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    Riggleman v. Douglas County Board of Equalization

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    Fink v. Douglas County Board of Equalization

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    Baker v. Saline County Board of Equalization

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    The Creightonian, 2025-10-31

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    Creighton Libraries Website & Services Health Sciences

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    This is an overview of Creighton University website, resources, and services.2025-08-1

    Thielen v. Douglas County Board of Equalization

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    DePorres Club Notes

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    Journal of Religion and Society

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    Afterlife belief is fundamental to religion, yet research has largely overlooked non-Christian perspectives, especially in terms of internal variety of belief. Judaism, for example, encompasses diverse afterlife beliefs across denominations that warrant attention. Survey data (N=1194) from self-identified U.S. Jews, collected in three waves, allows examination of beliefs from Jewish tradition on a 4-point Likert scale. Analysis involved chi-square tests of independence with Monte Carlo simulation for p-values, a non-parametric ANOVA equivalent, post-hoc comparisons, and t-tests to examine demographic differences. Findings from this sample reveal significant denominational differences, with expected high afterlife belief among Orthodox Jews and surprising variability among other groups. These insights suggest that assumptions about Jewish afterlife beliefs in America warrant further examination. This understanding aids professionals, such as healthcare providers, in addressing the full spectrum of Jewish beliefs. While not representative of the entire U.S. Jewish population, this study offers exploratory findings that may serve as a foundation for future, more comprehensive research on this topic.2

    John Galt Development LLC v. Lancaster County Board of Equalization

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    Investigating Central Chemoreception-based Biomarkers of Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP)

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    2025Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) causes significant mortality in epilepsy, affecting 1:1000 people every year. Preceding SUDEP, patients experienced a final GTC seizure, transient apneas and bradycardia, culminating in terminal apnea and asystole. Failure to recover from postictal hypercapnia and hypoxia (HH) is a critical risk factor for SUDEP. Central chemoreception initiates adaptive cardio-respiratory and autoresuscitation responses to HH changes, and is impaired in epilepsy and SUDEP. We have reported that the Kcna1-/- (KO) model of SUDEP, have increased GTCs, apnea, and chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) preceding SUDEP. We hypothesize that KO mice have impaired central chemoreception and autoresuscitation failure that contributes to their SUDEP susceptibility. We assessed the role of orexin antagonism and CIH in mitigating chemoreception dysfunction in preclinical SUDEP. Using non-invasive cardiorespiratory monitoring, we found that KO mice experienced increased apneas, intermittent bradycardia and hypoxia as they approached SUDEP. Using whole-body plethysmography, we found that high-risk KO mice had elevated ventilatory chemoresponses to a mild HH challenge (mimicking transient apnea) while 71% of KO mice failed to survive a severe HH challenge (mimicking terminal apnea). We next determined whether chemosensing orexin was involved in these responses. Orexin neurons exhibited exaggerated ex vivo chemosensitivity to low pH and may be upstream of the altered HH chemoresponses. Blocking orexin receptors improved cardio-respiration, oxygen saturation, and longevity of KO mice. It also rescued their in vivo ventilatory chemoresponses during mild and severe HH challenge and enabled survival. In response to a novel anoxia-autoresuscitation test (97% N₂, 3% CO₂), a majority of KO mice (~80%) had altered ventilatory chemoresponses and gasping parameters and succumbed to autoresuscitation failure and death. The risk of autoresuscitation failure increased with higher SUDEP risk. CIH pretreatment rescued ventilatory chemoresponses, improved gasping and enabled a majority of high-risk KO mice to autoresuscitate successfully and survive. Overall, these findings provide strong evidence that central chemoreception dysfunction contributes to autoresuscitation failure and death in a preclinical SUDEP model. We identified novel chemoreception-based cardiorespiratory biomarkers that may serve as predictors of SUDEP risk. This work highlights orexinergic pathway and CIH as promising targets for future SUDEP prevention studies

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