Publications by authors named "Eric Chase"

Article Synopsis
  • Produced water from oil and gas wells can be used to reduce dust on unpaved roads, but it can also contain harmful pollutants.
  • A study found that while produced water reduced dust by 10-85% in high humidity, commercial dust control products were generally more effective, reducing dust by over 90%.
  • When it rains, roads treated with produced water could pollute water runoff more than those treated with commercial products, especially with harmful substances like sodium and radium.
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The effectiveness of oil and gas produced water (OGPW) applied to unpaved roads to reduce particulate matter (PM) generation has not been well-characterized. Here we quantify the efficacy of OGPW compared to commercial and alternative byproducts as dust suppressants applied to unpaved roads and estimate efficacy of a dust suppressant extrapolated from both lab experiments and published data for OGPW across U.S.

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We developed a fully automated procedure for analyzing data from LED pulses and multilevel bead sets to evaluate backgrounds and photoelectron scales of cytometer fluorescence channels. The method improves on previous formulations by fitting a full quadratic model with appropriate weighting and by providing standard errors and peak residuals as well as the fitted parameters themselves. Here we describe the details of the methods and procedures involved and present a set of illustrations and test cases that demonstrate the consistency and reliability of the results.

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Objectives: The purpose of this investigation was to compare the incidence of esophageal intubations (EIs) when emergency medicine (EM) residents used a direct laryngoscope (DL) versus a video laryngoscope (VL) for intubation attempts in the emergency department (ED).

Methods: Prospectively collected continuous quality improvement data on tracheal intubations performed by EM residents in an academic ED over a 6-year period were retrospectively analyzed. Following each intubation, EM residents completed a data form with patient, intubation, and operator characteristics.

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Reductions in voltage-activated K+ (Kv) currents may underlie arrhythmias after myocardial infarction (MI). We investigated the role of beta-adrenergic signaling and the calcineurin/NFAT pathway in mediating the reductions in Kv currents observed after MI in mouse ventricular myocytes. Kv currents were produced by the summation of 3 distinct currents: I(to), I(Kslow1), and I(Kslow2).

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