Publications by authors named "Yost T"

Purpose: To describe the experience of internal qigong practice in service members diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).

Theoretical Framework: The study used qualitative descriptive phenomenological methods originally described by Husserl and later refined by Giorgi.

Methodology: Participants were interviewed about their experiences while learning qigong to determine their level of interest, benefits, and/or adverse effects; ease of learning/performing the routine; and any barriers to practice.

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Short stature skeletal dysplasia (SD) patients have orthopedic and neurologic complications causing significant pain and physical disability. We conducted a large cross-sectional online survey in 361 people with short stature SD (>10 years) to describe pain prevalence, characteristics, and the relationship between pain and function. Chronic pain prevalence per Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) was 70.

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The purpose of this article was to describe and analyze the nursing management of head-injured soldiers by military nurses serving in the Vietnam War. This study used traditional historical methods and a military history framework. Primary sources included original military reports, letters, and policies from the Vietnam War period (located in the archives of the Army Medical Department, Office of Medical History in Falls Church, VA); journal articles of the time period; and autobiographical texts.

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Hybrid organic/inorganic sol-gel materials containing an encapsulated crown ether ligand were found to selectively remove 91.4 +/- 1.3% of Sr2+ from a solution containing excess of competing ions such as Ca2+.

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The effects of macronutrient composition on fasting and postprandial activities of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (ATLPL) and skeletal muscle LPL (SMLPL) and on insulin sensitivity (S(I)) were studied in 25 normal-weight subjects. Each subject was fed a high-carbohydrate (HC) diet for 16 d and a high-fat (HF) diet for 16 d, in randomized order. On day 15 of each diet, biopsies for ATLPL and SMLPL were done in the fasted state and 6 h postprandially.

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In cultured adipocytes, leptin is increased by insulin and decreased by cAMP. In animal models, insulin and agents that increase intracellular cAMP have been shown to similarly affect plasma leptin in vivo. This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that in humans increased cAMP induced by isoproterenol would decrease leptin.

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Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is a hydrolytic enzyme, involved in lipoprotein metabolism and nutrient partitioning, that is subject to tissue-specific regulation. Evidence for divergent regulation of the lipase by insulin has been demonstrated, but alterations in the tissue-specific response of LPL to catecholamines has not been studied in humans. The regulation of LPL in gluteal adipose tissue and vastus lateralis muscle by isoproterenol (epinephrine isopropyl homologue) in humans was examined over 2 h in subjects infused with 0 (saline) or 8 or 24 ng.

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An assay for plasma lipoprotein lipase activity was used without prior injection of heparin to study arteriovenous differences of lipases across skeletal muscle and adipose tissue of normal male volunteers. Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL) activities and triglyceride?concentrations were measured in arterial plasma and in venous effluent plasma from forearm skeletal muscle and subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue, in the postabsorptive state and after a mixed meal. Triglyceride clearance by the tissues was greater across adipose tissue than across muscle.

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Ten moderately obese women (body mass index 34.9 +/- 1.1 kg/m2, mean +/- SEM), had previously been through a 3-month weight loss program followed by 3 months of weight maintenance at the reduced weight.

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Adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (ATLPL) is responsible for the provision of lipoprotein-derived fatty acids to adipocytes for storage as triglycerides. Fasting ATLPL has been shown to be decreased in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), an insulin-resistant state. Medically uncomplicated obesity, another state of relative insulin resistance, is associated with decreased stimulation of the enzyme in response to metabolic stimuli.

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Skeletal muscle lipoprotein lipase (SMLPL) provides fatty acids to myocytes for lipoprotein triglyceride oxidation. In human obesity, an insulin-resistant state, SMLPL levels measured in the fasted state are either decreased or unchanged as compared with levels in normal-weight controls. However, insulin/glucose infusion increases SMLPL activity in obese individuals, whereas in normal-weight subjects the activity is decreased.

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Obesity is an increasingly prevalent problem, and long-term maintenance of the weight-reduced state is difficult for the obese individual. Following weight reduction, many metabolic changes occur. Among these is an increase in adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (ATLPL), which predicts an alteration in lipid fuel partitioning which may then contribute to resumption of the obese state.

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This paper describes a preliminary study investigating the nature of publication and research ethics problems encountered by psychologists. Descriptions of 25 ethical dilemmas were written by 22 psychologists. Those dilemmas involved conflicts about authorship credit (13), plagiarism (9), unethical research (1), and other related problems (2).

