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Σάββατο 4 Αυγούστου 2018

When attended and conscious perception deactivates fronto-parietal regions

Publication date: Available online 13 September 2017

Source: Cortex

Author(s): Ausaf Ahmed Farooqui, Tom Manly

Abstract

The finding of increased fronto-parietal activity during conscious and attended perception forms a key basis for theories of consciousness and attention. However, this finding comes largely from studies that required explicit detection of events in a way that made detection the goal of the ongoing task. This is an important confound because goal completion itself elicits fronto-parietal activity. In everyday life attended and conscious perception is instrumental in achieving our goals but rarely a goal in itself. Here we examined whether conscious perception that was instrumental to participants' current goals, but not a goal in itself, elicited increased fronto-parietal activity. In Experiments 1 and 2 participants attended to a stream of letters (1 per second) to detect occasional targets in their midst. We found that consciousness of, and attention to, these highly visible non-targets events deactivated fronto-parietal regions. In Experiment 3 participants heard a loud auditory cue that had to be retained in memory for up to 9 sec before being used to select the correct rule for completing the goal. No increased fronto-parietal activity was observed even for such salient, attended and remembered event. In contrast, robust fronto-parietal activation was observed across all the experiments for goal completion events. The results indicate that increased fronto-parietal activity is not a necessary correlate of conscious and attended perception. We speculate that fronto-parietal deactivation during non-target events may be related to the suppression of potential interference from salient, conscious, but non-goal stimuli.



https://ift.tt/2LXY637

Rule reactivation and capture errors in goal directed behaviour

Publication date: Available online 10 September 2017

Source: Cortex

Author(s): María Roca, Milagros García, María Juliana Torres Ardila, María Luz González Gadea, Teresa Torralva, Jesica Ferrari, Agustín Ibáñez, Facundo Manes, John Duncan

Abstract

In everyday life people may act automatically, following "unwanted" lines of action which are triggered by contextual cues and may interfere with current goals. Such occurrences are known as "capture errors" in reference to errors that occur when a more salient behaviour takes place when a similar, but less salient, action was intended. Clinical neuropsychological studies suggest that reactivation of previous rules may play an important role in behavioural interference, but such reactivation has been little studied in normal subjects and simple experimental tasks. In the present study we develop this theme, presenting data on 4 subjects who spontaneously showed capture errors in verbal fluency tasks, and developing a new experimental paradigm specifically designed to elicit such interference in normal subjects. In the new paradigm, 101 normal subjects performed a simple series of working memory tasks, including occasional stimuli whose answer matched both the current and the previous rule. We found that normal controls indeed tend to commit more mistakes after the presentation of a stimulus whose answer is consistent with a current and preceding rule. In this case, however, the errors produced are not necessarily associated with a shift back to the old rule, suggesting that rule reactivation leads to a more general interference effect. We discuss the importance of our data from both theoretical and clinical perspectives.



https://ift.tt/2Kv6J0a

Semantic dementia and the left and right temporal lobes

Publication date: Available online 31 August 2017

Source: Cortex

Author(s): Julie S. Snowden, Jennifer M. Harris, Jennifer C. Thompson, Christopher Kobylecki, Matthew Jones, Anna M. Richardson, David Neary

