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Thomas Jefferson University

2012

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Articles 1 - 30 of 125

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Hyperosmolar Therapy For Raised Intracranial Pressure., Ethan A Benardete Dec 2012

Hyperosmolar Therapy For Raised Intracranial Pressure., Ethan A Benardete

Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers

No abstract provided.


Influence Of Body Mass Index And Antibiotic Dose On The Risk Of Surgical Site Infections In Pediatric Clean Orthopedic Surgery., Jeffrey J Cies, Shannon Chan, Jobayer Hossain, B Randall Brenn, M Cecilia Di Pentima Dec 2012

Influence Of Body Mass Index And Antibiotic Dose On The Risk Of Surgical Site Infections In Pediatric Clean Orthopedic Surgery., Jeffrey J Cies, Shannon Chan, Jobayer Hossain, B Randall Brenn, M Cecilia Di Pentima

Department of Anesthesiology Faculty Papers

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate body mass index (BMI) and antimicrobial dose as risk factors for surgical site infections in pediatric patients.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Children between 2 and 19 years of age undergoing clean orthopedic procedures and receiving at least one dose of perioperative antibiotics (cefazolin, vancomycin, or clindamycin) were studied. The retrospective case-controlled study was conducted at the Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, a 180-bed tertiary-care academic pediatric hospital in Wilmington, DE. Data were collected from January 1, 2002, to December 31, 2005.

RESULTS: Underweight children had a higher risk for SSIs than overweight and normal-weight children. American Society …


Root Causes Of Intraoperative Hypoglycemia: A Case Series., Eric S. Schwenk, Boris Mraovic, Ryan P. Maxwell, Gina S. Kim, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, Richard H. Epstein Dec 2012

Root Causes Of Intraoperative Hypoglycemia: A Case Series., Eric S. Schwenk, Boris Mraovic, Ryan P. Maxwell, Gina S. Kim, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, Richard H. Epstein

Department of Anesthesiology Faculty Papers

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To describe the root causes of intraoperative hypoglycemic events.

DESIGN: Retrospective analysis.

SETTING: Large academic teaching hospital.

MEASUREMENTS: Data from 80,379 ASA physical status 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 surgical patients were reviewed. Blood glucose values, insulin, oral hypoglycemic medication doses, and doses of glucose or other medications for hypoglycemia treatment were recorded.

MAIN RESULTS: Hypoglycemia in many patients had multiple etiologies, with many cases (8 of 17) involving preventable errors. The most common root causes of hypoglycemia were ineffective communication, circulatory shock, failure to monitor, and excessive insulin administration.

CONCLUSION: Intraoperative hypoglycemia was rare, but often …


Limited Sampling Estimates Of Epigallocatechin Gallate Exposures In Cirrhotic And Noncirrhotic Patients With Hepatitis C After Single Oral Doses Of Green Tea Extract., Dina Halegoua-De Marzio, Walter K. Kraft, Constantine Daskalakis, Xie Ying, Roy L Hawke, Victor J. Navarro Dec 2012

Limited Sampling Estimates Of Epigallocatechin Gallate Exposures In Cirrhotic And Noncirrhotic Patients With Hepatitis C After Single Oral Doses Of Green Tea Extract., Dina Halegoua-De Marzio, Walter K. Kraft, Constantine Daskalakis, Xie Ying, Roy L Hawke, Victor J. Navarro

Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) has antiangiogenic, antioxidant, and antifibrotic properties that may have therapeutic potential for the treatment of cirrhosis induced by hepatitis C virus (HCV). However, cirrhosis might affect EGCG disposition and augment its reported dose-dependent hepatotoxic potential.

OBJECTIVE: The safety, tolerability, and disposition of a single oral dose of EGCG in cirrhotic patients with HCV were examined in an exploratory fashion.

METHODS: Eleven patients with hepatitis C and detectable viremia were enrolled. Four had Child-Pugh (CP) class A cirrhosis, 4 had Child-Pugh class B cirrhosis, and 3 were noncirrhotic. After a single oral dose of green tea extract 400 …


Risk Factors For Wound Complications After Ankle Fracture Surgery., Adam G Miller, Andrew Margules, Steven M Raikin Nov 2012

Risk Factors For Wound Complications After Ankle Fracture Surgery., Adam G Miller, Andrew Margules, Steven M Raikin

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: The overall rate of complications after ankle fracture fixation varies between 5% and 40% depending on the population investigated, and wound complications have been reported to occur in 1.4% to 18.8% of patients. Large studies have focused on complications in terms of readmission, but few studies have examined risk factors for wound-related issues in the outpatient setting in a large number of patients. A review was performed to identify risk factors for wound complications tracked in the hospital and outpatient setting.

