18 results on '"David Torres-Barba"'
Search Results
2. Image Processing Techniques for Assessing Contractility in Isolated Adult Cardiac Myocytes.
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Carlos Bazan, David Torres Barba, Peter Blomgren, and Paul Paolini
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- 2009
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3. Nocturnal Respiratory Rate Dynamics Enable Early Recognition of Impending Hospitalizations
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Nicholas Harrington, David Torres Barba, Quan M. Bui, Andrew Wassell, Sukhdeep Khurana, Rodrigo B. Rubarth, Kevin Sung, Robert L. Owens, Parag Agnihotri, and Kevin R. King
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The days and weeks preceding hospitalization are poorly understood because they transpire before patients are seen in conventional clinical care settings. Home health sensors offer opportunities to learn signatures of impending hospitalizations and facilitate early interventions, however the relevant biomarkers are unknown. Nocturnal respiratory rate (NRR) is an activity-independent biomarker that can be measured by adherence-independent sensors in the home bed. Here, we report automated longitudinal monitoring of NRR dynamics in a cohort of high-risk recently hospitalized patients using non-contact mechanical sensors under patients’ home beds. Since the distribution of nocturnal respiratory rates in populations is not well defined, we first quantified it in 2,000 overnight sleep studies from the NHLBI Sleep Heart Health Study. This revealed that interpatient variability was significantly greater than intrapatient variability (NRR variances of 11.7 brpm2and 5.2 brpm2respectively, n=1,844,110 epochs), which motivated the use of patient-specific references when monitoring longitudinally. We then performed adherence-independent longitudinal monitoring in the home beds of 34 high-risk patients and collected raw waveforms (sampled at 80 Hz) and derived quantitative NRR statistics and dynamics across 3,403 patient-nights (n= 4,326,167 epochs). We observed 23 hospitalizations for diverse causes (a 30-day hospitalization rate of 20%). Hospitalized patients had significantly greater NRR deviations from baseline compared to those who were not hospitalized (NRR variances of 3.78 brpm2and 0.84 brpm2respectively, n= 2,920 nights). These deviations were concentrated prior to the clinical event, suggesting that NRR can identify impending hospitalizations. We analyzed alarm threshold tradeoffs and demonstrated that nominal values would detect 11 of the 23 clinical events while only alarming 2 times in non-hospitalized patients. Taken together, our data demonstrate that NRR dynamics change days to weeks in advance of hospitalizations, with longer prodromes associating with volume overload and heart failure, and shorter prodromes associating with acute infections (pneumonia, septic shock, and covid-19), inflammation (diverticulitis), and GI bleeding. In summary, adherence-independent longitudinal NRR monitoring has potential to facilitate early recognition and management of pre-symptomatic disease.
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- 2022
4. Downregulation of RyR and NCX in the neonatal rat ventricular myocyte modulates cytosolic [Ca2+]
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Esteban Vazquez-Hidalgo, Parag Katira, Paul Paolini, Xian Zhang, and David Torres Barba
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Regulation of gene expression ,Cytosol ,SERCA ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Ryanodine receptor ,Chemistry ,Myocyte ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Calcium ,Intracellular ,Cell biology - Abstract
Calcium (Ca2+) is necessary for cardiac muscle contraction. RyR, NCX, and SERCA are key regulatory protein channels for cytosolic Ca2+ in cardiac myocytes. Expression levels of these proteins are a function of development, with protein expression shifting toward the adult phenotype over time. We investigated how downregulation by siRNAs of RyR and NCX affected expression levels of complimentary proteins and the corresponding intracellular Ca2+ transients. We compared experimentally observed Ca2+ transients to those predicted by mathematical models. Experiments show RyR downregulation decreased SERCA and increased NCX protein levels. The associated Ca2+ transient had a decreased amplitude, increased time-to-peak, 50%, and 90% Ca2+ removal with respect to the control cell. NCX downregulation increased SERCA production without significant changes in RyR expression levels. The corresponding [Ca2+] transient had increased amplitude, no change in time-to-peak and 50% Ca2+ removal, and increased 90% Ca2+ removal with respect to the control cell. Computational models that accurately predict the observed experimental data suggest compensatory changes occurring in the expression levels as well as biochemical activity of the regulatory proteins.