Abstract

Semantic dementia, a circumscribed disorder of semantic knowledge, provides a unique model for understanding the neural basis for semantic representation. The study addressed areas of contention: the relative roles of the left and right temporal lobe, the contribution of anterior versus posterior temporal cortex and the status of the anterior temporal lobes as amodal hub. Naming and word comprehension was examined in 41 semantic dementia patients, 31 with left-predominant and 10 right-predominant atrophy. In keeping with expectation, naming and comprehension were significantly poorer in left-predominant patients. Structural magnetic resonance image analysis, using a visual rating scale, showed strong inverse correlations between naming scores and severity of both left anterior and posterior temporal lobe atrophy. By contrast, comprehension performance was more strongly correlated with left posterior temporal atrophy. Analysis of naming errors revealed a correlation between anterior temporal atrophy and associative/functional descriptive responses, implying availability of semantic information. By contrast, 'don't know' responses, indicative of loss of semantic knowledge, were linked to left posterior temporal lobe atrophy. Semantic errors, the hallmark of semantic dementia, were linked to right hemisphere atrophy, especially the right posterior temporal lobe. Matched visual-verbal tasks (famous face and name identification, Pyramids and Palm trees pictures and words, animal knowledge from 3-D models and animal names) administered to nine patients elicited variable correspondence between performance on nonverbal and verbal versions of the task. Marked performance dissociations were demonstrated in some patients: poorer understanding of names/words in left-predominant patients and of faces/pictures/models in right-predominant cases. The findings are compatible with the notion of the anterior temporal lobes as areas of convergence, but are less easily accommodated within the framework of amodal conceptual representation. The data, which reconcile some apparent contradictions in the literature, are discussed in the light of the nature and distribution of degenerative change in semantic dementia.



https://ift.tt/2LZFMX7

Functional brain networks for learning predictive statistics

Publication date: Available online 18 August 2017

Source: Cortex

Author(s): Joseph Giorgio, Vasilis M. Karlaftis, Rui Wang, Yuan Shen, Peter Tino, Andrew Welchman, Zoe Kourtzi

Abstract

Making predictions about future events relies on interpreting streams of information that may initially appear incomprehensible. This skill relies on extracting regular patterns in space and time by mere exposure to the environment (i.e., without explicit feedback). Yet, we know little about the functional brain networks that mediate this type of statistical learning. Here, we test whether changes in the processing and connectivity of functional brain networks due to training relate to our ability to learn temporal regularities. By combining behavioral training and functional brain connectivity analysis, we demonstrate that individuals adapt to the environment's statistics as they change over time from simple repetition to probabilistic combinations. Further, we show that individual learning of temporal structures relates to decision strategy. Our fMRI results demonstrate that learning-dependent changes in fMRI activation within and functional connectivity between brain networks relate to individual variability in strategy. In particular, extracting the exact sequence statistics (i.e., matching) relates to changes in brain networks known to be involved in memory and stimulus-response associations, while selecting the most probable outcomes in a given context (i.e., maximizing) relates to changes in frontal and striatal networks. Thus, our findings provide evidence that dissociable brain networks mediate individual ability in learning behaviorally-relevant statistics.



https://ift.tt/2KuIzmt

Niraparib: A Review in Ovarian Cancer

Abstract

Niraparib (Zejula®), a poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor, is approved for the maintenance treatment of recurrent, epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer in patients who are in complete or partial response to platinum-based chemotherapy. Approval was based on the results of the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III NOVA trial. In NOVA, niraparib significantly prolonged progression-free survival (primary endpoint), chemotherapy-free interval and time to first subsequent therapy compared with placebo in patients with recurrent, platinum-sensitive, high grade serous ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer. The beneficial effects of niraparib were consistent regardless of BRCA mutation or homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) status. Niraparib had a manageable tolerability profile, with the majority of grade 3 or 4 adverse events being haematologic abnormalities (e.g. thrombocytopenia, anaemia, neutropenia). Adverse events were generally well managed with dose interruption or modification of niraparib. Current evidence suggests that niraparib is an effective new option with a manageable tolerability profile for the maintenance treatment of recurrent, platinum-sensitive epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer in adults, with or without BRCA1/2 mutation or HRD.



https://ift.tt/2n8LrfG

Treatment of Advanced Merkel Cell Carcinoma: Current Therapeutic Options and Novel Immunotherapy Approaches

