383 results match your criteria: "University of Virginia-Charlottesville[Affiliation]"

Urinary extracellular vesicles (uEVs) are a promising substrate for discovering new biomarkers. In order to investigate the origin of uEVs and the cargo they carry, some types of downstream analysis of uEVs may require concentration and enrichment as well as removal of contaminating substances. Co-isolation of the abundant urinary protein uromodulin with uEVs can be a problem, and may interfere with some techniques, in particular with proteomic analysis tools.

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Consumers employ a variety of foraging strategies, and oftentimes the foraging strategy employed is related to resource availability. As consumers acquire resources, they may interact with their resource base in mutualistic or antagonistic ways-falling along a mutualism-antagonism continuum-with implications for ecological processes such as seed dispersal. However, patterns of resource use vary temporally, and textbook herbivores may switch foraging tactics to become more frugivorous in periods of greater fleshy fruit availability.

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Article Synopsis
  • PFAS (Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are harmful chemicals known for not breaking down easily in the environment and are found in high amounts in drinking water and various contaminated sites.
  • There is a rising demand for effective methods to detect PFAS, especially PFOA, in environmental samples like surface water.
  • This study presents a biosensor using human liver fatty acid binding protein that can quickly and efficiently identify PFOA levels in water samples from areas near Loring Airforce Base without needing complex sample preparation.
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Objective: Recent literature studying the impact of blood transfusion on outcomes in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) have shown that blood transfusions are associated with increased risk of death and higher wound infection rates. The purpose of this study was to implement a lower transfusion threshold while comparing outcomes of free flap patients following initiation of a new transfusion guideline.

Methods: A retrospective study of all patients at a tertiary care academic center who underwent free tissue transfer after HNC resection between July 17, 2007 and June 7, 2021.

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  • A new tool has been developed to effectively smooth and model irregular point clouds, which can come from various sources, with a focus on solid modeling.
  • The technique utilizes multivariate splines over triangulation to improve the quality of the data by reducing noise and blur, while also enabling a multi-resolution reconstruction.
  • The methodology has been theoretically verified, showcasing optimal convergence rates and includes a bootstrapping approach to measure estimator uncertainty, outperforming traditional smoothing methods in real-world applications.
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Background: Inflammation is a feature of coronary heart disease (CHD), but the role of proinflammatory microbial infection in CHD remains understudied.

Methods And Results: CHD was defined in the MESA (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) as myocardial infarction (251 participants), resuscitated arrest (2 participants), and CHD death (80 participants). We analyzed sequencing reads from 4421 MESA participants in the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine program using the PathSeq workflow of the Genome Analysis Tool Kit and a 65-gigabase microbial reference.

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Peptides are naturally potent and selective therapeutics with massive potential; however, low cell membrane permeability limits their clinical implementation, particularly for hydrophilic, anionic peptides with intracellular targets. To overcome this limitation, esterification of anionic carboxylic acids on therapeutic peptides can simultaneously increase hydrophobicity and net charge to facilitate cell internalization, whereafter installed esters can be cleaved hydrolytically to restore activity. To date, however, most esterified therapeutics contain either a single esterification site or multiple esters randomly incorporated on multiple sites.

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Designing molecules that can undergo late-stage modifications resulting in specific optical properties is useful for developing structure-function trends in materials, which ultimately advance optoelectronic applications. Herein, we report a series of fused diborepinium ions stabilized by carbene and carbone ligands (diamino-N-heterocyclic carbenes, cyclic(alkyl)(amino) carbenes, carbodicarbenes, and carbodiphosphoranes), including a detailed bonding analysis. These are the first structurally confirmed examples of diborepin dications and we detail how distortions in the core of the pentacyclic fused system impact aromaticity, stability, and their light-emitting properties.

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Chimeric RNAs, distinct from DNA gene fusions, have emerged as promising therapeutic targets with diverse functions in cancer treatment. However, the functional significance and therapeutic potential of most chimeric RNAs remain unclear. Here we identify a novel fusion transcript of solute carrier family 2-member 11 () and macrophage migration inhibitory factor ().

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The human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) plays a pivotal role in the presentation of peptidic fragments from proteins, which can originate from self-proteins or from nonhuman antigens, such as those produced by viruses or bacteria. To prevent cytotoxicity against healthy cells, thymocytes expressing T cell receptors (TCRs) that recognize self-peptides are removed from circulation (negative selection), thus leaving T cells that recognize nonself-peptides. Current understanding suggests that post-translationally modified (PTM) proteins and the resulting peptide fragments they generate following proteolysis are largely excluded from negative selection; this feature means that PTMs can generate nonself-peptides that potentially contribute to the development of autoreactive T cells and subsequent autoimmune diseases.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the relationship between electrode positioning and success rates in electrical cardioversion of atrial fibrillation.
  • It finds that patients requiring a single low-energy shock (100 J) for successful cardioversion had electrodes placed closer to the heart compared to those needing multiple shocks.
  • The research suggests that using the xiphoid process as a landmark could help improve electrode placement and increase successful cardioversion rates.
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Radiofrequency ablation of the hip: review.

