Publications by authors named "B Dennis Go"

Article Synopsis
  • Patients frequently search for information about facial fillers, with a significant focus on the costs associated with these procedures.
  • A study using the Ahrefs tool revealed that websites providing filler information vary in quality, with private practice sources rated lower on the JAMA score compared to corporate sources.
  • Interest in lip fillers specifically has grown more rapidly than inquiries about other types of injections over the past three years, highlighting a shift in consumer interest.
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Reconstruction of the oropharynx plays a critical role in preserving quality of life after surgical resection of oropharyngeal carcinoma. Free tissue is one of several reconstructive options, which can closely approximate native oropharyngeal anatomy and lead to favorable functional outcomes in carefully selected patients. Here, the authors provide an overview of the indications, treatment options, functional outcomes, potential complications, and future considerations for free flap reconstruction of the oropharynx.

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Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a chronic relapsing disease that is deleterious at individual, familial, and societal levels. Although AUD is one of the highest preventable causes of death in the USA, therapies for the treatment of AUD are not sufficient given the heterogeneity of the disorder and the limited number of approved medications. To provide better pharmacological strategies, it is important to understand the neurological underpinnings of AUD.

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Background: Illicitly manufactured fentanyl (IMF) increases overdose mortality, but its role in infectious disease transmission is unknown. We examined whether IMF use predicts hepatitis C virus (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) incidence among a cohort of people who inject drugs (PWID) in San Diego, California and Tijuana, Mexico.

Methods: PWID were recruited during 2020-2022, undergoing semi-annual interviewer-administered surveys and HIV and HCV serological rapid tests through 2024.

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Many phenolic compounds (PhCs) in biomass burning and fossil fuel combustion emissions can partition into atmospheric aqueous phases (, cloud/fog water and aqueous aerosols) and undergo reactions to form secondary organic aerosols (SOAs) and brown carbon (BrC). Redox-active transition metals, particularly Fe and Cu, are ubiquitous species in atmospheric aqueous phases known to participate in Fenton/Fenton-like chemistry as a source of aqueous ˙OH. However, even though the concentrations of water-soluble Cu are close to those of water-soluble Fe in atmospheric aqueous phases in some areas, unlike Fe, the effects that Cu have on SOA and BrC formation in atmospheric aqueous phases have scarcely been studied and remain poorly understood.

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