4,115 results match your criteria: "University of South Carolina School of medicine[Affiliation]"

What Is This Summary About?: This is a plain language summary of a published article in the journal . Narcolepsy is a sleep condition that has 2 different subtypes: narcolepsy type 1 and narcolepsy type 2. These are called NT1 and NT2 for short.

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Who declines "opt-out" HIV/HCV testing? Experience of an internal medicine resident continuity clinic serving a predominantly Black adult population in South Carolina.

J Natl Med Assoc

August 2024

Medical Practice Evaluation Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Universal "opt-out" testing for HIV and HCV involves offering tests to individuals unless they choose to decline, but the reasons behind those declines are not well understood.
  • A study reviewed medical records of adults in South Carolina who were offered these tests between May and July 2019, finding that about one-third chose not to get tested.
  • The results indicated that Black males were significantly more likely to decline testing compared to Black females, highlighting potential disparities in awareness and access to care.
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Background: We investigate the effect of antiplatelet and anticoagulant medications on bleeding complications in patients undergoing ventral hernia repair.

Methods: The Abdominal Core Health Quality Collaborative registry was queried from 2013 to 2022 for patients who underwent ventral hernia repair, evaluating the association between antiplatelet or anticoagulant use and bleeding complications.

Results: 37,973 patients underwent ventral hernia repair: 11.

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Aim: This meta-analysis evaluates the diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound (US) for bone fractures over the past 47 years, comparing it to established imaging standards.

Material And Methods: We adhered to PRISMA 2020 guidelines to search Medline, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library using tailored search strategies. The primary outcome, US diagnostic performance, was analyzed across various subgroups including clinical relevance, patient age, and anatomical considerations.

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Student Ultrasound Education, Current Views and Controversies; Who Should be Teaching?

Z Gastroenterol

October 2024

Allgemeine Innere Medizin (DAIM) Kliniken Beau Site, Salem und Permanence, Kliniken Hirslanden Beau Site, Salem und Permanence, Bern, Switzerland.

Article Synopsis
  • - Acquiring skills in diagnostic ultrasound is essential for modern healthcare, but traditional teaching methods often lack sufficient hands-on practice, which is crucial for mastering anatomy interpretation and scan techniques.
  • - The paper investigates different teaching roles in ultrasound education, including physicians, anatomists, peer tutors, and sonographers, emphasizing their importance in providing diverse support and practical experience.
  • - A well-structured ultrasound curriculum that incorporates various teaching methods and peer-assisted learning can enhance educational outcomes and ease faculty workload, highlighting the need for thorough training for all instructors involved.
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Background: Psychological safety is a team-based phenomenon whereby group members are empowered to ask questions, take appropriate risks, admit mistakes, propose novel ideas, and candidly voice concerns. Growing research supports the benefits of psychological safety in healthcare and education for patient safety, learning, and innovation. However, there is a paucity of research on how to create psychological safety, especially within academic medicine.

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Introduction: Managing acute postoperative pain in patients on chronic opioid therapy is challenging. There is little data regarding optimal perioperative chronic opioid management. We hypothesized that continuing the home dose of opioid while inpatient following ventral hernia repair (VHR) would reduce total opioid consumption postoperatively.

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Panniculus Retractor Use for Visualization of Fetal Anatomy: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

Obstet Gynecol

September 2024

Prisma Health/University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville, Greenville, and the Department of Public Health Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina.

Objective: To evaluate whether use of a panniculus retractor device for pregnant patients with body mass index (BMI) 40 or higher and a panniculus improves the completion rate of the fetal anatomic examination.

Methods: This was a randomized trial in which eligible patients with BMI 40 or higher and a panniculus were randomized to undergo their detailed fetal anatomic examination with a panniculus retractor device in place compared with usual care. The primary outcome was the completion rate of 16 prespecified views from the anatomic examination.

