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Institution

Medical University of South Carolina

EducationCharleston, South Carolina, United States
About: Medical University of South Carolina is a education organization based out in Charleston, South Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 23436 authors who have published 45440 publications receiving 1769397 citations. The organization is also known as: MUSC & Medical College of the State of South Carolina.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Medicine, Cancer, Stroke


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Risk of sudden death in patients with coronary disease depends on multiple variables in addition to ejection fraction, and the model demonstrates that patients whose only risk factor is EF < or =30% have a predicted 2-year arrhythmic death risk <5%.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2010-BJUI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated patient-reported reasons for discontinuing antimuscarinic prescription medications for overactive bladder (OAB) by using latent class analysis (LCA) and the Lo-Mendell-Rubin likelihood statistical test.
Abstract: Study Type – Symptom prevalence (prospective cohort) Level of Evidence 1b OBJECTIVE To evaluate patient-reported reasons for discontinuing antimuscarinic prescription medications for overactive bladder (OAB). PATIENTS AND METHODS A phase 1 screening survey was sent to a representative sample of 260 000 households in the USA to identify patients using antimuscarinic agents for OAB. A detailed phase-2 follow-up survey was sent to 6577 respondents with one or more antimuscarinic prescriptions for OAB in the 12 months before the phase 1 survey. The follow-up survey included questions about demographics, clinical characteristics, antimuscarinic use, beliefs about OAB, treatment expectations, OAB symptom bother, and pre-coded reasons for discontinuation. Patients who reported discontinuing one or more OAB medication during the 12 months before phase 2 were grouped by reason, using latent class analysis (LCA); the Lo-Mendell-Rubin likelihood statistical test was used to determine the number of classes. Conditional probabilities of reasons for discontinuation were calculated for each class. Multivariable logistic regression was used to assess the influence of demographic and clinical characteristics on class assignment. RESULTS In all, 162 906 (63%) and 5392 (82%) useable responses were returned in phases 1 and 2, respectively; the demographics were similar in respondents and nonrespondents in both phases. In all, 1322 phase 2 respondents (24.5%) reported discontinuing one or more antimuscarinic drugs during the 12 months before phase 2. LCA identified two classes (Lo-Mendell-Rubin statistic, P = 0.01) based on reasons for discontinuation. Most respondents (89%) reported discontinuing OAB medication primarily due to unmet treatment expectations and/or tolerability; many respondents in this class switched to a new antimuscarinic agent. A smaller group (11%) indicated a general aversion to taking medication. Age, sex, race, income, and history of incontinence were not predictive of class assignment. CONCLUSIONS Expectations about treatment efficacy and side-effects are the most important considerations in discontinuing OAB medications for most patients. Interventions to promote realistic expectations about treatment efficacy and side-effects might enhance adherence.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that glutamate transport and cystine-glutamate exchange may be coregulated and provide further evidence that targeting glutamate homeostasis is a potential method for treating cocaine relapse.

350 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Radiofrequency catheter ablation has been used extensively to treat refractory supraventricular tachycardia in adults, but few data are available on its safety and efficacy in children and adolescents.
Abstract: Background Although radiofrequency catheter ablation has been used extensively to treat refractory supraventricular tachycardia in adults, few data are available on its safety and efficacy in children and adolescents. We reviewed registry data obtained from 24 centers to evaluate the indications, early results, complications, and short-term follow-up data in young patients who underwent this procedure. Methods Standardized data were submitted for 652 patients who underwent 725 procedures between January 1, 1991, and September 1, 1992. The mean length of follow-up was 13.5 months. Results The median age of the patients was 13.5 years, and 84 percent of them had structurally normal hearts. The initial success rates for ablation of atrioventricular accessory pathways (508 of 615 procedures) and atrioventricular-node reentry (63 of 76 procedures) were both 83 percent. Greater institutional experience in performing ablation in children and location of the accessory pathway in the left free wall correlated with...

349 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A GWAS of alcohol dependence in European-American and African-American populations, with replication in independent samples of EAs, AAs and Germans, finds a convergence of risk genes between populations, and, to a lesser extent, between psychiatric traits.
Abstract: We report a GWAS of alcohol dependence (AD) in European-American (EA) and African-American (AA) populations, with replication in independent samples of EAs, AAs and Germans. Our sample for discovery and replication was 16 087 subjects, the largest sample for AD GWAS to date. Numerous genome-wide significant (GWS) associations were identified, many novel. Most associations were population specific, but in several cases were GWS in EAs and AAs for different SNPs at the same locus,showing biological convergence across populations. We confirmed well-known risk loci mapped to alcohol-metabolizing enzyme genes, notably ADH1B (EAs: Arg48His, P ¼ 1.17 � 10 � 31 ; AAs: Arg369Cys, P ¼ 6.33 � 10 � 17 ) and ADH1C in AAs (Thr151Thr, P ¼ 4.94 � 10 � 10 ), and identified novel risk loci mapping to the ADH gene cluster on chromosome 4 and extending centromerically beyond it to include GWS associations at LOC100507053 in AAs (P ¼ 2.63 � 10 � 11 ), PDLIM5 in EAs (P ¼ 2.01 � 10 � 8 ), and METAP in AAs (P ¼ 3.35 � 10 � 8 ). We also identified a novel GWS association (1.17 � 10 � 10 ) mapped to chromosome 2 at rs1437396, between MTIF2 and CCDC88A, across all of the EA and AA cohorts, with supportive gene expression evidence, and population-specific GWS for markers on chromosomes 5, 9 and 19. Several of the novel associations implicate direct involvement of, or interaction with, genes previously identified as schizophrenia risk loci. Confirmation of known AD risk loci supports the overall validity of the study; the novel loci are worthy of genetic and biological follow-up. The findings support a convergence of risk genes (but not necessarily risk alleles) between populations, and, to a lesser extent, between psychiatric traits.

349 citations


Authors

Showing all 23601 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Edward Giovannucci2061671179875
Ronald Klein1941305149140
Peter W.F. Wilson181680139852
Yusuke Nakamura1792076160313
John J.V. McMurray1781389184502
Nora D. Volkow165958107463
L. Joseph Melton16153197861
Gregg C. Fonarow1611676126516
Michael Boehnke152511136681
Charles B. Nemeroff14997990426
Deepak L. Bhatt1491973114652
Clifford R. Jack14096594814
Scott D. Solomon1371145103041
Karl Swedberg136706111214
Charles J. Yeo13667276424
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202364
2022196
20212,654
20202,488
20192,343
20182,094