173 results match your criteria: "The Toronto General Hospital[Affiliation]"

Vancomycin Therapeutic Drug Monitoring: A Cross-Sectional Survey of Canadian Hospitals.

Can J Hosp Pharm

July 2023

, PharmD, MPH, is with the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program, Sinai Health/University Health Network; the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto; and the Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario.

Background: Little is known about the current landscape of vancomycin therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in Canadian hospitals, which operate within publicly funded health care systems.

Objectives: To determine current TDM practices for vancomycin and associated challenges and to gather perceptions about TDM based on area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) in Canadian hospitals.

Methods: An electronic survey was distributed to hospital pharmacists in spring 2021 through multiple national and provincial antimicrobial stewardship, public health, and pharmacy organizations.

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When beauty is more than skin deep: Acute hepatitis secondary to topical para-phenylenediamine exposure from hair dye shampoo.

Can Fam Physician

June 2023

Director of Education in the Toronto Centre for Liver Disease-Francis Family Liver Clinic at Toronto General Hospital, Clinician Investigator in the Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, and Assistant Professor in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at the University of Toronto.

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Baroreflex resetting of human sympathetic action potential subpopulations during exercise.

J Neurophysiol

April 2023

Neurovascular Research Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.

This study tested the hypothesis that during fatiguing volitional exercise in humans, descending cortical signals and ascending skeletal muscle metaboreflex signals exert divergent control over baroreflex resetting of sympathetic action potential (AP) discharge. We quantified the baroreflex gain for sympathetic AP clusters within the muscle sympathetic nerve activity neurogram (peroneal microneurography and continuous wavelet transform) during baseline (BSL), the first 2-min of a 5-min isometric handgrip (20% of maximal effort; IHG1), the last 2-min of IHG (IHG2), and during postexercise circulatory occlusion (PECO) in seven healthy participants. AP baroreflex threshold gain was measured as the slope of the linear relationship between AP probability (%) versus diastolic blood pressure (DBP; mmHg) for 10 normalized AP clusters.

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Aims: Patients with sympathetic excess are those most likely to benefit from novel interventions targeting the autonomic nervous system. To inform such personalized therapy, we identified determinants of augmented muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in heart failure, versus healthy controls.

Methods And Results: We compared data acquired in 177 conventionally-treated, stable non-diabetic patients in sinus rhythm, aged 18-79 years (149 males; 28 females; left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF] 25 ± 11% [mean ± standard deviation]; range 5-60%), and, concurrently, under similar conditions, in 658 healthy, normotensive volunteers (398 males; aged 18-81 years).

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We provide the first description in a patient with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction of the "paradoxical," exaggerated reflex increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity in the opposite, stationary limb during dynamic 1-leg cycling exercise that was documented previously in patients with reduced ejection fraction. ().

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Beyond the tensions within transfer theories: implications for adaptive expertise in the health professions.

Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract

December 2022

Department of Community and Family Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Ensuring trainees develop the flexibility with their knowledge to address novel problems, and to efficiently build upon prior knowledge to learn new knowledge is a common goal in health profession education. How trainees come to develop this capacity to transfer and transform knowledge across contexts can be described by adaptive expertise, which focuses on the ability of some experts to innovate upon their existing knowledge to develop novel solutions to novel problems. While adaptive expertise is often presented as an alternative framework to more traditional cognitivist and constructivist expertise models, it is unclear whether the non-routine and routine forms of transfer it describes are distinct from those described by other accounts of transfer.

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Randomized Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Trial of the Corticosteroid-Sparing Effects of Immunoglobulin in Myasthenia Gravis.

