Publications by authors named "McGhee W"

Introduction: Individuals with chronic physical illness are at increased risk of negative psychological sequelae. Immersive virtual reality (VR) is an emerging treatment that might reduce these negative effects and increase quality of life in individuals with chronic physical illness.

Objective: To systematically review literature examining the use of immersive VR in adult populations with chronic physical illness to understand: (1) how immersive VR is used to improve psychological well-being of adults with chronic physical illness (2) what effect this immersive VR has on the psychological well-being of adults with chronic physical illness.

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Background: There is evidence that a companion animal (CA) or 'pet' can be helpful during the management of chronic illness. However, the psychological effects of CAs and the mechanism by which they can be beneficial to individuals managing life-limiting conditions is unknown. This study addresses this gap and provides the first examination of the lived experience of CAs among community-dwelling adults with advanced cancer.

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Pediatric transplant recipients are on multiple prescription and non-prescription drugs. Many patients also use dietary, nutritional, and herbal supplements. This manuscript researched formulations of immunosuppressive drugs currently available and presents information on generic immunosuppressive drugs, commonly used non-prescription medications, dietary supplements, and herbal supplements.

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Background: Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines recommend that key antimicrobial stewardship program (ASP) personnel include an infectious disease (ID) physician leader and dedicated ID-trained clinical pharmacist. Limited resources prompted development of an alternative model by using ID physicians and service-based clinical pharmacists at a pediatric hospital. The aim of this study was to analyze the effectiveness and impact of this alternative ASP model.

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We conducted a prospective pilot study to evaluate the potential role of combined systemic antifungal and liposomal amphotericin B lock therapy in children with intestinal insufficiency with fungal catheter-related bloodstream infections whose central venous catheters had not been removed. Our results provide supportive evidence for the conduct of larger clinical trials to confirm the efficacy and safety of this approach.

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This review summarizes the outcomes and known adverse effects of current immunosuppression strategies in use in pediatric intestinal transplantation. Intestinal transplantation has evolved from an experimental therapy to a highly successful treatment for children with intestinal failure who have complications with total parenteral nutrition. Because of continued success with intestinal transplantation over the past decade, the focus of clinicians and researchers is shifting from short-term patient survival to optimizing long-term outcomes.

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The current management of hepatic allograft rejection after liver transplantation in children requires effective baseline immunosuppression to prevent rejection and rapid diagnosis and treatment to manage acute rejection episodes. The subsequent impact on chronic rejection is dependent on the combination of adequate prevention and the treatment of acute rejection. Tacrolimus is a macrolide lactone that inhibits the signal transduction of interleukin-2 (IL-2) via calcineurin inhibition.

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An 8.5-year-old girl with classical maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) required liver transplantation for hypervitaminosis A and was effectively cured of MSUD over an 8-year clinical follow-up period. We developed a collaborative multidisciplinary effort to evaluate the effects of elective liver transplantation in 10 additional children (age range 1.

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A series of 21 novel 2-[(aminocarbonyl)amino]-5-acetylenyl-3-thiophenecarboxamides were synthesized and evaluated for the inhibition of IKK-2. In spite of their often modest activity on the enzyme, six selected analogs showed significant inhibition of the production of inflammatory cytokine IL-8 in IL-1beta stimulated rheumatoid arthritis-derived synovial fibroblasts, demonstrating their potential usefulness as NF-kappaB regulators.

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Intestinal, combined liver-intestinal, and multivisceral transplantation are now considered the standard of care for children and adults with permanent intestinal failure. Early attempts at intestinal transplantation were discouraging because of the high incidence of technical complications, rejection, and infection. Advances in the field of transplantation, including the introduction of tacrolimus, improved surgical techniques, and improvements in postoperative care, have led to a renewed interest in intestinal transplantation since 1990.

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To evaluate the pharmacokinetics of Sirolimus (SRL) and Tacrolimus (TAC) in pediatric transplant recipients. Fifty-one SRL and 55 TAC pharmacokinetic profiles were obtained from 20 male and 14 female recipients of liver alone (LTx, n = 23), small bowel alone, and with liver (SBTx, n = 11). The median age was 13.

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Aims: The role of sirolimus (SRL) as a rescue agent (n=42) and as a component of primary immunosuppression (n=8) was evaluated in a mixed population of 50 transplanted children receiving tacrolimus (liver: 26, heart: 5, intestinal: 5, liver-intestine: 9, lung: 1, bone marrow: 1, liver-kidney: 1, multivisceral: 1). Rescue indications for tacrolimus (TAC) failure were recurrent acute rejection and acute rejection complicating withdrawal of immunosuppression in posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD). Rescue indications for TAC toxicity were nephrotoxicity, pancreatitis, seizures, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and graft-versus-host disease.

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Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and prolactin (PRL) responses to thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) stimulation are sometimes blunted in alcoholic subjects; however, the mechanisms involved in these phenomena have not been established. We hypothesized that elevations in free thyroid concentrations might be related to these abnormal responses and then tested that hypothesis in a sample of nondepressed alcoholic inpatients (n = 21). Four alcoholic patients had delta max TSH responses that were < 7 mIU/l; three had PRL responses at or below 8 micrograms/l.

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High norepinephrine/cortisol ratios have been shown to be useful indicators of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Alexithymia can result from overwhelming stress; thus, we hypothesized that sympathetic-adrenal medullary/hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal ratios would be positively associated with alexithymia severity. In the present study, we correlated 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylethylene glycol (MHPG)/adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and MHPG/cortisol ratios with self-report Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) scores in a group (n = 17) of nondepressed, formerly alcohol-dependent men.

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