Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Internal Medicine

The Texas Medical Center Library

Series

2010

Female

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Progressive Regression Of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Two Years After Bariatric Surgery, Mohamed F Algahim, Thomas R Lux, Joshua G Leichman, Anthony F Boyer, Charles C Miller, Susan T Laing, Erik B Wilson, Terry Scarborough, Sherman Yu, Brad Snyder, Carol Wolin-Riklin, Ursula G Kyle, Heinrich Taegtmeyer Jun 2010

Progressive Regression Of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Two Years After Bariatric Surgery, Mohamed F Algahim, Thomas R Lux, Joshua G Leichman, Anthony F Boyer, Charles C Miller, Susan T Laing, Erik B Wilson, Terry Scarborough, Sherman Yu, Brad Snyder, Carol Wolin-Riklin, Ursula G Kyle, Heinrich Taegtmeyer

Journal Articles

BACKGROUND: Obesity is a systemic disorder associated with an increase in left ventricular mass and premature death and disability from cardiovascular disease. Although bariatric surgery reverses many of the hormonal and hemodynamic derangements, the long-term collective effects on body composition and left ventricular mass have not been considered before. We hypothesized that the decrease in fat mass and lean mass after weight loss surgery is associated with a decrease in left ventricular mass.

METHODS: Fifteen severely obese women (mean body mass index [BMI]: 46.7+/-1.7 kg/m(2)) with medically controlled hypertension underwent bariatric surgery. Left ventricular mass and plasma markers of systemic …


Maternal And Neonatal Outcomes By Labor Onset Type And Gestational Age, Jennifer L Bailit, Kimberly D Gregory, Uma M Reddy, Victor H Gonzalez-Quintero, Judith U Hibbard, Mildred M Ramirez, D Ware Branch, Ronald Burkman, Shoshana Haberman, Christos G Hatjis, Matthew K Hoffman, Michelle Kominiarek, Helain J Landy, Lee A Learman, James Troendle, Paul Van Veldhuisen, Isabelle Wilkins, Liping Sun, Jun Zhang Mar 2010

Maternal And Neonatal Outcomes By Labor Onset Type And Gestational Age, Jennifer L Bailit, Kimberly D Gregory, Uma M Reddy, Victor H Gonzalez-Quintero, Judith U Hibbard, Mildred M Ramirez, D Ware Branch, Ronald Burkman, Shoshana Haberman, Christos G Hatjis, Matthew K Hoffman, Michelle Kominiarek, Helain J Landy, Lee A Learman, James Troendle, Paul Van Veldhuisen, Isabelle Wilkins, Liping Sun, Jun Zhang

Journal Articles

OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine maternal and neonatal outcomes by labor onset type and gestational age.

STUDY DESIGN: We used electronic medical records data from 10 US institutions in the Consortium on Safe Labor on 115,528 deliveries from 2002 through 2008. Deliveries were divided by labor onset type (spontaneous, elective induction, indicated induction, unlabored cesarean). Neonatal and maternal outcomes were calculated by labor onset type and gestational age.

RESULTS: Neonatal intensive care unit admissions and sepsis improved with each week of gestational age until 39 weeks (P < .001). After adjusting for complications, elective induction of labor was associated with a lower risk of ventilator use (odds ratio [OR], 0.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.28-0.53), sepsis (OR, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.26-0.49), and neonatal intensive care unit admissions (OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.48-0.57) compared to spontaneous labor. The relative risk of hysterectomy at term was 3.21 (95% CI, 1.08-9.54) with elective induction, 1.16 (95% CI, 0.24-5.58) with indicated induction, and 6.57 (95% CI, 1.78-24.30) with cesarean without labor compared to spontaneous labor.

CONCLUSION: Some neonatal outcomes improved until 39 weeks. Babies born with elective induction …


Temporal Lobe White Matter Asymmetry And Language Laterality In Epilepsy Patients, Timothy M Ellmore, Michael S Beauchamp, Joshua I Breier, Jeremy D Slater, Giridhar P Kalamangalam, Thomas J O'Neill, Michael A Disano, Nitin Tandon Feb 2010

Temporal Lobe White Matter Asymmetry And Language Laterality In Epilepsy Patients, Timothy M Ellmore, Michael S Beauchamp, Joshua I Breier, Jeremy D Slater, Giridhar P Kalamangalam, Thomas J O'Neill, Michael A Disano, Nitin Tandon

Journal Articles

Recent studies using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) have advanced our knowledge of the organization of white matter subserving language function. It remains unclear, however, how DTI may be used to predict accurately a key feature of language organization: its asymmetric representation in one cerebral hemisphere. In this study of epilepsy patients with unambiguous lateralization on Wada testing (19 left and 4 right lateralized subjects; no bilateral subjects), the predictive value of DTI for classifying the dominant hemisphere for language was assessed relative to the existing standard-the intra-carotid Amytal (Wada) procedure. Our specific hypothesis is that language laterality in both unilateral …


