704 research outputs found

    Influences of obese (ob/ob) and diabetes (db/db) genotype mutations on lumber vertebral radiological and morphometric indices: Skeletal deformation associated with dysregulated systemic glucometabolism

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    BACKGROUND: Both diabetes and obesity syndromes are recognized to promote lumbar vertebral instability, premature osteodegeneration, exacerbate progressive osteoporosis and increase the propensity towards vertebral degeneration, instability and deformation in humans. METHODS: The influences of single-gene missense mutations, expressing either diabetes (db/db) or obese (ob/ob) metabolic syndromes on vertebral maturation and development in C57BL/KsJ mice were evaluated by radiological and macro-morphometric analysis of the resulting variances in osteodevelopment indices relative to control parameters between 8 and 16 weeks of age (syndrome onset @ 4 weeks), and the influences of low-dose 17-B-estradiol therapy on vertebral growth expression evaluated. RESULTS: Associated with the indicative genotypic obesity and hyper-glycemic/-insulinemic states, both db/db and ob/ob mutants demonstrated a significant (P ā‰¤ 0.05) elongation of total lumbar vertebrae column (VC) regional length, and individual lumbar vertebrae (LV1-5) lengths, relative to control VC and LV parameters. In contrast, LV1-5 width indices were suppressed in db/db and ob/ob mutants relative to control LV growth rates. Between 8 and 16 weeks of age, the suppressed LV1-5 width indices were sustained in both genotype mutant groups relative to control osteomaturation rates. The severity of LV1-5 width osteosuppression correlated with the severe systemic hyperglycemic and hypertriglyceridemic conditions sustained in ob/ob and db/db mutants. Low-dose 17-B-estradiol therapy (E2-HRx: 1.0 ug/ 0.1 ml oil s.c/3.5 days), initiated at 4 weeks of age (i.e., initial onset phase of db/db and ob/ob expressions) re-established control LV 1ā€“5 width indices without influencing VC or LV lengths in db/db groups. CONCLUSION: These data demonstrate that the abnormal systemic endometabolic states associated with the expression of db/db and ob/ob genomutation syndromes suppress LV 1ā€“5 width osteomaturation rates, but enhanced development related VC and LV length expression, relative to control indices in a progressive manner similar to recognized human metabolic syndrome conditions. Therapeutic E2 modulation of the hyperglycemic component of diabetes-obesity syndrome protected the regional LV from the mutation-induced osteopenic width-growth suppression. These data suggest that these genotype mutation models may prove valuable for the evaluation of therapeutic methodologies suitable for the treatment of human diabetes- or obesity-influenced, LV degeneration-linked human conditions, which demonstrate amelioration from conventional replacement therapies following diagnosis of systemic syndrome-induced LV osteomaturation-associated deformations

    ā€œDonā€™t Shoot The Unicorn!ā€ Finding Transformative Happiness and Resilience Through Developing Your ā€œAnditudeā€!

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    As a care provider and leader in your community, you understand the challenge of keeping your own resilience high, and maintaining an attitude of hope. This transformational, uplifting program will equip you to develop the skill of happiness, empowering you to lead youths by demonstrating positive approaches in your own life, and impacting them with ā€œInfectious Resilienceā€ as they learn to adopt your Anditude

    You Live, You Lose: Supporting Youths on Their Journeys in the Land of the Loss

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    As youths journey through life, they experience various personally significant losses and associated grief that can negatively impact their physical/mental health, developmental trajectory, and academic success. Framed in a broad-based perspective of loss, this presentation will acquaint participants with various loss-related constructs and events, potential associated physical, intellectual, emotional, and social effects of loss experiences, and supportive interventions and resources

    Childhood adversity and parent perceptions of child resilience

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    Abstract Background Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) negatively impact health throughout the life course. For children exposed to ACEs, resilience may be particularly important. However, the literature regarding resilience, particularly the self-regulation aspect of resilience, is not often described in children with ACEs. Additionally, family and community factors that might help promote resilience in childhood may be further elucidated. We aimed to describe the relationship between ACEs and parent-perceived resilience in children and examine the child, family, and community-level factors associated with child resilience. Methods Using the US-based, 2011ā€“2012 National Survey of Childrenā€™s Health, we examined adverse childhood experiences (NSCH-ACEs) as the main exposure. Affirmative answers to adverse experiences generated a total parent-reported NSCH-ACE score. Bivariate and multivariable logistic regression models were constructed for parent-perceived child resilience and its association with ACEs, controlling for child, family, and neighborhood-level factors. Results Among 62,200 US children 6ā€“17Ā years old, 47% had 0 ACEs, 26% had 1 ACE, 19% had 2ā€“3 ACEs, and 8% had 4 or more ACEs. Child resilience was associated with ACEs in a dose-dependent relationship: as ACEs increased, the probability of resilience decreased. This relationship persisted after controlling for child, family, and community factors. Specific community factors, such as neighborhood safety (pā€‰<ā€‰.001), neighborhood amenities (e.g., libraries, parks) (pā€‰<ā€‰.01) and mentorship (pā€‰<ā€‰.05), were associated with significantly higher adjusted probabilities of resilience, when compared to peersĀ without these specificĀ community factors. Conclusions While ACEs are common and may be difficult to prevent, there may be opportunities for health care providers, child welfare professionals, and policymakers to strengthen children and families by supporting community-based activities, programs, and policies that promote resilience in vulnerable children and communities in which they live.https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144527/1/12887_2018_Article_1170.pd

