Publications by authors named "Thatcher D"

The Gulf of Maine holds significant ecological and economic value for fisheries and communities in north-eastern North America. However, there is apprehension regarding its vulnerability to the effects of increasing atmospheric CO. Substantial recent warming and the inflow of low alkalinity waters into the Gulf of Maine have raised concerns about the impact of ocean acidification on resident marine calcifiers (e.

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Strict precautions during the COVID-19 pandemic left patients isolated during already stressful hospital stays. Research indicates that listening to music recruits regions in the brain involved with social interaction and reduces feelings of loneliness. We formed a team of clinicians and clinical musicians to bring music to the bedside, as "psychological first aid.

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Objective: To test whether combined patellofemoral and tibiofemoral osteoarthritis (OA), in addition to symptoms, is associated with greater changes in quality of life and objective physical function measures when compared with asymptomatic isolated tibiofemoral osteoarthritis.

Design: Of the 4796 participants in the Osteoarthritis Initiative, 577 were categorized into four groups based on the presence of symptoms (asymptomatic and symptomatic) and the structural involvement within the knee, where tibiofemoral OA was graded with the Kellgren and Lawrence scale, while patellofemoral OA was based on the Magnetic Resonance Imaging Osteoarthritis Knee Scoring cartilage loss feature. Knee-related quality of life was examined using the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Scale quality of life subscale, and objective physical function was examined by the 20 m Walk Test, 30-s Chair Stand Test, and isometric knee strength.

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Article Synopsis
  • Inertial measurement units (IMUs) are devices used to measure various aspects of walking gait, and this study aimed to systematically review and analyze their validity and reliability in healthy adults during level walking.
  • Researchers conducted searches across five databases, screening 82 articles to evaluate the quality and collect data on over 100 biomechanical outcomes.
  • The findings indicated that IMUs demonstrated excellent validity and reliability for measuring step and stride times, with good reliability for other metrics like length and timing, while showing less consistent results for variability and symmetry in gait parameters.
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Studies are needed that examine neurobiological characteristics in high risk individuals prior to substance use disorder (SUD) development. In this pilot study, 4 adolescent subjects at high risk (having at least 1 parent with a SUD) for SUD were compared with 4 adolescent reference subjects on a corticolimbic reactivity paradigm, where they were presented with affect-laden faces or geometric shapes. FMRI was used to measure cortical activation in response to these stimuli.

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Aims: Adolescents with substance use disorders (SUD) have difficulties with cognitive, behavioral and affective regulation. White matter (WM) disorganization has been observed in adolescents with SUD and may be related to psychological dysregulation. This study compared adolescents with SUD and control adolescents to investigate relationships among psychological dysregulation, WM disorganization and SUD symptoms.

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Background: Academic work as well as compensated employment has been found adversely associated with frequent headache; headache remains a costly disorder to the person and to society. However, little is known of factors--other than prior headache complaints--that may predict headache frequency over extended periods of time. Based on previous research, effortful task engagement appears to be a contributing factor to headache onset.

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Effective response inhibition is a key component of recovery from addiction. Some research suggests that response inhibition can be enhanced through reward contingencies. We examined the effect of monetary incentive on response inhibition among adolescents with and without substance use disorder (SUD) using a fast event-related fMRI antisaccade reward task.

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Few studies have focused on the neurobiological correlates of adolescent-onset substance use disorders (SUDs), particularly with respect to white matter development and organization. This study investigated microstructural white matter characteristics associated with SUDs during the adolescent developmental period. Twenty-four case adolescents (ages 14-18) entering treatment for SUDs and 12 sex- and age-matched control adolescents with no psychopathology were compared.

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Objective: We prospectively examined the health effects of child abuse and other traumatic events, with objective health indicators and consideration of alcohol use disorders (AUD).

Methods: Adolescents (n = 668) were recruited from clinical and community sources. At baseline, we examined child abuse and other traumas, AUD, health-related symptoms, physical findings, and blood assays.

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Objective: This report describes a model for the development, process, and tracking methods of a Peer-mentored Research Development Meeting (PRDM), an interdisciplinary peer mentoring program. The program was initiated in 2004 by a group of postdoctoral scholars and junior faculty from the Schools of the Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh.

Method: From February 2004 through February 2006, PRDM's first five members tracked and documented their research activity (e.

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Adolescents with alcohol-related problems often also use cigarettes and marijuana. Furthermore, early childhood characteristics that increase the risk for adolescent alcohol use disorders also increase the risk for problematic drug use. Identifying these characteristics early in childhood can be important for the prevention of alcohol and other drug (AOD) use disorders.

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While adolescent alcohol consumption has been asserted to adversely alter brain development, research in human adolescents has not yet provided us with sufficient evidence to support or refute this position. Brain constituents actively developing during adolescence include the prefrontal cortex, limbic system areas, and white matter myelin. These areas serving cognitive, behavioral, and emotional regulation may be particularly vulnerable to adverse alcohol effects.

