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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Bilateral Renal Artery Thrombosis Secondary To Blunt Trauma: Case Report And Review Of The Literature., P Frassinelli, Michael D. Pasquale Md, Facs, Fccm, C Reckard, J Goodreau, G Sherwin Jun 2016

Bilateral Renal Artery Thrombosis Secondary To Blunt Trauma: Case Report And Review Of The Literature., P Frassinelli, Michael D. Pasquale Md, Facs, Fccm, C Reckard, J Goodreau, G Sherwin

Michael D Pasquale MD, FACS, FCCM

No abstract provided.


Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptor Type Ia Localization Causes Increased Bmp2 Signaling In Mice Exhibiting Increased Peak Bone Mass Phenotype., Beth Bragdon, Jeremy Bonor, Kathryn L Shultz, Wesley G Beamer, Clifford J Rosen, Anja Nohe Jan 2016

Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptor Type Ia Localization Causes Increased Bmp2 Signaling In Mice Exhibiting Increased Peak Bone Mass Phenotype., Beth Bragdon, Jeremy Bonor, Kathryn L Shultz, Wesley G Beamer, Clifford J Rosen, Anja Nohe

Clifford J Shultz

Bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) is a growth factor that initiates osteoblast differentiation. Recent studies show that BMP2 signaling regulates bone mineral density (BMD). BMP2 interacts with BMP receptor type Ia (BMPRIa) and type II receptor leading to the activation of the Smad signaling pathway. BMPRIa must shuttle between distinct plasma membrane domains, enriched of Caveolin-1 alpha and Caveolin-1 beta isoforms, and receptor activation occurs in these domains. Yet it remains unknown whether the molecular mechanism that regulates BMP2 signaling is driving mineralization and BMD. Therefore, the B6.C3H-1-12 congenic mouse model with increased BMD and osteoblast mineralization was utilized in …


Hysteresis As A Measure Of Ankle Dysfunction, Alissa Cohen, James Mertz, Peggy Stewart, Michael Warner, Michael Kuchera Dec 2015

Hysteresis As A Measure Of Ankle Dysfunction, Alissa Cohen, James Mertz, Peggy Stewart, Michael Warner, Michael Kuchera

Michael Kuchera

There is no abstract for this article.


A Comparative Study Of Cervical Hysteresis Characteristics After Various Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (Omt) Modalities, Precious Barnes, Francisco Laboy, Lauren Noto-Bell, Veronica Ferencz, Jeffrey Nelson, Michael Kuchera Dec 2015

A Comparative Study Of Cervical Hysteresis Characteristics After Various Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (Omt) Modalities, Precious Barnes, Francisco Laboy, Lauren Noto-Bell, Veronica Ferencz, Jeffrey Nelson, Michael Kuchera

Michael Kuchera

BACKGROUND: Few objective measures have been used to document change in myofascial tissues after OMT.

HYPOTHESIS: Paraspinal tissues associated with cervical somatic dysfunction (SD) will demonstrate quantifiable change in myofascial hysteresis characteristics after a given OMT technique but not after a Sham intervention.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: 240 subjects were palpated for cervical articular SD. A randomly selected intervention (5 OMT techniques or a Sham) was applied to the cervical SD clinically considered to be most severe. A durometer (SA201(®); Sigma Instruments, Cranberry, PA, USA) objectively measured myofascial structures overlying each cervical spinal segment pre- and post- intervention. Using a …


Osteopathic Evaluation And Manipulative Treatment In Reducing The Morbidity Of Otitis Media: A Pilot Study, Brian Degenhardt, Michael Kuchera Dec 2015

Osteopathic Evaluation And Manipulative Treatment In Reducing The Morbidity Of Otitis Media: A Pilot Study, Brian Degenhardt, Michael Kuchera

Michael Kuchera

OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of osteopathic manipulative treatment in routine pediatric care for children with recurrent acute otitis media. STUDY DESIGN: Pilot cohort study with 1-year posttreatment follow-up. At follow-up, subjects' parents or legal guardians and their referring and/or family physicians were contacted to determine recurrence of otitis media since intervention. Subjects: A referred and volunteer sample of pediatric patients ranging in age from 7 months to 35 months with a history of recurrent otitis media (N=8). INTERVENTION: For 3 weeks, all subjects received weekly osteopathic structural examinations and osteopathic manipulative treatment. This intervention was performed concurrently with traditional …


