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Institution

Long Island University

EducationBrookville, New York, United States
About: Long Island University is a education organization based out in Brookville, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 2647 authors who have published 4924 publications receiving 108757 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
15 Feb 2004-Spine
TL;DR: Breath control is a significant factor in the generation of intra-abdominal pressure magnitude during lifting tasks and the effects of respiration should be controlled in studies analyzing intra-ABdominals pressure during lifting.
Abstract: STUDY DESIGN This was a repeated measures study examining 11 asymptomatic subjects while performing dynamic lifting using various postures, loads, and breath control methods. OBJECTIVES To examine the effects of breath control on magnitude and timing of intra-abdominal pressure during dynamic lifting. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA Intra-abdominal pressure has been shown to increase consistently during static and dynamic lifting tasks. The relationship between breath control and intra-abdominal pressure during lifting is not clear. METHODS Eleven healthy subjects were tested using lifting trials consisting of two levels of posture and load and four levels of breath control (natural breathing, inhalation-hold, exhalation-hold, inhalation-exhalation). Intra-abdominal pressure was measured using a microtip pressure transducer placed within the stomach through the nose. Timing of intra-abdominal pressure was determined relative to lift-off of the weights. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to determine the effect of breath control, posture, and load on intra-abdominal pressure magnitude and timing. RESULTS There was a significant effect of breath control (P < 0.018) and load (P < 0.002), but not of posture (P < 0.434), on intra-abdominal pressure magnitude. The inhalation-hold form of breath control produced significantly greater peak intra-abdominal pressure than all other forms of breath control (P < 0.000 for all comparisons). No other comparisons among levels of breath were significantly different. No significant main effects of breath control were found relative to intra-abdominal pressure timing. CONCLUSIONS Breath control is a significant factor in the generation of intra-abdominal pressure magnitude during lifting tasks. The effects of respiration should be controlled in studies analyzing intra-abdominal pressure during lifting.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors develop and implement an algorithm for accurately computing the cosmological observables arising from bubble collisions directly from the Lagrangian of a single scalar field.
Abstract: The theory of eternal inflation in an inflaton potential with multiple vacua predicts that our universe is one of many bubble universes nucleating and growing inside an ever-expanding false vacuum. The collision of our bubble with another could provide an important observational signature to test this scenario. We develop and implement an algorithm for accurately computing the cosmological observables arising from bubble collisions directly from the Lagrangian of a single scalar field. We first simulate the collision spacetime by solving Einstein's equations, starting from nucleation and ending at reheating. Taking advantage of the collision's hyperbolic symmetry, the simulations are performed with a 1+1-dimensional fully relativistic code that uses adaptive mesh refinement. We then calculate the comoving curvature perturbation in an open Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe, which is used to determine the temperature anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background radiation. For a fiducial Lagrangian, the anisotropies are well described by a power law in the cosine of the angular distance from the center of the collision signature. For a given form of the Lagrangian, the resulting observational predictions are inherently statistical due to stochastic elements of the bubble nucleation process. Further uncertainties arise due to our imperfect knowledge about inflationary and pre-recombination physics. We characterize observational predictions by computing the probability distributions over four phenomenological parameters which capture these intrinsic and model uncertainties. This represents the first fully-relativistic set of predictions from an ensemble of scalar field models giving rise to eternal inflation, yielding significant differences from previous non-relativistic approximations. Thus, our results provide a basis for a rigorous confrontation of these theories with cosmological data.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: MR performed by pharmacists versus physicians was more comprehensive and was followed by lower odds ofADEs from admission prescribing errors but with similar odds of all types of ADEs.
Abstract: Background Medication reconciliation (MR) has proven to be a problematic task for many hospitals to accomplish. It is important to know the clinical impact of physician- versus pharmacist-initiated MR in the resource-limited hospital environment. Methods This quasi-experimental study took place from December 2005 to February 2006 at an urban US Veterans Affairs hospital. MR was implemented on 2 similar general medical units: one received physician-initiated MR and the other received pharmacist-initiated MR. Adverse drug events (ADEs) and a 72-hour medication-prescribing risk score were ascertained by research pharmacists for all admitted patients by structured record review. Multivariable models were tested for intervention effect, accounting for quasi-experimental design and clustered observations, and were adjusted for patient and encounter covariates. Results Pharmacists completed the MR process in 102 admissions and physicians completed the process in 116 admissions. In completing the MR process, pharmacists documented statistically more admission medication changes than physicians (3.6 vs 0.8; P Conclusion MR performed by pharmacists versus physicians was more comprehensive and was followed by lower odds of ADEs from admission prescribing errors but with similar odds of all types of ADEs. Further research is warranted to examine how MR tasks may be optimally divided among clinicians and the mechanisms by which MR affects the likelihood of subsequent ADEs. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00370916 .

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The protein-containing PLGA-PVA composite may be suitable for long-term protein drug delivery and was characterized with regard to morphology, size and size distribution, BSA loading efficiency, in vitroBSA release, and BSA stability.
Abstract: Purpose. To prepare a heterogeneously structured composite based on poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microspheres and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) hydrogel nanoparticles for long-term protein drug delivery.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Current dietary/nutrition professional recommendations to avoid high-fat foods during this postsurgery transition time are problematic and future bariatric studies are needed to further explore this and other commonly practiced “dieting behaviors” in bariatric patients.
Abstract: This research compared both food selection and food intolerance frequency of High-fat grouped foods versus Low-fat grouped foods in Roux-en-Y bariatric clients during their dietary adaptation phase (DAP). Thirty-eight bariatric surgery patients in their dietary transition phase (3 months–2.5 years) filled out a 236-food item questionnaire. From the larger set of primary data, 24 high-fat (30% or greater fat) and 22 low/lower-fat food items were itemized by selection frequency and food intolerance frequency for comparison. High-fat food selection was 38.3% against low fat at 50.4% (p = .0002). For comparison, the complete questionnaire’s 236-item food selection percentage was 41%. Frequency of “Never” experiencing food intolerance was similar between both groups with a combined mean of 1.92%. “Seldom to Sometimes” intolerance in low-fat foods was 13.3%, and 24.9% in high fat (p = .002). Finally, “Often to Always” experiencing food intolerance in the Low-fat food group was 85.5% versus 72.2% for the High-fat group (p = .002). Roux-en-Y bariatric patients in the DAP demonstrated typical “dieting behavior” by selecting low-fat foods at a greater frequency than high-fat foods. Although selected more, these low-fat foods also showed significantly worse intolerance frequencies. Thus, current dietary/nutrition professional recommendations to avoid high-fat foods during this postsurgery transition time are problematic. Future bariatric studies are needed to further explore this and other commonly practiced “dieting behaviors” in bariatric patients.

57 citations


Authors

Showing all 2692 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Arturo Casadevall12098055001
Hagop S. Akiskal11856550869
Robert D. Burk10851539421
Mark A. Cane9327230450
John M. Pezzuto8858835901
John R. Kelsoe7627724542
William Breitbart7334021758
Jeffrey R. Idle7026116237
Debasis Bagchi6835120682
David E. Cohen6133314852
Christopher J. Gobler6020915659
Thomas R. Cundari6040613395
Steven M. Albert5730213985
Mark Hyman Rapaport5723913504
Barry Rosenfeld5720212361
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202326
202246
2021185
2020186
2019198
2018175