92 research outputs found

    STRATEGIES FOR STRENGTHENING THE GREAT PLAINS ORAL HEALTH WORKFORCE

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    The looming shortage of dentists in rural communities throughout the Great Plains is a well-documented concern. Access to care can be a problem, and the lack of dental care is generally most acute among those with low income, those with complex health issues, and minorities. Studies are finding that there are significant associations between poor oral health and the occurrence of systemic diseases or problems. Examples include cardiovascular disease, stroke, and preterm delivery of low-birth weight infants. The two primary diseases of the oral cavity-dental caries and periodontal disease-are not only treatable but also preventable with adequate care. The University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) College of Dentistry (COD) is committed to strengthening the rural dental workforce of the Great Plains by focusing upon rural recruitment strategies, service learning educational opportunities in rural communities, and strong support for dentists who practice in remote locations. Working closely with Nebraska and neighboring states, the UNMC College of Dentistry is striving to improve the oral health and economic vitality of small communities throughout the Great Plains region

    Post-Traumatic Hallux Valgus: A Modified Surgical Technique

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    Post-traumatic hallux valgus, a turf toe variant, is a rare, yet limiting injury. According to the literature, the deformity has been associated with acute medial collateral ligament tears, turf toe variant injuries, Lisfranc injury patterns, and first metatarsal fractures. There have been few documented cases of post-traumatic hallux valgus secondary to medial collateral ligament tears, and the treatment has been variable. Some authors have described direct end-to-end repair of the ligament to address the deformity, while others have described a modified McBride bunionectomy involving a Silver bunionectomy, lateral soft tissue release, and medial capsular and ligamentous repair. We propose a modified technique similar to the modified McBride bunionectomy, however, with the use of an all-suture anchor in the medial capsular and ligamentous repair. Our belief is that the all-suture anchor will allow for a stronger repair that will meet the physical demands of everyday ambulation and athletic participation. We used this technique in an individual who had evidence of a medial ligamentous complex injury of the hallux on MRI and failed conservative management. Postoperatively, the patient is immobilized until they can begin working on range of motion, strengthening, and finally to achieve return to full activity and sports

    AKAP7 Regulates CaM Kinase Activation in MCF-7 Cells

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    Abstract Estrogen (E2) activates calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (CaM Kinases) in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. In particular E2 activates a CaM KK, CaM KI, and ERK pathway to promote proliferation. CaM Kinase activation of ERK may be blocked by PKA in certain cell types through direct phosphorylation and inhibition of CaM KK. The ability of PKA to phosphorylate its cellular targets may be dictated by protein kinase A anchoring proteins (AKAPs). Hormones that elevate cAMP and activate PKA may utilize AKAPs to regulate signal transduction. Our goal was to evaluate the role of AKAPs in regulating E2 activation of the CaM KK and CaM KI pathway in MCF-7 cells. We also examined the ability of vitamin D (VitD) working through cAMP and PKA to block CaM KK signaling in breast cancer cells. Our results suggest that E2 activates CaM KK and CaM KI within 5 minutes. VitD promoted PKA-dependent phosphorylation of CaM KK. VitD and epinephrine treatment of cells triggered a potent increase in cAMP levels. Interestingly, purified GST-RII pulled down both CaM KK and CaM KI. Similarly, purified AKAP7 but not AKAP5 bound CaM KK and CaM KI an effect that is enhanced with E2. Endogenous AKAP7 and CaM KK associated in E2-stimulated but not in VitD-treated cells and VitD also blocked CaM KK activation in MCF-7 cells. Our results suggest that VitD blocks E2 activation of CaM Kinases and their association with AKAP7 in MCF-7 cells

    Regulatory Oversight and Safety of Probiotic Use

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    Saccharomyces boulardii probiotics should be used with caution for management of Clostridium difficile infections in hospitalized patients

    Effect of pre-weaning diet on the ruminal archaeal, bacterial, and fungal communities of dairy calves.

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    At birth, calves display an underdeveloped rumen that eventually matures into a fully functional rumen as a result of solid food intake and microbial activity. However, little is known regarding the gradual impact of pre-weaning diet on the establishment of the rumen microbiota. Here, we employed next-generation sequencing to investigate the effects of the inclusion of starter concentrate (M: milk-fed vs. MC: milk plus starter concentrate fed) on archaeal, bacterial and anaerobic fungal communities in the rumens of 45 crossbred dairy calves across pre-weaning development (7, 28, 49, and 63 days). Our results show that archaeal, bacterial, and fungal taxa commonly found in the mature rumen were already established in the rumens of calves at 7 days old, regardless of diet. This confirms that microbiota colonization occurs in the absence of solid substrate. However, diet did significantly impact some microbial taxa. In the bacterial community, feeding starter concentrate promoted greater diversity of bacterial taxa known to degrade readily fermentable carbohydrates in the rumen (e.g., Megasphaera, Sharpea, and Succinivribrio). Shifts in the ruminal bacterial community also correlated to changes in fermentation patterns that favored the colonization of Methanosphaera sp. A4 in the rumen of MC calves. In contrast, M calves displayed a bacterial community dominated by taxa able to utilize milk nutrients (e.g., Lactobacillus, Bacteroides, and Parabacteroides). In both diet groups, the dominance of these milk-associated taxa decreased with age, suggesting that diet and age simultaneously drive changes in the structure and abundance of bacterial communities in the developing rumen. Changes in the composition and abundance of archaeal communities were attributed exclusively to diet, with more highly abundant Methanosphaera and less abundant Methanobrevibacter in MC calves. Finally, the fungal community was dominated by members of the genus SK3 and Caecomyces. Relative anaerobic fungal abundances did not change significantly in response to diet or age, likely due to high inter-animal variation and the low fiber content of starter concentrate. This study provides new insights into the colonization of archaea, bacteria, and anaerobic fungi communities in pre-ruminant calves that may be useful in designing strategies to promote colonization of target communities to improve functional development