Abstract

Advanced Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a very aggressive, rare neuroendocrine tumor of the skin with a high frequency of locoregional recurrence and metastasis, and a high mortality rate. Surgical resection, sentinel lymph node biopsy, and radiotherapy represent the gold standard of treatment in patients with localized disease, while chemotherapy has a significant role in the treatment of advanced disease. However, no definitive evidence on the survival impact of radiotherapy in the advanced stages has been provided to date, and response to chemotherapy remains brief in the majority of cases, indicating an urgent need for alternative approaches. Biological and genome sequencing studies have implicated multiple molecular pathways in MCC, thus leading to the development of new agents that target angiogenic factors, anti-apoptosis molecules, poly-ADP ribose polymerase, intracellular signal proteins such as the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, and peptide receptors such as somatostatin receptors. More recently, immunotherapy agents such as avelumab, pembrolizumab, and nivolumab, which act by blocking the programmed cell-death (PD)-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint, have shown promising results, especially in the advanced setting, and should now be considered standard of care for metastatic MCC. Current research is focusing on developing new immunotherapeutic strategies, identifying predictive biomarker to aid in the selection of patients responsive to immunotherapy, and defining combination approaches to increase efficacy in refractory patients.



https://ift.tt/2KlVNC9

Therapies Targeting the Tumor Stroma and the VEGF/VEGFR Axis in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma: a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Abstract

Abundant tumor stroma is a hallmark of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), and is suggested to play a role in the resistance of this deadly disease to systemic treatment. Despite promising results from preclinical studies, clinical trials with therapies targeting the tumor stroma and the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptor VEGFR yielded conflicting results. With this systematic review and meta-analysis, we aim to summarize the existing evidence in this important field with a special focus on anti-VEGF/VEGFR therapy. A total of 24 clinical studies were included in the qualitative synthesis, and six randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating anti-VEGF/VEGFR agents were further included in the quantitative synthesis. The qualitative synthesis revealed a treatment advantage of combined therapy with nab-paclitaxel, while the meta-analysis on anti-VEGF/VEGFR drugs demonstrated marginal improvement of objective response rates and progression-free survival, but not overall survival. Stroma targeting is a promising and rapidly-developing treatment strategy in PDAC. However, novel drugs balancing stroma depletion and modulation are needed.



https://ift.tt/2Khf9bg

Constitutive activation of β-catenin in ameloblasts leads to incisor enamel hypomineralization

Abstract

Enamel is the hardest tissue with the highest degree of mineralization protecting the dental pulp from injury in vertebrates. The ameloblasts differentiated from ectoderm-derived epithelial cells are a single cell layer and are important for the enamel formation and mineralization. Wnt/β-catenin signaling has been proven to exert an important role in the mineralization of bone, dentin and cementum. Little was known about the regulatory mechanism of Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in ameloblasts during amelogenesis, especially in the mineralization of enamel. To investigate the role of β-catenin in ameloblasts, we established Amelx-Cre; β-catenin∆ex3fl/fl (CA-β-catenin) mice, which could constitutive activate β-catenin in ameloblasts. It showed the delayed mineralization and eventual hypomineralization in the incisor enamel of CA-β-catenin mice. Meanwhile, the amelogenesis-related proteinases Mmp20 and Klk4 were decreased in the incisors of CA-β-catenin mice. These data indicated that β-catenin plays an essential role in differentiation and function of ameloblasts during amelogenesis.



https://ift.tt/2KdrPQo

Ewing-like Sarcoma: A Case of a Primary Cutaneous Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumor With Atypical Immunohistochemistry and Lack of Fusion Oncogene Detection

Abstract: We present a 25-year-old male patient with a primary cutaneous primitive neuroectodermal tumor (cPNET) with unusual immunohistochemistry and lack of fusion oncogene generation. The lesion expressed CD99 and WT-1, and the histological features were consistent with cPNET. Differential diagnoses such as rhabdomyosarcoma, desmoplastic small round blue cell tumor, hematolymphoid neoplasm, neuroblastoma, and CIC-DUX round cell sarcoma were ruled out based on immunohistochemistry, genetic studies, and histology. Previous cPNET cases have been published detailing abnormal immunochemistry and genetic expression. However, to our knowledge, fusion oncogene negativity in cPNET tumors has only been reported in one other published case series. These reports, including this study, reinforce the fact that a high index of suspicion should be used when diagnosing these tumors, regardless of immunohistochemical and genetic variability. This case highlights that the typical genetic and immunohistochemical features of cPNET may be more variable than previously thought. Future studies are needed to better understand these variations of cPNET. Correspondence: Jessica G. Labadie, MD, 676 N St Clair Street, Suite 1600, Chicago, IL 60611 (e-mail: Jessica.gandy13@gmail.com). The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

