828 results match your criteria: "University of Southern California. Los Angeles[Affiliation]"

Introduction: Residence in a disadvantaged neighborhood associates with adverse health exposures and outcomes, and may increase risk for cognitive impairment and dementia. Utilization of a publicly available, geocoded disadvantage metric could facilitate efficient integration of social determinants of health into models of cognitive aging.

Methods: Using the validated Area Deprivation Index and two cognitive aging cohorts, we quantified Census block-level poverty, education, housing, and employment characteristics for the neighborhoods of 2119 older adults.

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Organelle stress and Liver injuries often occur in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected patients under anti-HIV therapies, yet few molecular off-targets of anti-HIV drugs have been identified in the liver. Here, we found through total RNA sequencing that the transcription of a host protease Ras converting CAAX endopeptidase 1 (RCE1) was altered in HepG2 cells treated with anti-HIV protease inhibitors, ritonavir and lopinavir. Levels of RCE1 protein were inhibited in HepG2 and primary mouse hepatocytes and in the liver of mice treated with the anti-HIV drugs, which were accompanied with inhibition of two potential substrates of RCE1, small GTP binding protein Rab13 and Rab18, which are with a common CAAX motif and known to regulate the ER-Golgi traffic or lipogenesis.

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Methamphetamine-associated cardiomyopathy (MACM) is an increasingly recognized disease entity in the context of a rapidly spreading methamphetamine epidemic. MACM may afflict individuals with a wide range of ages and socioeconomic backgrounds. Presentations can vary greatly and may involve several complications unique to the disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • Around 125 million people globally suffer from psoriasis, leading to significant health issues, including inflammatory arthritis, heart diseases, and mental health problems.
  • The most common type, plaque psoriasis, involves serious comorbidities and has seen advancements in understanding its causes and treatment options, especially biologics.
  • Treatment varies based on severity, with mild cases managed by topical agents and moderate to severe cases often treated with biologics, which target specific inflammatory pathways, providing both efficacy and safety.
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Cellular maps of gastrointestinal organs: getting the most from tissue clearing.

Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol

July 2020

Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Saban Research Institute Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

The development of modern methods to induce optical transparency ("clearing") in biological tissues has enabled the three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of intact organs at cellular resolution. New capabilities in visualization of rare cellular events, long-range interactions, and irregular structures will facilitate novel studies in the alimentary tract and gastrointestinal systems. The tubular geometry of the alimentary tract facilitates large-scale cellular reconstruction of cleared tissue without specialized microscopy setups.

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THE EXPOSOME IN HUMAN EVOLUTION: FROM DUST TO DIESEL.

Q Rev Biol

December 2019

Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and Dornsife College, University of Southern California Los Angeles, California 90089-0191 USA.

Global exposures to air pollution and cigarette smoke are novel in human evolutionary history and are associated with about 16 million premature deaths per year. We investigate the history of the human for relationships between novel environmental toxins and genetic changes during human evolution in six phases. Phase I: With increased walking on savannas, early human ancestors inhaled crustal dust, fecal aerosols, and spores; carrion scavenging introduced new infectious pathogens.

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Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is a leading cause of cirrhosis in the United States, which is characterized by extensive deposition of extracellular matrix proteins and formation of a fibrous scar. Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) are the major source of collagen type 1 producing myofibroblasts in ALD fibrosis. However, the mechanism of alcohol-induced activation of human and mouse HSCs is not fully understood.

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Background While elevated homocysteine has been associated with calcification in several studies, its importance as a cardiovascular risk factor remains unclear. This study examines the relationship between homocysteine and vascular and valve calcification in the MESA (Multi-ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) cohort. Methods and Results MESA participants with baseline homocysteine measurements and cardiac computed tomography scans were included (N=6789).

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Background: Academic emergency medicine is a constant balance between efficiency and education. We developed a new model called swarming, where the bedside nurse, resident, and attending/fellow simultaneously evaluate the patient, including initial vital signs, bedside triage, focused history and physical examination, and discussion of the treatment plan, thus creating a shared mental model.

Objectives: To combine perceptions from trainee physicians, supervising physicians, nurses, and families with in vivo measurements of emergency department swarms to better conceptualize the swarming model.

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In bone implants, antibacterial biomaterials with nonleaching surfaces are superior to ones based on abrupt release because systemic side effects arising from the latter can be avoided. In this work, a nonleaching antibacterial concept is demonstrated by fabricating 2D nanoflakes in situ on magnesium (Mg). Different from the conventional antibacterial mechanisms that depend on Mg release and pH increase, the nanoflakes exert mechanical tension onto the bacteria membranes to destroy microorganisms on contact and produce intracellular stress via physical interactions, which is also revealed by computational simulations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to track changes in daily physical activity and sedentary habits in children aged 8-12 over three years, focusing on how these patterns vary by sex and between weekdays and weekends.
  • - Results showed that girls exhibited a greater decline in short bouts of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and sedentary breaks as they aged compared to boys, with the steepest declines observed on weekends.
  • - The findings suggest that interventions should target increasing short activity bouts and sedentary breaks, particularly for girls and during weekends, to help mitigate health risks associated with inactivity.
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Hematologic abnormalities are an important part of the diagnostic criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This case presents a patient diagnosed with Evans Syndrome with underlying SLE on initial presentation.