Ann Palliat Med

July 2024

Department of Anesthesiology, University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA, USA; UVA Pain Management Center, Charlottesville, VA, USA.

Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of the articular branches of the femoral and obturator nerves (the innervation of the anterior capsule of the hip) is an emerging treatment for chronic hip pain. Body mass index (BMI) greater than 30, older age, large acetabular/femoral head bone marrow lesions, chronic widespread pain, depression, and female sex increase the risk of developing hip pain. Chronic hip pain is a common condition with a wide range of etiologies, including hip osteoarthritis (OA), labral tears, osteonecrosis, post total hip arthroplasty (THA), post-operative dislocation/fracture, and cancer.

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  • The anther-smut host-pathogen system has greatly contributed to understanding disease resistance, transmission, and evolution, revealing insights into sex ratios and fungi.
  • The authors reflect on their collaborative journey in studying this system since the 1980s, emphasizing the unpredictable nature of scientific progress filled with setbacks and breakthroughs.
  • They advocate for a reevaluation of the scientific method in ecology and evolution, highlighting the importance of integrating natural history with theoretical frameworks.
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Objectives: Monitoring resident trainees' patient outcomes is essential to improving surgical performance; however, resident-specific follow-up is rarely provided in the current surgical training environment. Whether there is a correlation between individual resident's surgical performance and patients' clinical outcomes remains undefined. In this study, we aimed to use risk-adjusted patient outcomes as an educational tool to track individual surgical trainee performance.

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  • Patients with esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula (EA-TEF) face various gastrointestinal complications, necessitating potential lifetime endoscopic monitoring.
  • There's growing interest in using pediatric unsedated transnasal endoscopy (TNE) as a safer, cost-effective alternative to traditional endoscopy for these patients.
  • The report highlights four cases where TNE was effectively utilized for monitoring and managing conditions like gastroesophageal reflux and eosinophilic esophagitis, supporting its use in routine screenings as per guidelines.
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Recent developments in molecular rotational resonance (MRR) spectroscopy that have enabled its use as an analytical technique for the precise determination of molecular structure are reviewed. In particular, its use in the differentiation of isomeric compounds-including regioisomers, stereoisomers and isotopic variants-is discussed. When a mixture of isomers, such as resulting from a chemical reaction, is analyzed, it is highly desired to be able to unambiguously identify the structures of each of the components present, as well as quantify them, without requiring complex sample preparation or reference standards.

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Do biological control agents adapt to local pest genotypes? A multiyear test across geographic scales.

Evol Appl

April 2024

United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service Tifton Georgia USA.

Parasite local adaptation has been a major focus of (co)evolutionary research on host-parasite interactions. Studies of wild host-parasite systems frequently find that parasites paired with local, sympatric host genotypes perform better than parasites paired with allopatric host genotypes. In contrast, there are few such tests in biological control systems to establish whether biological control parasites commonly perform better on sympatric pest genotypes.

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The effects of dune plant roots on loggerhead turtle () nest success.

Ecol Evol

April 2024

Sea Turtle Conservation and Research Program Mote Marine Laboratory Sarasota Florida USA.

Sand dunes are supported by the extensive root systems of dune plants that anchor the dune and protect it from erosion. While all plants that grow on the dunes support their structure, invasive plants can outcompete the native and non-native dune plants for resources such as nutrients, sunlight, and space to grow. During the summer, sea turtles lay nests on beaches and near dunes; however, their eggs and hatchlings are at risk of destruction and entrapment by dune plant root penetration.

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Background: Rilonacept, a once-weekly interleukin-1 alpha and beta cytokine trap, reduced pericarditis recurrence in the phase 3 study, RHAPSODY (Rilonacept Inhibition of Interleukin-1 Alpha and Beta for Recurrent Pericarditis: A Pivotal Symptomatology and Outcomes Study). The RHAPSODY long-term extension further explored recurrent pericarditis natural history and treatment duration decision-making during 24 additional months of open-label rilonacept treatment.

Methods And Results: Seventy-four patients commenced the long-term extension, with a median (maximum) total rilonacept duration of 22 (35) months.

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Key Clinical Message: Rhabdomyosarcoma of the female genital tract often involves the vagina and cervix. It usually occurs in infants and children. Such tumors are uncommon in the uterus, especially in adults.

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Introduction: Rhinoplasty is one of the most common cosmetic surgical procedures performed globally. Twitter, also known as "X," is used by both patients and physicians and has been studied as a useful tool for analyzing trends in healthcare. The public social media discourse of rhinoplasty has not been previously reported in the field of otolaryngology.

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