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Institution

Jewish Hospital

HealthcareCincinnati, 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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tenosynovitis of the upper extremity, often following trauma, was the most commonly reported presentation, with pulmonary disease occurring in an additional 26% of cases, and underlying medical problems were absent or not reported in 72% of the cases.
Abstract: Mycobacterium terrae infection can cause debilitating disease that is relatively resistant to antibiotic therapy. Two cases are presented, and data from an additional 52 reports from the literature are reviewed. Tenosynovitis of the upper extremity, often following trauma, was the most commonly reported presentation (59% of cases), with pulmonary disease occurring in an additional 26% of cases. Underlying medical problems were absent (44%) or not reported (28%) in 72% of the cases. One-half of the patients with upper extremity tenosynovitis were treated with local or systemic corticosteroids, before microbiological identification. Only one-half of the patients with tenosynovitis who were followed up for 6 months had clinical improvement or were cured. The other one-half of the patients required repeated debridement, tendon extirpation, or amputation. The best antimicrobial therapy for M. terrae infection is unknown but might include a macrolide antibiotic plus ethambutol and one other effective drug for at least 12 months after clinical response. Parenteral treatment with an aminoglycoside and surgery may be useful in selected cases.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Jun 1983-Science
TL;DR: The hyphae of the water mold Achyla bisexualis generate electrical currents that enter the growing tips and leave farther back; an inward-moving current precedes branching and predicts the site of branch emergence.
Abstract: The hyphae of the water mold Achyla bisexualis generate electrical currents that enter the growing tips and leave farther back. An inward-moving current also precedes branching and predicts the site of branch emergence; during the branching process, the current at the original tip declines or even reverses transiently without any change in growth rate. The inward current probably acts as an early signal during branch differentiation. The flow of specific ions rather than the flow of electrical charge probably serves to localize growth.

73 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that human keratinocytes under conditions that prevent terminal differentiation in vitro can synthesize, secrete, and deposit fibronectin in the extracellular matrix.

73 citations


Authors

Showing all 3894 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John C. Morris1831441168413
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Robert H. Purcell13966670366
Nancy J. Cox135778109195
Jennifer S. Haas12884071315
David A. Cheresh12533762252
John W. Kappler12246457541
Philippa Marrack12041654345
Arthur Weiss11738045703
Thomas J. Kipps11474863240
Michael Pollak11466357793
Peter M. Henson11236954246
Roberto Bolli11152844010
William D. Foulkes10868245013
David A. Lynch10871459678
Network Information
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
202217
202148
202038
201944
201828