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- 2021
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5. A young man with acute chest pain
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Neil Beri, Amir Farid, Charles Whitcomb, and David Torres-Barba
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Male ,Chest Pain ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Scale (ratio) ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,macromolecular substances ,General Medicine ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Myocarditis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,nervous system ,Acute Disease ,Acute chest pain ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
A young man presents with severe, pressure-like, midsternal, nonradiating pain, rated 10 on a scale of 10.
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- 2019
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6. Reliability of reported peri-ictal behavior to identify psychogenic nonepileptic seizures
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Akash B. Patel, Eric S. Hwang, Justine M. Le, David Torres-Barba, Janar Bauirjan, Jessica M. Hori, Jerome Engel, Albert Buchard, John M. Stern, Amir H. Karimi, Corinne H. Allas, Chelsea T. Braesch, Norma L. Gallardo, Andrew Y. Cho, Mark S. Cohen, Emily A. Janio, Emily C. Davis, Andrea M. Chau, Wesley T. Kerr, Shannon R. D'Ambrosio, and Mona Al Banna
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Peri ,Video Recording ,Context (language use) ,Dissociative Disorders ,Logistic regression ,Article ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Machine Learning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Seizures ,Medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,Ictal ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Prospective Studies ,Medical diagnosis ,Somatoform Disorders ,Retrospective Studies ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Decision Trees ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,ROC Curve ,Area Under Curve ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Self Report ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose Differentiating psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) from epileptic seizures (ES) can be difficult, even when expert clinicians have video recordings of seizures. Moreover, witnesses who are not trained observers may provide descriptions that differ from the expert clinicians’, which often raises concern about whether the patient has both ES and PNES. As such, quantitative, evidence-based tools to help differentiate ES from PNES based on patients’ and witnesses’ descriptions of seizures may assist in the early, accurate diagnosis of patients. Methods Based on patient- and observer-reported data from 1372 patients with diagnoses documented by video-elect roencephalography (vEEG), we used logistic regression (LR) to compare specific peri-ictal behaviors and seizure triggers in five mutually exclusive groups: ES, PNES, physiologic non-epileptic seizure-like events, mixed PNES plus ES, and inconclusive monitoring. To differentiate PNES-only from ES-only, we retrospectively trained multivariate LR and a forest of decision trees (DF) to predict the documented diagnoses of 246 prospective patients. Results The areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUCs) of the DF and LR were 75% and 74%, respectively (empiric 95% CI of chance 37–62%). The overall accuracy was not significantly higher than the naive assumption that all patients have ES (accuracy DF 71%, LR 70%, naive 68%, p > 0.05). Conclusions Quantitative analysis of patient- and observer-reported peri-ictal behaviors objectively changed the likelihood that a patient’s seizures were psychogenic, but these reports were not reliable enough to be diagnostic in isolation. Instead, our scores may identify patients with “probable” PNES that, in the right clinical context, may warrant further diagnostic assessment.
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- 2019
7. Abstract 213: Sarcolemma Genes Related to the Transverse Tubule Structure Are Mostly Not Expressed in Differentiating Human iPSC-derived Cardiomyocytes
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Javier E. López, David Torres Barba, Elizabeth Cortez-Toledo, Xiao-Dong Zhang, Janhavi Sharma, Eliseo T Vazquez, and Omar De la Cruz Cabrera
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Coupling (electronics) ,Contraction (grammar) ,Sarcolemma ,Physiology ,Chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Gene expression ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Sarcomere ,Ion channel ,Cell biology - Abstract
Background: Transverse tubules (TT) are tunnel-like extensions of sarcolemma studded with ion channels coupling excitation, through the cytoplasm, to contraction in the sarcomere of matured cardiomyocytes (CMs). Expression timing of sub-cellular TT-related genes (TT-rgs) in individual human iPSC-derived CMs (hiPSC-CMs) has not yet been reported. Objective: Map out the gene program of TT-rgs by sub-cellular locations during hiPSC-CM differentiation using single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA Seq.). Methods: hiPSC-CMs were differentiated from 2 commercially available lines using sequential GSK3 and Wnt signaling inhibition. The %CMs were assayed by flow cytometry for sarcomeric myosin heavy chain protein, a CM biomarker. Baseline cells (iPSCs, n=24) and day 14 (n=45), 30 (n=64), and 60 (n=5) post differentiation cells were sampled for scRNA Seq. using the Fluidigm C1 platform. We categorized 73 TT-rgs by cellular location of the coded protein (i.e. sarcomere, cytoplasm or sarcolemma). The expression pattern for each location was categorized as induced, repressed, or neither based on the median transcript per million for each individual cell normalized to iPSCs. Results: CMs increased from Conclusion: Single-cell transcriptomes in differentiating hiPSC-CMs revealed a discordance between sarcolemma (mostly not expressed) and sarcomeric genes being induced. Defining timing and within cell variability of TT sub-cellular genes will be critical to understand human CM maturation.
