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- Creator:
- Derstine, Brian A., Holcombe, Sven A., Ross, Brian E., Sullivan, June A., Wang, Stewart C., and Su, Grace L.
- Description:
- Sarcopenia is the age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and function. Computed tomography (CT) assessments of sarcopenia utilize measurements of skeletal muscle cross-sectional area (SMA), radiation attenuation (SMRA), intramuscular adipose tissue (IMAT), and skeletal muscle gauge (SMG). Unadjusted SMA is strongly correlated with both height and body mass index (BMI); therefore, SMA must be adjusted for body size to assess sarcopenic low muscle mass fairly in individuals of different heights and BMI. SMA/height (rather than SMA/height^2) provides optimal height adjustment for skeletal muscle index (SMI), and vertebra-specific relative muscle index (RMI) equations optimally adjust for both height and BMI. Since L3 measurement is not available in all CT scans, sarcopenic low muscle mass may be assessed using other levels. Both a mid-vertebral slice and an inferior slice have been used to define `L3 SMA', but the effect of vertebral slice location on SMA measurements is unexplored. Healthy reference values for skeletal muscle measures at mid- and inferior vertebra slices between T10 and L5, have not yet been reported.
- Keyword:
- sarcopenia, skeletal muscle, reference population, Morphomics, Analytic Morphomics, and body composition
- Citation to related publication:
- Derstine, B.A., Holcombe, S.A., Wang, N.C. et al. Relative muscle indices and healthy reference values for sarcopenia assessment using T10 through L5 computed tomography skeletal muscle area. Scientific Reports 14, 21799 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-71613-x
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Kimbrough, Erik, Murray, Jennifer, Sarmiento, Olga, Krupka, Erin, Ramalingam, Abhijit , Kee, Frank, Kumar, Rajnish, Sánchez-Franco, Sharon , and Hunter, Ruth
- Description:
- THE DATA: Unfortunately, we are unable to share our data for this project. Since we were working with a vulnerable population (children), we were asked by Queens University Belfast’s IRB-equivalent to include language in the consent documents indicating that the data would not be shared outside of the research team. Thus, the datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are not publicly available as participants were informed that no-one outside of the research team would have access to the research data when they signed their consent forms. Thus, we provide Stata, R and Mplus scripts used to generate all tables and figures reported in the paper. Since we cannot share the raw study data, most of these files cannot be run, but in the interest of transparency we include the scripts so that our code can be checked. Since a major portion of the paper is the LTA modeling, we took an additional step there and generated simulated data that allows the R+Mplus scripts to be run. These runnable scripts and the simulated data are contained in the subfolder LTA_code_EXEC. For further information about the study datasets, please contact the authors (Emails: Jennifer.Murray@qub.ac.uk; ruth.hunter@qub.ac.uk)
- Keyword:
- norms heterogeneity, experimental economics, and RCT
- Citation to related publication:
- Kimbrough, E., Krupka, E., Kumar, R., Murray, J., and Ramalingam, A. (conditional accept). On the Stability of Norms and Norm-Following Propensity: A Cross Cultural Panel Study with Adolescents. Experimental Economics
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Social Sciences
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- Creator:
- Bitzer, Markus
- Description:
- Kidney tissue was analyzed for spatial localization of features and associations with clinical parameters.
- Keyword:
- Kidney, Pathology, Human, and Image analysis
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Herzog, Joshua M, Verkade, Angela, and Sick, Volker
- Description:
- Data deposited here includes 60 image sets (30 individual participants, and 2 eyes per individual) consisting of raw fluorescence images, diffuse reflection images using ambient lighting, images used for correction, and calibration, and metadata. Images are split into two wavelength bands as described in the methodology. Raw images are stored in Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) file nodes (one file per eye) and each image node contains a tag for frame rate, exposure duration, and timestamp (stored in ImageData.zip). Summary statistics including demographic data, participant-reported diseases (e.g., diabetes, keratoconus), and pupil size are also stored in a text-based comma-separated table and as an Excel spreadsheet. Finally, 2-channel pseudocolor images and ratiometric grayscale images combining the two fully-processed image bands are stored as portable network graphics (PNG) files (stored in PseudocolorImages.zip).
- Keyword:
- Fluorescence, Imaging, Ocular lens, Corneal disease, Cataract, and Diabetes
- Citation to related publication:
- Herzog, Joshua M., Verkade, Angela, and Sick, Volker. "Corneal shadowgraphy: a simple, low-cost, rapid, and quantitative tool with potential clinical utility." Manuscript in review. 2024. and Herzog, Joshua M., Verkade, Angela, and Sick, Volker. "Quantitative and rapid in vivo imaging of human lenticular fluorescence." Manuscript in review. 2024.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
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- Creator:
- A. Tapaswi, N. Cemalovic, K. Polemi, J. Sexton, and J. Colacino
- Description:
- MCF10A non-tumorigenic breast cells were dosed with environmental toxicants and stained with multiple cellular stains to study morphological perturbations. Following up on feature results, MCF10A cells were stained with an anti-beta catenin antibody to study beta catenin nuclear translocation. Cell profiler software was used to measure and export per cell data .CSV formats to be further analyze din BMDExpress2 and R studio
- Keyword:
- Breast cancer , Cell Painting, Chemical exposure, Benchmark dose, and Cell Profiler
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
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- Creator:
- Fahim, Abigail T
- Description:
- The purpose of this research is to compare levels of unprenylated Rab proteins in CHM-/- iPSC-RPE cells with and without compactin. Compactin is a statin that inhibits prenyl synthesis and thereby reduces prenylation overall and has an unbiased inhibitory effect on all protein prenylation. So we expect that for Rabs that are already poorly prenylated at baseline in choroideremia RPE cells, compactin will have minimal effect. However, for Rabs that are efficiently prenylated at baseline, compactin should have a much greater effect. And then we used tandem mass tag spectrometry to compare the ratio of each unprenylated Rab in compactin-treated choroideremia cells vs untreated choroideremia cells. In the spreadsheet, "F8" refers to the CHM-/- iPSC-RPE cells and "WT" refers to the isogenic control iPSC-RPE cells. In the "Proteins only" tab, column M shows the ratio of each protein in "DMSO" (untreated) choroideremia cells compared to Compactin-treated choroideremia cells. Compactin-treated control cells are also included in other columns. Untreated control cells could not be used because prenylation is so efficient in these cells, there is almost no material available after doing the in vitro prenylation assay (i.e. almost no unprenylated proteins to biotinylate). The column descriptions can be found in the sheet titled "Explanations." In addition, AAs= number of amino acids in the protein, MW= molecular weight of the protein, and pI= isoelectric point. The software is set to report abundance values only when certain criteria are met (S/N of 6, unique peptide etc). A value is NOT reported when the data for a protein fall below these criteria and the cell is instead left blank.
- Keyword:
- choroideremia, retinal pigment epithelium, prenylation, and Rab protein
- Citation to related publication:
- Raeker, M.O., Perera, N.D., Karoukis, A.J., Chen, L., Feathers, K.L., Ali, R.R., Thompson, D.A., Fahim, A.T. Reduced retinal pigment epithelial autophagy due to loss of Rab12 prenylation in a human iPSC-RPE model of choroideremia. Cells, manuscript accepted, in press.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Science
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Lu-177 DOTATATE Anonymized Patient Datasets
User Collection- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This collection is comprised of a number of works that collectively represent the imaging studies and information necessary for dosimetric analysis of a patient treated with Lutathera. All works may be used as standalone datasets or in conjunction with the others in this collection depending on the analysis performed. Files are stored using the DICOM standard widely accepted for storage and transmission of medical images and related information. All patient private information has been anonymized using MIM commercial software (MIM Software Inc.). Data from 2 patients, referred to as patient 4 and patient 6, has been provided in this collection and is divided among 6 works as outlined below:, 1) Pre-Therapy Diagnostic Images. Description: Patient diagnostic scans performed prior to Lutathera treatment. Used for identifying lesions and measuring progression. Note that the date of the baseline scan may be several months before the Lutathera treatment and changes in the anatomy are possible. Files: (1) Ga68 Dotatate PET/CT, Either: (1) MRI, (1) standalone diagnostic CT, 2) Planar Whole Body Scans. Description: Planar whole body Lu-177 scans taken at 4 time points within a week after treatment. Two views (Anterior and Posterior) and 3 energy windows (one main window at 208 keV and 2 adjacent scatter windows) are available for each time point. The units of this image is counts. Energy window information, acquisition data/time and duration can be found in DICOM header. Files: (6) individual images at each time point (24 total images per patient) , 3) SPECT/CT Scans. Description: Lu-177 SPECT/CT scans at 4 time points within a week after treatment (same time points as the planar scans). Images were acquired on a Siemens Intevo system and reconstructed using xSPECT Quant. The units of this image is Bq/mL. Information on the reconstruction, acquisition date/time, duration, Lu-177 administration time and activity can be found in the DICOM header. Files: (1) Folder with reconstructed SPECT slices per time point (4 folders total per patient), (1) Folder containing co-registered CT slices per time point (4 folders total per patient), 4) Lesion and Organ Volumes of Interest. Description: DICOM RT structure files containing organ and lesion volumes of interest (VOI) that were defined on the CT of the scan1 SPECT/CT in 3). Organs were defined using semi-automatic tools (atlas based and CNN-based) while lesions were defined manually by a radiologist guided by baseline scans. Only lesions >2 cc were defined. Files: (1) File containing organ contours, (1) File containing lesion contours, 5) Time Integrated Activity Maps. Description: A DICOM file containing the time-integrated activity map over all 4 time points within a week after treatment. This combines the SPECT/CT scans provided in 3) into a single integrated activity map. This map was generated via the MIM MRT Dosimetry package: The 4 time points were registered to the reference SPECT scan (time point 1) using a contour intensity based SPECT alignment and the voxel-level time-activity data was fit using exponential functions. Voxel-level integration was performed to generate the TIA map. The units of this image is Bq/mL * sec. Files: (1) Folder with Time-integrated activity image per patient, and 6) Projection Data and CT based Attenuation Coefficient Maps. Description: SPECT projection data for each of the 4 Lutathera scans taken within a week after treatment is provided in 3 forms: unaltered, Siemens [Reformatted], and Siemens [Advanced]. The difference between the Projections and the [Advanced] Projections is that the [Advanced] consists of uncorrected raw projection data and the other the corrected projection data (e.g. camera uniformity corrections). The [Advanced] projections are used in xSPECT reconstruction (where all corrections are done during the reconstruction), while the other is used in Flash 3D reconstruction. CT-based attenuation coefficient maps (mumaps) are provided for each of the 4 scans taken within a week after treatment. Two methods are provided for each mumap: xSPECT and F3D as the matrix size is different for the 2 cases (256 x 256 for xSPECT and 128 x 128 for Flash3D). Files: (3) Folders containing raw SPECT projections, (2) Folders containing CT attenuation coefficient maps (mumaps)
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Lutathera, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, and CTMRIPET
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
6Works -
- Creator:
- Figueroa, Carlos A., Computational Vascular Biomechanics Lab, University of Michigan, and et al.
- Description:
- This collection concerns the CRIMSON (CardiovasculaR Integrated Modelling and SimulatiON) software environment. CRIMSON provides a powerful, customizable and user-friendly system for performing three-dimensional and reduced-order computational haemodynamics studies via a pipeline which involves: 1) segmenting vascular structures from medical images; 2) constructing analytic arterial and venous geometric models; 3) performing finite element mesh generation; 4) designing, and 5) applying boundary conditions; 6) running incompressible Navier-Stokes simulations of blood flow with fluid-structure interaction capabilities; and 7) post-processing and visualizing the results, including velocity, pressure and wall shear stress fields. , The minimum specifications to run CRIMSON are: Any AMD64 CPU (note: Intel Core i series are AMD64), Windows (only tested on Windows 10 but might work on Windows 7), 8 GB of RAM , If you are running non-trivial models you will want to have: Quad core CPU or higher, Solid state drive for storing data, Windows, 16 GB of RAM, Dedicated discrete GPU for rendering models. , and Software in this collection is a snapshot; please visit https://github.com/carthurs/CRIMSONGUI & www.crimson.software for more general information and the most up to date version of the software.
- Keyword:
- Blood Flow Simulation, Patient-specific, Open-source Software, Image-based simulation, Cardiovascular Medical Image, Segmentation, and Finite Element Simulation
- Citation to related publication:
- CRIMSON: An Open-Source Software Framework for Cardiovascular Integrated Modelling and Simulation C.J. Arthurs, R. Khlebnikov, A. Melville, et al. bioRxiv 2020.10.14.339960; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339960
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
4Works -
- Creator:
- Hatch, Nan E.
