47 results match your criteria: "Emory University-College of Arts and Sciences[Affiliation]"

Profile of co-occurring or secondary infections among COVID-19 patients with HBOT: a single-center retrospective study.

J Infect Dev Ctries

November 2024

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Shanxi Bethune Hospital, Shanxi Academy of Medical Sciences, Third Hospital of Shanxi Medical University, Tongji Shanxi Hospital, Taiyuan, 030032, China.

Introduction: This study was designed to describe the profile of co-occurring or secondary infections in hospitalized coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients undergoing hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) and those without.

Methodology: Out of 716 COVID-19 patients, 79 cases of co-occurring or secondary infections were included. These patients were categorized into two groups based on their usage of HBOT.

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Cell-based therapies reverse the heart failure-altered right ventricular proteome towards a pre-disease state.

Stem Cell Res Ther

November 2024

Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, 391 Technology Way, Winston-Salem, NC, 27101, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Congenital heart defects can cause right ventricular (RV) pressure overload, leading to heart failure, prompting research into cell-based therapies like mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and c-kit positive cells (CPCs) for restoring function.
  • In a study, juvenile rats underwent pulmonary artery banding to induce RV pressure overload, followed by the injection of different cell types, with results analyzed using advanced protein profiling techniques.
  • The findings showed that MSC therapy significantly reversed changes in RV proteins caused by pressure overload, outperforming other cell types, indicating the potential effectiveness of these therapies in cardiac recovery.
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Comorbid Diabetes Is Associated With Dyspnea Severity and Cardiometabolic Biomarkers in Black Adults With Heart Failure.

Nurs Res

December 2024

Brittany Butts, PhD, RN, FAHA , is Assistant Professor, Emory University Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Atlanta, Georgia; Julia Kamara is Undergraduate Research Assistant, Emory University College of Arts and Sciences, Atlanta, Georgia; Alanna A. Morris, MD, MSc , FAHA , is Senior Medical Director, Bayer, Atlanta, Georgia; and Erica Davis, PhD, RN , is Assistant Clinical Professor, Melinda K. Higgins, PhD , is Research Professor, and Sandra B. Dunbar, PhD, RN, FAAN, FAHA, FPCNA , is Research Professor and Charles Howard Candler Professor (Emerita), Emory University, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Atlanta, Georgia.

Background: Comorbidities such as Type 2 diabetes mellitus significantly and adversely influence heart failure outcomes, especially in Black adult populations. Likewise, heart failure has a negative effect on diabetes and cardiometabolic outcomes. Dyspnea, a common symptom of heart failure, often correlates with disease severity and prognosis.

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Background: Personalized dance-based movement therapies may improve cognitive and motor function in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a precursor to Alzheimer's disease. While age- and MCI-related deficits reduce individuals' abilities to perform dance-like rhythmic movement sequences (RMS)-spatial and temporal modifications to movement-it remains unclear how individuals' relationships to dance and music affect their ability to perform RMS.

Objective: Characterize associations between RMS performance and music or dance relationships, as well as the ability to perceive rhythm and meter (rhythmic proficiency) in adults with and without MCI.

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Background: No effective therapies exist to prevent degeneration from Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) to Alzheimer's disease. Therapies integrating music and/or dance are promising as effective, non-pharmacological options to mitigate cognitive decline.

Objective: To deepen our understanding of individuals' relationships (i.

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Background: Personalized dance-based movement therapies may improve cognitive and motor function in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a precursor to Alzheimer's disease. While age- and MCI-related deficits reduce individuals' abilities to perform dance-like rhythmic movement sequences (RMS)-spatial and temporal modifications to movement-it remains unclear how individuals' relationships to dance and music affect their ability to perform RMS.

Objective: Characterize associations between RMS performance and music or dance relationships, as well as the ability to perceive rhythm and meter (rhythmic proficiency) in adults with and without MCI.

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Dental bases require low thermal conductivity and good mechanical properties, such as bonding with composite resins. This study aims to elucidate the physicochemical properties of premixed mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) for its suitability as a dental base and to explore the optimal adhesive strategy with composite resin. The thermal conductivity and compressive strength of this premixed MTA are 0.

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Search Engines to Capture Missing Deaths From Institutional Data Warehouse.

J Surg Res

February 2024

Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia; Research and Surgical Services, Atlanta VA Medical Center, Decatur, Georgia. Electronic address:

Introduction: Clinical publications use mortality as a hard end point. It is unknown how many patient deaths are under-reported in institutional databases. The objective of this study was to query mortality in our patient cohort from our data warehouse and compare these deaths to those identified in different databases.

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Background: People with Parkinson's disease (PWP) and their care partners (CP) are underrepresented in research.

Methods: As an eight-week research advocacy training program, TeleDREAMS was designed to increase understanding of, and participation in, clinical research by older adults through topics on the research process. Qualitative analysis was conducted to explore themes from 365 thirty-minute semistructured phone interviews with 32 PWP and 17 CP TeleDREAMS participants.

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3D bioprinting is revolutionizing the fields of personalized and precision medicine by enabling the manufacturing of bioartificial implants that recapitulate the structural and functional characteristics of native tissues. However, the lack of quantitative and noninvasive techniques to longitudinally track the function of implants has hampered clinical applications of bioprinted scaffolds. In this study, multimaterial 3D bioprinting, engineered nanoparticles (NPs), and spectral photon-counting computed tomography (PCCT) technologies are integrated for the aim of developing a new precision medicine approach to custom-engineer scaffolds with traceability.

