232 results match your criteria: "University of Texas Mcgovern Medical School at Houston[Affiliation]"

Mode of Delivery and Subsequent Motor Function in Children With Myelomeningocele Without In Utero Repair.

Obstet Gynecol

January 2025

Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Magee-Women's Hospital, and the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, and the Richard D. Wood Jr. Center for Fetal Diagnosis and Treatment, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the Department of Neurosurgery, Duke University Medical Center, Duke Children's Hospital, Durham, North Carolina; the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan; the Department of Surgery (and Maternal Fetal Care Center), Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Children's Minnesota, St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota; the Johns Hopkins Center for Fetal Therapy, Baltimore, Maryland; Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee; Wexner Medical Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, and UC Davis Fetal Care and Treatment Center, Sacramento, California; St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri; University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York; and UTHealth Houston Fetal Center, University of Texas McGovern Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas.

Objective: To assess the association between mode of delivery and 2-year motor function in children with prenatal diagnosis of myelomeningocele.

Methods: A multisite retrospective cohort study of children with myelomeningocele across 14 NAFTNet (North American Fetal Therapy Network) centers born between 2007 and 2020 who had a physical examination available at 2 years of life. Exclusion criteria were in utero myelomeningocele repair, postnatal myelomeningocele diagnosis, missing data on fetal presentation at delivery, and contraindications to labor.

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Objective: Remote identification of individuals with severe hyposmia may enable scalable recruitment of participants with underlying alpha-synuclein aggregation. We evaluated the performance of a staged screening paradigm using remote smell testing to enrich for abnormal dopamine transporter single-photon emission computed tomography imaging (DAT-SPECT) and alpha-synuclein aggregation.

Methods: The Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) recruited participants for the prodromal cohort who were 60-years and older without a Parkinson's disease diagnosis.

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Serum metabolome profiling in patients with mild cognitive impairment reveals sex differences in lipid metabolism.

Neurobiol Dis

January 2025

Department of Neurology, the University of Texas McGovern Medical School at Houston, TX, USA; The University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Houston, TX, USA; UTHealth Consortium on Aging, the University of Texas McGovern Medical School, Houston, TX, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Alzheimer's disease (AD) is more prevalent in women than in men, with factors beyond longevity, like metabolic changes, influencing this increased risk.
  • A study conducted metabolomic profiling of blood samples from male and female patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), revealing significant metabolic differences related to sex, particularly in lipid and peptide energy metabolism pathways.
  • The research identified specific metabolites unique to each sex, such as higher levels of 1-palmitoleoyl glycerol in females, suggesting these could be potential biomarkers to enhance our understanding of MCI and AD prevention strategies.
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Small molecule-based regulation of gene expression in human astrocytes switching on and off the G-quadruplex control systems.

J Biol Chem

November 2024

The Department of Neurology, The University of Texas McGovern Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas, USA; The University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Houston, Texas, USA; UTHealth Consortium on Aging, The University of Texas McGovern Medical School, Houston, Texas, USA. Electronic address:

A great deal of attention is being paid to strategies seeking to uncover the biology of the four-stranded nucleic acid structure G-quadruplex (G4) via their stabilization in cells with G4-specific ligands. The conventional definition of chemical biology implies that a complete assessment of G4 biology can only be achieved by implementing a complementary approach involving the destabilization of cellular G4s by ad hoc molecular effectors. We report here on an unprecedented comparison of the cellular consequences of G4 chemical stabilization by pyridostatin (PDS) and destabilization by phenylpyrrolocytosine (PhpC) at both transcriptome- and proteome-wide scales in patient-derived primary human astrocytes.

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) affects more women than men. Although women live longer than men, it is not longevity alone, but other factors, including metabolic changes, that contribute to the higher risk of AD in women. Metabolic pathways have been implicated in AD progression, but studies to date examined targeted pathways, leaving many metabolites unmeasured.

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Unlabelled: Normative values for intracardiac and extracardiac vascular structures help in understanding normal growth and changes over time in children; this normative data is not currently available for ECG-gated computed tomography angiography (CTA). We sought to establish ECG-gated CTA-derived normative values for the aortic root, aorta, and aortic arch in children. Aortic root, ascending aorta, aortic arch, and descending aorta were measured in systole and diastole in 100 subjects who had ECG-gated CTA at our center between January 2015 and December 2020 and met our inclusion criteria.

