303 results match your criteria: "Illinois Wesleyan University; tschwend@iwu.edu.[Affiliation]"

Intraosseous Bioplasty for a Subchondral Cyst in the Lateral Condyle of Femur.

J Clin Med

May 2020

Department of Musculoskeletal Disorders, School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Salerno, 84084 Fisciano, Italy.

Several conditions can lead to the development of a subchondral cyst. The mechanism by which the cysts form, their location, and their severity depend on the underlying pathology, although the exact pathogenesis is not fully elucidated. Treatment options vary according to the location of the cyst, with less invasive procedures such as calcium phosphate cement injection to a joint arthroplasty when there is an extensive cyst in communication with the joint space.

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The development and maintenance of chronic neuropathic pain involves distorted neuroglial interactions, which result in prolonged perturbations of immune and inflammatory response, as well as disrupted synapses and cellular interactions. Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has proven effective and safe for more than 40 years, but comprehensive understanding of its mode of action remains elusive. Previous work in our laboratory provided evidence that conventional SCS parameters modulate biological processes associated with neuropathic pain in animals.

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Background: Functional outcome scores provide valuable data, yet they can be burdensome to patients and require significant resources to administer. The Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) is a knee-specific patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) and is validated for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction outcomes. The KOOS requires 42 questions in 5 subscales.

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Multiple aspects of cornea development, including the innervation of the cornea by trigeminal axons, are sensitive to embryonic levels of thyroid hormone (TH). Although previous work showed that increased TH levels could enhance the rate of axonal extension within the cornea in a thyroxine (T4)-dependent manner, details underlying the stimulatory effect of TH on cornea innervation are unclear. Here, by examining the effects throughout all stages of cornea innervation of the two main THs, triiodothyronine (T3) and T4, we provide a more complete characterization of the stimulatory effects of TH on corneal nerves and begin to unravel the underlying molecular mechanisms.

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A hallmark of the research experience is encountering difficulty and working through those challenges to achieve success. This ability is essential to being a successful scientist, but replicating such challenges in a teaching setting can be difficult. The Genomics Education Partnership (GEP) is a consortium of faculty who engage their students in a genomics Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience (CURE).

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Learning about the Ellsberg Paradox reduces, but does not abolish, ambiguity aversion.

PLoS One

June 2020

Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America.

Ambiguity aversion-the tendency to avoid options whose outcome probabilities are unknown-is a ubiquitous phenomenon. While in some cases ambiguity aversion is an adaptive strategy, in many situations it leads to suboptimal decisions, as illustrated by the famous Ellsberg Paradox. Behavioral interventions for reducing ambiguity aversion should therefore be of substantial practical value.

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Despite significant interest and past work to elucidate the phylogeny and photochemistry of species of the , genomic analyses of heliobacteria to date have been limited to just one published genome, that of the thermophilic species (.) str. Ice1.

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Umbilical cord-derived Wharton's jelly for regenerative medicine applications.

J Orthop Surg Res

February 2020

Department of Musculoskeletal Disorders, School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Salerno, Fisciano, Italy.

Background: The last decade has seen an explosion in the interest in using biologics for regenerative medicine applications, including umbilical cord-derived Wharton's Jelly. There is insufficient literature assessing the amount of growth factors, cytokines, hyaluronic acid, and extracellular vesicles including exosomes in these products. The present study reports the development of a novel Wharton's jelly formulation and evaluates the presence of growth factors, cytokines, hyaluronic acid, and extracellular vesicles including exosomes.

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Concentration and Volume: Understanding Sodium and Water in the Body.

Am J Nurs

January 2020

Lydia A. Bertschi is an assistant professor at Illinois Wesleyan University School of Nursing in Bloomington, IL. Contact author: The author has disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Nurses need to have a firm grasp of normal and pathophysiological mechanisms of sodium and water balance to fully understand assessment findings and establish a rationale for a patient's plan of care. While multiple mechanisms control sodium and water balance, antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone are the most important hormonal influences. This article, the first in a new series designed to improve nurses' understanding of the physiological abnormalities underlying many disorders, reviews the common etiologies and symptoms of hyponatremia and hypernatremia, as well as the role of nursing care in patients with imbalances of sodium and water.

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Glial cells comprise the majority of cells in the central nervous system and exhibit diverse functions including the development of persistent neuropathic pain. While earlier theories have proposed that the applied electric field specifically affects neurons, it has been demonstrated that electrical stimulation (ES) of neural tissue modulates gene expression of the glial cells. This study examines the effect of ES on the expression of eight genes related to oxidative stress and neuroprotection in cultured rodent glioma cells.

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Well-established in the field of bioelectronic medicine, Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) offers an implantable, non-pharmacologic treatment for patients with intractable chronic pain conditions. Chronic pain is a widely heterogenous syndrome with regard to both pathophysiology and the resultant phenotype. Despite advances in our understanding of SCS-mediated antinociception, there still exists limited evidence clarifying the pathways recruited when patterned electric pulses are applied to the epidural space.

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Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) applied between T8 and T11 segments has been shown to be effective for the treatment of chronic pain of the lower back and limbs. However, the mechanism of the analgesic effect at these medullary levels remains unclear. Numerous studies relate glial cells with development and maintenance of chronic neuropathic pain.

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Objective: To investigate the effect of phase polarity and charge balance of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) waveforms on pain behavior and gene expression in a neuropathic pain rodent model. We hypothesized that differing waveforms will result in diverse behavioral and transcriptomics expression due to unique mechanisms of action.

Materials And Methods: Rats were implanted with a four-contact cylindrical mini-lead and randomly assigned to two control (no-pain and pain model) and five test groups featuring monophasic, as well as charge-unbalanced and charge-balanced biphasic SCS waveforms.

