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Terry Jones

Researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University

Publications -  81
Citations -  3834

Terry Jones is an academic researcher from Virginia Commonwealth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nursing care & Health care. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 78 publications receiving 3584 citations. Previous affiliations of Terry Jones include University of Texas at Austin.

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Regional cerebral oxygen supply and utilization in dementia. A clinical and physiological study with oxygen-15 and positron tomography.

TL;DR: In this paper, the cerebral blood flow, oxygen extraction and oxygen utilization has been measured regionally in 22 dements, and 14 aged normal volunteers, and the results showed that a decline in cerebral flow and mean cerebral oxygen utilization was correlated with increasing severity of dementia in both degenerative and vascular dements.
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Unfinished nursing care, missed care, and implicitly rationed care: State of the science review.

TL;DR: Key limitations of the science include the threat of common method/source bias, a lack of transparency regarding the use of combined samples and secondary analysis, inconsistency in the reporting format for unfinished care prevalence, and a paucity of intervention studies.
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Decreased Brain GABAA-Benzodiazepine Receptor Binding in Panic Disorder: Preliminary Results From a Quantitative PET Study

TL;DR: There is a global reduction in benzodiazepine site binding throughout the brain in patients with panic disorder compared with controls, and results demonstrate that decreased flumazenil binding at this site may underlie panic disorder.
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Detection of Thirty-Second Cognitive Activations in Single Subjects with Positron Emission Tomography: A New Low-Dose H215O Regional Cerebral Blood Flow Three-Dimensional Imaging Technique

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the rCBF distribution associated with the cognitive state is detected during the arrival of radiotracer in the brain and constitutes a critical temporal window during which stimulation should be performed.
Journal Article

Use of the left ventricular time-activity curve as a noninvasive input function in dynamic oxygen-15-water positron emission tomography.

TL;DR: A new mathematical model has been developed, which corrects for the spillover of radioactivity both from the myocardium into the LV ROI and the blood into theMyocardial ROI, which enabled the prediction of an accurate input function using the LV time-activity curve, and hence, noninvasive quantification of MBF without arterial cannulation.