3,070 results on '"Colantuoni, A"'
Search Results
2. A Switch from Glial to Neuronal Gene Expression Alterations in the Spinal Cord of SIV-infected Macaques on Antiretroviral Therapy
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Mulka, Kathleen R., Queen, Suzanne E., Mangus, Lisa M., Beck, Sarah E., Knight, Audrey C., McCarron, Megan E., Solis, Clarisse V., Wizzard, Arlon J., Jayaram, Jyotsna, Colantuoni, Carlo, and Mankowski, Joseph L.
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- 2024
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3. Gene expression signatures in blood from a West African sepsis cohort define host response phenotypes
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Chenoweth, Josh G., Colantuoni, Carlo, Striegel, Deborah A., Genzor, Pavol, Brandsma, Joost, Blair, Paul W., Krishnan, Subramaniam, Chiyka, Elizabeth, Fazli, Mehran, Mehta, Rittal, Considine, Michael, Cope, Leslie, Knight, Audrey C., Elayadi, Anissa, Fox, Anne, Hertzano, Ronna, Letizia, Andrew G., Owusu-Ofori, Alex, Boakye, Isaac, Aduboffour, Albert A., Ansong, Daniel, Biney, Eno, Oduro, George, Schully, Kevin L., and Clark, Danielle V.
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- 2024
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4. Insights for disease modeling from single-cell transcriptomics of iPSC-derived Ngn2-induced neurons and astrocytes across differentiation time and co-culture
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Das, D., Sonthalia, S., Stein-O.’Brien, G., Wahbeh, MH., Feuer, K., Goff, L., Colantuoni, C., Mahairaki, V., and Avramopoulos, D.
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- 2024
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5. Single-cell genomics reveals region-specific developmental trajectories underlying neuronal diversity in the human hypothalamus.
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Herb, Brian, Glover, Hannah, Bhaduri, Aparna, Colantuoni, Carlo, Bale, Tracy, Siletti, Kimberly, Hodge, Rebecca, Lein, Ed, Doege, Claudia, Ament, Seth, and Kriegstein, Arnold
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Mice ,Animals ,Humans ,Hypothalamus ,Neurons ,Transcriptome ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Genomics - Abstract
The development and diversity of neuronal subtypes in the human hypothalamus has been insufficiently characterized. To address this, we integrated transcriptomic data from 241,096 cells (126,840 newly generated) in the prenatal and adult human hypothalamus to reveal a temporal trajectory from proliferative stem cell populations to mature hypothalamic cell types. Iterative clustering of the adult neurons identified 108 robust transcriptionally distinct neuronal subtypes representing 10 hypothalamic nuclei. Pseudotime trajectories provided insights into the genes driving formation of these nuclei. Comparisons to single-cell transcriptomic data from the mouse hypothalamus suggested extensive conservation of neuronal subtypes despite certain differences in species-enriched gene expression. The uniqueness of hypothalamic neuronal lineages was examined developmentally by comparing excitatory lineages present in cortex and inhibitory lineages in ganglionic eminence, revealing both distinct and shared drivers of neuronal maturation across the human forebrain. These results provide a comprehensive transcriptomic view of human hypothalamus development through gestation and adulthood at cellular resolution.
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- 2023
6. Combined SERS-Raman screening of HER2-overexpressing or silenced breast cancer cell lines
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Sara Spaziani, Alessandro Esposito, Giovannina Barisciano, Giuseppe Quero, Satheeshkumar Elumalai, Manuela Leo, Vittorio Colantuoni, Maria Mangini, Marco Pisco, Lina Sabatino, Anna Chiara De Luca, and Andrea Cusano
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Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Breast cancer (BC) is a heterogeneous neoplasm characterized by several subtypes. One of the most aggressive with high metastasis rates presents overexpression of the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). A quantitative evaluation of HER2 levels is essential for a correct diagnosis, selection of the most appropriate therapeutic strategy and monitoring the response to therapy. Results In this paper, we propose the synergistic use of SERS and Raman technologies for the identification of HER2 expressing cells and its accurate assessment. To this end, we selected SKBR3 and MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cell lines, which have the highest and lowest HER2 expression, respectively, and MCF10A, a non-tumorigenic cell line from normal breast epithelium for comparison. The combined approach provides a quantitative estimate of HER2 expression and visualization of its distribution on the membrane at single cell level, clearly identifying cancer cells. Moreover, it provides a more comprehensive picture of the investigated cells disclosing a metabolic signature represented by an elevated content of proteins and aromatic amino acids. We further support these data by silencing the HER2 gene in SKBR3 cells, using the RNA interference technology, generating stable clones further analysed with the same combined methodology. Significant changes in HER2 expression are detected at single cell level before and after HER2 silencing and the HER2 status correlates with variations of fatty acids and downstream signalling molecule contents in the context of the general metabolic rewiring occurring in cancer cells. Specifically, HER2 silencing does reduce the growth ability but not the lipid metabolism that, instead, increases, suggesting that higher fatty acids biosynthesis and metabolism can occur independently of the proliferating potential tied to HER2 overexpression. Conclusions Our results clearly demonstrate the efficacy of the combined SERS and Raman approach to definitely pose a correct diagnosis, further supported by the data obtained by the HER2 gene silencing. Furthermore, they pave the way to a new approach to monitor the efficacy of pharmacologic treatments with the aim to tailor personalized therapies and optimize patients’ outcome.
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- 2024
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7. Gene expression signatures in blood from a West African sepsis cohort define host response phenotypes
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Josh G. Chenoweth, Carlo Colantuoni, Deborah A. Striegel, Pavol Genzor, Joost Brandsma, Paul W. Blair, Subramaniam Krishnan, Elizabeth Chiyka, Mehran Fazli, Rittal Mehta, Michael Considine, Leslie Cope, Audrey C. Knight, Anissa Elayadi, Anne Fox, Ronna Hertzano, Andrew G. Letizia, Alex Owusu-Ofori, Isaac Boakye, Albert A. Aduboffour, Daniel Ansong, Eno Biney, George Oduro, Kevin L. Schully, and Danielle V. Clark
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Our limited understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms that operate during sepsis is an obstacle to rational treatment and clinical trial design. There is a critical lack of data from low- and middle-income countries where the sepsis burden is increased which inhibits generalized strategies for therapeutic intervention. Here we perform RNA sequencing of whole blood to investigate longitudinal host response to sepsis in a Ghanaian cohort. Data dimensional reduction reveals dynamic gene expression patterns that describe cell type-specific molecular phenotypes including a dysregulated myeloid compartment shared between sepsis and COVID-19. The gene expression signatures reported here define a landscape of host response to sepsis that supports interventions via targeting immunophenotypes to improve outcomes.
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- 2024
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8. Insights for disease modeling from single-cell transcriptomics of iPSC-derived Ngn2-induced neurons and astrocytes across differentiation time and co-culture
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D. Das, S. Sonthalia, G. Stein-O.’Brien, MH. Wahbeh, K. Feuer, L. Goff, C. Colantuoni, V. Mahairaki, and D. Avramopoulos
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Schizophrenia ,Autism ,Alzheimer’s ,Transcriptome ,Single cell ,Induced pluripotent stem cells ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Trans-differentiation of human-induced pluripotent stem cells into neurons via Ngn2-induction (hiPSC-N) has become an efficient system to quickly generate neurons a likely significant advance for disease modeling and in vitro assay development. Recent single-cell interrogation of Ngn2-induced neurons, however, has revealed some similarities to unexpected neuronal lineages. Similarly, a straightforward method to generate hiPSC-derived astrocytes (hiPSC-A) for the study of neuropsychiatric disorders has also been described. Results Here, we examine the homogeneity and similarity of hiPSC-N and hiPSC-A to their in vivo counterparts, the impact of different lengths of time post Ngn2 induction on hiPSC-N (15 or 21 days), and the impact of hiPSC-N/hiPSC-A co-culture. Leveraging the wealth of existing public single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) data in Ngn2-induced neurons and in vivo data from the developing brain, we provide perspectives on the lineage origins and maturation of hiPSC-N and hiPSC-A. While induction protocols in different labs produce consistent cell type profiles, both hiPSC-N and hiPSC-A show significant heterogeneity and similarity to multiple in vivo cell fates, and both more precisely approximate their in vivo counterparts when co-cultured. Gene expression data from the hiPSC-N show enrichment of genes linked to schizophrenia (SZ) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) as has been previously shown for neural stem cells and neurons. These overrepresentations of disease genes are strongest in our system at early times (day 15) in Ngn2-induction/maturation of neurons, when we also observe the greatest similarity to early in vivo excitatory neurons. We have assembled this new scRNA-seq data along with the public data explored here as an integrated biologist-friendly web-resource for researchers seeking to understand this system more deeply: https://nemoanalytics.org/p?l=DasEtAlNGN2&g=NES . Conclusions While overall we support the use of the investigated cellular models for the study of neuropsychiatric disease, we also identify important limitations. We hope that this work will contribute to understanding and optimizing cellular modeling for complex brain disorders.
