Publications by authors named "Gould J"

Background: Prescription opioids are responsible for a significant proportion of opioid-related deaths in the United States. Approximately 6% of opioid-naïve patients who receive opioid prescriptions after surgery become chronic opioid users. However, chronic opioid use after bariatric surgery may be twice as common.

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Background: Patients undergoing bariatric surgery may be at increased risk for postsurgical opioid dependence, highlighting a need for opioid-sparing anesthesia.

Objectives: Liposomal bupivacaine (LB), a prolonged release formulation of bupivacaine, may improve postoperative pain management and reduce postsurgical opioid use. This retrospective claims-database study investigated the effects of LB versus non-LB analgesia on opioid use and healthcare resource utilization (HCRU) in patients receiving laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (SG).

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Background And Objectives: Very low birth weight infants in the NICU are more susceptible to adverse outcomes. We recently described improving survival without major morbidity among very low birth weight infants in California. This study aims to examine whether this improvement was equitable across racial and ethnic groups.

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With large wildfires becoming more frequent, we must rapidly learn how megafires impact biodiversity to prioritize mitigation and improve policy. A key challenge is to discover how interactions among fire-regime components, drought and land tenure shape wildfire impacts. The globally unprecedented 2019-2020 Australian megafires burnt more than 10 million hectares, prompting major investment in biodiversity monitoring.

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  • - The study investigated how factors like match exposure, travel demands, wellness perceptions, and musculoskeletal screening influence training load during national football team duties.
  • - Researchers collected data on match minutes, travel duration, self-reported wellness metrics, and conducted musculoskeletal testing at the start of national team camp, measuring training load over the first three days using various performance metrics.
  • - Results indicated that training load peaked on day 3, with only minor correlations between fatigue/soreness and performance metrics, suggesting that the training schedule at camp is more significant than prior match exposure.
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  • Optical pooled screening (OPS) is a method that connects images of cells with genetic changes, but it previously had limitations in its ability to analyze complex data in cancer cell lines.
  • The new technology, PerturbView, improves OPS by amplifying genetic barcodes for more detailed and varied phenotype analysis across different biological systems, including stem cells and immune cells.
  • PerturbView has unveiled both known and new regulatory mechanisms in immune pathways, and it can be integrated with spatial transcriptomics, enhancing the potential for comprehensive studies of cellular behaviors in complex tissue environments.
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Anastatus orientalis Yang & Choi (Hymenoptera: Eupelmidae), an egg parasitoid of spotted lanternfly, Lycorma delicatula (White) (Hemiptera: Fulgoridae), has been documented emerging from host eggs in both autumn and spring, at the beginning and end of the period that spotted lanternfly eggs are present in the field, suggesting parasitoid-host specificity and synchrony. This study was designed to test whether, under conditions that simulate native and introduced ranges of spotted lanternfly, (a) A. orientalis has 2 and only 2 generations per year, (b) A.

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  • The APDR conducted a 2023 survey to analyze the impact of COVID-19 on residency program management, focusing on recruitment and education experiences among programs.
  • A total of 124 out of 393 active members responded, revealing that 83% found preference signaling helpful for interview offers, and 96% performed virtual interviews, with many planning to continue this format.
  • The results indicate a strong inclination toward maintaining virtual recruitment practices and a general acceptance of implementing a universal interview release date, highlighting the perceived benefits of preference signaling.
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  • The APDR conducts an annual survey to explore the effects of COVID-19 on residency program management, focusing on recruitment and education.
  • The 2023 survey invited all 393 APDR members to share their experiences through a 45-question format, with a 32% response rate.
  • Key findings reveal challenges such as faculty burnout and a preference for in-person sessions over remote learning, alongside varying assessments of residents' procedural competence.
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Introduction: An inclusive residency program is crucial to the recruitment and retention of competitive and diverse applicants. The radiology lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning, or another diverse gender identity (LGBTQ+) inclusion audit was published in 2022, which provided a road map for assessing the inclusivity of a program's policies, facilities, culture, and engagement. In this multi-institutional trial, we detail the results of the LGBTQ+ inclusion audit for nine US radiology residency programs.

