10 results on '"Okonkwo O"'
Search Results
2. Profile, Visual Presentation and Burden of Retinal Diseases Seen in Ophthalmic Clinics in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Nkanga D, Adenuga O, Okonkwo O, Ovienria W, Ibanga A, Agweye C, Oyekunle I, and Akanbi T
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diabetic retinopathy ,Ophthalmology ,vitreoretinal diseases ,macular edema ,genetic structures ,sub saharan africa ,RE1-994 ,eye diseases ,retinal detachment - Abstract
Dennis Nkanga,1 Olukorede Adenuga,2 Ogugua Okonkwo,3 Wilson Ovienria,4 Affiong Ibanga,1 Chineze Agweye,1 Idris Oyekunle,3 Toyin Akanbi3 On behalf of The Collaborative Retina Research Network1University of Calabar Teaching Hospital, Calabar, Nigeria; 2Jos University Teaching Hospital, Jos, Nigeria; 3Eye Foundation Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria; 4Irrua Specialist Hospital, Edo, NigeriaCorrespondence: Ogugua OkonkwoEye Foundation Hospital, 27 Isaac John Street, GRA. Ikeja, Lagos, NigeriaTel +234 8035027308Email o_okonkwo@yahoo.comPurpose: To determine the burden of retinal diseases and the degree of visual impairment associated with each disease, amongst Nigerians.Patients and Methods: This was a hospital-based multicenter, prospective, cross-sectional, non-comparative study conducted from January to December 2018. Data was obtained from consecutive patients with a retinal diagnosis presenting at the general ophthalmic and specialty retina clinics in four hospitals (three public, and one private teaching eye department) in Nigeria. Biodata, visual acuity and refraction, intraocular pressure, findings on dilated retinal examination, diagnosis and systemic diseases were noted. Degree of monocular and bilateral visual loss associated with each diagnosed retinal disease was summarized and p value was calculated using chi-square test. P < 0.05 was considered significant.Results: Eight hundred seventy-six of 8614 patients had a retinal diagnosis; establishing a hospital-based retinal disease prevalence of 9.8%. Male:female ratio was 1.1:1. The mean age of study patients was 49.97 (standard deviation 17.64 years). Mean symptom duration was 21.63 months (standard deviation 41.94). The mean intraocular pressure was 13.87 mmHg. Forty-three different retinal diseases were diagnosed. The most common was retinal complications of diabetes, i.e., diabetic retinopathy (DR) alone, diabetic macular edema (DME) alone and a combination of DR and DME, which accounted for 13.7%, 5.6% and 9.3%, respectively (contributed 28.6% of the entire diagnosis). This was followed by retinal detachment (RD), in 219 eyes (15.4%), dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD) in 124 eyes (8.7%). Nearly half of the eyes were blind or severely visually impaired. Blindness occurred in 34.1% of eyes; severe visual impairment in 8.2% of eyes and 29.7% had normal vision. There were 469 patients who had systemic diseases. The common systemic diseases were hypertension in 169 patients (19.3% of the total number of patients), hypertension and diabetes in 156 patients (18%), and diabetes alone in 98 patients (11.1%). Sickle cell disease was present in 1.5%.Conclusion: There is need to invest in infrastructure, local training and development of systems for early detection and treatment of several retinal diseases in sub-Saharan Africa; DR and DME having the largest burden. Collaborative physician care and management of hypertension and diabetes could significantly reduce the burden of DR and DME.Keywords: vitreoretinal diseases, sub-Saharan Africa, diabetic retinopathy, macular edema, retinal detachment
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- 2020
3. Whitepaper: Defining and investigating cognitive reserve, brain reserve, and brain maintenance
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Stern, Y. Arenaza-Urquijo, E.M. Bartrés-Faz, D. Belleville, S. Cantilon, M. Chetelat, G. Ewers, M. Franzmeier, N. Kempermann, G. Kremen, W.S. Okonkwo, O. Scarmeas, N. Soldan, A. Udeh-Momoh, C. Valenzuela, M. Vemuri, P. Vuoksimaa, E. Urquiljo, E.M.A. Cantillon, M. Clouston, A.A.P. Estanga, A. Gold, B. Habeck, C. Jones, R. Kochhann, R. Lim, Y.Y. Martínez-Lage, P. Morbelli, S. Okonkwo, O. Ossenkoppele, R. Pettigrew, C. Rosen, A.C. Song, X. Van Loenhoud, A.C. and the Reserve, Resilience Protective Factors PIA Empirical Definitions Conceptual Frameworks Workgroup
- Abstract