METHODS: Four hundred and seventy-eight patients underwent open reduction and internal fixation of an ankle fracture between 2003 …


Metabolic Syndrome And Migraine., Amit Sachdev, Michael J Marmura Nov 2012

Metabolic Syndrome And Migraine., Amit Sachdev, Michael J Marmura

Department of Jefferson Headache Center papers and presentations

Migraine and metabolic syndrome are highly prevalent and costly conditions. The two conditions coexist, but it is unclear what relationship may exist between the two processes. Metabolic syndrome involves a number of findings, including insulin resistance, systemic hypertension, obesity, a proinflammatory state, and a prothrombotic state. Only one study addresses migraine in metabolic syndrome, finding significant differences in the presentation of metabolic syndrome in migraineurs. However, controversy exists regarding the contribution of each individual risk factor to migraine pathogenesis and prevalence. It is unclear what treatment implications, if any, exist as a result of the concomitant diagnosis of migraine and …


Efficacy Of Miniaturized Imacor Trans-Esophageal Echocardiografm (Tee) Prove In Mechanical Circulatory Support., Hitoshi Hirose, Christopher Y. Kang, Joshua K. Wong, Harrison T. Pitcher, Caitlyn M. Johnson, Konrad Sarosiek, Linda J Bogar, Nicholas C. Cavarocchi Nov 2012

Efficacy Of Miniaturized Imacor Trans-Esophageal Echocardiografm (Tee) Prove In Mechanical Circulatory Support., Hitoshi Hirose, Christopher Y. Kang, Joshua K. Wong, Harrison T. Pitcher, Caitlyn M. Johnson, Konrad Sarosiek, Linda J Bogar, Nicholas C. Cavarocchi

Department of Surgery Faculty Papers

Application of the miniaturized ImaCor Trans-Esophageal Echocardiogram (TEE) probe in Heart Transplant/Mechanical Cardiac Support Patients In the surgical cardiac care unit (SCCU), therapeutic interventions often need to be done at the bedside, necessitating the need for a rapidly employable diagnostic tool for the cardiac intensivist. We report the clinical utility of the miniature ImaCor TEE-probe in guiding management of post heart transplant (H-Txp) and mechanical cardiac support patients (MCS) and describe the economic benefit of such a device. This is an IRB approved retrospective review of MCS/H-Txp patients who had ImaCor TEE monitoring in the SCCU of our institution in …


Aplastic Anemia Post Liver Transplant Due To Graft-Versus-Host Disease, Ping Gong, Md, Jerald Z. Gong, Md Nov 2012

Aplastic Anemia Post Liver Transplant Due To Graft-Versus-Host Disease, Ping Gong, Md, Jerald Z. Gong, Md

Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Resident's Posters

Poster presented at: American society for clinical pathology (ASCP) conference 2012, Boston MA, USA.

Introduction:

The patient was a 64-year-old male presented with a 2 day history of increasing fevers and altered mental status. He underwent orthotopic liver transplant for cryptogenic cirrhosis, probably secondary to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, 45 days before. The head and neck imaging showed pancytopenia with WBC 0.6 x 109 /L., hemoglobin 6.8 g/dl and platelet 29 x 109 /L.


A Kidney For Christmas, Stephen Scholand Oct 2012

A Kidney For Christmas, Stephen Scholand

The Medicine Forum

When Asmar Lawrence first walked into the small examining room in the Jefferson Hospital Ambulatory Practice (JHAP) Clinic, we both had no idea what the future would hold. It was July, 1998 and I was fresh from medical school. Each week, I looked forward to the JHAP experience to develop my clinical skills and follow patients longitudinally. No longer was my learning prescribed from a textbook, this was the 'real world' of medicine where anything could happen and I was supposed to be in control of it. The long white coat probably helped perpetuate some of that illusion. Fortunately our …


A Pilot Study Of Diabetes Management In The Managed Care Setting, Rachel Wagman Oct 2012

