Publications by authors named "Andrew M Bysice"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the oxygen levels needed to ignite airway fires during tracheostomy procedures using a porcine model.
  • Results showed that monopolar cautery was likely to ignite fires at higher oxygen fractions, particularly at 0.6 and above, while bipolar cautery did not ignite flames at all.
  • The presence of dry tissue eschar increased the ignition speed, unlike moist tissue, which slowed it down, indicating that tissue condition affects fire risk during airway surgery.
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The extent of initial surgical resection for low-risk papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) remains debatable. Since the 2015 American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines, several retrospective studies have reported that 40-60% of patients initially treated with lobectomy would require a completion thyroidectomy (CTx) due to high-risk pathological features (HRFs). These studies are limited by variable preoperative stratification and inability to quantify the value of intraoperative assessment.

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Locomotive defects resulting from neurodegenerative disorders can be a late onset symptom of disease, following years of subclinical degeneration, and thus current therapeutic treatment strategies are not curative. Through the use of whole exome sequencing, an increasing number of genes have been identified to play a role in human locomotion. Despite identifying these genes, it is not known how these genes are crucial to normal locomotive functioning.

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Background: Two ancestral nucleoid-associated proteins called Hha and YdgT contribute to the negative regulation of several virulence-associated genes in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. Our previous work showed that Hha and YdgT proteins are required for negative regulation of Salmonella Pathogenicity Island-2 and that hha ydgT double mutants are attenuated for murine infection. Interestingly, hha ydgT mutant bacteria exhibited a non-motile phenotype suggesting that Hha and YdgT have a role in flagellar regulation.

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