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5-Fluorouracil and 5-fluorouracil-based prodrugs have been used clinically for decades to treat cancer. Their anticancer effects are most prominently ascribed to inhibition of thymidylate synthase (TS) by metabolite 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate (FdUMP). However, 5-fluorouracil and FdUMP are subject to numerous unfavorable metabolic events that can drive undesired systemic toxicity.

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Dance-based therapies are an emerging form of movement therapy aiming to improve motor and cognitive function in older adults with mild cognitive impairments (MCIs). Despite the promising effects of dance-based therapies on function, it remains unclear how age-related declines in motor and cognitive function affect movement capacity and influence which movements and rhythms maximize dance therapy efficacy. Here, we evaluated the effects of age and MCI on the ability to accurately modulate spatial (, joint kinematics), temporal (, step timing), and spatiotemporal features of gait to achieve spatial and temporal targets during walking.

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Aims And Objectives: Long COVID is defined as the continuation of symptoms for four or more weeks after initial contraction of the virus. This review article examines the role of four select micronutrients (zinc, vitamins C, D and polyphenols) for their anti-inflammatory and therapeutic potential to improve sleep-related symptoms in persons with long COVID.

Background: Evidence suggests a link between long COVID and increased inflammation.

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Background And Purpose: Falling among older adults is common and can cause chronic health complications. Fear of falling, a lasting concern about falling that can lead an individual to avoid activities he or she can perform, is strongly associated with falling and fall risk. Although White older adults fall more often, Black older adults have more fall risk factors.

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Nearly 1 in every 100 children born have a congenital heart defect. Many of these defects primarily affect the right heart causing pressure overload of the right ventricle (RV). The RV maintains function by adapting to the increased pressure; however, many of these adaptations eventually lead to RV hypertrophy and failure.

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Findings from a feasibility study of estradiol for hypogonadal women with cystic fibrosis-related bone disease.

Pilot Feasibility Stud

August 2021

Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Lipids, Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.

Background: Advancements in therapies for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) have decreased mortality, leading to increased prevalence of chronic complications including bone disease. CF-related bone disease (CFBD) is characterized by low bone mineral density (BMD) and fragility fractures. Estrogen deficiency increases bone resorption, resulting in decreased BMD that can be restored with estrogen replacement.

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating, progressive neurodegenerative disease resulting in memory loss and a severe reduction in the ability to perform activities of daily living. Ethnicity-related genetic factors promoting the development of dementias among African Americans (AA) and increased risk among women for developing AD indicates that AA women with a parental history of AD are at great risk for developing AD. This phase I study assessed the impact of a 12 week, 20-lesson adapted Argentine Tango intervention ( = 24) to a no-contact control group ( = 10) on measures of plasma inflammatory markers, cognition, and motor and psychosocial performance in middle-aged AA woman at increased risk for AD by virtue of parental history.

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Infectious diseases are reported to be one of the major causes of death in the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) warns of an increase in the deaths number because of antibacterial resistance. Lately, a trend towards searching for new active antibacterial compounds in plants has been observed.

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Varieties and cultivars of the cruciferous vegetable are widely presumed to elicit positive influences on mammalian health and disease, particularly related to their indole and sulforaphane content. However, there is a considerable gap in knowledge regarding the mechanisms whereby these plant-derived molecules elicit their beneficial effects on the host. In this study, we examined the chemical variation between varieties and evaluated their capacity to both activate Nrf2 in the intestine and elicit cytoprotection.

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Epilepsy, one of the most common neurological disorders worldwide, is characterized by recurrent seizures and subsequent brain damage. Despite strong evidence supporting a deleterious impact on seizure occurrence and outcome severity, stress is an overlooked component in people with epilepsy. With regard to stressor duration and timing, acute stress can be protective in epileptogenesis, while chronic stress often promotes seizure occurrence in epilepsy patients.

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Brain Imaging in Patients With Dementia Visiting U.S. Emergency Departments.

AJR Am J Roentgenol

May 2021

Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, 1364 Clifton Rd NE, Ste BG20, Atlanta, GA 30322.

This article aimed to assess changing use of brain imaging tests among patients with Alzheimer disease and vascular dementia who visited U.S. emergency departments (EDs) between 2006 and 2014.

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A Bibliographic Assessment Using the Degrees of Publication Method: Medicinal Plants from the Rural Greater Mpigi Region (Uganda).

Evid Based Complement Alternat Med

January 2021

Institute of Biotechnology, Faculty III - Process Sciences, Technical University of Berlin, Gustav-Meyer-Allee 25, Berlin 13355, Germany.

In ethnopharmacological research, many field assessment tools exist. Yet, these miss that critical point of how to really determine which species merit the costly lab studies, e.g.

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Porphyromonas gingivalis is the keystone pathogen of periodontitis, a chronic inflammatory disease which causes tooth loss and deterioration of gingiva. Medicinal plants have been traditionally used for oral hygiene and health and might play a role as antibacterial agents against oral pathogens. In this work, we aimed to evaluate the antibacterial activity of plants used for oral hygiene or symptoms of periodontitis against P.

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