- Description:
- Craniosynostosis is the premature fusion of cranial bones. The goal of this study was to determine if delivery of recombinant tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) could prevent or diminish the severity of craniosynostosis in a C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ model of neonatal onset craniosynostosis or a BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ model of postnatal onset craniosynostosis. Mice were injected with a lentivirus encoding a mineral targeted form of TNAP immediately after birth. Cranial bone fusion as well as cranial bone volume, mineral content and density were assessed by micro computed tomography. Craniofacial shape was measured with calipers., Alkaline phosphatase, alanine amino transferase (ALT) and aspartate amino transferase (AST) activity levels were measured in serum. Neonatal delivery of TNAP diminished craniosynostosis severity from 94% suture obliteration in vehicle treated mice to 67% suture obliteration in treated mice, p<0.02) and the incidence of malocclusion from 82.4% to 34.7% (p<0.03), with no effect on cranial bone in C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ mice. In contrast, treatment with TNAP improved cranial bone volume (p< 0.01), density (p< 0.01) and mineral content (p< 0.01) but had no effect on craniosynostosis or malocclusion in BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ mice. , These results indicate that post-natal recombinant TNAP enzyme therapy diminishes craniosynostosis severity in the C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ neonatal onset mouse model of Crouzon syndrome, and that effects of exogenous TNAP are genetic background dependent., and Included in this collection is one set of images representing the C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ model of neonatal onset craniosynostosis, and one for the BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ model of postnatal onset craniosynostosis
- Keyword:
- craniofacial, bone, craniosynostosis, FGFR2, TNAP, mouse model, and development
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
2Works -
Radionuclide PET/CT, SPECT/CT, and Contours Collection
User Collection- Creator:
- Van, Benjamin and Dewaraja, Yuni
- Description:
- Interest in quantitative imaging of Y-90 and Lu-177 is growing due to their increased use as minimally invasive treatments for primary and metastatic tumors such as HCC and NETs. Accurate quantification of the 3D activity distribution for voxel-level dosimetry requires SPECT/CT and PET/CT imaging. This collection provides research access to anonymized PET/CT and SPECT/CT scans along with the relevant lesion/organ contours taken from University of Michigan clinical research studies of selected patients undergoing radionuclide treatments. All patients signed an informed consent to participate in the research studies. See the readme in each dataset for information on use and citation of this data.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
1Works -
- Creator:
- Asthana, Vishwaratn, Monovoukas, Demetri, Kucharski, Kevin, Chopra, Zoey, Perkins, Sidney, and Bugga, Pallavi
- Description:
- It is difficult to model outcomes in patients post-ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI), particularly onset of heart failure. The acute insult following a myocardial infarction and chronic degeneration seen in HF involve a similar process where a loss of cardiomyocytes and abnormal remodeling lead to pump failure. This process may alter the strength and direction of the heart’s net depolarization signal. The investigators hypothesized that changes over time in unique parameters extracted using vectorcardiography (VCG) have the potential to predict clinical outcomes in patients post-STEMI and could eventually be used as a non-invasive and cost-effective surveillance tool for characterizing the severity and progression of HF to guide evidence-based therapies.
- Keyword:
- Cardiology, ECG, VCG, STEMI, and Heart Failure
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Pedde, Meredith
- Description:
- In this study, we took advantage of the randomized allocation of the US EPA's funding for school bus replacements and retrofits to causally assess the impacts of upgrading buses on students' educational performance through the EPA’s national School Bus Rebate Program. Specifically, we used classical intent-to-treat analyses for randomized controlled trials to compare the change in school district level reading and language arts and math standardized test scores after vs before the 2012 through 2016 lotteries by funding selection status . We used overall district average standardized test scores since rates were not available for only school-bus riders.
- Keyword:
- School Bus Emissions, Diesel Air Pollution, and Student standardized testing
- Citation to related publication:
- Pedde, M., Szpiro, A., Hirth, R., Adar, S. School Bus Rebate Program and Student Educational Performance Test Scores. JAMA Network Open (2024). https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.3121
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Irani, Sanaya , Tolia, Sangini, Finks, Jonathan, and Sandhu, Gurjit
- Description:
- Program Description DoT was founded in 2012 with a mission to increase diversity amongst medical professionals by preparing students from underrepresented communities in Detroit to successfully pursue careers in healthcare. Our program builds on a partnership between Cass Technical High School (CTHS) and the University of Michigan Medical School (UMMS). The CTHS student body is reflective of the Detroit population with more than 80% of students identifying with racial and ethnic minority backgrounds. Students with an interest in healthcare apply for the program as ninth graders. In recent years, the program has received over 60 applications for approximately 30 positions in each grade. DoT’s unique strength lies in its longitudinal structure. There are three branches of the program – Foundations (ninth and tenth grade), Rising (eleventh and twelfth grade) and Succeed (undergraduate). Ninth graders start out in DoT Foundations. Each student is paired with a first-year medical student mentor at UMMS for the entire academic year. DoT students travel to UMMS every month for a visit day, with activities designed to give students hands-on experiences in healthcare, such as suturing and ultrasound skills in the simulation center, and clinical shadowing. Students then meet with their medical student mentor over lunch. The latter part of the day is dedicated to working on their capstone projects. For the capstone projects, students work in small teams led by medical student leaders to identify a community health issue, partner with a local organization, and present their proposed solutions at a formal symposium at the end of the year. , Transition to Virtual Programming In light of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, a growing number of universities cancelled all campus events including those of pipeline programs. We felt that our programming offered an important service to our students that would be greatly missed, so our team worked to quickly create and implement a virtual program. We ensured that each of our students had access to technology at home and those who did not were offered scholarships. During our introductory student session and new parent meeting, our leadership team discussed how to set up a Gmail email address for weekly communications and taught the students how to use Zoom, Google Drive, Google Docs and Google Sheets for online learning collaboration. For the virtual Foundations program, we offered 1-hour seminars each month, where a physician was invited to give a 30-minute presentation about different organ systems, followed by a 30-minute case-based session where students worked with medical student mentors to apply their new knowledge. We also created novel sessions such as “The Path to College and Medical School” and collaborated with members of the Black Medical Association (BMA) and Latin American and Native American Medical Association (LANAMA) to host a panel session where students could learn from medical students who identified as URiM. For the mentorship aspect, we created “pods” of Foundations, Rising, and Succeed students along with medical student and physician mentors. The Foundations students and mentors met every month for an hour on Zoom, a virtual communication platform, to work on their Capstone project. Rising and Succeed students joined the group for three full-pod meetings. The goal was to increase near-peer mentorship and connections between DoT students at all levels. , and Study Population Due to the virtual nature of the 2020-2021 program, we accepted 100% of 9th grade applicants from CTHS. We also expanded our reach to a new school, The School at Marygrove (TSM), which is also located in Detroit, Michigan. TSM is involved in the Detroit-20 Partnership with the University of Michigan College of Education and includes a novel three-year residency program for novice teachers. During the 2020-2021 school year, 108 students participated in the Foundations programming with 72 of them being 9th graders and 36 being 10th graders. The students were mostly from CTHS with 12 students out of the 108 total being from TSM. Students were predominantly from an African American/Black racial background (68.4% from N=98 respondents). The students were representative of their respective schools. The majority of students at CTHS identify as black, come from low-income homes, and have variable levels of parental education.
- Keyword:
- pipeline program, Underrepresented in medicine, Mentorship, Medical education, and COVID-19
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Alvarado, Roman, Scheven, Ulrich M., and Meiners, Jens-Christian
- Description:
- MRI raw data Image analysis script Raw pressure and vitals data
- Keyword:
- Decompression Sickness
- Citation to related publication:
- Alvarado R, Scheven U. M, Meiners, J. C.: Real-time Imaging of Decompression Gas Bubble Growth in the Spinal Cord of Live Rats, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2024, in press
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bautista-Arredondo, Luis F., Muñoz-Rocha, T. Verenice, Figueroa, José L., Téllez-Rojo, Martha M., Torres-Olascoaga, Libni A., Cantoral, Alejandra, Arboleda-Merino, Laura C., Leung, Cindy, Peterson, Karen E., and Lamadrid-Figueroa, Héctor
- Description:
- Data was collected from participants of the Early Life Exposures in Mexico to ENvironmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) study, which consists of three sequentially-enrolled birth cohorts of pregnant women. Research protocols of this study were approved by the Institutional Review Board at University of Michigan and the Mexico National Institute of Public Health. We obtained informed consent from study participants prior to enrollment.
- Keyword:
- Food Insecurity, COVID-19 Pandemic, Mexico, Cohort
- Citation to related publication:
- Bautista-Arredondo LF, Verenice Muñoz-Rocha T, Figueroa JL, Téllez-Rojo MM, Torres-Olascoaga LA, Cantoral A, Arboleda-Merino L, Leung L, Peterson KE, and Lamadrid-Figueroa H. A surge in food insecurity during the COVID-19 pandemic in a cohort in Mexico City. 2022. Article in process of publication.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dariya, Malyarenko, Tariq, Humera, Kushwaha, Aman, Mourad, Rami, Heist, Kevin, Chenevert, Thomas L, Ross, Brian D, Chen, Heang-Ping, and Hadjiiski, Lubomir
- Description:
- The 3D GRE MRI data for murine model of myelofbifrosis with expert segmentations of mouse tibia was used to train Attention UNET model to automate bone marrow segmentation for measurements of imaging biomarkers. This dataset consists of three archives: (1) containing the source MRI images in Meta-image-header (MHD) format with resulting segmentation labels by two experts and four UNET models with different training scenarios; (2) corresponding training models; and (3) deep-learning (DL)-based segmentation tools for application to future murine tibia MRI data. and The MHD images are an ITK compatible format that can be viewed in standard image viewer, like 3D Slicer. The image archive is structured with a directory tree that contains \"mouseID"\"scan-date"\"segmentaion-scenario"\. The "training model" archive containes DL-model labeled by the data subset, and "deployment" archive containes the DL-segmentation software.
- Keyword:
- deep-learning segmentation, preclinical MRI, murine tibia, and mouse model of myelofibrosis
- Citation to related publication:
- Kushwaha A, Mourad RF, Heist K, Tariq H, Chan HP, Ross BD, Chenevert TL, Malyarenko D, Hadjiiski LM. Improved Repeatability of Mouse Tibia Volume Segmentation in Murine Myelofibrosis Model Using Deep Learning. Tomography. 2023 Mar 7;9(2):589-602. doi: 10.3390/tomography9020048. PMID: 36961007; PMCID: PMC10037585. and https://github.com/dumichgh/MFJK1_Segmentation_MHDs
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Malyarenko, Dariya, Chenevert, Thomas L, Heist, Kevin, Bonham, Christopher, and Ross, Brian
- Description:
- The imaging data was used to measure repeatability and temporal trends of quantitative imaging biomarkers of myelofibrosis in bone marrow based on apparent diffusion coefficient, fat fraction and magnetization transfer ratio. The dataset consists of time series of the MRI Meta-image-header (MHD) images of wild type and diseased mice combined by the imaging time point. The MHD images are an ITK compatible format that can be viewed in standard image viewer, like 3D Slicer. Each time point image archive is structured with a directory tree that contains ./././"mouseID"/"scan-date"/"acquisition type"/
- Keyword:
- murine tibia MRI, bone marrow imaging, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), proton density fat fraction (PDFF), magnetization transfer ratio (MTR), and pre-clinical model of myelofibrosis
- Citation to related publication:
- Ross BD, Malyarenko D, Heist K, Amouzandeh G, Jang Y, Bonham CA, Amirfazli C, Luker GD, Chenevert TL. Repeatability of Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Biomarkers in the Tibia Bone Marrow of a Murine Myelofibrosis Model. Tomography. 2023 Feb 28;9(2):552-566. doi: 10.3390/tomography9020045. PMID: 36961004; PMCID: PMC10037563.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Samuel, Sara M, Wilson, Diane L, and Fleming, Emily K
- Description:
- The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) requires researchers to post individual participant data (IPD) plans for interventional clinical trials with registration in order to be eligible for publication in its member journals. This study looked at how researchers interpret the ICMJE requirements and the related prompts for information used by ClinicalTrials.gov. This data consists of the analyzed contents of the IPD plans that researchers at the University of Michigan (U-M) submitted with trial registrations for the first 27 months that the 2019 requirement was in effect.
- Keyword:
- research data sharing, research data policy, research data, clinical trials, ClinicalTrials.gov, individual participant data, IPD, data sharing plan, and compliance
- Citation to related publication:
- Samuel, S. M. & Wilson, D. L. & Fleming, E., (2023) “Evaluating individual participant data plans for ICMJE compliance: A case study at University of Michigan”, Journal of the Society for Clinical Data Management 3(4). doi: https://doi.org/10.47912/jscdm.257
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences, Social Sciences, and General Information Sources
-
- Creator:
- Lumeng, Julie C
- Description:
- Infant eating behavior is likely driven not only by hunger and satiety reflective of caloric need, but also by the reward value of food. The reward value of food can be understood in terms of wanting, liking, and salience. Little is understood about infant response to the reward value of food, or its predictors, particularly prenatally. This project sought to understand whether prenatal factors during pregnancy predict infant reward response to food, as measured by questionnaires in early infancy.
- Keyword:
- wanting, liking, salience, infancy, eating, growth, and prenatal
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Cevidanes, Lucia
- Description:
- Image Pre-Processing To allow reliable detection and comparison of changes between several individuals or within the same individual at different time points, before extracting the quantitative bone texture/morphometry features, all hr-CBCT scans were pre-processed using validated protocols. Extraction of Trabecular Bone Texture-based and Morphometry Imaging Features Using the “crop-volume” tool in 3D Slicer, a rectangular shaped volume of interest (VOI) was cropped from the trabecular bone in the mandibular condyles and the articular fossa. Then, using the average minimum and maximum intensity values of all VOIs, we standardized the grey level intensities of the VOIs to eliminate inaccuracies of textural features calculation and possible dependency on the global characteristics of the images. Lastly, imaging markers were extracted from the standardized VOIs using “BoneTexture” module in 3D-slicer. Measurement of the 3D Articular Joint Space To assess the progression/improvement of osteoarthritic changes in the affected individuals, we measured the 3D superior joint space. We pre-labelled two landmarks in the sagittal view of the oriented CBCT scans: on the most superior point of the condyle and on the opposing surface of the articular fossa. To avoid biasing the landmarks’ placements, pre-labelling was performed simultaneously on T1 and T2 scans, using two independent windows in ITK-SNAP. After the volumetric reconstruction of the identified landmarks, linear measurements were obtained in millimeters using the Q3DC tool in 3D Slicer. Three-dimensional Shape Analyses and Quantification of Remodeling in the Condyles SPHARM-PDM software was used to compute the correspondence across 4002 surface points among all condyles. The output point-based models displayed color-coded maps that enabled visual evaluation of consistent parametrization of all condyles. An average condyle shape for the TMJ OA and control groups was calculated through propagation of original surface point correspondences across all stages of deformations and averaging the condyle surface meshes. For visualization of the 3D qualitative changes of the average models within the same group at different time points or among different groups, semi-transparent overlays were created using 3D Slicer software. The vector differences were presented on the condyle surfaces, scaled according to the magnitude of difference, and pointing towards the direction of bone change. For quantification of remodeling in the condyles, calculation of signed distances across condyles surface meshes reflected the quantitative bone changes in the TMJ OA and control samples. To quantify regional bone changes across the lateral and anterior surfaces of the condyles, we used the Pick ‘n Paint tool in 3D Slicer to propagate regional surface points to the corresponding regions of shapes across all subjects and time points.
