Publications by authors named "B A Bacon"

Objective: The goal of this study was to describe lacerations of the head and neck sustained among ice hockey players in the US.

Methods: Data on adult (20-65 years) ice hockey injuries were collected from the 2003-2022 National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) database. Injuries of the head, neck, face, mouth, and ears were included, while those sustained as a spectator, coach, or on a non-ice surface were excluded.

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The influence of multisensory integration on spatial hearing has received more attention in recent years. Notably, incongruent sensory inputs can bias auditory spatial processing. Here, we present a protocol for producing an illusory shift in the localization of a sound source by inducing an unconscious shift in the representation of the body in space.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to analyze head and neck injuries in young ice hockey players in the U.S., excluding concussions.
  • It reviewed injury data from 2010 to 2021, focusing on children aged 1-18, and found that most injuries involved lacerations, primarily from hockey sticks or falls.
  • The results indicated that female players were generally younger and sustained injuries at an earlier age compared to males, highlighting differences possibly linked to protective gear usage.
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Objective: Since December 2021, the number of children with COVID-19 infections has increased. Sequelae in children have not been well-described. Our goal was to determine if children with a history of COVID-19 infection (C19 group) were more likely to present with recurrent acute otitis media (rAOM) or post-ventilation tube otorrhea (VTO) than children who had no history of COVID-19 infection (NoC19 group).

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After a large-scale radiological or nuclear event, hundreds of thousands of people may be exposed to ionizing radiation and require subsequent medical management. Acute exposure to moderate doses (2-6 Gy) of radiation can lead to the hematopoietic acute radiation syndrome, in which the bone marrow (BM) is severely compromised, and severe hemorrhage and infection are common. Previously, we have developed a panel of intracellular protein markers (FDXR, ACTN1, DDB2, BAX, p53 and TSPYL2), designed to reconstruct absorbed radiation dose from human peripheral blood (PB) leukocyte samples in humanized mice up to 3 days after exposure.

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