Publications by authors named "Hogue R"

Background: The effects of SARS-CoV-2 have varied between significant waves of hospitalization.

Research Question: Are cardiovascular complications different among the first, delta and omicron waves of hospitalized COVID-19 pneumonia patients?

Study Design And Methods: This was a multi-centre retrospective study of patients hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia: 632 were hospitalized during the (March-July 2020), 1013 during the (September 2020-March 2021), and 323 during the (January 2022-July 2022). Patients were stratified by wave and occurrence of cardiovascular events.

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The taxonomic assignment of sequences obtained by high throughput amplicon sequencing poses a limitation for various applications in the biomedical, environmental, and agricultural fields. Identifications are constrained by the length of the obtained sequences and the computational processes employed to efficiently assign taxonomy. Arriving at a consensus is often preferable to uncertain identification for ecological purposes.

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Application of date palm waste compost is quite beneficial in improving soil properties and crop growth. However, the effect of its application on soil microbial communities is less understood. High-throughput sequencing and quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) were used to evaluate the effect of compost application on the soil microbial composition in a barley field during the tillering, booting and ripening stages.

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In this work, the dithiolene complex iron(III) bis-maleonitriledithiolene [Fe(mnt)] is characterised and evaluated as a homogeneous CO reduction catalyst. Electrochemically the Fe(mnt) is reduced twice to the trianionic Fe(mnt) state, which is correspondingly found to be active towards CO. Interestingly, the first reduction event appears to comprise overlapping reversible couples, attributed to the presence of both a dimeric and monomeric form of the dithiolene complex.

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Common scab is a potato disease characterized by the formation of scab-like lesions on the surface of potato tubers. The actinobacterium Streptomyces scabiei is the main causal agent of common scab. During infection, this bacterium synthesizes the phytotoxin thaxtomin A which is essential for the production of disease symptoms.

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The decline of cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duchesne ex Rozier; Rosaceae) observed in the province of Quebec, Canada, between 2012 and 2014 was mostly caused by persistent viruses: strawberry mild yellow edge virus (SMYEV) (Potexvirus; Alphaflexiviridae) and strawberry crinkle virus (SCV) (Cytorhabdovirus; Rhabdoviridae); and semi-persistent viruses: strawberry mottle virus (SmoV) (Secoviridae), strawberry vein banding virus (SVBV) (Caulimovirus; Caulimoviridae), and strawberry pallidosis virus (SPaV) (Crinivirus: Closteroviridae) transmitted by insect vectors. The objective of this study was to determine the sources of viral contamination in commercial strawberry fields in Quebec. Specifically, we wished to 1) determine the prevalence of persistent viruses in winged strawberry aphid Chaetosiphon fragaefolii (Cockerell) (Hemiptera: Aphididae) specimens captured; 2) determine the prevalence of all viruses in wild strawberry Fragaria virginiana Miller plants near commercial plantings; and 3) evaluate the viral contamination of strawberry transplants obtained from nurseries and tested before and after planting in commercial strawberry fields.

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Five metal complexes of the dithiolene ligand maleonitriledithiolate (mnt ) with M=V, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu were studied as redox-active materials for nonaqueous redox flow batteries (RFBs). All five complexes exhibit at least two redox processes, making them applicable to symmetric RFBs as single-species electrolytes, that is, as both negolyte and posolyte. Charge-discharge cycling in a small-scale RFB gave modest performances for [(tea) V ], [(tea) Co ], and [(tea) Cu ] whereas [(tea)Fe ] and [(tea) Ni ] (tea=tetraethylammonium) failed to hold any significant capacity, indicating poor stability.

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Four new, symmetrical, bis-bidentate ditopic Rdpt-type, Rat (R azine-triazole), ligands have been prepared, Lnpym-meta/para (n = 2 or 4), which contain bidentate n-pyrimidine/triazole binding pockets connected through an appropriate aromatic spacer, meta/para-phenyl, to enable assembly into dinuclear helicates or tetranuclear tetrahedral cages, respectively. The 3 : 2 self assembly reactions of each Lnpym-meta/para ligand with iron(ii) tetrafluoroborate gave the desired complexes, as shown by X-ray crystal structure determinations of the pair of helicates [FeII2(Lnpym-meta)3(BF4)4]·6CH3CN, with n = 2 (1·6CH3CN) or 4 (2·6CH3CN), and the pair of Td cages [FeII4(Lnpym-para)6(BF4)8]·xsolvent, with n = 2 (3·xsolvent) or 4 (4·xsolvent). Reversible FeII/III processes at Em = 0.