Novel Ubiquitin Neuropathology In Frontotemporal Dementia With Valosin-Containing Protein Gene Mutations, Mark Forman, Ian Mackenzie, Nigel Cairns, Eric Swanson, Philip Boyer, David Drachman, Bharati Jhaveri, Jason Karlawish, Alan Pestronk, Thomas Smith, Pang-Hsien Tu, Giles Watts, William Markesbery, Charles Smith, Virginia Kimonis Nov 2014

Novel Ubiquitin Neuropathology In Frontotemporal Dementia With Valosin-Containing Protein Gene Mutations, Mark Forman, Ian Mackenzie, Nigel Cairns, Eric Swanson, Philip Boyer, David Drachman, Bharati Jhaveri, Jason Karlawish, Alan Pestronk, Thomas Smith, Pang-Hsien Tu, Giles Watts, William Markesbery, Charles Smith, Virginia Kimonis

Jason Karlawish

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) with inclusion body myopathy and Paget disease of bone (IBMPFD) is a rare, autosomal-dominant disorder caused by mutations in the valosin-containing protein (VCP) gene, a member of the AAA-ATPase gene superfamily. The neuropathology associated with sporadic FTD is heterogeneous and includes tauopathies and frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin-positive inclusions (FTLD-U). However, there is limited information on the neuropathology in IBMPFD. We performed a detailed, systematic analysis of the neuropathologic changes in 8 patients with VCP mutations. A novel pattern of ubiquitin pathology was identified in IBMPFD that was distinct from sporadic and familial FTLD-U without VCP gene …


National Trauma Institute Prospective Evaluation Of The Ventilator Bundle In Trauma Patients: Does It Really Work?, Martin A. Croce Md, Karen J. Brasel Md, Mph, Raul Coimbra Md, Phd, Charles A. Adams Jr, Md, Preston R. Miller Md, Michael D. Pasquale Md, Facs, Fccm, Chanchai S. Mcdonald Phd, Somchan Vuthipadadon Phd, Timothy C. Fabian Md, Elizabeth A. Tolley Phd Sep 2014

National Trauma Institute Prospective Evaluation Of The Ventilator Bundle In Trauma Patients: Does It Really Work?, Martin A. Croce Md, Karen J. Brasel Md, Mph, Raul Coimbra Md, Phd, Charles A. Adams Jr, Md, Preston R. Miller Md, Michael D. Pasquale Md, Facs, Fccm, Chanchai S. Mcdonald Phd, Somchan Vuthipadadon Phd, Timothy C. Fabian Md, Elizabeth A. Tolley Phd

Michael D Pasquale MD, FACS, FCCM

BACKGROUND: Since its introduction by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, the ventilator bundle (VB) has been credited with a reduction in ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP). The VB consists of stress ulcer prophylaxis, deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis, head-of-bed elevation, and daily sedation vacation with weaning assessment. While there is little compelling evidence that the VB is effective, it has been widely accepted. The Centers for Medical and Medicaid Services has suggested that VAP should be a "never event" and may reduce payment to providers. To provide evidence of its efficacy, the National Trauma Institute organized a prospective multi-institutional trial to evaluate the …


Depression Screening Of Perinatal Women By The Des Moines Healthy Start Project: Program Description And Evaluation, Lisa Segre, M. O'Hara, R. Brock, D. Taylor Aug 2014

Depression Screening Of Perinatal Women By The Des Moines Healthy Start Project: Program Description And Evaluation, Lisa Segre, M. O'Hara, R. Brock, D. Taylor

Lisa S. Segre

OBJECTIVE: Maternal depression is linked to poor infant and child outcome. In 2001, the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration required all Healthy Start programs to incorporate maternal-depression screening as part of home visiting services. This article describes the implementation and results of depression screening by the Des Moines Healthy Start Project between 2002 and 2009. The study represents the first longitudinal assessment of the Healthy Start maternal-depression screening initiative. METHODS: The evaluation assessed staff compliance with a protocol for screening for depression among clients at regular intervals during the prenatal and postnatal periods until the client's child was two …