https://ift.tt/2AFFlwJ

Plexiform Xanthomatous Tumor, Variety of Xanthoma or Subtype of Fibrohistiocytic Tumors?

Abstract: Plexiform xanthomatous tumor was proposed as an independent neoplasm within fibrohistiocytic tumor group a few years ago. The arguments were based on their different clinical features as well as their own morphological and immunohistochemical findings. Nevertheless, it has not been widely studied yet, and there are few reports about this entity. Regarding a case, we reviewed the diagnostic characteristics of this underdiagnosed tumor. Correspondence: Francisco José Illán-Gambín, MD, Department of Pathology, University General Hospital of Alicante, Pintor Baeza 12, Alicante 03010, Spain (e-mail: fjig90@gmail.com). The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

https://ift.tt/2vhSIhq

A Rare Form of Acquired Telangiectasia With Distinctive Histopathologic Features: Challenge

No abstract available

https://ift.tt/2AJidxy

Telangiectatic Patches on Knees and Elbows of a 73-Year-Old Woman: Challenge

No abstract available

https://ift.tt/2vhlaQI

Retrospective Chart Review of Cutaneous Adverse Events Associated with Tremelimumab in 17 Patients

Abstract

Background and Objectives

Tremelimumab is a monoclonal human antibody that inhibits cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4, giving rise to increased T cell activation and interleukin-2 release. While this activation of the immune system provides a mechanism to recognize and destroy cancer cells, it also leads to off-target immune-related adverse events. Ipilimumab is a US Food and Drug Administration-approved anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 antibody, which has a high incidence of cutaneous adverse events. While cutaneous adverse events for ipilimumab have been extensively studied, there is a distinct lack of cutaneous adverse event data for tremelimumab.

Methods

We conducted a retrospective chart review of our institution's electronic medical records from January 2000 to March 2018 to characterize cutaneous adverse events induced by tremelimumab. Previous descriptions of tremelimumab cutaneous adverse events are limited to rash and pruritus.

Results

We found 17 patients treated with tremelimumab who had cutaneous adverse events including pruritus (12/17), eczematous dermatitis (8/17), morbilliform rash (5/17), vitiligo (2/17), xerosis (3/17), acneiform rash (2/17), and psoriasiform dermatitis (1/17).

Conclusions

This case series demonstrates that cutaneous adverse events seen in patients taking tremelimumab overlap with those of ipilimumab. While there are some differences between rash characterizations of the two drugs, such as time to onset and clearance, the sample size of this case series is too small to draw any definite conclusions. This study addresses a gap in the descriptive knowledge on tremelimumab cutaneous adverse events and highlights the need for further large cohort prospective studies. Awareness of expected cutaneous toxicities and how best to treat these can help patients continue on immunotherapy regimens without delays or interruptions and give patients the best quality of life while receiving treatment.



https://ift.tt/2AHAGdB

Piloting the Use of Smartphones, Reminders, and Accountability Partners to Promote Skin Self-Examinations in Patients with Total Body Photography: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Abstract

Objective

The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of a mobile application (app) in patients already using total body photography (TBP) to increase skin self-examination (SSE) rates and pilot the effectiveness of examination reminders and accountability partners.

Design

Randomized controlled trial with computer generated randomization table to allocate interventions.

Setting

University of Pennsylvania pigmented lesion clinic.

Participants

69 patients aged 18 years or older with an iPhone/iPad, who were already in possession of TBP photographs.