Several concepts, which in the aggregate get might be used to account for “resilience” against age- and disease-related changes, have been the subject of much research. These include brain reserve, cognitive reserve, and brain maintenance. However, different investigators have use these terms in different ways, and there has never been an attempt to arrive at consensus on the definition of these concepts. Furthermore, there has been confusion regarding the measurement of these constructs and the appropriate ways to apply them to research. Therefore the reserve, resilience, and protective factors professional interest area, established under the auspices of the Alzheimer's Association, established a whitepaper workgroup to develop consensus definitions for cognitive reserve, brain reserve, and brain maintenance. The workgroup also evaluated measures that have been used to implement these concepts in research settings and developed guidelines for research that explores or utilizes these concepts. The workgroup hopes that this whitepaper will form a reference point for researchers in this area and facilitate research by supplying a common language. © 2019 the Alzheimer's Association
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- 2020
4. Whitepaper: Defining and investigating cognitive reserve, brain reserve, and brain maintenance
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Stern, Y., Arenaza-Urquijo, E. M., Bartres-Faz, D., Belleville, S., Cantilon, M., Chetelat, G., Ewers, M., Franzmeier, N., Kempermann, G., Kremen, W. S., Okonkwo, O., Scarmeas, N., Soldan, A., Udeh-Momoh, C., Valenzuela, M., Vemuri, P., Vuoksimaa, E., Arenaza Urquiljo, E. M., Cantillon, M., Clouston, S. A. P., Estanga, A., Gold, B., Habeck, C., Jones, R., Kochhann, R., Kremen, W., Lim, Y. Y., Martinez-Lage, P., Morbelli, S., Ossenkoppele, R., Pettigrew, C., Rosen, A. C., Song, X., and Van Loenhoud, A. C.
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Aging ,Knowledge management ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Structural imaging ,Guidelines as Topic ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,physiology [Brain] ,Cognition ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Cognitive Reserve ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,ddc:610 ,Alzheimer's disease ,Functional imaging ,Workgroup ,media_common ,Cognitive reserve ,Confusion ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,standards [Guidelines as Topic] ,physiology [Aging] ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Research Design ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychological resilience ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Several concepts, which in the aggregate get might be used to account for "resilience" against age- and disease-related changes, have been the subject of much research. These include brain reserve, cognitive reserve, and brain maintenance. However, different investigators have use these terms in different ways, and there has never been an attempt to arrive at consensus on the definition of these concepts. Furthermore, there has been confusion regarding the measurement of these constructs and the appropriate ways to apply them to research. Therefore the reserve, resilience, and protective factors professional interest area, established under the auspices of the Alzheimer's Association, established a whitepaper workgroup to develop consensus definitions for cognitive reserve, brain reserve, and brain maintenance. The workgroup also evaluated measures that have been used to implement these concepts in research settings and developed guidelines for research that explores or utilizes these concepts. The workgroup hopes that this whitepaper will form a reference point for researchers in this area and facilitate research by supplying a common language.
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- 2020
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5. Mechanisms underlying resilience in ageing
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Stern, Y. Chételat, G. Habeck, C. Arenaza-Urquijo, E.M. Vemuri, P. Estanga, A. Bartrés-Faz, D. Cantillon, M. Clouston, S.A.P. Elman, J.A. Gold, B.T. Jones, R. Kempermann, G. Lim, Y.Y. van Loenhoud, A. Martínez-Lage, P. Morbelli, S. Okonkwo, O. Ossenkoppele, R. Pettigrew, C. Rosen, A.C. Scarmeas, N. Soldan, A. Udeh-Momoh, C. Valenzuela, M. Vuoksimaa, E.