Determination Of Cutpoints For Low And High Number Of Symptoms In Patients With Advanced Cancer, Stephanie Gilbertson-White, B. Aouizerat, T. Jahan, S. Paul, C. West, K. Schumacher, M. Dodd, M. Rabow, A. Abu Raddaha, C. Miaskowski Nov 2013

Determination Of Cutpoints For Low And High Number Of Symptoms In Patients With Advanced Cancer, Stephanie Gilbertson-White, B. Aouizerat, T. Jahan, S. Paul, C. West, K. Schumacher, M. Dodd, M. Rabow, A. Abu Raddaha, C. Miaskowski

Stephanie Gilbertson-White

While patients with advanced cancer experience a wide range of symptoms, no work has been done to determine an optimal cutpoint for a low versus a high number of symptoms. Analytic approaches that established clinically meaningful cutpoints for the severity of cancer pain and fatigue provided the foundation for this study. The purpose of this study was to determine the optimal cutpoint for low and high numbers of symptoms using a range of potential cutpoints and to determine if those cutpoints distinguished between the two symptom groups on demographic and clinical characteristics and depression, anxiety, and quality of life (QOL). …


Documentation On Withdrawal Of Life Support In Adult Patients In The Intensive Care Unit [Corrected] [Published Erratum Appears In Am J Crit Care 2004 Sep;13(5):370], K. Kirchhoff, P. Anumandla, K. Foth, S. Lues, Stephanie Gilbertson-White Nov 2013

Documentation On Withdrawal Of Life Support In Adult Patients In The Intensive Care Unit [Corrected] [Published Erratum Appears In Am J Crit Care 2004 Sep;13(5):370], K. Kirchhoff, P. Anumandla, K. Foth, S. Lues, Stephanie Gilbertson-White

Stephanie Gilbertson-White

BACKGROUND: Patients' charts have been a source of data for retrospective studies of the quality of end-of-life care. In the intensive care unit, most patients die after withdrawal of life support. Chart reviews of this process could be used not only to assess the quality of documentation but also to provide information for quality improvement and research. OBJECTIVE: To assess the documentation of end-of-life care of patients and their families by care providers in the intensive care unit. METHOD: Charts of 50 adult patients who died in the intensive care unit at a large midwestern hospital after initiation of withdrawal …


The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications, Kathy Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison Cahill, Peter Cram Sep 2013

The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications, Kathy Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison Cahill, Peter Cram

Stephen K. Hunter

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between delivery volume and maternal complications. STUDY DESIGN: We used administrative data to identify women who had been admitted for childbirth in 2006. Hospitals were stratified into deciles that were based on delivery volume. We compared composite complication rates across deciles. RESULTS: We evaluated 1,683,754 childbirths in 1045 hospitals. Decile 1 and 2 hospitals had significantly higher rates of composite complications than decile 10 (11.8% and 10.1% vs 8.5%, respectively; P < .0001). Decile 9 and 10 hospitals had modestly higher composite complications as compared with decile 6 (8.8% and …


Developing An Artificial Fallopian Tube: Successful In Vitro Trials In Mice., Stephen Hunter, J. Neeld, J. Scott, D. Olsen, R. Urry, T. Cichocki Jul 2013

Developing An Artificial Fallopian Tube: Successful In Vitro Trials In Mice., Stephen Hunter, J. Neeld, J. Scott, D. Olsen, R. Urry, T. Cichocki

Stephen K. Hunter

This report describes the design and testing of an artificial fallopian tube for the treatment of tubal infertility. Within the device, mouse eggs incubated with sperm were fertilized and a microinfusion pump was used to transport the fertilized ova through the tube. Normal offspring resulted from transfer of the developing embryos into pseudopregnant recipients. These results provide encouraging evidence that an artificial fallopian tube warrants further investigation as a potential alternative to in vitro fertilization.