Intervention

A mobile app loaded with digital TBP photos for all participants, and either (1) the mobile app only, (2) skin examination reminders, (3) an accountability partner, or (4) reminders and an accountability partner.

Main Outcome Measure

Change in SSE rates as assessed by enrollment and end-of-study surveys 6 months later.

Results

Eighty one patients completed informed consent, however 12 patients did not complete trial enrollment procedures due to device incompatibility, leaving 69 patients who were randomized and analyzed [mean age 54.3 years, standard deviation 13.9). SSE rates increased significantly from 58% at baseline to 83% at 6 months (odds ratio 2.64, 95% confidence interval 1.20–4.09), with no difference among the intervention groups. The group with examination reminders alone had the highest (94%) overall satisfaction, and the group with accountability partners alone accounted for the lowest (71%).

Conclusion

A mobile app alone, or with reminders and/or accountability partners, was found to be an effective tool that can help to increase SSE rates. Skin examination reminders may help provide a better overall experience for a subset of patients.

Trial Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02520622.



https://ift.tt/2OEYQse

Introducing the Transparency and Openness Promotion (TOP) Guidelines and Badges for Open Practices at Cortex

Publication date: Available online 4 August 2018

Source: Cortex

Author(s): Christopher D. Chambers



https://ift.tt/2AHMCMA

Removal of metronidazole by TiO 2 and ZnO photocatalysis: a comprehensive comparison of process optimization and transformation products

Abstract

The photodegradation of antibiotic metronidazole (MNZ) was systematically studied and compared by using aqueous suspensions of TiO2 and ZnO catalysts under 100-W UV irradiation. The degradation conditions were optimized using the central composite design and response surface methodology. The optimal photodegradation conditions obtained were at pH 6.0 with 1.5 g L−1 of TiO2 (86.10% removal for 50 mg L−1 MNZ) and at pH 9.5 with 0.5 g L−1 of ZnO (60.32% removal for 30 mg L−1 MNZ) after 60-min irradiation at 20 °C. The degradation efficiency in the presence of TiO2 was higher than that of ZnO. The participation of active species such as hydroxyl radicals (OH·), holes (h+), and superoxide radicals (O2·) during MNZ photodegradation over TiO2 and ZnO catalysts was also examined. Experimental results showed that MNZ oxidation was mainly driven by the presence of holes and superoxide radicals. Totally, 10 major intermediates were detected in UV/TiO2 and UV/ZnO photocatalysis of MNZ using LC-QTof/MS system, in which 5 same intermediates were found. The remaining different intermediates led to the variations of degradation pathways of both processes. Moreover, some bigger transformation products than the parent MNZ were detected.



https://ift.tt/2M2toph

Physiological responses and metal uptake of Miscanthus under cadmium/arsenic stress

Abstract

The aim of this study is to explore the impact of cadmium (Cd) and arsenic (As) stress on physiological indexes and Cd/As uptake ability of Miscanthus, including Miscanthus sacchariflorus A0104, Miscanthus sinensis C0424 and C0640. Cd and As concentration showed significant hormesis effects on some physiological indexes, such as chlorophyll content, net photosynthetic rate, and MDA content. Compared with control group, Cd uptake can be most greatly enhanced by above fourfold with 150 mg/kg Cd treatment. As uptake of A0104 was increased by 3 ~ 33 folds with 200 mg/kg As treatment, C0424 was increased by 7–12 folds with 100 mg/kg As treatment, while C0640 was increased 1 ~ 6 folds with 250 mg/kg As treatment. The results also showed that C0640 was relatively better for the Cd remediation in the high Cd concentration (150 mg/kg) contaminated soil, while A0104 and C0424 were relatively better for the As remediation in the high As concentration (100 ~ 200 mg/kg) contaminated soil. Additionally, significantly (p < 0.05) close correlations were found among physiological indexes (except MDA content), while physiological indexes showed no significant relationship with the heavy metal contents in root, stem, and leaf.



