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Institution

California State University, Long Beach

EducationLong Beach, California, United States
About: California State University, Long Beach is a education organization based out in Long Beach, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 10036 authors who have published 13933 publications receiving 377394 citations. The organization is also known as: Cal State Long Beach & Long Beach State.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the reliability and validity of the Risk Behavior Assessment, a structured interview questionnaire designed to evaluate drug use and sexual HIV risk behaviors in 218 drug users who completed the questionnaire two times over a 48-hour period and gave urine samples on both occasions.
Abstract: This study examined the reliability and validity of the Risk Behavior Assessment, a structured interview questionnaire designed to evaluate drug use and sexual HIV risk behaviors. Participants were 218 drug users currently not in treatment who completed the RBA two times over a 48-hour period and gave urine samples on both occasions. We examined internal consistency and test-retest reliability and found that, overall, drug users reliably report drug use and sexual behavior, although the reliability of reports of specific needle practice and sexual behavior items was somewhat lower. Validity results indicated that drug users' accurately report use of cocaine and opiates. These findings indicate that this self-report questionnaire, when administered by trained interviewers, reliably measures HIV risk behaviors in a drug-using population and provides a valid assessment of recent drug use.

353 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors defined the characteristics of repair of 6-mm full-thickness osteochondral defects in the adult Spanish goat and examined the defect at ten time-intervals, ranging from time zero (immediately after creation of the defect) to one year post-operatively.
Abstract: Background: Full-thickness defects measuring 3 mm in diameter have been commonly used in studies of rabbits to evaluate new procedures designed to improve the quality of articular cartilage repair. These defects initially heal spontaneously. However, little information is available on the characteristics of repair of larger defects. The objective of the present study was to define the characteristics of repair of 6-mm full-thickness osteochondral defects in the adult Spanish goat. Methods: Full-thickness osteochondral defects measuring 6 ¥ 6 mm were created in the medial femoral condyle of the knee joint of adult female Spanish goats. The untreated defects were allowed to heal spontaneously. The knee joints were removed, and the defects were examined at ten time-intervals, ranging from time zero (immediately after creation of the defect) to one year postoperatively. The defects were examined grossly, microradiographically, histologically, and with magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography. Results: The 6-mm osteochondral defects did not heal. Moreover, heretofore undescribed progressive, deleterious changes occurred in the osseous walls of the defect and the articular cartilage surrounding the defect. These changes resulted in a progressive increase in the size of the defect, the formation of a large cavitary lesion, and the collapse of both the surrounding subchondral bone and the articular cartilage into the periphery of the defect. Resorption of the osseous walls of the defect was first noted by one week, and it was associated with extensive osteoclastic activity in the trabecular bone of the walls of the defect. Flattening and deformation of the articular cartilage at the edges of the defect was also observed at this time. By twelve weeks, bone resorption had transformed the surgically created defect into a larger cavitary lesion, and the articular cartilage and subchondral bone surrounding the defect had collapsed into the periphery of the defect. By twenty-six weeks, bone resorption had ceased and the osseous walls of the lesion had become sclerotic. The cavitary lesion did not become filled in with fibrocartilage. Instead, a cystic lesion was found in the center of most of the cavitary lesions. Only a thin layer of fibrocartilage was present on the sclerotic osseous walls of the defect. Specimens examined at one year postoperatively showed similar characteristics. Conclusions: Full-thickness osteochondral defects, measuring 6 mm in both diameter and depth, that are created in the medial femoral condyle of the knee joint of adult Spanish goats do not heal spontaneously. Instead, they undergo progressive changes resulting in resorption of the osseous walls of the defect, the formation of a large cavitary lesion, and the collapse of the surrounding articular cartilage and subchondral bone. Clinical Relevance: As surgeons apply new reparative procedures to larger areas of full-thickness articular cartilage loss, we believe that it is important to consider the potential deleterious effects of a "zone of influence" secondary to the creation of a large defect in the subchondral bone. When biologic and synthetic matrices with or without cells or bioactive factors are placed into surgically created osseous defects, the osseous walls serve as shoulders to protect and stabilize the preliminary repair process. It is important to protect the repair process until biologic incorporation occurs and the chondrogenic switch turns the cells on to synthesize an articular-cartilage-like matrix. It takes a varying period of time to fill a large, surgically created bone defect underlying a chondral surface. The repair of such a defect requires bone synthesis and the reestablishment of a subchondral plate with a tidemark transition to the new overlying articular surface. The prevention of secondary changes in the surrounding bone and articular cartilage and the durability of the new reparative tissue making up the articulating surface are issues that must be addressed in future studies.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first large-scale study finding DM as a strong, independent risk for the occurrence of atrial fibrillation and flutter and other cardiovascular disease.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tadalafil significantly improved the mean change from baseline in International Prostate Symptom Score at 6 weeks and at 12 weeks and made significant improvements in the Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Impact Index (significant at12 weeks) vs placebo.

350 citations


Authors

Showing all 10093 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David A. Weitz1781038114182
Menachem Elimelech15754795285
Josh Moss139101989255
Ron D. Hays13578182285
Matthew J. Budoff125144968115
Harinder Singh Bawa12079866120
Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh118102556187
Dionysios D. Dionysiou11667548449
Kathryn Grimm11061847814
Richard B. Kaner10655766862
William Oh10086748760
Nosratola D. Vaziri9870834586
Jagat Narula9897847745
Qichun Zhang9454028367
Muhammad Shahbaz92100134170
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202324
202260
2021663
2020638
2019578
2018536