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- 2018
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8. Abstract 212: Adrenergic Signaling Genes Are Not All Expressed During Myogenesis in Individual Human iPSC-derived Cardiomyocytes
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David Torres Barba, Omar De la Cruz Cabrera, Janhavi Sharma, Eliseo T Vazquez, Elizabeth Cortez-Toledo, and Javier E. López
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Adrenergic receptor ,Physiology ,Myogenesis ,Adrenergic signaling ,Cellular distribution ,Gene expression ,Adrenergic ,Biology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Gene ,Cell biology - Abstract
Background: Adrenergic receptors (AR) in an individual cardiomyocyte (CM) are not uniformly expressed at the single-cell level (Myagmar et al., 2017). The timing and cellular distribution of AR signaling (ARS) genes in individual human iPSC-derived CMs (hiPSC-CMs) have not yet been reported. Objective: To map out the transcription program of ARS genes during hiPSC-CM myogenesis using single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA Seq.). Methods: 132 ARS in CM genes curated by the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes were studied. The CMs were derived from 2 commercially available hiPSC lines using sequential GSK3 and Wnt signaling inhibition. The CMs were assayed by flow cytometry with sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (MYHC6/7) protein, a biomarker of myogenesis. Baseline cells (iPSCs, n=24) and day 14 (n=45), 30 (n=64), and 60 (n=5) post differentiation cells were sampled for scRNA Seq. using the Fluidigm C1 platform. Data from 10 somatic cell preparations and iPSCs defined the signal specificity and biological noise in the system. The expression patterns were categorized as induced, repressed, or neither based on the median transcript per million for individual cells normalized to iPSCs. A p -value of Results: The CMs had spontaneous contractions by D14 and increased from 90% of differentiating cells did. MYH6/7 median expression increased 15-fold from D14 to D30 (p Conclusion: Single-cell transcriptomes in derived hiPSC-CMs revealed a lack of uniformity between upstream ARS genes and early sarcomeric genes. Defining the timing and cell-to-cell variability of the ARS gene program will be critical to understanding its mechanistic relationship to the sarcomeric gene program in humans.
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- 2018
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9. An objective score to identify psychogenic seizures based on age of onset and history
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Andrea M. Chau, Eric S. Hwang, Jessica M. Hori, Emily C. Davis, Janar Bauirjan, Albert Buchard, Justine M. Le, Mark S. Cohen, David Torres-Barba, Jerome Engel, Andrew Y. Cho, Akash B. Patel, Norma L. Gallardo, Shannon R. D'Ambrosio, Mona Al Banna, Wesley T. Kerr, Chelsea T. Braesch, John M. Stern, and Emily A. Janio
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Video Recording ,Dissociative seizures ,Logistic regression ,Neurodegenerative ,Febrile ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Age of Onset ,Somatoform Disorders ,Electroencephalography ,Middle Aged ,Health Services ,Physical abuse ,Neurology ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Monitoring ,Clinical Sciences ,Dissociative Disorders ,Article ,Seizures, Febrile ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Seizures ,Diagnostic score ,Clinical Research ,medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,Physiologic ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Retrospective Studies ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Psychogenic Seizure ,Brain Disorders ,Sexual abuse ,Multiple imputation ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective Psychogenic nonepileptic seizure (PNES) is a common diagnosis after evaluation of medication resistant or atypical seizures with video-electroencephalographic monitoring (VEM), but usually follows a long delay after the development of seizures, during which patients are treated for epilepsy. Therefore, more readily available diagnostic tools are needed for earlier identification of patients at risk for PNES. A tool based on patient-reported psychosocial history would be especially beneficial because it could be implemented in the outpatient clinic. Methods Based on the data from 1375 patients with VEM-confirmed diagnoses, we used logistic regression to compare the frequency of specific patient-reported historical events, demographic information, age of onset, and delay from first seizure until VEM in five mutually exclusive groups of patients: epileptic seizures (ES), PNES, physiologic nonepileptic seizure-like events (PSLE), mixed PNES plus ES, and inconclusive monitoring. To determine the diagnostic utility of this information to differentiate PNES only from ES only, we used multivariate piecewise-linear logistic regression trained using retrospective data from chart review and validated based on data from 246 prospective standardized interviews. Results The prospective area