- Keyword:
- Degenerative joint disease, Temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis, TMJ OA, Machine learning, Prognosis
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lori, Jody R., Moyer, Cheryl, Lockhart, Nancy, Zielinski, Ruth E., Kukula, Vida, Apetorgbor, Veronica, Awini, Elizabeth, Badu-Gyan, Georgina, and Williams, John
- Description:
- GRAND is a five-year, cluster randomized controlled trial. The study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, [ID#: NCT04033003] and is a collaboration between University of Michigan in the United States and the Dodowa Health Research Center in Ghana. , The study setting for GRAND is four districts (Akwapim North, Yilo Krobo, Nsawam-Adoagyiri, and Lower Manya Krobo) within the Eastern Region of Ghana. Health facilities were selected based the number ANC registrants per month and average gestational age of women at registration in each facility., and Facilities were then matched based on facility type, district, and number of monthly ANC registrants. A cluster randomized controlled trial was conducted in 14 facilities in four districts of the Eastern Region of Ghana. Health facilities were randomized using a matched pairs design; each pair was similar in the number of deliveries and average gestational age of the women at enrollment in antenatal care. The locations of the facilities were far enough apart to avoid cross-group contamination. In each pair of facilities, one was randomly assigned to the intervention (G-ANC) and the other to the control (I-ANC). Recruitment began July 2019 and ended when enrollment targets were met. Data collection ended July 2023 when data collection was complete.
- Keyword:
- Antenatal care, Ghana, and Maternal health
- Citation to related publication:
- Lori, J., Kukula, V., Liu, L. et al. Improving health literacy through group antenatal care: results from a cluster randomized controlled trial in Ghana. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 24, 37 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-023-06224-x
- Discipline:
- International Studies and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Rana, Gurpreet K., Reynolds, Christopher W., Rha, Jennifer Y., Lenselink, Allison M., Asokumar, Dhanya, Zebib, Laura, Giacona, Francesca L. , Islam, Nowshin N., Kannikeswaran, Sanjana, Manuel, Kara, Cheung, Allison, Marzoughi, Maedeh , and Heisler, Michele
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on "Innovative strategies and implementation science approaches for health delivery among migrants in humanitarian settings". The data included in the dataset are the complete search strategies (rtf file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (ris file) after removal of duplicate citations.
- Keyword:
- humanitarian setting, migrant, forced displacement , health delivery, implementation science, and scoping review
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lockhart, Nancy
- Description:
- GRAND is a five-year, cluster randomized controlled trial. The study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, [ID#: NCT04033003] and is a collaboration between University of Michigan in the United States and the Dodowa Health Research Center in Ghana. and The study setting for GRAND is four districts (Akwapim North, Yilo Krobo, Nsawam-Adoagyiri, and Lower Manya Krobo) within the Eastern Region of Ghana. Health facilities were selected based the number ANC registrants per month and average gestational age of women at registration in each facility. Facilities were then matched based on facility type, district, and number of monthly ANC registrants.
- Keyword:
- Antenatal care, Ghana, and Maternal health
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and International Studies
2Works -
- Creator:
- Zielinski, Ruth E, Kukula, Vida, Apetorgbor, Veronica, Awini, Elizabeth, Moyer, Cheryl, Badu-Gyan, Georgina, Williams, John, Lockhart, Nancy, and Lori, Jody R
- Description:
- This is a process evaluation of the RCT, Group Antenatal Care and Delivery project (GRAND) to identify and document patient, provider, and system barriers and facilitators to program implementation. Using both quantitative and qualitative methods, potential and actual influences on the quality and conduct of the program's operations, implementation, and service delivery were identified. Only the seven (7) sites randomized to the Group ANC (G-ANC) intervention were included for collection of process evaluation data since the evaluation was of G-ANC implementation. Data were collected from August 2019 to November 2020 and included both quantitative and qualitative data sources.
- Keyword:
- Group Antenatal Care, Ghana, and Process Evaluation
- Citation to related publication:
- Zielinski R, Kukula V, Apetorgbor V, Awini E, Moyer C, Badu-Gyan G, et al. (2023) “With group antenatal care, pregnant women know they are not alone”: The process evaluation of a group antenatal care intervention in Ghana. PLoS ONE 18(11): e0291855. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291855
- Discipline:
- International Studies and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Chen, Kevin S, Noureldein, Mohamed H, McGinley, Lisa M, Hayes, John M, Rigan, Diana M, Kwentus, Jaquelin F, Mason, Shayna N, Mendelson, Faye E, Savelieff, Masha G, and Feldman, Eva L
- Description:
- Therapeutic mechanisms of human neural stem cells (hNSCs) were studied in an Alzheimer's disease mouse model (5XFAD). hNSCs restored spatial memory abilities in 5XFAD animals; however, amyloid beta levels were unchanged. Spatial transcriptomics was used to probe mechanisms of hNSCs. Focusing on a subset of plaque-induced genes, gene normalization was seen particularly in microglia, confirmed by PROGENy and Cell Chat analyses. and The spatial transcriptomics data from this publication have been deposited in NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (16) and are accessible through GEO Series accession number GSE209583 ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE209583 and enter token gzglogqkvjqrhmt). Additional supporting data are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
- Citation to related publication:
- Chen KS, Noureldein MH, McGinley LM, Hayes JM, Rigan DM, Kwentus JF, Mason SN, Mendelson FE, Savelieffd MG, Feldman EL. Human neural stem cells restore spatial memory in a transgenic Alzheimer's disease mouse model by an immunomodulating mechanism. bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Nov 4:2023.11.01.565161. doi: 10.1101/2023.11.01.565161. PMID: 37961246; PMCID: PMC10635057.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Singer, Kanakadurga
- Description:
- Supplementary Figure 1. Example gating scheme for bone marrow mature leukocytes and hematopoietic progenitors. To stain for mature leukocytes antibodies used were against CD45, Ly6G, CD11b, CD115, CD19, and CD3e. All CD45+ cells were gated first. Neutrophils were defined as Ly6G+CD11b+, monocytes were defined as Ly6G-CD11b+CD115+ (17,18), B cells were defined as Ly6G-CD11b-CD19+, and T cells were defined as Ly6G-CD11b-CD3e+. To stain for hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells antibodies used were against lineage panel (B220, Gr1, TER119, CD11b, CD4, CD8), cKit, Sca1, CD48, CD150, CD16/32, and CD105. HSCs were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD48-CD150+, MPPs were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD48-CD150-, HPC1 were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD48+CD150-, HPC2 were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD48+CD150+, GMP were defined as Lin-Sca1-cKit+CD150-CD16/32+, PreGM were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD150-CD105-, preMegE were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD150+CD105-, and PreCFUe were defined as Lin-Sca1+cKit+CD150+CD105+. , Supplementary Figure 2. Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell frequency by flow cytometry as a percentage of CD45 bone marrow cells in male and female Ctrl and HFD PN offspring. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), multipotent progenitor cells (MPP), Pre-Granulocyte Macrophage (Pre-GM), granulocyte monocyte precursors (GMP), Pre-Megakaryocyte-Erythroid Precursors (Pre-MegE) and erythroid precursors (Pre-CFUE). Analyses were Student’s t-test ang gating per Supplementary Figure 1., Supplementary Table 1. Differential gene expression between Ctrl and HFD PN male gonadal white adipose tissue (GWAT) from postnatal day 16. The significant gene expression differences were determined by the DESeq2 package for R Studio. Sequencing The RNA was extracted from adipose tissue using Trizol LS (Life Technologies) by Qiagen RNeasy Mini Kit (74106) according to the manual. The RNA was sent to the University of Michigan Advanced Genomics Core for RNA-sequencing. For RNAseq studies, gonadal white adipose tissue 3’ QuantSeq single-end poly-A mRNA libraries were generated (Lexogen). These were sequenced to a depth of 10-20M reads on Illumina NovaSeq platform. Data are available from GEO at accession number GSE227337., and Supplementary Table 2. Differentially expressed genes between Ctrl and HFD PN male gonadal white adipose tissue (GWAT) from postnatal day 16 that are significant after correction for false discovery rate were determined by the DESeq2 package for R Studio.
- Citation to related publication:
- Kim K, Varghese M, Sun H, Abrishami S, Bowers E, Bridges D, Meijer JL, Singer K* and Gregg B*. The influence of maternal high fat diet during lactation on offspring hematopoietic priming. Endocrinology. https://doi.org/10.1210/endocr/bqad182 PMID 38048597.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Wallace, Dylan M, Benyamini, Miri, Nason-Tomaszewski, Samuel R, Costello, Joseph T, Cubillos, Luis H, Mender, Matthew J, Temmar, Hisham, Willsey, Matthew S, Patil, Parag P, Chestek, Cynthia A, and Zacksenhouse, Miriam
- Description:
- This is data from Wallace, Benyamini et al., 2023, Journal of Neural Engineering. There are two sets of data included: 1. Neural features and error labels used to train error classifiers for each day used in the study 2. Trial data from an example experiment day (Monkey N, Day 6), with runs for offline calibration, online brain control, error monitoring, and error correction. The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of error signals in motor cortex to improve brain-machine interface (BMI) performance for control of two finger groups. All data is contained in .mat files, which can be opened using MATLAB or the Python SciPy library.
- Keyword:
- Brain-machine interface (BMI), Error detection, and Neural recording
- Citation to related publication:
- Wallace, D. M., Benyamini, M., Nason-Tomaszewski, S. R., Costello, J. T., Cubillos, L. H., Mender, M. J., Temmar, H., Willsey, M. S., Patil, P. G., Chestek, C. A., & Zacksenhouse, M. (2023). Error detection and correction in intracortical brain–machine interfaces controlling two finger groups. Journal of Neural Engineering, 20(4), 046037. https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/acef95
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Turner, Cortney, Khalil, Huzefa, Murphy-Weinberg, Virginia, Hagenauer, Megan, Gates, Linda, Tang, Yu, Weinberg, Lauren, Grysko, Robert, Floran-Garduno, Leonor, Dokas, Thomas, Samaniego, Catherine, Zhao, Zhuo, Fang, Yu, Sen, Srijan, Lopez, Juan, Watson Jr., Stanley, and Akil, Huda
- Description:
- This research was conducted on freshmen at the University of Michigan. Activity and sleep data from Fitbit is included along with a data dictionary.
- Keyword:
- Mood Disorder, Polygenic Risk Score, College Freshmen, Resilience, and Susceptibility
- Citation to related publication:
- Turner, C., Khalil, H., Murphy-Weinberg, V., Hagenauer, M., Gates, L., Tang, Y., Weinberg, L., Grysko, R., Floran, L., Dokas, T., Samaniego, C., Zhao, J., Fang, Y., Sen, S., Lopez, J., Watson Jr, S., Akil, H.: Stress, Genetics and Mood: Impact of COVID-19 on a College Freshman Sample, submitted to PNAS.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, HaEun, Lori, Jody R, Sieka, Joseph, Reynolds, Christopher W, and Lockhart, Nancy
- Description:
- Mobile obstetric emergency system (MORES) is a promising intervention to enhance communication between rural health facilities and hospitals and to improve maternal and newborn outcomes.
- Keyword:
- Obstetric referral, WhatsApp, Mobile health, Referral system, and International Heath
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee, H., Dahn B., Sieka, J., Nyanplu, A., Reynolds, C., Edson, C., Lockhart, N., & Lori, J. The use of a mobile obstetric emergency system (MORES) to improve obstetric referrals in Bong County, Liberia: A pre/post study. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics. (2023) http://doi.org/10.1002/ijgo.15175
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and International Studies
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Documentary videos of pottery making, notably a four-part documentary of one potter's work. Credits are at the end of videos. Additional documentaries from Mali may be added later.
- Keyword:
- pottery
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lumeng, Julie C
- Description:
- Healthy full-term infants were enrolled in a longitudinal study designed to examine the development of infant eating behavior. Infant weight and length was measured, mothers completed questionnaires regarding infant eating behaviors, and infants were weighed and length measured at ages 1, 2, 4, 6 and 10 months. Trajectories of eating behaviors were identified using latent class growth modeling and bivariate analyses examined associations of infant eating behavior trajectory membership with infant and maternal characteristics. Cross-lagged analyses examined associations between BEBQ subscales and infant weight-for-length z-score.