A Pilot Study Of Diabetes Management In The Managed Care Setting, Rachel Wagman

The Medicine Forum

Diabetes mellitus represents a disease entity that primary care providers commonly encounter in the outpatient setting. Patient visits encompass a broad range of concerns, from optimizing management of hyperglycemia to the sequelae of chronic disease. The third National Health and Nutrition Exam Survey, (NHANES III) 1988-1994 has reported the prevalence of diabetes mellitus type 2 in the U.S. adult population at 12.3%. The cost of diabetes in 1998, estimated at $77 billion, is a formidable challenge to the health care community and third-party payers. Historically, Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) have encouraged more preventative tests, procedures, and exams to curtail the …


Brachytherapy: A New Weapon Against Coronary Restenosis, Rob Silver Oct 2012

Brachytherapy: A New Weapon Against Coronary Restenosis, Rob Silver

The Medicine Forum

Since its introduction in the late 1970's, coronary angioplasty has become a common procedure for treating coronary atherosclerotic disease. It offers significant improvement in symptoms of coronary artery disease through a less invasive procedure than coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Each year, over 500,000 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) procedures are performed in North America alone. In larger epicardial vessels that are 3 millimeters or greater in diameter, a metal stent can be placed during angioplasty to reduce the incidence of restenosis. In fact, stents are now deployed in approximately 80 percent of PTCA procedures. The success rate of PTCA …


Melena With Fever, Monica Patel, Jennifer Wilhelm Oct 2012

Melena With Fever, Monica Patel, Jennifer Wilhelm

The Medicine Forum

The patient is a 62 year old Indian male with a past medical history significant for myasthenia gravis, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus, who presented to an outside hospital with fever, fecal incontinence, and melena. Work up at that hospital was remarkable for elevated liver function tests, heme-positive brown stool and a CT of the abdomen showing a thick ascending colon suggesting possible mass. The patient had an episode of desaturation and fever to 105 degrees Fahrenheit prior to transfer to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital for further evaluation. Upon arrival, the patient was in respiratory distress with oxygen saturation of 70% …


Severe Dyspnea And Cough, Traci Mellinger Kohl, Elizabeth Cartwright Oct 2012

Severe Dyspnea And Cough, Traci Mellinger Kohl, Elizabeth Cartwright

The Medicine Forum

A 43 year-old white male with a history of hypertension and a smoking history of 30 pack-years presented to the emergency room coplaining of cough, severe dyspnea, nausea, and vomiting. Ten days prior to presentation, he experienced flu-like symptoms with a low-grade fever, myalgias, and malaise that lasted approximately four days but resolved spontaneously. He had a cough productive of white sputum and blood-tinged nasal drainage for one week. Three days prior to presentation he began to experience right upper quadrant abdominal pain and bilious vomiting. The patient worked as a bar inspector and had a routine PPD check 9 …


A Case Of Hypercalcemia, Daniel Lin Oct 2012

A Case Of Hypercalcemia, Daniel Lin

The Medicine Forum

A 79-year-old man with a past medical history of diet-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and chronic lower extremity venous stasis ulcers requiring two skin grafts was admitted to the hospital due to dehydration. He was in his usual state of health intermittently being wheelchair bound due to leg ulcers until four days earlier, when he accidentally spilled hot tea on his left arm while in the kitchen. In his attempt to maneuver the wheelchair away from the spill, the wheelchair turned over, pinning him on the floor and against the cabinets. He remained in that position for four days …


Hematuria Status Post Renal Biopsy, Bill Mcelhaugh Oct 2012

Hematuria Status Post Renal Biopsy, Bill Mcelhaugh

The Medicine Forum

This is a case of a 66 year old Caucasian woman admitted to the hospital following a ureteroscopic biopsy of the left renal pelvis. The biopsy was performed for asymptomatic hematuria, with a retrograde intravenous pyelogram revealing a mass in the left renal pelvis. The patient developed lightheadedness and left flank pain 12-24 hours following the procedure and was found to have a 3 gram drop in hemoglobin compared to blood work performed during the previous week.


Candidal Retinitis, Carl D. Mele Oct 2012

Candidal Retinitis, Carl D. Mele

The Medicine Forum

Mr. R.T. was a 49 year old male with recurrent Hepatitis C infection after orthotopic liver transplant, who presented with complications related to hemorrhagic pancreatitis. While on long term total parenteral nutrition, he developed blurry vision and Candida albicans fungemia. A fundus photograph revealed fungal endopthalmitis with focal areas of chorioretinitis. His vision improved significantly with serial intravitreal antifungal injections.


