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Featured researches published by Evan Cassity.


European Journal of Sport Science | 2016

The effect of body composition and BMI on 25(OH)D response in vitamin D-supplemented athletes

Evan Cassity; Maja Redzic; Teager Cr; Thomas Dt

Abstract Fat mass is inversely associated with vitamin D status, and athletes with the most adipose tissue may have the greatest risk for insufficient (25(OH)D 20–32 ng mL−1) or deficient (25(OH)D < 20 ng ml−1) status. The effects of fat and lean mass on 25(OH)D change in response to vitamin D supplementation have yet to be elucidated in athletes. In addition, vitamin D has a known role in bone health yet a link between short-term changes in 25(OH)D and bone turnover in indoor athletes have not yet been described. Thirty-two collegiate swimmers and divers (19 male, 13 female; 19 (1) years) participated in a 6-month randomized controlled trial and consumed either 4000 IU d−1 of vitamin D3 (n = 19) or placebo (PLA; n = 13). Anthropometry and blood collection of 25(OH)D, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (B-ALP) and N-terminal telopeptide (NTx) occurred at three time points. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry measured body composition analysis at baseline and endpoint. In the vitamin D group, BMI was negatively correlated with 6-month 25(OH)D change (R = −0.496; P = .03) and a stronger predictor of 25(OH)D change (P = .04) than ultraviolet B exposure and fat mass change. Athletes in the high bone turnover group showed significantly greater losses of 25(OH)D over 6-months compared to athletes in the low bone turnover group (P = .03). These results suggest athletes within the normal BMI category experience a diminished response to 4000 IU d−1 of vitamin D3 supplementation, and periods of high bone turnover may be an additional risk factor for developing compromised vitamin D status in athletes.


Journal of Intensive Care Medicine | 2018

Multidisciplinary Prerounding Meeting as a Continuous Quality Improvement Tool: Leveraging to Reduce Continuous Benzodiazepine Use at an Academic Medical Center

Alexander H. Flannery; Melissa L. Thompson Bastin; Ashley Montgomery-Yates; Corrine Hook; Evan Cassity; Phillip M. Eaton; Peter E. Morris

Background: Evidence-based medicine often has many barriers to overcome prior to implementation in practice, hence the importance of continuous quality improvement. We report on a brief (≤10 minutes) multidisciplinary meeting prior to rounds to establish a dashboard for continuous quality improvement and studied the success of this meeting on a particular area of focus: continuous infusion benzodiazepine minimization. Methods: This was a prospective observational study of patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit (MICU) of a large academic medical center over a 4-month period. A morning multidisciplinary prerounding meeting was implemented to report on metrics required to establish a dashboard for MICU care for the previous 24 hours. Fellows and nurse practitioners on respective teams reported on key quality metrics and other important data related to patient census. Continuous benzodiazepines were tracked daily as the number of patients per team who had orders for a continuous benzodiazepine infusion. The aim of this report is to describe the development of the morning multidisciplinary prerounding meeting and its impact on continuous benzodiazepine use, along with associated clinical outcomes. Results: The median number of patients prescribed a continuous benzodiazepine daily decreased over this time period and demonstrated a sustained reduction at 1 year. Furthermore, sedation scores improved, corresponding to a reduction in median duration of mechanical ventilation. The effectiveness of this intervention was mapped post hoc to conceptual models used in implementation science. Conclusions: A brief multidisciplinary meeting to review select data points prior to morning rounds establishes mechanisms for continuous quality improvement and may serve as a mediating factor for successful implementation when initiating and monitoring practice change in the ICU.


Critical Care Medicine | 2018

860: FAMILY PERCEPTIONS OF DAILY FAMILY ROUNDS IN THE MEDICAL ICU

Travis Klein; Ashley Montgomery-Yates; Evan Cassity; Peter S. Morris


Critical Care Medicine | 2018

1047: EVALUATION OF STRESS ULCER PROPHYLAXIS INDICATIONS AT A LARGE ACADEMIC MEDICAL CENTER

Kinjal Dave; Melissa Thompson-Bastin; Alexander H. Flannery; Peter S. Morris; Andrew Kelly; Evan Cassity


Critical Care Medicine | 2018

1487: USE OF ARB-BICARBONATE SCORE TO PREDICT SITE OF CARE IN PATIENTS WITH SEPSIS

Anthony Otekeiwebia; Evan Cassity; Peter S. Morris; David M. Mannino; Andrew Kelly; Radmila Choate; Mehdi Khosravi


Chest | 2018

SERUM BICARBONATE: A NEW PREDICTOR FOR MORTALITY IN SEPSIS

Robin Paudel; Andrew Kelly; Kamel Gharaibeh; Peter S. Morris; Prerna Dogra; Taj Rahman; Evan Cassity; Said Chaaban


Chest | 2017

Utility of the Modified CRB Score in Predicting Site of Care and Disease Severity in Patients With Sepsis Presenting to the Emergency Department

Anthony Otekeiwebia; Evan Cassity; Peter S. Morris; David M. Mannino; Andrew Kelly; Radmila Choate; Aleksandra Wieleczko; Mehdi Khosravi


Critical Care Medicine | 2016

1063: INTERNATIONAL CHALLENGE TO DEVELOP UNIFORM CRITERIA FOR OUTPATIENT ICU SURVIVORS CLINIC

Ashley Montgomery-Yates; Andrew Kelly; Evan Cassity; Kevin Smith; Mark A. Williams; Aleksandra Wieliczko; Travis Klein; Peter E. Morris


Critical Care Medicine | 2016

122: ICU "HOTEL ROUNDS" AS A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT TOOL: CHANGING PRACTICE IN A MEDICAL INTENSIVE CARE UNIT.

Melissa L. Thompson Bastin; Alexander H. Flannery; Ashley Montgomery-Yates; Kevin Smith; Corinne Hook; Evan Cassity; Phillip M. Eaton; Peter E. Morris


Critical Care Medicine | 2016

1069: NOVEL APPROACH TO INTRA-INSTITUTIONAL ICU OUTCOME REPORTING

Anna Kalema; Andrew Kelly; Ashley Montgomery-Yates; Kevin Smith; Andrew C. Bernard; Evan Cassity; Mark A. Williams; Peter E. Morris

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Peter S. Morris

Charles Darwin University

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Anthony Otekeiwebia

Morehouse School of Medicine

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Maja Redzic

University of Kentucky

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