Neurology

February 2023

From the Toronto General Hospital (V.B.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Centrum Neurologii Klinicznej (A.S.), Krakow, Poland; Department of Neurology (A.V.), Kaunas Clinics, Hospital of Lithuanian University of Health Sciences, Lithuania; Jahn Ferenc Del-pesti Korhaz es Rendelointezet Neurologiai Osztaly (C.R.), Budapest, Hungary; Department of Neurology (A.K.-P.), Medical University of Warsaw, Poland, ERN EURO NMD; Fakultni Nemocnice Ostrava (P.H.), Neurologicka Klinika, Ostrava-Poruba, Czech Republic; Department of Neurology (J.B.), Masaryk University, University Hospital Brno and Faculty of Medicine, Czech Republic; Vseobecna Fakultni Nemocnice v Praze (M.T.), Neurologicka Klinika, Centrum Myasthenia Gravis, Praha, Czech Republic; FKH Hubertusburg (W.K.), Klinik Fuer Neurologie und Neurologische, Intensivmedizin, Wermsdorf, Germany; East Tallinn Central Hospital (T.T.), Estonia; Department of Neurology (R.J.N.), Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; University of California (Tahseen Mozaffar), Irvine, Orange; Department of Neurology (M.L.F.), The Ohio State University, Columbus; London Health Sciences Centre (M.W.N.), Western University, Ontario, Canada; Universitaetsklinikum Hamburg Eppendorf (Tim Magnus), Klinik und Poliklinik Fuer Neurologie, Neurologische Studienzentrale, Hamburg, Germany; University of Florida Health Science Center (M.T.P.), Jacksonville, FL; Neurology/EMG Laboratory (M.R.), Augusta University, GA; The University of Kansas Medical Center (M.M.D.); University of Washington (B.J.D.), Seattle; Indiana School of Medicine (R.M.P.), Indianapolis; Grifols Bioscience Research Group (D.B., J.L., R.G., E.M.), Research Triangle Park, NC; and Grifols Bioscience Research Group (M.Q.C.), Sant Cugat, Spain.

Background And Objectives: Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease characterized by dysfunction at the neuromuscular junction. Treatment frequently includes corticosteroids (CSs) and IV immunoglobulin (IVIG). This study was conducted to determine whether immune globulin (human), 10% caprylate/chromatography purified (IGIV-C) could facilitate CS dose reduction in CS-dependent patients with MG.

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We examined the influence of sex and age on the relationship between aerobic fitness and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in healthy adults. Data were assessed from 224 volunteers (88 females), aged 18-76 yr, in whom resting MSNA (microneurography) and peak oxygen uptake (V̇o; incremental exercise test) were evaluated. When separated into younger (<50 yr) and older (≥50 yr) subgroups, there were inverse relationships between relative V̇o (mL·kg·min) and MSNA burst frequency in younger males ( = 0.

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Due to the ultra-thin optical sectioning capability of exclusively illuminating space at the interface where total internal reflection occurs, the TIRF microscope has been indispensable for monitoring biological processes adjacent to the plasma membrane with excellent signal-to-noise ratio. Insulin-containing granules fuse with the plasma membrane to release contents within hundreds of milliseconds, which involves well-orchestrated assembly of SNARE complex and associated proteins. A video-rate multiple-color TIRF microscope offers the unique opportunity to visualize single secretory granule docking and fusion dynamics and can also map its regulators with high spatiotemporal resolution.

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Cardiogenic shock (CS) is a condition associated with high mortality rates in which prognostication is uncertain for a variety of reasons, including its myriad causes, its rapidly evolving clinical course and the plethora of established and emerging therapies for the condition. A number of validated risk scores are available for CS prognostication; however, many of these are tedious to use, are designed for application in a variety of populations and fail to incorporate contemporary hemodynamic parameters and contemporary mechanical circulatory support interventions that can affect outcomes. It is important to separate patients with CS who may recover with conservative pharmacological therapies from those in who may require advanced therapies to survive; it is equally important to identify quickly those who will succumb despite any therapy.

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Evaluation of gene validity for CPVT and short QT syndrome in sudden arrhythmic death.

Eur Heart J

April 2022

Division of Cardiology, Toronto General Hospital, The Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network, University of Toronto, 200 Elizabeth St, Toronto, ON M5G 2C4, Canada.

Aims: Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) and short QT syndrome (SQTS) are inherited arrhythmogenic disorders that can cause sudden death. Numerous genes have been reported to cause these conditions, but evidence supporting these gene-disease relationships varies considerably. To ensure appropriate utilization of genetic information for CPVT and SQTS patients, we applied an evidence-based reappraisal of previously reported genes.

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Media Portrayals of the ARDS.

Chest

September 2021

Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the Center for Acute Respiratory Failure, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY.