- Keyword:
- infant, eating, weight gain, and feeding
- Citation to related publication:
- Harlan McCaffery, Julie Zaituna, Sophie Busch, Niko Kaciroti, Alison L. Miller, Julie C. Lumeng, Katherine L. Rosenblum, Ashley Gearhardt, Megan H. Pesch, Developmental trajectories of eating behaviors and cross-lagged associations with weight across infancy, Appetite, 2023, 106978
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Chenevert, Thomas L., Malyarenko, Dariya, Amouzandeh, Ghoncheh, Pickup, Stephen, Zhou, Rong, Manning, Henry Charles, Gamon, Seth T., Shoghi, Kooresh I., Quirk, James D., Sriram, Renuka, Larson, Peder, Lewis, Mickael T., Pautler, Robia G., Kinahan, Paul E., and Muzi, Mark
- Description:
- Goals of this work quantify repeatability and reproducibility across multiple NIH/NCI Co-Clinical Imaging Research Resources Program (CIRP) preclinical MRI systems in performing diffusion measurement using a standardized acquisition protocol on a shared phantom containing temperature-controlled medium of known diffusivity. To achieve these goals, the CIRP Image Acquisition Data Processing (IADP) working group (WG) performed a round-robin study of an ice water-based DWI phantom using a detailed phantom preparation procedure and standardized DWI acquisition protocol, with both site- and core-lab generated ADC measurements derived from shared datasets.
- Keyword:
- diffusion MRI, pre-clinical MRI, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), repeatability, reproducibility, and accuracy
- Citation to related publication:
- Tomography 2023, 9, 375–386. https://doi.org/10.3390/tomography9010030
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lumeng, Julie C
- Description:
- Healthy full-term infants were enrolled in a longitudinal study designed to examine the development of infant eating behavior. Infant weight and length was measured, mothers completed questionnaires regarding infant eating behaviors, and infant capacity for regulation of energy intake was evaluated by comparing intake between two days: one with feedings given on demand and one with feedings offered hourly. The infant's ability to downregulate intake in response to more frequent feedings was calculated.
- Keyword:
- infant, eating, weight gain, feeding, and energy regulation
- Citation to related publication:
- Reynolds, L. A., McCaffery, H., Appugliese, D., Kaciroti, N. A., Miller, A. L., Rosenblum, K. L., ... & Lumeng, J. C. (2023). Capacity for Regulation of Energy Intake in Infancy. JAMA pediatrics, 177(6), 590-598.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lumeng, Julie C
- Description:
- Healthy full-term infants were enrolled in a longitudinal study designed to examine the development of infant eating behavior. Infant weight and length was measured, mothers completed questionnaires regarding infant eating behaviors, and infant sucking behavior was quantified using the NFANT device during a typical feeding. The predictive value of the NFANT-generated sucking metrics for infant weight gain was evaluated.
- Keyword:
- infant, eating, weight gain, and sucking
- Citation to related publication:
- Feldman, Keith, Katharine Asta, Ashley N. Gearhardt, Julie M. Sturza, Danielle Appugliese, Alison L. Miller, Katherine Rosenblum, Kai Ling Kong, Amanda K. Crandall, and Julie C. Lumeng. "Characterization of a Vigorous sucking style in early infancy and its predictive value for weight gain and eating behaviors at 12 months." Appetite (2023): 106525.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
ABC Baby Study
User Collection- Creator:
- Lumeng, Julie C
- Description:
- The primary goal of this project was to identify domains of infant eating behavior and their trajectories over the first year of life. A convenience sample of 284 mother-infant dyads was recruited and enrolled from communities within a 1-hour driving distance of Ann Arbor, Michigan, via social media; flyers in outpatient pediatric clinics and community settings; and targeted outreach by telephone, email, and mail to pregnant women and mothers of newborn infants receiving care within the University of Michigan health system between October 2015 and February 2019. The planned sample size was based on a priori power calculations anticipating 3-5 eating behavior factors, each with 3 different trajectories, providing 81% power to detect a 10% or more change in the likelihood of exhibiting one of an anticipated 3 trajectory patterns of infant growth; the ultimate sample size of 284 was based on feasibility related to recruitment and retention. , The study included a repeated-measures, within-participant experimental design embedded within a longitudinal observational cohort study. The goal was to examine the development of infant eating behavior longitudinally at ages 0.5, 2, 4, 6, 9 and 12 months based on data collected from questionnaires, eating behavior experiments, and anthropometry via home visits by trained research staff. The study was described to participants as seeking to understand infant eating behavior and interactions between mothers and babies in the first year after birth. Inclusion criteria were gestational age of 37.0 to 42.0 weeks, weight appropriate for gestational age, no significant perinatal or neonatal complications, biological mother was the legal and custodial guardian, and infant’s having had consumed 2 oz or more in 1 feeding from an artificial nipple at least once per week. Exclusion criteria were mother not fluent in English; mother younger than 18 years; infant medical problems or diagnosis affecting current or future eating, growth, or development; or child protective services involvement. Mothers provided written informed consent for themselves and their infants. The study was approved by the University of Michigan institutional review board. To facilitate recruitment, dyads could be enrolled at 1 of 3 age points up to and including age 4 months; data collected at enrollment are referred to as baseline. , and Mothers responded to questionnaires on demographics, psychosocial stress, perinatal history, feeding behaviors and practices, sleep, their own eating behaviors, infant temperament, their own and the infant’s diet, and infant eating behaviors. Maternal and infant anthropometry was measured by trained research assistants. Mother-infant dyads participated in protocols designed to measure infant response to sucrose, infant ability to delay gratification, infant response to a challenging feeding, the relative reinforcing value of food, eating in the absence of hunger, capacity for regulation of energy intake in response to more frequent feedings and in response to increased caloric density, and response to novel and familiar foods. Maternal feeding behaviors were also coded from video. Biological samples included infant stool and maternal breastmilk.
- Keyword:
- infant, eating, weight gain, and sucking
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
4Works -
- Creator:
- Raghani, Ravi M, Urie, Russell R, and Shea, Lonnie D
- Description:
- The IN were sampled during and after ICB and sequenced to identify gene expression signatures that correlated with sensitivity or resistance. We also analyzed gene expression at the IN prior to ICB treatment to identify markers predicting therapeutic response. Longitudinally interrogating an IN, to monitor changes associated with ICB response, presents a new opportunity to personalize care and investigate mechanisms underlying treatment resistance.
- Keyword:
- Immunotherapy resistance, Biomaterials, Metastasis, Checkpoint blockade, and Therapy monitoring
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Pedde, Meredith
- Description:
- In this study, we took advantage of the randomized allocation of the US EPA's funding for school bus replacements and retrofits to causally assess the impacts of upgrading buses on student attendance through the EPA’s national School Bus Rebate Program. Specifically, we used classical intent-to-treat analyses for randomized controlled trials to compare the change in school district level attendance rates after vs before the 2012 through 2017 lotteries by funding selection status . We used overall district attendance rates since rates were not available for only school-bus riders.
- Keyword:
- School Bus Emissions, Diesel Air Pollution, and School Attendance
- Citation to related publication:
- Pedde, M., Szpiro, A., Hirth, R. et al. Randomized design evidence of the attendance benefits of the EPA School Bus Rebate Program. Nat Sustain (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-023-01088-7
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bellile, Emily L, Taylor, Jeremy MG, and Wolf, Gregory T
- Description:
- The University of Michigan’s Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) included an epidemiology project that approached every previously untreated adult head and neck squamous carcinoma (HNSCC) patient evaluated in the multidisciplinary Head and Neck Oncology Program of the University of Michigan (UM; Ann Arbor, MI) Comprehensive Cancer Center for participation in our longitudinal epidemiology study. This analytic dataset includes the most commonly requested covariates and outcome variables for survival analysis of this cohort of HNSCC patients. Data cleaning and creation of this analysis dataset was performed with SAS software v 9.3 (Carey,NC) by a biostatistician supporting multiple projects in the University of Michigan’s Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) and is available in RedCap for UM investigators to join with discipline specific data collected on the same cohort through a de-identified ID link.
- Keyword:
- Head and Neck Cancer, HNSCC, Squamous Cell Cancer, Epidemiology, Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE). , Cancer, Prognosis, and Survival Analysis
- Citation to related publication:
- Cigarette use, comorbidities, and prognosis in a prospective head and neck squamous cell carcinoma population. Peterson LA, Bellile EL, Wolf GT, Virani S, Shuman AG, Taylor JM, Rozek LS; University of Michigan Head and Neck Specialized Program of Research Excellence Program. Head Neck. 2016 Dec;38(12):1810-1820. doi: 10.1002/hed.24515. Epub 2016 Jul 19. PMID: 27432208. , Development and Assessment of a Model for Predicting Individualized Outcomes in Patients With Oropharyngeal Cancer. Beesley LJ, Shuman AG, Mierzwa ML, Bellile EL, Rosen BS, Casper KA, Ibrahim M, Dermody SM, Wolf GT, Chinn SB, Spector ME, Baatenburg de Jong RJ, Dronkers EAC, Taylor JMG. JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Aug 2;4(8):e2120055. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.20055. PMID: 34369988., Amlani, L; Bellile, E; Spector, M; Smith, J; Brenner, C; Rozek, L; Nguyen, A; Zarins, K; Thomas, D; McHugh, J; Taylor, J; Wolf, GT. Expression of p53 and prognosis in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC); Int J Cancer Clin Res 2019, 6:122. DOI: 10.23937/2378-3419/1410122., and Spector ME, Bellile E, Amlani L, Zarins K, Smith J, Brenner JC, Rozek L, Nguyen A, Thomas D, McHugh JB, Taylor JMG, Wolf GT; University of Michigan Head and Neck SPORE Program. Prognostic Value of Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma. JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2019 Nov 1;145(11):1012-1019. doi: 10.1001/jamaoto.2019.2427. PMID: 31486841; PMCID: PMC6735419.
- Discipline:
- Science and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Diaz-Espinosa, Jennifer, Stringer, Kathleen, and Rosania, Gus
- Description:
- These data were produced from a study that assessed mitochondrial metabolic function by measuring two metabolites, l-carnitine and acetylcarnitine, to determine their effectiveness as candidate clinical biomarkers for age-related, drug-induced alterations in mitochondrial metabolism. To study age and medication-related changes in mitochondrial metabolism, we administered the FDA-approved mitochondriotropic drug, clofazimine (CFZ), or vehicle for to young and old mice. These findings are described in our manuscript: Clofazimine-Mediated, Age-Related Changes in Skeletal Muscle Mitochondrial Metabolites. Data reported was supported by funding from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under award numbers R01GM127787 (GRR), R35GM136312 (KAS), P30AR069620 (K Jepsen), and T32GM140223 (L Isom).
- Keyword:
- adverse drug reactions, mitochondrial metabolism, l-carnitine, acetylcarnitine, and cardiac muscle
- Citation to related publication:
- Metabolites 2023
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Walker, Logan A, Li, Ye, McGlothlin, Maggie, and Cai, Dawen
- Description:
- These are datasets released from our manuscript "A Comparison of Lossless Compression Methods in Microscopy Data Storage Applications". Included in this data release are: `noise16.tif`: a file containing background noise collected from a 1000-frame acquisition of a ORCA-Fusion camera; `noise8.tif`: a file containing the 16-bit data collective above converted into a 8-bit form; `brainbow.tif`: This is a mouse Brainbow image originally published and described in Roossien, et al. Bioinformatics 2019; `bead.tif`: This is a 3D image of 100nm Invitrogen TetraSpeck fluorescent microspheres imaged in a blue channel using a custom microscope; `fly.tif`: This is a 3D image of a fly Bitbow brain collected as described in Li, et al. Front. Neural Circuits 2021; and `neurite.tif`: This is a 3D image of DiD-labeled mouse V1 tissue, collected using a custom microscope.
- Keyword:
- neuroscience, microscopy, and Bitbow
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Reynolds, Mack B., Hong, Hanna S., Zhang, Li, Lyssiotis, Costas A., and O'Riordan, Mary X.
- Description:
- Untargeted lipidomics (Data S1) and targeted metabolomics (Data S2) analysis from in vitro culture of a murine macrophage cell line expressing shRNA targeted to Cardiolipin synthase (CRLS1), referred to as CRLS1 knockdown (KD), or a paired non-target shRNA-expressing (NT-Control). CRLS1 KD and NT-Control macrophages were either directly analyzed (untargeted lipidomics) or stimulated with lipopolysaccharide for a variety of timepoints and then analyzed (targeted metabolomics). Datasets are available as .csv files.
- Keyword:
- Lipidomics, Metabolomics, Cardiolipin, Macrophage, CRLS1, lipopolysaccharide, and LPS
- Citation to related publication:
- Reynolds M.B. et al. (2023). Cardiolipin coordinates inflammatory metabolic reprogramming through regulation of Complex II disassembly and degradation. Science Advances, 9(5). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade8701
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Szuromi, Matthew P. and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- The data and scripts are meant to show how burster dynamics determine response to a single biphasic stimulus. The files include data which show trends in the propensity of termination for different burster types and the MATLAB scripts used to generate this data. The MATLAB scripts also allow the user to generate their own data sets for alternative bursting paths and stimulus parameter combinations. Furthermore, they allow the user to visually examine the effects of single stimuli in the voltage timeseries and in state space. How the user can access these features of the script is described in the file "ReadMe.pdf."
- Keyword:
- Epilepsy, Stimulation, Modelling, Dynamics, Seizure, and Dynamotype
- Citation to related publication:
- (PROVISIONAL) Optimization of Ictal Aborting Stimulation Using the Dynamotype Taxonomy
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences, Engineering, and Science
-
- Creator:
- Lin, Jack and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- The characterization of HFO networks through functional connectivity analysis and network centrality. Details of the code repository can be found in the README.txt file.