https://ift.tt/2vy6c8g

Frontiers of cancer imaging and guided therapy using ultrasound, light, and microwaves

Abstract

This review describes emerging techniques within the last 5 years that employ ultrasound for detecting and staging malignancy, tracking metastasis, and guiding treatment. Ultrasound elastography quantifies soft tissue elastic properties that change as a tumor grows and proliferates. Hybrid imaging modalities that combine ultrasound with light or microwave energy provide novel contrast for mapping blood oxygen saturation, transport of particles through lymphatic vessels and nodes, and real-time feedback for guiding needle biopsies. Combining these methods with smart nanoparticles and contrast agents further promotes new paradigms for cancer imaging and therapy.



https://ift.tt/2LOafIB

Measuring the frequency of consumer hair combing and magnitude of combing forces on individual hairs in a tress and the implications for product evaluation and claims substantiation

International Journal of Cosmetic Science, Volume 0, Issue ja, -Not available-.


https://ift.tt/2LUKuWY

Phase II trial of capecitabine plus oxaliplatin (CAPOX) as perioperative therapy for locally advanced rectal cancer

Abstract

Purpose

The standard strategy for locally advanced lower rectal cancer is chemoradiotherapy followed by total mesorectal excision (TME) in Western countries and TME followed by adjuvant chemotherapy without preoperative treatment in Japan.

Methods

This phase II trial evaluated the efficacy of a preoperative CAPOX chemotherapy regimen without radiation therapy for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. The primary endpoint was 2-year disease-free survival.

Results

The trial enrolled 45 patients from 9 institutions between 2012 and 2014. The mean age was 63.5 (29–74) years; 31 patients were male. Most patients (n = 41) received preoperative chemotherapy (CTx), and the preoperative CTx completion rate was 95.2%. R0 resection after CTx was performed in 41 patients. The pathological complete response rate was 7.3% (3/41). After surgery, 35 patients (85.3%) received adjuvant CTx, and 22 of 35 completed the protocol treatment. The follow-up period ranged from 0.71 to 4.68 years (median 2.86 years). There was recurrence in 13 of 40 patients who underwent R0 resection, and the 2-year disease-free survival rate and overall survival rate were 71.6 and 92.7%, respectively.

Conclusions

Here we report the completion rates for neoadjuvant CTx and adjuvant CTx, the pathological complete response rate, and the mid-term prognosis. The results indicate that CAPOX followed by TME may be a safe treatment strategy for locally advanced rectal cancer.



https://ift.tt/2AFgbhU

Scholar : New Political Science, Volume 40, Issue 3, September 2018 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online

Taylor & Francis Online - The new journals and reference work platform for Taylor & Francis
The online platform for Taylor & Francis Online content

New Political Science, Volume 40, Issue 3, September 2018 is now available online on Taylor & Francis Online.



This new issue contains the following articles:

Original Articles

How Do We Solve a Problem Like the Donald? The Democratic Challenge of Trump Supporters and the Politics of Presidential Removal
Julie Novkov
Pages: 439-458 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487111


"The Immigration Problem" and Norwegian Right-Wing Politicians | Open Access
Katrine Fangen & Mari Vaage
Pages: 459-476 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487145


Must We Talk about Populism? Interrogating Populism's Conceptual Utility in a Context of Crisis
Barry Cannon
Pages: 477-496 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487187


John Locke and the Limits of Religious Liberty: Marriage License Refusal, Religious Freedom Laws, Vaccine Refusal, Contraception Mandate Exemptions, and Ultrasound Requirements
Ryan Reed
Pages: 497-514 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487146


Symposium: Transformative Practices of Teacher-Scholar-Activists in the Era of Trump

Symposium: Transformative Practices of Teacher-Scholar-Activists in the Era of TrumpIntroduction
Sarah T. Romano & Courtenay W. Daum
Pages: 515-527 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487114


