Publications by authors named "M Van de Pol"

Background: In 2020, a mandatory, nationwide 1-day bronchoscopy simulation-based training (SBT) course was implemented for novice pulmonology residents in the Netherlands. This pretest-posttest study was the first to evaluate the effectiveness of such a nationwide course in improving residents' simulated basic bronchoscopy skills.

Methods: After passing a theoretical test, residents followed a 1-day SBT course, available in 7 centers, where they practiced their bronchoscopy skills step-by-step on a virtual reality simulator under pulmonologist supervision.

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Article Synopsis
  • Misophonia is a sound sensitivity disorder often starting in childhood, and there are currently no effective questionnaires to assess its severity in youth.
  • This study introduced and validated two new questionnaires: the Misophonia Screening List-Child and Youth for screening, and the Amsterdam Misophonia Scale-Youth (AMISOS-Y) for measuring severity.
  • The questionnaires were tested on a diverse sample and showed strong psychometric properties (α = 0.95-0.96), but future studies are needed for broader validation in community and clinical settings.
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Background: The current study aims to report the presentation of the malperfusion syndrome in patients with acute type A aortic dissection admitted to surgery and its impact on mortality.

Methods: Data were retrieved from the multicenter European Registry of Type A Aortic Dissection. The Penn classification was used to categorize malperfusion syndromes.

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Surface modification of materials with proteins has various biological applications, and hence the methodology for surface modification needs to accommodate a wide range of proteins that differ in structure, size, and function. Presented here is a methodology that uses the Affinity Bioorthogonal Chemistry (ABC) tag, 3-(2-pyridyl)-6-methyltetrazine (PyTz), for the site-selective modification and purification of proteins and subsequent attachment of the protein to -cyclooctene (TCO)-functionalized hydrogel microfibers. This method of surface modification is shown to maintain the functionality of the protein after conjugation with proteins of varying size and functionalities, namely, HaloTag, NanoLuc luciferase (NanoLuc), and fibronectin type III domains 9-10 (FNIII 9-10).

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Described herein is a protocol for producing a synthetic extracellular matrix that can be modified in situ during three-dimensional cell culture. The hydrogel platform is established using modular building blocks employing bio-orthogonal tetrazine (Tz) ligation with slow (norbornene, Nb) and fast (trans-cyclooctene, TCO) dienophiles. A cell-laden gel construct is created via the slow, off-stoichiometric Tz/Nb reaction.

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