without increasing staff workload, (b) identifying strategies to gather feedback on adaptations from stakeholders, and (c) developing materials to share with pharmacy champions for them to independently implement and sustain the intervention in their organization. The study team collaborated with Aurora Pharmacy, Inc to develop an intervention designed to increase awareness of safe over-the-counter medication use for older adults. Senior Safe, a community pharmacy-based intervention, was designed, implemented, and tested using the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment implementation framework. Senior Safe was adapted through pilot testing and a randomized control trial. Feedback was collected from key stakeholders, including pharmacy staff, older adults, and a research advisory group. A finalized version of Senior Safe, as well as an implementation package, was provided to Aurora Pharmacy to integrate into all 63 sites. This multiphase study illustrated that refining an intervention is possible and welcomed by pharmacy staff, but it requires time, resources, and funds to create an impactful, sustainable community pharmacy intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Soft Tissue Structures at Risk With a Percutaneous Focal Dome Osteotomy: A Cadaver Study.
- Author
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Casciato, Dominick J., Stone, Ryan, and Mendicino, Robert
- Abstract
The focal dome osteotomy allows deformity correction through frontal plane rotation, and if needed, anterior or posterior translation. This percutaneous technique allows extracapsular ankle realignment with minimal soft tissue dissection. While circumventing a standard anterior incision, this technique encounters soft tissue structures that must be considered. Focal dome osteotomies were simulated on 10 fresh-frozen below the knee cadavers. Centered proximal to the tibial plafond at the physeal scar, a radial arm using a 4-hole Rancho cube was used to map the dome. Medial, lateral, and central incisions were made to allow access for drilling and measured to nearby anatomic structures. Among 10 cadavers, the age and weight were 70 ± 7.96 years and 134.7 ± 30.8 pounds, respectively. In all cadavers, the hole below the most proximal posthole provided the ideal position for the creation of the osteotomy. The medial and central incisions were closest to the tibialis anterior tendon measuring 3.37 ± 2.48 mm and 0.43 ± 0.9 mm, respectively. The lateral incision and half-pin used to create the distal axis of rotation were closest to the extensor hallucis longus tendon, measuring 1.97 ± 1.92 mm and 1.27 ± 1.5 mm, respectively. Drilling the second hole from the top on a 4-hole Rancho cube, forming a 2.50 cm radial arm, created the ideal osteotomy arc. Though neurovascular structures were further away from respective incision and half-pin sites compared to tendons, in several specimens, anatomic variations held them closer, warranting preoperative handheld Doppler and mapping. Care should be taken to protect anterior ankle anatomy during dissection, drilling, and completing the osteotomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Defining the Structures at Risk and an Anatomical Safe Zone for Percutaneous Antegrade Subtalar Joint Fixation With a Single Screw: A Cadaveric Study.
- Author
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Stone, Ryan, Dao, Tung, Hill, Zachary, Malay, D. Scot, and Mendicino, Robert
- Abstract
Percutaneous antegrade (anterior to posterior) fixation for subtalar joint (STJ) arthrodesis offers various intraoperative and biomechanical advantages. Currently, the entry point for percutaneous antegrade STJ screw fixation is not clearly described and variable. To our knowledge, there are no publications that evaluate anatomic structures at risk or define an anatomically safe entry point for this fixation. The aim of this investigation was to define an anatomically safe and reproducible entry point for percutaneous antegrade STJ arthrodesis fixation, while also describing anatomic structures at risk when undertaking this method of fixation. We hypothesized that percutaneous single screw antegrade STJ fixation would encroach upon named anatomic structures in more than one cadaveric specimen. Ten cadaver limbs were used in this investigation. A percutaneous guidewire was inserted 5 mm lateral to the tibialis anterior tendon. The midpoint of the talar neck served as the sagittal plane starting point, as seen on the lateral fluoroscopic view. A cannulated 6.5-mm headed screw was inserted antegrade through the STJ into the calcaneus. Each specimen was dissected to assess the distance from the screw to nearby anatomic structures and distance from the tibialis anterior tendon to named structures. Our hypothesis was found to be incorrect, as 0/10 screws invaded neurovascular or tendinous structures. The dorsalis pedis artery and deep peroneal nerve were on average 12.1 ± 2.79 mm and 12.2 ± 2.82 mm lateral to the screw, respectively. These findings are clinically relevant and ultimately allow us to define an anatomic safe starting point for percutaneous antegrade STJ single screw fixation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Stem cell-derived exosome patch with coronary artery bypass graft restores cardiac function in chronically ischemic porcine myocardium.
