Publications by authors named "A E Luedke"

Upper respiratory infections are some of the most common reasons for pediatric patients to present to the emergency department. A small percentage of these viral infections can evolve into acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS), which can be further complicated by the development of orbital, intracranial, and osseous complications. Differentiating between viral upper respiratory infections and ABS and identifying cases of ABS that require antibiotics can pose a challenge.

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Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare disorder defined by the abnormal proliferation of Langerhans cells. While LCH can present at any age, it is classically described as a pediatric condition, and is therefore overlooked in the adult patient. Additionally, depending on tumor burden and location, LCH can manifest with a host of oral and systemic symptoms which further confuses the clinical presentation and ultimate diagnosis.

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One of the most widely covered aspects of the current conflict in South Sudan has been the use sexual violence by rival factions of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) and other armed groups. While this has had the positive effect of ensuring that sexual violence is an integral component of intervention strategies in the country, it has also had a number of unintended consequences. This paper demonstrates how the narrow focus on sexual violence as a 'weapon of war', and the broader emergency lens through which the plight of civilians, especially women, has been viewed, are overly simplistic, often neglecting the root causes of such violence.

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This study validates and expands on our previous work that assessed three-dimensional (3D) nuclear telomere profiling in buccal cells of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and non-AD controls (Mathur et al., J Alzheimers Dis 39, 35-48, 2014). While the previous study used age- and gender-matched caregiver controls, the current study consented a new cohort of 44 age- and gender-matched healthy non-caregiver controls and 44 AD study participants.

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The advent of super-resolution microscopy allowed for new insights into cellular and physiological processes of normal and diseased cells. In this study, we report for the first time on the super-resolved DNA structure of buccal cells from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) versus age- and gender-matched healthy, non-caregiver controls. In this super-resolution study cohort of 74 participants, buccal cells were collected and their spatial DNA organization in the nucleus examined by 3D Structured Illumination Microscopy (3D-SIM).

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