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Institution

Methodist University

EducationFayetteville, North Carolina, United States
About: Methodist University is a education organization based out in Fayetteville, North Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Supply chain. The organization has 1080 authors who have published 1239 publications receiving 20858 citations. The organization is also known as: Methodist & Methodist College.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this review, the specialized aspects of glutamine/glutamate metabolism of different glutamine‐utilizing cells are highlighted and in each case relate key aspects of metabolism to cell function.
Abstract: Glucose is widely accepted as the primary nutrient for maintenance and promotion of cell function. However, we propose that the 5-carbon amino acids, glutamine and glutamate, should be considered to be equally important for maintenance and promotion of cell function. The functions of glutamine are many and include: substrate for protein synthesis, anabolic precursor for muscle growth, acid-base balance in the kidney, substrate for ureogenesis in the liver, substrate for hepatic and renal gluconeogenesis, an oxidative fuel for intestine and cells of the immune system, inter-organ nitrogen transport, precursor for neurotransmitter synthesis, precursor for nucleotide and nucleic acid synthesis and precursor for glutathione production. Many of these functions are connected to the formation of glutamate from glutamine. We propose that the unique properties regarding concentration and routes of metabolism of these amino acids allow them to be used for a diverse array of processes related to the specialized function of each of the glutamine utilizing cells. In this review we highlight the specialized aspects of glutamine/glutamate metabolism of different glutamine-utilizing cells and in each case relate key aspects of metabolism to cell function.

566 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2006-Sleep
TL;DR: Actigraphy proved to be a satisfactory objective measure of sleep on 4 of 5 sleep parameters, but these results are specific to this particular instrument using this particular algorithm and should not be construed as a blanket endorsement of actigraphy for measuring insomnia.
Abstract: Study Objective: Actigraphy, a method of inferring sleep from the presence or absence of wrist movement, has been well validated against polysomnography in trials with people without insomnia. However, the small amount of literature on validation with insomniacs has revealed an actigraphy bias toward overscoring sleep. The current validation trial with insomniacs used the largest number of subjects to date in such research and attracted participants with diverse demographic characteristics. Design: People with insomnia slept 1 night in the laboratory while simultaneously being monitored by polysomnography, actigraphy (high-sensitivity algorithm of the Mini Mitter AW64 Actiwatch™), and morning sleep diary. Setting: Sleep disorders center. Participants: Participants were 57 volunteers from the community, 26 men and 31 women, ranging in age from 21 to 87 years. All participants satisfied conservative criteria for insomnia. The sample included subjects with primary insomnia, subjects with comorbid insomnia, and hypnotic users with current insomnia complaints. Interventions: N/A. Measurements and Results: Actigraphy was successfully validated on 4 measures of sleep pattern—number of awakenings, wake time after sleep onset, total sleep time, and sleep efficiency percentage—based on nonsignificant mean differences and significant correlation between actigraphy and polysomnography. Sleep-onset latency with actigraphy was not significantly different from polysomnography but was weakly correlated with polysomnography. Hypnotic use contributed to actigraphic overscoring of sleep. Conclusions: Actigraphy proved to be a satisfactory objective measure of sleep on 4 of 5 sleep parameters, but these results are specific to this particular instrument using this particular algorithm and should not be construed as a blanket endorsement of actigraphy for measuring insomnia.

471 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The leadless cardiac pacemaker met prespecified pacing and sensing requirements in the large majority of patients, and met the primary safety end point through 6 months.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Cardiac pacemakers are limited by device-related complications, notably infection and problems related to pacemaker leads. We studied a miniaturized, fully selfcontained leadless pacemaker that is nonsurgically implanted in the right ventricle with the use of a catheter. METHODS In this multicenter study, we implanted an active-fixation leadless cardiac pacemaker in patients who required permanent single-chamber ventricular pacing. The primary efficacy end point was both an acceptable pacing threshold (≤2.0 V at 0.4 msec) and an acceptable sensing amplitude (R wave ≥5.0 mV, or a value equal to or greater than the value at implantation) through 6 months. The primary safety end point was freedom from device-related serious adverse events through 6 months. In this ongoing study, the prespecified analysis of the primary end points was performed on data from the first 300 patients who completed 6 months of followup (primary cohort). The rates of the efficacy end point and safety end point were compared with performance goals (based on historical data) of 85% and 86%, respectively. Additional outcomes were assessed in all 526 patients who were enrolled as of June 2015 (the total cohort). RESULTS The leadless pacemaker was successfully implanted in 504 of the 526 patients in the total cohort (95.8%). The intention-to-treat primary efficacy end point was met in 270 of the 300 patients in the primary cohort (90.0%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 86.0 to 93.2, P = 0.007), and the primary safety end point was met in 280 of the 300 patients (93.3%; 95% CI, 89.9 to 95.9; P<0.001). At 6 months, device-related serious adverse events were observed in 6.7% of the patients; events included device dislodgement with percutaneous retrieval (in 1.7%), cardiac perforation (in 1.3%), and pacing-threshold elevation requiring percutaneous retrieval and device replacement (in 1.3%). CONCLUSIONS The leadless cardiac pacemaker met prespecified pacing and sensing requirements in the large majority of patients. Device-related serious adverse events occurred in approximately 1 in 15 patients. (Funded by St. Jude Medical; LEADLESS II ClinicalTrials .gov number, NCT02030418.)

397 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The function of glutamines goes beyond that of a simple metabolic fuel or protein precursor as previously assumed, and some of the common mechanisms underlying the regulation of glutamine dependent cellular functions are attempted.
Abstract: Glutamine is the most abundant free amino acid in the body and is known to play a regulatory role in several cell specific processes including metabolism (e.g., oxidative fuel, gluconeogenic precursor, and lipogenic precursor), cell integrity (apoptosis, cell proliferation), protein synthesis, and degradation, contractile protein mass, redox potential, respiratory burst, insulin resistance, insulin secretion, and extracellular matrix (ECM) synthesis. Glutamine has been shown to regulate the expression of many genes related to metabolism, signal transduction, cell defense and repair, and to activate intracellular signaling pathways. Thus, the function of glutamine goes beyond that of a simple metabolic fuel or protein precursor as previously assumed. In this review, we have attempted to identify some of the common mechanisms underlying the regulation of glutamine dependent cellular functions.

384 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of air quality regulation on economic activity were examined using a unique county-level data set for New York State from 1980 to 1990, using a seminonparametric method based on propensity score matching.
Abstract: This study examines the effects of air quality regulation on economic activity. Anecdotal evidence and some recent empirical studies suggest that an inverse relationship exists between the stringency of environmental regulations and new plant formations. Using a unique county-level data set for New York State from 1980 to 1990, we revisit this conjecture using a seminonparametric method based on propensity score matching. Our empirical estimates suggest that pollution-intensive plants are responding to environmental regulations; more importantly, we find that traditional parametric methods used in previous studies may dramatically understate the impact of more stringent regulations.

381 citations


Authors

Showing all 1088 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Richard G. Wunderink7236826892
Russell S. Harmon6225912597
Alan H. Cowley5767714874
Miklos Z. Molnar5729914921
Steven J. Fleck5613614500
Elfi Kraka5524010486
Carlos A. Silva5576517298
Philip A. Bromberg531778841
Joshua D. Harris522979818
William C. Orr5216610049
Zhong Lu472597480
Nicolay V. Tsarevsky4212510391
David Z. Hambrick421209553
Stephanie Al Otaiba411434685
Andreas Griewank4018610717
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20228
202198
2020118
201996
201866