under the curve of our weighted multivariate piecewise-linear by-sex score was 73%, with the threshold that maximized overall retrospective accuracy resulting in a prospective sensitivity of 74% (95% CI: 70–79%) and prospective specificity of 71% (95% CI: 64–82%). The linear model and piecewise linear without an interaction term for sex had very similar performance statistics. In the multivariate piecewise-linear sex-split predictive model, the significant factors positively associated with ES were history of febrile seizures, current employment or active student status, history of traumatic brain injury (TBI), and longer delay from first seizure until VEM. The significant factors associated with PNES were female sex, older age of onset, mild TBI, and significant stressful events with sexual abuse, in particular, increasing the likelihood of PNES. Delays longer than 20 years, age of onset after 31 years for men, and age of onset after 40 years for women had no additional effect on the likelihood of PNES. Discussion Our promising results suggest that an objective score has the potential to serve as an early outpatient screening tool to identify patients with greater likelihood of PNES when considered in combination with other factors. In addition, our analysis suggests that sexual abuse, more than other psychological stressors including physical abuse, is more associated with PNES. There was a trend of increasing frequency of PNES for women during childbearing years and plateauing outside those years that was not observed in men.
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- 2018
10. Identifying psychogenic seizures through comorbidities and medication history
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Mona Al Banna, Chelsea T. Braesch, Shannon R. D'Ambrosio, John M. Stern, Wesley T. Kerr, Sarah E. Barritt, Eric S. Hwang, David Torres-Barba, Emily C. Davis, Jerome Engel, Janar Bauirjan, Andrea M. Chau, Andrew Y. Cho, Norma L. Gallardo, Jessica M. Hori, Mark S. Cohen, Albert Buchard, Justine M. Le, Emily A. Janio, and Akash B. Patel
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Video Recording ,Comorbidity ,Neurodegenerative ,Logistic regression ,0302 clinical medicine ,Migraines ,Psychogenic nonepileptic attack disorder ,Prospective Studies ,Somatoform Disorders ,education.field_of_study ,Electroencephalography ,Middle Aged ,Health Services ,Neurology ,Screening ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medication history ,Population ,Clinical Sciences ,Context (language use) ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medication Reconciliation ,Seizures ,Clinical Research ,Machine learning ,medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,Medical history ,education ,Retrospective Studies ,Epilepsy ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,business.industry ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,Asthma ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychogenic Seizure ,Brain Disorders ,Physical therapy ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
SummaryObjective Low-cost evidence-based tools are needed to facilitate the early identification of patients with possible psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES). Prior to accurate diagnosis, patients with PNES do not receive interventions that address the cause of their seizures and therefore incur high medical costs and disability due to an uncontrolled seizure disorder. Both seizures and comorbidities may contribute to this high cost. Methods Based on data from 1,365 adult patients with video-electroencephalography–confirmed diagnoses from a single center, we used logistic and Poisson regression to compare the total number of comorbidities, number of medications, and presence of specific comorbidities in five mutually exclusive groups of diagnoses: epileptic seizures (ES) only, PNES only, mixed PNES and ES, physiologic nonepileptic seizurelike events, and inconclusive monitoring. To determine the diagnostic utility of comorbid diagnoses and medication history to differentiate PNES only from ES only, we used multivariate logistic regression, controlling for sex and age, trained using a retrospective database and validated using a prospective database. Results Our model differentiated PNES only from ES only with a prospective accuracy of 78% (95% confidence interval =72–84%) and area under the curve of 79%. With a few exceptions, the number of comorbidities and medications was more predictive than a specific comorbidity. Comorbidities associated with PNES were asthma, chronic pain, and migraines (p < 0.01). Comorbidities associated with ES were diabetes mellitus and nonmetastatic neoplasm (p < 0.01). The population-level analysis suggested that patients with mixed PNES and ES may be a population distinct from patients with either condition alone. Significance An accurate patient-reported medical history and medication history can be useful when screening for possible PNES. Our prospectively validated and objective score may assist in the interpretation of the medication and medical history in the context of the seizure description and history.
