Recent Publications by CFE Educators

Recent Published articles, books, and other scholarship by Academy members, CFE Education Scientists, and CFE Faculty.
Strategies for effective education in a jail setting: the Tuberculosis Prevention Project.
2003
Authors: White MC, Duong TM, Cruz ES, Rodas A, McCall C, Menéndez E, Carmody ER, Tulsky JP
Jails are a unique setting for health education. The Tuberculosis (TB) Prevention Project was designed to improve completion of care for latent TB infection in released inmates. As part of an ongoing clinical trial to improve rates of completion, educators provided TB-focused educational sessions to 1,027 inmates. This article describes the educational sessions and illustrates some of the barriers to working in a jail setting and strategies to overcome them. The nature of the jail itself, inmate characteristics, the characteristics of educators, and the educational sessions themselves interacted in different ways to enhance or impair the interaction. Jail is a setting in which the population is at high risk for a number of health problems and health education is increasingly important.
View on PubMedRadiologic findings are strongly associated with a pathologic diagnosis of usual interstitial pneumonia.
2003
Authors: Hunninghake GW, Lynch DA, Galvin JR, Gross BH, Müller N, Schwartz DA, King TE, Lynch JP, Hegele R, Waldron J, Colby TV, Hogg JC
PURPOSE
To determine which clinical and radiologic findings are independently associated with a pathologic diagnosis of usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP).
METHODS
We recently reported, using a prospective, multicenter study of patients suspected of having idiopathic interstitial pneumonia (IIP), that a confident diagnosis of UIP made by experienced radiologists was correct in 95% of cases. In the current article, we further analyzed data from this study. Ninety-one patients were entered into the study. Clinical, physiologic, chest radiographic, and CT features were prospectively recorded, and analyzed using univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis to compare the patients with a histologic diagnosis of UIP with those who received other pathologic diagnoses.
RESULTS
Fifty-four of 91 patients (59%) received a pathologic diagnosis of UIP. The following features recorded at the referring clinical centers were associated with a pathologic diagnosis of UIP on multivariate analysis: lower-lobe honeycombing on high-resolution CT (HRCT) [odds ratio, 11.45], radiographic findings consistent with UIP (odds ratio, 5.73), elevated ratio of FEV(1) to FVC (odds ratio, 4.8), and absence of smoking history (odds ratio, 0.19). On multivariate analysis of specific HRCT features recorded by four experienced chest radiologists, lower-lung honeycombing (odds ratio, 5.36) and upper-lung irregular lines (odds ratio, 6.28) were the only independent predictors of UIP. Using only these two factors, a diagnosis of UIP could be established with a sensitivity of 74%, a specificity of 81%, and a positive predictive value of 85%.
CONCLUSION
In patients presenting with a clinical syndrome suggestive of IIP, CT findings of lower-lung honeycombing and upper-lung irregular lines are most closely associated with a pathologic diagnosis of UIP.
View on PubMedMiscellaneous causes of bronchiolitis: inhalational, infectious, drug-induced, and idiopathic.
2003
Authors: King TE
Bronchiolitis is increasingly recognized as an important clinical syndrome that encompasses the broad spectrum of histopathologic processes which show some degree of inflammation, narrowing, or obliteration of the small conducting airways. It has an extremely variable clinical course, etiology, and histologic appearance. Understanding of this entity has been limited because until recently only case reports described this lesion in several diverse clinical settings. In addition, there has been considerable confusion as a result of the different terminologies applied to the many syndromes. This article reviews the clinical, radiographic, and histopathologic findings of the bronchiolar syndromes that are secondary to inhalation of chemicals or organic dust, that are secondary to infection, that are drug-induced, and that have no known etiology (idiopathic).
View on PubMedAbility of exercise testing to predict cardiovascular and all-cause death in asymptomatic women: a 20-year follow-up of the lipid research clinics prevalence study.
2003
Authors: Mora S, Redberg RF, Cui Y, Whiteman MK, Flaws JA, Sharrett AR, Blumenthal RS
CONTEXT
The value of exercise testing in women has been questioned.
OBJECTIVE
To determine the prognostic value of exercise testing in a population-based cohort of asymptomatic women followed up for 20 years.
