Publications by authors named "Moses D"

ObjectiveThis study tests a model to improve the management of patients with an osteoporotic fracture.MethodsPatients with fractures potentially due to osteoporosis were identified from imaging reports using computerised near natural language processing. A coordinator notified the referring GP about the finding and provided follow-up to remind GPs of the need for management.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A cluster randomised controlled trial will be conducted in Sydney to test a new integrated approach for secondary fracture prevention in primary care settings, which includes alerts to doctors and management guidelines for osteoporotic fractures.
  • * The primary goal of the trial is to measure how many patients get bone density scans or prescriptions for osteoporosis treatment within three months of an initial fracture diagnosis, while also tracking additional outcomes related to osteoporosis management.
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The CSANZ/RANZCR Position Statement on Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging (CMRI) is intended to support and foster the provision of quality, safe CMRI services in Australia and New Zealand. This document specifically pertains to CMRI in adults, as distinct from general vascular MRI or paediatric imaging, and provides certification and recertification requirements.

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Advancements in decoding speech from brain activity have focused on decoding a single language. Hence, the extent to which bilingual speech production relies on unique or shared cortical activity across languages has remained unclear. Here, we leveraged electrocorticography, along with deep-learning and statistical natural-language models of English and Spanish, to record and decode activity from speech-motor cortex of a Spanish-English bilingual with vocal-tract and limb paralysis into sentences in either language.

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Loss of speech after paralysis is devastating, but circumventing motor-pathway injury by directly decoding speech from intact cortical activity has the potential to restore natural communication and self-expression. Recent discoveries have defined how key features of speech production are facilitated by the coordinated activity of vocal-tract articulatory and motor-planning cortical representations. In this Review, we highlight such progress and how it has led to successful speech decoding, first in individuals implanted with intracranial electrodes for clinical epilepsy monitoring and subsequently in individuals with paralysis as part of early feasibility clinical trials to restore speech.

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Purpose: This study aimed to characterise the normal morphometry of the biliary tree in pediatric and adult populations, through a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Methods: This study, conducted using the PRISMA guidelines and registered with PROSPERO, searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCOPUS and Web of Science databases up to October 2022, and updated to August 2023. Studies that reported extractable data on diameter and length of the right, left and common hepatic ducts (LHD, RHD and CHD), and common bile duct (CBD) were included.

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Background: Microvascular scarring compromises the functionality of the endometrium, and vascular flow at the junctional zone (JZ) may be the key to understanding poor reproductive outcomes in women with Asherman syndrome (AS).

Aims: To investigate whether vascular perfusion of the uterus, measured by dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) is impaired in women with intrauterine adhesions (IUA) and AS.

Materials And Methods: A prospective observational cohort pilot study of 23 women with IUA treated with hysteroscopic synecholysis and a control group of two patients with cervix cancer were subject to DCE-MRI with gadolinium to assess uterine vascularity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are important parts of cells that don’t fold into a specific shape like regular proteins do.
  • IDPs can change their shape and have special interactions that help them work properly inside the cell.
  • Research shows that the behavior of these proteins can change based on their environment and can be used for helpful purposes or in diseases.
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Context: Impairment in social functioning had been consistently found in remitted schizophrenia; yet, predictors of social dysfunction had been hardly explored and intervention trials had rarely included remitted schizophrenia.

Methods: 60 subjects with schizophrenia (diagnosed based on DSM5), currently in remission (SAPS and SANS global rating ≤2, for a minimum period of 12 weeks) and 46 age and gender-matched healthy controls were recruited after obtaining informed consent. The socio-demographic details, illness characteristics, depressive symptoms, positive and negative symptoms [using Scale for assessment of positive symptoms (SAPS), and scale for assessment of negative symptoms (SANS)] were assessed.

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Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) that directly decode speech from brain activity aim to restore communication in people with paralysis who cannot speak. Despite recent advances, neural inference of speech remains imperfect, limiting the ability for speech BCIs to enable experiences such as fluent conversation that promote - that is, the ability for users to author and transmit messages enacting their intentions. Here, we make recommendations for promoting agency based on existing and emerging strategies in neural engineering.

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Purpose: The morphometry of the hepatic portal vein is of clinical importance, particularly in pre-operative assessments, surgical management, and diagnoses of liver conditions. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to characterize the morphometry of the normal portal vein in both pediatric and adult patients.

Methods: The study, conducted using the PRISMA guidelines and registered with PROSPERO, utilized the MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCOPUS and Web of Science databases up to May 2020, and updated to May 2023.

