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Noelle Lucke-Wold
Researcher at West Virginia University
Publications - 17
Citations - 558
Noelle Lucke-Wold is an academic researcher from West Virginia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Lymphocyte. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 15 publications receiving 433 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Peripheral blood AKAP7 expression as an early marker for lymphocyte-mediated post-stroke blood brain barrier disruption
Grant C. O’Connell,Madison B. Treadway,Ashley B Petrone,Connie S. Tennant,Noelle Lucke-Wold,Paul D. Chantler,Taura L. Barr +6 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that AKAP7 expression levels may have clinical utility as a prognostic biomarker for post-stroke BBB complications, and are likely elevated early in patients who later develop post- stroke BBB disruption due to the presence of an invasive lymphocyte population in the peripheral blood.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quality of life and loneliness in stroke survivors living in Appalachia.
Laurie A. Theeke,Patricia Horstman,Jennifer A. Mallow,Noelle Lucke-Wold,Stacey Culp,Jennifer Domico,Taura L. Barr +6 more
TL;DR: Nurses need to assess for loneliness, include loneliness in care planning, and implement smoking cessation and cognitive behavioral interventions that target loneliness for stroke survivors to potentially diminish psychological sequelae after stroke and enhance QoL.
Journal ArticleDOI
Monocyte-lymphocyte cross-communication via soluble CD163 directly links innate immune system activation and adaptive immune system suppression following ischemic stroke.
Grant C. O’Connell,Connie S. Tennant,Noelle Lucke-Wold,Yasser Kabbani,Abdul R Tarabishy,Paul D. Chantler,Taura L. Barr +6 more
TL;DR: Novel evidence is provided that the innate immune system employs protective mechanisms aimed at mitigating the risk of post-stroke autoimmune complications driven by adaptive immune system overactivation, and that CD163 is key mediator of this phenomenon.
Journal ArticleDOI
Incorporating Health Literacy Screening Into Patients’ Health Assessment
TL;DR: Results indicated that RNs were receptive to HL screening, with HL scores decreasing as age increased, and patients with low HL had significantly higher hospital readmissions, even when controlling for age and number of health conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nurses' Research Capacity, Use of Evidence, and Research Productivity in Acute Care: Year 1 Findings From a Partnership Study.
TL;DR: Findings support some EBP benefits related to a research-focused ASP including research productivity; however, implementation barriers and contextual factors may have limited potential outcomes.