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- 2017
11. Diagnostic implications of review-of-systems questionnaires to differentiate epileptic seizures from psychogenic seizures
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Norma L. Gallardo, Andrew Y. Cho, Mark S. Cohen, Andrea M. Chau, Justine M. Le, Akash B. Patel, John M. Stern, Wesley T. Kerr, Jerome Engel, Eric S. Hwang, Emily C. Davis, David Torres-Barba, Jessica M. Hori, Janar Bauirjan, Emily A. Janio, Sarah E. Barritt, and Chelsea T. Braesch
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Comorbidity ,Neurodegenerative ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Diagnosis ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Video-electroencephalography ,Somatoform Disorders ,education.field_of_study ,Seizure types ,Electroencephalography ,Health Services ,Prognosis ,Computer-diagnostics ,Neurology ,Review of systems ,Neurological ,Screening ,Pseudoseizures ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Clinical Sciences ,Article ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Seizures ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,education ,Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Review-of-systems ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,business.industry ,Neurosciences ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Psychogenic Seizure ,Brain Disorders ,Differential ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
ObjectiveEarly and accurate diagnosis of patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) leads to appropriate treatment and improves long-term seizure prognosis. However, this is complicated by the need to record seizures to make a definitive diagnosis. Suspicion for PNES can be raised through knowledge that patients with PNES have increased somatic sensitivity and report more positive complaints on review-of-systems questionnaires (RoSQs) than patients with epileptic seizures. If the responses on the RoSQ can differentiate PNES from other seizure types, then these forms could be an early screening tool.MethodsOur dataset included all patients admitted from January 2006 to June 2016 for video-electroencephalography at UCLA. RoSQs prior to May 2015 were acquired through retrospective chart review (n=405), whereas RoSQs from subsequent patients were acquired prospectively (n=190). Controlling for sex and number of comorbidities, we used binomial regression to compare the total number of symptoms and the frequency of specific symptoms between five mutually exclusive groups of patients: epileptic seizures (ES), PNES, physiologic nonepileptic seizure-like events (PSLE), mixed PNES plus ES, and inconclusive monitoring. To determine the diagnostic utility of RoSQs to differentiate PNES only from ES only, we used multivariate logistic regression, controlling for sex and the number of medical comorbidities.ResultsOn average, patients with PNES or mixed PNES and ES reported more than twice as many symptoms than patients with isolated ES or PSLE (p0.1).DiscussionThis analysis of RoSQs confirms that patients with PNES with and without comorbid ES report more symptoms on a population level than patients with epilepsy or PSLE. While these differences help describe the population of patients with PNES, the consistency of RoSQ responses was neither accurate nor specific enough to be used solely as an early screening tool for PNES. Our results suggest that the RoSQ may help differentiate PNES from ES only when, based on other information, the pre-test probability of PNES is at least 50%.
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- 2016
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12. Lung Transplant Outcomes in Systemic Sclerosis with Significant Esophageal Dysfunction. A Comprehensive Single-Center Experience
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Rajeev Saggar, Reshma Biniwale, David J. Ross, Fereidoun Abtin, Ariss Derhovanessian, Thomas Mahrer, Deepshikha Charan, Jeffrey L. Conklin, David Elashoff, Erin Lindsey Duffy, Rajan Saggar, Curtis Hunter, Elizabeth R. Volkmann, David Torres Barba, Michael Y. Shino, Dinesh Khanna, Philip J. Clements, Abbas Ardehali, Michelle Lo, John A. Belperio, Catherine H. Miele, Daniel E. Furst, Joseph P. Lynch, Kevin A. Ghassemi, David M. Sayah, S. Sam Weigt, Suzanne Kafaja, Chi-Hong Tseng, Murray Kwon, Osama T. Siddiqui, Kristin Schwab, Jimmy Johannes, Aric L. Gregson, and Bernard M. Kubak
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Male ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,gastroesophageal reflux ,Single Center ,Esophageal Diseases ,acute rejection ,Scleroderma ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Bronchiolitis Obliterans ,Lung ,Original Research ,integumentary system ,Graft Survival ,respiratory system ,Middle Aged ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,surgical procedures, operative ,Respiratory ,Female ,Lung Transplantation ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Primary Graft Dysfunction ,Bronchiolitis obliterans ,Autoimmune Disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Esophagus ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,esophageal dysfunction ,medicine ,lung transplantation ,Lung transplantation ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Esophageal disease ,Systemic ,Organ Transplantation ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,United States ,Surgery ,respiratory tract diseases ,Orphan Drug ,030228 respiratory system ,Scleroderma, Diffuse ,Multivariate Analysis ,business ,Digestive Diseases - Abstract
