Publications by authors named "Angela Gleason"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the gene expression profiles of circulating CD14+ monocytes in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and interstitial lung disease (RA-ILD) to better understand the disease's pathogenesis.
  • Researchers collected blood samples from various groups, including RA patients with and without lung disease, and those with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and healthy controls, analyzing the RNA for gene expression differences.
  • Findings revealed that monocytes in RA-ILD patients exhibited unique gene expression patterns, particularly in inflammation and fibrosis regulation, linking their immune features more closely to IPF than to RA without lung involvement, which could inform future therapeutic strategies.
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Background: Environmental lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and microbial component-enriched organic dusts cause significant lung disease. These environmental exposures induce the recruitment and activation of distinct lung monocyte/macrophage subpopulations involved in disease pathogenesis. Aconitate decarboxylase 1 () was one of the most upregulated genes following LPS (vs.

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Background: Environmental/occupational exposures cause significant lung diseases. Agricultural organic dust extracts (ODE) and bacterial component lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induce recruited, transitioning murine lung monocytes/macrophages, yet their cellular role remains unclear.

Methods: CCR2 RFP mice were intratracheally instilled with high concentration ODE (25%), LPS (10 μg), or gram-positive peptidoglycan (PGN, 100 μg) for monocyte/macrophage cell-trafficking studies.

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Efficacious therapeutic options capable of resolving inflammatory lung disease associated with environmental and occupational exposures are lacking. This study sought to determine the preclinical therapeutic potential of lung-delivered recombinant interleukin (IL)-10 therapy following acute organic dust exposure in mice. Here, C57BL/6J mice were intratracheally instilled with swine confinement organic dust extract (ODE) (12.

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Behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is a neurodegenerative condition characterized by progressive changes in behavior, cognition, and day-to-day functioning. Progression of the disease usually leads to death 3-5 years after diagnosis. However, there are reports of individuals who are initially diagnosed with bvFTD but fail to progress.

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Objectives: Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is associated with significant mortality in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with key cellular players remaining largely unknown. This study aimed to characterize inflammatory and myeloid derived suppressor cell (MDSC) subpopulations in RA-ILD as compared to RA, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) without autoimmunity, and controls.

Methods: Peripheral blood was collected from patients with RA, RA-ILD, IPF, and controls (N = 60, 15/cohort).

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Respiratory-related diseases are a leading cause of death in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and are disproportionately higher in men, which may be attributable to environmental risk factors. Animal studies have demonstrated potentiated autoimmunity, arthritis, and profibrotic/inflammatory lung disease with a combination of airborne exposures and collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). This study aimed to determine whether hormone-dependent differences explained these observations.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the use of a deep learning (DL) autosegmentation model to speed up organ-at-risk segmentation in radiation therapy for head and neck cancer, aiming to improve treatment access without sacrificing accuracy.
  • Expert radiation oncologists created gold standard (GS) contours on CT images, and a custom 3D U-Net DL model was trained to generate contour predictions, which were then compared to contours made by medical dosimetry assistants (MDAs) in a randomized trial.
  • Results showed that using the DL model significantly reduced contouring time by 76% overall and 35% specifically in RO revisions, while the accuracy of DL-generated contours was equal or superior to those revised by MDAs, with 76%
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Article Synopsis
  • Lung diseases can result from both long-term exposure and even a single high-dose exposure; endotoxin like lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is often used to study airway inflammation.
  • A murine model showed that LPS exposure caused rapid weight loss and persistent inflammation, indicating lasting effects even after a short exposure period.
  • Administering recombinant interleukin-10 (rIL-10) helped reduce weight loss and inflammatory markers, suggesting potential therapy to promote recovery after acute exposure to harmful substances.
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Background And Aim: Accuracy in scheduling complex procedures is improved through technology to aid nonmedically trained allied health professionals. We used a new computer technology to assess whether a single coordinator could schedule endoscopic procedures across sites of a multisite academic medical institution, thus improving efficiency within the clinic overall.

Methods: A multidisciplinary team designed a cross-site scheduling model.