    Preā€registration of latent fingerprints based on orientation field

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    Different kinetics govern dopaminergic transmission in the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and striatum: an in vivo voltammetric study

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    The regulation of extracellular dopamine (DA) concentrations was examined and compared in vivo in four projection fields of mesotelencephalic dopaminergic neurons with fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fiber microelectrodes. Transient electrical stimulation of ascending DA fibers in a near physiological range of frequencies (10-20 Hz) elicited similar levels of extracellular DA in the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), basal lateral amygdaloid nucleus (BAN), caudate-putamen (CP), and nucleus accumbens (NAc) despite the documented 90-fold disparity in DA tissue levels and terminal density. However, marked differences were observed in the dynamics and overall frequency dependence of the evoked synaptic overflow of DA. These differences are due to the significantly different rates of release and uptake found in each of the four regions. For example, rate constants for the release of the four regions. For example, rate constants for the release and uptake of DA were similar in the MPFC and BAN but approximately 8 and 50 times less, respectively, than that in the CP and NAc. When the parameters were normalized to endogenous DA tissue content, a unique picture emerged: compared to all other regions, relative release was 10-fold greater in the MPFC while relative uptake was at least 10 times less in the BAN. The results further differentiate the functional characteristics of mesotelencephalic dopaminergic systems and demonstrate the regiospecific nature of DA neural transmission in the brain. In addition, the regulation of extracellular DA levels in the MPFC and BAN is suitable for the "long-range" transfer of chemical information in the brain and is consistent with a hypothesis of extrasynaptic neurotransmission

    Quality Improvement in Pediatric Head Trauma with PECARN Rules Implementation as Computerized Decision Support

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    Background: For the 1.4 million emergency department (ED) visits for traumatic brain injury (TBI) annually in the United States, computed tomography (CT) may be over utilized. The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network developed 2 prediction rules to identify children at very low risk of clinically important TBI. We implemented these prediction rules as decision support within our electronic health record (EHR) to reduce CT. Objective: To test EHR decision support implementation in reducing CT rates for head trauma at 2 pediatric EDs. Methods: We compared monthly CT rates 1 year before [preimplementation (PRE)] and 1 year after [postimplementation (POST)] decision support implementation. The primary outcome was change in CT use rate over time, measured using statistical process control charts. Secondary analyses included multivariate comparisons of PRE to POST. Balancing measures included ED length of stay and returns within 7 days after ED release. Results: There were 2,878 patients with head trauma (1,329 PRE and 1,549 POST) included. Statistical process control charts confirmed decreased CT rates over time POST that was not present PRE. Secondary statistical analyses confirmed that CT scan utilization rates decreased from 26.8% to 18.9% (unadjusted Odds Ratio [OR], 0.64; 95% Confidence Interval [CI], 0.53 -0.76; adjusted OR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.58 -0.86). Length of stay was unchanged. There was no increase in returns within 7 days and no significant missed diagnoses. Conclusions: Implementation of EHR-integrated decision support for children with head trauma presenting to the ED is associated with a decrease in CT utilization and no increase in significant safety events

    Estrogen Modulation of Uterine Adrenergic-Cholinergic Interaction: Effects on Vasoactivity and Adrenergic Receptors in the Guinea Pig1

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    ABSTRACT ABBREVIATIONS: UBF, uterine blood flow; NE, norepinephrine; DHA, dihydroalprenolol; DHE, dihydroergocryptine; OVX, ovanectomized; ACh, acetylchohine; 5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine

    The Ursinus Weekly, May 9, 1949

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    Ursinus to acquire fad of lettuce box by Chatlos, Carson ā€¢ Pageant, play to highlight annual May Day events ā€¢ Weekly board selects Leeming as \u2749-\u2750 editor ā€¢ News writer wins mention for essay in national contest ā€¢ Parliament speaker ends forum season with British theme ā€¢ WSGA sets banquet to install officers ā€¢ Lincoln group plans Y vespers program ā€¢ Hospitality crew set to serve visitors over gala week-end ā€¢ Junior class to elect officers Wednesday for last college year ā€¢ MSGA schedules elections for class representatives ā€¢ Dressler to address pre-meds on tuberculosis at last meeting ā€¢ Weekly takes peek at past and future of collegiate male ā€¢ Ursinus claims Missouri pianist ā€¢ Ursinus bows 80-46; Kennedy sets record ā€¢ Bearettes win 15-2 in three hit game against Bryn Mawr ā€¢ Bears trip F&M 7-3 as Stauffer hurls ā€¢ Bruins drop close meet with Albright speedsters ā€¢ Netmen fail to win in two more tries ā€¢ Rain causes delay in campus softball; four games played ā€¢ Ursinus selects Spangler to assist coaching staff ā€¢ Links squad bows to Garnet, Albright ā€¢ Bears elect to join grid hall of fame ā€¢ Curtain rings down on last group play ā€¢ Freshmen produce atmosphere with moonlight mood propshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1617/thumbnail.jp
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