- Keyword:
- Epilepsy, High Frequency Oscillation, HFO, Network, and EEG
- Citation to related publication:
- Pending
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
Real-time, volumetric imaging of radiation dose delivery deep into the liver during cancer treatment
- Creator:
- Wei Zhang
- Description:
- Ionizing radiation acoustic imaging (iRAI) allows online monitoring of radiation’s interactions with tissues during radiation therapy, providing real-time, adaptive feedback for cancer treatments. Using the data set presented here, this study demonstrated iRAI can image the temporal dose accumulation of a radiaiton treatment plan. Clincial standard treatment plan with both rabbit and patient in vivo were first real-time volumetric visulized by iRAI. This data set is the rawdata for our paper published in Nature Biotechnology entitled "Real-time, volumetric imaging of radiation dose delivery deep into the liver during cancer treatment ".
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Zalta, Alyson K., Vanderboll, Kathryn, Dent, Amy L., Contreras, Isaias M., Malek, Nadia, Lascano, Xrystyan N., Zellner, Kelly L., Grandhi, Jyotsna, Araujo, Precious J., Straka, Kelci, Liang, Cathy Z., Czarny, Jordyn E., Martinez, Jazmin, and Burgess, Helen J.
- Description:
- An individual participant data meta-analysis was conducted to examine 1) the degree to which bedtime, wake time, and chronotype correlate with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity among individuals diagnosed with PTSD, 2) the standardized mean difference in bedtime, wake time, and chronotype for those with and without a PTSD diagnosis, and 3) moderators of these relationships. This deposit includes the full dataset used for data analyses. No proprietary software is required to open any of these files.
- Keyword:
- Psychology, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Sleep Timing, Chronotype, and Meta-Analysis
- Citation to related publication:
- Zalta, A. K., Vanderboll, K., Dent, A. L., Contreras, I. M., Malek, N., Lascano, X. N., Zellner, K. L., Grandhi, J., Araujo, P. J., Straka, K., Liang, C. Z., Czarny, J. E., Martinez, J., & Burgess, H. J. (2023). Sleep timing, chronotype, and posttraumatic stress disorder: An individual participant data meta-analysis. Psychiatry research, 321, 115061. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115061
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark and Bauer, Melissa
- Description:
- The intent of the project was to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Wiley Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and EBSCOhost CINAHL.
- Keyword:
- Health sciences, Thrombocytopenia, Literature searches, and Systematic review
- Citation to related publication:
- Bauer ME, Toledano RD, Houle T, Beilin Y, MacEachern M, McCabe M, Rector D, Cooper JP, Gernsheimer T, Landau R, Leffert L. Lumbar neuraxial procedures in thrombocytopenic patients across populations: A systematic review and meta-analysis. J Clin Anesth. 2020 May;61:109666. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinane.2019.109666. Epub 2019 Dec 4. PMID: 31810860. and Bauer ME, Arendt K, Beilin Y, Gernsheimer T, Perez Botero J, James AH, Yaghmour E, Toledano RD, Turrentine M, Houle T, MacEachern M, Madden H, Rajasekhar A, Segal S, Wu C, Cooper JP, Landau R, Leffert L. The Society for Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology Interdisciplinary Consensus Statement on Neuraxial Procedures in Obstetric Patients With Thrombocytopenia. Anesth Analg. 2021 Jun 1;132(6):1531-1544. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005355. PMID: 33861047.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark, Khouri, Alexander, Adidharma, Widya, Haase, Steven, Waljee, Jennifer, Cederna, Paul, and Strong, Amy
- Description:
- The intent of the project was to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and Wiley Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. The searches yielded 889 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Fat Grafting, Surgery, Hand, Systematic Review, and Health Sciences
- Citation to related publication:
- Khouri AN, Adidharma W, MacEachern M, et al. The Current State of Fat Grafting in the Hand: A Systematic Review for Hand Diseases. HAND. February 2022. doi:10.1177/15589447211066347
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Adler, Jeremy
- Description:
- Data comparing the Simplified Endoscopic Mucosal Assessment for Crohn's Disease (SEMA-CD) from video recordings of colonoscopies to SEMA-CD scoring of their corresponding colonoscopy reports from pediatric patients with Crohn's disease.
- Keyword:
- Crohn's disease and colonoscopy
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., McCormick, Amanda D., Wilde, Megan M., Charpie, Christine E., Yu, Sunkyung, and Cousino, Melissa K.
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on Psychological Functioning in Pediatric Patients with Single Ventricle Congenital Heart Disease. The data included are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). Both the original search files and updated search files have been included in the deposit.
- Keyword:
- pediatrics, univent, Single Ventricle Congenital Heart Disease, and psychological
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Umberfield, Elizabeth, Ford, Kathleen, Stansbury, Cooper, and Harris, Marcelline R.
- Description:
- Research Overview: This dataset is clinical consent forms, collected as part of Dr. Elizabeth Umberfield's dissertation research of at the University of Michigan. 134 consent forms are used in the analysis, 102 of which are shared here (not all are shared due to data protection agreements with participating sites). The research aimed to enable representation of clinical consent forms and their permissions within the Informed Consent Ontology. These efforts were supported by the Rackham Graduate Student Research Grant, and Dr. Umberfield's doctoral training was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Future of Nursing Scholars Program.
- Keyword:
- Consent, Consent Form, Informed Consent, Health Care, and Healthcare
- Citation to related publication:
- Umberfield, E., Jiang, Y., Fenton, S., Stansbury, C., Ford, K., Crist, K., Kardia, S., Thomer, A., & Harris, M. R. (In Press). Lessons Learned for Identifying and Annotating Permissions in Clinical Consents. Applied Clinical Informatics. and Umberfield, E., Stansbury, C., Ford, K., Jiang, Y., Kardia, S. L. R., Thomer, A., & Harris, M. R. (Under Review). Evaluating and Extending the Informed Consent Ontology for Representing Permissions from the Clinical Domain.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Stringer, Kathleen A.
- Description:
- These data were produced from the survival analysis of the pre-treatment metabolomics data generated from the Phase II clinical trial of L-carnitine treatment for septic shock (the RACE trial - see https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01665092). The results based on respective acetylcarnitine or valine concentration are presented (pdf). The csv files contain the at risk numbers from the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. These findings described in our manuscript: Pharmacometabolomics Identifies Candidate Predictor Metabolites of an L-carnitine Treatment Mortality Benefit in Septic Shock. and All of the metabolomics data are available at the NIH Common Fund's National Metabolomics Data Repository (NMDR) website, the Metabolomics Workbench, https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org which is supported by NIH grant U2C-DK119886 and where it has been assigned Project ID (accession number ST001319). The data can be accessed directly via its Project DOIs: (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.21228/M8VX0Z).
- Keyword:
- sepsis, septic shock, survival, mortality, metabolomics, and pharmacometabolomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Puskarich, M. A., Jennaro, T. S., Gillies, C. E., Evans, C. R., Karnovsky, A., McHugh, C. E., Flott, T. L., Jones, A. E., Stringer, K. A., & Investigators, O. behalf of the R. T. (2021). Pharmacometabolomics Identifies Candidate Predictor Metabolites of an L-carnitine Treatment Mortality Benefit in Septic Shock. (Preprint) https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.28.21250687
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Whitaker, Steven T., Nataraj, Gopal, Nielsen, Jon-Fredrik, and Fessler, Jeffrey A.
- Description:
- File: P,jf06Sep2019,mese.7 The multi-echo spin echo (MESE) data was acquired using a 3D acquisition with an initial 90 degree excitation pulse followed by 32 refocusing (180 degree) pulses, resulting in 32 echoes with echo spacing of 10 ms. The repetition time of the sequence was 1200 ms. Each refocusing pulse was flanked by crusher gradients to impart 14 cycles of phase across the imaging volume. The initial excitation pulse had time-bandwidth product of 6, duration of 3 ms, and slab thickness of 0.9 cm, and each refocusing pulse had time-bandwidth product of 2, duration of 2 ms, and slab thickness of 2.1 cm. The scan took 36 min 11 s and covered a field of view (FOV) of 22 x 22 x 0.99 cm^3 with matrix size 200 x 200 x 9., File: P,jf06Sep2019,b1.7 The Bloch-Siegert (BS) scans were acquired using a 3D acquisition. The excitation pulse of these scans had time-bandwidth product of 8 and duration of 1 ms. The pair of scans used +/-4 kHz off-resonant Fermi pulses between excitation and readout. The BS scans took 2 min 40 s in total and covered a FOV of 22 x 22 x 0.99 cm^3 with matrix size 200 x 50 x 9., File: P,jf06Sep2019,mwf.7 The small-tip fast recovery (STFR) scans were acquired using a 3D acquisition. The first two and last two scans were pairs of spoiled gradient-recalled echo (SPGR) scans with echo time difference of 2.3 ms. (In the related paper, only the first set was used, i.e., only 11 of the 13 scans were used.) The remaining scans used scan parameters that were optimized to minimize the Cramer-Rao Lower Bound (CRLB) of estimates of myelin water fraction (MWF). The RF pulses had time-bandwidth product of 8 and duration of 1 ms. Each pair of SPGR scans took 58 s and the nine STFR scans took 3 min 36 s for a total scan time of 5 min 32 s (4 min 34 s if one pair of SPGR scans is ignored). The scans covered a field of view (FOV) of 22 x 22 x 0.99 cm^3 with matrix size 200 x 200 x 9., File: meseslice5.mat Contains the 32 echoes of the MESE image data for the middle slice of the imaging volume. Saved using Mathworks MATLAB R2019a., File: b1slice5.mat Contains the transmit field inhomogeneity map for the middle slice of the imaging volume., File: recon.jld Key "img" contains the 11 STFR images for the middle slice of the imaging volume. Key "b0map" contains a field map estimated from the two SPGR scans. Key "mask" contains a mask of the voxels for which to estimate MWF. Key "T1img" contains a T1-weighted image for anatomical reference., File: headmask.mat Contains a mask for visualizing just the brain (ignores the skull) for the middle slice of the imaging volume., File: rois.mat Contains masks for various regions of interest (ROIs), used for computing statistics. Keys "mtopleft", "mtopright", "mbottomleft", and "mbottomright" refer to the corresponding locations on the anatomical reference image (see related paper). Key "mic" refers to the internal capsules, and key "mgm" refers to a gray matter ROI., The raw data files (P-files) can be read into the Julia programming language using the Julia version of the Michigan Image Reconstruction Toolbox ( https://github.com/JeffFessler/MIRT.jl) or into MATLAB using TOPPE ( https://github.com/toppeMRI/toppe). The reconstructed slices used in the related paper are provided for convenience, and are stored in .mat files that can be loaded into Julia (using the package MAT.jl) or MATLAB, and a .jld file that can be loaded into Julia (using the package JLD.jl). The Julia code for processing the data to create MWF maps is hosted publicly on GitHub at https://github.com/StevenWhitaker/STFR-MWF., and Files: toppe-master.zip and MIRT.jl-master.zip are archived versions of the TOPPE and Michigan Image Reconstruction Toolbox code sets from GitHub as of 2/28/2020.
- Keyword:
- myelin, machine learning, kernel learning, magnetic resonance imaging, and scan design
- Citation to related publication:
- Whitaker, S. T., Nataraj, G., Nielsen, J.-F., & Fessler, J. A. (2020). Myelin water fraction estimation using small-tip fast recovery MRI. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 84(4), 1977–1990. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28259
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Hatch, Nan E.
- Description:
- Crouzon FGFR2-C342Y/+ and wild type littermate pups on a C57BL/6 congenic background were injected with lentivirus expressing recombinant TNAP enzyme or phosphate buffered saline shortly after birth. Mice were euthanized 3 weeks after birth for analyses.
- Keyword:
- craniofacial, bone, craniosynotosis, FGFR2, TNAP tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase, mouse model, and development
- Citation to related publication:
- Nam, H. K., Vesela, I., Schutte, S. D., & Hatch, N. E. (2020). Viral delivery of tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase diminishes craniosynostosis in one of two FGFR2C342Y/+ mouse models of Crouzon syndrome. PLOS ONE, 15(5), e0234073. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234073
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Tronson, Natalie C and Tchessalova, Daria
- Description:
- The main goal of this research was to identify potential molecular pathways that contribute to memory dysregulation and decline that persists long after illness or inflammation. We have previously established a subchronic immune challenge model that results in memory impairments months after the inflammatory challenge. This project aimed to determine whether memory impairments were accompanied by transcriptional dysregulation in memory related brain region (the hippocampus). These data show the differential gene expression as log2fold change (and p-value) in males and females 3 months after immune challenge (Supp Tables 1 and 2); after a subsequent immune challenge (Supp Tables 3 and 4); the differential regulation of genes in males and females (Supp Table 5); genes differentially expressed in the hippocampus of males and females at baseline (Supp Table 6) and the differential regulation of those genes in males and females after immune challenge (Supp Tables 7,8).
- Keyword:
- hippocampus, lipopolysaccharide, differential gene expression, RNA sequencing, neuroimmune, sex differences, learning and memory, and inflammation
- Citation to related publication:
- Tchessalova, D., & Tronson, N. C. (2019). Enduring and sex-specific changes in hippocampal gene expression after a subchronic immune challenge. BioRxiv, 566570. https://doi.org/10.1101/566570
- Discipline:
- Science and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Cheung, Warwick, Gliske, Stephen V., Lai, Alan, Freestone, Dean R., Grayden, David B., Cook, Mark J., and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- The data and the scripts are to show that seizure onset dynamics and evoked responses change over the progression of epileptogenesis defined in this intrahippocampal tetanus toxin rat model. All tests explored in this study can be repeated with the data and scripts included in this repository. and Dataset citation: Crisp, D.N., Cheung, W., Gliske, S.V., Lai, A., Freestone, D.R., Grayden, D.B., Cook, MJ., Stacey, W.C. (2019). Epileptogenesis modulates spontaneous and responsive brain state dynamics [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/r6vg-9658
- Keyword:
- evoked response, stimulation, bifurcation, epilepsy, seizure, divergence, and dynamics
- Citation to related publication:
- Crisp, D. N., Cheung, W., Gliske, S. V., Lai, A., Freestone, D. R., Grayden, D. B., Cook, M. J., & Stacey, W. C. (2020). Quantifying epileptogenesis in rats with spontaneous and responsive brain state dynamics. Brain Communications, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa048
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Haydar, Bishr and MacEachern, Mark
- Description:
- The research adheres to PRISMA-HARM recommendations for systematic reviews. The reproducible search strategies for all databases, the citation export files from all databases, and the eligibility screening decisions are included in the dataset.
