Publications by authors named "Laura Wells"

Undesirable host responses to implants commonly lead to impaired device function. As the first immune cell to respond to inflammation, activated neutrophils release antimicrobials and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) that prime microenvironments for macrophages and other infiltrating cells. This research aims to understand how functional groups in copolymers of isodecyl acrylate (IDA) that are known to modulate healing, modulate neutrophil cells.

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In this commentary, we explore the disproportionate risk women experience with the insertion of various medical devices. Although pre-market device testing and complication tracking could be improved for all, a failure to consider sex differences in hormones, anatomy, inflammatory responses, and physical function puts women at particular risk. This invisibility of women is an example of gender bias in medical science and practice, a bias that could be corrected in the ways we suggest.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Emergency departments (EDs) serve as crucial care locations for individuals with mental health (MH) issues, but treating these patients can be difficult due to various challenges and limited research reflecting both patient and provider viewpoints.
  • - A study analyzed 17 papers to explore the experiences of patients and healthcare providers in EDs, identifying key barriers and facilitators to effective care through three main themes: interpersonal factors, environmental factors, and system-level factors, each with specific sub-themes.
  • - The findings highlighted a shared interest between patients and providers in enhancing ED connections to community resources, while also revealing differing opinions on how interpersonal and system-level issues affect care delivery for those with MH concerns.
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Purpose: Surgically implanted intraocular lenses (IOLs) may be used as drug-delivery devices, but their effectiveness is not well defined. Computational fluid dynamics models were developed to investigate the capability of IOLs to release drugs at therapeutic concentrations.

Methods: Models were generated using COMSOL Multiphysics.

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Smoking contributes to health inequalities, but how social inequalities in smoking develop in early life remains unclear. This study examines how measures of education attained over the early life course (representing socioeconomic position of origin, socioeconomic position of destination, and in-between) contribute to smoking behavior in a Swedish longitudinal sample. We used data obtained from the Swedish Level-of-Living Surveys in addition to national register data.

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Microfluidics has emerged as a powerful analytical tool for biology and biomedical research, with uses ranging from single-cell phenotyping to drug discovery and medical diagnostics, and only small sample volumes required for testing. The ability to rapidly prototype new designs is hugely beneficial in a research environment, but the high cost, slow turnaround, and wasteful nature of commonly used fabrication techniques, particularly for complex multi-layer geometries, severely impede the development process. In addition, microfluidic channels in most devices currently play a passive role and are typically used to direct flows.

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Alginate solutions crosslink into microspheres in calcium alginate, enabling the encapsulation and subsequent release of biological macromolecules and drugs. However, release from calcium alginate into PBS is relatively fast because it will decrosslink the gel relatively quickly. In this research, FITC-dextran (MW 10 kDa) was encapsulated in 2% (w/v) calcium alginate microspheres by electrospraying.

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Alginate can be gently crosslinked by calcium into hydrogels and microspheres for the encapsulation and release of proteins and drugs. However, the release is often over short periods unless alginate is also covalently modified or crosslinked. This research aims to sustain the release of encapsulated model drug FITC-dextran by covalently crosslinking alginate with short oligomers DNA because evidence suggests that DNA may also interact with alginate to further increase effective crosslinking.

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Background: Alcohol consumption contributes to health inequalities, but few studies have examined how socially differentiated alcohol use develops across the life course. In this study, we examine how one aspect of childhood socioeconomic position (parental education) relates to two often-conflated young adult drinking patterns: drinking frequency and quantity per occasion. Using a life course perspective, we also explore whether parental drinking patterns or young adults' own educational attainment might account for such associations.

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The identification of emotional expressions is vital for social interaction, and can be affected by various factors, including the expressed emotion, the intensity of the expression, the sex of the face, and the gender of the observer. This study investigates how these factors affect the speed and accuracy of expression recognition, as well as dwell time on the two most significant areas of the face: the eyes and the mouth. Participants were asked to identify expressions from female and male faces displaying six expressions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise), each with three levels of intensity (low, moderate, and normal).

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Polymer beads made of 45% methacrylic acid co methyl methacrylate (MAA beads) promote vascular regenerative responses in contrast to control materials without methacrylic acid (here polymethyl methacrylate beads, PMMA). In vitro and in vivo studies suggest that MAA copolymers induce differences in macrophage phenotype and polarization and inflammatory responses, presumably due to protein adsorption differences between the beads. To explore differences in protein adsorption in an unbiased manner, we used high resolution shotgun mass spectrometry to identify and compare proteins that adsorb from human plasma or serum onto MAA and PMMA beads.