- Author
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Aggarwal, Rishav, Shao, Annie, Potel, Koray N., So, Simon W., Swingen, Cory M., Wright, Christin A., Hocum Stone, Laura L., McFalls, Edward O., Butterick, Tammy A., and Kelly, Rosemary F.
- Abstract
This study aimed to investigate whether or not the application of a stem cell-derived exosome-laden collagen patch (EXP) during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) can recover cardiac function by modulating mitochondrial bioenergetics and myocardial inflammation in hibernating myocardium (HIB), which is defined as myocardium with reduced blood flow and function that retains viability and variable contractile reserve. In vitro methods involved exposing H9C2 cardiomyocytes to hypoxia followed by normoxic coculture with porcine mesenchymal stem cells. Mitochondrial respiration was measured using Seahorse assay. GW4869, an exosomal release antagonist, was used to determine the effect of mesenchymal stem cells-derived exosomal signaling on cardiomyocyte recovery. Total exosomal RNA was isolated and differential micro RNA expression determined by sequencing. In vivo studies comprised 48 Yorkshire-Landrace juvenile swine (6 normal controls, 17 HIB, 19 CABG, and 6 CABG + EXP), which were compared for physiologic and metabolic changes. HIB was created by placing a constrictor on the proximal left anterior descending artery, causing significant stenosis but preserved viability by 12 weeks. CABG was performed with or without mesenchymal stem cells-derived EXP application and animals recovered for 4 weeks. Before terminal procedure, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging at rest, and with low-dose dobutamine, assessed diastolic relaxation, systolic function, graft patency, and myocardial viability. Tissue studies of inflammation, fibrosis, and mitochondrial morphology were performed posttermination. In vitro data demonstrated improved cardiomyocyte mitochondrial respiration upon coculture with MSCs that was blunted when adding the exosomal antagonist GW4869. RNA sequencing identified 8 differentially expressed micro RNAs in normoxia vs hypoxia-induced exosomes that may modulate the expression of key mitochondrial (peroxisome proliferator-activator receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha and adenosine triphosphate synthase) and inflammatory mediators (nuclear factor kappa-light-chain enhancer of activated B cells, interferon gamma, and interleukin 1β). In vivo animal magnetic resonance imaging studies demonstrated regional systolic function and diastolic relaxation to be improved with CABG + EXP compared with HIB (P =.02 and P =.02, respectively). Histologic analysis showed increased interstitial fibrosis and inflammation in HIB compared with CABG + EXP. Electron microscopy demonstrated increased mitochondrial area, perimeter, and aspect ratio in CABG + EXP compared with HIB or CABG alone (P <.0001). Exosomes recovered cardiomyocyte mitochondrial respiration and reduced myocardial inflammation through paracrine signaling, resulting in improved cardiac function. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Conflicting European and North American Society Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) Volume Guidelines Differentially Discriminate Peri-operative Mortality After Elective Open AAA Repair.
