Publications by authors named "DeMartino C"

Objective: To explore barriers and perspectives of premedication use for non-emergent intubations of very low birth weight (VLBW) infants (less than 1,500 g).

Study Design: A cross-sectional, online survey was distributed from January to April 2023 to members of the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine. Data was analyzed using descriptive statistics and chi-square tests.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Premedication for neonatal tracheal intubation, including analgesia, sedation, and paralytics, can enhance success rates and minimize risks associated with the procedure.
  • - This review covers various premedication classes, their indications, administration routes, dosages, and potential side effects in different infant populations.
  • - The article highlights the need for guidelines on premedication, especially with the rise in survival of extremely preterm infants, and addresses gaps in established practices during certain medical procedures.
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Standards and Codes of Practice for designing new constructions and for assessing and strengthening existing ones are usually based on uniform hazard maps, where different Limit States (LSs) are associated with different hazard-exceedance probabilities. This approach yields non-homogeneous LS-exceedance probabilities across a territory, thus failing to achieve the goal of uniform risk throughout a territory. Such lack of uniformity stems from estimating the probability of failure using capacity and demand models.

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Several hypotheses about influences on college drinking derived from the social learning theory of deviance were tested and confirmed. The effect of ethnicity on alcohol use was completely mediated by differential association and differential reinforcement, whereas the effect of biological sex on alcohol use was partially mediated. Higher net positive reinforcements to costs for alcohol use predicted increased general use, more underage use, and more frequent binge drinking.

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As barriers to xenotransplantation are surmounted, such as suppression of hyperacute rejection allowing improved graft survival, it becomes important to define longer-term host-xenograft interactions. To this end we have prepared in baboons high titer anti-alpha-Galactosyl (alphaGal) and anti-porcine aortic endothelial cell antibodies, similar to human natural xenoantibodies and reactive with epitopes of thyroglobulin, laminin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. When injected into pigs with a protocol similar to that used in the rat to show the nephritogenic potential of heterologous anti-laminin and anti-heparan sulfate proteoglycan antibodies, baboon immunoglobulins bound first to renal vascular endothelium, and later to interstitial cells, especially fibroblasts and macrophages, and to antigens in basement membranes and extracellular matrix, where they colocalized with laminin- and heparan sulfate proteoglycan-antibodies, and with bound Griffonia simplicifolia B4.

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In the course of studies on the humoral consequences of swine to primate xenotransplantation, the investigators induced formation of glomerular subepithelial immune deposits and tubular lesions in pigs injected with heterologous antibody to angiotensin-converting enzyme. This study describes the morphology of the lesions, discusses their mechanism, explains their relevance for understanding the pathogenesis of human idiopathic membranous glomerulonephritis, and proposes future directions for investigations.

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Several forms of glomerulonephritis are induced by antibodies against self or foreign antigens. Normal B lymphocyte antibody production requires T cell costimulatory signals provided in part by T cell surface expression of gp39/CD40ligand (CD40L) that engages the B cell receptor CD40 and induces B cell differentiation and immunoglobulin class switching. We assessed the effect of disrupting the CD40L-CD40 costimulatory pathway, using a CD40-Ig fusion protein, on the development of membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN) in the mouse.

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Methods: Ligamenta flava obtained from nine patients with lumbar disc herniation and ten patients with lumbar stenosis were studied at histologic, histochemical, and ultrastructural levels. Lumbar ligamenta flava removed from six patients who underwent surgeries for thoracolumbar fractures were used as controls.

Results: Ligamenta flava from control subjects consisted of large elastic fibers, thin bundles of collagen fibers, and few spindle-shaped fibroblasts.

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The regenerated tissue which fills the gap between the stumps of sectioned and unsutured rabbit calcaneal tendon was studied by immunofluorescence, light and electron microscopy from 2 days to 30 weeks after surgery. In the early stages, the newly formed tissue consisted of few connective tissue cells of variable shape dispersed in an abundant intercellular matrix. At 7 days after tenotomy most of the cells were spindle shaped and arranged along the major tendon axis.

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