Publications by authors named "G Finch"

This intriguing case report explores an interesting complication following percutaneous cholecystostomy for the management of acute cholecystitis in an elderly female with multiple comorbidities. Despite initial improvement, she later presented with recurrent symptoms, due to a collection of gallstones, that had migrated through the cholecystostomy tract, requiring exploration, stone retrieval and abscess drainage. While percutaneous cholecystostomy remains an effective treatment for managing acute cholecystitis in high-risk surgical candidates, this case highlights the rare yet critical risk of extrahepatic gallstones and abscess formation.

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Premise: The history of angiosperms is marked by repeated rounds of ancient whole-genome duplications (WGDs). Here we used state-of-the-art methods to provide an up-to-date view of the distribution of WGDs in the history of angiosperms that considers both uncertainty introduced by different WGD inference methods and different underlying species-tree hypotheses.

Methods: We used the distribution synonymous divergences (K) of paralogs and orthologs from transcriptomic and genomic data to infer and place WGDs across two hypothesized angiosperm phylogenies.

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Immunotherapies for malignant melanoma seek to boost the anti-tumoral response of CD8 T cells, but have a limited patient response rate, in part due to limited tumoral immune cell infiltration. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of the pannexin 1 (PANX1) channel-forming protein is known to decrease melanoma cell tumorigenic properties in vitro and ex vivo. Here, we crossed Panx1 knockout (Panx1) mice with the inducible melanoma model Braf, Pten, Tyr::CreER (BPC).

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Ticks are blood-feeding arthropods responsible for the transmission of disease-causing pathogens to a wide range of vertebrate hosts, including livestock and humans. Tick-borne diseases have been implicated in significant economic losses to livestock production, and this threat will increase as these obligate parasites widen their geographical ranges. Similar to other ectotherms, thermal stress due to changing global temperatures has been shown to influence tick survival and distribution.

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Climate change is leading to substantial global thermal changes, which are particularly pronounced in polar regions. Therefore, it is important to examine the impact of heat stress on the reproduction of polar terrestrial arthropods, specifically, how brief extreme events may alter survival. We observed that sublethal heat stress reduces male fecundity in an Antarctic mite, yielding females that produced fewer viable eggs.

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