- Author
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Scali, Salvatore, Wanhainen, Anders, Neal, Dan, Debus, Sebastian, Mani, Kevin, Behrendt, Christian-Alexander, D'Oria, Mario, and Stone, David
- Abstract
The European Society for Vascular Surgery (ESVS) guidelines endorse a minimum abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair volume of 20 open (OAR) and or endovascular (EVAR) AAA repair procedures per year as a proxy for high quality care. In contrast, the Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) espouses 10 exclusively OARs per year. Given the differences in these volume standards and definitions, debate persists regarding surgeon credentialing and healthcare resource allocation. This analysis aimed to determine which society endorsed volume benchmark better discriminates OAR mortality. A retrospective national registry based cohort analysis. Patients undergoing elective OAR were compared between centres meeting either ESVS (≥ 20 AAA procedures/year) or SVS (≥ 10 OARs/year) volume thresholds within the Vascular Quality Initiative (2010 – 2020). The primary outcome was in hospital death. Logistic regression was used for risk adjusted comparisons. A total of 8 761 OARs were performed at 193 US centres, and the median (IQR) volume was 6.6 (3.3, 9.9) OARs/year. When applying the SVS centre volume definition, the proportion of centres meeting ESVS and SVS minimum case thresholds was 12% (n = 22) and 25% (n = 48), respectively. The absolute mortality difference was 0.3% between centres performing ≥ 20 vs. ≥ 10 OARs/year (2.6% vs. 2.9%; p =.51). There was an incremental association between OAR volume and crude mortality rate; however, this absolute difference between lower and higher thresholds was only 0.2%/procedure (OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.97 – 0.99; p <.001). Moreover, no difference in risk adjusted mortality was detected between volume standards (≥ 10 vs. ≥ 20; p =.78). In sub-analysis, the ESVS ≥ 20 total composite AAA repair volume threshold was not associated with mortality (p =.17); however, increasing the proportion of OAR cases making up the total annual AAA centre volume inversely correlated with mortality (p =.008). It appears that the SVS endorsed AAA centre volume threshold using exclusively OAR had a modest ability to discriminate peri-operative mortality outcomes and was superior to the current composite ESVS volume guideline in differentiating centre performance. These findings raise questions regarding the clinical validity of using EVAR as a volume proxy for OAR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Educational programs for implementing ultrasound guided peripheral intravenous catheter insertion in emergency departments: A systematic integrative literature review.
- Author
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Stone, Renee, Walker, Rachel M., Marsh, Nicole, and Ullman, Amanda J.
- Subjects
INTRAVENOUS catheterization ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,TEACHING methods ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,LEARNING ,CLINICAL competence ,THEMATIC analysis ,CATHETERS - Abstract
Ultrasound-guided peripheral intravenous catheter insertion has been identified as an effective method to improve the success rate of cannulation, thereby improving patient experience. However, learning this new skill is complex, and involves training clinicians from a variety of backgrounds. The aim of this study was to appraise and compare literature on educational methods in the emergency setting used to support ultrasound guided peripheral intravenous catheter insertion by different clinicians, and how effective these current methods are. A systematic integrative review was undertaken using Whittemore and Knafl's five stage approach. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool was used to assess the quality of the studies. Forty-five studies met the inclusion criteria, with five themes identified. These were: the variety of educational methods and approaches; the effectiveness of the different educational methods; barriers and facilitators of education; clinician competency assessments and pathways; clinician confidence assessment and pathways. This review demonstrates that a variety of educational methods are being used in successfully training emergency department clinicians in using ultrasound guidance for peripheral intravenous catheter insertion. Furthermore, this training has resulted in safer and more effective vascular access. However, it is evident that there is a lack of consistency of formalised education programs available. A standardised formal education program and increased availability of ultrasound machines in the emergency department will ensure consistent practices are maintained, retained, therefore leading to safer practice as well as more satisfied patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The financial burden associated with endovascular repair of thoracoabdominal and pararenal aortic aneurysms using physician-modified fenestrated-branched endografts.
- Author
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Ilyas, Sadia, Stone, David H., Powell, Richard J., Ponukumati, Aravind S., Kuwayama, David P., Goodney, Philip P., Columbo, Jesse A., and Suckow, Bjoern D.
