20 research outputs found

    Forging Information Literacy Skills With ANVIL: An Innovative Game-based Approach to Teaching Information Literacy

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    At the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, library staff developed a game-based tool to aid in the teaching of the concepts and skills associated with information literacy. Students watch a series of videos based on the ACRL standards for information literacy. After viewing the videos, students test their comprehension of a particular standard by playing a “bar-trivia” style game. Points are awarded for accuracy and speed, and scores are posted to a global leaderboard to promote friendly competition. This presentation will highlight the process behind game development, campus-wide implementation, and user and faculty response

    Enhancing tectonic and provenance information from detrital zircon studies: assessing terrane-scale sampling and grain-scale characterization

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    <p>Determining detrital zircon U–Pb ages has become the method of choice for single- mineral-based provenance studies focused on the identification of potential source regions of siliciclastic sediments. Advances in microanalytical methods have significantly accelerated the acquisition rate of U–Pb ages, thus allowing for more statistically significant zircon age datasets to be acquired than previously. However, several studies have demonstrated limitations of relying solely on detrital zircon as a provenance proxy. To further assess the utility of this provenance indicator we measured U–Pb ages of detrital zircon derived from modern sediment collected from the French Broad River and its tributaries that drain portions of the Appalachian Orogen in southeastern USA. The results demonstrate that significant detrital zircon age variations occur along the length of the river. The age variations suggest that characterization of entire sedimentary formations by analysis of single samples may be misleading and that a multiple-sample approach is required. In addition, by incorporating high-magnification cathodoluminescence images with Th/U for each detrital grain, a more robust interpretation can be made regarding zircon source. </p

    Functional Impairment Is a Risk Factor for Knee Replacement in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study.

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    Background: Debilitating pain associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) often leads patients to seek and complete total knee arthroplasty (TKA). To date, few studies have evaluated the relation of functional impairment to the risk of TKA, despite the fact that OA is associated with functional impairment. Questions/purposes: The purpose of our study was to (1) evaluate whether function as measured by WOMAC physical function subscale was associated with undergoing TKA; and (2) whether any such association varied by sex. Methods: The National Institutes of Health-funded Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) is an observational cohort study of persons aged 50 to 79&nbsp;years with or at high risk of symptomatic knee OA who were recruited from the community.&nbsp;All eligible subjects with complete data were included in this analysis. Our study population sample consisted of 2946 patients with 5796 knees; 1776 (60%) of patients were women. We performed a repeated-measures analysis using baseline WOMAC physical function score to predict the risk of TKA from baseline to 30&nbsp;months and WOMAC score at 30&nbsp;months to predict risk of incident TKA from 30&nbsp;months to 60&nbsp;months. We used generalized estimating equations to account for the correlation between two knees within an individual and across the two periods. We calculated relative risk (RR) of TKA over 30&nbsp;months by WOMAC function using a score of 0 to 5 as the referent in multiple binomial regressions with log link. Results: Those with the greatest functional impairment (WOMAC scores 40–68; 62 TKAs in 462 knee periods) had 15.5 times (95% confidence interval [CI], 7.6–31.8; p&nbsp;&lt;&nbsp;0.001) the risk of undergoing TKA over 30&nbsp;months compared with the referent group (12 TKAs in 3604 knee periods), adjusting for basic covariates, and 5.9 times (95% CI, 2.8–12.5; p&nbsp;&lt;&nbsp;0.001) the risk after further adjusting for knee pain severity. At every level of functional limitation, the RR for TKA for women was higher than for men, but interaction with sex did not reach significance after adjustment for covariates including ipsilateral pain (p&nbsp;=&nbsp;0.138). Conclusions: Baseline physical function appears to be an important element in patients considering TKA. Future studies should examine whether interventions to improve function can reduce the need for TKA. Level of Evidence: Level III, observational cohort study