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In the autism field, there is increasing interest in translating evidence-based interventions (EBIs) into systems that serve young autistic children and their families. Public Early Intervention systems have been a focal point of research-based implementation efforts given that these systems are federally mandated to provide services to children birth to three years of age with developmental delays under Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Although a growing number of research studies are now training Early Intervention providers to deliver autism EBIs, this work has been conducted on a relatively small scale and has only just begun to consider the alignment of these models with Early Intervention systems and whether sufficient infrastructure exists to scale up these training efforts and to sustain their public health impact.

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Background: Nature-based and other outdoor virtual reality (VR) experiences in head-mounted displays (HMDs) offer powerful, non-pharmacological tools for hospice teams to help patients undergoing end-of-life (EOL) transitions. However, the psychological distress of the patient-caregiver dyad is interconnected and highlights the interdependence and responsiveness to distress as a unit. Hospice care services and healthcare need strategies to help patients and informal caregivers with EOL transitions.

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Aim: To perform a meta-analysis comparing real-world medication adherence to sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) versus glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs).

Materials And Methods: A systematic search of Medline and Embase was conducted through October 2023. To meet inclusion criteria, articles had to be published in full text form and directly compare medication adherence to SGLT2is versus GLP-1RAs in adults.

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Aquatic Antagonists: Seaweed Dermatitis (Lyngbya majuscula).

Cutis

May 2024

Dr. Hill is from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Greenville. Dr. Fulton is from Spartanburg Regional Medical Center, South Carolina. Dr. McGovern is from Fort Wayne Dermatology Consultants, Indiana.

The cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula grows in marine and estuarine environments across the world and produces many biologically active compounds. Direct contact with L majuscula and its dermatoxins can cause seaweed dermatitis, which manifests as a papulovesicular eruption. As oceans warm, L majuscula will bloom more frequently; therefore, public awareness of L majuscula and seaweed dermatitis in oceanside communities can help promote precautions that can reduce the risk for exposure.

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By 2040, there will be an estimated 26 million cancer survivors in the United States. The essential components of survivorship care are (1) surveillance for cancer recurrence, (2) surveillance for new primary cancers, (3) management of physical and psychological long-term effects of treatment, (4) prevention or mitigation of late treatment effects, and (5) coordination of care between the oncology team and primary care clinicians. Recommendations for surveillance to detect recurrence vary with cancer type and stage at diagnosis.

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Background: Closed incision negative-pressure therapy (ciNPT) has become increasingly used on surgical sites to attempt to minimize postoperative complications. The literature describing the benefits of ciNPT in reducing donor site morbidity after free tissue transfer is limited. This review compares the effectiveness of ciNPT and conventional dressings in reducing donor site complications after free tissue transfer.

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Hospitalizations are increasing among persons who use opioids, secondary to overdose and infections. Our study identified acute hospitalization as a reachable moment for engaging people who use drugs in increased screening and education about human immunodeficiency virus risk and prevention (preexposure prophylaxis).

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Cancer cachexia, the unintentional loss of lean mass, contributes to functional dependency, poor treatment outcomes, and decreased survival. Although its pathogenicity is multifactorial, metabolic dysfunction remains a hallmark of cachexia. However, significant knowledge gaps exist in understanding the role of skeletal muscle lipid metabolism and dynamics in this condition.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study examined the impact of weight-based dosing strategies on valproic acid (VPA) effectiveness and safety in both obese and nonobese patients, aiming to address the variability in drug absorption and response due to body weight.
  • The analysis, involving 186 patients, revealed no significant difference in VPA serum levels but showed that obese patients received lower doses (15.6 mg/kg) compared to nonobese patients (19.5 mg/kg), with a stronger correlation found between VPA dose and serum levels in the obese group.
  • The researchers suggested that using adjusted body weight (AdjBW) for dosing in obese patients may reduce the risk of toxicity, recommending further studies with larger
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Cancer is one of the leading causes of death, making timely diagnosis and prognosis very important. Utilization of AI (artificial intelligence) enables providers to organize and process patient data in a way that can lead to better overall outcomes. This review paper aims to look at the varying uses of AI for diagnosis and prognosis and clinical utility.