RationaleConsideration of lung transplantation in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) remains guarded, often due to the concern for esophageal dysfunction and the associated potential for allograft injury and suboptimal post-lung transplantation outcomes.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to systematically report our single-center experience regarding lung transplantation in the setting of SSc, with a particular focus on esophageal dysfunction.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed all lung transplants at our center from January 1, 2000 through August 31, 2012 (n = 562), comparing the SSc group (n = 35) to the following lung transplant diagnostic subsets: all non-SSc (n = 527), non-SSc diffuse fibrotic lung disease (n = 264), and a non-SSc matched group (n = 109). We evaluated post-lung transplant outcomes, including survival, primary graft dysfunction, acute rejection, bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, and microbiology of respiratory isolates. In addition, we defined severe esophageal dysfunction using esophageal manometry and esophageal morphometry criteria on the basis of chest computed tomography images. For patients with SSc referred for lung transplant but subsequently denied (n = 36), we queried the reason(s) for denial with respect to the concern for esophageal dysfunction.Measurements and main resultsThe 1-, 3-, and 5-year post-lung transplant survival for SSc was 94, 77, and 70%, respectively, and similar to the other groups. The remaining post-lung transplant outcomes evaluated were also similar between SSc and the other groups. Approximately 60% of the SSc group had severe esophageal dysfunction. Pre-lung transplant chest computed tomography imaging demonstrated significantly abnormal esophageal morphometry for SSc when compared with the matched group. Importantly, esophageal dysfunction was the sole reason for lung transplant denial in a single case.ConclusionsRelative to other lung transplant indications, our SSc group experienced comparable survival, primary graft dysfunction, acute rejection, bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, and microbiology of respiratory isolates, despite the high prevalence of severe esophageal dysfunction. Esophageal dysfunction rarely precluded active listing for lung transplantation.
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- 2016
13. Voriconazole increases the risk for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma after lung transplantation
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Jenny Hu, Abbas Ardehali, Erin Lindsey Duffy, Vishad Nabili, Michael Y. Shino, Alice Zhang, David M. Sayah, B. Kubak, Rajan Saggar, Nicholas A. Kolaitis, S. Samuel Weigt, Rajeev Saggar, Joseph P. Lynch, David Torres Barba, David J. Ross, Michelle Lo, David Elashoff, Ariss Derhovanessian, Teresa Soriano, Meng Chen, and John A. Belperio
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Oncology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifungal Agents ,Skin Neoplasms ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,030230 surgery ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Lung transplantation ,Humans ,Risk factor ,education ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Voriconazole ,education.field_of_study ,Transplantation ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,Immunology ,Chemoprophylaxis ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Skin cancer ,Risk assessment ,business ,medicine.drug ,Lung Transplantation - Abstract
Lung transplant recipients (LTR) are at high risk of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Voriconazole exposure after lung transplant has recently been reported as a risk factor for SCC. We sought to study the relationship between fungal prophylaxis with voriconazole and the risk of SCC in sequential cohorts from a single center. We evaluated 400 adult LTR at UCLA between 7/1/2005 and 12/22/2012. On 7/1/2009, our center instituted a protocol switch from targeted to universal antifungal prophylaxis for at least 6 months post-transplant. Using Cox proportional hazards models, time to SCC was compared between targeted (N = 199) and universal (N = 201) prophylaxis cohorts. Cox models were also used to assess SCC risk as a function of time-dependent cumulative exposure to voriconazole and other antifungal agents. The risk of SCC was greater in the universal prophylaxis cohort (HR 2.02, P < 0.01). Voriconazole exposure was greater in the universal prophylaxis cohort, and the cumulative exposure to voriconazole was associated with SCC (HR 1.75, P < 0.01), even after adjustment for other important SCC risk factors. Voriconazole did not increase the risk of advanced tumors. Exposure to other antifungal agents was not associated with SCC. Voriconazole should be used cautiously in this population.