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Introduction: Patients requiring emergent endotracheal intubation are at higher risk of post-intubation hypotension due to altered physiology in critical illness. Post-intubation hypotension increases mortality and hospital length of stay, however, the impact of vasopressors on its incidence and outcomes is not known. This scoping review identified studies reporting hemodynamic data in patients undergoing emergent intubation to provide a literature overview on post-intubation hypotension in cohorts that did and did not receive vasopressors.

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  • * Among 259 participants, significant impairments in aspects like anxiety (58.1%), cognition (58.5%), and social function (57.7%) were observed, with many scoring worse than reference populations.
  • * The findings indicate that individuals with MOGAD experience various QoL challenges, particularly those with a relapsing disease course, emphasizing the need for greater recognition and further research in this area.
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This review explores methodological considerations in estimating racial disparities in mortality among very preterm infants (VPIs). Significant methodological variations are evident across studies, potentially affecting the estimated mortality rates of VPIs across racial groups and influencing the perceived direction and magnitude of racial disparities. Key methodological approaches include the birth-based approach versus the fetuses-at-risk approach, with each offering distinct insights depending on the specific research questions posed.

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Iron supplementation is commonly recommended for the prevention and treatment of maternal iron deficiency (ID) or iron deficiency anemia (IDA). However, the impacts of prophylactic of therapeutic prenatal iron supplementation on child neurodevelopment in upper middle-income (UMI) and high-income countries (HICs), where broad nutritional deficiencies are less common, are unclear. To investigate this, we conducted a systematic review, searching four databases (Medline, CINAHL, EMBASE, Cochrane Library) through 1 May 2023.

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Background: Acute incarcerated paraesophageal hernias (PEH) have historically been considered a surgical emergency. Emergent operations have a higher rate of morbidity and mortality compared to elective surgery. Our institution has adopted a strategy of initial conservative management in patients presenting with acute obstruction from an incarcerated PEH who are clinically stable.

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Progress in cytokine engineering is driving therapeutic translation by overcoming these proteins' limitations as drugs. The IL-2 cytokine is a promising immune stimulant for cancer treatment but is limited by its concurrent activation of both pro-inflammatory immune effector cells and antiinflammatory regulatory T cells, toxicity at high doses, and short serum half-life. One approach to improve the selectivity, safety, and longevity of IL-2 is complexing with anti-IL-2 antibodies that bias the cytokine toward immune effector cell activation.

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Background: Clinical care pathways help guide and provide structure to clinicians and providers to improve healthcare delivery and quality. The Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Committee (QIPS) of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS) has previously published care pathways for the performance of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) and pre-operative care of patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB).

Objective: This current RYGB care pathway was created to address intraoperative care, defined as care occurring on the day of surgery from the preoperative holding area, through the operating room, and into the postanesthesia care unit (PACU).

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Skin sensitization is a critical end point in occupational toxicology that necessitates the use of fast, accurate, and affordable models to aid in establishing handling guidance for worker protection. While many in silico models have been developed, the scarcity of reliable data for active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and their intermediates (together regarded as pharmaceutical compounds) brings into question the reliability of these tools, which are largely constructed using publicly available nonspecialty chemicals. Here, we present the quantum-mechanical (QM) Computer-Aided Discovery and REdesign (CADRE) model, which was developed with the bioactive and structurally complex chemical space in mind by relying on the fundamentals of chemical interactions in key events (versus structural attributes of training-set data).

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Objective: To determine the causes, time to resolution, effect of therapeutics, and ocular sequelae of hyphema, fibrin, and/or vitreal hemorrhage in horses.

Animals: 225 horses (219 eyes) who were diagnosed with hyphema, fibrin, and/or vitreal hemorrhage.

Methods: Records were retrospectively reviewed for the horses.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Out of 648 patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy, 53 (8.2%) visited the ED within 30 days post-surgery, with factors like being unemployed, having government insurance, and a lower socioeconomic status increasing the likelihood of such visits.
  • * The findings highlight various risk factors, including not having a primary care physician within the health system and a higher number of pre-surgery ED visits, which can inform strategies to reduce unnecessary ED visits after surgery.
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