Institution
Medical University of South Carolina
Education•Charleston, South Carolina, United States•
About: Medical University of South Carolina is a education organization based out in Charleston, South Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 23436 authors who have published 45440 publications receiving 1769397 citations. The organization is also known as: MUSC & Medical College of the State of South Carolina.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Medicine, Cancer, Stroke
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The results of these short‐term studies indicate that ovariectomy in growing rats leads to increases in both bone formation and resorption, and that these increases are reversed by treatment with 17β‐estradiol.
Abstract: The effects of ovariectomy for four weeks and of 17β-estradiol for three weeks on histomorphometry of the tibial diaphysis were determined in young rats. The effects of ovariectomy on histomorphometry of subcutaneous implants of demineralized bone matrix were also examined. Groups of young female rats were either ovariectomized or sham operated. After surgery, the animals were weight matched and pair fed. Despite the same caloric intake, ovariectomized rats grew more rapidly than pair-fed, sham-operated controls but were significantly heavier at sacrifice in only one of three experiments. Ovariectomy did not change mean serum calcium, phosphate, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD), or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH)2D] but significantly lowered mean serum magnesium. Serum estradiol was not detectable in ovariectomized animals. 17β-Estradiol in ovariectomized animals significantly increased mean serum estradiol and lowered mean serum phosphate but did not change mean serum calcium, magnesium, 25-OHD, or 1,25(OH)2D, as compared to values in sham-operated controls. Bone formation rate was significantly enhanced in ovariectomized animals at both the endosteal and periosteal surfaces of the tibial diaphysis as compared to values in sham-operated controls. The increase in bone formation rate was reversed by 17β-estradiol at the periosteal but not endosteal surface. Ovariectomy increased the bone apposition rate, mineralization rate, and osteoid thickness of the tibial diaphysis. These increases were reversed by 17β-estradiol. In implants, ovariectomy increased the resorption of implant matrix and enhanced the formation of new matrix. Ovariectomy resulted in increases in forming surface and resorbing surface in the implants. The results of these short-term studies indicate (a) that ovariectomy in growing rats leads to increases in both bone formation and resorption, and (b) that these increases are reversed by treatment with 17β-estradiol.
366 citations
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TL;DR: The SmartDelay Determined AV Optimization: A Comparison to Other AV Delay Methods used in Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (SMART-AV) trial prospectively randomized patients to a fixed empirical AV delay (120 milliseconds), echocardiographically optimized AV delay, or AV delay optimized with Smartdelay, an electrogram-based algorithm.
Abstract: BackgroundOne variable that may influence cardiac resynchronization therapy response is the programmed atrioventricular (AV) delay. The SmartDelay Determined AV Optimization: A Comparison to Other AV Delay Methods Used in Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (SMART-AV) Trial prospectively randomized patients to a fixed empirical AV delay (120 milliseconds), echocardiographically optimized AV delay, or AV delay optimized with SmartDelay, an electrogram-based algorithm. Methods and ResultsA total of 1014 patients (68% men; mean age, 66±11 years; mean left ventricular ejection fraction, 25±7%) who met enrollment criteria received a cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator, and 980 patients were randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio. All patients were programmed (DDD-60 or DDDR-60) and evaluated after implantation and 3 and 6 months later. The primary end point was left ventricular end-systolic volume. Secondary end points included New York Heart Association class, quality-of-life score, 6-minute walk distance, lef...
365 citations
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TL;DR: This article is a user's guide to conducting empirically respectable case-based time-series studies in a clinical practice or laboratory setting.
Abstract: Both researchers and practitioners need to know more about how laboratory treatment protocols translate to real-world practice settings and how clinical innovations can be systematically tested and communicated to a skeptical scientific community. The single-case time-series study is well suited to opening a productive discourse between practice and laboratory. The appeal of case-based time-series studies, with multiple observations both before and after treatment, is that they enrich our design palette by providing the discipline another way to expand its empirical reach to practice settings and its subject matter to the contingencies of individual change. This article is a user's guide to conducting empirically respectable case-based time-series studies in a clinical practice or laboratory setting.
365 citations
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TL;DR: It is demonstrated here that activated human blood monocyte, but not resting monocytes, release a mediator that attracts smooth muscle cells and cooperates with other mediators to stimulate fibroblast proliferation.
Abstract: Activated human monocytes express the c-sis proto-oncogene and release a mediator showing PDGF-like activity
364 citations
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TL;DR: The prevalence of scleroderma-type capillary abnormalities, as observed by in vivo microscopy, was determined in 173 patients from three rheumatic disease centers, finding enlarged and deformed capillary loops surrounded by relatively avascular areas, most prominently in the nail-folds were found in 82% of patients with sclerodma and in 54% with mixed connective tissue disease.
Abstract: The prevalence of scleroderma-type capillary abnormalities, as observed by in vivo microscopy, was determined in 173 patients from three rheumatic disease centers. The patients had a variety of connective tissue diseases: scleroderma (systemic sclerosis) 50; systemic lupus erythematosus 60; mixed connective disease 26; Raynaud's disease 11; other rheumatic disorders 26. Enlarged and deformed capillary loops surrounded by relatively avascular areas, most prominently in the nail-folds, were found in 82% of patients with scleroderma and in 54% with mixed connective tissue disease. The rarity of these abnormalities in systemic lupus erythematosus (2%) despite the presence of Raynaud's phenomenon suggests that they are not an expression of the Raynaud's phenomenon frequently associated with scleroderma and mixed connective tissue disease. The single patient with Raynaud's disease and sclerodermatype capillary changes subsequently developed scleroderma.
364 citations
Authors
Showing all 23601 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Edward Giovannucci | 206 | 1671 | 179875 |
Ronald Klein | 194 | 1305 | 149140 |
Peter W.F. Wilson | 181 | 680 | 139852 |
Yusuke Nakamura | 179 | 2076 | 160313 |
John J.V. McMurray | 178 | 1389 | 184502 |
Nora D. Volkow | 165 | 958 | 107463 |
L. Joseph Melton | 161 | 531 | 97861 |
Gregg C. Fonarow | 161 | 1676 | 126516 |
Michael Boehnke | 152 | 511 | 136681 |
Charles B. Nemeroff | 149 | 979 | 90426 |
Deepak L. Bhatt | 149 | 1973 | 114652 |
Clifford R. Jack | 140 | 965 | 94814 |
Scott D. Solomon | 137 | 1145 | 103041 |
Karl Swedberg | 136 | 706 | 111214 |
Charles J. Yeo | 136 | 672 | 76424 |