DESIGN AND SETTING
Near-maximal Bruce-protocol treadmill test data from the Lipid Research Clinics Prevalence Study (1972-1976) with follow-up through 1995.
PARTICIPANTS
A total of 2994 asymptomatic North American women, aged 30 to 80 years, without known cardiovascular disease.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.
RESULTS
There were 427 (14%) deaths during 20 years of follow-up, of which 147 were due to cardiovascular causes. Low exercise capacity, low heart rate recovery (HRR), and not achieving target heart rate were independently associated with increased all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. There was no increased cardiovascular death risk for exercise-induced ST-segment depression (age-adjusted hazard ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.57-1.80; P =.96). The age-adjusted hazard ratio for cardiovascular death for every metabolic equivalent (MET) decrement in exercise capacity was 1.20 (95% CI, 1.18-1.30; P.001); for every 10 beats per minute decrement in HRR, the hazard ratio was 1.36 (95% CI, 1.19-1.55; P.001). After adjusting for multiple other risk factors, women who were below the median for both exercise capacity and HRR had a 3.5-fold increased risk of cardiovascular death (95% CI, 1.57-7.86; P =.002) compared with those above the median for both variables. Among women with low risk Framingham scores, those with below median levels of both exercise capacity and HRR had significantly increased risk compared with women who had above median levels of these 2 exercise variables, 44.5 and 3.5 cardiovascular deaths per 10 000 person-years, respectively (hazard ratio for cardiovascular death, 12.93; 95% CI, 5.62-29.73; P.001).
CONCLUSION
The prognostic value of exercise testing in asymptomatic women derives not from electrocardiographic ischemia but from fitness-related variables.
View on PubMedSystemic morphine-induced release of serotonin in the rostroventral medulla is not mimicked by morphine microinjection into the periaqueductal gray.
2003
Authors: Taylor BK, Basbaum AI
We used in vivo microdialysis in awake rats to test the hypothesis that intravenous morphine increases serotonin (5-HT) release within the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM). We also injected morphine into various sites along the rostrocaudal extent of the periaqueductal gray (PAG), and examined the extent of its diffusion to the RVM. Intravenous morphine (3.0 mg/kg) produced thermal antinociception and increased RVM dialysate 5-HT, 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA), and homovanillic acid (HVA) in a naloxone-reversible manner. As neither PAG microinjection of morphine (5 micro g/0.5 micro L) nor RVM administration of fentanyl or d-Ala(2),NMePhe(4),Gly-ol(5)]enkephalin (DAMGO) increased RVM 5-HT, we were unable to determine the precise site of action of morphine. Surprisingly, peak morphine levels in the RVM were higher after microinjection into the caudal PAG as compared to either intravenous injection or microinjection into more rostral sites within the PAG. Naloxone-precipitated withdrawal in morphine-tolerant rats not only increased extracellular 5-HT in the RVM, but also dopamine (DA) and HVA. We conclude that substantial amounts of morphine diffuse from the PAG to the RVM, and speculate that opioid receptor interactions at multiple brain sites mediate the analgesic effects of PAG morphine. Further studies will be required to elucidate the contribution of 5-HT and DA release in the RVM to opioid analgesia and opioid withdrawal.
View on PubMedSarcoidosis following HIV infection: evidence for CD4+ lymphocyte dependence.
2003
Authors: Morris DG, Jasmer RM, Huang L, Gotway MB, Nishimura S, King TE
BACKGROUND
The chronic granulomatous inflammation of sarcoidosis has been hypothesized to depend on the CD4+ T-helper lymphocyte. HIV infection, which depletes these cells, has been reported to attenuate the manifestations of sarcoidosis.
STUDY OBJECTIVES
We asked whether the development of symptomatic sarcoidosis in the context of preexisting HIV infection was dependent on the CD4+ lymphocyte count.
DESIGN
We performed a retrospective standardized chart review of all patients who developed granulomatous inflammation following HIV infection at an urban academic referral center.
MEASUREMENTS
We identified seven patients with sarcoidosis within this cohort and compared their CD4+ lymphocyte count to that in a cohort of 16 patients in whom similar granulomatous inflammation was found but who did not have sarcoidosis. We then compared our cases to all reported cases using a systematic literature review.