Adorno and Marcuse at the Barricades?: Critical Theory, Scholar-Activism, and the Neoliberal University
Bradley J. Macdonald & Katherine E. Young
Pages: 528-541 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1489092


Creating Student-Scholar-Activists: Discourse Instruction and Social Justice in Political Science Classrooms
Kelly A. Clancy & Kelly Bauer
Pages: 542-557 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1489091


"They Tried to Bury Us": Scholar Advocacy in the Wake of the DACA Rescission
Eric Ishiwata & Susana M. Muñoz
Pages: 558-580 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1489093


Environmental Activism of Teacher-Scholars in the Neoliberal University
Sarah T. Romano & Wendy Highby
Pages: 581-598 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487112


Conclusion: Teacher-Scholar-Activists in the Era of Trump: Where Do We Go from Here?
Sarah T. Romano & Courtenay W. Daum
Pages: 599-604 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1487113


Review Articles

What's the Matter with College? Exploring White Working-Class Resentment Towards Higher Education
Claire Snyder-Hall
Pages: 605-612 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1488095


"The Vietnam War: A Reckoning?"
Edward P. Morgan
Pages: 613-618 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1488094


Book Reviews

What is populism?
Nandini Deo
Pages: 619-623 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1488093


Violent conjunctures in democratic India, by Amitra Basu, New York, NY, Cambridge University Press, 2015, 357 pp., $35.99 (paperback), ISBN-13: 978-1107461321
Charmaine N. Willis
Pages: 621-623 | DOI: 10.1080/07393148.2018.1488092


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Scholar : ΜΑΣΤΟΕΙΔΙΤΙΣ - νέα αποτελέσμ

Otogenic cerebral venous thrombosis in children: A review of 16 consecutive cases

G Coutinho, S Júlio, R Matos, M Santos, J Spratley - International Journal of Pediatric …, 2018
… children. A previous study from our institution reported three cases of OCVT among
43 children diagnosed with acute mastoiditis during five years [7]. Despite the OCVT
low incidence, its potential consequences can be serious …
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Cross Sectional Imaging of the Ear and Temporal Bone

AF Juliano - Head and Neck Pathology, 2018
… accumulated material is infectious and per- haps purulent, for example in
the setting of infectious acute otitis media, there may be bony destruction
involving the mastoid septations and/or overlying cortex associated with the …
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Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the External Auditory Canal and Temporal Bone: An Update

BM Allanson, TH Low, JR Clark, R Gupta - Head and Neck Pathology, 2018
… Increased signal along the facial nerve may also be observed. MRI may help
distinguish malignancy from benign processes, with mastoiditis, middle ear
effusions and cholesteatomas typically showing hyperintensity on T2WI and …
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Anatomy and Surgical Approach of the Ear and Temporal Bone

B Isaacson - Head and Neck Pathology, 2018
… of the osseous external auditory canal respectively. A cortical mastoidectomy, an intact
canal wall technique, is typically performed in the setting of acute mastoiditis with
subperiosteal abscess [19]. A surgical drill is used to remove …
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Hypertrophic pachymeningitis and hydrocephalus: the role of neuroendoscopy. Case report and review of the literature

FR Barbieri, F Novegno, A Iaquinandi, P Lunardi - World Neurosurgery, 2018
… 19. Bravo D, Machová H, Hahn A, Marková H, Otruba L, Mandys V
et al. Mastoiditis complicated with Gradenigo syndrome and a
hypertrophic pachymeningitis with consequent communicating …
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Idiopathic, Infectious and Reactive Lesions of the Ear and Temporal Bone

KR Magliocca, EX Vivas, CC Griffith - Head and Neck Pathology, 2018
Page 1. Vol.:(0123456789) 1 3 Head and Neck Pathology https://ift.tt/2M0K2Wx
018-0952-0 SPECIAL ISSUE: EAR Idiopathic, Infectious and Reactive Lesions of the Ear
and Temporal Bone Kelly R. Magliocca1 · Esther X. Vivas2 · Christopher C. Griffith1 …
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[HTML] Infecciones del Oído (Oído Medio)