Validation Of A Novel, Non-Invasive System For Autonomic Profiling In Healthy Volunteers, Agostino Ingraldi, Behzad B. Pavri, Himanshu Patel, Sammy Zakaria, Reginald T. Ho, Arnold J. Greenspon Oct 2012

Validation Of A Novel, Non-Invasive System For Autonomic Profiling In Healthy Volunteers, Agostino Ingraldi, Behzad B. Pavri, Himanshu Patel, Sammy Zakaria, Reginald T. Ho, Arnold J. Greenspon

The Medicine Forum

Noninvasive profiling of the autonomic nervous system has been shown to have prognostic value in patients with myocardial infarction, CHF and diabetes. The ANSAR system (ANX 3.0, Philadelphia, PA) is a new commercially available system that utilizes respiratory rate, HR and BP to assess on-going sympathovagal modulation during various maneuvers known to evoke autonomic perturbations. Instead of using conventional Fast Fourier Transform for frequency domain analysis, a Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) is used to generate numerical and graphical data. The system calculates Low Frequency Area (LFA, analogous to LF Power) and Respiratory Frequency Area (RFA, analogous to High Frequency Power.) …


A Case Of Invasive Thymoma, Jon Geddes Oct 2012

A Case Of Invasive Thymoma, Jon Geddes

The Medicine Forum

A 52 year-old man with a past medical history of an isolated seizure presented to the Veterans Affairs hospital complaining of weakness which was most prominent in the face and upper extremities. About 6 months prior to this admission he developed intermittent episodes of weakness when chewing and swallowing. He would often have to use his hands to close his jaw when eating or talking. He noticed that his voice had developed a nasal quality but he did not have slurred speech. He denied drooling, ptosis, cramping or muscle twitches. He was seen 6 months ago at another VA hospital …


A Case Of Thrombosis And Thromboembolic Events, Daniel Lin Oct 2012

A Case Of Thrombosis And Thromboembolic Events, Daniel Lin

The Medicine Forum

A 65 year old black woman with hypertension (HTN), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and anxiety had complained to her primary care physician of vague abdominal pain. Initial empiric treatment as an outpatient for worsening GERD was unsuccessful. The patient had insidious development of generalized fatigue, early satiety, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss. An ultrasound of the abdomen revealed multiple liver lesions, with the largest lesion being 2.5 cm x 2.5 cm. She subsequently underwent a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis, which confirmed multiple hyperdense liver lesions. The remainder of the scan was unremarkable. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) as well as …


A Case Of A Male With Fever And Fatigue, Steve Ting Oct 2012

A Case Of A Male With Fever And Fatigue, Steve Ting

The Medicine Forum

This is a case of a 78 year old Caucasian gentleman who presented to the hospital in the early summer with complaints of high fevers and progressive fatigue. The patient lives near Philadelphia and enjoys doing yard work. He reported finding a tick attached to the skin near his groin approximately 3 weeks prior to admission. The tick was removed; however the patient was unsure of the duration of the tick attachment. He also denied developing any significant rash in that area. He had no recent sick contacts and no recent history of travel. He began developing fever spikes up …


Nevirapine Hepatotoxicity: Case Report And Discussion, Matt Baichi Oct 2012

Nevirapine Hepatotoxicity: Case Report And Discussion, Matt Baichi

The Medicine Forum

Nevirapine (viramune) is a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor commonly used in combination with other antiretroviral medicines in the treatment of HIV/AIDS. The safety profile of nevirapine, as determined by review of prospective clinical trials, reports rash with an incidence of 16% as the most common side effect. Clinical hepatitis is reported to occur with an incidence of 1%. A review of the literature shows many case reports of nevirapine-induced hepatotoxicity in patients receiving both treatment and prophylaxis for HIV. The purpose of this case report is to stress the importance of early recognition and withdrawal of the offending drug.