- Abstract
Endovascular thoracoabdominal and pararenal aortic aneurysm repair is more complex and requires more devices than infrarenal aneurysm repair. It is unclear if current reimbursement covers the cost of delivering this more advanced form of vascular care. The objective of this study was to evaluate the economics of fenestrated-branched (FB-EVAR) physician-modified endograft (PMEG) repairs. We obtained technical and professional cost and revenue data for four consecutive fiscal years (July 1, 2017, to June 30, 2021) at our quaternary referral institution. Inclusion criteria were patients who underwent PMEG FB-EVAR in a uniform fashion by a single surgeon for thoracoabdominal/pararenal aortic aneurysms. Patients in industry-sponsored clinical trials or receiving Cook Zenith Fenestrated grafts were excluded. Financial data were analyzed for the index operation. Technical costs were divided into direct costs that included devices and billable supplies and indirect costs including overhead. 62 patients (79% male, mean age: 74 years, 66% thoracoabdominal aneurysms) met inclusion criteria. The mean aneurysm size was 6.0 cm, the mean total operating time was 219 minutes, and the median hospital length of stay was 2 days. PMEGs were created with a mean number of 3.7 fenestrations, using a mean of 8.6 implantable devices per case. The average technical cost per case was $71,198, and the average technical reimbursement was $57,642, providing a net negative technical margin of $13,556 per case. Of this cohort, 31 patients (50%) were insured by Medicare remunerated under diagnosis-related group code 268/269. Their respective average technical reimbursement was $41,293, with a mean negative margin of $22,989 per case, with similar findings for professional costs. The primary driver of technical cost was implantable devices, accounting for 77% of total technical cost per case over the study period. The total operating margin, including technical and professional cost and revenue, for the cohort during the study period was negative $1,560,422. PMEG FB-EVAR for pararenal/thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms produces a substantially negative operating margin for the index operation driven largely by device costs. Device cost alone already exceeds total technical revenue and presents an opportunity for cost reduction. In addition, increased reimbursement for FB-EVAR, especially among Medicare beneficiaries, will be important to facilitate patient access to such innovative technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. Sensitivity and specificity of the posterolateral rotatory drawer test in the diagnosis of lateral collateral ligament insufficiency of the elbow.
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Stone, Andrew, Venkatakrishnan, Shruti, and Phadnis, Joideep
- Abstract
Numerous clinical tests are described for the diagnosis of chronic lateral collateral ligament (LCL) insufficiency of the elbow; however, none of these tests have been adequately assessed for sensitivity, with at most 8 patients included in previous studies. Furthermore, no test has had specificity assessed. The posterolateral rotatory drawer (PLRD) test is thought to have improved diagnostic accuracy over other tests in the awake patient. The aim of this study is to formally assess this test using reference standards in a large cohort of patients. A total of 106 eligible patients were identified for inclusion from a single-surgeon database of operative procedures. Examination under anesthetic (EUA) and arthroscopy were chosen as the reference standards to compare the PLRD test against. Only patients with a clearly documented PLRD test finding performed preoperatively in the clinic, and a clearly documented EUA and/or arthroscopic findings from surgery were included. A total of 102 patients underwent EUA, 74 of whom also underwent arthroscopy. Twenty-eight patients had EUA, and then an open procedure without arthroscopy. Four patients had arthroscopy without a clearly documented EUA. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) were calculated with 95% confidence intervals. Thirty-seven patients had a positive PLRD test, and 69 had a negative test. Compared to the reference standard of EUA (n = 102), the PLRD test had a sensitivity of 97.3% (85.8%-99.9%) and a specificity of 98.5% (91.7%-100%) (PPV = 0.973, NPV = 0.985). Compared to the reference standard of arthroscopy (n = 78), the PLRD test had a sensitivity of 87.5% (61.7%-98.5%) and a specificity of 98.4% (91.3%-100%) (PPV = 0.933, NPV = 0.968). Compared to either reference standard (n = 106), the PLRD test has a sensitivity of 94.7% (82.3%-99.4%) and a specificity of 98.5% (92.1%-100%) (PPV = 0.973, NPV = 0.971). The PLRD test demonstrated an overall sensitivity of 94.7% and specificity of 98.5% with high positive and negative predictive values. This test is recommended as the primary diagnostic tool for LCL insufficiency in the awake patient and should be widely incorporated into surgical training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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42. Motivational Interviewing for Fall Prevention (MI-FP) pilot study: Older Adults' readiness to participate in fall prevention.
