151 research outputs found

    Third Grade Reading Performance and Teacher Perceptions of the Scott Foresman Reading Street Program in Title I Schools in South Mobile County

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    The purpose of this study was to determine if third grade reading performance of students enrolled in south Mobile County Title I schools improved as a result of the first year implementation of the Scott Foresman Reading Street program. Attempts were also made to identify predictors that may improve future reading performance and data were obtained regarding the perceptions and overall satisfaction of the certified instructional personnel in grades K-5 employed in the Mobile County Public School System during the 2009-2010 school year, the first school year following the initial full year of program implementation. Reading performance was measured using the Stanford Achievement Test-I Oth Edition. Independent variables included scores from the Alabama Reading and Mathematics Test, OLSAT School Ability Index, Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills, and annual absences. Research findings indicated no significant differences between the performance third grade participants before and after the implementation of the Reading Street curriculum. A review of the literature revealed that generally speaking, reading achievement outcomes did not immediately increase following the first or second year of curriculum change and implementation. It is suspected that the findings of this study may be characteristic of the curvilinear nature of reading curriculum implementation which has been reported in the literature. Statistical analyses revealed no specific predictors within the data that may improve future student performance within the participating population. In addition, the questionnaire data indicated that certified instructional personnel overall were very satisfied with the new program

    The Effects of Complementary Hippotherapy for Children with Austism Spectrum Disorder

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    Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is an intricate and complex disorder that continues to grow in its prevalence year after year. The disorder is based on decreased social communication with prevalent stereotypical behaviors and problems in sensory processing. Due to the disorder diagnosis based on a spectrum, each child is different in their severity, and thus requires individualized forms of therapies and treatments. The cause of ASD is unknown, which makes the treatment difficult to standardize. Desperate to find a regimen that benefits their child’s ability to function more successfully, more and more parents are utilizing complementary alternative medicine (CAM). The problem with CAM is lack of evidence that supports using CAM practice. One example of CAM is hippotherapy, which is a type of intervention used by physical, occupational and speech therapists which uses the movements of a horse to address a patient’s impairments physically, emotionally and neurologically. Hippotherapy has been used since the 1960s for a number of disorders. This systematic literature review examines the effects of hippotherapy for children with ASD in regards to increasing social communication and decreasing stereotypical behaviors. The conclusion of the review resulted in conflicting evidence regarding the efficacy of hippotherapy for children with ASD. This inconclusive lack of evidence is generally due to the lack of standardized measurement scales or treatment plans used during each session and small sample sizes

    Utilization of TEG and Platelet Mapping to Guide Resuscitation, in the Setting of Massive Transfusion

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    Presented as a poster at Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists Annual Meeting 2021

    The clinical application of PET/CT: a contemporary review

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    The combination of positron emission tomography (PET) scanners and x-ray computed tomography (CT) scanners into a single PET/CT scanner has resulted in vast improvements in the diagnosis of disease, particularly in the field of oncology. A decade on from the publication of the details of the first PET/CT scanner, we review the technology and applications of the modality. We examine the design aspects of combining two different imaging types into a single scanner, and the artefacts produced such as attenuation correction, motion and CT truncation artefacts. The article also provides a discussion and literature review of the applications of PET/CT to date, covering detection of tumours, radiotherapy treatment planning, patient management, and applications external to the field of oncology

    Stabilisation of the [SiH6]2– Anion within a Supramolecular Assembly

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    The hypercoordinate [SiH6]2– anion is not stable in solution. Here, we report the room temperature, solution stable molecular [SiH6]2– complex, [{KCa(NON)(OEt2)}2][SiH6] (NON = 4,5-bis(2,6-diisopropylanilido)-2,7-di-tertbutyl-9,9-dimethyl-xanthene)), where the [SiH6]2– anion is stabilised within a supramolecular assembly that mimics the solid-state environment of the anion in the lattice of K2SiH6. Solution-state reactivity of the complex towards carbon monoxide, benzaldehyde, azobenzene and acetonitrile is reported, yielding a range of reduction and C–C coupled products

