Publications by authors named "George Jerry"

Article Synopsis
  • Burnout is a syndrome characterized by emotional exhaustion and depersonalization, often arising from prolonged stress, negatively impacting job performance and productivity.
  • A study conducted with medical interns at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital found that 95% of participants reported experiencing burnout, with significant contributors being lack of resources and poor relationships with staff.
  • The interns primarily identified the internal medicine rotation as the most significant factor leading to their burnout, indicating a troubling level of distress in this specific population compared to similar studies.
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Chronic inflammation is central to the pathogenesis of many chronic inflammatory conditions. This review aims to analyze whether the practice of yoga, or yogic meditation and breathing, has any effect on the levels of inflammatory cytokines and other inflammatory markers in patients with various chronic inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, neoplastic disorders, and asthma, as well as in healthy subjects, compared to usual care or sham interventions. A comprehensive search of databases (PubMed, CENTRAL, Embase, and CINAHL) was performed.

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Advances in radiotherapy (RT) technologies permit significant decreases in the dose delivered to organs at risk (OARs) for patients with esophageal cancer (EC). Novel RT modalities such as proton beam therapy (PBT) and magnetic resonance-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT), as well as motion management techniques including breath hold (BH) are expected to further improve the therapeutic ratio. However, to our knowledge, the dosimetric benefits of PBT vs MRgRT vs volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT) have not been directly compared for EC.

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Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PD) is the most common enzyme deficiency. Mode of inheritance is X-linked recessive with a high prevalence in endogamous marriages, such as Jehovah's Witness. Oxidative triggers such as infection, ingestion of certain medications, certain types of food, and in rare instances diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) may unmask the diagnosis by triggering a hemolytic event.

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Disseminated cysticercosis is defined by the presence of multiple vesicular cystic lesions in the brain with cysts demonstrable in at least two other body parts. The exact course of disseminated cysticercosis is not known and the individual cysts either become inflamed or calcify. A patient's quality of life is often poor and disseminated cysticercosis treatment is far from satisfactory.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A 26-year-old woman, postpartum, experienced acute flaccid quadriparesis due to atypical HIV-associated vacuolar myelopathy (HIV-VM), despite ruling out other causes.
  • - Her condition involved severe cord atrophy in both the thoracic and cervical regions, leading to severe symptoms and high CD4 counts, but treatment with IV-immunoglobulin and antiretrovirals was ineffective.
  • - The patient ultimately succumbed to complications, including pneumonia, highlighting the challenges in managing atypical presentations of HIV-VM.
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We report a 29-year-old, HIV-positive woman being treated with antipsychotic medication for psychosis (Clopixol 200mg intramuscularly monthly, Risperidone 2mg orally daily Haloperidol 2.5mg twice a day), who presented with neuroleptic malignant syndrome. She was also receiving lorazepam and sodium valproate.

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Intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) planning for the head and neck (HN) cancer often requires the use of the range shifter, which can increase the lateral penumbrae of the pencil proton beam in the patient, thus leading to an increase in unnecessary dose to the organs at risks (OARs) in proximity to the target volumes. The primary goal of the current study was to investigate the dosimetric benefits of utilizing beam-specific apertures for the IMPT HN cancer plans. The current retrospective study included computed tomography datasets of 10 unilateral HN cancer patients.

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Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord is a typical clinical syndrome due to vitamin B12 deficiency, characterised by the involvement of the posterior column and corticospinal tracts. Occasionally, it may present with atypical features such as a sensory level and Lhermitte's sign, both traditionally considered to be a feature of compressive myelopathy. Spinal magnetic resonance imaging strongly augments the diagnosis by exhibiting changes in the posterior column in the form of a 'dot'.

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Background: Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is one of the most challenging cases that confront modern orthopaedics. Two-stage revision, which is the standard of care for PJI, is the preferred mode of treatment for these infections.

Aims And Objectives: To study the microbiological profile of prosthetic joint infections (PJI) in the hip and to assess the efficacy of a two stage revision surgery for PJI.