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Kiyoshi-Teo, Hiroko, De Lima, Bryanna, Cohen, Deborah J., Dieckmann, Nathan, Winters-Stone, Kerri, and Eckstrom, Elizabeth
- Abstract
• Having the knowledge of their own fall risks and recommendations to reduce these risks did not seem to enhance older adults' interest in participating in a research study. • Participants had high confidence to reduce their fall risks, but varied in their adherence to fall prevention recommendations by their HCP. • Important opportunities exist to enhance older adults' readiness to engage in fall prevention activities. Older adults' readiness to participate in fall prevention behaviors is largely unknown. We evaluated the feasibility of recruitment for a fall prevention intervention and participants' readiness to participate in fall prevention activities. Patients ≥ 65 years at high fall risk were recruited. Feasibility of recruitment was assessed by reaching the goal sample size (200), and recruitment rate (50%). Surveys assessed participants' readiness to participate in fall prevention activities (confidence to manage fall risks [0–10 scale; 10 most confident] and adherence to fall prevention recommendations). We recruited 200 patients (46.3% of eligible patients), and 185 completed surveys. Participants reported high confidence (range 7.48 to 8.23) in addressing their risks. Their adherence to clinician recommendations was mixed (36.4% to 90.5%). We nearly met our recruitment goals, and found that older adults are confident to address their fall risks, but do not consistently engage in fall prevention recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Impact of a Repatriation Program Between Quaternary and Community Hospitals.
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Safavi, Kyan C., Koehler, Allison, Mathews, Nancy, McKenzie, Rachael, Stone, Christina, Masson, Patricia R., Hu, Michael, and Dunn, Peter F.
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- 2023
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44. Women's experience of early labour in a free-standing birth centre: Midwifing embodied labour.
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Stone, Nancy Iris and Downe, Soo
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Women who present at hospital labour wards in early labour must often meet measurable diagnostic criteria before admission. Early labour is a phase of neurohormonal, emotional, and physical changes that are often not measurable. When admission to birthplace is based on results of diagnostic procedures, women's embodied knowledge may be disregarded. To describe the early labour experience of women with spontaneous onset of labour in a free-standing birth centre, as well as midwifery care when women arrived in labour. An ethnographic study was conducted in 2015 in a free-standing birth centre after receiving ethics approval. The findings for this article were drawn from a secondary analysis of the data, which included interview data with women and detailed field notes of midwives' activities related to early labour. The women in this study were instrumental in the decision-making process to stay at the birth centre. Observational data showed that vaginal exams were rarely conducted when women arrived at the birth centre and were not a deciding factor in admission. The women and midwives co-constructed early labour based on the lived experience of women and the meaning that this experience held for both. Given the growing concern about the need for respectful maternity care, this study provides examples of good practice in listening to women, as well as an illustration of the consequences of not doing so. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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45. In-Office Needle Arthroscopy with Meniscal Repair for Meniscal Lesions of the Knee.
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Kirschner, Noah, Owusu-Sarpong, Stephane, Neal, William H.E., Fariyike, Babatunde, Bi, Andrew S., Colasanti, Christopher A., Azam, Mohammad T., Gianakos, Arianna L., Stone, James W., and Kennedy, John G.
- Abstract
Meniscal injuries are a common cause of knee pain and are often an indication for knee arthroscopy, the most common orthopedic surgical procedure in the United States. In-office needle arthroscopy (IONA) is a described technique with the ability to diagnose and treat meniscal injuries in the office. IONA allows for diagnosis and treatment at a significantly deceased cost, with both quicker patient recovery, and improved patient satisfaction. The purpose of this technical report is to describe the technique for performing in-office needle arthroscopy for meniscal injuries of the knee, including the technique for obtaining adequate local anesthesia, proper indications, adequate visualization, and the advantages of performing these procedures in the office rather than the operating room. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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46. In-Office Needle Arthroscopy of the Knee With Lateral Parapatellar Retinacular Release.