Elevated Albumin In Retinas Of Monkeys With Experimental Glaucoma, Louvenia Carter-Dawson, Yujin Zhang, Ronald S Harwerth, Ricky Rojas, Pramod Dash, Xinping C Zhao, Elizabeth Woldemussie, Guadalupe Ruiz, Alice Chuang, William P Dubinsky, John B Redell Feb 2010

Elevated Albumin In Retinas Of Monkeys With Experimental Glaucoma, Louvenia Carter-Dawson, Yujin Zhang, Ronald S Harwerth, Ricky Rojas, Pramod Dash, Xinping C Zhao, Elizabeth Woldemussie, Guadalupe Ruiz, Alice Chuang, William P Dubinsky, John B Redell

Journal Articles

PURPOSE: To establish the identity of a prominent protein, approximately 70 kDa, that is markedly increased in the retina of monkeys with experimental glaucoma compared with the fellow control retina, the relationship to glaucoma severity, and its localization in the retina.

METHODS: Retinal extracts were subjected to 2-D gel electrophoresis to identify differentially expressed proteins. Purified peptides from the abundant 70 kDa protein were analyzed and identified by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) separation, and collision-induced dissociation sequencing. Protein identity was performed on MASCOT (Matrix Science, Boston, MA) and confirmed by Western blot. The relationship between the increase in this …


Humoral Immunity In Tuberculin Skin Test Anergy And Its Role In High-Risk Persons Exposed To Active Tuberculosis, Liliana Encinales, Joaquin Zuñiga, Julio Granados-Montiel, Maria Yunis, Julio Granados, Ingrid Almeciga, Olga Clavijo, Carlos Awad, Vilma Collazos, María Inés Vargas-Rojas, José Luis Bañales-Mendez, Lilia Vazquez-Castañeda, Joel N Stern, Viviana Romero, Masha Fridkis-Hareli, Masha Frindkis-Hareli, Daniel Terreros, Marcelo Fernandez-Viña, Edmond J Yunis Feb 2010

Humoral Immunity In Tuberculin Skin Test Anergy And Its Role In High-Risk Persons Exposed To Active Tuberculosis, Liliana Encinales, Joaquin Zuñiga, Julio Granados-Montiel, Maria Yunis, Julio Granados, Ingrid Almeciga, Olga Clavijo, Carlos Awad, Vilma Collazos, María Inés Vargas-Rojas, José Luis Bañales-Mendez, Lilia Vazquez-Castañeda, Joel N Stern, Viviana Romero, Masha Fridkis-Hareli, Masha Frindkis-Hareli, Daniel Terreros, Marcelo Fernandez-Viña, Edmond J Yunis

Journal Articles

The most common test to identify latent tuberculosis is the tuberculin skin test that detects T cell responses of delayed type hypersensitivity type IV. Since it produces false negative reactions in active tuberculosis or in high-risk persons exposed to tuberculosis patients as shown in this report, we studied antibody profiles to explain the anergy of such responses in high-risk individuals without active infection. Our results showed that humoral immunity against tuberculin, regardless of the result of the tuberculin skin test is important for protection from active tuberculosis and that the presence of high antibody titers is a more reliable indicator …


A Woman With Hiv Infection, Brain Abscesses, And Eosinophilia, Marcela Campo, Man K Phung, Rehan Ahmed, Paul Cantey, Henry Bishop, Tanvir K Bell, Carolyn Gardiner, Cesar A Arias Jan 2010

A Woman With Hiv Infection, Brain Abscesses, And Eosinophilia, Marcela Campo, Man K Phung, Rehan Ahmed, Paul Cantey, Henry Bishop, Tanvir K Bell, Carolyn Gardiner, Cesar A Arias

Journal Articles

No abstract provided.


Social Support In An Internet Weight Loss Community, Kevin O Hwang, Allison J Ottenbacher, Angela P Green, M Roseann Cannon-Diehl, Oneka Richardson, Elmer V Bernstam, Eric J Thomas Jan 2010

Social Support In An Internet Weight Loss Community, Kevin O Hwang, Allison J Ottenbacher, Angela P Green, M Roseann Cannon-Diehl, Oneka Richardson, Elmer V Bernstam, Eric J Thomas

Journal Articles

PURPOSE: To describe social support for weight loss shared by members of a large Internet weight loss community.

METHODS: We conducted a mixed-methods study with surveys (n=193) and interviews (n=13) of community members along with a content analysis of discussion forum messages (n=1924 messages). Qualitative data were analyzed for social support themes.

RESULTS: Survey respondents were primarily white (91.4%) and female (93.8%) with mean age 37.3 years and mean body mass index 30.9. They used forums frequently, with 56.8% reading messages, 36.1% replying to messages, and 18.5% posting messages to start a discussion related to weight loss on a daily …