    Bacterial Communities in the Alpaca Gastrointestinal Tract Vary With Diet and Body Site

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    Gut -associated microbes (‘gut microbiota’) impact the nutrition of their hosts, especially in ruminants and pseudoruminants that consume high-cellulose diets. Examples include the pseudoruminant alpaca. To better understand how body site and diet influence the alpaca microbiota, we performed three 16S rRNA gene surveys. First, we surveyed the compartment 1 (C1), duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, and large intestine (LI) of alpacas fed a grass hay (GH; tall fescue) or alfalfa hay (AH) diet for 30 days. Second, we performed a C1 survey of alpacas fed a series of 2-week mixed grass hay (MGH) diets supplemented with ∼25% dry weight barley, quinoa, amaranth, or soybean meal. Third, we examined the microbial differences of alpacas with normal versus poor body condition. Samples from GH- and AH-fed alpacas grouped by diet and body site but none of the four supplements significantly altered C1 microbiota composition, relative to each other, and none of the OTUs were differentially abundant between alpacas with normal versus poor body conditions. Taken together, the findings of a diet- and body-site specific alpaca microbiota are consistent with previous findings in ruminants and other mammals, but we provide no evidence to link changes in alpaca body condition with variation in microbiota relative abundance or identity

    Hepatitis B Sero-Prevalence and Risk Behaviors Among Immigrant Men in a Population-Based Household Survey in Low-Income Neighborhoods of Northern California

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    Background Despite an effective vaccine, 60,000 new HBV infections were reported in the US in 2004; 95% in adults. We evaluate HBV sero-prevalence, risk behaviors and self-reported vaccination among Latino immigrant, Asian immigrant and US born low income men in five northern California counties. Methods Population based, cross sectional survey of HBV sero-prevalence and risk behaviors in men aged 18 to 35 years. Results Among 1,512 men screened, Asian immigrants were most likely to have had prior HBV infection (15.1%) and chronic infection (3.8%) compared to US born (prior 5.1%, chronic 0.6%) and Latino immigrant men (prior 2.0%, chronic 0.3%.) Reported HBV vaccination was lowest for Latino immigrants (12%) compared to Asian immigrants and US born men (35% in both.) Latino immigrants reported less educational attainment, medical insurance coverage and access to a physician in the last six months. Discussion Healthcare providers should routinely screen Asian immigrants for HBV regardless of their self reported vaccination status. Latino immigrants may comprise an important group of under-vaccinated, at risk persons in California. HBV testing and vaccination of immigrants soon after US arrival should be encouraged

    Justify your alpha

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    Benjamin et al. proposed changing the conventional “statistical significance” threshold (i.e.,the alpha level) from p ≤ .05 to p ≤ .005 for all novel claims with relatively low prior odds. They provided two arguments for why lowering the significance threshold would “immediately improve the reproducibility of scientific research.” First, a p-value near .05provides weak evidence for the alternative hypothesis. Second, under certain assumptions, an alpha of .05 leads to high false positive report probabilities (FPRP2 ; the probability that a significant finding is a false positive

    Justify your alpha

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    In response to recommendations to redefine statistical significance to p ≤ .005, we propose that researchers should transparently report and justify all choices they make when designing a study, including the alpha level

    OEG implantation and step training enhance hindlimb-stepping ability in adult spinal transected rats

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    This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Brain following peer review. The definitive publisher-authenticated version Brain (2008), 131 (1): 264-276. is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1093/brain/awm267Numerous treatment strategies for spinal cord injury seek to maximize recovery of function and two strategies that show substantial promise are olfactory bulb-derived olfactory ensheathing glia (OEG) transplantation and treadmill step training. In this study we re-examined the issue of the effectiveness of OEG implantation but used objective, quantitative measures of motor performance to test if there is a complementary effect of long-term step training and olfactory bulb-derived OEG implantation. We studied complete mid-thoracic spinal cord transected adult female rats and compared four experimental groups: media-untrained, media-trained, OEG-untrained and OEG-trained. To assess the extent of hindlimb locomotor recovery at 4 and 7 months post-transection we used three quantitative measures of stepping ability: plantar stepping performance until failure, joint movement shape and movement frequency compared to sham controls. OEG transplantation alone significantly increased the number of plantar steps performed at 7 months post-transection, while training alone had no effect at either time point. Only OEG-injected rats plantar placed their hindpaws for more than two steps by the 7-month endpoint of the study. OEG transplantation combined with training resulted in the highest percentage of spinal rats per group that plantar stepped, and was the only group to significantly improve its stepping abilities between the 4- and 7-month evaluations. Additionally, OEG transplantation promoted tissue sparing at the transection site, regeneration of noradrenergic axons and serotonergic axons spanning the injury site. Interestingly, the caudal stump of media- and OEG-injected rats contained a similar density of serotonergic axons and occasional serotonin-labelled interneurons. These data demonstrate that olfactory bulb-derived OEG transplantation improves hindlimb stepping in paraplegic rats and further suggest that task-specific training may enhance this OEG effect.Funding from the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation (PA-1-0102-2, PAC1-0102-2, PEP) and NINDS (R21NS42000-01, PEP; RO1NS54159, VRE).Peer reviewe
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