- Published
- 2016
14. Contractility assessment in enzymatically isolated cardiomyocytes
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J’Terrell Moore, Johanna Martinez, Hung Nguyen, Trevor Hawkins, Rosa Lemus, Jeremy Mitchell, Paul Paolini, Jessica Larsen, Delnita Moore, Samantha Anderson, David Torres Barba, Esteban Vazquez-Hidalgo, and Carlos Bazan
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Cardiac function curve ,Cardiac cycle ,Experimental model ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular research ,Cardiac myocyte ,Biophysics ,Anatomy ,Review ,Contractility ,Structural Biology ,Medicine ,Myocyte ,Intact tissue ,business ,Molecular Biology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The use of enzymatically isolated cardiac myocytes is ubiquitous in modern cardiovascular research. Parallels established between cardiomyocyte shortening responses and those of intact tissue make the cardiomyocyte an invaluable experimental model of cardiac function. Much of our understanding regarding the fundamental processes underlying heart function is owed to our increasing capabilities in single-cell stimulation and direct or indirect observation, as well as quantitative analysis of such cells. Of the many important mechanisms and functions that can be readily assessed in cardiomyocytes at all stages of development, contractility is the most representative and one of the most revealing. The purpose of this review is to provide a survey of various methodological approaches in the literature used to assess adult and neonatal cardiomyocyte contractility. The various methods employed to evaluate the contractile behavior of enzymatically isolated mammalian cardiac myocytes can be conveniently divided into two general categories—those employing optical (image)-based systems and those that use transducer-based technologies. This survey is by no means complete, but we have made an effort to include the most popular methods in terms of reliability and accessibility. These techniques are in constant evolution and hold great promise for the next generation of breakthrough studies in cell biology for the prevention, treatment, and cure of cardiovascular diseases.
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- 2012
15. Cardiocyte Functional Data Analysis: A Novel Approach
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Paul Paolini, Esteban Vazquez-Hidalgo, and David Torres Barba
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0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Population ,Digital imaging ,Biophysics ,Functional data analysis ,Nanotechnology ,Video processing ,Contractility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Software ,Calcium flux ,Signal averaging ,Biological system ,business ,education ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Current laboratory methods used to assess neonatal and adult cardiocyte function include measurement of gene and protein expression levels, calcium transients, and contractility. Our goal was to develop simple tools to analyze such data readily. We created two MATLAB®-based toolboxes; the Contraction Video Processing (CVP) and the Cardiocyte Functional Response Analysis (CFRA) Toolbox. Videos of contracting cultured cardiocytes are acquired using a digital camera attached to an inverted phase microscope. Video frames are analyzed using digital imaging processing techniques along with several contraction assessment methods available through the CVP toolbox. The CVP offers direct correlation, pixel intensity tracking and Polar Fourier transform methods for the analysis of neonatal cardiocyte contraction. Analysis of adult cardiocytes includes those implemented on neonatal cardiocytes in addition to area boundary tracking, Fourier descriptor analysis, and cell length tracking methods. The resulting contraction records are processed using the CFRA toolbox to provide quantitative analyses of cardiocyte contractility and calcium transient responses. Transient data are obtained by measuring the calcium fluxes using the fluorescent dye Fluo-3, and a Photon Technology fluorometer system running Felix software. Data analysis routines have been created and tailored exclusively to the characteristics and needs of cellular cardiovascular research investigators. The analytical methods created are used to find the onset of contraction, perform signal averaging, and acquire statistical information of functional data. CFRA toolbox contractility processing yields onset time, time-to-peak, duration, and fast and slow recovery times. CFRA toolbox calcium transient signal processing yields onset time, signal intensity, and fast and slow exponential recovery rates associated with SERCA and NCX channels respectively. The toolboxes allow examination of beat-to-beat contractility and calcium transient variations within the same cardiocyte as well as from cell population to population. Supported by NIH/NIGMS SDSU MARC Program 5T34GM008303-22
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- 2012
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16. Introduction of non-linear elasticity models for characterization of shape and deformation statistics: application to contractility assessment of isolated adult cardiocytes
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Carlos Bazan, Paul Paolini, Trevor Hawkins, Peter Blomgren, and David Torres-Barba
- Subjects
Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Constitutive equation ,Biophysics ,Fidelity ,Nanotechnology ,lcsh:QC1-999 ,Contractility ,Nonlinear system ,Non linear elasticity ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Cell contraction ,Compatibility (mechanics) ,Image warping ,Biological system ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,lcsh:Physics ,media_common ,Research Article - Abstract
Background We are exploring the viability of a novel approach to cardiocyte contractility assessment based on biomechanical properties of the cardiac cells, energy conservation principles, and information content measures. We define our measure of cell contraction as being the distance between the shapes of the contracting cell, assessed by the minimum total energy of the domain deformation (warping) of one cell shape into another. To guarantee a meaningful vis-à-vis correspondence between the two shapes, we employ both a data fidelity term and a regularization term. The data fidelity term is based on nonlinear features of the shapes while the regularization term enforces the compatibility between the shape deformations and that of a hyper-elastic material. Results We tested the proposed approach by assessing the contractile responses in isolated adult rat cardiocytes and contrasted these measurements against two different methods for contractility assessment in the literature. Our results show good qualitative and quantitative agreements with these methods as far as frequency, pacing, and overall behavior of the contractions are concerned. Conclusions We hypothesize that the proposed methodology, once appropriately developed and customized, can provide a framework for computational cardiac cell biomechanics that can be used to integrate both theory and experiment. For example, besides giving a good assessment of contractile response of the cardiocyte, since the excitation process of the cell is a closed system, this methodology can be employed in an attempt to infer statistically significant model parameters for the constitutive equations of the cardiocytes.