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Purpose: In patients with Wilms tumor with lung metastases, a cardiac-sparing intensity modulated radiation therapy (CS-IMRT) technique is increasingly being adopted for whole lung irradiation. However, the standard technique for flank and whole abdomen radiation remains 2-dimensional anterioposterior (AP), and overlap at the junction between the whole lung CS-IMRT and abdominal AP fields can result in overdose to normal organs. Here, we compared the dosimetry of patients who received whole lung irradiation and flank or abdominal radiation therapy with CS-IMRT with AP abdominal field (IMRT-AP) versus CS-IMRT with IMRT abdominal field (combined IMRT).

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Supporting Sexual and Reproductive Health for Immigrant Families Across the Lifespan.

Acad Pediatr

July 2024

Department of Pediatrics/Children's Health Services Research (TA Wilkinson), Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind. Electronic address:

The ability to exercise autonomy in achieving reproductive health goals necessitates access to contraceptive and reproductive health information and medical care. Finding trusted, comprehensive, consistent and affordable reproductive care is particularly challenging for immigrants living in the United States, especially for those without legal immigration status and for those who prefer a language other than English. In immigrant communities, sexual and reproductive health (SRH) knowledge, contraceptive choice, and family planning are influenced by many factors including tension between traditional and adopted cultural norms, limited English proficiency, restricted health care access, and structural racism.

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Effect of self-efficacy among persons who inject drugs treated with direct-acting antivirals on Hepatitis C treatment initiation, duration, completion, adherence, and cure.

Drug Alcohol Depend

September 2024

School of Health Research, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA; Department of Medicine, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, 876 W Faris Rd, Greenville, SC 29605, USA; Department of Medicine, Prisma Health, Greenville, SC, USA. Electronic address:

Background: Self-efficacy, a patient-level factor, has been shown to facilitate patient engagement in treatment and optimize treatment-related outcomes in various health contexts. Research on interventions supporting hepatitis C virus (HCV) direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment uptake and adherence among persons who inject drugs (PWID) is needed, but whether self-efficacy factors influence DAA treatment cascade outcomes in this population has been less studied.

Methods: Using the HERO study data, we analyzed a subset of participants with any general health self-efficacy data (n=708) measured at baseline and end-of-treatment time points using a 5-items instrument (facets: 'goal setting', 'goal attainment', 'having a positive effect', 'being in control', and 'working to improve').

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Children and adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) have increases in morbidity and mortality with COVID-19 infections. The American Society of Hematology Research Collaborative Sickle Cell Disease Research Network performed a prospective COVID-19 vaccine study to assess antibody responses and analyze whether messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccination precipitated any adverse effects unique to individuals with SCD. Forty-one participants received 2 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and provided baseline blood samples before vaccination and 2 months after the initial vaccination for analysis of immunoglobulin G (IgG) reactivity against the receptor binding domain (RBD) of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 spike protein.

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Background: Birthing people in the United States face numerous challenges when accessing adequate prenatal care (PNC), with transportation being a significant obstacle. Nevertheless, previous studies that relied solely on the distance to the nearest provider cannot differentiate the effects of travel burden on provider selection and care utilization. These may exaggerate the degree of inequality in access and fail to capture perceived travel burden.

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Involvement of the gut microbiota in cancer cachexia.

Am J Physiol Cell Physiol

September 2024

Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine Columbia, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, United States.

Cancer cachexia, or the unintentional loss of body weight in patients with cancer, is a multiorgan and multifactorial syndrome with a complex and largely unknown etiology; however, metabolic dysfunction and inflammation remain hallmarks of cancer-associated wasting. Although cachexia manifests with muscle and adipose tissue loss, perturbations to the gastrointestinal tract may serve as the frontline for both impaired nutrient absorption and immune-activating gut dysbiosis. Investigations into the gut microbiota have exploded within the past two decades, demonstrating multiple gut-tissue axes; however, the link between adipose and skeletal muscle wasting and the gut microbiota with cancer is only beginning to be understood.

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