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The development of 'molecular-omic' tools and computing analysis platforms have greatly enhanced our ability to assess the impacts of agricultural practices and crop management protocols on soil microbial diversity. However, biotic factors are rarely factored into agricultural management models. Today it is possible to identify specific microbiomes and define biotic components that contribute to soil quality.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focuses on creating a set of new cobalt complexes using varying tridentate monoanionic dipyridyl-pyrrolide anions, where different substituents (R and R) are tested to see how they affect the complexes' properties.
  • - These cobalt(II) complexes can switch their oxidation and spin states depending on external conditions, with most complexes showing gradual spin crossover behavior in solid form and some in solution as well.
  • - The cobalt centers in low spin conditions exhibit a specific structural distortion, with their redox potentials (how easily they can gain or lose electrons) influenced by the choice of substituents, showing a predictable range from -0.95 to -0.45 V based
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Iron(ii) spin crossover (SCO) materials have been widely studied as molecular switches with a wide variety of potential applications, including as displays, sensors, actuators or memory components. Most SCO materials have been either monometallic or polymeric, and it is only relatively recently that chemists have really started to focus on linking multiple metal centres together within the one, discrete, molecule in an effort to enhance the SCO properties, such as abrupt, hysteretic, and multistep switching, as well as the potential for quantum cellular automata, whilst still being readily amenable to characterisation. Here we present a review of the ligand designs of the last two decades that have led to self assembly of discrete di- to poly-nuclear iron(ii) complexes of helicate, cage, cube, and other supramolecular architectures with rich SCO activity, and to an increased focus on host-guest interactions.

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Seventeen cobalt complexes-eleven dinuclear cobalt(II) complexes and three tetranuclear cobalt complexes (two mixed valent) of ditopic ligands, with varying N-donor aromatic bridging moieties and pendant pyridine side arms, as well as three mononuclear cobalt(II) complexes of Schiff base macrocyclic ligands-have been screened for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity. All 17 complexes are active catalysts for the HER, in both DMF and aqueous solution, in tandem with the [Ru(bpy) ] (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine) photosensitiser. All are benchmarked to the literature standard [Co (dmgH) (py)Cl] (dmg=dimethylglyoxime, py=pyridine) under identical conditions.

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Monitoring the spin states of species in solution is a crucial aspect of understanding magnetic properties as well as spin-labile sensing, supramolecular, catalytic and biochemical processes. Herein, we describe the first quantitative variable-pressure and variable-temperature method of determining spin states in solution, demonstrate that it is accurate, and identify a simultaneous T and P sensor system.

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Self-assembly of 1:1:2 M (BF ) (M=Zn or Fe), pyrazine-2,5-dicarbaldehyde (1) and 2-(2-aminoethyl)pyridine gave trimetallic triangle architectures rather than the anticipated tetrametallic [2×2] squares. Options for the nontrivial synthesis of 1 are considered, and synthetic details provided for both preferred routes. Rare cyclohelicate triangle architectures are observed for the pair of structurally characterized yellow-brown [Zn L ](BF ) and dark green [Fe L ](BF ) complexes of the neutral bis-terdentate Schiff base L.

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The whole genome sequence of isolated from the blood of a patient with interstitial lung disease was sequenced with the Pacific Biosciences RS II platform. The genome size is 2.1 Mb with 2,127 annotated coding sequences; it contained two clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated proteins (Cas) systems.

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The genome of , isolated from a paraplegic patient with neurogenic bladder, was sequenced with the Pacific Biosciences RSII platform. The genome size is 2.68 Mb and includes 3,096 annotated coding sequences, including genes associated with quinone cofactors, which play crucial roles in the virulence of Gram-negative bacteria.

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Access to a new family of thioether-linked PSRT ligands, 4-substituted-3,5-bis{[(2-pyridylmethyl)sulfanyl]methyl}-4H-1,2,4-triazoles (analogues of the previously studied amino-linked PMRT ligands), has been established. Four such ligands have been prepared, PSPhT, PS(i)BuT, PS(t-Bu)PhT, and PS(Me)PhT, with R = Ph, (i)Bu, (t-Bu)Ph, and (Me)Ph, respectively. Three dinuclear colorless to pale green iron(II) complexes, [Fe(II)2(PSRT)2](BF4)4·solvent, featuring N4S2 donor sets, were prepared.

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Mobile technologies (including handheld and wearable devices) have the potential to enhance learning activities from basic medical undergraduate education through residency and beyond. In order to use these technologies successfully, medical educators need to be aware of the underpinning socio-theoretical concepts that influence their usage, the pre-clinical and clinical educational environment in which the educational activities occur, and the practical possibilities and limitations of their usage. This Guide builds upon the previous AMEE Guide to e-Learning in medical education by providing medical teachers with conceptual frameworks and practical examples of using mobile technologies in medical education.

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Background: As Family Medicine programs across Canada are transitioning into a competency-based curriculum, medical students and clinical teachers are increasingly incorporating tablet computers in their work and educational activities. The purpose of this pilot study was to identify how preceptors and residents use tablet computers to implement and adopt a new family medicine curriculum and to evaluate how they access applications (apps) through their tablet in an effort to support and enhance effective teaching and learning.

Methods: Residents and preceptors (n = 25) from the Family Medicine program working at the Pembroke Regional Hospital in Ontario, Canada, were given iPads and training on how to use the device in clinical teaching and learning activities and how to access the online curriculum.

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A family of three new mononuclear complexes of the general form [Fe(L(pz))2(NCE)2] has been prepared (L(pz) = 4-p-tolyl-3-(2-pyrazinyl)-5-(2-pyridyl)-1,2,4-triazole; E = S, Se, BH3). All three exhibit spin crossover, in two cases with hysteresis, with T1/2 being predictably tuned by varying the coordinated anion.

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Background: Use of in silico bioinformatics analyses has led to important leads in the complex nature of alcoholism at the genomic, epigenomic, and proteomic level, but has not previously been successfully translated to the development of effective pharmacotherapies. In this study, a bioinformatics approach led to the discovery of neuroimmune pathways as an age-specific druggable target. Minocycline, a neuroimmune modulator, reduced high ethanol (EtOH) drinking in adult, but not adolescent, mice as predicted a priori.

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The brain is one of the major targets of chronic alcohol abuse. Yet the fundamental mechanisms underlying alcohol-mediated brain damage remain unclear. The products of alcohol metabolism cause DNA damage, which in conditions of DNA repair dysfunction leads to genomic instability and neural death.

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We report the second human case of infection caused by an organism identified as the proposed Bartonella species, "B. washoensis." The organism was isolated from a blood sample from a patient presenting with meningitis and early sepsis.

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Objectives: To assess the effect of topically applied nitroglycerin (NTG) ointment (2%) on preoperative targeted venous access site great saphenous vein (GSV) diameter in patients undergoing endovenous laser treatment (ELT).

Methods: In this double-blinded randomized study design, 75 patients received either (A) treadmill ambulation only, (B) topically applied NTG ointment only, or (C) topically applied NTG ointment + treadmill ambulation. Targeted venous access vein diameters were measured before therapeutic intervention and then repeated after approximately 30 min following pretreatment intervention.

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Over the past several decades, the appearance of pink-pigmented bacteria in clinical specimens has gone from being a microbiologic curiosity in the clinical laboratory to the recognition of these aerobic microorganisms as etiologic agents of human disease, most notably bloodstream infections. Advances in the fields of molecular taxonomy and phylogenetics indicate that at least four distinct genera and eight different species are associated with clinical infections in susceptible patient populations. However, these bacteria are slow growing and present multiple diagnostic challenges to the microbiology laboratory including culture, isolation, and identification to species rank.

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