Publications by authors named "A J Forster"

Background: Understanding recovery is important for patients with stroke and their families, including how much recovery is expected and how long it might take. These conversations can however be uncomfortable for stroke unit staff, particularly when they involve breaking bad news. This study aimed to begin development of a novel complex intervention to improve conversations about recovery on stroke units.

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Frequent and severe occurrences of harmful algal blooms increasingly threaten human health by the release of microcystins (MCs). Urgent attention is directed toward managing MCs, as evidenced by rising HAB-related do not drink/do not boil advisories due to unsafe MC levels in drinking water. UV/chlorine treatment, in which UV light is applied simultaneously with chlorine, showed early promise for effectively degrading MC-LR to values below the World Health Organization's guideline limits.

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Background: Kidney transplant recipients are uniquely exposed to the disordered bone metabolism associated with chronic kidney disease beginning before transplantation followed by chronic corticosteroid use after transplantation. Previous efforts to synthesize the rapidly accruing evidence regarding estimation and management of fracture risk in kidney transplant recipients are outdated and incomplete.

Objective: To synthesize the evidence informing the overall incidence, patient-specific risk prediction, and methods of prevention of fractures in patient living with a kidney transplant.

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Hedin's approximation to the electronic self-energy has been impressively successful in calculating quasiparticle energies, such as ionization potentials, electron affinities, or electronic band structures. The success of this fairly simple approximation has been ascribed to the cancellation of the so-called vertex corrections that go beyond the approximation. This claim is mostly based on past calculations using vertex corrections within the crude local-density approximation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Trichophyton rubrum (T. rubrum) typically causes minor skin infections, mostly affecting healthy individuals, but can lead to serious infections in immunocompromised patients.
  • A unique case involved a 94-year-old man with an invasive T. rubrum infection on both forearms, which resembled cutaneous blastomycosis.
  • Diagnosis is complicated as T. rubrum can present with large spore-like structures that mimic Blastomyces dermatitidis, underscoring the necessity for culture or PCR testing for accurate identification.
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