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Article Synopsis
  • Exposure to agricultural organic dusts can lead to chronic airway diseases, with the SRA/CD204 receptor playing a key role in the body's response to these irritants.
  • In studies with wild-type and SRA knockout mice, SRA KO mice showed greater lung damage after repeated exposure to organic dust compared to wild-type mice.
  • Following a recovery period, wild-type mice exhibited significant healing of lung injury, whereas SRA knockout mice did not, highlighting the importance of SRA in mediating lung inflammation and repair from dust exposure.
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Skeletal health consequences associated with chronic inflammatory respiratory disease, and particularly chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), contribute to overall disease morbidity. Agricultural environmental exposures induce significant airway diseases, including COPD. However, animal models to understand inhalant exposure-induced lung injury and bone disease have not been described.

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Organic dust exposure within agricultural environments results in airway diseases. Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) and TLR4 only partly account for the innate response to these complex dust exposures. To determine the central pathway in mediating complex organic dust-induced airway inflammation, this study targeted the common adaptor protein, myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88), and investigated the relative contributions of receptors upstream from this adaptor.

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Exposure to organic dusts elicits airway inflammatory diseases. Vitamin D recently has been associated with various airway inflammatory diseases, but its role in agricultural organic dust exposures is unknown. This study investigated whether vitamin D reduces organic dust-induced inflammatory outcomes in cell culture and animal models.

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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by an airway and systemic inflammatory response. Bioaerosols/organic dusts are important agricultural pollutants that may lead to COPD. These environments are complex, containing a rich source of various microbial components.

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Background: Organic dust exposure in agricultural environments induces an inflammatory response that attenuates over time, yet repetitive dust exposures result in chronic lung diseases. Animal models resembling this chronic lung inflammatory response have been developed, yet the underlying cellular mechanisms are not well defined.

Objective: Because mice repetitively exposed to organic dust extracts (DE) display increased CD3+ T cell lung infiltrates, we sought to determine the phenotype and importance of these cells.

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Organic dust samples from swine confinement facilities elicit pro-inflammatory cytokine/chemokine release from bronchial epithelial cells and monocytes, dependent, in part, upon dust-induced activation of the protein kinase C (PKC) isoform, PKCε. PKCε is also rapidly activated in murine tracheal epithelial cells following in vivo organic dust challenges, yet the functional role of PKCε in modulating dust-induced airway inflammatory outcomes is not defined. Utilizing an established intranasal inhalation animal model, experiments investigated the biologic and physiologic responses following organic dust extract (ODE) treatments in wild-type (WT) and PKCε knock-out (KO) mice.

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Organic dust exposure in the agricultural industry results in significant lung disease. Macrophage infiltrates are increased in the lungs after organic dust exposures, yet the phenotype and functional importance of these cells remain unclear. Using an established intranasal inhalation murine model of dust-induced lung inflammation, animals were treated once or daily for 3 weeks with swine confinement organic dust extract (DE).

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Variation in response styles in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are known to be predictors of short- and long-term health outcomes. The nature of HPA responses to stressors changes with developmental stage, and some components of the stress response exhibit long-term individual consistency (i.e.

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Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain 2 (NOD2) is involved in innate immune responses to peptidoglycan degradation products. Peptidoglycans are important mediators of organic dust-induced airway diseases in exposed agriculture workers; however, the role of NOD2 in response to complex organic dust is unknown. Monocytes/macrophages were exposed to swine facility organic dust extract (ODE), whereupon NOD2 expression was evaluated by real-time PCR and Western blot.

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Organic dust exposure in agricultural environments results in significant airway inflammatory diseases. Gram-positive cell wall components are present in high concentrations in animal farming dusts, but their role in mediating dust-induced airway inflammation is not clear. This study investigated the role of Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2, a pattern recognition receptor for gram-positive cell wall products, in regulating swine facility organic dust extract (DE)-induced airway inflammation in mice.

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Raven's Progressive Matrices (RPM), a widely used test of reasoning, is sensitive to aging, but it has not proven to be helpful in the assessment of acquired focal or lateralized brain damage. Clinical experience suggests that the test is insensitive to traumatic brain injury (TBI), but the data are difficult to interpret because of rapid inflation of norms over time (the Flynn effect). In examining data from 64 adult patients with TBI who were administered the Standard RPM between 1981 and 1989, we used previous and subsequent norms conjointly to adjust for the Flynn effect.

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