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Objective: The aim of this study is to characterise the clinical and microbiological profile of adult patients treated at our orthopaedic unit with septic arthritic between 2006 and 2017.

Materials And Methods: A total of 70 patients who were admitted with a diagnosis of septic arthritis between 2006 and 2017 were included in the study. The patients' clinical and epidemiological characteristics were surveyed; microbiological profile and the complications relating to the patients' treatment were identified.

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Objective: The aim of this study was to assess whether increased time from emergency department (ED) triage to appendectomy is associated with a greater risk of children developing appendiceal perforation.

Methods: We performed a multicenter retrospective cohort study of children younger than 18 years hospitalized with appendicitis. To avoid enrolling patients who had perforated prior to ED arrival, we included only children who had a computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrating nonperforated appendicitis.

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Oral direct thrombin inhibitors have improved treatment of non-valvular atrial fibrillation. Safety concerns have been raised since there is no antidote for treatment of secondary haemorrhages and the absence of widely validated test to monitor drug levels. We present a case of dabigatran overdose in an 82-year-old female who was treated with a seemingly appropriate dose.

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Considerable evidence now exists to show that that the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) changes considerably along the proton depth-dose distribution, with progressively higher RBE values at the distal part of the modulated, or spread out Bragg peak (SOBP) and in the distal dose fall-off (DDF). However, the highly variable nature of the existing studies (with regards to cell lines, and to the physical properties and dosimetry of the various proton beams) precludes any consensus regarding the RBE weighting factor at any position in the depth-dose profile. We have thus conducted a systematic study on the variation in RBE for cell killing for two clinical modulated proton beams at Indiana University and have determined the relationship between the RBE and the dose-averaged linear energy transfer (LETd) of the protons at various positions along the depth-dose profiles.

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Mesenchymal cell migration through a three-dimensional (3D) matrix typically involves major matrix remodeling. The direction of matrix deformation occurs locally in all three dimensions, which cannot be measured by current techniques. To probe the local, 3D, real-time deformation of a collagen matrix during tumor cell migration, we developed an assay whereby matrix-embedded beads are tracked simultaneously in all three directions with high resolution.

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During vasculogenesis and angiogenesis, endothelial cell responses to growth factors are modulated by the compositional and mechanical properties of a surrounding three-dimensional (3D) extracellular matrix (ECM) that is dominated by either cross-linked fibrin or type I collagen. While 3D-embedded endothelial cells establish adhesive interactions with surrounding ligands to optimally respond to soluble or matrix-bound agonists, the manner in which a randomly ordered ECM with diverse physico-mechanical properties is remodeled to support blood vessel formation has remained undefined. Herein, we demonstrate that endothelial cells initiate neovascularization by unfolding soluble fibronectin (Fn) and depositing a pericellular network of fibrils that serve to support cytoskeletal organization, actomyosin-dependent tension, and the viscoelastic properties of the embedded cells in a 3D-specific fashion.

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Lamin A/C is a major constituent of the nuclear lamina, a thin filamentous protein layer that lies beneath the nuclear envelope. Here we show that lamin A/C deficiency in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (Lmna(-/-) MEFs) diminishes the ability of these cells to polarize at the edge of a wound and significantly reduces cell migration speed into the wound. Moreover, lamin A/C deficiency induces significant separation of the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) from the nuclear envelope.

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Vascular endothelial (VE) cadherin is the surface glycoprotein cadherin specific to the endothelium that mediates cell-cell adhesion and plays a major role in the remodeling, gating, and maturation of vascular vessels. To investigate the contribution of individual VE-cadherins to endothelial cell-cell interactions and investigate whether different classical cadherins display different kinetics and micromechanical properties, we characterize the binding properties of VE-cadherin/VE-cadherin bonds at single-molecule resolution and in living human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Our single-molecule force spectroscopy measurements reveal that type II VE-cadherin molecules form bonds that are less prone to rupture and display a higher tensile strength than bonds formed by classical type I neuronal (N) cadherin and epithelial (E) cadherin.

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