The Gamete And Embryo Compatibility Of Various Synthetic Polymers., Stephen Hunter, J. Scott, D. Hull, R. Urry Jul 2013

The Gamete And Embryo Compatibility Of Various Synthetic Polymers., Stephen Hunter, J. Scott, D. Hull, R. Urry

Stephen K. Hunter

Several popular and well-characterized polymeric materials were evaluated for their biocompatibility toward the cells unique to reproduction. To accomplish these studies, several in vitro tests were developed that evaluated biocompatibility between the polymers and spermatozoa, ova, and embryos. The data indicated significant differences between the materials with respect to their biocompatibility toward sperm motility, the sperm's ability to penetrate zona-free hamster eggs, and the ability of two-cell mouse embryos to divide. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE-Teflon; PTFE, Chemplast Inc., Wayne, NJ), polyethylene glycol (PEG), and polyhydroxyethyl methacrylate (PHEMA) appear to be the most inert of the materials studied. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC; Tygon-Norton, Akron, …


Surface Modification Of Polyurethane To Promote Long-Term Patency Of Peritoneal Access Devices., Stephen Hunter, D. Gregonis, D. Coleman, B. Hanover, R. Stephen, S. Jacobsen Jul 2013

Surface Modification Of Polyurethane To Promote Long-Term Patency Of Peritoneal Access Devices., Stephen Hunter, D. Gregonis, D. Coleman, B. Hanover, R. Stephen, S. Jacobsen

Stephen K. Hunter

No abstract provided.


Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter Jul 2013

Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter

Stephen K. Hunter

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this work was to determine whether cells overexpressing phenylalanine (Phe) hydroxylase (PAH) can significantly reduce Phe in vitro for potential use as a therapy for preventing maternal phenylketonuria. STUDY DESIGN: Human 293T and WRL68 cell lines were transiently and stably transfected to overexpress PAH. Cells were encapsulated within microspheres of sodium alginate. Timed measurements of Phe in media were performed using tandem mass spectrometry. RESULTS: Both nonencapsulated and encapsulated transiently transfected cells overexpressing PAH significantly reduced the Phe concentration in media by approximately 50% in comparison to mock-transfected cells. Cell line clones stably expressing PAH significantly …


A Mouse Model For Beta 0-Thalassemia., Baoli Yang, S. Kirby, J. Lewis, P. Detloff, N. Maeda, O. Smithies Jul 2013

A Mouse Model For Beta 0-Thalassemia., Baoli Yang, S. Kirby, J. Lewis, P. Detloff, N. Maeda, O. Smithies

Baoli Yang

We have used a "plug and socket" targeting technique to generate a mouse model of beta 0-thalassemia in which both the b1 and b2 adult globin genes have been deleted. Mice homozygous for this deletion (Hbbth-3/Hbbth-3) die perinatally, similar to the most severe form of Cooley anemia in humans. Mice heterozygous for the deletion appear normal, but their hematologic indices show characteristics typical of severe thalassemia, including dramatically decreased hematocrit, hemoglobin, red blood cell counts, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, as well as dramatically increased reticulocyte counts, serum bilirubin concentrations, and red cell distribution …


Appropriate Tissue- And Cell-Specific Expression Of A Single Copy Human Angiotensinogen Transgene Specifically Targeted Upstream Of The Hprt Locus By Homologous Recombination., B. Cvetkovic, Baoli Yang, R. Williamson, C. Sigmund Jul 2013

Appropriate Tissue- And Cell-Specific Expression Of A Single Copy Human Angiotensinogen Transgene Specifically Targeted Upstream Of The Hprt Locus By Homologous Recombination., B. Cvetkovic, Baoli Yang, R. Williamson, C. Sigmund

Baoli Yang

Development of experimental models by genetic manipulation in mice has proven to be very useful in determining the significance of particular genes in the development of or susceptibility to hypertension. Advances in molecular genetics, transgenic mouse technology, and physiological measurements in mice provided an opportunity to go a step further and develop models to analyze the physiological significance of specific gene variants potentially causing hypertension. In this report, we describe the development of a human angiotensinogen transgenic mouse model generated by targeting the human angiotensinogen gene upstream of the mouse HPRT locus by homologous recombination. The main benefit of this …


The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications., Kathy L Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison G Cahill, Peter Cram Jun 2013

The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications., Kathy L Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison G Cahill, Peter Cram

Donna A. Santillan

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between delivery volume and maternal complications.

STUDY DESIGN: We used administrative data to identify women who had been admitted for childbirth in 2006. Hospitals were stratified into deciles that were based on delivery volume. We compared composite complication rates across deciles.

