379 results match your criteria: "UMASS Medical School[Affiliation]"
J Am Coll Radiol
July 2020
Chair of Radiology, UMass Memorial Medical Center and UMass Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
The advent of the CT scanner in the early 1970s removed much, if not all, of the morbidity and discomfort previously associated with diagnostic imaging studies. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, advances in CT technology allowed radiologists to scan "better and faster." The professional fee for reading a CT study was higher than for reading a radiograph, an uncontroversial policy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Radiol
September 2020
Chair of Radiology, Department of Radiology, UMass Memorial Medical Center and UMass Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
During the first decade of the 21st century, the imaging bubble began to burst. The combination of digitized images, the DICOM standard, and affordable PACS sharply increased radiologists' productivity but also allowed an imaging study to be read from anywhere, creating the field of teleradiology and increased competition for radiologists. Increasing numbers of insurers contracted with radiology benefits managers to help control radiology utilization, and the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 mandated spending cuts across the government.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Vasc Surg
August 2020
Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, UMass Memorial Medical Center, University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester, Worcester, MA. Electronic address:
Background: Health care quality metrics are crucial to medical institutions, payers, and patients. Obtaining current and reliable quality data is challenging, as publicly reported databases lag by several years. Vizient Clinical Data Base (previously University Health Consortium) is utilized by over 5,000 academic and community medical centers to benchmark health care metrics with results based on predetermined Vizient service lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Radiol
August 2020
Chair of Radiology, Department of Radiology, UMass Memorial Medical Center and UMass Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
With the collapse of the Clinton health care reforms, advanced imaging entered an economic bubble. Between 1995 and 2006, the number of CT and MRI studies almost tripled, from 21 million to 62 million and from 9.1 to 26.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Radiol
June 2020
Department of Radiology, UMass Memorial Medical Center and UMass Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
In the first article in a four-part work, the authors review the economic history of how radiologists are paid, from the fight for independent billing in the 1960s to the impact of advanced imaging technologies on radiologists' incomes in the 1980s to the "bubble years" of the 1990s and to the end of the bubble in the first decade of the 21 century. The authors begin in this first part with the connections among a radiologist from Arkansas, a congressman, and the passage of Medicare, the program that gave radiologists the right to bill independently and gave the federal government a big role in health care spending.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcad Emerg Med
July 2020
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Mechanical circulatory support is increasingly used as a long-term treatment option for patients with end-stage heart failure. Patients with implanted ventricular assist devices are at high risk for a range of diverse medical urgencies and emergencies. Given the increasing prevalence of mechanical circulatory support devices, this expert clinical consensus document seeks to help inform emergency medicine and prehospital providers regarding the approach to acute medical and surgical conditions encountered in these complex patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Evidence for the diagnosis and management of cough due to acute bronchitis in immunocompetent adult outpatients was reviewed as an update to the 2006 "Chronic Cough Due to Acute Bronchitis: American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines."
Methods: Acute bronchitis was defined as an acute lower respiratory tract infection manifested predominantly by cough with or without sputum production, lasting no more than 3 weeks with no clinical or any recent radiographic evidence to suggest an alternative explanation. Two clinical population, intervention, comparison, outcome questions were addressed by systematic review in July 2017: (1) the role of investigations beyond the clinical assessment of patients presenting with suspected acute bronchitis, and (2) the efficacy and safety of prescribing medication for cough in acute bronchitis.
Phys Rev E
January 2020
Carlson School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts 01610, USA.
The effect of boundary relaxation on pulsed field gradient (PFG) anomalous restricted diffusion is investigated in this paper. The PFG signal attenuation expressions of anomalous diffusion in plate, sphere, and cylinder are derived based on fractional calculus. In addition, approximate expressions for boundary relaxation induced short time signal attenuation under zero gradient field and boundary relaxation affected short time apparent diffusion coefficients are given in this paper.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry
March 2020
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, UMass Medical School, 364 Plantation Street, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605, United States.
Sterile alpha and toll/interleukin receptor (TIR) motif-containing protein 1 (SARM1) plays a pivotal role in triggering the neurodegenerative processes that underlie peripheral neuropathies, traumatic brain injury, and neurodegenerative diseases. Importantly, SARM1 knockdown or knockout prevents degeneration, thereby demonstrating that SARM1 is a promising therapeutic target. Recently, SARM1 was shown to promote neurodegeneration via its ability to hydrolyze NAD, forming nicotinamide and ADP ribose (ADPR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocrit Care
October 2020
Department of Neurology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA.
Background: Hypernatremia has been associated with mortality in neurocritically ill patients, with and without traumatic brain injury (TBI). These studies, however, lack concomitant adjustment for hyperchloremia as a physiologically co-occurring finding despite the associations with hyperchloremia and worse outcomes after trauma, sepsis, and intracerebral hemorrhage. The objective of our study was to examine the association of concomitant hypernatremia and hyperchloremia with in-hospital mortality in moderate-severe TBI (msTBI) patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
March 2020
Research Institute of Internal Medicine, Oslo University Hospital, Rikshospitalet, Oslo, Norway; Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; Center for Heart Failure Research, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; K.G. Jebsen Inflammation Research Center, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Inflammation is centrally involved in the development of cardiac hypertrophy and the processes of remodelling. The complement system and Toll-like receptor (TLR) family, two upstream arms of the innate immune system, have previously been reported to be involved in cardiac remodelling. However, the role of complement component 3 (C3), TLR co-receptor CD14 and the synergy between them have not been addressed during pressure overload-induced cardiac remodelling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunity
December 2019
Institute of Innate Immunity, University Hospital Bonn, University of Bonn, 53127 Bonn, Germany; German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, 53127 Bonn, Germany; Department of Infectious Diseases & Immunology, UMass Medical School, Worcester, MA 01605, USA; Centre of Molecular Inflammation Research, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7491 Trondheim, Norway. Electronic address:
Toll-like receptor (TLR) activation induces inflammatory responses in macrophages by activating temporally defined transcriptional cascades. Whether concurrent changes in the cellular metabolism that occur upon TLR activation influence the quality of the transcriptional responses remains unknown. Here, we investigated how macrophages adopt their metabolism early after activation to regulate TLR-inducible gene induction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Afr Med
March 2020
Department of Paediatrics, Baystate Children's Hospital/UMass Medical School, Springfield, MA, USA.