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The Neuronal alpha-Synuclein Disease (NSD) biological definition and Integrated Staging System (NSD-ISS) provide a research framework to identify individuals with Lewy body pathology and stage them based on underlying biology and increasing degree of functional impairment. Utilizing data from the PPMI, PASADENA, and SPARK studies, we developed and applied biologic and clinical data-informed definitions for the NSD-ISS across the disease continuum. Individuals enrolled as Parkinson's disease, Prodromal, or Healthy Controls were defined and staged based on biological, clinical, and functional anchors at baseline.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Neuronal alpha-Synuclein Disease (NSD) and its Integrated Staging System (NSD-ISS) aim to identify and classify individuals with Lewy body pathology according to biological and functional factors.
  • Data from multiple studies reveal that a significant percentage of participants with Parkinson’s disease (PD) were classified as S+ (consistent with NSD), indicating a strong link between biological markers and disease staging.
  • Findings suggest that the baseline stage of individuals influences the timeline for progression to significant clinical outcomes, highlighting the need for further validation of the staging anchors in longer-term studies.
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Purpose: Normative values for intracardiac and extracardiac vascular structures help in understanding normal growth and changes over time in children; this normative data are not currently available for ECG-gated Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA). We sought to establish ECG-gated CTA derived normative values for the aortic root, aorta and aortic arch in children.

Methods And Results: Aortic root, ascending aorta, aortic arch, and descending aorta were measured in systole and diastole in 100 subjects who had ECG-gated CTA at our center between January 2015 through December 2020 and met our inclusion criteria.

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Patients with cardiovascular diseases who experience disease-related short-term events, such as hospitalizations, often exhibit diverse long-term survival outcomes compared to others. In this study, we aim to improve the prediction of long-term survival probability by incorporating two short-term events using a flexible varying coefficient landmark model. Our objective is to predict the long-term survival among patients who survived up to a pre-specified landmark time since the initial admission.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Macroautophagy is a complex process that can lead to cell death, influenced by various cell types and stressors, while ferroptosis is a specific kind of cell death related to lipid damage and iron dependency.
  • - Certain types of autophagy, like ferritinophagy and lipophagy, play a role in triggering ferroptotic cell death by degrading protective proteins, whereas others, such as reticulophagy, help protect cells from this damage.
  • - The review seeks to clarify the relationship between autophagy and ferroptosis, focusing on defining terms, outlining key components, discussing experimental techniques, and providing interpretation guidelines for ongoing research.
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Objectives: This study aimed to identify predictors associated with the tooth loss phenotype in a large periodontitis patient cohort in the university setting.

Methods: Information on periodontitis patients and nineteen factors identified at the initial visit was extracted from electronic health records. The primary outcome is tooth loss phenotype (presence or absence of tooth loss).

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Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies are currently defined by their clinical features, with α-synuclein pathology as the gold standard to establish the definitive diagnosis. We propose that, given biomarker advances enabling accurate detection of pathological α-synuclein (ie, misfolded and aggregated) in CSF using the seed amplification assay, it is time to redefine Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies as neuronal α-synuclein disease rather than as clinical syndromes. This major shift from a clinical to a biological definition of Parkinson's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies takes advantage of the availability of tools to assess the gold standard for diagnosis of neuronal α-synuclein (n-αsyn) in human beings during life.

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In multivariate recurrent event data, each patient may repeatedly experience more than one type of event. Analysis of such data gets further complicated by the time-varying dependence structure among different types of recurrent events. The available literature regarding the joint modeling of multivariate recurrent events assumes a constant dependency over time, which is strict and often violated in practice.

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Non-invasive cardiac imaging like echocardiogram, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR), and computed tomography angiography (CTA) play a key role in the diagnosis, aid in management and follow-up of congenital heart disease patients. Normative data for intracardiac and extracardiac vascular structures in children are currently available for echocardiogram, CMR, and non-gated CTA. We sought to establish systolic and diastolic normative data for main and branch pulmonary arteries in children using electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated CTA.

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A novel case of EUS-guided targeted radiofrequency ablation of metastatic duodenal renal cell carcinoma.

Endosc Ultrasound

October 2023

Center for Interventional Gastroenterology at UTHealth (iGUT), Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, McGovern Medical School, UTHealth, Houston, TX, USA.

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Acute pain management after trauma: What you need to know.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

April 2024

From the Department of Surgery and Center for Translational Injury Research, The University of Texas McGovern Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas.

Effective acute pain control is mandatory after injury. Opioids continue to be a pillar acute pain management of strategies despite not being as effective as some nonnarcotic alternatives. An acute pain management strategy after trauma should be thoughtful, effective, and responsible.

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Article Synopsis
  • Continuous tobacco use in cancer patients leads to higher healthcare costs and complications, while quitting smoking improves treatment outcomes and reduces costs.
  • A study at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center found that patients who quit smoking through the Tobacco Research and Treatment Program saved an average of $1,095 in healthcare costs over three months.
  • The findings suggest that implementing smoking cessation programs can enhance patient health and create economic efficiencies within the healthcare system, highlighting their importance in cancer prevention strategies.
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