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Intrinsically disordered proteins and protein regions (IDRs) are abundant in eukaryotic proteomes and play a wide variety of essential roles. Instead of folding into a stable structure, IDRs exist in an ensemble of interconverting conformations whose structure is biased by sequence-dependent interactions. The absence of a stable 3D structure, combined with high solvent accessibility, means that IDR conformational biases are inherently sensitive to changes in their environment.

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Speech neuroprostheses have the potential to restore communication to people living with paralysis, but naturalistic speed and expressivity are elusive. Here we use high-density surface recordings of the speech cortex in a clinical-trial participant with severe limb and vocal paralysis to achieve high-performance real-time decoding across three complementary speech-related output modalities: text, speech audio and facial-avatar animation. We trained and evaluated deep-learning models using neural data collected as the participant attempted to silently speak sentences.

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Purpose: Computed tomography (CT)-defined sarcopenia, as a measurement of low skeletal muscle (SM), is a poor prognostic indicator in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC), independent of weight or nutritional status. We used SM measures at the second thoracic vertebra (T2) to determine T2-SM index (SMI) thresholds for sarcopenia, and investigate the impact of low T2-SMI on overall survival (OS), and weight loss during radiotherapy (RT).

Methods: Adult patients with newly diagnosed HNC with a diagnostic PET-CT or RT planning CT scan were included.

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Objectives: To test if tumour changes measured using combination of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) MRI and FDG-PET/CT performed serially during radiotherapy (RT) in mucosal head and neck carcinoma can predict treatment response.

Methods: Fifty-five patients from two prospective imaging biomarker studies were analysed. FDG-PET/CT was performed at baseline, during RT (week 3), and post RT (3 months).

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Background: The aim of this study was to measure functional changes in parotid glands using mid-treatment FDG-PET/CT and correlate early imaging changes to subsequent xerostomia in mucosal head and neck squamous cell carcinoma patients undergoing radiotherapy.

Materials And Methods: 56 patients from two prospective imaging biomarker studies underwent FDG-PET/CT at baseline and during radiotherapy (week 3). Both parotid glands were volumetrically delineated at each time point.

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Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of tumour region of interest (ROI) delineation method on mid-treatment F-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) response prediction in mucosal head and neck squamous cell carcinoma during radiotherapy.

Methods: A total of 52 patients undergoing definitive radiotherapy with or without systemic therapy from two prospective imaging biomarker studies were analysed. FDG-PET was performed at baseline and during radiotherapy (week 3).

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Background: Local staging of prostate cancer (PCa) is important for treatment planning. Radiologist interpretation using qualitative criteria is variable with high specificity but low sensitivity. Quantitative methods may be useful in the diagnosis of extracapsular extension (ECE).

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Aims: The aim is to report the results of Australia's first uterus transplantation (UTx).

Methods: Following long-standing collaboration between the Swedish and Australian teams, Human Research Ethics approval was obtained to perform six UTx procedures in a collaborative multi-site research study (Western Sydney Local District Health 2019/ETH13038), including Royal Hospital for Women, Prince of Wales Hospital, and Westmead Hospital in New Souh Wales. Surgeries were approved in both the live donor (LD) and deceased donor models in collaboration with the inaugural Swedish UTx team.

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Background: The cross-sectional area (CSA) of skeletal muscle (SM) at the third lumbar vertebra (L3) is used to determine computed tomography (CT)-defined sarcopenia. We investigated the feasibility of SM assessment at the second thoracic vertebra (T2) in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC).

Methods: Diagnostic PET-CT scans were used to develop a prediction model for L3-CSA using T2-CSA.

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Untranslatable mitochondrial transcripts in kinetoplastids are decrypted post-transcriptionally through an RNA editing process that entails uridine insertion/deletion. This unique stepwise process is mediated by the editosome, a multiprotein complex that is a validated drug target of considerable interest in addressing the unmet medical needs for kinetoplastid diseases. With that objective, several in vitro RNA editing assays have been developed, albeit with limited success in discovering potent inhibitors.

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Parasitic protozoans of the and species have a uniquely organized mitochondrial genome, the kinetoplast. Most kinetoplast-transcribed mRNAs are cryptic and encode multiple subunits for the electron transport chain following maturation through a uridine insertion/deletion process called RNA editing. This process is achieved through an enzyme cascade by an RNA editing catalytic complex (RECC), where the final ligation step is catalyzed by the kinetoplastid RNA editing ligases, KREL1 and KREL2.

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