A Case Of Facial Pain And Vesicular Rash, Matt Baichi Oct 2012

A Case Of Facial Pain And Vesicular Rash, Matt Baichi

The Medicine Forum

The patient is an 81 year old male with a past medical history of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and dyslipidemia who presents with a complaint of facial pain. The pain began 3-4 days before presentation to his primary care physician. It was constant and intense. There was no history of similar head or facial pain, visual changes, jaw claudication, rash, tearing, nasal discharge, photophobia, phonophobia, sinus congestion, tooth ache, nor neurologic complaints. There was no relief with over-the-counter analgesics. A rash subsequently developed over his left forehead and scalp. At presentation, vital signs were stable. Skin examination revealed an …


A Case Of Chronic Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction, Matt Baichi Oct 2012

A Case Of Chronic Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction, Matt Baichi

The Medicine Forum

Scleroderma is a systemic disease characterized by the deposition of excessive collagen and other matrix elements in the skin as well as in multiple internal organs. Scleroderma can be classified into diffuse cutaneous disease and limited cutaneous disease. Limited cutaneous disease is characterized by skin involvement limited to the hands, face, feet, and forearms; it includes the CREST variant (calcinosis, raynauds, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, and telangiectasia). Diffuse cutaneous disease is characterized by skin involvement as well as early and diffuse visceral involvement. Clinically significant gastrointestinal involvement occurs in approximately 50% of all patients with scleroderma. The esophagus is the most …


Sleep Disturbances And Hypnotic Medication Use In Relation To Risk Of Barrett’S Esophagus And Esophageal Adenocarcinoma, Anastasia Shnitser, Md, Abhik Roy, Md, Sidney Cohen, Md, Anthony J. Dimarino, Md Oct 2012

Sleep Disturbances And Hypnotic Medication Use In Relation To Risk Of Barrett’S Esophagus And Esophageal Adenocarcinoma, Anastasia Shnitser, Md, Abhik Roy, Md, Sidney Cohen, Md, Anthony J. Dimarino, Md

Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND

The incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (EA) has increased more rapidly than any other cancer (with the exception of malignant melanoma) in the United States over the past 30 years. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the strongest risk factor for the development of Barrett’s esophagus, which in turn leads to the rise of most EA’s. In a large portion of persons with sleep disorders, perhaps as high as 30%, GERD is a major causal or contributing factor. It has been proposed that the use of hypnotics for the treatment of sleep disorders may exacerbate the damaging effects of refluxate on …


Neurophysiological Impact And Modeling-Independent Elucidation Of Inactivation Pathways In A-Type K+ Channels, J.D. Fineberg, David Ritter, Manuel Covarrubias Oct 2012

Neurophysiological Impact And Modeling-Independent Elucidation Of Inactivation Pathways In A-Type K+ Channels, J.D. Fineberg, David Ritter, Manuel Covarrubias

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics Faculty Papers

Poster presented at Society for Neuroscience

Abstract:

A-type voltage-gated K+ channels auto-regulate their function by undergoing fast inactivation. Independent of molecular mechanisms, this inactivation can proceed after channel opening (open-state inactivation, OSI) or from a closed state prior to opening (closed-state inactivation, CSI). We hypothesize that the specific neurophysiological roles of A-type Kv channels depend on whether they undergo OSI, CSI or both (CSI+OSI). To explore these possibilities, we introduced Markov kinetic schemes of the A-type Kv4 conductance into a computational model of the hippocamcal CA1 neuron assuming either CSI or CSI+OSI and compared the properties of the somatic …


Acute Heart Transplant Rejection In The Presence Of Apparently Weak, Non-Complement-Fixing Donor-Specific Antibodies Detected At The Time Of Transplant, Anthony Nizio, Paul J. Mather, Beth Colombe Oct 2012

Acute Heart Transplant Rejection In The Presence Of Apparently Weak, Non-Complement-Fixing Donor-Specific Antibodies Detected At The Time Of Transplant, Anthony Nizio, Paul J. Mather, Beth Colombe

Division of Cardiology Faculty Papers

Poster presented at: American Society for Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics (ASHI) conference.

AIM: A 66 year old female with an end-stage NYHA class IV inotrope-dependent, ischemic cardiomyopathy received a heart transplant on 9-12-09 from a doctor having antigens B13 and DR7. Pre-transplant antibody testing indicated only weakly positive, non-complement fixing donor-specific antibodies. The patient suffered a cardiac arrest on POD#6 and was resuscitated. She was in cardiogenic shock from allograft failure and subsequently expired on POD#9 of multiorgan failure due to "acute humoral rejection". These antibodies were investigated further.