RESULTS: We evaluated 1,683,754 childbirths in 1045 hospitals. Decile 1 and 2 hospitals had significantly higher rates of composite complications than decile 10 (11.8% and 10.1% vs 8.5%, respectively; P < .0001). Decile 9 and 10 hospitals had modestly higher composite complications as compared with decile 6 (8.8% and 8.5% vs 7.6%, respectively; P < .0001). Sixty percent of decile 1 and 2 hospitals were located within 25 miles of the nearest greater volume hospital.

CONCLUSION: Women who deliver at very low-volume hospitals have higher complication rates, as do women who deliver at …


From Molecules To Medicine: A Future Cure For Preeclampsia?, Mark Santillan, Donna Santillan, Curt Sigmund, Stephen Hunter Jun 2013

From Molecules To Medicine: A Future Cure For Preeclampsia?, Mark Santillan, Donna Santillan, Curt Sigmund, Stephen Hunter

Donna A. Santillan

In the United States, preeclampsia (PreE) affects 5-7% of all pregnancies, yet represents 15% of all maternal-fetal morbidity and mortality. PreE causes fetal growth restriction, oligohydramnios, fetal death, and maternal seizures, stroke, cerebrovascular hemorrhage and death. It has immediate and potentially long-term effects on both the fetus and mother. To date, the molecular pathogenesis of PreE is largely unknown. Multiple pathways, including dysfunctional angiogenesis, inappropriate placentation, oxidative stress and an altered immunological milieu have been proposed as key players in the development of PreE. In addition, genetic factors in all of these pathways are essential components in the etiology of …


Noninvasive Whole-Genome Sequencing Of A Human Fetus, J. Kitzman, M. Snyder, M. Ventura, A. Lewis, R. Qiu, L. Simmons, H. Gammill, C. Rubens, Donna Santillan, J. Murray, H. Tabor, M. Bamshad, E. Eichler, J. Shendure Jun 2013

Noninvasive Whole-Genome Sequencing Of A Human Fetus, J. Kitzman, M. Snyder, M. Ventura, A. Lewis, R. Qiu, L. Simmons, H. Gammill, C. Rubens, Donna Santillan, J. Murray, H. Tabor, M. Bamshad, E. Eichler, J. Shendure

Donna A. Santillan

Analysis of cell-free fetal DNA in maternal plasma holds promise for the development of noninvasive prenatal genetic diagnostics. Previous studies have been restricted to detection of fetal trisomies, to specific paternally inherited mutations, or to genotyping common polymorphisms using material obtained invasively, for example, through chorionic villus sampling. Here, we combine genome sequencing of two parents, genome-wide maternal haplotyping, and deep sequencing of maternal plasma DNA to noninvasively determine the genome sequence of a human fetus at 18.5 weeks of gestation. Inheritance was predicted at 2.8 x 10(6) parental heterozygous sites with 98.1% accuracy. Furthermore, 39 of 44 de novo …


Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter Jun 2013

Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter

Donna A. Santillan

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this work was to determine whether cells overexpressing phenylalanine (Phe) hydroxylase (PAH) can significantly reduce Phe in vitro for potential use as a therapy for preventing maternal phenylketonuria. STUDY DESIGN: Human 293T and WRL68 cell lines were transiently and stably transfected to overexpress PAH. Cells were encapsulated within microspheres of sodium alginate. Timed measurements of Phe in media were performed using tandem mass spectrometry. RESULTS: Both nonencapsulated and encapsulated transiently transfected cells overexpressing PAH significantly reduced the Phe concentration in media by approximately 50% in comparison to mock-transfected cells. Cell line clones stably expressing PAH significantly …


Protective Immunization In Mice Against Group B Streptococci Using Encapsulated C5a Peptidase, Donna Santillan, M. E. Andracki, S. K. Hunter Jun 2013

Protective Immunization In Mice Against Group B Streptococci Using Encapsulated C5a Peptidase, Donna Santillan, M. E. Andracki, S. K. Hunter

