752 results on '"Gornbein, Jeffrey"'
Search Results
2. Abstract 4138101: CAR-T-associated Cardiovascular Events are Associated with Increased Resource Utilization
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Song, Justin, Vuong, Jacqueline, Mead, Monica, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Rothberg, Michael, Pan, Chelsea, Dhaliwal, Jasmeet, Boiarsky, Jonathan, Gaut, Daria, Eradat, Herbert, Schiller, Gary, DEVOS, SVEN, Timmerman, John, Stein-Merlob, Ashley, Neilan, Tomas, Larson, Sarah, Young, Patricia, Mahmood, Syed, and Yang, Eric
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- 2024
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3. Neurologic Improvement in Acute Cerebral Ischemia
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Balucani, Clotilde, Levine, Steven R, Sanossian, Nerses, Starkman, Sidney, Liebeskind, David, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, Shkirkova, Kristina, Stratton, Samuel, Eckstein, Marc, Hamilton, Scott, Conwit, Robin, Sharma, Latisha K, and Saver, Jeffrey L
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Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Stroke ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Male ,Brain Ischemia ,Acute Disease ,Data Collection ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and objectivesInvestigations of rapid neurologic improvement (RNI) in patients with acute cerebral ischemia (ACI) have focused on RNI occurring after hospital arrival. However, with stroke routing decisions and interventions increasingly migrating to the prehospital setting, there is a need to delineate the frequency, magnitude, predictors, and clinical outcomes of patients with ACI with ultra-early RNI (U-RNI) in the prehospital and early postarrival period.MethodsWe analyzed prospectively collected data of the prehospital Field Administration of Stroke Therapy-Magnesium (FAST-MAG) randomized clinical trial. Any U-RNI was defined as improvement by 2 or more points on the Los Angeles Motor Scale (LAMS) score between the prehospital and early post-emergency department (ED) arrival examinations and classified as moderate (2-3 point) or dramatic (4-5 point) improvement. Outcome measures included excellent recovery (modified Rankin Scale [mRS] score 0-1) and death by 90 days.ResultsAmong the 1,245 patients with ACI, the mean age was 70.9 years (SD 13.2); 45% were women; the median prehospital LAMS was 4 (interquartile range [IQR] 3-5); the median last known well to ED-LAMS time was 59 minutes (IQR 46-80 minutes), and the median prehospital LAMS to ED-LAMS time was 33 minutes (IQR 28-39 minutes). Overall, any U-RNI occurred in 31%, moderate U-RNI in 23%, and dramatic U-RNI in 8%. Any U-RNI was associated with improved outcomes, including excellent recovery (mRS score 0-1) at 90 days 65.1% (246/378) vs 35.4% (302/852), p < 0.0001; decreased mortality by 90 days 3.7% (14/378) vs 16.4% (140/852), p < 0.0001; decreased symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage 1.6% (6/384) vs 4.6% (40/861), p = 0.0112; and increased likelihood of being discharged home 56.8% (218/384) vs 30.2% (260/861), p < 0.0001.DiscussionU-RNI occurs in nearly 1 in 3 ambulance-transported patients with ACI and is associated with excellent recovery and decreased mortality at 90 days. Accounting for U-RNI may be useful for routing decisions and future prehospital interventions. TRIAL REGISTRATION INFORMATION: clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00059332.
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- 2023
4. The Application of Dental Fluoride Varnish in Children: A Low Cost, High-Value Implementation Aided by Passive Clinical Decision Support
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Lukac, Paul J, Bell, Douglas, Sreedharan, Priya, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, and Lerner, Carlos
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Fluorides ,Topical ,Fluorides ,Cariostatic Agents ,Decision Support Systems ,Clinical ,Dental Caries ,clinical decision support ,electronic health record ,fluoride ,Information Systems ,Clinical Sciences ,Health services and systems - Abstract
BackgroundFluoride is vital in the prevention of dental caries in children. In 2014, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force deemed fluoride varnish a recommended preventive service (grade B). Electronic health record-based clinical decision support (CDS) tools have shown variable ability to alter physicians' ordering behaviors.ObjectivesThis study aimed to increase the application of fluoride varnish in children while analyzing the effect of two passive CDS tools-an order set and a note template.MethodsData on outpatient pediatric visits over an 18-month period before and after CDS implementation (October 15, 2020-April 15, 2022) were queried, while trends in application rate of fluoride were examined. We constructed a multiple logistic regression model with a primary outcome of whether a patient received fluoride at his/her visit. The primary predictor was a "phase" variable representing the CDS implemented. Physician interaction with CDS as well as the financial effects of the resulting service use were also examined.ResultsThere were 3,049 well-child visits of children aged 12 months to 5 years. The addition of a fluoride order to a "Well Child Check" order set led to a 10.6% increase in ordering over physician education alone (25.4 vs. 14.8%, p = 0.001), while the insertion of fluoride-specific text to drop-down lists in clinical notes led to a 6.2% increase (31.5 vs. 25.4%, p = 0.005). Whether a patient received topical fluoride was positively associated with order set implementation (odds ratio [OR] = 5.87, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.20-8.21) and fluoride-specific drop-down lists (OR = 7.81, 95% CI: 5.41-11.28). Female providers were more likely to use order sets when ordering fluoride (56.2 vs. 40.9% for males, p ≤ 0.0001). Added revenue totaled $15,084.ConclusionThe targeted use of order sets and note templates was positively associated with the ordering of topical fluoride by physicians.
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- 2023
5. Predicting the risk of iliofemoral vascular complication in complex transfemoral-TAVR using new generation transcatheter devices.
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Koren, Ofir, Patel, Vivek, Tamir, Yuval, Koseki, Keita, Kaewkes, Danon, Sanders, Troy, Naami, Robert, Naami, Edmund, Cheng, Daniel, Natanzon, Sharon, Shechter, Alon, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Chakravarty, Tarun, Nakamura, Mamoo, Cheng, Wen, Jilaihawi, Hasan, and Makkar, Raj
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TAVR ,aortic stenosis ,calcification ,crossability ,iliofemoral vascular complications ,risk model ,tortuosity ,validation & verification component - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Design a predictive risk model for minimizing iliofemoral vascular complications (IVC) in a contemporary era of transfemoral-transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TF-TAVR). BACKGROUND: IVC remains a common complication of TF-TAVR despite the technological improvement in the new-generation transcatheter systems (NGTS) and enclosed poor outcomes and quality of life. Currently, there is no accepted tool to assess the IVC risk for calcified and tortuous vessels. METHODS: We reconstructed CT images of 516 propensity-matched TF-TAVR patients using the NGTS to design a predictive anatomical model for IVC and validated it on a new cohort of 609 patients. Age, sex, peripheral artery disease, valve size, and type were used to balance the matched cohort. RESULTS: IVC occurred in 214 (7.2%) patients. Sheath size (p = 0.02), the sum of angles (SOA) (p 100, in predicting IVC (C-stat 0.936, 95% CI 0.911-0.959, p 1.00 in a tree model increased the overall accuracy to 97.7%. In the validation cohort, the model predicted 89.5% of the IVC cases with an overall 89.5% sensitivity, 98.9% specificity, and 94.2% accuracy (C-stat 0.842, 95% CI 0.904-0.980, p
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- 2023
6. Staged use of ordinal and linear disability scales: a practical approach to granular assessment of acute stroke outcome.
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Chaisinanunkul, Napasri, Starkman, Sidney, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Hamilton, Scott, Chatfield, Fiona, Conwit, Robin, and Saver, Jeffrey
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acute cerebral hemorrhage ,acute cerebral infarction ,acute stroke syndromes ,cerebrovascular disease/stroke ,clinical trials ,emergency treatment of stroke ,outcome assessment - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) assessment of global disability is the most common primary endpoint in acute stroke trials but lacks granularity (7 broad levels) and is ordinal (scale levels unknown distances apart), which constrains study power. Disability scales that are linear and continuous may better discriminate outcomes, but computerized administration in stroke patients is challenging. We, therefore, undertook to develop a staged use of an ordinal followed by a linear scale practical to use in multicenter trials. METHODS: Consecutive patients undergoing 3-month final visits in the NIH FAST-MAG phase 3 trial were assessed with the mRS followed by 15 mRS level-specific yes-no items of the Academic Medical Center Linear Disability Score (ALDS), a linear disability scale derived using item response theory. RESULTS: Among 55 patients, aged 71.2 (SD ± 14.2), 67% were men and the entry NIHSS was 10.7 (SD ± 9.5). At 90 days, the median mRS score was 3 (IQR, 1-4), and the median ALDS score was 78.8 (IQR, 3.3-100). ALDS scores correlated strongly with 90 days outcome measures, including the Barthel Index (r = 0.92), NIHSS (r = 0.87), and mRS (r = 0.94). ALDS scores also correlated modestly with entry NIHSS (r = 0.38). At 90 days, the ALDS showed greater scale granularity than the mRS, with fewer patients with identical values, 1.9 (SD ± 3.2) vs. 8.0 (SD ± 3.6), p < 0.001. When treatment effect magnitudes were small to moderate, projected trial sample size requirements were 2-12-fold lower when the ALDS rather than the mRS was used as the primary trial endpoint. CONCLUSION: Among patients enrolled in an acute neuroprotective stroke trial, the ALDS showed strong convergent validity and superior discrimination characteristics compared with the modified Rankin Scale and increased projected trial power to detect clinically meaningful treatment benefits.
