Publications by authors named "Rich C"

In pediatric emergency medicine, sedation is crucial for performing some therapeutic procedures in children. Ketamine is still not widely used, despite being the preferred agent due to its effectiveness and safety profile. Implementing a guideline for intravenous ketamine in emergencies requiring procedural sedation in children, as well as training and evaluating staff competencies in performing this procedure, are the aims of this study.

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's inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH, GuaB encoded by the gene) is a potential therapeutic target. GuaB is necessary for replication in mammalian hosts but not in standard laboratory culture conditions. Therefore, we cannot test novel GuaB inhibitors against without utilizing mammalian infection models.

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Background: The literature on the ethics of biobanking often overlooks the practical operations of biobanks. The ethics of stewardship requires that biobank resources are used to conduct beneficial science. Networked biobanks have emerged to increase the scientific benefit of biobank resources, but little is known about whether and how operations of networking may accomplish this goal.

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In avascular wound repair, calcium signaling events are the predominant mechanism cells use to transduce information about stressors in the environment into an effective and coordinated migratory response. Live cell imaging and computational analysis of corneal epithelial wound healing revealed that signal initiation and propagation at the wound edge are highly ordered, with groups of cells engaging in cyclical patterns of initiation and propagation. The cells in these groups exhibit a diverse range of signaling behavior, and dominant "conductor cells" drive activity in groups of lower-signaling neighbors.

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Tumour-host immune interactions lead to complex changes in the tumour microenvironment (TME), impacting progression, metastasis and response to therapy. While it is clear that cancer cells can have the capacity to alter immune landscapes, our understanding of this process is incomplete. Herein we show that endocytic trafficking at the plasma membrane, mediated by the small GTPase ARF6, enables melanoma cells to impose an immunosuppressive TME that accelerates tumour development.

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Purpose: Understanding drivers of antibiotic use is key to limiting the development of antimicrobial resistance. Outpatient antibiotic prescribing rates vary substantially across and within states. Kentucky is one of the highest prescribing states, and the southeastern region has rates that are drastically higher than the national average and urban areas of the state.

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Plasma-driven solution electrochemistry (PDSE) uses plasma-generated reactive species to drive redox reactions in solution. Nonthermal, atmospheric pressure plasmas, when irradiating water, produce many redox species. While PDSE is a promising chemical tool, there is limited insight into the mechanisms of the reactions due to the variety of short-lived reagents produced.

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Many applications involving plasma-liquid interactions depend on the reactive processes occurring at the plasma-liquid interface. We report on a falling liquid film plasma reactor allowing for in situ optical absorption measurements of the time-dependence of the ferricyanide/ferrocyanide redox reactivity, complemented with ex situ measurement of the decomposition of formate. We found excellent agreement between the measured decomposition percentages and the diffusion-limited decomposition of formate by interfacial plasma-enabled reactions, except at high pH in thin liquid films, indicating the involvement of previously unexplored plasma-induced liquid phase chemistry enabled by long-lived reactive species.

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Femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy (FSRS) is a powerful nonlinear spectroscopic technique that probes changes in molecular and material structure with high temporal and spectral resolution. With proper spectral interpretation, this is equivalent to mapping out reactive pathways on highly anharmonic excited-state potential energy surfaces with femtosecond to picosecond time resolution. FSRS has been used to examine structural dynamics in a wide range of samples, including photoactive proteins, photovoltaic materials, plasmonic nanostructures, polymers, and a range of others, with experiments performed in multiple groups around the world.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pigmentation in uveal melanoma affects tumor behavior and treatment response, with a focus on the contrast between pigmented and nonpigmented cell lines.
  • Treatment with light-activated Belzupacap sarotalocan (Bel-sar) resulted in significant cell death and increased immune response in both types of tumors, showing enhanced phagocytosis and maturation of immune cells.
  • The findings suggest that pigmentation not only influences the macrophage composition within tumors but also plays a role in the effectiveness of Bel-sar treatment, leading to delayed tumor growth and increased M1 macrophage response.
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Translational research has tended to ignore the question of whether receiving a genomic diagnosis provides utility in community care contexts outside of doctors' offices and hospitals. However, empirical research with parents has highlighted numerous ways that a genomic diagnosis might be of practical value in the care provided by teachers, physical or occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists, behavior analysts, and nonphysician mental health providers. In this essay, we propose a new conceptual model of genomic utility that offers the opportunity to better capture a broad range of potential implications of genomic technologies for families in various social and organizational systems.

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The corneal epithelium is an avascular structure that has a unique wound healing mechanism, which allows for rapid wound closure without compromising vision. This wound healing mechanism is attenuated in diabetic patients, resulting in poor clinical outcomes and recurrent non-healing erosion. We investigated changes in cellular calcium signaling activity during the wound response in murine diabetic tissue using live cell imaging from both ex vivo and in vitro models.