Donna A. Santillan

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the study was to test whether C5a peptidase encapsulated within a biodegradable polymer can act as a vaccine and elicit an immune response to prevent group B streptococci (GBS) infection in mice and provide protection to pups. STUDY DESIGN: C5a peptidase was encapsulated in semipermeable microspheres of poly(lactide-co-glycolide). Female ICR mice were immunized with encapsulated C5a peptidase, free C5a peptidase, or empty microparticles. Booster doses were given at days 21 and 42. Antibody responses were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Challenge with GBS type III was performed 4 days after the final booster in the vaginal …


Efficacy Of Polymeric Encapsulated C5a Peptidase-Based Group B Streptococcus Vaccines In A Murine Model, Donna Santillan, K. Rai, Mark Santillan, Y. Krishnamachari, A. Salem, S. Hunter Jun 2013

Efficacy Of Polymeric Encapsulated C5a Peptidase-Based Group B Streptococcus Vaccines In A Murine Model, Donna Santillan, K. Rai, Mark Santillan, Y. Krishnamachari, A. Salem, S. Hunter

Donna A. Santillan

OBJECTIVE: The purpose was to examine in mice the efficacy of various polymeric-encapsulated C5a peptidase vaccine formulations in eliciting a long-term immune response and preventing group B streptococcus (GBS) infection. STUDY DESIGN: C5a peptidase was encapsulated in semipermeable microspheres of poly(lactide-coglycolide) (PLGA). Female ICR mice were immunized with 0, 10, or 30 mug of encapsulated C5a peptidase within 2 different formulations of PLGA polymers. Booster doses were given at weeks 4 and 8. Antibody responses were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay at weeks 4, 8, 11, and 40. Vaginal challenges with GBS types 1a, III, and V were performed at …


Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter Jun 2013

Cell Encapsulation As A Potential Nondietary Therapy For Maternal Phenylketonuria, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter

Mark K. Santillan

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this work was to determine whether cells overexpressing phenylalanine (Phe) hydroxylase (PAH) can significantly reduce Phe in vitro for potential use as a therapy for preventing maternal phenylketonuria. STUDY DESIGN: Human 293T and WRL68 cell lines were transiently and stably transfected to overexpress PAH. Cells were encapsulated within microspheres of sodium alginate. Timed measurements of Phe in media were performed using tandem mass spectrometry. RESULTS: Both nonencapsulated and encapsulated transiently transfected cells overexpressing PAH significantly reduced the Phe concentration in media by approximately 50% in comparison to mock-transfected cells. Cell line clones stably expressing PAH significantly …


Semen Quality In Fertile Men In Relation To Psychosocial Stress, A. Gollenberg, F. Liu, C. Brazil, E. Drobnis, D. Guzick, J. Overstreet, J. Redmon, Amy Sparks, C. Wang, S. Swan Jun 2013

Semen Quality In Fertile Men In Relation To Psychosocial Stress, A. Gollenberg, F. Liu, C. Brazil, E. Drobnis, D. Guzick, J. Overstreet, J. Redmon, Amy Sparks, C. Wang, S. Swan

Amy E.T. Sparks

OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between stressful life events and semen parameters. DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis in a pregnancy cohort study. SETTING: Prenatal clinics in five U.S. cities. PATIENT(S): Fertile men (n = 744) in the Study for Future Families, a cohort study of pregnant women and their partners. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Sperm concentration, percent motile, and percent normal morphology and classification above/below World Health Organization (WHO) cutoffs for semen quality. RESULT(S): After adjusting for confounders, men reporting 2+ recent stressful life events had an increased risk of being classified below WHO thresholds for "normal" defined by concentration, motility, …


Gene Transfer Efficiency During Gestation And The Influence Of Co-Transfer Of Non-Manipulated Embryos On Production Of Transgenic Mice, R. Canseco, Amy Sparks, R. Page, C. Russell, J. Johnson, W. Velander, R. Pearson, W. Drohan, F. Gwazdauskas Jun 2013

Gene Transfer Efficiency During Gestation And The Influence Of Co-Transfer Of Non-Manipulated Embryos On Production Of Transgenic Mice, R. Canseco, Amy Sparks, R. Page, C. Russell, J. Johnson, W. Velander, R. Pearson, W. Drohan, F. Gwazdauskas