METHODS: Antibodies were evaluated using Labscreen PRA (One Lambda), Labscreen Single Antigen …


Parenthood With Exposure To Mycophenolic Acid Products, Sophia M. Termimi, Megan Clary, Lisa Coscia, Carolyn Mcgrory, Vincent T. Armenti Oct 2012

Parenthood With Exposure To Mycophenolic Acid Products, Sophia M. Termimi, Megan Clary, Lisa Coscia, Carolyn Mcgrory, Vincent T. Armenti

Department of Surgery Faculty Papers

Successful pregnancy outcomes have been reported in all solid-organ transplant recipients on a variety of immunosuppressive medication regimes. In October 2007, the FDA pregnancy category of mycophenolic acid products (MPA) was changed from category C to D, based on registry and post-marketing data which revealed a higher incidence of spontaneous abortions and structural birth defects. The purpose of this abstract is to describe pregnancy outcomes with exposure to MPA and pregnancies fathered by male transplant recipients conceived while taking MPA. Data were collected by the National Transportation Pregnancy Registry (NTPR) via questionnaires, telephone interview and medical records. There were 152 …


Phase Ii Evaluation Of Dasatinib In The Treatment Of Recurrent Or Persistent Epithelial Ovarian Or Primary Peritoneal Carcinoma: A Gynecologic Oncology Group Study., Russell J Schilder, William E Brady, Heather A Lankes, James V Fiorica, Mark S Shahin, Xun C Zhou, Robert S Mannel, Harsh B Pathak, Wei Hu, R Katherine Alpaugh, Anil K Sood, Andrew K Godwin Oct 2012

Phase Ii Evaluation Of Dasatinib In The Treatment Of Recurrent Or Persistent Epithelial Ovarian Or Primary Peritoneal Carcinoma: A Gynecologic Oncology Group Study., Russell J Schilder, William E Brady, Heather A Lankes, James V Fiorica, Mark S Shahin, Xun C Zhou, Robert S Mannel, Harsh B Pathak, Wei Hu, R Katherine Alpaugh, Anil K Sood, Andrew K Godwin

Department of Medical Oncology Faculty Papers

OBJECTIVES: Preclinical data suggest an important role for the sarcoma proto-oncogene tyrosine kinase (SRC) in the oncogenesis of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) or primary peritoneal carcinoma (PPC). The Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) conducted a Phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of dasatinib, an oral SRC-family inhibitor in EOC/PPC, and explored biomarkers for possible association with clinical outcome.

METHODS: Eligible women had measurable, recurrent or persistent EOC/PPC and had received one or two prior regimens which must have contained a platinum and a taxane. Patients were treated with 100mg orally daily of dasatinib continuously until progression of disease …


Pulmonary Complications In Patients With Severe Brain Injury., Kiwon Lee, Fred Rincon Oct 2012

Pulmonary Complications In Patients With Severe Brain Injury., Kiwon Lee, Fred Rincon

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Pulmonary complications are prevalent in the critically ill neurological population. Respiratory failure, pneumonia, acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS), pulmonary edema, pulmonary contusions and pneumo/hemothorax, and pulmonary embolism are frequently encountered in the setting of severe brain injury. Direct brain injury, depressed level of consciousness and inability to protect the airway, disruption of natural defense barriers, decreased mobility, and secondary neurological insults inherent to severe brain injury are the main cause of pulmonary complications in critically ill neurological patients. Prevention strategies and current and future therapies need to be implemented to avoid and treat the development …


Determining The Absolute Requirement Of G Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinase 5 For Pathological Cardiac Hypertrophy: Short Communication., Jessica I Gold, Erhe Gao, Xiying Shang, Richard T Premont, Walter J Koch Sep 2012

Determining The Absolute Requirement Of G Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinase 5 For Pathological Cardiac Hypertrophy: Short Communication., Jessica I Gold, Erhe Gao, Xiying Shang, Richard T Premont, Walter J Koch

Center for Translational Medicine Faculty Papers

RATIONALE: Heart failure (HF) is often the end phase of maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy. A contributing factor is activation of a hypertrophic gene expression program controlled by decreased class II histone deacetylase (HDAC) transcriptional repression via HDAC phosphorylation. Cardiac-specific overexpression of G proteinen-coupled receptor kinase-5 (GRK5) has previously been shown to possess nuclear activity as a HDAC5 kinase, promoting an intolerance to in vivo ventricular pressure overload; however, its endogenous requirement in adaptive and maladaptive hypertrophy remains unknown.

OBJECTIVE: We used mouse models with global or cardiomyocyte-specific GRK5 gene deletion to determine the absolute requirement of endogenous GRK5 for cardiac hypertrophy …