Publications by authors named "M B McCrohan"

Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact the health-care system in the United States and has brought further light on health disparities within it. However, only a few studies have examined hospitalization risk with regard to social determinants of health.

Objective: We aimed to identify how health disparities affect hospitalization rates among patients with COVID-19.

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Maternal smoking during pregnancy has been shown to result in abnormalities in lung function in newborn infants, including reduced expiratory flow and increased airway responsiveness to inhaled agonists. The mechanisms by which this occurs remain unclear. Using a guinea pig model of in utero smoke exposure, we measured airway responsiveness and lung morphology in a group of neonatal guinea pigs 21 d after delivery.

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One of the mechanisms by which corticosteroids may modify acute graft vs host disease (GvHD) is via inhibition of arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism. Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) is a product of that pathway which may take part in the pathogenesis of GvHD through the stimulation of T-lymphopoiesis and T-lymphocyte activation. LTB4 is a metabolite of AA (20:4n-6).

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Esophageal perforation is usually an acute, life-threatening event, and its diagnosis can be established on the basis of obvious clinical and radiographic findings. This article describes two cases whereby symptoms of esophageal perforations were masked by concomitant administration of steroids, thus causing marked delay in diagnosis and treatment. Esophageal rupture should be considered when patients receiving steroids develop unexplained fever with pleural effusion or pneumomediastinum, particularly following instrumentation or forceful retching.

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The use of plasma thrombospondin (TSP) concentration was investigated as an indicator of intravascular platelet activation. Patients (n = 20) with diseases that have known vasculitis were included in the study. The range and the mean of plasma TSP concentrations of patients with vasculitis were 117 ng/ml to 6500 ng/ml and 791 +/- 1412 ng/ml (mean +/- SD); the range and the mean of plasma TSP concentrations of control individuals (n = 33) were 13 ng/ml to 137 ng/ml and 59 +/- 29 ng/ml.

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