- Keyword:
- Systematic review, Patient transportation, intrahospital, intra-hospital, and Critically ill patients
- Citation to related publication:
- Haydar B, Baetzel A, Elliott A, MacEachern M, Kamal A, Christensen R. Adverse Events During Intrahospital Transport of Critically Ill Children: A Systematic Review. Anesth Analg. 2019. http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1213/ANE.0000000000004585
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Figueroa, C. Alberto
- Description:
- This information provides the data and commands to manually setup the computational simulations used in the PLOS ONE paper 'Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome' using CRIMSON (CARDIOVASCULAR INTEGRATED MODELLING & SIMULATION) a prototype simulation environment developed under the support of the European Research Council (( http://www.crimson.software/)., Note that a Windows version of the CRIMSON flowsolver is provided as part of the CRIMSON Windows installer, but you will need a very powerful Windows computer to run these simulations, as the models used in the present work are extremely computationally-demanding. It is recommended that you use a Linux version of the CRIMSON flowsolver on a high-performance computer., Option 1 (ready-to-use files to immediately start the simulation): 1. Please unzip the Ready-to-use files. 2. Copy the folders of each of the three conditions to the high performance computer. 3. In addition to different codes used, each folder provides the boundary conditions applied in the simulations described in the manuscript (e.g. LPN parameters). To run the 3D simulations for each condition simply launch the it using the CRIMSON flowsolver. In addition, the solver.inp file can be modified to run a 0D "real-time simulation" (please open solver.inp with a text editor and modify line 4 "Simulate in Purely Zero Dimensions:" to "True")., Option 2 (using the MITK files): 1. Please download and install Crimson software ( http://www.crimson.software/). 2. Please unzip the MITK files and the Ready-to-use files. 3. From amongst the provided MITK files, load the MITK file of interest to CRIMSON (using the MITK files, additional changes can be made to the computational model in case the user wants to explore different settings/boundary conditions e.g. change the vascular wall properties, introducing a change in the geometry to create a virtual stenosis). 3. Navigate to the tree in the "Data Manager" panel and select the "Pulmonaries", "CRIMSON SOLVER" and then "Solver study 3D" items, in the described order. 4. In the right hand panel select the "CRIMSON Solver setup" tab and scroll down the right hand bar until to find the "Setup Solver" box; click to output the simulation files (faceInfo.dat, geombc.dat.1, multidomain.dat, netlist_surface.dat,numstart.dat, presolver folder, solver.inp, restart.0.1). 5. Copy and replace the geombc.dat.1 and restart.0.1 generated by CRIMSON for each individual condition to the respective unziped folder in the Ready-to-use file (discard the remaining files that were output by CRIMSON). Note that if you have not changed anything about the model (e.g. vascular wall properties), then doing this will produce restart.0.1 and geombc.dat.1 files which are identical to the ready-to-use versions. 6. Finally copy each Condition folder to the high performance computer and simply launch the simulation using the CRIMSON flowsolver., and For technical queries please contact crimson-users@googlegroups.com. --October 2018.
- Citation to related publication:
- Silva Vieira M, Arthurs CJ, Hussain T, Razavi R, Figueroa CA (2018) Patient-specific modeling of right coronary circulation vulnerability post-liver transplant in Alagille’s syndrome. PLOS ONE 13(11): e0205829. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205829
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han
- Description:
- Data include variables used to run accelerated failure time models examining the association between the nose/throat microbiome and 1) symptom duration, 2) shedding duration, and 3) time to infection. Certain individual participant data have been excluded due to identifiability concerns. Data also include the oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications.
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee KH, Gordon A, Shedden K, Kuan G, Ng S, Balmaseda A, Foxman B. The respiratory microbiome and susceptibility to influenza virus infection. PloS One. 2019;14:e0207898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207898
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- George De la Rosa, Mery Vet, Patel, Dipali, McCann, Marc R., Stringer, Kathleen A., and Rosania, Gus R.
- Description:
- These data were produced from a study that employed a database strategy to identify candidate mitochondrial metabolites that could be clinically useful to identify individuals at increased risk of mitochondrial-related ADRs. The main candidate metabolite identified by the database strategy was evaluated using a mouse model of mitochondrial drug toxicity. These findings are described in our manuscript: Database Screening as a Strategy to Identify Endogenous Candidate Metabolites to Probe and Assess Mitochondrial Drug Toxicity. Data reported was supported by funding from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under award numbers R01GM127787 (GRR) & R35GM136312 (KAS).
- Keyword:
- mitochondrial-realted metabolites, adverse drug reactions, and mitochondrial drug toxicity
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bacon, Elizabeth, Hanson, Erika N., Austin, Sarah, Delacroix, Emerson, Uhlmann, Wendy, Roberts, Scott, and Resnicow, Ken
- Description:
- Survey respondents were cancer-affected patients seen at an academic medical center, and self-reported experiences with genetic testing and counseling. This is raw dataset is saved in comma separated value (.csv) format.
- Keyword:
- Genetic Testing, Clinician Recommandation , NCCN Guidelines, Hereditary Genetic Testing, and Disparities in Genetic Counseling
- Citation to related publication:
- American Association of Kidney Patients: A List of Support Groups in Michigan. https://aakp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Support-Groups-Michigan.pdf
- Discipline:
- Science and Health Sciences
-
Preterm Birth
User Collection- Creator:
- Betsy Foxman
- Description:
- This collection has been retired as of Sept 28. 2020 and replaced with the "Preterm Birth" work listed below.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
1Works -
Transmission of Oral microbiome and Sequencing
User Collection- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han
- Description:
- De-identified participant data from household transmission study of influenza in Nicaragua Oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
2Works -
- Creator:
- Hero, Alfred O, Zhai, Yaya, Burke, Thomas, Doraiswamy, Murali, Ginsburg, Geoffrey S, Henao, Ricardo, Turner, Ronald B, and Woods, Christopher W
- Description:
- The data deposited here is as follows: The clinical shedding/symptom data, RNAseq, steroid, and wearable E4 data was partially presented in publications [1]-[3] and the cognitive lumos and VAFS data is presented in the paper [4], which is under review and embargoed. The data files are: subject.json, sample.json, and genematrix_TPM.csv. In addition, a copy of the blank consent form used to enroll volunteers in the study is included (17964_Adult Consent_2015Mar17-Mod 1_clean.pdf)., Clinical symptom and viral shedding data (in subject.json): reports each subject's accumulated and maximum self-reported symptom score (modified Jackson score) and shedding titrations from nasal-pharyngeal washes after inoculation. , RNAseq data (genematrix_TMP.csv): Whole blood was collected in PAXgene™ Blood RNA tubes (PreAnalytiX), and total RNA extracted using the PAXgene™ Blood miRNA Kit (QIAGEN) using the manufacturer’s recommended protocol. RNA quantity and quality were assessed using Nanodrop 2000 spectrophotometer (Thermo-Fisher) and Bioanalyzer 2100 with RNA 6000 Nano Chips (Agilent). RNA sequencing libraries were prepared using Illumina TruSeq mRNA Library Kit with RiboZero Globin depletion, and sequenced on an Illumina NextSeq sequencer with 50bp paired-end reads (target 40M reads per sample). After demultiplexing to FASTQ paired-end read counts files, the 396 samples were TPM transformed using HISAT2 software with the reference genome Homo_sapiens.GRCh38.84. Each sample corresponds to one of the 18 subjects at one of 22 time points. One of these samples was of insufficient quality to be mapped to read counts. In addition to the TPM normalized RNAseq data contained in this repository, the raw FASTQ data for the 395 samples are deposited in the GEO repository ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo), Accession # GSE215087. , Cognitive data (sample.json): Outcomes from a NeuroCognitive Performance Test (NCPT) that was taken approximately 3 time daily by all volunteers. The NCPT is a repeatable, web-based, computerized, cognitive assessment platform designed to measure subtle changes in performance across multiple cognitive domains. Subject scores along 18 cognitive variables data were collected at approximated 22 time points during the challenge study. The data structure sample.json contains the raw cognitive data and the extracted 18 cognitive scores over time for each subject. , The Visual Analog Fatigue Scale (sample.json): the VAFS is a measure of cognitive fatigue that was measured approximately 3 times per day at the same time as the NCPT and blood draw. , Wearable device data (sample.json): participants wore an Empatica E4 device for the duration of the challenge study. Summarized features are provided for each subject that include sleep duration (mean and std), sleep offset (mean and std), and temperature (mean and std). , Steroid data was also collected and is included in the sample.json. This steroid data was collected from the whole blood samples and consists of cortisol, melatonin, and DHEAS. , and See README.txt for more specific details on the data structures contained in the sample.json, subject.json, and genematrix_TPM.csv files.
- Keyword:
- human challenge study and cognitive health and immunity
- Citation to related publication:
- X She, Y Zhai, R Henao, CW Woods, C Chiu, Geoffrey S. Ginsburg, Peter X.K. Song, AO. Hero, “Adaptive multi-channel event segmentation and feature extraction for monitoring health outcomes,” IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. 68, no. 8, pp. 2377-2388, Aug. 2021, doi: 10.1109/TBME.2020.3038652. Available on arxiv:2008.09215 , Emilia Grzesiak, Brinnae Bent, Micah T. McClain, Christopher W. Woods, Ephraim L. Tsalik, Bradly P. Nicholson, Timothy Veldman, Thomas W. Burke, Zoe Gardener, Emma Bergstrom, Ronald B. Turner, Christopher Chiu, P. Murali Doraiswamy, Alfred Hero, Ricardo Henao, Geoffrey S. Ginsburg, Jessilyn Dunn Assessment of the Feasibility of Using Noninvasive Wearable Biometric Monitoring Sensors to Detect Influenza and the Common Cold Before Symptom Onset. JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(9):e2128534. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.28534 , E Sabeti, S Oh, PX Song, A Hero. “A Pattern Dictionary Method for Anomaly Detection,” Entropy, vol 24, pp. 1095 Aug 2022. doi: 10.3390/e24081095, and Yaya Zhai, P. Murali Doraiswamy, Christopher W. Woods, Ronald B. Turner, Thomas W. Burke, Geoffrey S. Ginsburg, Alfred O. Hero, "Pre-exposure cognitive performance variability is associated with severity of respiratory infection," manuscript under review.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lester, Corey A, Al Kontar, Raed, and Chen, Qiyuan
- Description:
- The dataset contains images of pills inside a medication bottle from a top down view. The dataset was used to build an image classification model for predicting the national drug code (NDC) of the medication seen in the image. There are 13,955 images of 20 distinct NDC. The image data were used to create a machine learning algorithm which could predict the NDC.
- Keyword:
- Medication, Pills, and Image
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Goodrich, Jaclyn M., Tang, Lu, Rodríguez-Carmona, Yanelli, Meijer, J L., Perng, Wei, Watkins, Deborah J., Meeker, John D. , Mercado-García, Adriana, Cantoral, Alejandra, Song, Peter X. , Téllez-Rojo, Martha M. , and Peterson, Karen E.
- Description:
- Phthalates are chemicals found in many products that humans are exposed to. Prenatal exposure to phthalates has been associated with adverse outcomes that are detected in childhood, adolescence, and even adulthood. In this study, we sought to identify subtle biological changes in the metabolome of children that were exposed to phthalates during gestation. We hypothesized that prenatal phthalate exposures would alter metabolic pathways related to adiposity and cardiometabolic health. The article is under review (citation to be added when paper is published). The data included here encompass all exposure, demographic, and untargeted metabolomics data needed for the analysis described in the manuscript.
- Keyword:
- Phthalates , Prenatal, and Metabolomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Goodrich J.M., Tang L.,Rodríguez-Carmona Y., Meijer J.L, Perng W., Watkins D.J., Meeker J.D., Mercado-García A., Cantoral A., Song P.X., Téllez-Rojo M.M., Peterson K.E. Trimester-specific phthalate exposures in pregnancy are associated with circulating metabolites in children. PLoS One. (Under revision – forthcoming.)
- Discipline:
- Other and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the literature review. Abstracts and keywords have been removed from the citation file. The citation file was exported in an .RIS format and can be imported with any citation manger such as EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley, RefWorks, etc. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Zongyu Li, Yuni K. Dewaraja, and Jeffrey A. Fessler
- Description:
- Current methods for patient-specific voxel-level dosimetry in radionuclide therapy suffer from a trade-off between accuracy and computational efficiency. Monte Carlo (MC) radiation transport algorithms are considered the gold standard for voxel-level dosimetry but can be computationally expensive, whereas faster dose voxel kernel (DVK) convolution can be sub-optimal in the presence of tissue heterogeneities. Furthermore, the accuracies of both these methods are limited by the spatial resolution of the reconstructed emission image. To overcome these limitations, this paper considers a single deep convolutional neural network (CNN) with residual learning (named DblurDoseNet) that learns to produce dose-rate maps while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We took the novel approach of constructing a convolutional neural network with residual learning to handle the accuracy-efficiency tradeoff while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We then test our CNN on clinically relevant phantoms and patients undergoing Lu-177 DOTATATE therapy in our clinic. Our network demonstrated superior results than Monte Carlo, the current gold standard for voxel dosimetry, but only takes a fraction of time. Thus, the DblurDoseNet has the potential for real-time patient-specific dosimetry in clinical treatment planning due to its demonstrated improvement in accuracy, resolution, noise and speed over the DVK/MC approaches. Matlab is needed to access the phantoms and Python (with Numpy package installed) is needed to access the DVKs.