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- 2024
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9. Participant retention in follow-up studies of intensive care unit survivors – A scoping review
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Sree Cherukuri, Sai Phani, Dhonten, Ngawang, Hiser, Stephanie, Kota, Pooja, Nikooie, Roozbeh, Seth, Bhavna, Thondamala, Vishwanath, Young, Daniel L., Al-Ani, Awsse, Lakhmalla, Mounika, Raman, Vaishnavi, Fatima, Arooj, Friedman, Lisa Aronson, Challa, Suryanarayana Reddy, Vasishta, Sumana, Koneru, Mounica, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Needham, Dale M., and Dinglas, Victor D.
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- 2024
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10. Individual variation in the emergence of anterior-to-posterior neural fates from human pluripotent stem cells
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Kim, Suel-Kee, Seo, Seungmae, Stein-O’Brien, Genevieve, Jaishankar, Amritha, Ogawa, Kazuya, Micali, Nicola, Luria, Victor, Karger, Amir, Wang, Yanhong, Kim, Hyojin, Hyde, Thomas M., Kleinman, Joel E., Voss, Ty, Fertig, Elana J., Shin, Joo-Heon, Bürli, Roland, Cross, Alan J., Brandon, Nicholas J., Weinberger, Daniel R., Chenoweth, Joshua G., Hoeppner, Daniel J., Sestan, Nenad, Colantuoni, Carlo, and McKay, Ronald D.
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- 2024
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11. An Evaluation of the Efficacy and Safety of Timolol Maleate 0.5% Microdrops Administered with the Nanodropper
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Steger, Jennifer S., Durai, Indira, Odayappan, Annamalai, Raman, Ramalakshmi, Sruthi, Talla, Song, Allisa J., Puthuran, George, Venkatesh, Rengaraj, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, and Robin, Alan L.
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- 2024
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12. Efficacy of adjuvant chemotherapy schedules for breast cancer according to body mass index: results from the phase III GIM2 trial
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Poggio, F., Blondeaux, E., Tagliamento, M., Perachino, M., Nardin, S., Conte, B., Giuliano, M., Arpino, G., De Laurentiis, M., Gravina, A., Bisagni, G., Rimanti, A., Turletti, A., Nisticò, C., Magnolfi, E., Gasparro, S., Fabi, A., Garrone, O., Alicicco, M.G., Urracci, Y., Poletti, P., Correale, P., Molinelli, C., Fozza, A., Puglisi, F., Colantuoni, G., Fregatti, P., Boni, L., Lambertini, M., and Del Mastro, L.
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- 2024
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13. Dynamic Prediction of Post-Acute Care Needs for Hospitalized Medicine Patients
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Young, Daniel L., Hannum, Susan M., Engels, Rebecca, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Friedman, Lisa Aronson, and Hoyer, Erik H.
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- 2024
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14. Evaluating preschool linear growth velocities: an interim reference illustrated in Nepal
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Swetha Manohar, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Andrew Lucian Thorne-Lyman, Binod Shrestha, Ramesh Kant Adhikari, Angela KC, Abhigyna Bhattarai, and Keith Parker West
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Linear growth velocity ,Growth faltering ,Anthropometry ,Growth velocity reference ,Nepal ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: An annualised linear growth velocity (LGV) reference can identify groups of children at risk of growing poorly. As a single velocity reference for all preschool ages does not exist, we present an interim tool, derived from published, normative growth studies, for detecting growth faltering, illustrating its use in Nepali preschoolers. Design: The WHO Child Growth Velocity Standard was adapted to derive 12-month increments and conjoined to the Tanner-Whitehouse Height Velocity Reference data yielding contiguous preschool linear growth annualised velocities. Linear restricted cubic spline regressions were fit to generate sex-specific median and standard normal deviate velocities for ages 0 through 59 months. LGV Z-scores (LGVZ) were constructed, and growth faltering was defined as LGVZ < –2. Setting: Use of the reference was illustrated with data from Nepal’s Tarai region. Participants: Children contributing the existing growth references and a cohort of 4276 Nepali children assessed from 2013 to 2016. Results: Fitted, smoothed LGV reference curves displayed monotonically decreasing 12-month LGV, exemplified by male/female annual medians of 26·4/25·3, 12·1/12·7, 9·1/9·4, 7·7/7·8 and 7/7 cm/years, starting at 0, 12, 24, 36 and 48 months, respectively. Applying the referent, 31·1 %, 28·6 % and 29·3 % of Nepali children
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- 2023
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15. Development of High-Loading Trastuzumab PLGA Nanoparticles: A Powerful Tool Against HER2 Positive Breast Cancer Cells
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Caputo TM, Barisciano G, Mulè C, Cusano AM, Aliberti A, Muccillo L, Colantuoni V, Sabatino L, and Cusano A
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plga nanoparticles ,double-emulsion method ,trastuzumab ,breast cancer ,signaling transduction. ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Tania Mariastella Caputo,1,* Giovannina Barisciano,2,* Chiara Mulè,1 Angela Maria Cusano,3 Anna Aliberti,1 Livio Muccillo,2 Vittorio Colantuoni,2 Lina Sabatino,2 Andrea Cusano1,3 1Optoelectronics Group, Department of Engineering, University of Sannio, Benevento, Italy; 2Department of Sciences and Technologies, University of Sannio, Benevento, Italy; 3CeRICTscrl Regional Center Information Communication Technology, Benevento, Italy*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Anna Aliberti; Lina Sabatino, Email anna.aliberti@unisannio.it; sabatino@unisannio.itBackground: Trastuzumab, a therapeutic monoclonal antibody directed against HER2, is routinely used to treat HER2-positive breast cancer with a good response rate. However, concerns have arisen in the clinical practice due to adverse side effects. One way to overcome these limitations is to encapsulate trastuzumab in nanoparticles to improve cytotoxic activity, increase intracellular drug concentrations, escape the immune system and avoid systemic degradation of the drug in vivo.Methods: A double emulsion method was used to encapsulate trastuzumab into poly(lactic-co-glycolic) nanoparticles, effective for their biocompatibility and biodegradability. These nanocarriers, hereafter referred to as TZPs, were characterised in terms of size, homogeneity, zeta potential and tested for their stability and drug release kinetics. Finally, the TZPs cytotoxicity was assessed in vitro on the HER2 positive SKBR3 breast cancer cell line and compared to free trastuzumab.Results: The TZPs were stable, homogeneous in size, with a reduced zeta potential. They showed higher encapsulation efficiency and drug loading, a prolonged trastuzumab release kinetics that retained its physicochemical properties and functionality. TZPs showed a stronger cytotoxicity and increased apoptosis than similar doses of free trastuzumab in the cell line analysed. Confocal microscopy and flow cytometry assessed TZPs and trastuzumab cellular uptake while Western blot evaluated downstream signalling, overall HER2 content and shedding.Conclusion: TZPs exert more robust effects than free trastuzumab via a dual mode of action: TZPs are taken up by cells through an endocytosis mechanism and release the drug intracellularly for longer time. Additionally, the TZPs that remain in the extracellular space release trastuzumab which binds to the cognate receptor and impairs downstream signalling. This is the sole modality used by free trastuzumab. Remarkably, half dose of TZPs is as efficacious as the highest dose of free drug supporting their possible use for drug delivery in vivo. Keywords: PLGA nanoparticles, double-emulsion method, trastuzumab, breast cancer, signaling transduction