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Objective: We have previously shown in an acute inpatient setting that dietary substitution of 77.5% of fat kcal as medium chain triglycerides (MCT) increased insulin-mediated glucose metabolism in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), and that this effect appeared to be mediated by increases in insulin-mediated glucose disposal. The purpose of this study was to test the application of dietary substitution of medium chain triglycerides as an adjunctive tool in ambulatory therapy of NIDDM.

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To determine the effects of suction lipectomy on regional adipose tissue metabolism, nine women had repetitive circumferential measurements and biopsies of subcutaneous adipose tissue from a lipectomy site (site A) and a nonlipectomy site (site B) up to 12 months following lipectomy. Maximum reductions from preoperative baseline in weight, body mass index, and circumferences of sites A and B occurred at 3 months. Because of variable long-term compliance (6 to 12 months), we created a "last visit" time-point to assess adequately the effects of lipectomy for each individual.

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Objectives: To determine the effect of a methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) outbreak in a nursing home on the subsequent MRSA caseload in a closely affiliated hospital.

Design: Observational and descriptive; routine and special MRSA surveillance data for nursing home and hospital were reviewed for a four-year period (1988 to 1991) as were records regarding patient transfers from nursing home to hospital.

Setting: The 120-bed nursing home care unit (NHCU) and the geographically separate 434-bed acute care facility (hospital) of the Portland Veterans' Affairs Medical Center (PVAMC).

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Twenty-six normal weight subjects (22 female, 4 male) were studied to determine the relationships of fasting levels of lipoprotein lipase in gluteal adipose tissue (ATLPL) and skeletal muscle (SMLPL) to body composition and body fat distribution. No relationship was found between fasting gluteal ATLPL and percent (%) body fat. There was, however, an inverse relationship between fasting SMLPL (from the vastus lateralis) and %body fat (p=0.

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Dietary medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) may improve insulin-mediated glucose metabolism. To examine this possibility, 10 non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) patients, 4 hypertriglyceridemic, and 6 normotriglyceridemic nondiabetic control subjects were examined with a 5-day cross-over design, in which the short-term metabolic effects of a 40% fat diet containing 77.5% of fat calories as MCT were compared with an isocaloric long-chain triglyceride-containing diet.

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To determine the putative metabolic relevance of preheparin versus postheparin lipoprotein lipases, the relationships of both pre- and postheparin lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase (HTGL) to plasma triglycerides, low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol were determined in 93 men. Relationships of preheparin lipases to their respective postheparin lipases were also examined. Although relationships between the preheparin lipases and plasma triglycerides and HDL cholesterol were not apparent, both preheparin LPL (rs = 0.

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Seven normal weight and 10 obese women were studied to determine the relative activities of adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase (ATLPL) in the gluteal and abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue depots, both in the fasting state and in response to a 6-hour insulin/glucose infusion. In normal weight women, fasting gluteal enzyme activity was greater than abdominal (P less than .02).

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Eight normal-weight subjects (four men, four women) were studied to determine the relative activities of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in adipose tissue (ATLPL) and vastus lateralis skeletal muscle (SMLPL), both in the fasting state and in response to a 6-hour insulin/glucose infusion. Mean fasting levels of ATLPL and SMLPL were not statistically different. After 6 hours of insulin/glucose infusion, mean ATLPL activity was significantly greater than the fasting level (P less than .

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The effect of weight reduction on fasting serum lipids and lipoproteins and adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase responsiveness to insulin was assessed immediately after and 3 mo subsequent to a mean 11.7% weight reduction in 14 women. Whereas reduction in fasting serum triglycerides persisted after 3 mo, reductions in serum cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol were not found at 3 mo.

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Medium-chain (MCT) and long-chain (LCT) triglyceride diets were compared during and after 4 or 12 wk of hypocaloric feeding in obese women to determine the effects on weight loss, ketones, nitrogen balance, and insulin action. After a base-line euglycemic clamp, two groups ingested an 800-kcal/d liquid diet with 30% of calories as LCT (group 1) or 6% of calories as LCT and 24% as MCT (group 2). Rate and amount of weight loss, serum ketones, and N balance were not different between groups.

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