12 research outputs found
How Can I Be of Use to You?
The fall after I graduated from college, I moved to Seattle to work as an unpaid assistant for the Egyptian feminist Mansoura Metwally. Mansoura is famous in certain intellectual circles in Europe and North America and has been notorious in Egypt itself since the â70s, when she published a string of worksânovels, books of criticismâthat challenged patriarchal practices and landed her, several times, in jail. She had a shock of white hair and bad teeth, wore plaid shirts every day, and dressed from the waist down like a serf out of a Turgenev short story
Kafka at the West Bank checkpoint: de-normalizing the Palestinian encounter before the law
The checkpoint has emerged as a quintessential trope within the contemporary Palestinian imagination, to such an extent that âcheckpoint narrativesâ have arguably come to assume a dangerously ânormalizedâ status as everyday, even iconic features of Palestinian existence. Turning to the films Route 181 by Michel Khleifi and Eyal Sivan, and like twenty impossibles by Annemarie Jacir, this article explores how alternative representations (and theorizations) of checkpoint encounter might serve to âde-normalizeâ the checkpoint in a way that invites us to interrogate the very nature of the checkpoint apparatus in itself, including the nature of the âlawâ that it represents. Mobilizing the critical paradigms of the âstate of exceptionâ and âhomo sacerâ drawn from the theoretical work of Giorgio Agamben and the literary work of Franz Kafka, the article argues that apprehension of the enduring oddity and abnormality of the checkpoint serves as a vital mode of critical resistance to the policies of âspatio-cideâ, âsecuritizationâ and colonialism exercised at the hands of the State of Israel through the checkpoint mechanism
A Map of Home
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/diversefamilies/1824/thumbnail.jp
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Rapid Rescue Treatment with Diazepam Nasal Spray Leads to Faster Seizure Cluster Termination in Epilepsy: An Exploratory Post Hoc Cohort Analysis.
INTRODUCTION: Although prompt treatment of status epilepticus is standard of care, the effect of timing of rescue therapy administration for seizure clusters in epilepsy remains unknown. Seizure clusters are a rare but clinically important condition, and benzodiazepines are the cornerstone rescue therapy for seizure clusters in epilepsy. We characterized temporal patterns from a large dataset of treated seizure clusters in the safety study of diazepam nasal spray. METHODS: This post hoc analysis used timing data of treated seizure clusters recorded by care partners and patients in seizure diaries during a 1-year safety study. Data analysis used time from seizure start to administration of diazepam. RESULTS: From 4466 observations, 3225 had data meeting criteria for analysis. Overall, median times from seizure start to dose administration, dose administration to seizure termination, and total seizure duration were 2, 3, and 7 min, respectively. In seizure clusters treated inâ<â5 min (median 1.0 min), median time from dose to seizure termination was 2.0 min, and median total seizure duration was 4.0 min. Among seizure clusters treated inââ„â5 min (median 10.0 min), median time to seizure termination was 10.0 min, and median total seizure duration was 23.0 min. Previously published safety results reported that over a mean participation of 1.5 years, 82.2% of patients hadââ„â1 treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) irrespective of relationship to treatment, including 30.7% with serious TEAEs; 18.4% had TEAEs deemed at least possibly related to the study drug, none of which were serious. There were no events of cardiorespiratory depression. CONCLUSION: Echoing the importance of early use of benzodiazepines in status epilepticus, the findings from this exploratory analysis of patients with refractory epilepsy and frequent seizure clusters identify a potential benefit of early diazepam nasal spray treatment leading to faster seizure resolution within the seizure cluster. Trial Registration Information: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02721069 ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02721069 )
Immunogenetic Profiling of SLE and LN among Jordanian Patients
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a prolonged inflammatory autoimmune disease, which is characterized by a high titer of serological autoantibodies. Interactions between environmental and genetic factors play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of SLE. Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) genes, namely HLA-class II genes, are one of the main candidate genes that increase susceptibility to SLE. The aim of this study was to investigate, for the first time, the association of HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 genes among Jordanian patients diagnosed with SLE and Lupus Nephritis (LN) using the Polymerase Chain Reaction-Sequence-Specific Primer (PCR-SSP) technique. This study showed that SLE is positively associated with DRB1*0301, DRB1*1101, DRB1*1102 and HLA-DQB1*0601. Furthermore, HLA-DRB1*0301, DRB1*1101, HLA-DRB1*1501 and HLA-DQB1*0601 were found to be linked to SLE patients with LN. In addition, haplotypes HLA-DRB1*0301/DQB1*0201 and HLA-DRB1*1501/DQB1*0601 were found to be linked to SLE and LN. Our findings may serve as possible predictive markers for early screening for LN risk in SLE patients. In light of these results, the role of HLA gene polymorphisms may help in understanding the clinical course, prognosis of the disease and developing better treatment strategies for SLE patients. In addition, it may help in early diagnosis, prevention, intervention and management of the disease
Resting-state functional MRI connectivity impact on epilepsy surgery plan and surgical candidacy: prospective clinical work
OBJECTIVE: The authors\u27 goal was to prospectively quantify the impact of resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) on pediatric epilepsy surgery planning. METHODS: Fifty-one consecutive patients (3 months to 20 years old) with intractable epilepsy underwent rs-fMRI for presurgical evaluation. The team reviewed the following available diagnostic data: video-electroencephalography (n = 51), structural MRI (n = 51), FDG-PET (n = 42), magnetoencephalography (n = 5), and neuropsychological testing (n = 51) results to formulate an initial surgery plan blinded to the rs-fMRI findings. Subsequent to this discussion, the connectivity results were revealed and final recommendations were established. Changes between pre- and post-rs-fMRI treatment plans were determined, and changes in surgery recommendation were compared using McNemar\u27s test. RESULTS: Resting-state fMRI was successfully performed in 50 (98%) of 51 cases and changed the seizure onset zone localization in 44 (88%) of 50 patients. The connectivity results prompted 6 additional studies, eliminated the ordering of 11 further diagnostic studies, and changed the intracranial monitoring plan in 10 cases. The connectivity results significantly altered surgery planning with the addition of 13 surgeries, but it did not eliminate planned surgeries (p = 0.003). Among the 38 epilepsy surgeries performed, the final surgical approach changed due to rs-fMRI findings in 22 cases (58%), including 8 (28%) of 29 in which extraoperative direct electrical stimulation mapping was averted. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the impact of rs-fMRI connectivity results on the decision-making for pediatric epilepsy surgery by providing new information about the location of eloquent cortex and the seizure onset zone. Additionally, connectivity results may increase the proportion of patients considered eligible for surgery while optimizing the need for further testing