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As physical inactivity may track from adolescence to adulthood, it is important to identify social determinants of physical inactivity in early life. However, most studies have measured socioeconomic position as one dimension. We examine whether multiple dimensions of socioeconomic position, in addition to other dimensions of inequality (i.

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We report the fabrication of a scaffold (hereafter referred to as AngioChip) that supports the assembly of parenchymal cells on a mechanically tunable matrix surrounding a perfusable, branched, three-dimensional microchannel network coated with endothelial cells. The design of AngioChip decouples the material choices for the engineered vessel network and for cell seeding in the parenchyma, enabling extensive remodelling while maintaining an open-vessel lumen. The incorporation of nanopores and micro-holes in the vessel walls enhances permeability, and permits intercellular crosstalk and extravasation of monocytes and endothelial cells on biomolecular stimulation.

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Psychopathic traits are linked with impairments in emotional facial expression recognition. These impairments may, in part, reflect reduced attention to the eyes of emotional faces. Although reduced attention to the eyes has been noted among children with conduct problems and callous-unemotional traits, similar findings are yet to be found in relation to psychopathic traits among adult male participants.

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An unbiased phosphoproteomic method was used to identify biomaterial-associated changes in the phosphorylation patterns of macrophage-like cells. The phosphorylation differences between differentiated THP1 (dTHP1) cells treated for 10, 20, or 30 min with a vascular regenerative methacrylic acid (MAA) copolymer or a control methyl methacrylate (MM) copolymer were determined by MS. There were 1,470 peptides (corresponding to 729 proteins) that were differentially phosphorylated in dTHP1 cells treated with the two materials with a greater cellular response to MAA treatment.

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In diabetic patients the development of chronic non-healing wounds is a common complication. A methacrylic acid-based biomaterial is a vascular regenerative material that enhances diabetic healing without the use of cells or growth factors. The bioactive nature of this material is thought to be associated with its anionic charge or surface chemistry.

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Without any external additives such as growth factors, polymer beads containing methacrylic acid (MAA) promoted functional vascularization in vivo leading to faster cutaneous wound healing in diabetic mice and improved skin graft integration in Wistar rats. The aim of this work is to understand this material-driven vascularization by investigating the effect of polymer MAA-content, in the absence of surface roughness, on the behaviour of macrophage-like and endothelial cells. Smooth polymer films containing 20, 30 or 40% MAA or methyl methacrylate as a control copolymerized with isodecyl acrylate, were synthesized to study the effect of MAA content in smooth films, without roughness.

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In the United Kingdom (UK), the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) stipulate that practice experience makes up 50% of the nursing curricula. We argue that mentors play a pivotal role in this experience, being the main practitioner responsible for supporting learning in practice, and the NMC's framework to support learning and assessment in practice establishes the knowledge and skills that mentors must apply in practice with students. This framework acts as a resource guide to mentors on how to successfully facilitate students clinical learning experiences, ensuring that students are "fit to practice" at the point of registration.

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Light-responsive polymers with controllable, reversible crosslink mechanisms have the potential to create unique biomaterials with stimulus-controlled swelling, degradation and diffusion properties useful in tissue engineering and drug delivery applications. Generic photodimerizing polyethylene glycol-anthracene macromolecules that may be grafted to various polymers to effectively control their crosslinking via a photodimerization mechanism have been developed. These generic crosslinkers were shown to effectively introduce photoresponsive properties into hyaluronate and alginate as model hydrophilic polymers.

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Ophthalmic drug delivery to the posterior segment of the eye could benefit from a responsive controlled drug delivery system with light or laser inducible changes. For example, the delivery of age-related macular degeneration drugs requires invasive monthly injections making long-term photoresponsive drug delivery a desirable option. The feasibility of this may be facilitated by both the transparency of the eye and the advanced technology in ophthalmic lasers.

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Responsive polymer systems that react to thermal and light stimuli have been a focus in the biomaterials literature because they have the potential to be less invasive than currently available materials and may perform well in the in vivo environment. Natural and synthetic polymer systems created to exhibit a temperature-sensitive phase transition lead to in situ forming hydrogels that can be degradable or non-degradable. These systems typically yield physical gels whose properties can be manipulated to accommodate specific applications while requiring no additional solvents or cross-linkers.

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The alpha2beta1 integrin, a collagen/laminin receptor, is expressed at high level in the basal cell layer of the epidermis. To define the role of the alpha2beta1 integrin in wound healing, wound repair was extensively evaluated in wild-type and alpha2-null mice in vivo. In addition, the impact of alpha2beta1 integrin-deficiency on the function of primary murine keratinocytes in vitro was analyzed.

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