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003) without changes in VL muscle thickness. Content of lipidated microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B-light chain 3 (LC3-II) increased in EX (P = 0.022) suggesting increased autophagosome content. Additionally, an autophagosome clearance marker sequestosome 1 (p62) decreased in EX (P = 0.006). Markers of UPR selectively modulated with decreases (e.g. ATF4, P = 0.003) and increases (e.g. EIF2α, P = 0.019) observed in EX. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that a new intensive training stimulus that combines strength training with sprint training may increase muscle autophagosome content in a basal state without any evidence of impaired autophagosome clearance in masters sprinters. Simultaneously, the combined training may have a selective effect on the content of UPR signaling components.Community-acquired acute kidney injury (CA-AKI) can be a devastating diagnosis for any patient and can increase mortality during hospitalization. There can be long-term consequences for those who survive the initial insult. This article discusses CA-AKI and its implications for APRNs.NP organizations can complement academic programs by providing DNP students with experiential learning and mentorship. This article focuses on a regional NP organization that provided mentoring to DNP students who joined their leadership board. Students gained leadership, advocacy, policy, and advanced practice experience, and the organization experienced growth and innovation.Gaps in care currently exist between diabetic kidney disease (DKD) guidelines and diabetes management in primary care settings. Implementation of quality improvement (QI) initiatives often improves these gaps in care. This article outlines a QI initiative exploring whether a local Federally Qualified Health Center could improve rates of screening for microalbuminuria, diagnosis of DKD, and treatment of the disorder in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.Although acute respiratory distress syndrome is the most common cause of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, NPs also should be familiar with several other less common causes, including transfusion-related acute lung injury, neurogenic pulmonary edema, preeclampsia/eclampsia, opioid overdose, high-altitude pulmonary edema, and pulmonary embolism. This article addresses the pathophysiology, clinical presentation, diagnostics, treatment, and nursing considerations associated with each uncommon cause of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema.Over the past 15 years, there has been a steady resurgence of planned home births in the US. Multiple factors may impact health outcomes for mother and baby. NPs have the opportunity to provide reliable information to women to help ensure a safe delivery and to optimize care for the neonate.OBJECTIVES Data on long-term survival in children after interhospital transport to a PICU are scarce. The main objective was to investigate short- and long-term outcome after acute interhospital transport to a PICU for different age and risk stratification groups. Secondary aims were to investigate whether neonatal patients would have higher mortality and be more resource demanding than older patients. DESIGN Single-center, retrospective cohort study. SETTING Specialist pediatric transport team and a tertiary PICU in Sweden. PATIENTS Critically ill children 0-18 years old, acutely transported by a specialist pediatric transport team to a PICU in Sweden (January 1, 2008, to December 31, 2016). INTERVENTIONS None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS A total of 401 acute transport events were included. Overall mortality was 15.7% with a median follow-up time of 3.4 years (range, 0-10.2 yr). Median predicted death rate was 4.9%. There was no mortality during transport. Cumulative mortality almost doubled within the first 6 months after PICU discharge, from 6.5% to 12.0%. Of late deaths, 66.7% occurred in the risk stratification group predicted death rate 0-10%, and 95% suffered from severe comorbidity. There were no deaths after PICU discharge in the neonatal group. Cumulative mortality in multiple transported patients was 36.4%. CONCLUSIONS This is the first report on long-term survival after acute pediatric interhospital transport. For the entire cohort, there was significant mortality after PICU discharge, especially in multiple transported patients. In contrast, survival in the subgroup of neonatal patients was high after PICU discharge.OBJECTIVES Reduced morbidity and mortality associated with lung-protective mechanical ventilation is not proven in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome. This study aims to determine if a lung-protective mechanical ventilation protocol in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome is associated with improved clinical outcomes. DESIGN This pilot study over April 2016 to September 2019 adopts a before-and-after comparison design of a lung-protective mechanical ventilation protocol. All admissions to the PICU were screened daily for fulfillment of the Pediatric Acute Lung Injury Consensus Conference criteria and included. SETTING Multidisciplinary PICU. PATIENTS Patients with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome. INTERVENTIONS Lung-protective mechanical ventilation protocol with elements on peak pressures, tidal volumes, end-expiratory pressure to FIO2 combinations, permissive hypercapnia, and permissive hypoxemia. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Ventilator and blood gas data were collected foranical ventilation protocol was associated with decreased mortality (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.16-0.88). CONCLUSIONS In pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome, a lung-protective mechanical ventilation protocol improved adherence to lung-protective mechanical ventilation strategies and potentially mortality.BACKGROUND Those who provide assistance to persons who have experienced stroke (care partners) become exposed to new situation and paradigms that may produce stress. Providing adequate information and training before discharge may reduce care partner stress. METHODS This prospective longitudinal pilot study examined whether tailored poststroke discharge education would reduce care partner stress. click here Stress was measured via survey at baseline and at 30 and 60 days after discharge with the modified Caregiver Strain Index (mCSI), where a higher mCSI indicates a higher level of stress. RESULTS There was no significant difference between the mCSI scores at baseline (9.73), 30 days (9.59), and 60 days (10.26; P = .94). DISCUSSION Education is an important part of predischarge care for both patients and care partners. However, education alone or education only delivered once before discharge may not be sufficient to significantly reduce care partner stress. CONCLUSION A single postdischarge education session does not reduce care partner stress.