Amy E.T. Sparks

Litter size of DNA microinjected zygotes is lower than for non-manipulated zygotes. The rate of embryonic and fetal survival in early, mid and late gestation was determined to assess whether DNA integration was responsible for embryonic losses. Also, the effect of including non-microinjected embryos with injected embryos on pregnancy rate and transgenic pup production was determined. In Experiment 1, one-cell embryos from immature CD-1 mice were microinjected with a whey acidic protein promoter-human protein C gene construct. One hour after microinjection embryos were transferred to pseudopregnant recipients (45 transfers of 30 embryos each). Fifteen recipients were sacrificed on day 4, …


Psychological Empowerment And Job Satisfaction Between Baby Boomer And Generation X Nurses, Amy Sparks Jun 2013

Psychological Empowerment And Job Satisfaction Between Baby Boomer And Generation X Nurses, Amy Sparks

Amy E.T. Sparks

AIM: This paper is a report of a study of differences in nurses' generational psychological empowerment and job satisfaction. BACKGROUND: Generations differ in work styles such as autonomy, work ethics, involvement, views on leadership, and primary views on what constitutes innovation, quality, and service. METHOD: A secondary analysis was conducted from two data sets resulting in a sample of 451 registered nurses employed at five hospitals in West Virginia. One data set was gathered from a convenience sample and one from a randomly selected sample. Data were collected from 2000 to 2004. RESULTS: Baby Boomer nurses reported higher mean total …


Characterization Of Human Sperm Antigens Reacting With Anti-Sperm Antibodies From An Infertile Female Patient's Serum, H. Feng, Y. Han, Amy Sparks, J. Sandlow Jun 2013

Characterization Of Human Sperm Antigens Reacting With Anti-Sperm Antibodies From An Infertile Female Patient's Serum, H. Feng, Y. Han, Amy Sparks, J. Sandlow

Amy E.T. Sparks

Identification of sperm antigens that elicit immunoglobulin (Ig) production and knowledge of their roles in sperm transport and fertilization may enhance diagnosis and treatment of immunologic infertility. Sperm antigens recognized by a female patient's serum anti-sperm antibodies were characterized using an indirect immunobead-binding test, immunoblot analysis, and immunochemical labeling. The anti-sperm antibodies' effect on sperm function was evaluated by acrosome induction by calcium ionophore. Immunobeads specific for IgG were bound to the head of 79% of motile donor sperm. Immunochemical labeling of antibody-binding sites was restricted to the plasma membrane over the acrosomal crescent. No labeling was observed on the …


Social Cognition, Empathy And Functional Outcome In Schizophrenia, Amy Sparks, S. Mcdonald, B. Lino, M. O'Donnell, M. Green Jun 2013

Social Cognition, Empathy And Functional Outcome In Schizophrenia, Amy Sparks, S. Mcdonald, B. Lino, M. O'Donnell, M. Green

Amy E.T. Sparks

Social and occupational functioning difficulties are a characteristic feature of schizophrenia, and a growing body of evidence suggests that deficits in social cognition contribute significantly to these functional impairments. The present study sought to investigate whether the association between social cognition and social functioning in schizophrenia would be mediated by self-reported levels of empathy. Thirty outpatients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, and twenty-five healthy controls completed a well-validated facial affect processing task (Ekman 60-faces facial task from the Facial Expressions of Emotion - Stimuli and Tests; FEEST), The Awareness of Social Inference Test (TASIT; to assess emotion …


Development Of An Immunocontraceptive Vaccine. Current Status, H. Feng, J. Sandlow, Amy Sparks, A. Sandra Jun 2013

Development Of An Immunocontraceptive Vaccine. Current Status, H. Feng, J. Sandlow, Amy Sparks, A. Sandra

Amy E.T. Sparks

Development of an effective and modern contraceptive vaccine is a key factor in the global issue of regional population growth as well as agricultural, medical, economic and social development. A review was done of the current medical literature concerning development of an immunocontraceptive vaccine and relative molecular biology technology. Various approaches have been taken to identify candidate-specific antigens for immunocontraceptive development, such as sperm, zona pellucida and hormonal antigens. Suppressed fertility and the reversibility of these effects on mammalian species, including humans, have been demonstrated. The successful results obtained so far support the continued investigation for an effective immunocontraceptive vaccine.