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Neal, William H.E., Kirschner, Noah, Owusu-Sarpong, Stephane, Colasanti, Christopher A., Fariyike, Babatunde, Bi, Andrew S., Azam, Mohammad T., Stone, James W., and Kennedy, John G.
- Abstract
The lateral patellofemoral joint, composed of multiple soft-tissue structures, balances the knee by aiding patella tracking, stability, and force distribution. Arthroscopic lateral release is a well-described procedure that addresses patellofemoral knee pain and, in cases with patellar instability, may be combined with medial stabilization. In-office needle arthroscopy is an up-trending technique that simultaneously diagnoses and treats patellofemoral pathology in the office, leading to a quicker patient recovery, reduced cost, and improved patient satisfaction. The purpose of this Technical Note is to describe in-office needle arthroscopy technique to address patellofemoral pain and lateral patellar mal-tracking, with special consideration for achieving adequate local anesthesia, proper indications, adequate visualization, and the advantages of performing these procedures in the office rather than the operating room. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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47. Reproducible and Effective Biceps Tenodesis Method Utilizing In-Office Nano-Arthroscopy.
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Colasanti, Christopher A., Azam, Mohammad T., Bi, Andrew S., Fariyike, Babatunde, Kirschner, Noah, Neal, William H.E., Owusu-Sarpong, Stephane, Stone, James W., and Kennedy, John G.
- Abstract
Biceps tendinopathy is a common cause of chronic anterior shoulder pain characterized by altered joint mechanics with considerable deficits in range of motion secondary to pain. The benefits of in-office nano-arthroscopy (IONA) include the ability to diagnosis and treat biceps tendinopathy, quicker patient recovery, reduced cost, and improved patient satisfaction. The purpose of this technical report is to describe the technique for performing IONA for biceps tendinopathy (biceps tenotomy/biceps tenodesis), with special consideration for obtaining adequate local anesthesia, proper indications, adequate visualization, and the advantages of performing these procedures in the office rather than the operating room. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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48. Out of oxygen: Stratification and loading drove hypoxia during a warm, wet, and productive year in a Great Lakes estuary.
- Author
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Dugener, Nathan M., Stone, Ian P., Weinke, Anthony D., and Biddanda, Bopaiah A.
- Abstract
Hypolimnetic hypoxia, or low oxygen in bottom waters, impairs ecosystem services of freshwater lakes and estuaries globally. Both hypoxia incidence and intensity are increasing around the world due to eutrophication and climate change. As the hypolimnion becomes hypoxic and ultimately anoxic, sediment-bound legacy phosphorus is released. Water column mixing due to large storm events or fall turnover entrains these nutrients to the surface, causing harmful algal blooms. To assess the dynamics of hypoxia throughout the growing season, we evaluated Muskegon Lake, where hypoxia recurs annually, utilizing high-frequency time-series data from the Muskegon Lake Observatory (MLO) buoy (https://www.gvsu.edu/wri/buoy/), biweekly nutrient sampling, and seasonal respiration experiments during 2021. While water-column stratification set the stage for hypolimnetic hypoxia, frequent wind-mixing events, and episodic intrusions of cold, oxygenated, upwelled Lake Michigan waters intermittently reduced the thickness or intensity of the hypoxic zone. Respiration experiments revealed that riverine and surface organic matter inputs contributed most to hypolimnetic hypoxia in the spring, whereas surface inputs did so during summer, and riverine inputs during fall, indicating seasonally variable sources drive hypoxia. Biweekly measurements indicated increased soluble reactive phosphorus in the hypolimnion during anoxia via internal phosphorus loading from the sediment with the potential for fueling surface blooms with net export of soluble reactive phosphorus and total phosphorus to nearshore Lake Michigan. Our findings on the role of seasonally changing temperature, loading, phytoplankton production, hypolimnetic respiration, and internal phosphorus loading in shaping hypoxia dynamics have relevance to similarly afflicted ecosystems in the Great Lakes Basin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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49. The effect of mandibular advancement for mandibular deficiency dentofacial deformities on laryngeal grade and intubation difficulty: a preliminary study.
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Carr, Brian R., Neal, Timothy W., Finn, Richard A., Luo, Xi, and Stone, Joshua A.