- Keyword:
- Deep learning, Voxel-level dosimetry, Lu-177 therapy, SPECT resolution effects
- Citation to related publication:
- "DblurDoseNet: A Deep Residual Learning Network for Voxel Radionuclide Dosimetry Compensating for SPECT Imaging Resolution" by Zongyu Li, Jeffrey A. Fessler, Justin K. Mikell, Scott J. Wilderman and Yuni K. Dewaraja. Accepted by Medical Physics, 2021. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15397
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bhaumik, Deesha
- Description:
- This cross-sectional analysis included 584 participants in the Center for Oral Health Research in Appalachia cohort 1 (COHRA1). We sequenced the V4 region of the 16S rRNA of supragingival plaque from 185 caries-active and 565 caries-free teeth using the Illumina MiSeq platform. Sequences were filtered using the R DADA2 package and assigned taxonomy using the Human Oral Microbiome Database ( http://www.homd.org/).
- Keyword:
- Amplicon Sequence Variant
- Citation to related publication:
- In press
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Dahee, Panicker, Veena, and Landis-Lewis, Zach
- Description:
- We use the term “performance summary display” (PSD) to mean a kind of visualization that relates performance levels to other types of information. In the context of healthcare organizations, PSDs are intended to be communicated to a healthcare professional, team, or organization. and Displays were identified, classified, and elements counted and coded. The performance summary display ontology provides a set of descriptions of components of displays that have been used to annotate performance feedback visualizations.
- Keyword:
- Performance
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee, D., Panicker, V., Gross, C., Zhang, J., & Landis-Lewis, Z. (2020). What was visualized? A method for describing content of performance summary displays in feedback interventions. BMC medical research methodology, 20(1), 90. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-020-00951-x
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Science
-
- Creator:
- LaBarre, Jennifer L., Peterson, Karen E., Kachman, Maureen T., Perng, Wei., Tang, Lu., Hao, Wei., Zhou, Ling., Karnovsky, Alla., Cantoral, Alejandra., Téllez-Rojo, Martha María., Song, Peter XK., and Burant, Charles F.
- Description:
- Participants were enrolled in the Early Life Exposure in Mexico to ENvironmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) project which was started in 1994 and consists of three sequentially-enrolled birth cohorts from Mexico City Maternity Hospitals (20). A subset of these children, age 8-14 years, were contacted through their primary caregiver to provide urine samples, serum samples, anthropometry and complete an interview-based questionnaire (n=250). Subjects for this analysis have baseline and follow data on anthropometry, metabolic biomarkers and adequate serum volume for metabolomics analyses (n=206).
- Citation to related publication:
- LaBarre, J. L., Peterson, K. E., Kachman, M. T., Perng, W., Tang, L., Hao, W., Zhou, L., Karnovsky, A., Cantoral, A., Téllez-Rojo, M. M., Song, P. X. K., & Burant, C. F. (2020). Mitochondrial Nutrient Utilization Underlying the Association Between Metabolites and Insulin Resistance in Adolescents. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 105(7), 2442–2455. https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgaa260
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark, Vitous, C Ann, Dinh, Duyhoang, Jafri, Sara, Bennett, Olivia, and Suwanabol, Pasithorn
- Description:
- The intent of the project was to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and EBSCOhost CINAHL. The searches yielded 1168 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Health Sciences, Systematic Review, Surgeons, Well-being, and Literature Searches
- Citation to related publication:
- Vitous, C. Ann MA, MPH*; Dinh, Duyhoang Q. BS†; Jafri, Sara M. BS‡; Bennett, Olivia M. BS†; MacEachern, Mark MLIS§; Suwanabol, Pasithorn A. MD, MS* Optimizing Surgeon Well-Being, Annals of Surgery Open: March 2021 - Volume 2 - Issue 1 - p e029 doi: 10.1097/AS9.0000000000000029
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Joyce Y, Knauer, Heather A, Lee, Shawna J, MacEachern, Mark P, and Garfield, Craig F
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Review, Fathers, Education, and Perinatal
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee JY, Knauer HA, Lee SJ, MacEachern MP, Garfield CF. (2018). Father-inclusive perinatal parent education programs: A systematic review. Pediatrics, 142(1). PMID: 29903835. and https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2018-0437
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Harper Diane M
- Description:
- Patients included in this study were all males with no prior HIV diagnosis between 18 and 45 years who had at least one primary care encounter between March 2016 and March 2019. We chose 2016 as the index year because the question of the sexual partners’ gender became coded data elements with the clinic contact. Eligible patients were grouped based on reported sexual partners at the most recent disclosure. Individuals who reported having a male sexual partner or both a male and female partner were included in the MSM group. The non-MSM group included individuals who reported only a female partner or no partner. Patients who did not answer the question were excluded from the study. The study proposal was submitted to the Institutional Review Boards of the University of Michigan Medical School and was exempted from ongoing IRB review (HUM00155091). Individual consent was waived for this study.
- Keyword:
- HIV, MSM, and annual screening
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark P, Marti, Kyriaki C, Mylonas, Anastassios I, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote (enlx) file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the methods of the article for more information.
- Keyword:
- Dental Education, Dentistry, Education, Humanities, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Marti KC, Mylonas AI, MacEachern M, Gruppen L. (2019). Humanities in predoctoral dental education: A scoping review. Journal of Dental Education, 83(10), 1174-1198. DOI: 10.21815/JDE.019.126, http://www.jdentaled.org/content/83/10/1174.long, and https://doi.org/10.21815/JDE.019.126
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Gradwohl, Kelsey M.
- Description:
- The data set includes one file: Dermatology Clerkship Chalk Talks Raw Dataset which is the raw data collected from the surveys. This raw data was then coded and scored with the following analysis. Objective knowledge questions were asked for each chalk talk which was scored by authors. A knowledge assessment score was calculated by adding the total number of points accumulated by the student, dividing it by the total number of points possible, and summarizing the score as a percentage. Pre- and post-talk knowledge assessment scores were compared for each chalk talk and for the entire curriculum using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05., Before and after each talk, students were asked how confident they felt differentiating conditions within each disease group. For the erythroderma and immunobullous talks, students were also asked how confident they felt working up the conditions. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all confident) to 5 (extremely confident). Pre- and post-chalk talk scores were summarized as means with standard deviations and compared using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05. , After each talk, students were asked about its efficacy in terms of enhancing their understanding of the diseases, providing a framework or approach to work-up, and facilitating interaction between student and teacher. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all effective) to 5 (extremely effective), and summarized as means with standard deviations. Students were asked for written feedback regarding what they liked about the talk and suggestions for improvement. Qualitative data were sorted into categories and scored by two independent raters (cohen's kappa =0.8)., and In the response Likert scale, "Not at all"=1, "Not so (much)"=2, "Somewhat"=3, "Very"=4, and "Extremely"=5.
- Keyword:
- Chalk talk, Dermatology clerkship, Dermatology education, Virtual learning, and Online learning
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Parent, Rachel, Nakatani, Mitsuyoshi, Murphy, Geoffrey G. , and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- This data and scripts are meant to test and show that seizure onset dynamics can be modulated using anti-epileptic drugs. A zip file is included that contains all waveform data, MATLAB processing scripts, and metadata. The MATLAB scripts allow for visual review validation and objective feature analysis. The file includes various README files explaining the scripts and their relationships in greater detail.
- Keyword:
- Bifurcation, Epilepsy, Seizure, and Electrophysiology
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences, Engineering, and Science
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Hicks, Patrice M., Kang, Linda, Stagg, Brian C., Newman-Casey, Paula-Anne, and Woodward, Maria A.
- Description:
- The search data supports a scoping literature review project on Loss to follow-up barriers in care for Cornea Ulcers and Glaucoma. The data included are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). Both the original search files and updated search files have been included in the deposit.
- Keyword:
- Cornea, Glaucoma, Loss to follow, and ophthalmology
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Sirihorachai, Rattima , and Manojlovich, Milisa
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on counting interventions to reduce the incidence of retained surgical instruments. The data included in the dataset are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- literature search , retained surgical instruments, counting, and nursing
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, M. P. , Woolen, S. A., Shankar, P. R., Gagnier, J. J., Singer, L., and Davenport, M. S.
- Description:
- The intent of the project to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and Wiley Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. The searches yielded 2700 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Systematic review, Meta-analysis, Radiology, Gadolinium, Chronic kidney disease, and Literature searches
- Citation to related publication:
- Woolen, S. A., Shankar, P. R., Gagnier, J. J., MacEachern, M. P., Singer, L., & Davenport, M. S. (2020). Risk of Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis in Patients With Stage 4 or 5 Chronic Kidney Disease Receiving a Group II Gadolinium-Based Contrast Agent: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA internal medicine, 180(2), 223–230. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2019.5284
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Attari, Ali
- Description:
- Please refer to the "README.txt" for more details., MATLAB R2018a (Mathworks, Natick, MA, USA) was used to process this data., and Excel (Microsoft Office) was used to store survey data on the comfort of both systems and also to provide absolute and relative intraobserver variablities for the DM device.
- Keyword:
- Digital Manometry
- Citation to related publication:
- Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system Attari A, Chey WD, Baker JR, Ashton-Miller JA (2020) Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system. PLOS ONE 15(9): e0228761. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228761
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., Arring, Noël M., Aduse-Poku, Livingstone, Jiagge, Evelyn, Walker, Eleanor, White-Perkins, Denise, Israel, Barbara, Hinebaugh, Analise, Harb, Rayya, DeWitt, Jillian, Molnar, Maxim, Wilson-Powers, Eliza, and Brush, Barbara L.
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on Strategies to Increase Black Enrollment and Retention in Cancer Clinical Trials. This dataset includes the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- African American, Cancer, Neoplasm, clinical trials, and Minority Recruitment
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Gliske, Stephen V and Stacey, William C
- Description:
- This data repository includes the quantitative features of high frequency, intracranial EEG along with all necessary scripts to reproduce the figures of the accompanying manuscript.
- Keyword:
- high frequency oscillation, HFO, high frequency activity, and epilepsy
- Citation to related publication:
- (under review)
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark P; Sun, Gordon H; Chen, Stephanie W; Wang, Jing
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (Clarivate), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Tracheostomy, Decannulation, Spinal Cord Injury, Scoping Review, and Literature Searches
- Citation to related publication:
- Gordon H. Sun, Stephanie W. Chen, Mark P. MacEachern & Jing Wang (2020) Successful decannulation of patients with traumatic spinal cord injury: A scoping review, The Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine, DOI: 10.1080/10790268.2020.1832397
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This publication contains anonymized planar whole body images of two patients. Patient scans were taken at 4 different time points in the week following a therapeutic dose of Lu-177 DOTATATE. Both anterior and posterior views are provided. All images are in DICOM format.
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Lutathera, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, and Planar
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni, K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This publication contains the anonymized SPECT/CT scans of two patients. Patient scans were taken at 4 different time points in the week following a therapeutic dose of Lu-177 DOTATATE. Each of the scans contains 5 subfolders, 3 of which contain SPECT projection data used for reconstructing SPECT images, and 2 contain the linear attenuation coefficient maps for the CT scans that correspond to each patients SPECT projections. All images are in DICOM format.
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, SPECT, and CT
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Payam Mirshams Shahshahani
- Description:
- The two R codes are related to the feasible balance region calculations for Figures 2, 3, and 4 in the paper. The MATLAB codes are related to the simulations of the recoverable initial quasi-static states, the results of which are shown in Figure 5 of the paper.
- Keyword:
- One-legged balance, Biomechanics, Hip Abductor, and Unipedal Stance
- Citation to related publication:
- Shahshahani, P. M., & Ashton-Miller, J. A. (2020). On the importance of the hip abductors during a clinical one legged balance test: A theoretical study. PLOS ONE, 15(11), e0242454. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242454
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Dulka, Eden A
- Description:
- This data is a subset of that originally produced as part of an effort to characterize GnRH neuron activity during prepubertal development in control and PNA mice and investigate the potential influences of sex and PNA treatment on this process (1). It was later used in (2) to further investigate the firing patterns of GnRH neurons in these categories of mice and determine how these patterns might differ based on age and treatment condition. The data files can be opened and examined using Wavemetric's Igor Pro software. Code used to further examine and visualize the data can be found at https://gitlab.com/um-mip/mc-project-code. This research was supported by National Institute of Health/Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development R01 HD34860 and P50 HD28934. (1) Dulka EA, Moenter SM. Prepubertal development of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuron activity is altered by sex, age and prenatal androgen exposure. Endocrinology 2017; 158:3941-3953 (2) Penix JJ, DeFazio RA, Dulka EA, Schnell S, Moenter SM. Firing patterns of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons are sculpted by their biology. Pending.