RESULTS
The CD4+ lymphocyte count was > 200 cells/ microL in all of our patients with HIV infection when they developed subsequent sarcoidosis. In contrast, specific etiologies for granulomatous inflammation were found in all 10 HIV-infected patients who presented with granulomatous inflammation and a CD4+ lymphocyte count of 200 cells/ microL, with infectious etiologies found in 8 patients. Similarly, there was relative preservation of the CD4+ lymphocyte count in previously reported cases, with 14 of 19 patients (74%) having an absolute CD4+ lymphocyte count of > 200 cells/ microL.
CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that the development of the chronic granulomatous inflammation of sarcoidosis appears to depend on the preservation or restoration of the peripheral CD4+ lymphocyte count and that in most cases the CD4+ lymphocyte count exceeds 200 cells/ microL. Furthermore, alternative specific etiologies of granulomatous inflammation are generally identifiable in HIV-infected patients with peripheral CD4+ lymphocyte counts of 200 cells/ microL.
View on PubMedPhysician - nurse practitioner teams in chronic disease management: the impact on costs, clinical effectiveness, and patients' perception of care.
2003
Authors: Litaker D, Mion L, Planavsky L, Kippes C, Mehta N, Frolkis J
Cycle-averaged models of cardiovascular dynamics.
2003
Authors: Thomas Heldt, Jolie L. Chang, George C. Verghese, Roger G. Mark
Laparoscopic cyst decortication in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease: impact on pain, hypertension, and renal function.
2003
Authors: Lee DI, Andreoni CR, Rehman J, Landman J, Ragab M, Yan Y, Chen C, Shindel A, Middleton W, Shalhav A, McDougall EM, Clayman RV
Osteogenic activity of the fourteen types of human bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs).
2003
Authors: Cheng H, Jiang W, Phillips FM, Haydon RC, Peng Y, Zhou L, Luu HH, An N, Breyer B, Vanichakarn P, Szatkowski JP, Park JY, He TC
BACKGROUND
Bone morphogenic proteins (BMPs) are known to promote osteogenesis, and clinical trials are currently underway to evaluate the ability of certain BMPs to promote fracture-healing and spinal fusion. The optimal BMPs to be used in different clinical applications have not been elucidated, and a comprehensive evaluation of the relative osteogenic activity of different BMPs is lacking.
METHODS
To identify the BMPs that may possess the most osteoinductive activity, we analyzed the osteogenic activity of BMPs in mesenchymal progenitor and osteoblastic cells. Recombinant adenoviruses expressing fourteen human BMPs (BMP-2 to BMP-15) were constructed to infect pluripotent mesenchymal progenitor C3H10T1/2 cells, preosteoblastic C2C12 cells, and osteoblastic TE-85 cells. Osteogenic activity was determined by measuring the induction of alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin, and matrix mineralization upon BMP stimulation.
RESULTS
BMP-2, 6, and 9 significantly induced alkaline phosphatase activity in pluripotential C3H10T1/2 cells, while BMP-2, 4, 6, 7, and 9 significantly induced alkaline phosphatase activity in preosteoblastic C2C12 cells. In TE-85 osteoblastic cells, most BMPs (except BMP-3 and 12) were able to induce alkaline phosphatase activity. The results of alkaline phosphatase histochemical staining assays were consistent with those of alkaline phosphatase colorimetric assays. Furthermore, BMP-2, 6, and 9 (as well as BMP-4 and, to a lesser extent, BMP-7) significantly induced osteocalcin expression in C3H10T1/2 cells. In C2C12 cells, osteocalcin expression was strongly induced by BMP-2, 4, 6, 7, and 9. Mineralized nodules were readily detected in C3H10T1/2 cells infected with BMP-2, 6, and 9 (and, to a lesser extent, those infected with BMP-4 and 7).
CONCLUSIONS
A comprehensive analysis of the osteogenic activity of fourteen types of BMPs in osteoblastic progenitor cells was conducted. Our results suggest an osteogenic hierarchical model in which BMP-2, 6, and 9 may play an important role in inducing osteoblast differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells. In contrast, most BMPs are able to stimulate osteogenesis in mature osteoblasts.
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