    Anionic Magnesium and Calcium Hydrides : Transforming CO into Unsaturated Disilyl Ethers

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    OA-artikkeli, mutta ladattaessa tulee hieman erinäköinen versio (esim. ei lisenssiä). Tallennettu kuitenkin OA-artikkelina.The synthesis, characterisation and reactivity of two isostructural anionic magnesium and calcium complexes is reported. By X-ray and neutron diffraction techniques, the anionic hydrides are shown to exist as dimers, held together by a range of interactions between the two anions and two bridging potassium cations. Unlike the vast proportion of previously reported dimeric group 2 hydrides, which have hydrides that bridge two group 2 centres, here the hydrides are shown to be “terminal”, but stabilised by interactions with the potassium cations. Both anionic hydrides were found to insert and couple CO under mild reaction conditions to give the corresponding group 2 cis-ethenediolate complexes. These cis-ethenediolate complexes were found to undergo salt elimination reactions with silyl chlorides, allowing access to small unsaturated disilyl ethers with a high percentage of their mass originating from the C1 source CO.Peer reviewe

    Installing the "magic methyl"- C-H methylation in synthesis

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    The selective and efficient C-H methylation of sp2 and sp3 carbon centres has become a powerful transformation in the synthetic toolbox. Due to the potential for profound changes to physicochemical properties attributed to the installation of a "Magic Methyl" group at a strategic site in a lead compound, such techniques have become highly desirable in modern drug discovery and synthesis programmes. This review will cover the diverse techniques that have been employed to enable the selective installation of the C-Me bond in a wide range of chemical structures, from simple building blocks to complex drug-like architectures

    Naturalistic driving measures of route selection associate with resting state networks in older adults

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    Our objective was to identify functional brain changes that associate with driving behaviors in older adults. Within a cohort of 64 cognitively normal adults (age 60+), we compared naturalistic driving behavior with resting state functional connectivity using machine learning. Functional networks associated with the ability to interpret and respond to external sensory stimuli and the ability to multi-task were associated with measures of route selection. Maintenance of these networks may be important for continued preservation of driving abilities

    Key Lessons Learned from Moffitt's Molecular Tumor Board: The Clinical Genomics Action Committee Experience

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    The increasing practicality of genomic sequencing technology has led to its incorporation into routine clinical practice. Successful identification and targeting of driver genomic alterations that provide proliferative and survival advantages to tumor cells have led to approval and ongoing development of several targeted cancer therapies. Within many major cancer centers, molecular tumor boards are constituted to shepherd precision medicine into clinical practice

    Activator protein transcription factors coordinate human IL-33 expression from noncanonical promoters in chronic airway disease

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    IL-33 is a cytokine central to type 2 immune pathology in chronic airway disease. This cytokine is abundantly expressed in the respiratory epithelium and increased in disease, but how expression is regulated is undefined. Here we show that increased IL33 expression occurs from multiple noncanonical promoters in human chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and it facilitates production of alternatively spliced isoforms in airway cells. We found that phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) can activate IL33 promoters through protein kinase C in primary airway cells and lines. Transcription factor (TF) binding arrays combined with RNA interference identified activator protein (AP) TFs as regulators of baseline and induced IL33 promoter activity. ATAC-Seq and ChIP-PCR identified chromatin accessibility and differential TF binding as additional control points for transcription from noncanonical promoters. In support of a role for these TFs in COPD pathogenesis, we found that AP-2 (TFAP2A, TFAP2C) and AP-1 (FOS and JUN) family members are upregulated in human COPD specimens. This study implicates integrative and pioneer TFs in regulating IL33 promoters and alternative splicing in human airway basal cells. Our work reveals a potentially novel approach for targeting IL-33 in development of therapeutics for COPD
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