    Varus and valgus alignment and incident and progressive knee osteoarthritis

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    OBJECTIVE: Varus and valgus alignment increase, respectively, medial and lateral tibiofemoral load. Alignment was associated with tibiofemoral osteoarthritis progression in previous studies; an effect on risk of incident osteoarthritis is less certain. We tested whether alignment influences the risk of incident and progressive radiographic tibiofemoral osteoarthritis. METHODS: In an observational, longitudinal study of the MOST (Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study) cohort, full-limb x-rays to measure alignment were acquired at baseline and knee x-rays were acquired at baseline and 30 months. Varus alignment was defined as ≤ 178° and valgus as ≥ 182°. Using logistic regression and GEE, we examined the association of baseline alignment and incident osteoarthritis at 30 months (in knees without osteoarthritis at baseline), and alignment and osteoarthritis progression (in knees with baseline osteoarthritis). All analyses were adjusted for age, gender, BMI, knee injury, laxity, and extensor strength, with neutral knees as referent. RESULTS: 2958 knees (1752 participants) were without osteoarthritis at baseline. Varus (adj. OR 1.49, 95% CI 1.06, 2.10) but not valgus alignment was associated with incident osteoarthritis. 1307 knees (950 participants) had osteoarthritis at baseline. Varus alignment was associated with a greater risk of medial osteoarthritis progression (adj. OR 3.59, 95% CI 2.62, 4.92) and a reduced risk of lateral progression, and valgus with a greater risk of lateral progression (adj. OR 4.85, 95% CI 3.17, 7.42) and a reduced risk of medial progression. CONCLUSION: Varus but not valgus alignment increased the risk of incident tibiofemoral osteoarthritis. In knees with osteoarthritis, varus and valgus alignment each increased the risk of progression in the biomechanically stressed compartment and reduced the risk of progression in the unloaded compartment

    The role of varus and valgus alignment in the initial development of knee cartilage damage by MRI: The MOST study

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    OBJECTIVE: Varus and valgus alignment are associated with progression of knee osteoarthritis, but their role in incident disease is less certain. Radiographic measures of incident knee osteoarthritis may be capturing early progression rather than disease development. We tested the hypothesis: in knees with normal cartilage morphology by MRI, varus is associated with incident medial cartilage damage and valgus with incident lateral damage. METHODS: In MOST, a prospective study of persons at risk for or with knee osteoarthritis, baseline full-limb x-rays and baseline and 30-month MRIs were acquired. In knees with normal baseline cartilage morphology in all tibiofemoral subregions, we used logistic regression with GEE to examine the association between alignment and incident cartilage damage adjusting for age, gender, BMI, laxity, meniscal tear, and extrusion. RESULTS: Of 1881 knees, 293 from 256 persons met criteria. Varus vs. non-varus was associated with incident medial damage (adjusted OR 3.59, 95% CI: 1.59, 8.10), as was varus vs. neutral, with evidence of a dose effect (adjusted OR 1.38/1° varus, 95% CI: 1.19, 1.59). Findings held even excluding knees with medial meniscal damage. Valgus was not associated with incident lateral damage. Varus and valgus were associated with a reduced risk of incident lateral and medial damage, respectively. CONCLUSION: In knees with normal cartilage morphology, varus was associated with incident cartilage damage in the medial compartment, and varus and valgus with a reduced risk of incident damage in the less loaded compartment. These results support that varus increases the risk for initial development of knee osteoarthritis

    Consistency of knee pain and risk of knee replacement: The multicenter osteoarthritis study

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    OBJECTIVE: To examine whether the consistency or persistence of knee pain, in addition to its severity, predicts incident total knee replacement (TKR). METHODS: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) is a longitudinal study of persons aged 50 to 79 years with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis or at high risk of disease. Subjects were queried about the presence of knee pain on most days of the previous 30 days (i.e., frequent knee pain; FKP) at 2 timepoints: a telephone screen followed by a clinic visit (median separation 4 weeks). We defined a knee as having “consistent pain” if the subject answered positively to the FKP question at both timepoints, “inconsistent pain” if FKP was positive at only one timepoint, or as “no FKP” if negative at both. We examined the association between consistent FKP and risk of TKR using multiple binomial regression with generalized estimating equations. RESULTS: In 3026 persons (mean age 63 yrs, mean body mass index 30.4), 2979 knees (50%) had no FKP at baseline, 1279 knees (21.5%) had inconsistent FKP, and 1696 knees (28.5%) had consistent FKP. Risk of TKR over 30 months was 0.8%, 2.6%, and 8.8% for knees with no, inconsistent, and consistent FKP, respectively. Relative risks of TKR over 30 months were 1.2 (95% CI 0.6–2.3) and 2.3 (95% CI 1.2–4.4) for knees with inconsistent and consistent FKP, compared with those without FKP. This association was consistent across each level of pain severity on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index. CONCLUSION: Consistency of frequent knee pain is associated with an increased risk of TKR independently of knee pain severity. (First Release April 15 2011; J Rheumatol 2011;38:1390–5; doi:10.3899/jrheum.100743
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