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- 2023
16. A transcriptomic and epigenomic cell atlas of the mouse primary motor cortex
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Yao, Zizhen, Liu, Hanqing, Xie, Fangming, Fischer, Stephan, Adkins, Ricky S, Aldridge, Andrew I, Ament, Seth A, Bartlett, Anna, Behrens, M Margarita, Van den Berge, Koen, Bertagnolli, Darren, de Bézieux, Hector Roux, Biancalani, Tommaso, Booeshaghi, A Sina, Bravo, Héctor Corrada, Casper, Tamara, Colantuoni, Carlo, Crabtree, Jonathan, Creasy, Heather, Crichton, Kirsten, Crow, Megan, Dee, Nick, Dougherty, Elizabeth L, Doyle, Wayne I, Dudoit, Sandrine, Fang, Rongxin, Felix, Victor, Fong, Olivia, Giglio, Michelle, Goldy, Jeff, Hawrylycz, Mike, Herb, Brian R, Hertzano, Ronna, Hou, Xiaomeng, Hu, Qiwen, Kancherla, Jayaram, Kroll, Matthew, Lathia, Kanan, Li, Yang Eric, Lucero, Jacinta D, Luo, Chongyuan, Mahurkar, Anup, McMillen, Delissa, Nadaf, Naeem M, Nery, Joseph R, Nguyen, Thuc Nghi, Niu, Sheng-Yong, Ntranos, Vasilis, Orvis, Joshua, Osteen, Julia K, Pham, Thanh, Pinto-Duarte, Antonio, Poirion, Olivier, Preissl, Sebastian, Purdom, Elizabeth, Rimorin, Christine, Risso, Davide, Rivkin, Angeline C, Smith, Kimberly, Street, Kelly, Sulc, Josef, Svensson, Valentine, Tieu, Michael, Torkelson, Amy, Tung, Herman, Vaishnav, Eeshit Dhaval, Vanderburg, Charles R, van Velthoven, Cindy, Wang, Xinxin, White, Owen R, Huang, Z Josh, Kharchenko, Peter V, Pachter, Lior, Ngai, John, Regev, Aviv, Tasic, Bosiljka, Welch, Joshua D, Gillis, Jesse, Macosko, Evan Z, Ren, Bing, Ecker, Joseph R, Zeng, Hongkui, and Mukamel, Eran A
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Human Genome ,Neurosciences ,Genetics ,Bioengineering ,Biotechnology ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Neurological ,Animals ,Atlases as Topic ,Datasets as Topic ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Epigenomics ,Female ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Male ,Mice ,Motor Cortex ,Neurons ,Organ Specificity ,Reproducibility of Results ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Transcriptome ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Single-cell transcriptomics can provide quantitative molecular signatures for large, unbiased samples of the diverse cell types in the brain1-3. With the proliferation of multi-omics datasets, a major challenge is to validate and integrate results into a biological understanding of cell-type organization. Here we generated transcriptomes and epigenomes from more than 500,000 individual cells in the mouse primary motor cortex, a structure that has an evolutionarily conserved role in locomotion. We developed computational and statistical methods to integrate multimodal data and quantitatively validate cell-type reproducibility. The resulting reference atlas-containing over 56 neuronal cell types that are highly replicable across analysis methods, sequencing technologies and modalities-is a comprehensive molecular and genomic account of the diverse neuronal and non-neuronal cell types in the mouse primary motor cortex. The atlas includes a population of excitatory neurons that resemble pyramidal cells in layer 4 in other cortical regions4. We further discovered thousands of concordant marker genes and gene regulatory elements for these cell types. Our results highlight the complex molecular regulation of cell types in the brain and will directly enable the design of reagents to target specific cell types in the mouse primary motor cortex for functional analysis.
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- 2021
17. Design of Clinical Trials Evaluating Sedation in Critically Ill Adults Undergoing Mechanical Ventilation: Recommendations From Sedation Consortium on Endpoints and Procedures for Treatment, Education, and Research (SCEPTER) Recommendation III
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Ward, Denham S, Absalom, Anthony R, Aitken, Leanne M, Balas, Michele C, Brown, David L, Burry, Lisa, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Coursin, Douglas, Devlin, John W, Dexter, Franklin, Dworkin, Robert H, Egan, Talmage D, Elliott, Doug, Egerod, Ingrid, Flood, Pamela, Fraser, Gilles L, Girard, Timothy D, Gozal, David, Hopkins, Ramona O, Kress, John, Maze, Mervyn, Needham, Dale M, Pandharipande, Pratik, Riker, Richard, Sessler, Daniel I, Shafer, Steven L, Shehabi, Yahya, Spies, Claudia, Sun, Lena S, Tung, Avery, and Urman, Richard D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Generic health relevance ,Quality Education ,Congresses as Topic ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,District of Columbia ,Humans ,Hypnotics and Sedatives ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Time Factors ,clinical trial ,intensive care ,outcome assessments ,research methodology ,sedation ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesClinical trials evaluating the safety and effectiveness of sedative medication use in critically ill adults undergoing mechanical ventilation differ considerably in their methodological approach. This heterogeneity impedes the ability to compare results across studies. The Sedation Consortium on Endpoints and Procedures for Treatment, Education, and Research Recommendations convened a meeting of multidisciplinary experts to develop recommendations for key methodologic elements of sedation trials in the ICU to help guide academic and industry clinical investigators.DesignA 2-day in-person meeting was held in Washington, DC, on March 28-29, 2019, followed by a three-round, online modified Delphi consensus process.ParticipantsThirty-six participants from academia, industry, and the Food and Drug Administration with expertise in relevant content areas, including two former ICU patients attended the in-person meeting, and the majority completed an online follow-up survey and participated in the modified Delphi process.Measurements and main resultsThe final recommendations were iteratively refined based on the survey results, participants' reactions to those results, summaries written by panel moderators, and a review of the meeting transcripts made from audio recordings. Fifteen recommendations were developed for study design and conduct, subject enrollment, outcomes, and measurement instruments. Consensus recommendations included obtaining input from ICU survivors and/or their families, ensuring adequate training for personnel using validated instruments for assessments of sedation, pain, and delirium in the ICU environment, and the need for methodological standardization.ConclusionsThese recommendations are intended to assist researchers in the design, conduct, selection of endpoints, and reporting of clinical trials involving sedative medications and/or sedation protocols for adult ICU patients who require mechanical ventilation. These recommendations should be viewed as a starting point to improve clinical trials and help reduce methodological heterogeneity in future clinical trials.
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- 2021
18. Instrument adaptation and preliminary validation study of the Laryngeal Hypersensitivity Questionnaire used for assessment of laryngeal symptoms in patients with artificial airways
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Brodsky, Martin B., Friedman, Lisa Aronson, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Pandian, Vinciya, Vertigan, Anne E., Needham, Dale M., and Chan, Kitty S.