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- 2023
7. Incidence of Atrial Fibrillation or Arrhythmias After Patent Foramen Ovale Closure
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Ravellette, Keeley, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Tobis, Jonathan
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Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Published
- 2023
8. Modified Rankin Scale disability status at day 4 poststroke is an informative predictor of long-term day 90 outcome
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Taleb, Shayandokht, Ji-hyun Lee, Jenny, Asanad, Samuel, Starkman, Sidney, Hamilton, Scott, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Conwit, Robin A., Sanossian, Nerses, and Saver, Jeffrey L
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- 2024
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9. Intracranial artery calcification: Frequency, determinants, and modification of outcomes from endovascular thrombectomy
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Phan, Allan Q., Yoo, Bryan, Liebeskind, David S., Sharma, Latisha K., Bahr-Hosseini, Mersedeh, Alfonso, Rodel, Jahan, Reza, Duckwiler, Gary R., Tateshima, Satoshi, Nour, May, Szeder, Victor, Colby, Geoffrey P., Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Saver, Jeffrey L.
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- 2024
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10. Neural‐hematopoietic‐inflammatory axis in nonsmokers, electronic cigarette users, and tobacco smokers
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Ruedisueli, Isabelle, Arastoo, Sara, Gupta, Pawan K, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Glucose ,Humans ,Inflammation ,Non-Smokers ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Smokers ,Young Adult ,Physiology ,Medical Physiology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Amygdala activity in context of the splenocardiac model has not been investigated in healthy, young adults and has not been compared between nonsmokers, electronic cigarette users, and smokers. The purpose of the current study was to determine whether fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computer tomography (FDG PET/CT) scans would demonstrate positively correlated metabolic activity in the amygdala, bone marrow, spleen, and aorta, elucidating activation of the splenocardiac axis in otherwise healthy young people who use tobacco products compared to nonusers. Moreover, the study was conducted to evaluate whether electronic cigarette users and tobacco smokers have similar levels of inflammation compared to nonusers. In 45 healthy adults (mean age = 25 years), including nonsmoker (n = 15), electronic cigarette user (n = 16), and smoker (n = 14) groups, metabolic activity in the amygdala, spleen, aorta, bone marrow of thoracic vertebrae, and adjacent erector spinae skeletal muscle was quantified through visualization of radioactive glucose (18 FDG) uptake by FDG-PET/CT. The maximum standardized uptake value for each region was calculated for correlation analyses and comparisons between groups. In correlation analyses, metabolic activity of the amygdala correlated with metabolic activity in the aorta (r = 0.757), bone marrow (r = 0.750), and spleen (r = 0.665), respectively. Metabolic activity in the aorta correlated with 18 FDG uptake in the thoracic vertebrae (r = 0.703) and spleen (r = 0.594), respectively. Metabolic activity in the spleen also correlated with 18 FDG uptake in the bone marrow (r = 0.620). Metabolic activity in the adjacent erector spinae skeletal muscle (our control tissue) was not positively correlated with any other region of interest. Finally, there were no statistically significant mean differences in metabolic activity between the three groups: nonsmokers, electronic cigarette users, and smokers in any target tissue. Amygdala metabolic activity, as measured by 18 FDG uptake in FDG-PET/CT scans, positively correlated with inflammation in the splenocardiac tissues, including: the aorta, bone marrow, and spleen, underscoring the existence of a neural-hematopoietic-inflammatory axis in healthy, young adults.
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- 2022
11. Optimizing ECG lead selection for detection of prolongation of ventricular repolarization as measured by the Tpeak‐end interval
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Ruedisueli, Isabelle, Ma, Joyce, Nguyen, Randy, Lakhani, Karishma, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Electrocardiography ,Humans ,Young Adult ,sudden death ,Tp-e ,QT ,QTc ,Tpeak-end ,ventricular repolarization ,Tp-e/QT ,Tp-e/QTc ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundThe Tpeak-end(Tp-e) has not been compared in all 12 ECG leads in healthy adults to determine if the Tp-e varies across leads. If there is variation, it remains uncertain, which lead(s) are preferred for recording in order to capture the maximal Tp-e value.ObjectiveThe purpose of the current study was to determine the optimal leads, if any, to capture the maximal Tp-e interval in healthy young adults.MethodsIn 88 healthy adults (ages 21-38 years), including derivation (n = 21), validation (n = 20), and smoker/vaper (n = 47) cohorts, the Tp-e was measured using commercial computer software (LabChart Pro 8 with ECG module, ADInstruments) in all 12 leads at rest and following a provocative maneuver, abrupt standing. Tp-e was compared to determine which lead(s) most frequently captured the maximal Tp-e interval.ResultsIn the rest and abrupt standing positions, the Tp-e was not uniform among the 12 leads; the maximal Tp-e was most frequently captured in the precordial leads. At rest, grouping leads V2-V4 resulted in detection of the maximum Tp-e in 85.7% of participants (CI 70.7, 99.9%) versus all other leads (p
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- 2022
12. Mechanical Ventilator Liberation of Patients With COVID-19 in Long-term Acute Care Hospital
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Dolinay, Tamas, Jun, Dale, Chen, Lucia, and Gornbein, Jeffrey
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Assistive Technology ,Bioengineering ,Patient Safety ,Respiratory ,COVID-19 ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Intensive Care Units ,Length of Stay ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Retrospective Studies ,Ventilators ,Mechanical ,long-term acute care hospital ,ventilator liberation ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundMechanical ventilation (MV) via tracheostomy is performed commonly for patients who are in long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs) after respiratory failure. However, the outcome of MV in COVID-19-associated respiratory failure in LTACHs is not known.Research questionWhat is the ventilator liberation rate of patients who have received tracheostomy with COVID-19-associated respiratory failure compared with those with respiratory failure unrelated to COVID-19 in LTACHs?Study design and methodsIn this retrospective cohort study, we examined mechanically ventilated patients discharged between June 2020 and March 2021. Of 242 discharges, 165 patients who had undergone tracheostomy arrived and were considered for ventilator liberation. One hundred twenty-eight patients did not have COVID-19 and 37 patients were admitted for COVID-19.ResultsThe primary outcome of the study was ventilator liberation; secondary outcomes were functional recovery, length of stay (LOS) at the LTACH, and discharge disposition. After controlling for demographics, the number of comorbidities, hemodialysis, vasopressor need, thrombocytopenia, and the LOS at the short-term acute care hospital, our results indicated that patients with COVID-19 showed a higher adjusted ventilator liberation rate of 91.4% vs 56.0% in those without COVID-19. Functional ability was assessed with the change of Functional Status Score for the Intensive Care Unit (FSS-ICU) between admission and discharge. The adjusted mean change in FSS-ICU was significantly higher in the COVID-19 group than in the non-COVID-19 group: 9.49 (95% CI, 7.38-11.6) vs 2.08 (95% CI, 1.05-3.11), respectively (P
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- 2022
13. Randomized Controlled Trial of Over-the-Scope Clip as Initial Treatment of Severe Nonvariceal Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
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Jensen, Dennis M, Kovacs, Thomas, Ghassemi, Kevin A, Kaneshiro, Marc, and Gornbein, Jeffrey
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Digestive Diseases ,Hematology ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,Hemostasis ,Endoscopic ,Humans ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Surgical Instruments ,Treatment Outcome ,Nonvariceal UGI Hemorrhage ,Ulcer Bleeding ,Dieulafoy's Lesion ,Hemoclips ,Dieulafoy’s Lesion ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background and aimsNo prior randomized controlled trial (RCT) has reported patient outcomes of large over-the-scope clip (OTSC) compared to standard hemostasis as initial endoscopic treatment of severe NVUGIB. This was our study aim.MethodsPatients with bleeding ulcers or Dieulafoy's lesions and major stigmata of hemorrhage - SRH (active spurting bleeding, visible vessel, or clot) - or lesser SRH (oozing bleeding or flat spots - with arterial blood flow by Doppler probe) were randomized to OTSC or standard endoscopic hemostasis (with hemoclips or multipolar electrocoagulation - MPEC). Patients and their healthcare providers were blinded to treatments and made all post-randomization management decisions. Ulcer patients received high dose intravenous infusions of proton pump inhibitors (PPI) for 3 days, then 27 days of oral PPI. 30 day outcomes were prospectively recorded; data management was with SAS; and data analysis was by a statistician.Results53 patients (25 OTSC, 28 Standard) were randomized, with similar baseline risk factors. However, there were significant differences in OTSC vs. Standard groups in rates of rebleeding (4% vs. 28.6%; p = .017; relative risk 0.10, 95% confidence intervals 0.01, 0.91; number needed to treat 4); severe complications (0 % vs. 14.3%); and post-randomization units of red cell transfusions (0.04 vs. 0.68). All rebleeds occurred in patients with major SRH and none with lesser SRH.Conclusion1. OTSC significantly reduced rates of rebleeding, severe complications, and post-randomization red cell transfusions. 2. Patients with major stigmata benefited significantly from hemostasis with OTSC, but those with lesser stigmata did not. (ClinicalTrials.gov, Number: NCT03065465).
- Published
- 2021
14. Electronic and Tobacco Cigarettes Alter Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Oxidative Biomarkers
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Gupta, Rajat, Lin, Yan, Luna, Karla, Logue, Anjali, Yoon, Alexander J, Haptonstall, Kacey P, Moheimani, Roya, Choroomi, Yasmine, Nguyen, Kevin, Tran, Elizabeth, Zhu, Yifang, Faull, Kym F, Kelesidis, Theodoros, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Middlekauff, Holly R, and Araujo, Jesus A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Prevention ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Arachidonic Acid ,Bilirubin ,Biomarkers ,Cigarette Smoking ,Female ,Glutathione ,Heme Oxygenase (Decyclizing) ,Humans ,Linoleic Acids ,Male ,Oxidative Stress ,Vaping ,antioxidant ,bilirubin ,biomarkers ,cardiovascular disease ,lipid peroxidation ,smoking ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
[Figure: see text].