Background: Clinically evident microvascular complications are rarely seen among children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), although early signs develop during childhood and accelerate during puberty.
Aim: The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of early signs of microvascular complications in children and adolescents aged 9-19 years with a short duration of T1DM by screening for retinopathy and nephropathy.
Methods: A cross-sectional study and participants were consecutively enrolled from the Endocrinology Clinic at Federal Teaching Hospital, Abakaliki.
Nucleic Acid Ther
December 2019
RNA Therapeutics Institute, UMass Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts.
Objective: The American Diabetes Association recommends psychosocial screening for individuals with type 1 diabetes (T1D). The purpose of this study is to present (a) several high priority decisions that program developers may encounter when building a new psychosocial screening program and (b) both the screening development process and results of one mental health screening program within a multidisciplinary pediatric diabetes clinic, with particular emphasis on parent-youth screening agreement and changes to elevation status over time.
Methods: Youth with T1D ages 12-17 and parents of youth with T1D ages 8-17 were administered mental health screeners as a part of outpatient diabetes visits over a 1-year period.
Clin Pract Cases Emerg Med
November 2019
UMASS Medical School-Baystate Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Springfield, Massachusetts.
Acute vascular injury can be a cause of significant disability and morbidity. High clinical suspicion and a thorough physical examination are key components to facilitate a timely diagnosis. We present a case of acute vascular injury after isolated penetrating trauma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunity
November 2019
Institute of Innate Immunity, University Hospital Bonn, University of Bonn, Bonn 53127, Germany; Department of Infectious Diseases & Immunology, UMass Medical School, Worcester, MA 01605, USA; Center of Molecular Inflammation Research, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim 7491, Norway; German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Bonn 53127, Germany. Electronic address:
The consumption of Western-type calorically rich diets combined with chronic overnutrition and a sedentary lifestyle in Western societies evokes a state of chronic metabolic inflammation, termed metaflammation. Metaflammation contributes to the development of many prevalent non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and these lifestyle-associated pathologies represent a rising public health problem with global epidemic dimensions. A better understanding of how modern lifestyle and Western diet (WD) activate immune cells is essential for the development of efficient preventive and therapeutic strategies for common NCDs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Res
March 2020
Associate Professor of Surgery, Pediatrics and Urology, UMASS Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
JCI Insight
October 2019
Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts (UMass) Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.
Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is the visceral fat depot of the heart. Inflammation of EAT is thought to contribute to coronary artery disease (CAD). Therefore, we hypothesized that the EAT of patients with CAD would have increased inflammatory gene expression compared with controls without CAD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Manag Care Spec Pharm
September 2019
Clinical Pharmacy Services, UMass Medical School, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts.
Background: Lumacaftor/ivacaftor (LUM/IVA) is indicated for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) homozygous for the F508del mutation in the CFTR gene. In clinical trials, LUM/IVA decreased pulmonary exacerbation rates. To our knowledge, there is no published data evaluating real-world outcomes for Medicaid patients receiving LUM/IVA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
August 2019
Advanced Biophotonics Laboratory, UMASS Lowell, Lowell, MA 01851, USA.
Fluorescence emission, polarization and subcellular localization of methylene blue (MB) were studied in four cancerous and two normal human brain cell lines. Fluorescence emission and polarization images were acquired and analyzed. The co-localization of MB with mitochondria, lysosomes and nuclei of the cells was evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocrit Care
February 2020
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Spreading depolarizations (SDs) are profound disruptions of cellular homeostasis that slowly propagate through gray matter and present an extraordinary metabolic challenge to brain tissue. Recent work has shown that SDs occur commonly in human patients in the neurointensive care setting and have established a compelling case for their importance in the pathophysiology of acute brain injury. The International Conference on Spreading Depolarizations (iCSD) held in Boca Raton, Florida, in September of 2018 included a discussion session focused on the question of "Which SDs are deleterious to brain tissue?" iCSD is attended by investigators studying various animal species including invertebrates, in vivo and in vitro preparations, diseases of acute brain injury and migraine, computational modeling, and clinical brain injury, among other topics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTelehealth is an acknowledged strategy to meet patient healthcare needs. In critical care settings, Tele-ICU's are expanding to deliver clinical services across a diverse spectrum of critically ill patients. The expansion of telehealth provides increased opportunities for advanced practice providers including advanced practice nurses and physician assistants; however, limited information on roles and models of care for advanced practice providers in telehealth exist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Cardiol
December 2019
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health & Meyers Primary Care Institute, Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School, USA. Electronic address:
Background: Myocarditis is a rare but severe adverse event associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors, its diagnosis depending on a high index of suspicion and appropriate investigations. Our objective was to systematically review the diagnostic approaches to myocarditis associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors.
Methods: The systematic review was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines (PROSPERO Registration: CRD42018097247).