BMI Calculator
… Otras complicaciones posibles, aunque raras, de la OAM incluyen mastoiditis (una
infección en el hueso detrás del oído) y meningitis espinal. Evaluaciones Científicas
de los Remedios Homeopáticos para las Infecciones del Oído Medio …
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Cholesteatoma Pearls: Practical Points and Update

JT Castle - Head and Neck Pathology
… leads to progression of cholesteatomas. Advanced infection can progress to significant
complications such as cavernous sinus thrombosis, meningitis, brain abscess and
mastoiditis [27]. Staging. The EAONO/JOS working group …
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[HTML] Kategori: Laporan Kasus

LKLB Pain–Melisa, E Dameri
Pos tentang Laporan Kasus yang ditulis oleh DEPARTEMEN NEUROLOGI AMBARAWA.
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Αυτή η ειδοποίηση αποστέλλεται από τον Μελετητή Google. Ο Μελετητής Google είναι μια υπηρεσία που παρέχεται από την Google.



Scholar : Decannulation - νέα αποτελέσματα

Serial intralesional triamcinolone acetonide injections for acquired subglottic stenosis in premature infants

A Sekioka, K Fukumoto, M Yamoto, T Takahashi… - Pediatric Surgery …, 2018
… These kinds of SGS often require tracheostomy and subsequently make decannulation
difficult … One patient achieved decannulation, and another one underwent laryngotracheal
reconstruction and decannulation. Two patients started using a speech cannula …
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[PDF] Therapy with propylthiouracil for T3-predominant neonatal Graves' disease: a case report

E Hamajima, M Noda, E Nai, S Akiyama, Y Ikuta… - Clinical Pediatric …, 2018
… 175 During treatment, airway stenosis symptoms appeared due to a goiter. When we
attempted decannulation on day 5 and day 14 of life, we performed reintubation due to
airway stenosis. We then performed decannulation on day 28 of life …
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Multidisciplinary guidelines for the management of paediatric tracheostomy emergencies

C Doherty, R Neal, C English, J Cooke, D Atkinson… - Anaesthesia, 2018
… Children with reversible, treatable or acquired pathologies, such as vocal cord palsies
or subglottic stenoses, are more likely to get decannulated and the number of associated
comorbidities is linked to the likeli- hood of eventual decannulation [17] …
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A Clinical Care Pathway to Reduce ICU Usage in Head and Neck Microvascular Reconstruction

E Morse, C Henderson, T Carafeno, J Dibble… - Otolaryngology–Head and …, 2018
Objective To design and implement a postoperative clinical care pathway designed to
reduce intensive care usage on length of stay, readmission rates, and surgic...
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Awareness and Management of Dysphagia in Dutch Intensive Care Units: A Nationwide Survey

W van Snippenburg, A Kröner, M Flim, J Hofhuis… - Dysphagia, 2018
… No aspiration on FEES/VFSS 12 (18) 5 (12) 7 (26) 0.19 Criteria needed before
decannulation (besides patent airway) No endotracheal suction needed 61 (91) 38 (93)
22 (81) 0.20 Negative aspiration screening test 24 (36) 14 (34) 10 (37) 0.80 …
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Left ventricular dysfunction after two hours of polarizing or depolarizing cardioplegic arrest in a porcine model

T Aass, L Stangeland, CA Moen, A Solholm, GO Dahle… - Perfusion, 2018
Introduction: This experimental study compares myocardial function after prolonged arrest
by St. Thomas' Hospital polarizing cardioplegic solution (esmolol, ade...
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[PDF] 小児声門下腔狭窄症に対する partial cricotracheal resection (PCTR)

津川二郎, 西島栄治 - 小児耳鼻咽喉科, 2018
… anastomosis. However, operative techniques and postoperative cares in PCTR
for small infants are complicated, PCTR for severe subglottic stenosis in pediatric
patients has been reported to have a high decannulation rate …
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