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Institution

University of Colorado Denver

EducationDenver, Colorado, United States
About: University of Colorado Denver is a education organization based out in Denver, Colorado, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 27444 authors who have published 57213 publications receiving 2539937 citations. The organization is also known as: CU Denver & UCD.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This document summarizes needs for further research in VWF, VWD and bleeding disorders, including clinical research to obtain more objective information about bleeding symptoms, advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic tools, and enhancement in the education and training of clinicians and scientists in bleeding and thrombotic disorders.
Abstract: von Willebrand disease (VWD) is a commonly encountered inherited bleeding disorder affecting both males and females, causing mucous membrane and skin bleeding symptoms, and bleeding with surgical or other haemostatic challenges. VWD may be disproportionately symptomatic in women of child-bearing age. It may also occur less frequently as an acquired disorder (acquired von Willebrand syndrome). VWD is caused by deficiency or dysfunction of von Willebrand factor (VWF), a plasma protein that mediates platelet haemostatic function and stabilizes blood coagulation factor VIII. The pathophysiology, classification, diagnosis and management of VWD are relatively complex, but understanding them is important for proper diagnosis and management of patients with VWD. These evidence-based guidelines for diagnosis and management of VWD from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Expert Panel (USA) review relevant publications, summarize current understanding of VWD pathophysiology and classification, and present consensus diagnostic and management recommendations based on analysis of the literature and expert opinion. They also suggest an approach for clinical and laboratory evaluation of individuals with bleeding symptoms, history of bleeding or conditions associated with increased bleeding risk. This document summarizes needs for further research in VWF, VWD and bleeding disorders, including clinical research to obtain more objective information about bleeding symptoms, advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic tools, and enhancement in the education and training of clinicians and scientists in bleeding and thrombotic disorders. The NHLBI Web site (http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/vwd) has a more detailed document, a synopsis of these recommendations, and patient education information.

862 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Predrag Radivojac1, Wyatt T. Clark1, Tal Ronnen Oron2, Alexandra M. Schnoes3, Tobias Wittkop2, Artem Sokolov4, Artem Sokolov5, Kiley Graim5, Christopher S. Funk6, Karin Verspoor6, Asa Ben-Hur5, Gaurav Pandey7, Gaurav Pandey8, Jeffrey M. Yunes7, Ameet Talwalkar7, Susanna Repo9, Susanna Repo7, Michael L Souza7, Damiano Piovesan10, Rita Casadio10, Zheng Wang11, Jianlin Cheng11, Hai Fang, Julian Gough12, Patrik Koskinen13, Petri Törönen13, Jussi Nokso-Koivisto13, Liisa Holm13, Domenico Cozzetto14, Daniel W. A. Buchan14, Kevin Bryson14, David T. Jones14, Bhakti Limaye15, Harshal Inamdar15, Avik Datta15, Sunitha K Manjari15, Rajendra Joshi15, Meghana Chitale16, Daisuke Kihara16, Andreas Martin Lisewski17, Serkan Erdin17, Eric Venner17, Olivier Lichtarge17, Robert Rentzsch14, Haixuan Yang18, Alfonso E. Romero18, Prajwal Bhat18, Alberto Paccanaro18, Tobias Hamp19, Rebecca Kaßner19, Stefan Seemayer19, Esmeralda Vicedo19, Christian Schaefer19, Dominik Achten19, Florian Auer19, Ariane Boehm19, Tatjana Braun19, Maximilian Hecht19, Mark Heron19, Peter Hönigschmid19, Thomas A. Hopf19, Stefanie Kaufmann19, Michael Kiening19, Denis Krompass19, Cedric Landerer19, Yannick Mahlich19, Manfred Roos19, Jari Björne20, Tapio Salakoski20, Andrew Wong21, Hagit Shatkay22, Hagit Shatkay21, Fanny Gatzmann23, Ingolf Sommer23, Mark N. Wass24, Michael J.E. Sternberg24, Nives Škunca, Fran Supek, Matko Bošnjak, Panče Panov, Sašo Džeroski, Tomislav Šmuc, Yiannis A. I. Kourmpetis25, Yiannis A. I. Kourmpetis26, Aalt D. J. van Dijk26, Cajo J. F. ter Braak26, Yuanpeng Zhou27, Qingtian Gong27, Xinran Dong27, Weidong Tian27, Marco Falda28, Paolo Fontana, Enrico Lavezzo28, Barbara Di Camillo28, Stefano Toppo28, Liang Lan29, Nemanja Djuric29, Yuhong Guo29, Slobodan Vucetic29, Amos Marc Bairoch30, Amos Marc Bairoch31, Michal Linial32, Patricia C. Babbitt3, Steven E. Brenner7, Christine A. Orengo14, Burkhard Rost19, Sean D. Mooney2, Iddo Friedberg33 
TL;DR: Today's best protein function prediction algorithms substantially outperform widely used first-generation methods, with large gains on all types of targets, and there is considerable need for improvement of currently available tools.
Abstract: Automated annotation of protein function is challenging. As the number of sequenced genomes rapidly grows, the overwhelming majority of protein products can only be annotated computationally. If computational predictions are to be relied upon, it is crucial that the accuracy of these methods be high. Here we report the results from the first large-scale community-based critical assessment of protein function annotation (CAFA) experiment. Fifty-four methods representing the state of the art for protein function prediction were evaluated on a target set of 866 proteins from 11 organisms. Two findings stand out: (i) today's best protein function prediction algorithms substantially outperform widely used first-generation methods, with large gains on all types of targets; and (ii) although the top methods perform well enough to guide experiments, there is considerable need for improvement of currently available tools.

