Publications by authors named "HOWELL W"

Background: A large, retrospective study was designed to interrogate current NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) HLA matching strategies for the provision of HLA selected platelets (HLA SP) and to determine whether additional factors such as ABO blood group matching, patient diagnosis, patient and/or donor age, sex, ethnicity, age of platelet unit at transfusion and possibly seasonal variation also play a role in transfusion efficacy.

Materials And Methods: Data for 56 640 HLA SP transfusions over a 3-year period were collected. Transfusions with missing data for any factor under consideration were excluded, resulting in a cohort of 13 044 transfusions for analysis.

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Do American presidents speak discernibly different from each other? If so, in what ways? And are these differences confined to any single medium of communication? To investigate these questions, this paper introduces a novel metric of uniqueness based on large language models, develops a new lexicon for divisive speech, and presents a framework for assessing the distinctive ways in which presidents speak about their political opponents. Applying these tools to a variety of corpora of presidential speeches, we find considerable evidence that Donald Trump's speech patterns diverge from those of all major party nominees for the presidency in recent history. Trump is significantly more distinctive than his fellow Republicans, whose uniqueness values appear closer to those of the Democrats.

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The main study objective was to determine the extent to which the quality of institutionalized healthcare, sociodemographic factors of obstetric patients, and institutional factors affect maternal mortality in the Dominican Republic. COM-Poisson distribution and the Pearson correlation coefficient were used to determine the relationship of predictor factors (i.e.

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Effective communication of critical imaging findings is an important patient safety issue. Despite an increase in exam volumes, our institution saw a decrease in the number of alerts sent through our critical alert system, indicating that critical findings were not being communicated. The purpose of our interventions was to increase the number of critical alerts, while also improving documentation and improving our provider database.

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Background: The past few decades have seen rapid advancements in exoskeleton technology, with a considerable shift towards applications involving users with gait pathologies. Commercial devices from ReWalk, Ekso Bionics, and Indego, mainly designed for rehabilitation purposes, have inspired the development of many research platforms aimed at extending capabilities for use as safe and effective personal mobility devices. The 2016 Cybathlon featured an impressive demonstration of exoskeletons designed to enable mobility for individuals with spinal cord injury, however, not a single team completed every task and only two completed the stairs.

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Introduction: Neratinib and neratinib-based combinations have demonstrated efficacy for treatment of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive (HER2+) early-stage and metastatic breast cancers. However, diarrhea has been reported as a common adverse event leading to neratinib discontinuation. Results from the CONTROL trial suggest that proactive diarrhea management with antidiarrheal prophylaxis or dose escalation of neratinib from a lower starting dose to the full FDA-approved dose of 240 mg/day can reduce the incidence, duration, and severity of neratinib-associated diarrhea in patients with early-stage breast cancer.

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Our research objective was to determine which environmental and social factors were predictive of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) case and death rates in New York City (NYC), the original epicenter of the pandemic in the US, and any differential impacts among the boroughs. Data from various sources on the demographic, health, and environmental characteristics for NYC zip codes, neighborhoods, and boroughs were analyzed along with NYC government's reported case and death rates by zip code. At the time of analysis, the Bronx had the highest COVID-19 case and death rates, while Manhattan had the lowest rates.

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Our novel Python-based tool EVANGELIST allows the visualization of GC and repeats percentages along chromosomes in sequenced genomes and has enabled us to perform quantitative large-scale analyses on the chromosome level in fish and other vertebrates. This is a different approach from the prevailing analyses, i.e.

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To understand the cytogenomic evolution of vertebrates, we must first unravel the complex genomes of fishes, which were the first vertebrates to evolve and were ancestors to all other vertebrates. We must not forget the immense time span during which the fish genomes had to evolve. Fish cytogenomics is endowed with unique features which offer irreplaceable insights into the evolution of the vertebrate genome.

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Article Synopsis
  • Acipenseriformes include sturgeons and paddlefishes, characterized by unique genomic traits like broad ploidy variation and high chromosome numbers, with the American paddlefish showing confirmed palaeotetraploidy.
  • The study revealed that Hox gene paralogs in the paddlefish are distinguishable on chromosomes, with HoxA paralogs clearly visible while HoxD alpha was not successfully identified.
  • Various chromosomal markers were identified, showing stages of rediploidization from ancestral tetraploidy, indicating complex genetic changes in paddlefish evolution.
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  • The innate immune system, particularly the complement, plays a crucial role in transplant injury and immune responses, and genetic differences may influence transplant success.
  • A study analyzed the impact of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in complement genes on transplant outcomes in two groups totaling over 1,100 recipients, looking at factors like graft survival and acute rejection.
  • One specific SNP in a gene related to immune response showed an initial association with transplant success, but after further statistical adjustments, no SNP consistently linked to clinical outcomes, suggesting that genetic variation in these genes might not explain transplant variability in this patient group.
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HLA and disease: guilt by association.

Int J Immunogenet

February 2014

It is now over forty years since the first associations between particular HLA antigens and disease susceptibility were described, and the identification of large numbers HLA-associated diseases parallels our increased understanding of the genetic complexity of the HLA system and its extensive polymorphism. However, surprisingly and frustratingly, clear identification of the underlying mechanisms resulting in a causative role for HLA polymorphism in the molecular immunopathogenesis of individual HLA-associated diseases remains the exception rather than the rule. This review, while not intended to be a comprehensive catalogue of HLA-associated diseases, aims to revisit a number of well known and more recently described HLA-associated diseases as exemplars of our current understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms which may result in genetic disease predisposition.

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We investigated the presence of antibodies to vimentin in 150 patients awaiting transplant, (50 kidney, 50 liver and 50 thoracic) and in 51 previously transplanted kidney patients whose grafts had failed. Patients with primary end stage thoracic or kidney disease did not have increased levels of vimentin antibodies, but those with primary liver failure and those with kidney graft failure did. Those with kidney graft failure were more likely to form vimentin antibodies if the patient was HLA-DQ2 positive (p=<0.

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Background: Despite evidence of antioxidant effects of vitamin E in vitro and in animal studies, large, randomized clinical trials have not substantiated a benefit of vitamin E in reducing inflammation in humans. An individual's genetic background may affect the response to α-tocopherol supplementation, but this has rarely been investigated.

Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the role of genetic polymorphisms on changes in LPS-stimulated inflammatory cytokine production from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) after α-tocopherol supplementation.

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Detection and identification of pathogens in environmental samples for biosecurity applications are challenging due to the strict requirements on specificity, sensitivity and time. We have developed a concept for quick, specific and sensitive pathogen identification in environmental samples. Target identification is realized by padlock- and proximity probing, and reacted probes are amplified by RCA (rolling-circle amplification).

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