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate mandibular advancement for cases of mandibular deficiency with changes in vocal cord grade and intubation difficulty at subsequent surgery requiring intubation. This retrospective case series included patients with a diagnosis of mandibular deficiency (Class II skeletal dentofacial deformity) who underwent mandibular advancement surgery (T1) followed by a subsequent surgery (T2) which required intubation. The primary predictor variable was mandibular advancement. The primary outcome variable was the change in laryngeal grade—Cormack and Lehane—after mandibular advancement. A secondary outcome was intubation difficulty after mandibular advancement. Eight patients were included in the study. At T1, the average laryngeal grade was 1.6. There was 1 difficult intubation. The average time to T2 was 9 months. At T2, all patients were intubated on their first attempt, and all had a Cormack-Lehane Grade I view of the vocal cords. There were no difficult intubations at T2. Analysis showed a significant association between mandibular advancement and laryngeal grade at T2 (P =.03; 95% CI 0.07-1.13). This preliminary investigation found an association between mandibular advancement for cases of mandibular and improved laryngeal grade at subsequent intubation without any difficult intubations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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50. Preventive PCI or medical therapy alone for vulnerable atherosclerotic coronary plaque: Rationale and design of the randomized, controlled PREVENT trial.
- Author
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Ahn, Jung-Min, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Pil Hyung, Ahn, Young-Keun, Kim, Won-Jang, Nam, Chang-Wook, Jeong, Jin-Ok, Chae, In-Ho, Shiomi, Hiroki, Kao, Paul Hsien Li, Hahn, Joo-Yong, Her, Sung-Ho, Lee, Bong-Ki, Ahn, Tae Hoon, Chang, Kiyuk, Chae, Jei Keon, Smyth, David, Stone, Gregg W., Park, Duk-Woo, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
Acute coronary syndromes are commonly caused by the rupture of vulnerable plaque, which often appear angiographically not severe. Although pharmacologic management is considered standard therapy for stabilizing plaque vulnerability, the potential role of preventive local treatment for vulnerable plaque has not yet been determined. The PREVENT trial was designed to compare preventive percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) plus optimal medical therapy (OMT) with OMT alone in patients with functionally nonsignificant high-risk vulnerable plaques. The PREVENT trial is a multinational, multicenter, prospective, open-label, active-treatment-controlled randomized trial. Eligible patients have at least 1 angiographically significant stenosis (diameter stenosis >50% by visual estimation) without functional significance (fractional flow reserve [FFR] >0.80). Target lesions are assessed by intracoronary imaging and must meet at least 2 imaging criteria for vulnerable plaque; (1) minimal lumen area <4.0 mm
2 ; (2) plaque burden >70%; (3) maximal lipid core burden index in a 4 mm segment >315 by near infrared spectroscopy; and (4) thin cap fibroatheroma as determined by virtual histology or optical coherence tomography. Enrolled patients are randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either preventive PCI with either bioabsorbable vascular scaffolds or metallic everolimus-eluting stents plus OMT or OMT alone. The primary endpoint is target-vessel failure, defined as the composite of death from cardiac causes, target-vessel myocardial infarction, ischemic-driven target-vessel revascularization, or hospitalization for unstable or progressive angina, at 2 years after randomization. Enrollment of a total of 1,608 patients has been completed. Follow-up of the last enrolled patient will be completed in September 2023 and primary results are expected to be available in early 2024. The PREVENT trial is the first large-scale, randomized trial to evaluate the effect of preventive PCI on non–flow-limiting vulnerable plaques containing multiple high-risk features that is appropriately powered for clinical outcomes. PREVENT will provide compelling evidence as to whether preventive PCI of vulnerable plaques plus OMT improves patient outcomes compared with OMT alone. URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02316886. The PREVENT trial is the first, large-scale randomized clinical trial to evaluate the effect of preventive PCI on non-flow-limiting vulnerable plaque with high-risk features. It will provide compelling evidence to determine whether PCI of focal vulnerable plaques on top of OMT improves patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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