- Published
- 2011
17. Image Processing Techniques for Assessing Contractility in Isolated Adult Cardiac Myocytes
- Author
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Peter Blomgren, Paul Paolini, David Torres Barba, and Carlos Bazan
- Subjects
lcsh:Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,Contraction (grammar) ,lcsh:Medical technology ,Article Subject ,Digital video recording ,business.industry ,lcsh:R895-920 ,Pattern recognition ,Image processing ,Edge detection ,Contractility ,lcsh:R855-855.5 ,Myocyte ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Segmentation ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Smoothing ,Simulation ,Research Article - Abstract
We describe a computational framework for the comprehensive assessment of contractile responses of enzymatically dissociated adult cardiac myocytes. The proposed methodology comprises the following stages: digital video recording of the contracting cell, edge preserving total variation-based image smoothing, segmentation of the smoothed images, contour extraction from the segmented images, shape representation by Fourier descriptors, and contractility assessment. The different stages are variants of mathematically sound and computationally robust algorithms very well established in the image processing community. The physiologic application of the methodology is evaluated by assessing overall contraction in enzymatically dissociated adult rat cardiocytes. Our results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach in characterizing the true, two-dimensional, “shortening” in the contraction process of adult cardiocytes. We compare the performance of the proposed method to that of a popular edge detection system in the literature. The proposed method not only provides a more comprehensive assessment of the myocyte contraction process but also can potentially eliminate historical concerns and sources of errors caused by myocyte rotation or translation during contraction. Furthermore, the versatility of the image processing techniques makes the method suitable for determining myocyte shortening in cells that usually bend or move during contraction. The proposed method can be utilized to evaluate changes in contractile behavior resulting from drug intervention, disease modeling, transgeneity, or other common applications to mammalian cardiocytes.
- Published
- 2009
18. Introduction of Non-Linear Elasticity Models for the Characterization of Isolated Adult Cardiocyte Contractility
- Author
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Peter Blomgren, Trevor Hawkins, Paul Paolini, David Torres Barba, and Carlos Bazan
- Subjects
Contractility ,Nonlinear system ,Non linear elasticity ,Computer science ,Contractile response ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Constitutive equation ,Biophysics ,Fidelity ,Image warping ,Biological system ,Cell shape ,media_common - Abstract
We are exploring the viability of a novel approach to cardiocyte contractility assessment based on biomechanical properties of the cardiac cells, energy conservation principles, and information content measures. We define our measure of cell contraction as being the distance between the shapes of the contracting cell, assessed by the minimum total energy of the domain deformation (warping) of one cell shape into another. To guarantee a meaningful vis-a-vis correspondence between the two shapes, we employ both a data fidelity term and a regularization term. The data fidelity term is based on nonlinear features of the shapes while the regularization term enforces the compatibility between the shape deformations and that of a hyper-elastic material. We tested this approach by assessing the contractile responses in isolated adult rat cardiocytes and contrasted these measurements against two different methods for contractility assessment in the literature. Results show good qualitative and quantitative agreements with these methods as far as frequency, pacing, and overall behavior of the contractions are concerned. We hypothesize that the proposed methodology, once appropriately developed and customized, can provide a framework for computational cardiac cell biomechanics that can be used to integrate both theory and experiment. For example, besides giving a good assessment of contractile response of the cardiocyte, since the excitation process of the cell is a closed system, this methodology can be employed in an attempt to infer statistically significant model parameters for the constitutive equations of the cardiocytes.
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