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Laboratory experiments report that detectable seismic velocity changes should occur in the vicinity of fault zones prior to earthquakes. However, operating permanent active seismic sources to monitor natural faults at seismogenic depth is found to be nearly impossible to achieve. We show that seismic noise generated by vehicle traffic, and especially heavy freight trains, can be turned into a powerful repetitive seismic source to continuously probe the Earth's crust at a few kilometers depth.

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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is common in children and may progress to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), advanced fibrosis, and even cirrhosis in childhood or early adulthood, indicating the need for pharmacologic treatment in this age group. Multiple trials are evaluating different therapeutic targets for NASH with fibrosis in adults, and the U.S.

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Ecological monitoring of streams has often focused on assessing the biotic integrity of individual benthic macroinvertebrate (BMI) communities through local measures of diversity, such as taxonomic or functional richness. However, as individual BMI communities are frequently linked by a variety of ecological processes at a regional scale, there is a need to assess biotic integrity of groups of communities at the scale of watersheds. Using 4,619 sampled communities of streambed BMIs, we investigate this question using co-occurrence networks generated from groups of communities selected within California watersheds under different levels of stress due to upstream land use.

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Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) is commonly used to treat several liver disorders in adults and children, including primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) for which it is not U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved.

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Western Trauma Association critical decisions in trauma: Cervical spine clearance in trauma patients.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

February 2020

From the Department of Surgery (D.J.C.), Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida; Department of Surgery (D.V.S.), University of California-Davis, Sacramento, California; Department of Surgery (E.E.M.), University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado; Department of Surgery (J.S.), Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC; Department of Surgery (M.J.M.), Scripps Medical Center, San Diego, California; Department of Surgery (C.V.R.B.), Dell Seton Medical Center at University of Texas, Austin, Texas; Department of Surgery (H.B.A., G.A.V.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Department of Surgery (K.J.B.), Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon; Department of Surgery (K.I.), University of Southern California Los Angeles, California.

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Play in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is often atypical, yet consensus regarding effective occupational therapy strategies for improving play is not established. To examine the efficacy of strategies used in occupational therapy to improve play in ASD, authors completed a systematic review of papers from January 1980 through January 2019. Search terms included autism, Asperger's, ASD, autistic in combination with play, playfulness, pretend, imagination, praxis, creativity, and generativity.

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Validated 60-Second General Foot Screen: A Pilot Trial and Guide to Diagnoses and Treatment.

Adv Skin Wound Care

November 2019

R. Gary Sibbald, MD, DSc (Hons), MEd, FRCPC (Med Derm), ABIM, FAAD, MAPWCA • Professor • Medicine and Public Health • Director • International Interprofessional Wound Care Course and Masters of Science in Community Health (Prevention and Wound Care) • Dalla Lana Faculty of Public Health • University of Toronto • Lead Project ECHO Ontario Wound & Skin Care • Toronto, Ontario, Canada • Investigator, Institute for Better Health, Trillium Health Partners • co-Editor-in-Chief • Advances in Skin and Wound Care • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Khalad Maliyar, BA • Medical Student • Faculty of Medicine • University of Toronto • Toronto, Ontario, Canada Reneeka Persaud-Jaimangal, MD, MScCH • Clinical Coordinator • Project ECHO Skin and Wound • Research Coordinator and Special Projects • Toronto Regional Wound Healing Clinic • Adjunct Faculty • International Interprofessional Wound Care Course • Toronto, Ontario, Canada James A. Elliott, MSc • Faculty • International Interprofessional Wound Care Course • Member • Wounds Canada Research Committee • Toronto, Ontario, Canada Alisa Brandon, BSc • Medical Student • Faculty of Medicine • University of Toronto • Toronto, Ontario, Canada Bharat Kotru, PhD, MSc, BSc, PT Podiatry • Clinical Integrity & Wound Management • Faculty Member of the International Interprofessional Wound Care Course (IIWCC) • Max Super Speciality Hospital • Punjab, India David G. Armstrong, DPM, MD, PhD • Director • Southwestern Academic Limb Salvage Alliance • Professor of Surgery • Keck School of Medicine • University of Southern California • Los Angeles, California.

General Purpose: To provide information on a 60-second General Foot Screen to assist in the prevention and/or identification and management of common foot problems.

Target Audience: This continuing education activity is intended for physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and nurses with an interest in skin and wound care.

Learning Objectives/outcomes: After participating in this educational activity, the participant should be better able to:1.

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Recent studies have suggested a negative impact of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) on sustained virologic response (SVR) to hepatitis C virus (HCV) direct acting antivirals (DAAs). We compared the effectiveness of DAAs in patients with cirrhosis, with and without HCC, and in those with HCC partially treated or untreated (PT/UT-HCC) versus completely treated (CT-HCC). HCC status was based on imaging 6 months before or 2 months after start of DAA therapy.

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We describe twins with an interstitial deletion of chromosome 1 with a severe phenotype compared to previously described cases. As genetic testing is more frequently performed, it is important for clinicians to understand the spectrum of clinical findings that can occur with this particular deletion.

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