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Objectives: To establish epidemiology, healthcare costs, and labor market attachment in patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (Pt-PNH) in Denmark.

Methods: Data were from Statistics Denmark and the Danish Health Data Authority national population registers (2005-2021). Descriptive baseline statistics characterized the Pt-PNH analytic population; ordinary least squares and adjusted Cox proportional hazards regressions measured outcomes in the Pt-PNH versus Danish general population matched comparators.

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Objectives: To describe real-world use/effectiveness of pegcetacoplan (PEG) in paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria (PNH).

Methods: Data were drawn from the Adelphi PNH Disease Specific Programme™, a cross-sectional survey conducted in France, Italy, Germany, Spain and the United States from January to November 2022. Patients had a confirmed PNH diagnosis and received PEG for ≥1 month.

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Reservoir host associations have been observed among and within genospecies, and host complement-mediated killing is a major determinant in these interactions. In North America, only a subset of lineages cause the majority of disseminated infections in humans. We hypothesize that differential resistance to human complement-mediated killing may be a major phenotypic determinant of whether a lineage can establish systemic infection.

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Adaptive immune resistance (AIR) is a protective process used by cancer to escape elimination by CD8 T cells. Inhibition of immune checkpoints PD-1 and CTLA-4 specifically target Interferon-gamma (IFNγ)-driven AIR. AIR begins at the plasma membrane where tumor cell-intrinsic cytokine signaling is initiated.

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Background: Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) is a promising immunotherapeutic approach for patients with advanced solid tumors. While numerous advances have been made, the contribution of neoantigen-specific CD4T cells within TIL infusion products remains underexplored and therefore offers a significant opportunity for progress.

Methods: We analyzed infused TIL products from metastatic melanoma patients previously treated with ACT for the presence of neoantigen-specific T cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Parents of newborns in the NICU found genome sequencing (GS) valuable for decision-making about future care and resolving diagnostic uncertainties.
  • - Most parents accepted the timing of receiving GS results, though they noted the NICU environment could be overwhelming during the process.
  • - Parents indicated that GS did not negatively affect their bonding with their infants and had mixed feelings about guilt related to the results.
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Despite the advances in low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), there are limited spectroscopic applications for untargeted analysis and metabolomics. To evaluate its potential, we combined high-field and low-field NMR with chemometrics for the differentiation between virgin and refined coconut oil and for the detection of adulteration in blended samples. Although low-field NMR has less spectral resolution and sensitivity compared to high-field NMR, it was still able to achieve a differentiation between virgin and refined coconut oils, as well as between virgin coconut oil and blends, using principal component analysis (PCA), partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA), and random forest techniques.

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Introduction: The current study describes real-world clinical outcomes and factor usage among patients with haemophilia B switching from standard half-life factor IX (SHL FIX) treatment to recombinant factor IX Fc fusion protein (rFIXFc) prophylaxis in European treatment centres.

Methods: This non-interventional, retrospective, multicentre chart review evaluated medical records from adult and paediatric patients with haemophilia B in Denmark, Germany and the UK. Patients had documented SHL FIX treatment, on-demand or prophylaxis, for ≥ 6 months before starting rFIXFc prophylaxis, and subsequent data for ≥ 6 months afterwards (up to 24 months).

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Purpose: The virus-like drug conjugate belzupacap sarotalocan (AU-011), currently under clinical investigation for first-line treatment of primary uveal melanoma (UM), shows enhanced tumor specificity by targeting heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG). Such a treatment may potentially lead to systemic immune responses. We studied the potential of AU-011 treatment to induce immunogenic cell death as the first step to induce systemic immunity.

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Experiments on disordered alloys suggest that spin glasses can be brought into low-energy states faster by annealing quantum fluctuations than by conventional thermal annealing. Owing to the importance of spin glasses as a paradigmatic computational testbed, reproducing this phenomenon in a programmable system has remained a central challenge in quantum optimization. Here we achieve this goal by realizing quantum-critical spin-glass dynamics on thousands of qubits with a superconducting quantum annealer.

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Metastases remain the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Therefore, improving the treatment efficacy against such tumors is essential to enhance patient survival. AU-011 (belzupacap sarotalocan) is a new virus-like drug conjugate which is currently in clinical development for the treatment of small choroidal melanoma and high-risk indeterminate lesions in the eye.

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is a human pathogen vectored by ticks and maintained in nature by a suite of competent vertebrate reservoirs. White-tailed deer (WTD) are considered to be noncompetent reservoirs for . Sera from other deer species have been found to be borreliacidal, and similar mechanisms could explain the lack of reservoir competence of WTD.

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