859 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patients who stopped thienopyridine therapy by 30 days were more likely to die during the next 11 months and to be rehospitalized and strategies to improve the use of thienobyridines are needed to optimize the outcomes of MI patients treated with DES.
Abstract: Background— Although drug-eluting stents (DES) significantly reduce restenosis, they require 3 to 6 months of thienopyridine therapy to prevent stent thrombosis. The rate and consequences of prematurely discontinuing thienopyridine therapy after DES placement for acute myocardial infarction (MI) are unknown. Methods and Results— We used prospectively collected data from a 19-center study of MI patients to examine the prevalence and predictors of thienopyridine discontinuation 30 days after DES treatment. We then compared the mortality and cardiac hospitalization rates for the next 11 months between those who stopped and those who continued thienopyridine therapy. Among 500 DES-treated MI patients who were discharged on thienopyridine therapy, 68 (13.6%) stopped therapy within 30 days. Those who stopped were older, less likely to have completed high school or be married, more likely to avoid health care because of cost, and more likely to have had preexisting cardiovascular disease or anemia at presentatio...

858 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In patients with LAM, sirolimus stabilized lung function, reduced serum VEGF-D levels, and was associated with a reduction in symptoms and improvement in quality of life.
Abstract: Background Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a progressive, cystic lung disease in women; it is associated with inappropriate activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling, which regulates cellular growth and lymphangiogenesis. Sirolimus (also called rapamycin) inhibits mTOR and has shown promise in phase 1–2 trials involving patients with LAM. Methods We conducted a two-stage trial of sirolimus involving 89 patients with LAM who had moderate lung impairment — a 12-month randomized, double-blind comparison of sirolimus with placebo, followed by a 12-month observation period. The primary end point was the difference between the groups in the rate of change (slope) in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1). Results During the treatment period, the FEV1 slope was −12±2 ml per month in the placebo group (43 patients) and 1±2 ml per month in the sirolimus group (46 patients) (P<0.001). The absolute between-group difference in the mean change in FEV1 during the treatment period was 153 ml, o...

851 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is no effective pharmacologic therapy, although cell-based therapy and other therapies currently being tested in clinical trials may provide novel treatments for ARDS.
Abstract: The acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) causes 40% mortality in approximately 200,000 critically ill patients annually in the United States. ARDS is caused by protein-rich pulmonary edema that causes severe hypoxemia and impaired carbon dioxide excretion. The clinical disorders associated with the development of ARDS include sepsis, pneumonia, aspiration of gastric contents, and major trauma. The lung injury is caused primarily by neutrophil-dependent and platelet-dependent damage to the endothelial and epithelial barriers of the lung. Resolution is delayed because of injury to the lung epithelial barrier, which prevents removal of alveolar edema fluid and deprives the lung of adequate quantities of surfactant. Lymphocytes may play a role in resolution of lung injury. Mortality has been markedly reduced with a lung-protective ventilatory strategy. However, there is no effective pharmacologic therapy, although cell-based therapy and other therapies currently being tested in clinical trials may provi...

849 citations


Authors

Showing all 27683 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Matthew Meyerson194553243726
Charles A. Dinarello1901058139668
Gad Getz189520247560
Gordon B. Mills1871273186451
Jasvinder A. Singh1762382223370
David Haussler172488224960
Donald G. Truhlar1651518157965
Charles M. Perou156573202951
David Cella1561258106402
Bruce D. Walker15577986020
Marco A. Marra153620184684
Thomas E. Starzl150162591704
Marc Humbert1491184100577
Rajesh Kumar1494439140830
Martin J. Blaser147820104104
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202383
2022358
20213,830
20203,913
20193,632