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- 2021
15. NICOTINE, NOT NON-NICOTINE CONSTITUENTS, IN TOBACCO AND ELECTRONIC CIGARETTE EMISSIONS MEDIATE ACUTE HEMODYNAMIC EFFECTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR HARM REDUCTION
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Middlekauff, Holly R, Nguyen, Randy, Ruedisueli, Isabelle, and Gornbein, Jeffrey
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Good Health and Well Being ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Published
- 2021
16. Arrhythmic Risk Profile and Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Cardiac Sympathetic Denervation for Recurrent Monomorphic Ventricular Tachycardia After Ablation
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Dusi, Veronica, Gornbein, Jeffrey, H., Duc, Sorg, Julie M, Khakpour, Houman, Krokhaleva, Yuliya, Ajijola, Olujimi A, Macias, Carlos, Bradfield, Jason S, Buch, Eric, Fujimura, Osamu A, Boyle, Noel G, Yanagawa, Jane, Lee, Jay M, Shivkumar, Kalyanam, and Vaseghi, Marmar
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Anti-Arrhythmia Agents ,Catheter Ablation ,Cicatrix ,Comorbidity ,Defibrillators ,Implantable ,Electrophysiologic Techniques ,Cardiac ,Female ,Heart ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Adjustment ,Secondary Prevention ,Sympathectomy ,Tachycardia ,Ventricular ,United States ,ablation ,autonomic ,cardiac sympathetic denervation ,ventricular tachycardia ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Background Cardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) has been used as a bailout strategy for refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT). Risk of VT recurrence in patients with scar-related monomorphic VT referred for CSD and the extent to which CSD can modify this risk is unknown. We aimed to quantify arrhythmia recurrence risk and impact of CSD in this population. Methods and Results Adjusted competing risk time to event models were developed to adjust for risk of VT recurrence and sustained VT/implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shocks after VT ablation based on patient comorbidities at the time of VT ablation. Adjusted VT and implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shock recurrence rates were estimated for the subgroup who subsequently required CSD after ablation. The expected adjusted recurrence rates were then compared with the observed rates after CSD. Data from 381 patients with scar-mediated monomorphic VT who underwent VT ablation were analyzed, excluding patients with polymorphic VT. Sixty eight patients underwent CSD for recurrent VT. CSD reduced the expected adjusted VT recurrence rate by 36% (expected rate of 5.61 versus observed rate of 3.58 per 100 person-months, P=0.01) and the sustained VT/implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shock rates by 34% (expected rate of 4.34 versus observed 2.85 per 100 person-months, P=0.03). The median number of sustained VT/implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shocks in the year before versus the year after CSD was reduced by 90% (10 versus 1, P
- Published
- 2021
17. MRI-AST (MAST) Score Accurately Predicts Major Adverse Liver Outcome, Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Liver Transplant, and Liver-Related Death
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Truong, Emily, Gornbein, Jeffrey A., Yang, Ju Dong, Noureddin, Nabil, Harrison, Stephen A., Alkhouri, Naim, and Noureddin, Mazen
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- 2023
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18. Cardiovascular autonomic effects of electronic cigarette use: a systematic review
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Garcia, Phoebe D, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Tobacco ,Cardiovascular ,Substance Misuse ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Good Health and Well Being ,Autonomic Agents ,Cardiovascular System ,Humans ,Nicotine ,Vaping ,Autonomic nervous system ,Electronic cigarettes ,Smoking ,Sympathetic nervous system ,Clinical Sciences ,General Clinical Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Neurosciences - Abstract
PurposeElectronic cigarettes (ECs) are the fastest growing tobacco product in the USA, and ECs, like tobacco cigarettes (TCs), have effects on the cardiovascular autonomic nervous system, with clinical implications. The purpose of this review was to collect and synthesize available studies that have investigated the autonomic cardiovascular effects of EC use in humans. Special attention is paid to the acute and chronic effects of ECs, the relative contributions of the nicotine versus non-nicotine constituents in EC emissions and the relative effects of ECs compared to TCs.MethodsUsing the methodology described in the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) statement, we conducted a literature search of the Ovid PubMed and Embase databases on 6 December 2019 using keywords in titles and abstracts of published literature. Acute (minutes to hours) and chronic (days or longer) changes in heart rate variability (HRV), heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) were used as estimates of cardiovascular autonomic effects.ResultsNineteen studies were included in this systematic review, all of which used earlier generation EC devices. Acute EC vaping increased HR and BP less than acute TC smoking. Nicotine but not non-nicotine constituents in EC aerosol were responsible for the sympathoexcitatory effects. The results of chronic EC vaping studies were consistent with a chronic sympathoexcitatory effect as estimated by HRV, but this did not translate into chronic increases in HR or BP.ConclusionsElectronic cigarettes are sympathoexcitatory. Cardiac sympathoexcitatory effects are less when vaping using the earlier generation ECs than when smoking TCs. Additional studies of the latest pod-like EC devices, which deliver nicotine similarly to a TC, are necessary.
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- 2020
19. Elevated Cellular Oxidative Stress in Circulating Immune Cells in Otherwise Healthy Young People Who Use Electronic Cigarettes in a Cross‐Sectional Single‐Center Study: Implications for Future Cardiovascular Risk
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Kelesidis, Theodoros, Tran, Elizabeth, Arastoo, Sara, Lakhani, Karishma, Heymans, Rachel, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cotinine ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Female ,Flow Cytometry ,Humans ,Killer Cells ,Natural ,Leukocytes ,Lymphocytes ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Monocytes ,Neutrophils ,Oxidative Stress ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Risk Factors ,Vaping ,Young Adult ,electronic cigarettes ,monocytes ,nicotine ,reactive oxidative species ,tobacco cigarettes ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Background Tobacco cigarettes (TCs) increase oxidative stress and inflammation, both instigators of atherosclerotic cardiac disease. It is unknown if electronic cigarettes (ECs) also increase immune cell oxidative stress. We hypothesized an ordered, "dose-response" relationship, with tobacco-product type as "dose" (lowest in nonsmokers, intermediate in EC vapers, and highest in TC smokers), and the "response" being cellular oxidative stress (COS) in immune cell subtypes, in otherwise, healthy young people. Methods and Results Using flow cytometry and fluorescent probes, COS was determined in immune cell subtypes in 33 otherwise healthy young people: nonsmokers (n=12), EC vapers (n=12), and TC smokers (n=9). Study groups had similar baseline characteristics, including age, sex, race, and education level. A dose-response increase in proinflammatory monocytes and lymphocytes, and their COS content among the 3 study groups was found: lowest in nonsmokers, intermediate in EC vapers, and highest in TC smokers. These findings were most striking in CD14dimCD16+ and CD14++CD16+ proinflammatory monocytes and were reproduced with 2 independent fluorescent probes of COS. Conclusions These findings portend the development of premature cardiovascular disease in otherwise healthy young people who chronically vape ECs. On the other hand, that the COS is lower in EC vapers compared with TC smokers warrants additional investigation to determine if switching to ECs may form part of a harm-reduction strategy. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03823885.
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- 2020
20. Differential effects of tobacco cigarettes and electronic cigarettes on endothelial function in healthy young people
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Haptonstall, Kacey P, Choroomi, Yasmine, Moheimani, Roya, Nguyen, Kevin, Tran, Elizabeth, Lakhani, Karishma, Ruedisueli, Isabella, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Tobacco ,Cardiovascular ,Prevention ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Atherosclerosis ,Brachial Artery ,Cigarette Smoking ,Consumer Product Safety ,Cross-Over Studies ,E-Cigarette Vapor ,Endothelium ,Vascular ,Female ,Healthy Volunteers ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Random Allocation ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Vaping ,Vasodilation ,Young Adult ,electronic cigarettes ,endothelial function ,flow-mediated dilation ,nicotine ,tobacco cigarettes ,Physiology ,Medical Physiology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Tobacco cigarette (TC) smoking has never been lower in the United States, but electronic cigarette (EC) vaping has reached epidemic proportions among our youth. Endothelial dysfunction, as measured by flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD) is a predictor of future atherosclerosis and adverse cardiovascular events and is impaired in young TC smokers, but whether FMD is also reduced in young EC vapers is uncertain. The aim of this study in otherwise healthy young people was to compare the effects of acute and chronic tobacco cigarette (TC) smoking and electronic cigarette (EC) vaping on FMD. FMD was compared in 47 nonsmokers (NS), 49 chronic EC vapers, and 40 chronic TC smokers at baseline and then after EC vapers (n = 31) and nonsmokers (n = 47) acutely used an EC with nicotine (ECN), EC without nicotine (EC0), and nicotine inhaler (NI) at ~4-wk intervals and after TC smokers (n = 33) acutely smoked a TC, compared with sham control. Mean age (NS, 26.3 ± 5.2 vs. EC, 27.4 ± 5.45 vs. TC, 27.1 ± 5.51 yr, P = 0.53) was similar among the groups, but there were more female nonsmokers. Baseline FMD was not different among the groups (NS, 7.7 ± 4.5 vs. EC:6.6 ± 3.6 vs. TC, 7.9 ± 3.7%∆, P = 0.35), even when compared by group and sex. Acute TC smoking versus control impaired FMD (FMD pre-/postsmoking, -2.52 ± 0.92 vs. 0.65 ± 0.93%∆, P = 0.02). Although the increase in plasma nicotine was similar after EC vapers used the ECN versus TC smokers smoked the TC (5.75 ± 0.74 vs. 5.88 ± 0.69 ng/mL, P = 0.47), acute EC vaping did not impair FMD. In otherwise healthy young people who regularly smoke TCs or ECs, impaired FMD compared with that in nonsmokers was not present at baseline. However, FMD was significantly impaired after smoking one TC, but not after vaping an equivalent "dose" (estimated by change in plasma nicotine) of an EC, consistent with the notion that non-nicotine constituents in TC smoke mediate the impairment. Although it is reassuring that acute EC vaping did not acutely impair FMD, it would be dangerous and premature to conclude that ECs do not lead to atherosclerosis.NEW & NOTEWORTHY In our study of otherwise healthy young people, baseline flow-mediated dilation (FMD), a predictor of atherosclerosis and increased cardiovascular risk, was not different among tobacco cigarette (TC) smokers or electronic cigarette (EC) vapers who had refrained from smoking, compared with nonsmokers. However, acutely smoking one TC impaired FMD in smokers, whereas vaping a similar EC "dose" (as estimated by change in plasma nicotine levels) did not. Finally, although it is reassuring that acute EC vaping did not acutely impair FMD, it would be premature and dangerous to conclude that ECs do not lead to atherosclerosis or increase cardiovascular risk.