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This study was designed to examine the influence of performance feedback on task performance and neural activity in expert and novice baseball players. Participants completed a video task to determine whether thrown pitches were balls or strikes while their neural activity was recorded. After each pitch, participants were given feedback on the accuracy of their choice.

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Major habitat transitions, such as those from marine to freshwater habitats or from aquatic to terrestrial habitats, have occurred infrequently in animal evolution and may represent a barrier to diversification. Identifying genomic events associated with these transitions can help us better understand mechanisms that allow animals to cross these barriers and diversify in new habitats. Study of the Capitella telata and Helobdella robusta genomes allows examination of one such habitat transition (marine to freshwater) in Annelida.

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Objective: Given the increase in the birth and survival rate of the premature infants, a need for supportive health care services becomes more evident. The goal of the present study was to examine the effectiveness of the Premature Infant Oral Motor Intervention (PIOMI) in the feeding progression and early intervention. This study was a double-blind randomized clinical trial.

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Twelve B1 cluster mycobacteriophages were isolated from soil samples collected in Philadelphia, PA, USA, using Mycobacterium smegmatis mc 155 as a host, and were sequenced. The genome sequences range in size from 66,887 bp to 68,953 bp in length and have between 99 and 105 putative protein-coding genes.

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Increasing diversity in nursing offers opportunities and challenges. This article addresses considerations for clinical and educational policies when working with Muslim nursing students and suggests changes to facilitate inclusive environments. This article describes the twofold response of a school of nursing where Muslim nursing students encountered potential limitations in clinical experiences.

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Lake Fryxell, situated in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica, is an intriguing aquatic ecosystem because of its perennial ice cover, highly stratified water column, and extreme physicochemical conditions, which collectively restrict lake biodiversity to solely microbial forms. To expand our current understanding of the cultivable biodiversity of Lake Fryxell, water samples were collected from depths of 10 and 17 m, and pure cultures of eight diverse strains of aerobic, chemoorganotrophic bacteria were obtained. Despite having high 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity to mesophilic bacteria inhabiting various temperate environments, all Lake Fryxell isolates were psychrotolerant, with growth occurring at 0°C and optimal growth from 18-24°C for all isolates.

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Contactless sample confinement would enable a whole host of new studies in developmental biology and neuroscience, in particular, when combined with long-term, wide-field optical imaging. To achieve this goal, we demonstrate a contactless acoustic gradient force trap for sample confinement in light sheet microscopy. Our approach allows the integration of real-time environmentally controlled experiments with wide-field low photo-toxic imaging, which we demonstrate on a variety of marine animal embryos and larvae.

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Article Synopsis
  • Regenerative medicine aims to harness the body's natural healing processes to repair or replace damaged tissues, showing promise as a new alternative to traditional therapies.
  • The objective of the guidelines is to ensure safe and effective use of biologic therapies in treating lumbar spine issues and to encourage standardized treatment protocols and high-quality research.
  • A team of medical experts reviewed existing literature to establish these guidelines, focusing on the effectiveness and safety of regenerative medicine while considering potential conflicts of interest.
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Cancer causes considerable suffering and 80% of advanced cancer patients experience moderate to severe pain. Surgical tumor excision remains a cornerstone of primary cancer treatment, but is also recognized as one of the greatest risk factors for metastatic spread. The perioperative period, characterized by the surgical stress response, pharmacologic-induced angiogenesis, and immunomodulation results in a physiologic environment that supports tumor spread and distant reimplantation.

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Laboratory science requires careful maintenance of sterile reagents and tools as well as the sterilization of waste prior to disposal. However, steam autoclaves typically used for this purpose may not be readily accessible to everyone in the scientific community, such as K-12 teachers, researchers in the field, students in under-funded laboratories, or persons in the developing world who lack funding and resources. This work examines the use of commercial electric pressure cookers as an alternative method for the sterilization of media, instruments, and waste.

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Population Health Management: Coming of Age.

Prof Case Manag

February 2019

Karen Zander, MS, RN, CMAC, FAAN, is President and CEO of The Center for Case Management. Her pioneering work with clinical case management and CareMap systems, begun at New England Medical Center Hospitals (Now Tufts Medical Center) in Boston more than 30 years ago, is internationally recognized. Hospitals and Health Networks named her a "Cutting Edge" leader. She is the author of many articles about case management and editor of The New Definition newsletter. Ms Zander has also written several case management texts: (1) Competency Evaluation Tools for Case Management Professionals, (2) Emergency Department Case Management: The Compendium of Best Practices second edition with K. Walsh, and Hospital Case Management Models: Evidence Connecting the Bedside to the Boardroom and a second edition: Case Management Models: Best Practices for Health Systems and ACOs, also from HCPro. Ms Zander holds a BSN from Illinois Wesleyan University, an MS in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing from Boston University, postgraduate credits from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a Doctorate in Humane Letters (DHL), honoris causa, from Illinois, Wesleyan University. She has been on the Partners Care at Home Patient/Family Advisory Board for 3 years, and has been a cellist in the New Philharmonia Orchestra for over 25 years.

Purpose: Population health is finally catching up with itself. Before it was known as disease management, it began at New England Medical Center in Boston, MA (now Tufts Medical Center), more than 30 years ago.

Implications For Case Management Practice: Take-away ideas: (1) population health management is about segmenting and targeting specific patient populations for interventions that are evidence based; (2) there are currently many examples of population health management; (3) population health management will not work without social workers and nurse navigators/care coordinators working side by side.

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Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 is a multicellular, filamentous, freshwater cyanobacterium that is capable of differentiating specialized heterocyst cells for nitrogen fixation. This unit includes protocols for the growth and maintenance of Anabaena appropriate for a research or teaching laboratory.

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