- Keyword:
- action potential, Monte Carlo, polycystic ovary syndrome, puberty, and androgen
- Citation to related publication:
- Dulka EA, Moenter SM. Prepubertal development of gonadotropin-releasing hormone neuron activity is altered by sex, age and prenatal androgen exposure. Endocrinology 2017; 158:3943-3953. https://dx.doi.org/10.1210%2Fen.2017-00768 and Penix JJ, DeFazio RA, Dulka EA, Schnell S, Moenter SM. Firing patterns of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons are sculpted by their biology. Pending.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Townsend, Whitney A, MacEachern, Mark P, and Song, Jean
- Description:
- We conducted a search through BioMed Central's 54 medicine and public health journals that provide OPR documentation in order to identify systematic review papers published in 2017. For each article we determined if OPR data, reviewer and author comments, were accessible. If so, we assessed the search methodology and reporting quality of the search process with a grading rubric based on PRISMA and PRESS standards, and then mined peer reviewer comments for references to the search methodology.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Reviews, Peer Review, Open Peer Review, Methodology, Research Methods, and Reporting
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This publication contains anonymized time integrated activity maps for two patients. SPECT/CT scans were taken at 4 different time points in the week following a therapeutic dose of Lu-177 DOTATATE and combined into a single activity map for each patient. All images are in DICOM format.
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, SPECT, and CT
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark, DeLong, M. R. , Tandon, V. J., Bertrand, A. A. , Goldberg, M. , Salibian, A. , Pusic, A. L. , Festekjian, J. H. , and Wilkins, E. G.
- Description:
- The intent of the project was to identify all relevant studies and data related to the topic. There are searches for the following databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, Clarivate Web of Science, and Wiley Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. The searches yielded 1168 citations after duplicates were removed in Endnote X8.
- Keyword:
- Literature searches, Breast reconstruction, Mesh, and Systematic review
- Citation to related publication:
- DeLong MR, Tandon VJ, Bertrand AA, MacEachern M, Goldberg M, Salibian A, Pusic AL, Festekjian JH, Wilkins EG. Review of Outcomes in Prepectoral Prosthetic Breast Reconstruction with and without Surgical Mesh Assistance. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2021 Feb 1;147(2):305-315. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000007586. PMID: 33177453.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Chun-Seok Cho, Jingyue Xi, Hyun Min Kang, and Jun Hee Lee
- Description:
- There are three experimental outputs from Seq-Scope. (1) High definition map coordinate identifier (HDMI) sequence, tile and spatial coordinate information from 1st-Seq, (2) HDMI sequence, coupled with cDNA sequence from 2nd-Seq, and (3) Histological image obtained from Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) staining of the tissue slice. (1) and (2) were uploaded to GEO ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE169706). (3) is deposited here. In addition, this deposit includes the processed RDS (single R object) data files.
- Keyword:
- Seq-Scope, scRNA-seq, and spatial transcriptomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Chun-Seok Cho, Jingyue Xi, Sung-Rye Park, Jer-En Hsu, Myungjin Kim, Goo Jun, Hyun-Min Kang, Jun Hee Lee “Seq-Scope: Submicrometer-resolution spatial transcriptomics for single cell and subcellular studies” (preprint) bioRxiv https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.25.427807 and Related data sets in NCBI’s Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) repository: Cho C, Xi J, Si Y, Lee JH, Kang HM, Park S, Hsu J, Kim M, Jun G “Seq-Scope: Submicrometer-resolution spatial barcoding technology that enables microscopic examination of tissue transcriptome at single cell and subcellular levels” https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE169706
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Arthurs, Christopher J., Khlebnikov, Rostislav, Melville, Alexander, Marčan, Marija, Gomez, Alberto, Dillon-Murphy, Desmond, Cuomo, Federica, Vieira, Miguel, Schollenberger, Jonas, Lynch, Sabrina, Tossas-Betancourt, Christopher, Iyer, Kritika, Hopper, Sara, Livingston, Elizabeth, Youssefi, Pouya, Noorani, Alia, Ben Ahmed, Sabrina, Nauta, Foeke J.N., van Bakel, Theodorus M.J., Ahmed, Yunus, van Bakel, Petrus A.J., Mynard, Jonathan, Di Achille, Paolo, Gharahi, Hamid, Lau, Kevin D., Filonova, Vasilina, Aguirre, Miquel, Nama, Nitesh, Xiao, Nan, Baek, Seungik, Garikipati, Krishna, Sahni, Onkar, Nordsletten, David, and Figueroa, Carlos A.
- Description:
- This repository contains the source code for the CRIMSON Flow Solver as required in the PLOS Computational Biology publication: CRIMSON: An Open-Source Software Framework for Cardiovascular Integrated Modelling and Simulation by the same authors., This is a snapshot of the software. Please visit https://github.com/carthurs/CRIMSONFlowsolver/releases/tag/PLOS_Comp_Bio & www.crimson.software for more general information and the most up to date version of the software. , and Software can be compiled in Cygwin and Linux.
- Keyword:
- Blood Flow Simulation, Patient-specific, Open-source Software, Image-based simulation, Cardiovascular Medical Image, Segmentation, and Finite Element Simulation
- Citation to related publication:
- CRIMSON: An Open-Source Software Framework for Cardiovascular Integrated Modelling and Simulation C.J. Arthurs, R. Khlebnikov, A. Melville, M. Marčan, A. Gomez, D. Dillon-Murphy, F. Cuomo, M.S. Vieira, J. Schollenberger, S.R. Lynch, C. Tossas-Betancourt, K. Iyer, S. Hopper, E. Livingston, P. Youssefi, A. Noorani, S. Ben Ahmed, F.J.H. Nauta, T.M.J. van Bakel, Y. Ahmed, P.A.J. van Bakel, J. Mynard, P. Di Achille, H. Gharahi, K. D. Lau, V. Filonova, M. Aguirre, N. Nama, N. Xiao, S. Baek, K. Garikipati, O. Sahni, D. Nordsletten, C.A. Figueroa bioRxiv 2020.10.14.339960; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339960 and Arthurs, C., Khlebnikov, R., Melville, A., Marčan, M., Gomez, A., Dillon-Murphy, D., Cuomo, F., Vieira, M., Schollenberger, J., Lynch, S., Tossas-Betancourt, C., Iyer, K., Hopper, S., Livingston, E., Youssefi, P., Noorani, A., Ben Ahmed, S., Nauta, F., van Bakel, T., Ahmed, Y., van Bakel, P., Mynard, J., Di Achille, P., Gharahi, H., Lau, K., Filonova, V., Aguirre, M., Nama, N., Xiao, N., Baek, S., Garikipati, K., Sahni, O., Nordsletten, D., Figueroa, C. (2021). CRIMSON open source project - Graphical User Interface (GUI) Source Code for PLOS Computational Biology [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. https://doi.org/10.7302/679b-dw96
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This publication contains anonymized diagnostic imaging scans of two patients. The images provided are pre-therapy scans used by clinicians for diagnosis and for selecting patients for treatment with Lu-177 DOTATATE. Multiple imaging modalities are present including diagnostic CT, MRI, and Ga68 PET, depending on the selected patient. All images are in DICOM format.
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Lutathera, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, CT, MRI, and PET
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Computational Vascular Biomechanics Lab @ the University of Michigan and other collaborators, The Qt Company, NSIS Team and contributors, PostgreSQL Global Development Group, Oracle Corporation, and Kitware
- Description:
- This repository contains several open-source components as well as software developed by our own lab that are required to build the GUI of the open source CRIMSON software from scratch using Visual Studio 2013 update 5:, cmake-3.13.5-win64-x64.zip: build tool; nsis-3.05-setup.exe: packaging tool; postgresql-9.5.21-1-windows-x64-binaries.zip: Qt dependency; presolver_win.zip: windows binary for CRIMSON Presolver built using MinGW; qt-opensource-windows-x86-msvc2013_64-5.7.0.exe: Qt GUI library; mysql-5.7.29-winx64.zip: Qt dependencies, Software in this repository is a snapshot; please visit https://github.com/carthurs/CRIMSONGUI & www.crimson.software for more general information and the most up to date version of the software., and This repository completes the following Deep Blue repository: GUI repository: https://doi.org/10.7302/679b-dw96
- Citation to related publication:
- CRIMSON: An Open-Source Software Framework for Cardiovascular Integrated Modelling and Simulation C.J. Arthurs, R. Khlebnikov, A. Melville, M. Marčan, A. Gomez, D. Dillon-Murphy, F. Cuomo, M.S. Vieira, J. Schollenberger, S.R. Lynch, C. Tossas-Betancourt, K. Iyer, S. Hopper, E. Livingston, P. Youssefi, A. Noorani, S. Ben Ahmed, F.J.H. Nauta, T.M.J. van Bakel, Y. Ahmed, P.A.J. van Bakel, J. Mynard, P. Di Achille, H. Gharahi, K. D. Lau, V. Filonova, M. Aguirre, N. Nama, N. Xiao, S. Baek, K. Garikipati, O. Sahni, D. Nordsletten, C.A. Figueroa bioRxiv 2020.10.14.339960; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.14.339960 and Arthurs, C., Khlebnikov, R., Melville, A., Marčan, M., Gomez, A., Dillon-Murphy, D., Cuomo, F., Vieira, M., Schollenberger, J., Lynch, S., Tossas-Betancourt, C., Iyer, K., Hopper, S., Livingston, E., Youssefi, P., Noorani, A., Ben Ahmed, S., Nauta, F., van Bakel, T., Ahmed, Y., van Bakel, P., Mynard, J., Di Achille, P., Gharahi, H., Lau, K., Filonova, V., Aguirre, M., Nama, N., Xiao, N., Baek, S., Garikipati, K., Sahni, O., Nordsletten, D., Figueroa, C. (2021). CRIMSON open source project - Graphical User Interface (GUI) Source Code for PLOS Computational Biology [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. https://doi.org/10.7302/679b-dw96
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Saylor, Kate M., King, Wesley M., and Gamarel, Kristi E.
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on Firearm violence among LGBTQ+ communities. The data included in the dataset are the reproducible search strategies (txt file) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt, ris, and.nbib files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- LGBTQ, Transgender, Firearms
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Muzyk, Andrew, Smothers, Zachary, Akrobetu, Dennis, Ruiz Veve, Jennifer, MacEachern, Mark P, Tetrault, Jeanette M, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx) and Microsoft Excel (xlsx), as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Medical Education, Substance Use Disorders, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Muzyk A, Smothers ZPW, Akrobetu D, Ruiz Veve J, MacEachern M, Tetrault JM, Grupen L. (2019). Substance use disorder education in medical schools: A scoping review of the literature. Academic Medicine. PMID: 31348067. and https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002883
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Tan, Meng H, Iyengar, Ravi, Mizokami-Stout, Kara, Yentz, Sarah, MacEachern, Mark P, Shen, Li Yan, Redman, Bruce, and Gianchandani, Roma
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes.
- Keyword:
- Literature search, Scoping review, and Endocrinopathies
- Citation to related publication:
- Tan MH, Iyengar R, Mizokami-Stout K, et al. Spectrum of immune checkpoint inhibitors-induced endocrinopathies in cancer patients: a scoping review of case reports. Clin Diabetes Endocrinol. 2019;5:1. Published 2019 Jan 22. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40842-018-0073-4
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Hsu, Jer-En, Cho, Chun-Seok, Kim, Myungjin, Xi, Jingyue, and Lee, Jun Hee
- Description:
- There are three experimental outputs from Seq-Scope. (1) High definition map coordinate identifier (HDMI) sequence, tile and spatial coordinate information from 1st-Seq, (2) HDMI sequence, coupled with cDNA sequence from 2nd-Seq, and (3) Histological image obtained from Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) staining of the tissue slice. (1) and (2) were uploaded to GEO ( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE186601). (3) is deposited here. In addition, this deposit includes the processed RDS (single R object) data files.
- Citation to related publication:
- Do TH, Ma F, Andrade PR, Teles R, de Andrade Silva BJ, Hu C, Espinoza A, Hsu JE, Cho CS, Kim M, Xi J, Xing X, Plazyo O, Tsoi LC, Cheng C, Kim J, Bryson BD, O'Neill AM, Colonna M, Gudjonsson JE, Klechevsky E, Lee JH, Gallo RL, Bloom BR, Pellegrini M, Modlin RL. TREM2 macrophages induced by human lipids drive inflammation in acne lesions. Sci Immunol. 2022 Jul 22;7(73):eabo2787. doi: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abo2787. Epub 2022 Jul 22. PMID: 35867799; PMCID: PMC9400695.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dewaraja, Yuni K and Van, Benjamin J
- Description:
- This publication contains anonymized SPECT/CT scans of two patients. Patient scans were taken at 4 different time points in the week following a therapeutic dose of Lu-177 DOTATATE. Both the SPECT and the co-registered CT are provided. All images are in DICOM format.
- Keyword:
- Lu-177, Dosimetry, Radionuclide, SPECT, and CT
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Van, Benjamin J. and Dewaraja, Yuni K.
- Description:
- Interest in quantitative imaging of Y-90 is growing because transarterial radioembolization (RE) with Y-90 loaded microspheres is a promising and minimally invasive treatment that is FDA approved for unresectable primary and metastatic liver tumors. These cancers are a leading cause of cancer mortality and morbidity. Radioembolization is a therapy that irradiates liver tumors with radioactive microspheres administered through a microcatheter placed in the hepatic arterial vasculature. Radioembolization is based on the principle that healthy liver and tumor are mainly vascularized by the portal vein and the hepatic artery respectively. As a result, radioactive microspheres are preferentially located in the lesions after they are administered via the hepatic artery.
- Keyword:
- Y-90, PET, SPECT, CT, Segmentation, Organ, Tumor, Label, Microsphere, Radioembolization, and SIRT
- Citation to related publication:
- Van, B. J., Dewaraja, Y. K., Sangogo, M. L., & Mikell, J. K. (2021). Y-90 SIRT: Evaluation of TCP variation across dosimetric models. EJNMMI Physics, 8(1), 45. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40658-021-00391-6
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences