Publications by authors named "Katherine Field"

Unlabelled: Micronutrient fortification can improve nutrient intake of older adults in long-term care. However, previous studies indicate that micronutrient fortification can alter food sensory attributes and, potentially, consumer liking. Others have found no effect of fortification on liking.

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Background: There is no appropriately validated scale with which to rate the problem of residue after swallowing. The Boston Residue and Clearance Scale (BRACS) was developed to meet this need. Initial reliability and validity were assessed.

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This article has 3 parts. The 1st part provides an overview of the family genetics, brain imaging, and treatment research in the University of Washington Multidisciplinary Learning Disabilities Center (UWLDC) over the past decade that points to a probable genetic basis for the unusual difficulty that individuals with dyslexia encounter in learning to read and spell. Phenotyping studies have found evidence that phonological, orthographic, and morphological word forms and their parts may contribute uniquely to this difficulty.

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Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among adults in the United States, in Europe, and in much of Asia. Despite advances in primary prevention of coronary artery disease, including early detection and treatment of dyslipidemia, one half of all myocardial infarctions and strokes occur in patients with normal serum cholesterol levels. Observations like this prompt the search for new risk factors and improved identification of individuals at high risk.

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Joubert syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by hypotonia, ataxia, developmental delay, and a distinctive hindbrain malformation involving the cerebellum and brain stem, visualized radiographically on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as the "molar tooth sign." In postmortem brains from subjects with Joubert syndrome, there is an apparent absence of decussation of both corticospinal and superior cerebellar tracts, although the functional significance has not been elucidated. We sought to explore the cerebral and cerebellar activation pattern elicited by finger tapping in an adolescent with Joubert syndrome and in a normal control subject using functional MRI.

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