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- 2024
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19. Diagnostic stewardship for blood cultures in the pediatric intensive care unit: lessons in implementation from the BrighT STAR Collaborative
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Charlotte Z. Woods-Hill, Danielle W. Koontz, Anping Xie, Elizabeth A. Colantuoni, Anna Sick-Samuels, Marlene R. Miller, Abigail Arthur, Anushree Aneja, Urmi Kumar, Aaron M. Milstone, and for the Brigh T STAR authorship group
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: BrighT STAR was a diagnostic stewardship collaborative of 14 pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) across the United States designed to standardize and reduce unnecessary blood cultures and study the impact on patient outcomes and broad-spectrum antibiotic use. We now examine the implementation process in detail to understand how sites facilitated this diagnostic stewardship program in their PICUs. Design: A multi-center electronic survey of the 14 BrighT STAR sites, based on qualitative data about the implementation process collected during the primary phase of BrighT STAR. Setting: 14 PICUs enrolled in BrighT STAR. Participants: Site leads at each enrolled site. Methods: An electronic survey guided by implementation science literature and based on data collected during BrighT STAR was administered to all 14 sites after completion of the primary phase of the collaborative. Results: 10 specific tasks appear critical to implementing blood culture diagnostic stewardship, with variability in site-level strategies employed to accomplish those tasks. Sites rated certain tasks and strategies as highly important. Strategies used in top-performing sites were distinct from those used in lower-performing sites. Certain strategies may link to drivers of culture overuse and represent key targets for changing clinician behavior. Conclusions: BrighT STAR offers important insights into the tasks and strategies used to facilitate successful diagnostic stewardship in the PICU. More work is needed to compare specific strategies and optimize stewardship outcomes in this complex environment. Clinical trial registry information: Blood Culture Improvement Guidelines and Diagnostic Stewardship for Antibiotic Reduction in Critically Ill Children (Bright STAR). NCT03441126. https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03441126?term=Bright%20STAR&aggFilters=status:com&checkSpell=false&rank=1
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- 2024
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20. Impact of liver fibrosis on COVID-19 in-hospital mortality in Southern Italy
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Raffaele Galiero, Giuseppe Loffredo, Vittorio Simeon, Alfredo Caturano, Erica Vetrano, Giulia Medicamento, Maria Alfano, Domenico Beccia, Chiara Brin, Sara Colantuoni, Jessica Di Salvo, Raffaella Epifani, Riccardo Nevola, Raffaele Marfella, Celestino Sardu, Carmine Coppola, Ferdinando Scarano, Paolo Maggi, Cecilia Calabrese, Pellegrino De Lucia Sposito, Carolina Rescigno, Costanza Sbreglia, Fiorentino Fraganza, Roberto Parrella, Annamaria Romano, Giosuele Calabria, Benedetto Polverino, Antonio Pagano, Fabio Numis, Carolina Bologna, Mariagrazia Nunziata, Vincenzo Esposito, Nicola Coppola, Nicola Maturo, Rodolfo Nasti, Pierpaolo Di Micco, Alessandro Perrella, Luigi Elio Adinolfi, Paolo Chiodini, Marina Di Domenico, Luca Rinaldi, and Ferdinando Carlo Sasso
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Medicine ,Science - Published
- 2024
21. Editorial: Vascular function and mechanisms of aging: hypertension, obesity and metabolic disorders
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Eduardo Nava, Andreea Trache, Alejandro Diaz, and Antonio Colantuoni
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vascular function ,aging ,hypertension ,obesity ,metabolic syndrome ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Published
- 2024
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22. Impact of a multifaceted early mobility intervention for critically ill children — the PICU Up! trial: study protocol for a multicenter stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
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Azamfirei, Razvan, Mennie, Colleen, Dinglas, Victor D., Fatima, Arooj, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Gurses, Ayse P., Balas, Michele C., Needham, Dale M., and Kudchadkar, Sapna R.
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- 2023
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23. The Effect of a Quality Improvement Intervention on Sleep and Delirium in Critically Ill Patients in a Surgical ICU.
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Tonna, Joseph, Dalton, Anna, Presson, Angela, Zhang, Chong, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Lander, Kirsten, Howard, Sullivan, Beynon, Julia, and Kamdar, Biren
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critical care ,delirium ,sleep ,sleep hygiene ,wakefulness ,Cardiology Service ,Hospital ,Critical Care ,Critical Illness ,Delirium ,Dyssomnias ,Female ,Humans ,Intensive Care Units ,Light Pollution ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Noise ,Outcome and Process Assessment ,Health Care ,Patient Care Bundles ,Protective Devices ,Quality Improvement ,Sleep Quality ,Sleep Wake Disorders - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delirium is a deleterious condition affecting up to 60% of patients in the surgical ICU (SICU). Few SICU-focused delirium interventions have been implemented, including those addressing sleep-wake disruption, a modifiable delirium risk factor common in critically ill patients. RESEARCH QUESTION: What is the effect on delirium and sleep quality of a multicomponent nonpharmacologic intervention aimed at improving sleep-wake disruption in patients in the SICU setting? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Using a staggered pre-post design, we implemented a quality improvement intervention in two SICUs (general surgery or trauma and cardiovascular) in an academic medical center. After a preintervention (baseline) period, a multicomponent unit-wide nighttime (ie, efforts to minimize unnecessary sound and light, provision of earplugs and eye masks) and daytime (ie, raising blinds, promotion of physical activity) intervention bundle was implemented. A daily checklist was used to prompt staff to complete intervention bundle elements. Delirium was evaluated twice daily using the Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit. Patient sleep quality ratings were evaluated daily using the Richards-Campbell Sleep Questionnaire (RCSQ). RESULTS: Six hundred forty-six SICU admissions (332 baseline, 314 intervention) were analyzed. Median age was 61 years (interquartile range, 49-70 years); 35% of the cohort were women and 83% were White. During the intervention period, patients experienced fewer days of delirium (proportion ± SD of ICU days, 15 ± 27%) as compared with the preintervention period (20 ± 31%; P = .022), with an adjusted pre-post decrease of 4.9% (95% CI, 0.5%-9.2%; P = .03). Overall RCSQ-perceived sleep quality ratings did not change, but the RCSQ noise subscore increased (9.5% [95% CI, 1.1%-17.5%; P = .02). INTERPRETATION: Our multicomponent intervention was associated with a significant reduction in the proportion of days patients experienced delirium, reinforcing the feasibility and effectiveness of a nonpharmacologic sleep-wake bundle to reduce delirium in critically ill patients in the SICU. TRIAL REGISTRY: ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT03313115; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.
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- 2021
24. Eliminating accidental deviations to minimize generalization error and maximize replicability: Applications in connectomics and genomics.
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Bridgeford, Eric W, Wang, Shangsi, Wang, Zeyi, Xu, Ting, Craddock, Cameron, Dey, Jayanta, Kiar, Gregory, Gray-Roncal, William, Colantuoni, Carlo, Douville, Christopher, Noble, Stephanie, Priebe, Carey E, Caffo, Brian, Milham, Michael, Zuo, Xi-Nian, Consortium for Reliability and Reproducibility, and Vogelstein, Joshua T
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Consortium for Reliability and Reproducibility ,Humans ,Artifacts ,Brain Mapping ,Reproducibility of Results ,Genome ,Connectome ,Datasets as Topic ,Clinical Research ,Mathematical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Bioinformatics - Abstract
Replicability, the ability to replicate scientific findings, is a prerequisite for scientific discovery and clinical utility. Troublingly, we are in the midst of a replicability crisis. A key to replicability is that multiple measurements of the same item (e.g., experimental sample or clinical participant) under fixed experimental constraints are relatively similar to one another. Thus, statistics that quantify the relative contributions of accidental deviations-such as measurement error-as compared to systematic deviations-such as individual differences-are critical. We demonstrate that existing replicability statistics, such as intra-class correlation coefficient and fingerprinting, fail to adequately differentiate between accidental and systematic deviations in very simple settings. We therefore propose a novel statistic, discriminability, which quantifies the degree to which an individual's samples are relatively similar to one another, without restricting the data to be univariate, Gaussian, or even Euclidean. Using this statistic, we introduce the possibility of optimizing experimental design via increasing discriminability and prove that optimizing discriminability improves performance bounds in subsequent inference tasks. In extensive simulated and real datasets (focusing on brain imaging and demonstrating on genomics), only optimizing data discriminability improves performance on all subsequent inference tasks for each dataset. We therefore suggest that designing experiments and analyses to optimize discriminability may be a crucial step in solving the replicability crisis, and more generally, mitigating accidental measurement error.