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Among adults, chronic alcohol dependence is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD). While it is unlikely that adolescents with alcohol use disorders (AUDs) would exhibit CVD, they might show elevated CVD risk factors. The purpose of this study was to compare CVD risk factors in adolescents with AUDs and an adolescent reference group.

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This study investigated the psychometric structure of two widely utilized measures of posttraumatic symptoms in a primarily Caucasian non-clinical sample. Given the prevalence of trauma exposure in non-referred samples, measurement of resulting symptoms is a critical issue. Exploratory factor analysis was utilized to assess and compare the factor structure of the Impact of Event Scale [IES; Horowitz, M.

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Background: In adults, prefrontal, thalamic, and cerebellar brain injury is associated with excessive ethanol intake. As these brain structures are actively maturing during adolescence, we hypothesized that subjects with adolescent-onset alcohol use disorders, compared with control subjects, would have smaller brain volumes in these areas. Thus, we compared prefrontal-thalamic-cerebellar measures of adolescents and young adults with adolescent-onset alcohol use disorders (AUD, defined as DSM-IV alcohol dependence or abuse) with those of sociodemographically similar control subjects.

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Background: While parental supervision has been demonstrated to influence adolescent alcohol involvement, lack of a threshold defining inadequate supervision and little study of DSM defined alcohol use disorders (AUDs) have limited clinical applications. Utilizing a four-item supervision scale, this study identified adolescents with inadequate supervision, and examined effects on AUD development and treatment outcome.

Methods: Two groups of adolescent subjects (ages 14-17) were recruited: (1) a representative community sample of adolescents (n = 170) and (2) adolescents with AUDs from drug and alcohol or psychiatric treatment programs (n = 194).

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Background: This study investigated adolescent alcohol use disorders (AUDs) and other characteristics as predictors of adult borderline personality disorder (BPD) symptoms.

Methods: Adolescents with AUDs (n = 355) were recruited from clinical treatment sources and adolescents without AUDs (n = 169) were recruited from the community. During an adolescent assessment (age 16+/-1.

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Parental responsibilities to adolescents include supervision and emotional support, and variations in these parenting behaviors have been demonstrated to influence adolescent alcohol involvement. This study developed a scale-based method for identifying adolescents with low-parent involvement and examined effects on the development and course of alcohol use disorders (AUDs). The participants were 361 adolescents (ages 14 to 17 years) from two-parent families recruited from clinical and community sources.

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Condensing peptide-DNA complexes have great potential as nonviral agents for gene delivery. To date, however, such complexes have given transfection activities greatly inferior to adenovirus and somewhat inferior to cationic lipid-DNA complexes, even for cell lines and primary cells in vitro. We report here the identification of a novel condensing peptide, CL22, which forms DNA complexes that efficiently transfect many cell lines, as well as primary dendritic and endothelial cells.

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Regulatory agencies have stringent requirements for the large-scale production of biotherapeutics. One of the difficulties associated with the manufacture of plasmid DNA for gene therapy is the removal of the host cell-related impurity RNA following cell lysis. We have constructed a modified Escherichia coli JM107 plasmid host (JMRNaseA), containing a bovine pancreatic ribonuclease (RNaseA) expression cassette, integrated into the host chromosome at the dif locus.

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We describe a process for the commercial manufacture of therapeutic grade plasmid DNA. The industrially scaleable unit operations employed in this process are: (i) optimized alkaline lysis; (ii) bag filtration; (iii) expanded bed anion exchange chromatography; (iv) ultrafiltration, and (v) size exclusion chromatography. These steps are scaleable alternatives to current approaches to plasmid DNA isolation such as high speed centrifugation for feed-stock clarification and solvent precipitation for plasmid concentration, and an efficient alternative to conventional low through-put packed bed chromatography.

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The past year has witnessed several advances in the development of targeted, cell-specific gene delivery systems of both viral and non-viral origin. Progress has been made in understanding the cellular mechanisms of nuclear import, and novel sequence-specific integrases have been developed that mediate insertion of DNA molecules into specific target sequences. Knowledge of the mechanisms by which herpes simplex virus and Epstein-Barr virus escape from immune surveillance has also advanced significantly; this may be exploited to reduce the immunogenicity of certain therapeutic gene products.

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Recombinant ricin A chain was irreversibly modified by Procion blue MX-R, a dichlorotriazinyl analogue of Cibacron blue F3G-A, at pH 7.5 and 4 degrees C in 90 h with over 95% loss of activity in an in vitro translation assay. The presence of total yeast RNA reduced the covalent attachment of Procion blue MX-R to ricin A chain.

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Ricin is a potent plant toxin which acts by removing a specific adenine residue from the ribosome. The X-ray crystal structure of a new, tetragonal crystal form of the recombinant ricin A-chain diffracting to 1.8 A resolution has been determined via molecular replacement methods and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 18.

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