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- 2020
21. Acute and chronic sympathomimetic effects of e-cigarette and tobacco cigarette smoking: role of nicotine and non-nicotine constituents
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Arastoo, Sara, Haptonstall, Kacey P, Choroomi, Yasmine, Moheimani, Roya, Nguyen, Kevin, Tran, Elizabeth, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Minority Health ,Cardiovascular ,Tobacco ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Substance Misuse ,Prevention ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aerosols ,Blood Pressure ,Cardiovascular System ,Cigarette Smoking ,Cross-Over Studies ,Female ,Heart Rate ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Inhalation Exposure ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nicotine ,Nicotinic Agonists ,Random Allocation ,Risk Assessment ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Sympathomimetics ,Time Factors ,Vaping ,Young Adult ,blood pressure ,electronic cigarettes ,heart rate variability ,nicotine ,tobacco cigarettes ,Physiology ,Medical Physiology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Electronic cigarettes (ECs) and tobacco cigarettes (TCs) both release nicotine, a sympathomimetic drug. We hypothesized that baseline heart rate variability (HRV) and hemodynamics would be similar in chronic EC and TC smokers and that after acute EC use, changes in HRV and hemodynamics would be attributable to nicotine, not non-nicotine, constituents in EC aerosol. In 100 smokers, including 58 chronic EC users and 42 TC smokers, baseline HRV and hemodynamics [blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR)] were compared. To isolate the acute effects of nicotine vs. non-nicotine constituents in EC aerosol, we compared changes in HRV, BP, and HR in EC users after using an EC with nicotine (ECN), EC without nicotine (EC0), nicotine inhaler (NI), or sham vaping (control). Outcomes were also compared with TC smokers after smoking one TC. Baseline HRV and hemodynamics were not different in chronic EC users and TC smokers. In EC users, BP and HR, but not HRV outcomes, increased only after using the ECN, consistent with a nicotine effect on BP and HR. Similarly, in TC smokers, BP and HR but not HRV outcomes increased after smoking one TC. Despite a similar increase in nicotine, the hemodynamic increases were significantly greater after TC smokers smoked one TC compared with the increases after EC users used the ECN. In conclusion, chronic EC and TC smokers exhibit a similar pattern of baseline HRV. Acute increases in BP and HR in EC users are attributable to nicotine, not non-nicotine, constituents in EC aerosol. The greater acute pressor effects after TC compared with ECN may be attributable to non-nicotine, combusted constituents in TC smoke.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Chronic electronic cigarette (EC) users and tobacco cigarette (TC) smokers exhibit a similar level of sympathetic nerve activity as estimated by heart rate variability. Acute increases in blood pressure (BP) and heart rate in EC users are attribute to nicotine, not non-nicotine, constituents in EC aerosol. Acute TC smoking increased BP significantly more than acute EC use, despite similar increases in plasma nicotine, suggestive of additional adverse vascular effects attributable to combusted, non-nicotine constituents in TC smoke.
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- 2020
22. Tobacco and electronic cigarettes adversely impact ECG indexes of ventricular repolarization: implication for sudden death risk
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Ip, Michelle, Diamantakos, Evangelos, Haptonstall, Kacey, Choroomi, Yasmine, Moheimani, Roya S, Nguyen, Kevin Huan, Tran, Elizabeth, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Prevention ,Substance Misuse ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Respiratory ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Action Potentials ,Adult ,Death ,Sudden ,Cardiac ,Female ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Male ,Nicotine ,Nicotinic Agonists ,Tobacco Smoking ,Vaping ,Ventricular Function ,electronic cigarettes ,nicotine ,smoking ,sudden death ,tobacco cigarettes ,ventricular repolarization ,Physiology ,Medical Physiology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Tobacco cigarette smoking is associated with increased sudden death risk, perhaps through adverse effects on ventricular repolarization. The effect of electronic (e-)cigarettes on ventricular repolarization is unknown. The objective of the study was to test the hypothesis that tobacco cigarettes and e-cigarettes have similar adverse effects on electrocardiogram (ECG) indexes of ventricular repolarization and these effects are attributable to nicotine. ECG recordings were obtained in 37 chronic tobacco cigarette smokers, 43 chronic e-cigarette users, and 65 nonusers. Primary outcomes, Tpeak to Tend (Tp-e), Tp-e/QT ratio, and Tp-e/QTc ratio, were measured in tobacco cigarette smokers pre-/post-straw control and smoking one tobacco cigarette and in e-cigarette users and nonusers pre-/post-straw control and using an e-cigarette with and without nicotine (different days). Mean values of the primary outcomes were not different among the three groups at baseline. In chronic tobacco cigarette smokers, all primary outcomes, including the Tp-e (12.9 ± 5.0% vs. 1.5 ± 5%, P = 0.017), Tp-e/QT (14.9 ± 5.0% vs. 0.7 ± 5.1%, P = 0.004), and Tp-e/QTc (11.9 ± 5.0% vs. 2.1 ± 5.1%, P = 0.036), were significantly increased pre-/post-smoking one tobacco cigarette compared with pre-/post-straw control. In chronic e-cigarette users, the Tp-e/QT (6.3 ± 1.9%, P = 0.046) was increased only pre/post using an e-cigarette with nicotine but not pre/post the other exposures. The changes relative to the changes after straw control were greater after smoking the tobacco cigarette compared with using the e-cigarette with nicotine for Tp-e (11.4 ± 4.4% vs. 1.1 ± 2.5%, P < 0.05) and Tp-e/QTc (9.8 ± 4.4% vs. -1.6 ± 2.6%, P = 0.05) but not Tp-e/QT(14.2 ± 4.5% vs. 4.2 ± 2.6%, P = 0.061) . Heart rate increased similarly after the tobacco cigarette and e-cigarette with nicotine. Baseline ECG indexes of ventricular repolarization were not different among chronic tobacco cigarette smokers, electronic cigarette users and nonusers. An adverse effect of acute tobacco cigarette smoking on ECG indexes of ventricular repolarization was confirmed. In chronic e-cigarette users, an adverse effect of using an e-cigarette with nicotine, but not without nicotine, on ECG indexes of ventricular repolarization was also observed.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Abnormal ventricular repolarization, as indicated by prolonged Tpeak-end (Tp-e), is associated with increased sudden death risk. Baseline ECG indexes of repolarization, Tp-e, Tp-e/QT, and Tp-e/QTc, were not different among tobacco cigarette (TC) smokers, electronic cigarette (EC) users, and nonsmokers at baseline, but when TC smokers smoked one TC, all parameters were prolonged. Using an electronic cigarette with nicotine, but not without nicotine, increased the Tp-e/QT. Smoking induces changes in ECG indexes of ventricular repolarization associated with increased sudden death risk.
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- 2020
23. Prognostic impact of atrial rhythm and dimension in patients with structural heart disease undergoing cardiac sympathetic denervation for ventricular arrhythmias.
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Dusi, Veronica, Sorg, Julie M, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Gima, Jean, Yanagawa, Jane, Lee, Jay M, Vecerek, Natalia, Vaseghi, Marmar, Bradfield, Jason S, De Ferrari, Gaetano M, Shivkumar, Kalyanam, and Ajijola, Olujimi A
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Heart Atria ,Heart Conduction System ,Humans ,Tachycardia ,Ventricular ,Echocardiography ,Stroke Volume ,Prognosis ,Treatment Outcome ,Sympathectomy ,Retrospective Studies ,Follow-Up Studies ,Heart Rate ,Atrial Function ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Atrial arrhythmias ,Autonomic nervous system ,Cardiac sympathetic denervation ,Left atrial volume index ,Structural heart disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
BackgroundCardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) is a promising treatment for patients with structural heart disease (SHD) and refractory ventricular tachyarrhythmias (VTs). The effect of CSD on atrial rhythm as well as the prognostic impact of atrial arrhythmias (AAs) or left atrial volume index (LAVI) on CSD outcome are unknown.ObjectivesThe goals of this study were to evaluate the impact of AAs and LAVI on CSD outcome and to assess changes in AAs burden and in atrial pacing after CSD.MethodsPatients with SHD undergoing CSD for VTs were analyzed. Hazards models were built to assess predictors of sustained VT/implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) shock recurrences and death/orthotopic heart transplant (OHT). Changes before vs after CSD were assessed using ICD, clinical, and echocardiographic data. A drug index was devised to correct for medication use.ResultsBetween 2009 and 2018, 91 patients (mean age 56 ± 13 years; mean left ventricular ejection fraction 34% ± 14%; 47% with a history of AAs) underwent left CSD (16%) or bilateral CSD (BCSD). The median follow-up was 14 months (interquartile range 4-37 months). Using multivariable analysis, neither LAVI nor AAs were associated with recurrences; LAVI was an independent predictor of death/OHT. AAs burden did not change after BCSD, but atrial pacing increased from a median of 28% to 72% (P < .01). Left ventricular end-diastolic diameter slightly increased; however, sustained VT/ICD shocks were reduced.ConclusionIn patients with SHD undergoing CSD, LAVI predicts death/OHT. AAs burden, already low at baseline, was unchanged after BCSD, while the need for atrial pacing increased, suggesting an impact of BCSD on sinus node chronotropism.
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- 2020
24. Hospital experience predicts outcomes after high-risk geriatric surgery.
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Dworsky, Jill, Childers, Christopher, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Russell, Marcia
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Aged ,Female ,Health Services for the Aged ,Hospitals ,High-Volume ,Humans ,Male ,Surgical Procedures ,Operative ,United States - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geriatric patients require specialized perioperative care, yet the impact of geriatric surgery proportion (a measure of experience) and geriatric surgery volume, on clinical outcomes is unknown. This study analyzes the association between proportion and volume and clinical outcomes after high-risk geriatric surgery. METHODS: Using the 2014 National Inpatient Sample, hospital encounters for older adults (≥65 years) undergoing high-risk geriatric surgery were identified. Geriatric surgery volume was defined as a hospitals annual volume of geriatric patients undergoing high-risk geriatric surgery. Geriatric surgery proportion was calculated as volume divided by the sum of high-risk surgeries in all ages. Hierarchical multivariable regression models identified predictors of inpatient mortality, postoperative length of stay, and discharge to nursing facility. RESULTS: There were an estimated 514,950 hospital encounters for older adults undergoing high-risk geriatric surgery from 3,115 hospitals. Mean proportion was 0.53 ± 0.19; median volume was 60 cases per year, ranging from 5 to 3,235. After adjustment, comparing the 90th to 10th percentiles, higher proportion was associated with decreased mortality (odds ratio [95% confidence interval] 0.81 [0.73-0.88]; P < .001) and shorter postoperative length of stay (-4.44% (-5.49 to -3.39%); P < .0001). Higher volume was not associated with mortality but was associated with longer length of stay (7.76% [6.75-8.77%]; P < .0001) and decreased discharge to nursing facility (0.87 [0.79-0.95]; P= .003). CONCLUSION: Treatment of geriatric patients at hospitals with the highest proportion of high-risk geriatric surgery, or the most experience, is associated with improved outcomes. High-proportion hospitals should be examined to understand the mechanisms by which better quality geriatric surgical care is achieved, while lower-proportion hospitals may be targets for quality improvement efforts.
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- 2020
25. Abstract 12959: Association of Gender-Affirming Hormone Treatment With Metabolic Syndrome in Transgender Patients Compared With Cis-Gender Patients
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Marijic Buljubasic, Andriana, Goodman, Michael, Budoff, Matthew J, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Hashemi, Leila
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- 2023
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26. Artificial Intelligence Detection of Diabetic Retinopathy: Subgroup Comparison of the EyeArt System with Ophthalmologists’ Dilated Examinations
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Dubiner, Harvey, Levy-Clarke, Grace, Pesavento, Richard, Sherman, Mark D., Silverstein, Steven, Kim, Brian, Walman, Gerald B., Blodi, Barbara A., Domalpally, Amitha, Reed, Susan, Reimers, James, Lang, Kris, Cohn, Holy, Shaw, Ruth, Watson, Sheila, Ewen, Andrew, Barrett, Nancy, Swift, Maria, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Lim, Jennifer Irene, Regillo, Carl D., Sadda, SriniVas R., Ipp, Eli, Bhaskaranand, Malavika, Ramachandra, Chaithanya, and Solanki, Kaushal
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- 2023
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27. Central Nervous System Electrical Stimulation for Neuroprotection in Acute Cerebral Ischemia
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Bahr Hosseini, Mersedeh, Hou, Jesse, Bikson, Marom, Iacoboni, Marco, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Saver, Jeffrey L
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Neurosciences ,Stroke ,Rehabilitation ,Brain Disorders ,Neurological ,Animals ,Brain Ischemia ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Electric Stimulation ,Mice ,acute stroke ,central nervous system ,electrical stimulation ,meta-analysis ,neuroprotection ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and Purpose- Brain electrical stimulation, widely studied to facilitate recovery from stroke, has also been reported to confer direct neuroprotection in preclinical models of acute cerebral ischemia. Systematic review of controlled preclinical acute cerebral ischemia studies would aid in planning for initial human clinical trials. Methods- A systematic Medline search identified controlled, preclinical studies of central nervous system electrical stimulation in acute cerebral ischemia. Studies were categorized among 6 stimulation strategies. Three strategies applied different stimulation types to tissues within the ischemic zone (cathodal hemispheric stimulation [CHS], anodal hemispheric stimulation, and pulsed hemispheric stimulation), and 3 strategies applied deep brain stimulation to different neuronal targets remote from the ischemic zone (fastigial nucleus stimulation, subthalamic vasodilator area stimulation, and dorsal periaqueductal gray stimulation). Random-effects meta-analysis assessed electrical stimulation modification of final infarct volume. Study-level risk of bias and intervention-level readiness-for-translation were assessed using formal rating scales. Results- Systematic search identified 28 experiments in 21 studies, including a total of 350 animals, of electrical stimulation in preclinical acute cerebral ischemia. Overall, in animals undergoing electrical stimulation, final infarct volumes were reduced by 37% (95% CI, 34%-40%; P
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- 2019
28. A new biometric: In utero growth curves for metacarpal and phalangeal lengths reveal an embryonic patterning ratio.
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Rao, Rashmi, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Afshar, Yalda, Platt, Lawrence, DeVore, Greggory, and Krakow, Deborah
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Adult ,Biometry ,Body Patterning ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Finger Phalanges ,Gestational Age ,Growth Charts ,Humans ,Metacarpal Bones ,Pregnancy ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study are to develop gestational age-specific growth curves for fetal third metacarpal and phalangeal lengths and to determine if fetal hand proportion is established in utero. METHODS: This prospective cross-sectional study used 2D ultrasound across gestational ages 12 to 39 weeks to evaluate the third fetal metacarpal and phalangeal measurements. Gestational age-specific reference growth curves were developed. Associations between continuous variables were assessed using Spearman correlations (rs ) and restricted cubic splines. A nonlinear biologic regression model was used to predict metacarpal and phalangeal lengths as a function of gestational age. Measurements derived from five cases of thanatophoric dysplasia were used to determine if brachydactyly could be objectified. RESULTS: Fetal metacarpal and phalangeal lengths are highly correlated across gestational age (rs = 0.96, P
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- 2019
29. MRI-based (MAST) score accurately identifies patients with NASH and significant fibrosis
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Noureddin, Mazen, Truong, Emily, Gornbein, Jeffrey A., Saouaf, Rola, Guindi, Maha, Todo, Tsuyoshi, Noureddin, Nabil, Yang, Ju Dong, Harrison, Stephen A., and Alkhouri, Naim
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- 2022
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30. Outcomes of Catheter Ablation of Ventricular Tachycardia Based on Etiology in Nonischemic Heart Disease: An International Ventricular Tachycardia Ablation Center Collaborative Study.
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Vaseghi, Marmar, Hu, Tiffany Y, Tung, Roderick, Vergara, Pasquale, Frankel, David S, Di Biase, Luigi, Tedrow, Usha B, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, Yu, Ricky, Mathuria, Nilesh, Nakahara, Shiro, Tzou, Wendy S, Sauer, William H, Burkhardt, J David, Tholakanahalli, Venkatakrishna N, Dickfeld, Timm-Michael, Weiss, J Peter, Bunch, T Jared, Reddy, Madhu, Callans, David J, Lakkireddy, Dhanunjaya R, Natale, Andrea, Marchlinski, Francis E, Stevenson, William G, Della Bella, Paolo, and Shivkumar, Kalyanam
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Humans ,Tachycardia ,Ventricular ,Cardiomyopathies ,Catheter Ablation ,Treatment Outcome ,Retrospective Studies ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,ablation ,arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy ,myocarditis ,nonischemic ,sarcoidosis ,valvular ,ventricular tachycardia ,Rare Diseases ,Autoimmune Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study sought to characterize ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation outcomes across nonischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM) etiologies and adjust these outcomes by patient-related comorbidities that could explain differences in arrhythmia recurrence rates.BackgroundOutcomes of catheter ablation of VT in patients with NICM could be related to etiology of NICM.MethodsData from 2,075 patients with structural heart disease referred for catheter ablation of VT from 12 international centers was retrospectively analyzed. Patient characteristics and outcomes were noted for the 6 most common NICM etiologies. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards modeling was used to adjust for potential confounders.ResultsOf 780 NICM patients (57 ± 14 years of age, 18% women, left ventricular ejection fraction 37 ± 13%), underlying prevalence was 66% for dilated idiopathic cardiomyopathy (DICM), 13% for arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC), 6% for valvular cardiomyopathy, 6% for myocarditis, 4% for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and 3% for sarcoidosis. One-year freedom from VT was 69%, and freedom from VT, heart transplantation, and death was 62%. On unadjusted competing risk analysis, VT ablation in ARVC demonstrated superior VT-free survival (82%) versus DICM (p ≤ 0.01). Valvular cardiomyopathy had the poorest unadjusted VT-free survival, at 47% (p < 0.01). After adjusting for comorbidities, including age, heart failure severity, ejection fraction, prior ablation, and antiarrhythmic medication use, myocarditis, ARVC, and DICM demonstrated similar outcomes, whereas hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, valvular cardiomyopathy, and sarcoidosis had the highest risk of VT recurrence.ConclusionsCatheter ablation of VT in NICM is effective. Etiology of NICM is a significant predictor of outcomes, with ARVC, myocarditis, and DICM having similar but superior outcomes to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, valvular cardiomyopathy, and sarcoidosis, after adjusting for potential covariates.
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- 2018
31. Pilot Study of Intra-Aortic Balloon Occlusion to Limit Morbidity in Patients with Adherent Placentation Undergoing Cesarean Hysterectomy.
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Blumenthal, Elizabeth, Rao, Rashmi, Murphy, Aisling, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Hong, Richard, Moriarty, John M, Kahn, Daniel A, and Janzen, Carla
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abnormal placentation ,cesarean hysterectomy ,intra-aortic balloon ,placenta accreta ,placenta percreta - Abstract
Objective We study whether using an intra-aortic balloon (IAB) during cesarean hysterectomy decreases delivery morbidity in patients with suspected morbidly adherent placentation. Study Design This is a retrospective cohort study of deliveries complicated by suspected abnormal placentation between 2009 and 2016 comparing maternal and neonatal outcomes with an IAB placed prior to cesarean hysterectomy versus no IAB. The primary outcome included quantified blood loss (QBL). Results Thirty-five cases were reviewed, 16 with IAB and 19 without IAB. No difference was seen in median QBL between the two groups (1,351 vs. 1,397 mL; p = 0.90). There were no significant differences in overall surgical complications (19% IAB, 21% no IAB; p = 0.86), bladder complications (12 vs. 21%; p = 0.66), intensive care unit admissions (12 vs. 26%; p = 0.41), surgical duration (2.9 vs. 2.8 hour; p = 0.83), or blood transfusions (median 2 vs. 2; p = 0.27) between the two groups. There was one groin hematoma at the balloon site that was managed conservatively. There were no complications involving thrombosis or limb ischemia in the IAB group. Conclusion While we did not detect statistically significant differences, larger studies may be warranted given the potential for extreme morbidity in these cases. This study highlights the potential use of an IAB in the management of these cases.
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- 2018
32. Neurologic Improvement in Acute Cerebral Ischemia: Frequency, Magnitude, Predictors and Clinical Outcomes
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Balucani, Clotilde, Levine, Steven R., Sanossian, Nerses, Starkman, Sidney, Liebeskind, David, Gornbein, Jeffrey A., Shkirkova, Kristina, Stratton, Samuel, Eckstein, Marc, Hamilton, Scott, Conwit, Robin, Sharma, Latisha K., and Saver, Jeffrey L.
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- 2022
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33. Combination Biomarkers for Risk Stratification in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure Biomarkers Prognostication in HF
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FENG, ZEKUN, AKINRIMISI, OLUMUYIWA P., GORNBEIN, JEFFREY A., TRUONG, QUYNH A., DAS, SAUMYA, SINGH, JAGMEET P., and AJIJOLA, OLUJIMI
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- 2021
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34. Sympathomimetic Effects of Acute E‐Cigarette Use: Role of Nicotine and Non‐Nicotine Constituents
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Moheimani, Roya S, Bhetraratana, May, Peters, Kacey M, Yang, Benjamin K, Yin, Fen, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Araujo, Jesus A, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Tobacco ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cross-Over Studies ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Female ,Ganglionic Stimulants ,Healthy Volunteers ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nicotine ,Smoking ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Sympathomimetics ,Young Adult ,electronic cigarettes ,heart rate variability ,nicotine ,oxidant stress ,sympathetic nervous system ,tobacco ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundChronic electronic (e) cigarette users have increased resting cardiac sympathetic nerve activity and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress. The purpose of the present study is to determine the role of nicotine versus non-nicotine constituents in e-cigarette emissions in causing these pathologies in otherwise healthy humans.Methods and resultsThirty-three healthy volunteers who were not current e-cigarette or tobacco cigarette smokers were studied. On different days, each participant used an e-cigarette with nicotine, an e-cigarette without nicotine, or a sham control. Cardiac sympathetic nerve activity was determined by heart rate variability, and susceptibility to oxidative stress was determined by plasma paraoxonase activity. Following exposure to the e-cigarette with nicotine, but not to the e-cigarette without nicotine or the sham control, there was a significant and marked shift in cardiac sympathovagal balance towards sympathetic predominance. The decrease in high-frequency component and the increases in the low-frequency component and the low-frequency to high-frequency ratio were significantly greater following exposure to the e-cigarette with nicotine compared with exposure to the e-cigarette without nicotine or to sham control. Oxidative stress, as estimated by plasma paraoxonase, did not increase following any of the 3 exposures.ConclusionsThe acute sympathomimetic effect of e-cigarettes is attributable to the inhaled nicotine, not to non-nicotine constituents in e-cigarette aerosol, recapitulating the same heart rate variability pattern associated with increased cardiac risk in multiple populations with and without known cardiac disease. Evidence of oxidative stress, as estimated by plasma paraoxonase activity, was not uncovered following acute e-cigarette exposure.
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- 2017
35. Activation of the “Splenocardiac Axis” by electronic and tobacco cigarettes in otherwise healthy young adults
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Boas, Zachary, Gupta, Pawan, Moheimani, Roya S, Bhetraratana, May, Yin, Fen, Peters, Kacey M, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Araujo, Jesus A, Czernin, Johannes, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Tobacco ,Clinical Research ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aorta ,Case-Control Studies ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Female ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Heart ,Humans ,Male ,Muscle ,Skeletal ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Smoking ,Spleen ,Arterial inflammation ,electronic cigarettes ,FDG-PET ,CT ,hematopoietic activation ,tobacco cigarettes ,Tobacco and electronic cigarettes ,Inflammation ,Positron emission tomography ,Vascular disease ,FDG‐PET/CT ,Physiology ,Medical Physiology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
The "Splenocardiac Axis" describes an inflammatory signaling network underlying acute cardiac ischemia, characterized by sympathetic nerve stimulation of hematopoietic tissues, such as the bone marrow and spleen, which then release proinflammatory monocytes that populate atherosclerotic plaques, thereby promoting ischemic heart disease. Electronic (e) cigarettes, like tobacco cigarettes trigger sympathetic nerve activation, but virtually nothing is known about their influence on hematopoietic and vascular tissues and cardiovascular risks. The objective of this study was to determine if the Splenocardiac Axis is activated in young adults who habitually use either tobacco or e-cigarettes. In otherwise healthy humans who habitually use tobacco cigarettes or e-cigarettes (not both), we used 18F-flurorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computer tomography (FDG-PET/CT) to test the hypothesis that tobacco or e-cigarettes increased metabolic activity of the hematopoietic and vascular tissues. FDG uptake in the spleen increased from nonuser controls (1.62 ± 0.07), to the e-cigarette users (1.73 ± 0.04), and was highest in tobacco cigarette smokers (1.82 ± 0.09; monotone P = 0.05). Similarly, FDG uptake in the aorta increased from the nonuser controls (1.87 ± 0.07) to the e-cigarette users (1.98 ± 0.07), and was highest in tobacco cigarette smokers (2.10 ± 0.07; monotone P = 0.04). FDG uptake in the skeletal muscle, which served as a control tissue, was not different between the groups. In conclusion, these findings are consistent with activation of the Splenocardiac Axis by emissions from tobacco cigarettes and e-cigarettes. This activation suggests a mechanism by which tobacco cigarettes, and potentially e-cigarettes, may lead to increased risk of future cardiovascular events.
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- 2017
36. Doppler Endoscopic Probe Monitoring of Blood Flow Improves Risk Stratification and Outcomes of Patients With Severe Nonvariceal Upper Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
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Jensen, Dennis M, Kovacs, Thomas OG, Ohning, Gordon V, Ghassemi, Kevin, Machicado, Gustavo A, Dulai, Gareth S, Sedarat, Alireza, Jutabha, Rome, and Gornbein, Jeffrey
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Digestive Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Endosonography ,Female ,Hemostasis ,Endoscopic ,Humans ,Male ,Mallory-Weiss Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage ,Recurrence ,Regional Blood Flow ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Single-Blind Method ,Treatment Outcome ,Ultrasonography ,Doppler ,Vascular Malformations ,Endoscopy ,UGI Bleeding ,Stigmata of Hemorrhage ,Clinical Trial ,Neurosciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences ,Nutrition and dietetics - Abstract
Background & aimsFor 4 decades, stigmata of recent hemorrhage in patients with nonvariceal lesions have been used for risk stratification and endoscopic hemostasis. The arterial blood flow that underlies the stigmata rarely is monitored, but can be used to determine risk for rebleeding. We performed a randomized controlled trial to determine whether Doppler endoscopic probe monitoring of blood flow improves risk stratification and outcomes in patients with severe nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage.MethodsIn a single-blind study performed at 2 referral centers we assigned 148 patients with severe nonvariceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding (125 with ulcers, 19 with Dieulafoy's lesions, and 4 with Mallory Weiss tears) to groups that underwent standard, visually guided endoscopic hemostasis (control, n = 76), or endoscopic hemostasis assisted by Doppler monitoring of blood flow under the stigmata (n = 72). The primary outcome was the rate of rebleeding after 30 days; secondary outcomes were complications, death, and need for transfusions, surgery, or angiography.ResultsThere was a significant difference in the rates of lesion rebleeding within 30 days of endoscopic hemostasis in the control group (26.3%) vs the Doppler group (11.1%) (P = .0214). The odds ratio for rebleeding with Doppler monitoring was 0.35 (95% confidence interval, 0.143-0.8565) and the number needed to treat was 7.ConclusionsIn a randomized controlled trial of patients with severe upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage from ulcers or other lesions, Doppler probe guided endoscopic hemostasis significantly reduced 30-day rates of rebleeding compared with standard, visually guided hemostasis. Guidelines for nonvariceal gastrointestinal bleeding should incorporate these results. ClinicalTrials.gov no: NCT00732212 (CLIN-013-07F).
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- 2017
37. Increased Cardiac Sympathetic Activity and Oxidative Stress in Habitual Electronic Cigarette Users: Implications for Cardiovascular Risk
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Moheimani, Roya S, Bhetraratana, May, Yin, Fen, Peters, Kacey M, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Araujo, Jesus A, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cotinine ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Oxidative Stress ,Risk Factors ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Vaping ,Young Adult ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
ImportanceElectronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) have gained unprecedented popularity, but virtually nothing is known about their cardiovascular risks.ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that an imbalance of cardiac autonomic tone and increased systemic oxidative stress and inflammation are detectable in otherwise healthy humans who habitually use e-cigarettes.Design, setting, and participantsCross-sectional case-control study of habitual e-cigarette users and nonuser control individuals from 2015 to 2016 at the University of California, Los Angeles. Otherwise healthy habitual e-cigarette users between the ages of 21 and 45 years meeting study criteria, including no current tobacco cigarette smoking and no known health problems or prescription medications, were eligible for enrollment. Healthy volunteers meeting these inclusion criteria who were not e-cigarette users were eligible to be enrolled as control individuals. A total of 42 participants meeting these criteria were enrolled in the study including 23 self-identified habitual e-cigarette users and 19 self-identified non-tobacco cigarette, non-e-cigarette user control participants.Main outcomes and measuresHeart rate variability components were analyzed for the high-frequency component (0.15-0.4 Hz), an indicator of vagal activity, the low-frequency component (0.04-0.15 Hz), a mixture of both vagal and sympathetic activity, and the ratio of the low frequency to high frequency, reflecting the cardiac sympathovagal balance. Three parameters of oxidative stress were measured in plasma: (1) low-density lipoprotein oxidizability, (2) high-density lipoprotein antioxidant/anti-inflammatory capacity, and (3) paraoxonase-1 activity.ResultsOf the 42 participants, 35% were women, 35% were white, and the mean age was 27.6 years. The high-frequency component was significantly decreased in the e-cigarette users compared with nonuser control participants (mean [SEM], 46.5 [3.7] nu vs 57.8 [3.6] nu; P = .04). The low-frequency component (mean [SEM], 52.7 [4.0] nu vs 39.9 [3.8] nu; P = .03) and the low frequency to high frequency ratio (mean [SEM], 1.37 [0.19] vs 0.85 [0.18]; P = .05) were significantly increased in the e-cigarette users compared with nonuser control participants, consistent with sympathetic predominance. Low-density lipoprotein oxidizability, indicative of the susceptibility of apolipoprotein B-containing lipoproteins to oxidation, was significantly increased in e-cigarette users compared with nonuser control individuals (mean [SEM], 3801.0 [415.7] U vs 2413.3 [325.0] U; P = .01) consistent with increased oxidative stress, but differences in high-density antioxidant/anti-inflammatory capacity and paraoxonase-1 activity were not significant.Conclusions and relevanceIn this study, habitual e-cigarette use was associated with a shift in cardiac autonomic balance toward sympathetic predominance and increased oxidative stress, both associated with increased cardiovascular risk.
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- 2017
38. Peptide Composition of Stroke Causing Emboli Correlate with Serum Markers of Atherosclerosis and Inflammation
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Rao, Neal M, Capri, Joseph, Cohn, Whitaker, Abdaljaleel, Maram, Restrepo, Lucas, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, Yong, William H, Liebeskind, David S, and Whitelegge, Julian P
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Brain Disorders ,Atherosclerosis ,Cerebrovascular ,Stroke ,Hematology ,proteomics ,stroke ,stroke etiology ,mass spectrometry ,mechanical thrombectomy ,thrombus proteomics ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
IntroductionThe specific protein composition of stroke-causing emboli is unknown. Because ischemic stroke has a varied etiology, it is possible that the composition of the thrombus from which an embolus originated will have distinctive molecular characteristics reflective of the underlying pathophysiology. We used mass spectrometry to evaluate the protein composition of retrieved emboli from patients with differing stroke etiologies and correlated the protein levels to serum predictors of atherosclerosis.MethodsEmboli from 20 consecutive acute stroke patients were retrieved by thrombectomy during routine stroke care. Thrombus proteins were extracted, digested, and multidimensional fractionation of peptides was performed. Fractionated peptides underwent nano-liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry. Spectra were searched using Mascot software in which results with p
- Published
- 2017
39. Comparison of Three Risk Scores to Predict Outcomes of Severe Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding
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Camus, Marine, Jensen, Dennis M, Ohning, Gordon V, Kovacs, Thomas O, Jutabha, Rome, Ghassemi, Kevin A, Machicado, Gustavo A, Dulai, Gareth S, Jensen, Mary E, and Gornbein, Jeffrey A
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Digestive Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Female ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Outcome Assessment ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,ROC Curve ,Risk Factors ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Tertiary Care Centers ,Treatment Outcome ,prognosis score ,gastrointestinal bleeding ,Charlson index ,ASA score ,CURE Hemostasis prognosis score ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background and aimsImproved medical decisions by using a score at the initial patient triage level may lead to improvements in patient management, outcomes, and resource utilization. There is no validated score for management of lower gastrointestinal bleeding (LGIB) unlike for upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The aim of our study was to compare the accuracies of 3 different prognostic scores [Center for Ulcer Research and Education Hemostasis prognosis score, Charlson index, and American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score] for the prediction of 30-day rebleeding, surgery, and death in severe LGIB.MethodsData on consecutive patients hospitalized with severe gastrointestinal bleeding from January 2006 to October 2011 in our 2 tertiary academic referral centers were prospectively collected. Sensitivities, specificities, accuracies, and area under the receiver operator characteristic curve were computed for 3 scores for predictions of rebleeding, surgery, and mortality at 30 days.ResultsTwo hundred thirty-five consecutive patients with LGIB were included between 2006 and 2011. Twenty-three percent of patients rebled, 6% had surgery, and 7.7% of patients died. The accuracies of each score never reached 70% for predicting rebleeding or surgery in either. The ASA score had a highest accuracy for predicting mortality within 30 days (83.5%), whereas the Center for Ulcer Research and Education Hemostasis prognosis score and the Charlson index both had accuracies
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- 2016
40. Risk Factors Associated With Infant Deaths From Pertussis: A Case-Control Study
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Winter, Kathleen, Zipprich, Jennifer, Harriman, Kathleen, Murray, Erin L, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Hammer, Sandra Jo, Yeganeh, Nava, Adachi, Kristina, and Cherry, James D
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Prevention ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Infectious Diseases ,Lung ,Biodefense ,Vaccine Related ,Infant Mortality ,Pediatric ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Hypertension ,Pulmonary ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Leukocytosis ,Lymphocytosis ,Male ,Pneumonia ,Risk Factors ,Whooping Cough ,Young Adult ,infant pertussis ,leukocytosis ,lymphocytosis ,pneumonia ,pulmonary hypertension ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundIn the current era, most pertussis deaths occur in infants
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- 2015
41. The Effect of Young Age in Hormone Receptor Positive Breast Cancer.
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Lee, Minna, Varzi, Leo, Chung, Debra, Cao, Minh-An, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Apple, Sophia, and Chang, Helena
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Adult ,Age Factors ,Aged ,Breast Neoplasms ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Disease-Free Survival ,Female ,Humans ,Mastectomy ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Receptor ,ErbB-2 ,Receptors ,Estrogen ,Receptors ,Progesterone ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies have shown that young breast cancer patients have more advanced disease and worse survival compared to older patients. Our objective was to study disease characteristics and survival in the subset of young women with hormone receptor positive (HR+) and HER2 negative (HER2-) cancer. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed HR+/HER2- breast cancer patients who underwent surgery at our institution between 2002 and 2010. We compared clinical characteristics, pathology, treatment, and recurrence-free survival between younger (≤40 years) and older (>40 years) patients. RESULTS: Of 669 HR+/HER2- breast cancer cases, 54 (8.1%) patients were 40 years or younger. Younger patients had more luminal B subtype, high grade, poor differentiation, and increased lymphovascular invasion. Younger women were treated more often with mastectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy. Although the unadjusted recurrence-free survival at median 55-month follow-up was lower in younger women, adjusting for stage, there was no significant difference (90.7% versus 89.3%, p = 0.74) between groups. CONCLUSION: Younger patients with HR+/HER2- breast cancer had more advanced disease and more aggressive treatment than older patients. The unfavorable pathologic features suggest a biologically different tumor in young women. After adjusting for these factors, younger patients have a recurrence-free survival similar to older patients.
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- 2015
42. Fish oil (n-3 fatty acids) in drug resistant epilepsy: a randomised placebo-controlled crossover study
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DeGiorgio, Christopher M, Miller, Patrick R, Harper, Ronald, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Schrader, Lara, Soss, Jason, and Meymandi, Sheba
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Epilepsy ,Neurodegenerative ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Anticonvulsants ,Blood Pressure ,Cross-Over Studies ,Docosahexaenoic Acids ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Resistance ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Eicosapentaenoic Acid ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Pharmacology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Backgroundn-3 fatty acids inhibit neuronal excitability and reduce seizures in animal models. High-dose fish oil has been explored in two randomised trials in drug resistant epilepsy with negative results. We performed a phase II randomised controlled crossover trial of low-dose and high-dose fish oil in participants with drug resistant epilepsy to explore whether low-dose or high-dose fish oil reduces seizures or improves cardiovascular health.MethodsRandomised placebo-controlled trial of low-dose and high-dose fish oil versus placebo (corn oil, linoleic acid) in 24 participants with drug resistant epilepsy. A three-period crossover design was utilised lasting 42 weeks, with three 10-week treatment periods and two 6-week washout periods. All participants were randomised in double-blind fashion to receive placebo, high dose or low dose in different sequences. The primary outcome was per cent change in total seizure frequency.FindingsLow-dose fish oil (3 capsules/day, 1080 mg eicosapentaenoic acid+docosahexaenoic acid) was associated with a 33.6% reduction in seizure frequency compared with placebo. Low-dose fish oil was also associated with a mild but significant reduction in blood pressure. High-dose fish oil was no different than placebo in reducing seizures or improving cardiac risk factors.InterpretationIn this phase II randomised crossover trial, low-dose fish oil was effective in reducing seizures compared with placebo. The magnitude of improvement is similar to that of recent antiepileptic drug trials in drug resistant epilepsy (DRE). The results indicate that low-dose fish oil may reduce seizures and improve the health of people with epilepsy. These findings justify a large multicentre randomised trial of low-dose fish oil (n-3 fatty acids
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- 2015
43. Catheter ablation of scar-based ventricular tachycardia: Relationship of procedure duration to outcomes and hospital mortality
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Yu, Ricky, Ma, Sootkeng, Tung, Roderick, Stevens, Steven, Macias, Carlos, Bradfield, Jason, Buch, Eric, Vaseghi, Marmar, Fujimura, Osama, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Mandapati, Ravi, Shivkumar, Kalyanam, and Boyle, Noel G
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Catheter Ablation ,Cicatrix ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Hospital Mortality ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Operative Time ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Stroke Volume ,Tachycardia ,Ventricular ,Treatment Outcome ,Ventricular tachycardia ,Ventricular tachycardia ablation ,Procedure duration ,Ventricular tachycardia ablation efficacy ,Ventricular tachycardia recurrence ,Hospital mortality ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundAblation has become an important option for treatment of ventricular tachycardia (VT). The influence of procedure duration on outcomes remains unexamined.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to determine the influence of procedure duration on outcomes and complications over an 8-year periodMethodsPatients referred for scar-mediated VT ablation from 2004 to 2011 were retrospectively analyzed. Procedure duration was defined as the time from the insertion of catheters through the femoral vein to the time of their withdrawal. Procedure duration was analyzed in relationship with baseline and intraoperative covariates, acute procedural outcomes, complications, and 6-month clinical outcomes.ResultsOne hundred forty-eight patients underwent VT ablation with mean procedure duration of 5.7 ± 1.8 hours. VT recurrence and survival at 6 months were 46% and 82%, respectively, and were not associated with procedure duration. Hospital mortality increased with intraoperative intraaortic balloon pump insertion (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 13.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.35-79.94, P = .004) and was improved with successful ablation of the clinical VT as a procedural end-point (adjusted OR 0.13, 95% Cl 0.03-0.54, P = .005). The association between procedure duration and hospital mortality remained after adjusting for significant baseline variables (adjusted OR 1.75, 95% CI 1.14-2.68, P = .0098) and intraoperative variables (adjusted OR 1.6, 95% CI 1.12-2.29, P = .0104).ConclusionHospital mortality was significantly increased by unsuccessful clinical VT ablation as a procedural end-point and intraoperative intraaortic balloon pump insertion. However, after adjusting for significant baseline and intraoperative covariates, procedure duration still was associated with increased hospital mortality. Procedure duration had no impact on VT recurrence and survival at 6 months.
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- 2015
44. Optimizing ECG lead selection for detection of prolongation of ventricular repolarization as measured by the Tpeak-end interval
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Ruedisueli, Isabelle, primary, Ma, Joyce, additional, Nguyen, Randy, additional, Lakhani, Karishma, additional, Gornbein, Jeffrey, additional, and Middlekauff, Holly R., additional
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Cigarette smoking is associated with dose-dependent adverse effects on paraoxonase activity and fibrinogen in young women
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Ramanathan, Gajalakshmi, Araujo, Jesus A, Gornbein, Jeffrey, Yin, Fen, and Middlekauff, Holly R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Atherosclerosis ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Tobacco ,Adult ,Aryldialkylphosphatase ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cholesterol ,HDL ,Cholesterol ,LDL ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug ,Female ,Fibrinogen ,Humans ,Oxidative Stress ,Risk Factors ,Smoking ,Young Adult ,paraoxonase activity ,smoking ,women ,Toxicology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
ContextSmoking is associated with increased fibrinogen and decreased paraoxonase (PON) activity, markers of inflammation and oxidative stress, in patients with coronary artery disease.ObjectiveWe tested the hypothesis that the adverse effect of smoking on these biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress would be detectable in otherwise healthy young female habitual smokers.Materials and methodsThirty-eight young women participated in the study (n = 20 habitual smokers, n = 18 non-smokers). Fibrinogen, PON-1 activity and HDL oxidant index (HOI) were measured.ResultsMean values of fibrinogen, PON-1 activity and log HOI were not different between the groups. Importantly, however, decreased PON-1 activity (rs = -0.51, p = 0.03) and increased fibrinogen (rs = 0.49, p = 0.04) were significantly correlated with increasing number of cigarettes smoked per day in habitual smokers.Discussion and conclusionCigarette smoking is associated with a dose-dependent adverse effect on PON-1 activity and fibrinogen in young women, which may have implications for future cardiovascular risk.
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- 2014
46. Defining Clinically Relevant Cerebral Hemorrhage After Thrombolytic Therapy for Stroke
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Rao, Neal M, Levine, Steven R, Gornbein, Jeffrey A, and Saver, Jeffrey L
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Stroke ,Cerebrovascular ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Humans ,National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (U.S.) ,Prognosis ,Radiography ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,brain ischemia ,cerebrovascular disorders ,hemorrhage ,stroke ,thrombolysis ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
Background and purposeSeveral definitions have been proposed to distinguish clinically relevant from incidental cerebral hemorrhagic transformation after thrombolytic therapy for acute ischemic stroke. We investigated which definition best identifies cerebral hemorrhages that alter long-term functional outcome in the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) trials.MethodsWe analyzed 4 candidate hemorrhage definitions for which the NINDS tPA trials public data set had relevant data. For each, we identified tPA-treated patients having that hemorrhage type and compared their actual functional outcomes at 90 days with their predicted outcomes had they not received tPA and not had the hemorrhage. Projected outcomes without tPA were based on a 17-variable prognostic model derived from the NINDS tPA trials placebo group.ResultsAmong the 312 patients treated with intravenous tPA, 33 (10.6%) experienced any radiological intracerebral hemorrhage
- Published
- 2014
47. The association between oral health literacy and failed appointments in adults attending a university‐based general dental clinic
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Holtzman, Jennifer S, Atchison, Kathryn A, Gironda, Melanie W, Radbod, Rebecca, and Gornbein, Jeffrey
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Dentistry ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Appointments and Schedules ,Dental Clinics ,Female ,Health Literacy ,Humans ,Los Angeles ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Oral Health ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Universities ,access ,dental services research ,disparities ,psychosocial aspects of oral health ,public health ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology - Abstract
ObjectivesThe purpose of this study is to determine the association between personal characteristics, a person's oral health literacy, and failing to show for dental appointments at a university dental clinic.MethodsA secondary data analysis was conducted on data collected from 200 adults at a university dental clinic between January 2005 and December 2006. In the original study, an oral health literacy instrument, the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine and Dentistry (REALM-D), was administered, sociodemographic and health information seeking behavior was gathered, and electronic records were reviewed.ResultsDescriptive and bivariate analyses and a classification and regression tree (CART) analysis were conducted. Seeking health information through fewer sources vs. multiple sources was the strongest predictor of failing to show. The subjects' oral health literacy, as measured by the REALM-D List 3 score, was the next most significant variable. Classification and regression tree analyses also selected gender, chief complaint, age, and payment type as predictor variables.ConclusionsMultiple factors contribute to failing to show for dental appointments. However, individuals who use fewer sources of oral health information, a subset of health literacy skills, are more likely to fail to show for dental appointments.
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- 2014
48. Arrhythmogenic effects of acute electronic cigarette compared to tobacco cigarette smoking in people living with HIV.
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Ruedisueli, Isabelle, Shi, Katie, Lopez, Samuel, Gornbein, Jeffrey, and Middlekauff, Holly R.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,TOBACCO smoke ,SMOKING ,DRUG abuse ,HIV-positive persons - Abstract
The leading cause of death in people living with HIV (PLWH) is cardiovascular disease, and the high prevalence of tobacco cigarette (TC) smoking is a major contributor. Switching to electronic cigarettes (ECs) has been promoted as a harm reduction strategy. We sought to determine if acute EC compared to TC smoking had less harmful effects on arrhythmogenic risk factors including acute changes in hemodynamics, heart rate variability (HRV), and ventricular repolarization (VR). In PLWH who smoke, changes in hemodynamics, HRV, and VR were compared pre/post acutely using an EC, TC, or puffing on an empty straw on different days in random order, in a crossover study. Thirty‐seven PLWH (36 males, mean age 40.5 ± 9.1 years) participated. Plasma nicotine was greater after TC versus EC use (10.12 ± 0.96 vs. 6.18 ± 0.99 ng/mL, respectively, p = 0.004). HR increased significantly, and similarly, after acute EC and TC smoking compared to control. Changes in HRV that confer increased cardiac risk (LF/HF ratio) were significantly smaller after acute EC versus TC use, consistent with a harm reduction effect. In a post‐hoc analysis of PLWH with and without positive concurrent recreational drug use as indicated by point of care urine toxicology testing, this differential effect was only seen in PLWH not currently using recreational drugs. Changes in VR were not different among the three exposures. In PLWH who smoke, EC compared to TC smoking resulted in smaller adverse changes in HRV. This differential effect was accompanied by a smaller increase in plasma nicotine, and was negated by concurrent recreational drug use. Additional studies are warranted in this vulnerable population disproportionately affected by tobacco‐related health disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Corrigendum: Staged use of ordinal and linear disability scales: a practical approach to granular assessment of acute stroke outcome
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Chaisinanunkul, Napasri, primary, Starkman, Sidney, additional, Gornbein, Jeffrey, additional, Hamilton, Scott, additional, Chatfield, Fiona, additional, Conwit, Robin, additional, and Saver, Jeffrey L., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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50. Handling of Missing Outcome Data in Acute Stroke Trials: Advantages of Multiple Imputation Using Baseline and Postbaseline Variables
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Young-Saver, Dashiell F., Gornbein, Jeffrey, Starkman, Sidney, and Saver, Jeffrey L.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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