Publications by authors named "Adrian Rajab"

Article Synopsis
  • Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a serious gastrointestinal condition in premature infants, often linked to imbalances in gut bacteria.
  • A novel delivery system for probiotics, specifically Limosilactobacillus reuteri mixed with dextranomer microspheres (Lr-DM-maltose), shows promise in reducing the incidence of NEC in a piglet model.
  • Treatment with Lr-DM-maltose significantly improved outcomes by decreasing both the occurrence of definite NEC and related deaths, while altering the gut microbiome favorably compared to untreated piglets.
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Life-threatening and treatment-altering errors occur in estimates of the percentage of total body surface area burned (%TBSA burned) with unacceptable frequency. In response, numerous attempts have been made to improve the charts commonly used for %TBSA-burned estimation. Recent research shows that the largest errors in %TBSA-burned estimates probably come from sources other than inaccurate values in the charts.

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Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a devastating disease affecting premature newborns with no known cure. Up to half of survivors subsequently exhibit cognitive impairment and neurodevelopmental defects. We created a novel probiotics delivery system in which the probiotic () was induced to form a biofilm [ (biofilm)] by incubation with dextranomer microspheres loaded with maltose (-DM-maltose).

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Background: Early-stage symptomology of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is similar in presentation to non-NEC sepsis, though the treatment plans differ based on antibiotic administration and withholding of feeds. Improved diagnostics for NEC differentiation would allow clinicians to more rapidly set individual patients on a targeted treatment path. Extracellular vesicle-derived miRNAs, have previously demonstrated efficacy as disease biomarkers.

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Background: Treating burns effectively requires accurately assessing the percentage of the total body surface area (%TBSA) affected by burns. Current methods for estimating %TBSA, such as Lund and Browder (L&B) tables, rely on historic body statistics. An increasingly obese population has been blamed for increasing errors in %TBSA estimates.

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