7 results match your criteria: "HCA TriStar Centennial Medical Center.[Affiliation]"

Increasing the Volume of Delivered Enteral Feeds Using a Volume-Based Feeding Protocol in a Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit.

Crit Care Nurse

June 2024

Sage Whitmore is the Medical Director for the intensive care unit and a staff intensivist, HCA Intensivist Services, HCA TriStar Centennial Medical Center.

Background: Iatrogenic malnutrition is a significant burden to patients, clinicians, and health care systems. Compared with well-nourished patients, underfed patients (those who receive less than 80% of their daily energy requirement) have more adverse outcomes related to nutritional status. Volume-based protocols allow for catch-up titrations, are consistently superior to rate-based protocols, and can be implemented in most settings.

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Article Synopsis
  • Drug-coated balloons, specifically paclitaxel-coated balloons, show promise for treating coronary in-stent restenosis but previously lacked approval for U.S. use.
  • A clinical trial, involving 600 participants across 40 centers, compared the effectiveness of paclitaxel-coated balloons to uncoated ones in preventing target lesion failure one year post-treatment.
  • Results indicated that patients receiving the paclitaxel-coated balloon had significantly lower rates of target lesion revascularization and myocardial infarction compared to those with uncoated balloons, demonstrating the coated balloon's superiority (17.9% vs 28.6% failure rate).
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Integrative Proteogenomics Using ProteomeGenerator2.

J Proteome Res

August 2023

Molecular Pharmacology Program, Sloan Kettering Institute, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10065, United States.

Recent advances in nucleic acid sequencing now permit rapid and genome-scale analysis of genetic variation and transcription, enabling population-scale studies of human biology, disease, and diverse organisms. Likewise, advances in mass spectrometry proteomics now permit highly sensitive and accurate studies of protein expression at the whole proteome-scale. However, most proteomic studies rely on consensus databases to match spectra to peptide and protein sequences, and thus remain limited to the analysis of canonical protein sequences.

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What the American Journal of Critical Care Junior Peer Reviewers Were Reading During Year 2 of the Program.

Am J Crit Care

September 2022

Aluko A. Hope is an associate professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

The American Journal of Critical Care's Junior Peer Reviewer program aims to mentor novice reviewers in the peer review process. To grow their critical appraisal skills, the participants take part in discussion sessions in which they review articles published in other journals. Here we summarize the articles reviewed during the second year of the program, which again focused on the care of critically ill patients with COVID-19.

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The Junior Peer Reviewer program of the American Journal of Critical Care provides mentorship in the peer review process to novice reviewers. The program includes discussion sessions in which participants review articles published in other journals to practice and improve their critical appraisal skills. The articles reviewed during the first year of the program focused on caring for patients with COVID-19.

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Which SSRI is safest for patients with CVD and major depressive disorder?

JAAPA

April 2021

Sabrina Dunham is a cardiology pharmacy specialty resident at HCA Tristar Centennial Medical Center/University of Tennessee College of Pharmacy in Nashville, Tenn. G. Lucy Wilkening is an associate professor in the Department of Clinical Psychopharmacology at Idaho State University's College of Pharmacy in Meridian, Idaho. Nicholas C. Schwier is an associate professor at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and a clinical pharmacy specialist in cardiology at OU Medicine Inc., both in Oklahoma City, Okla. The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Major depressive disorder is a common mood disorder and presents increased morbidity and mortality risks for patients with comorbid cardiovascular disease (CVD). Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are a cornerstone of treatment for major depressive disorder, given their relative safety and affordability compared with other antidepressant classes, and SSRIs frequently are used in patients with CVD. However, clinicians should carefully weigh safety considerations before prescribing SSRIs in these patients.

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Background: Peripheral neuropathy is a common treatment-related adverse effect associated with vincristine. Vincristine is a major CYP3A4 substrate and is often administered alongside the neurokinin-1 (NK-1) receptor antagonists, aprepitant or fosaprepitant, which are moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors. This inhibition may result in increased concentrations of vincristine and an increased incidence of toxicity.

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