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    Date Issued2021 (2)2018 (1)Author
    Rice, Shauna Mary (3)
    Das, Manas (1)Eberlin, Kyle (1)Feeney, Freyja (1)Ferree, Sarah D. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationSchool of Medicine (2)Department of Radiology, Division of Translational Anatomy (1)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (1)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordBody dysmorphia (1)bullae (1)bullous pemphigoid (1)Cardiovascular Diseases (1)Cardiovascular System (1)View MoreJournalInternational Journal of Anatomical Variations (1)International journal of women's dermatology (1)Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open (1)

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    Life after lockdown: Zooming out on perceptions in the post-videoconferencing era

    Silence, Channi; Rice, Shauna Mary; Pollock, Samara; Lubov, Janet E.; Oyesiku, Linda O.; Ganeshram, Sonya; Mendez, Alexa; Feeney, Freyja; Kourosh, Arianne Shadi (2021-08-27)
    Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply disrupted daily life across the globe, with profound effects on mental and physical health. After more than a year of isolation and communication via videoconferencing, people are returning to in-person activities. Objective: This study aimed to investigate worsening self-perception, mental health, and anxiety with the return to in-person activities, with a focus on the influence of videoconferencing, social media, and the use of filters. Methods: An anonymous survey was distributed online through social media platforms and student network pages. Results: A total of 7295 participants responded to the survey. Seventy-one precent reported anxiety or stress related to returning to in-person activities, and nearly 64% sought mental health support services. Thirty-percent stated they plan to invest in their appearance as a coping strategy to deal with the anxiety of returning to in-person, and > 30% plan to take action in changing their appearance. The most reported dermatologic concerns were skin discoloration (32.36%), wrinkles (24.45%), and acne (14.85%). The prevalence of anxiety and mental health services increased relative to the use of filters in 18- to 24 year-olds. Conclusion: This survey study of > 7000 participants across the country elucidates worsening self-perception, anxiety, and mental health as we return to in-person activities in relation to increased videoconferencing, social media usage, and the use of filters. Physicians should be aware of these effects to better serve their patients.
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    Lower Extremity Salvage in the Setting of Bullous Pemphigoid Exacerbation: A Case Report

    Pollock, Samara E.; Rice, Shauna Mary; Ferree, Sarah D.; Friedstat, Jonathan; Eberlin, Kyle; Kourosh, Arianne S. (2021-08-05)
    Bullous pemphigoid is an autoimmune blistering disease where patients suffer from painful bullae, often covering large portions of the skin and requiring management with immune-suppression. Our case report of recurring bullous pemphigoid illustrates the importance of considering immunosuppressive perioperative management in patients with a history of autoimmune blistering even when the disease has been quiescent for some time. With multidisciplinary care and immune suppressive therapies in the perioperative period, a free flap complicated by recurrent bullous pemphigoid can be salvaged.
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    Varicosities affecting the lower limb veins consequent to a unique variant drainage pattern of the small saphenous vein

    Rice, Shauna Mary; Schipani, Elke Sarah; Santos, Ana Maleesa Rae; Sadaniantz, Katherine Anais; Roychowdhury, Prithwijit; Giannaris, Eustathia Lela; Das, Manas (2018-06-06)
    We report varicosities affecting the right deep femoral vein and the right femoral vein consequent to a unique unilateral variation in the course of the small saphenous vein. The right small saphenous vein, instead of draining into the popliteal vein at the popliteal fossa, expanded considerably in girth and thickness and continued as the deep femoral vein. The deep femoral vein then pierced the adductor magnus muscle, appeared in the anterior compartment, and joined the femoral vein. Four centimeters distal to this junction, a two-centimeter long varicosity in the deep femoral vein was noted. There was also a one-centimeter long varicosity on the femoral vein at its point of attachment to the deep femoral vein. The abnormal course of the small saphenous vein has several clinical implications, including pathogenesis and treatment of varicose veins, planning of coronary artery bypass grafting, and pathogenesis of venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism.
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