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The autophagy-lysosome system is an important cellular degradation pathway that recycles dysfunctional organelles and cytotoxic protein aggregates. A decline in this system is pathogenic in many human diseases including neurodegenerative disorders, fatty liver disease, and atherosclerosis. Thus there is intense interest in discovering therapeutics aimed at stimulating the autophagy-lysosome system.

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Response.

Chest

March 2021

Division of Critical Care, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada; Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, the Division of Palliative Care, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, and the Institut du Savoir Montfort, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

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To better identify, quantify, and understand the current stressors and protective factors reported by Canadian medical assistance in dying (MAiD) assessors and providers to inform policy, education, and supports. E-survey of MAiD stressors ( = 33) and protective factors ( = 27); resilience measurement and comments relating to practice involving physicians and nurse practitioners who provide MAiD services and belong to the Canadian Association of MAiD Assessors and Providers or a francophone equivalent. The survey was conducted, while Parliament was considering changes to MAiD eligibility criteria, which occurred during COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

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Objective: We previously showed that MELAS patients have decreased cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) (p≤ 0.002) and increased cerebral blood flow (CBF) (p<0.0026); changes correlated with disease severity and % mutant mtDNA (inversely for CVR; directly for CBF).

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers previously identified mutations in the KRAS gene linked to brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), but the role of these mutations in creating lesions and the impact of active KRAS signaling remains unclear.
  • The study aimed to create in vivo models in mice and zebrafish to examine the effects of KRAS mutations on endothelial cells, discovering that these mutations can cause the formation of AVMs through changes in cell structure and connections between arteries and veins.
  • The findings indicate that active KRAS is sufficient for AVM formation and that targeting MEK signaling could be a potential treatment strategy, as KRAS-induced AVMs in zebrafish can be reversed through specific interventions.
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Overcoming Barriers: The Endothelium As a Linchpin of Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pathogenesis?

Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol

August 2020

From the Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network, Canada (D.G., S.R., R.W., C.C., S.V., K.R., E.B., K.L.H., J.E.F.).

Objective: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a global pandemic involving >5 500 000 cases worldwide as of May 26, 2020. The culprit is the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2, which invades cells by binding to ACE2 (angiotensin-converting enzyme 2). While the majority of patients mount an appropriate antiviral response and recover at home, others progress to respiratory distress requiring hospital admission for supplemental oxygen.

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Percutaneous Repair of the Sinus Venosus Atrial Defect: Usus Est Magister Optimus.

J Am Coll Cardiol

March 2020

The Peter Munk Cardiac Center, University Health Network, The Toronto General Hospital, University of Toronto School of Medicine, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Editorial Overview: "Islet Biology in Type 2 Diabetes".

J Mol Biol

March 2020

Oxford Centre for Endocrinology and Metabolism, Radcliffe Department of Medicine and Wellcome Centre for Human Genetics, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, UK NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK. Electronic address:

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Background: Long QT syndrome (LQTS) is the first described and most common inherited arrhythmia. Over the last 25 years, multiple genes have been reported to cause this condition and are routinely tested in patients. Because of dramatic changes in our understanding of human genetic variation, reappraisal of reported genetic causes for LQTS is required.

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Background: The impact of simple snoring on sleep structure and sleepiness has not been well described. In several studies, self-reported snoring was associated with increased daytime sleepiness. However, most studies did not distinguish patients with simple snoring from those with coexisting obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) using objective measures.

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Days Alive and Out of Hospital: Validation of a Patient-centered Outcome for Perioperative Medicine.

Anesthesiology

July 2019

From the Department of Anesthesia and Pain Management, Toronto General Hospital (A.J., D.N.W.) the Department of Anesthesia, University of Toronto (A.J., D.N.W.) the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (A.J., P.C.A., D.N.W.) the Toronto General Hospital Research Institute (A.J.) the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital (D.N.W.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Background: Days alive and out of hospital is a potentially useful patient-centered quality measure for perioperative care in adult surgical patients. However, there has been very limited prior validation of this endpoint with respect to its ability to capture differences in patient-level risk factor profiles and longer-term postoperative outcomes. The main objective of this study was assessment of the feasibility and validity of days alive and out of hospital as a patient-centered outcome for perioperative medicine.

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