Institution
Jewish Hospital
Healthcare•Cincinnati, Ohio, United States•
About: Jewish Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Antigen & Population. The organization has 3881 authors who have published 3414 publications receiving 123044 citations.
Topics: Antigen, Population, Pregnancy, Thrombophilia, Transplantation
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The roles reflected a paternalistic approach to chronic disease management and the shared decision making approach supported in the literature was not evident; this finding is important for health professional education and practice.
Abstract: Health care provider-patient role relationships can influence patient satisfaction, adherence to treatment, and health outcomes positively. Existing models of role relationships reflect one of three approaches to clinical management--paternalism, consumerism, or shared decision making. These models may or may not reflect the reality of chronic disease management in clinical practice. To characterize the nature of chronic disease management from the perspectives of primary care providers, we asked four nurse practitioners and four internists to describe the roles they saw for themselves and for their patients. A qualitative approach using a descriptive mode supported the formulation of a narrative description of these roles. The roles reflected a paternalistic approach to chronic disease management. The shared decision making approach supported in the literature was not evident. This finding is important for health professional education and practice.
32 citations
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TL;DR: It is suggested that maintenance immunotherapy does not result in an increase of circulating immune complexes and patients receiving maintenance inhalant immunotherapy have no statistically significant differences in incidence of Clq binding immune complexes.
Abstract: Patients with allergic rhinitis receiving maintenance inhalant immunotherapy and two control groups were studied for evidence of circulating immune complexes. The first control group contained patients with allergic rhinitis who had never received immunotherapy. The second control group contained normal volunteers. Patients in the treatment group had no proteinuria. When compared with the control group, the treatment group had no statistically significant differences in incidence of Clq binding immune complexes, cryoglobulinemia, rheumatoid factor, or complement depletion. This initial study suggests that maintenance immunotherapy does not result in an increase of circulating immune complexes.
32 citations
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TL;DR: These patients who developed marked increases in plasma cholesterol on ketogenic diets should serve as a caution that high-fat low-carbohydrate diets have the potential to exacerbate or cause hypercholesterolemia in patients with or without underlying genetic hyperlipidemia.
32 citations
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TL;DR: Thermoinducible mini-Mu prophage which have internal deletions spanning various portions of the αG regions were used to analyze the replication process of bacteriophage Mu, indicating that in the region between genes B and C a function(s) exists which amplifies the replication of Mu DNA.
32 citations
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TL;DR: Identifying the cause of dementia is important because some forms can be treated with currently available therapies, and in instances involving genetically transmitted disease, genetic testing and counseling of family members may be advisable.
Abstract: Classification of dementia involves the recognition of its presence, followed by the differential diagnosis of its cause. Informant-based methods for dementia detection can be highly sensitive, even when cognitive impairment is mild. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is by far the leading cause of dementia; standardized clinical criteria result in high diagnostic accuracy rates. Classification of other dementing disorders is less satisfactory, particularly because there is frequent clinical and pathological overlap with AD. After AD, the most common causes of dementia are vascular dementia and dementia in persons with Parkinson's disease. Less common dementias include progressive supranuclear palsy, Huntington's disease, Pick's disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and inherited metabolic disorders, most of which are extremely rare. Identifying the cause of dementia is important because some forms can be treated with currently available therapies. In instances involving genetically transmitted disease, genetic testing and counseling of family members may be advisable.
32 citations
Authors
Showing all 3894 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
John C. Morris | 183 | 1441 | 168413 |
David L. Kaplan | 177 | 1944 | 146082 |
Robert H. Purcell | 139 | 666 | 70366 |
Nancy J. Cox | 135 | 778 | 109195 |
Jennifer S. Haas | 128 | 840 | 71315 |
David A. Cheresh | 125 | 337 | 62252 |
John W. Kappler | 122 | 464 | 57541 |
Philippa Marrack | 120 | 416 | 54345 |
Arthur Weiss | 117 | 380 | 45703 |
Thomas J. Kipps | 114 | 748 | 63240 |
Michael Pollak | 114 | 663 | 57793 |
Peter M. Henson | 112 | 369 | 54246 |
Roberto Bolli | 111 | 528 | 44010 |
William D. Foulkes | 108 | 682 | 45013 |
David A. Lynch | 108 | 714 | 59678 |