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- 2021
25. Association of Longitudinal Mobility Levels in the Hospital and Injurious Inpatient Falls
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Hoyer, Erik, Young, Daniel, Ke, Victor, Zhang, Jia Yi, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Farley, Holley, Dahbura, Anton, and Ghobadi, Kimia
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- 2024
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26. 1280: BLOODSTREAM INFECTION REDUCTION AFTER THE BRIGHT STAR PICU DIAGNOSTIC STEWARDSHIP COLLABORATIVE
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Woods-Hill, Charlotte, Koontz, Danielle, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Xiao, Shaoming, Xie, Anping, Miller, Marlene, Fackler, James, and Milstone, Aaron
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- 2024
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27. A Survey of PICU Clinician Practices and Perceptions regarding Respiratory Cultures in the Evaluation of Ventilator-Associated Infections in the BrighT STAR Collaborative
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Sick-Samuels, Anna C., Koontz, Danielle W., Xie, Anping, Kelly, Daniel, Woods-Hill, Charlotte Z., Aneja, Anushree, Xiao, Shaoming, Colantuoni, Elizabeth A., Marsteller, Jill, and Milstone, Aaron M.
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- 2024
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28. Cochlear organoids reveal transcriptional programs of postnatal hair cell differentiation from supporting cells
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Kalra, Gurmannat, Lenz, Danielle, Abdul-Aziz, Dunia, Hanna, Craig, Basu, Mahashweta, Herb, Brian R., Colantuoni, Carlo, Milon, Beatrice, Saxena, Madhurima, Shetty, Amol C., Hertzano, Ronna, Shivdasani, Ramesh A., Ament, Seth A., and Edge, Albert S.B.
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- 2023
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29. Application of Participatory Ergonomics to the Dissemination of a Quality Improvement Program for Optimizing Blood Culture Use
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Xie, Anping, Koontz, Danielle W., Colantuoni, Elizabeth A., Voskertchian, Annie, Miller, Marlene R., Fackler, James C., Milstone, Aaron M., and Woods-Hill, Charlotte Z.
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- 2023
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30. The Neuroscience Multi-Omic Archive: a BRAIN Initiative resource for single-cell transcriptomic and epigenomic data from the mammalian brain.
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Seth A. Ament, Ricky S. Adkins, Robert Carter, Elena Chrysostomou, Carlo Colantuoni, Jonathan Crabtree, Heather Huot Creasy, Kylee Degatano, Victor Felix, Peter Gandt, Gwenn a Garden, Michelle G. Giglio, Brian R. Herb, Farzaneh Khajouei, Elizabeth Kiernan, Carrie McCracken, Kennedy McDaniel, Suvarna Nadendla, Lance Nickel, Dustin Olley, Joshua Orvis, Joseph P. Receveur, Mike Schor, Shreyash Sonthalia, Timothy L. Tickle, Jessica Way, Ronna Hertzano, Anup A. Mahurkar, and Owen R. White
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- 2023
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31. 16 Sociodemographic and Hospital-Level Characteristics Associated with Hospital-Onset Bacteremia in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
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Aaron Milstone, Shaoming Xiao, Elizabeth Colantuoni, and Erica Prochaska
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Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: The primary objective is to measure the independent association of hospital-level and sociodemographic variables on the rate of hospital-onset bacteremia among infants admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit in a United States of America retrospective cohort. The secondary outcome will be relative blood culture collection rate. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: The study is an analysis of a retrospective cohort comprised of infants admitted to 322 neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in the United States of America between 2016-2021. The primary outcome will be hospital-onset bacteremia (HOB), defined as a positive blood culture with a bacteria or fungi after day 3 of admission. Independent risk factors will include birthweight, postnatal age, central venous catheter presence, sociodemographic variables (race, ethnicity, insurance status and ZIP code-level demographic data from the US Census American Community Survey (ACS), and hospital-level variables. Infants will be stratified by sociodemographic groups and a Poisson model will be utilized to measure the adjusted association between risk of HOB and clinical and hospital-level variables. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: I anticipate that infants in sociodemographic groups with a history of socioeconomic marginalization will have a higher unadjusted rate of HOB; however, sociodemographic variables will not be independently associated with HOB risk after adjusting for markers of hospital quality and acuity, such as quartiles of the following: mean admissions per year, percentage of infants born
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- 2024
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32. Cochlear organoids reveal transcriptional programs of postnatal hair cell differentiation from supporting cells
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Gurmannat Kalra, Danielle Lenz, Dunia Abdul-Aziz, Craig Hanna, Mahashweta Basu, Brian R. Herb, Carlo Colantuoni, Beatrice Milon, Madhurima Saxena, Amol C. Shetty, Ronna Hertzano, Ramesh A. Shivdasani, Seth A. Ament, and Albert S.B. Edge
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CP: Stem cell research ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: We explore the changes in chromatin accessibility and transcriptional programs for cochlear hair cell differentiation from postmitotic supporting cells using organoids from postnatal cochlea. The organoids contain cells with transcriptional signatures of differentiating vestibular and cochlear hair cells. Construction of trajectories identifies Lgr5+ cells as progenitors for hair cells, and the genomic data reveal gene regulatory networks leading to hair cells. We validate these networks, demonstrating dynamic changes both in expression and predicted binding sites of transcription factors (TFs) during organoid differentiation. We identify known regulators of hair cell development, Atoh1, Pou4f3, and Gfi1, and the analysis predicts the regulatory factors Tcf4, an E-protein and heterodimerization partner of Atoh1, and Ddit3, a CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein (C/EBP) that represses Hes1 and activates transcription of Wnt-signaling-related genes. Deciphering the signals for hair cell regeneration from mammalian cochlear supporting cells reveals candidates for hair cell (HC) regeneration, which is limited in the adult.
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- 2023
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33. Use of actigraphy to characterize inactivity and activity in patients in a medical ICU
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Gupta, Prerna, Martin, Jennifer L, Needham, Dale M, Vangala, Sitaram, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, and Kamdar, Biren B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Actigraphy ,Critical Care ,Critical Illness ,Humans ,Intensive Care Units ,Length of Stay ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Activity ,Inactivity ,Critical illness ,ICU ,Mobilization ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Nursing ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundIn the intensive care unit (ICU), inactivity is common, contributing to ICU-acquired weakness and poor outcomes. Actigraphy may be useful for measuring activity in the ICU.ObjectivesTo use actigraphy to characterize inactivity and activity in critically ill patients.MethodsThis prospective observational study involved 48-h wrist actigraphy in medical ICU (MICU) patients, with activity data captured across 30-s epochs. Inactivity (zero-activity epochs) and activity (levels of non-zero activity) were summarized across key patient (e.g., age) and clinical (e.g., mechanical ventilation status) variables, and compared using multivariable regression.ResultsOverall, 189,595 30-s epochs were collected in 34 MICU patients. Zero-activity (inactivity) comprised 122,865 (65%) of epochs; these epochs were 24% and 13% more prevalent, respectively, in patients receiving mechanical ventilation (versus none, p
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- 2020
34. Impact of a multifaceted early mobility intervention for critically ill children — the PICU Up! trial: study protocol for a multicenter stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
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Razvan Azamfirei, Colleen Mennie, Victor D. Dinglas, Arooj Fatima, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Ayse P. Gurses, Michele C. Balas, Dale M. Needham, Sapna R. Kudchadkar, and on behalf of the PICU Up! Investigators
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Critical care ,Intensive care unit ,Pediatrics ,Rehabilitation ,Cluster randomized controlled trial ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Over 50% of all critically ill children develop preventable intensive care unit-acquired morbidity. Early and progressive mobility is associated with improved outcomes in critically ill adults including shortened duration of mechanical ventilation and improved muscle strength. However, the clinical effectiveness of early and progressive mobility in the pediatric intensive care unit has never been rigorously studied. The objective of the study is to evaluate if the PICU Up! intervention, delivered in real-world conditions, decreases mechanical ventilation duration (primary outcome) and improves delirium and functional status compared to usual care in critically ill children. Additionally, the study aims to identify factors associated with reliable PICU Up! delivery. Methods The PICU Up! trial is a stepped-wedge, cluster-randomized trial of a pragmatic, interprofessional, and multifaceted early mobility intervention (PICU Up!) conducted in 10 pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). The trial’s primary outcome is days alive free of mechanical ventilation (through day 21). Secondary outcomes include days alive and delirium- and coma-free (ADCF), days alive and coma-free (ACF), days alive, as well as functional status at the earlier of PICU discharge or day 21. Over a 2-year period, data will be collected on 1,440 PICU patients. The study includes an embedded process evaluation to identify factors associated with reliable PICU Up! delivery. Discussion This study will examine whether a multifaceted strategy to optimize early mobility affects the duration of mechanical ventilation, delirium incidence, and functional outcomes in critically ill children. This study will provide new and important evidence on ways to optimize short and long-term outcomes for pediatric patients. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04989790. Registered on August 4, 2021.
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- 2023
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35. A unit-based, multi-center evaluation of adopting mobility measures and daily mobility goals in the hospital setting
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Hoyer, Erik H., Friedman, Michael, Lavezza, Annette, Flanagan, Eleni, Kumble, Sowmya, D'Alessandro, Michelle, Gutierrez, Morning, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Brotman, Daniel J., and Young, Daniel L.
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- 2023
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36. The burdens of participation: A mixed-methods study of the effects of a nutrition-sensitive agriculture program on women’s time use in Malawi
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Margolies, Amy, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Morgan, Rosemary, Gelli, Aulo, and Caulfield, Laura
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- 2023
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37. Non-invasive respiratory support in SARS-CoV-2 related acute respiratory distress syndrome: when is it most appropriate to start treatment?
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Riccardo Nevola, Antonio Russo, Samuel Scuotto, Simona Imbriani, Concetta Aprea, Marianna Abitabile, Domenico Beccia, Chiara Brin, Caterina Carusone, Francesca Cinone, Giovanna Cirigliano, Sara Colantuoni, Domenico Cozzolino, Giovanna Cuomo, Micol Del Core, Klodian Gjeloshi, Aldo Marrone, Giulia Medicamento, Luciana Agnese Meo, Francesco Nappo, Andrea Padula, Pia Clara Pafundi, Roberta Ranieri, Carmen Ricozzi, Luca Rinaldi, Ciro Pasquale Romano, Rachele Ruocco, Carolina Ruosi, Annabella Salvati, Ferdinando Carlo Sasso, Ausilia Sellitto, Pino Sommese, Angela Villani, Nicola Coppola, and Luigi Elio Adinolfi
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SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,ARDS ,CPAP ,NIV ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is one of the most severe complications of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Non-Invasive Respiratory Support (NRS) as Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) and/or Non-Invasive Ventilation (NIV) has been proven as effective in the management of SARS-CoV-2-related ARDS. However, the most appropriate timing for start NRS is unknown. Methods We conducted a prospective pilot study including all consecutive patients who developed moderate SARS-CoV-2-related ARDS during hospitalization. Patients were randomly divided into two intervention groups according to ARDS severity (assessed by PaO2/FiO2-P/F) at NRS beginning: group A started CPAP/NIV when P/F was ≤ 200 and group B started CPAP/NIV when P/F was ≤ 150. Eligible patients who did not give their consent to CPAP/NIV until the severe stage of ARDS and started non-invasive treatment when P/F ≤ 100 (group C) was added. The considered outcomes were in-hospital mortality, oro-tracheal intubation (OTI) and days of hospitalization. Results Among 146 eligible patients, 29 underwent CPAP/NIV when P/F was ≤ 200 (Group A), 68 when P/F was ≤ 150 (Group B) and 31 patients agreed to non-invasive treatment only when P/F was ≤ 100 (Group C). Starting NRS at P/F level between 151 and 200 did not results in significant differences in the outcomes as compared to treatment starting with P/F ranging 101–150. Conversely, patients undergone CPAP/NIV in a moderate stage (P/F 101–200) had a significantly lower in-hospital mortality rate (13.4 vs. 29.0%, p = 0.044) and hospitalization length (14 vs. 15 days, p = 0.038) than those in the severe stage (P/F ≤ 100). Age and need for continuous ventilation were independent predictors of CPAP/NIV failure. Conclusions Starting CPAP/NIV in patients with SARS-CoV-2-related ARDS in moderate stage (100 > P/F ≤ 200) is associated to a reduction of both in-hospital mortality and hospitalization length compared to the severe stage (P/F ≤ 100). Starting CPAP/NIV with a P/F > 150 does not appear to be of clinical utility.
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- 2022
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38. Editorial: Methods and applications in vascular physiology: 2022
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Antonio Colantuoni, Julien V. Brugniaux, Alexey Goltsov, and Rosalia Rodriguez-Rodriguez
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vascular physiology ,methods ,protocols ,clinical research ,vascular disease ,diagnostics ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Published
- 2023
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39. Raman and Surface Enhanced Raman spectroscopy analysis of breast cancer cell lines with different HER2 expression profiles
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Spaziani Sara, Esposito Alessandro, Barisciano Giovannina, Quero Giuseppe, Leo Manuela, Colantuoni Vittorio, Mangini Maria, Pisco Marco, Sabatino Lina, De Luca Anna Chiara, and Cusano Andrea
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Assessing HER2 expression in breast cancer cells holds significant diagnostic and prognostic importance. Traditional methods like immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization suffer from low sensitivity and misclassification rates. In this frame, techniques such as vibrational microscopies can ensure, together with low costs and analytical speed, both high accuracy and precision. Herein, we propose a combined Raman and SERS approach for characterizing 4 breast cancer cell lines and normal cells with varying HER2 expression levels. We show that Raman spectroscopy offers a promising alternative, providing unique molecular fingerprints for cell types based on their biochemical signatures. Its non-invasive nature and ability to detect subtle changes in cellular metabolism make it ideal for cancer cell analysis. Coupled with machine learning techniques like PCA and LDA, Raman spectroscopy can classify different breast cancer subcategories accurately. Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) further enhances sensitivity, allowing the detection of single molecules like HER2 receptors. Overall, our results enable fast screening of cancer subpopulation in terms of HER2 concentration and macromolecule cell content. Integration of Raman spectroscopy with SERS offers precise identification and opens avenues for personalized therapies.
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- 2024
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40. Impact of Acute Kidney Injury on the COVID-19 In-Hospital Mortality in Octogenarian Patients: Insights from the COVOCA Study
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Alfredo Caturano, Raffaele Galiero, Erica Vetrano, Giulia Medicamento, Maria Alfano, Domenico Beccia, Chiara Brin, Sara Colantuoni, Jessica Di Salvo, Raffaella Epifani, Riccardo Nevola, Raffaele Marfella, Celestino Sardu, Carmine Coppola, Ferdinando Scarano, Paolo Maggi, Cecilia Calabrese, Pellegrino De Lucia Sposito, Carolina Rescigno, Costanza Sbreglia, Fiorentino Fraganza, Roberto Parrella, Annamaria Romano, Giosuele Calabria, Benedetto Polverino, Antonio Pagano, Fabio Giuliano Numis, Carolina Bologna, Mariagrazia Nunziata, Vincenzo Esposito, Nicola Coppola, Nicola Maturo, Rodolfo Nasti, Pierpaolo Di Micco, Alessandro Perrella, Luigi Elio Adinolfi, Marina Di Domenico, Marcellino Monda, Vincenzo Russo, Roberto Ruggiero, Giovanni Docimo, Luca Rinaldi, and Ferdinando Carlo Sasso
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acute kidney injury ,octogenarian ,COVID-19 ,in-hospital mortality ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Science - Abstract
Background and Aims: The COVID-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, has fundamentally reshaped the landscape of global public health, with some people suffering more adverse clinical outcomes than others. The aim of this study is to deepen our understanding of the specific impact of acute kidney injury (AKI) on the in-hospital mortality in octogenarian patients with COVID-19. Methods: This is a prospective observational cohort study, which involved 23 COVID-19 hospital units in the Campania Region, Italy. Exposure variables were collected during hospital admission and at discharge. Only patients aged ≥80 years were deemed eligible for the study. Results: 197 patients were included in the study (median age 83.0 [82.0–87.0] years; 51.5% men), with a median duration of hospitalization of 15.0 [8.0–25.0] days. From the multivariable Cox regression analysis, after the application of Šidák correction, only the respiratory rate (HR 1.09, 95% CI: 1.04 to 1.14; p < 0.001) and AKI development (HR: 3.40, 95% CI: 1.80 to 6.40; p < 0.001) were independently associated with the primary outcome. Moreover, the Kaplan–Meier analysis showed a significantly different risk of in-hospital mortality between patients with and without AKI (log-rank:
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- 2024
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41. Loss of circadian gene Timeless induces EMT and tumor progression in colorectal cancer via Zeb1-dependent mechanism
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Colangelo, Tommaso, Carbone, Annalucia, Mazzarelli, Francesco, Cuttano, Roberto, Dama, Elisa, Nittoli, Teresa, Albanesi, Jacopo, Barisciano, Giovannina, Forte, Nicola, Palumbo, Orazio, Graziano, Paolo, di Masi, Alessandra, Colantuoni, Vittorio, Sabatino, Lina, Bianchi, Fabrizio, and Mazzoccoli, Gianluigi
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- 2022
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42. Use of a High-Frequency Reciprocating Rig as a Condition Monitoring Tool to Measure Lubricity
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Shah, Raj, primary, Colantuoni, Vincent, additional, and Huq, Nabill, additional
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- 2022
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43. Fluorouracil and dose-dense adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with early-stage breast cancer (GIM2): end-of-study results from a randomised, phase 3 trial
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Venturini, M, Abate, A, Pastorino, S, Canavese, G, Vecchio, C, Guenzi, M, Lambertini, M, Levaggi, A, Giraudi, S, Accortanzo, V, Floris, C.A., Aitini, E, Fornari, G, Miraglia, S, Buonfanti, G, Cherchi, M.C., Petrelli, F, Vaccaro, A, Magnolfi, E, Contu, A, Labianca, R, Parisi, A, Basurto, C, Cappuzzo, F, Merlano, M, Russo, S, Mansutti, M, Poletto, E, Nardi, M, Grasso, D, Fontana, A, Isa, L, Comandè, M, Cavanna, L, Iacobelli, S, Milani, S, Mustacchi, G, Venturini, S, Scinto, A.F., Sarobba, M.G., Pugliese, P, Bernardo, A, Pavese, I, Coccaro, M, Massidda, B, Ionta, M.T., Nuzzo, A, Laudadio, L, Chiantera, V, Dottori, R, Barduagni, M, Castiglione, F, Ciardiello, F, Tinessa, V, Ficorella, A, Moscetti, L, Vallini, I, Giardina, G, Silva, R, Montedoro, M, Seles, E, Morano, F, Cruciani, G, Adamo, V, Pancotti, A, Palmisani, V, Ruggeri, A, Cammilluzzi, E, Carrozza, F, D'Aprile, M, Brunetti, M, Gallotti, P, Chiesa, E, Testore, F, D'Arco, A, Ferro, A, Jirillo, A, Pezzoli, M, Scambia, G, Iacono, C, Masullo, P, Tomasello, G, Gandini, G, Zoboli, A, Bottero, C, Cazzaniga, M, Genua, G, Palazzo, S, D'Amico, M, Perrone, D, Del Mastro, Lucia, Poggio, Francesca, Blondeaux, Eva, De Placido, Sabino, Giuliano, Mario, Forestieri, Valeria, De Laurentiis, Michelino, Gravina, Adriano, Bisagni, Giancarlo, Rimanti, Anita, Turletti, Anna, Nisticò, Cecilia, Vaccaro, Angela, Cognetti, Francesco, Fabi, Alessandra, Gasparro, Simona, Garrone, Ornella, Alicicco, Maria Grazia, Urracci, Ylenia, Mansutti, Mauro, Poletti, Paola, Correale, Pierpaolo, Bighin, Claudia, Puglisi, Fabio, Montemurro, Filippo, Colantuoni, Giuseppe, Lambertini, Matteo, and Boni, Luca
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- 2022
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44. Association of postnatal age with neonatal hospital-onset bacteremia in a multicenter, retrospective cohort
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Erica Prochaska, Shaoming Xiao, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Sagori Mukhopadhyay, Dustin Flannery, Ibukun Kalu, Danielle Zerr, Amanda Adler, and Aaron Milstone
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Prevention of hospital-onset bacteremia (HOB) in all settings is a healthcare priority. The CDC is developing a neonatal-specific HOB quality metric, but the epidemiology of neonatal HOB is poorly understood. Our objective was to validate a prior single-center finding that HOB risk varies by birthweight and postnatal age in a multicenter cohort. Methods: We performed a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of neonates admitted to 4 neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) for ≥4 days between July 1, 2016, and July 1, 2021. HOB was defined as a positive blood culture for bacteria or fungi on day ≥4 of admission. The first HOB event in the hospitalization was counted per neonate. Repeat HOB events during a neonate’s admission were excluded. Poisson regression models with robust variance estimates were used to estimate the incidence rate (IR) of HOB, expressed as HOB events per 1,000 patient days and IR ratios (IRRs), within strata defined by CDC birthweight categories and 4-week postnatal age intervals, adjusting for central venous catheter (CVC) presence at time of HOB and study site. Results: The analysis included 9,267 neonates, contributing 191,295 patient days and 470 HOB events, with an unadjusted IR of 2.46 per 1,000 patient days (Table 1). Of 477 infants born ≤750 g, 153 (30.1%) had a HOB with an IR of 13.3 (95% CI, 10.5–16.0) events per 1,000 patient days in the first 4 weeks after birth (Fig. 1). After adjusting for CVC presence and study site, infants ≤750 g had a higher HOB rate in the first 4 weeks of life (IRR, 7.45; 95% CI, 3.81–14.56) compared to infants ≥2,500 g. After 8 weeks of life, there was no difference in HOB rate in the 2 groups (IRR, 0.8, 95% CI, 0.3–2.7). Conclusions: Neonates born ≤750 g were at highest risk for HOB within the first 4 weeks after birth; however, risk for HOB was not consistent over time. Postnatal age should be considered in a neonatal HOB quality metric.
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- 2023
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45. A national survey of PICU clinician practices and perceptions about respiratory cultures for invasively ventilated patients
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Anna Sick-Samuels, Danielle Koontz, Anping Xie, Daniel Kell, Charlotte Woods-Hill, Anushree Aneja, Shaoming Xiao, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Jill Marsteller, and Aaron Milstone
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Respiratory cultures are commonly obtained from patients with suspicion for ventilator-associated infections (VAIs). In the absence of specimen ordering and collection guidelines, management practices may differ. We characterized current respiratory culture collection practices and perceptions and identified potential barriers to changing practices among a national collaborative of pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). Methods: We conducted an electronic survey of PICU physicians, advanced practice providers (APPs), respiratory therapists (RTs), and nurses at 16 US academic pediatric hospitals across the United States. Positive Likert-scale responses (eg, “agree” and “strongly agree”) were grouped. To account for varying hospital representation, we analyzed the results as the median proportion of participants with that response across the hospitals. Results: After excluding incomplete responses, 568 (44%) of 1,301 invited participants responded (range, 16–107 per site); the median hospital response rate was 60% (range, 17%–83%). Roles included physicians (35%), APPs (10%), RTs (24%), and nurses (31%). Moreover, 44% of the participating units cared for cardiac surgery patients. Across hospitals, specimens are often collected by RTs, followed by nurses, typically via inline endotracheal aspirate for either endotracheal tubes or tracheostomies. Saline lavage is a common practice, but only 4% reported a standardized approach. Examining the likeliness to obtain cultures for different clinical symptoms, the widest variation in responses were for fever and inflammatory markers without respiratory symptoms (median proportion, 68%; IQR, 54%–79%), isolated change in secretion characteristics (67%; IQR, 54%–78%), isolated increased secretions (55%; IQR, 40%–65%), isolated inflammatory markers (49%; IQR, 38%–57%) or isolated fever (49%; IQR, 38%–61%). Overall, 75% (IQR, 70%–86%) of reported respiratory cultures were likely to be obtained as a “pan culture.” Most respondents (median proportion, 69%) felt confident about the indications to obtain cultures, but 60% felt that clinicians had a low threshold, and 84% reported clinical practice variation. Barriers to change included reluctance to change (70%), opinion of consultants (64%), and fear of missing a diagnosis of VAI (62%). Respondents agreed that they would find clinical decision support (CDS) tools helpful (79%). In addition, 83% expected that they would follow CDS, and 82% thought that CDS would help align ICU and/or consulting teams. Conclusions: Among 16 participating hospitals, we detected a lack of standardized respiratory-culture specimen collection and ordering practices. Most respondents agreed that CDS tools would be helpful. Diagnostic stewardship of respiratory cultures using CDS must account for potential reluctance to change and needs to address stakeholder perspectives, including fear of missing infections.
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- 2023
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46. Participant retention in follow-up studies of intensive care unit survivors – A scoping review.
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Young, Daniel L., Al-Ani, Awsse, Lakhmalla, Mounika, Raman, Vaishnavi, Fatima, Arooj, Friedman, Lisa Aronson, Challa, Suryanarayana Reddy, Vasishta, Sumana, Koneru, Mounica, Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Needham, Dale M., and Dinglas, Victor D.
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- 2024
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47. L-Arginine and Taurisolo ® Effects on Brain Hypoperfusion–Reperfusion Damage in Hypertensive Rats.
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Lapi, Dominga, Tenore, Gian Carlo, Federighi, Giuseppe, Chiurazzi, Martina, Nunziato, Santo, Lonardo, Maria S., Stornaiuolo, Mariano, Colantuoni, Antonio, Novellino, Ettore, and Scuri, Rossana
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BLOOD pressure ,CEREBRAL circulation ,LABORATORY rats ,CAROTID artery ,DIETARY supplements ,REPERFUSION - Abstract
Acute and chronic hypertension causes cerebral vasculopathy, increasing the risk of ischemia and stroke. Our study aimed to compare the effects of arterial pressure reduction on the pial microvascular responses induced by hypoperfusion and reperfusion in spontaneously hypertensive Wistar rats, desamethasone-induced hypertensive Wistar rats and age-matched normotensive Wistar rats fed for 3 months with a normal diet or normal diet supplemented with L-arginine or Taurisolo
® or L-arginine plus Taurisolo® . At the end of treatments, the rats were submitted to bilateral occlusion of common carotid arteries for 30 min and reperfusion. The microvascular parameters investigated in vivo through a cranial window were: arteriolar diameter changes, permeability increase, leukocyte adhesion to venular walls and percentage of capillaries perfused. Hypoperfusion–reperfusion caused in all rats marked microvascular changes. L-arginine treatment was effective in reducing arterial blood pressure causing vasodilation but did not significantly reduce the damage induced by hypoperfusion–reperfusion. Taurisolo® treatment was less effective in reducing blood pressure but prevented microvascular damage from hypoperfusion–reperfusion. L-arginine plus Taurisolo® maintained blood pressure levels within the physiological range and protected the pial microcirculation from hypoperfusion–reperfusion-induced microvascular injuries. Therefore, the blood pressure reduction is not the only fundamental aspect to protect the cerebral circulation from hypoperfusion–reperfusion damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Extended versus Standard Proning Duration for COVID-19–associated Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: A Target Trial Emulation Study.
- Author
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Hochberg, Chad H., Colantuoni, Elizabeth, Sahetya, Sarina K., Eakin, Michelle N., Fan, Eddy, Psoter, Kevin J., Iwashyna, Theodore J., Needham, Dale M., and Hager, David N.
- Subjects
ADULT respiratory distress syndrome ,PATIENT positioning ,INTENSIVE care units ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL registries - Abstract
Rationale: Prone positioning for ⩾16 hours in moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) improves survival. However, the optimal duration of proning is unknown. Objectives: To estimate the effect of extended versus standard proning duration on patients with moderate-to-severe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) ARDS. Methods: Data were extracted from a five-hospital electronic medical record registry. Patients who were proned within 72 hours of mechanical ventilation were categorized as receiving extended (⩾24 h) versus standard (16–24 h) proning based on the first proning session length. We used a target trial emulation design to estimate the effect of extended versus standard proning on the primary outcome of 90-day mortality and secondary outcomes of ventilator liberation and intensive care unit (ICU) discharge. Analytically, we used inverse probability of treatment weighted (IPTW) Cox or Fine-Gray regression models. Results: A total of 314 patients were included; 234 received extended proning, and 80 received standard-duration proning. Patients who received extended proning were older, had greater comorbidity, were more often at an academic hospital, and had shorter time from admission to mechanical ventilation. After IPTW, characteristics were well balanced. Unadjusted 90-day mortality in the extended versus standard proning groups was 39% versus 58%. In doubly robust IPTW analyses, we found no significant effects of extended versus standard proning duration on mortality (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval], 0.95 [0.51–1.77]), ventilator liberation (subdistribution hazard, 1.60 [0.97–2.64], or ICU discharge (subdistribution hazard, 1.31 [0.82–2.10]). Conclusions: Using target trial emulation, we found no significant effect of extended versus standard proning duration on mortality, ventilator liberation, or ICU discharge. However, given the imprecision of estimates, further study is justified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Biological Oscillations of Vascular Origin and Their Meaning: In Vivo Studies of Arteriolar Vasomotion
- Author
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Colantuoni, Antonio, Lapi, Dominga, Abarbanel, Henry D. I., Series Editor, Braha, Dan, Series Editor, Érdi, Péter, Series Editor, Friston, Karl J., Series Editor, Haken, Hermann, Series Editor, Jirsa, Viktor, Series Editor, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Kaneko, Kunihiko, Series Editor, Kelso, Scott, Founding Editor, Kirkilionis, Markus, Series Editor, Kurths, Jürgen, Series Editor, Menezes, Ronaldo, Series Editor, Nowak, Andrzej, Series Editor, Qudrat-Ullah, Hassan, Series Editor, Reichl, Linda, Series Editor, Schuster, Peter, Series Editor, Schweitzer, Frank, Series Editor, Sornette, Didier, Series Editor, Thurner, Stefan, Series Editor, Stefanovska, Aneta, editor, and McClintock, Peter V. E., editor
- Published
- 2021
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50. Association of healthcare worker behaviors with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) risk during four pandemic periods and characteristics associated with high-risk behaviors
- Author
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Emily R. Egbert, Shaoming Xiao, Erica Prochaska, S. Omar Ali, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Avi Gadala, Danielle Koontz, Diana Zhong, Christina M. Schumacher, Anna C. Sick-Samuels, Amanda K. Debes, and Aaron M. Milstone
- Subjects
Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
In a large healthcare worker cohort, we quantified the association between behaviors and risk of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) during different pandemic phases, adjusting for prior infection and vaccination. Individual characteristics, including personal concerns, were associated with these behaviors. Public health messaging should target high-risk populations and behaviors as the pandemic evolves.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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