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- 2019
6. International Practice Patterns for the Management of Acute Postsurgical and Postintravitreal Injection Endophthalmitis: European Vitreo-Retinal Society Endophthalmitis Study Report 1
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Soliman, M. K., Gini, G., Kuhn, F., Iros, M., Parolini, B., Ozdek, S., Michalewska, Z., Bopp, S., Adelman, R. A., Sallam, A. B., Kardaszewska, A., M'Bongo Zindamoyen, A. N., Banker, A., Serhiienko, A., Loo, A., Meireles, A., Aydin, B., Luebke, B., Ozmen, C., Odrobina, D., Bertelli, E., Unsal, E., Kenneth, F., Becquet, F., Hamon, F., Pellegrini, G., Tosi, G. M., Donvito, G., Khaqan, H., Badat, I., Fiser, I., Michalewski, J., Francois Le Rouic, J., Nawrocki, J., Zarallo-Gallardo, J., Lee, J. H., Boninska, K., Nowomiejska, K., Dziegielewski, K., Arrevola, L., Lytvynchuk, L., Elshafei, M., Pietras-Trzpiel, M., Detjen, M., Iglicki, M., Badino, M., Angelina, M., Gavura, M., Hasanreisoglu, M., Karadas, M., Atienza, N., Acar, N., Okonkwo, O., Miesbauer, P., Malgorzata, P. -T., Velez-Montoya, R., Robert, R., Frisina, R., Soyeur, R., Rejdak, R., Giannini, R., Mittal, S., Saidkasimova, S., Abdulsalam, S., Cisiecki, S., Rusnak, S., Teoh, S., Teixeira, S., Altan, T., Schrader, W., Kapran, Z., Aktas, Z., and Szijarto, Z.
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Male ,Endophthalmitis ,Incidence ,Eye Infections ,Bacterial ,Disease Management ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Cataract Extraction ,Aged ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Antibiotic Prophylaxis ,Europe ,Eye Infections, Bacterial ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Intravitreal Injections ,Middle Aged ,Ophthalmology ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Retrospective Studies ,Societies, Medical ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Vitrectomy ,Medical ,Societies - Published
- 2019
7. Empirical model of cellular signal propagation loss for smart grid environment
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Okumbor N. Anthony and Okonkwo O. R
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Radio propagation ,Smart grid ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Electronic engineering ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Computer network - Published
- 2016
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8. HRP biosensor based on carbonized maize tassel-MWNTs modified electrode for the detection of divalent trace metal ions
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Okonkwo O. Jonathan, Agyei M. Nana, and Moyo Mambo
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Detection limit ,biology ,Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Carbon nanotube ,Electrochemistry ,Horseradish peroxidase ,Divalent ,law.invention ,law ,Electrode ,biology.protein ,Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy ,Biosensor ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
The change in electrochemical behavior of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) activity induced by trace metals was used as a basis for developing an amperometric biosensor. The HRP was immobilized on maize tassel-multiwalled carbon nanotube (MT-MWCNT) through electrostatic interactions. The FTIR and UV-Vis results inferred that HRP was not denatured during its immobilization on MT-MWCNT composite. Using Cd2002B; as a model divalent metal ion, the inhibition rate was proportional to the concentration in the range from 0.002-0.030 mg L-1 with a limit of detection of 0.51 μg L-1. Representative Dixon and Cornish-Bowden plots showed that the reaction was reversible and noncompetitive.
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- 2013
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9. Concentrations of perfluorooctanoate and perfluorooctane sulfonate in sediment of western cape rivers, South Africa
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Mudumbi, J. B. N., Ntwampe, S. K. O., Muganza, M., Andrew Rand, and Okonkwo, O. J.
10. Self-Control and Exercise: A Review of the Bi-Directional Relationship
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Boat, R, Cooper, SB, Okonkwo, O, and van Praag, H
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self-regulation ,Ego depletion ,business.industry ,Cognitive engagement ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physical fitness ,strength model of self-control ,Review ,physical performance ,Self-control ,shifting priorities model ,Executive function ,Physical performance ,Exercise performance ,Mental capacity ,Trait ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Psychology ,business ,ego depletion ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Self-control has been defined as the mental capacity of an individual to alter, modify, change or override their impulses, desires, and habitual responses. In this review, we will discuss the bi-directional nature of the relationship between self-control and exercise. In brief, higher levels of trait self-control have been associated with greater exercise performance and adherence; whilst the depletion of state self-control has been shown to decrease performance and persistence on subsequent exercise tasks requiring self-control. In the opposite direction, long-term participation in exercise (and improved physical fitness) has been demonstrated to enhance self-control. Furthermore, an acute bout of exercise has been shown to enhance subsequent self-control, particularly when the exercise is of a moderate intensity and requires some degree of cognitive engagement. Throughout, when discussing each of these relationships, evidence will be drawn from other aspects of the review, where appropriate, to enhance our understanding of the observed effects. Finally, recommendations for future research will be made; including the importance of considering the bi-directional nature of the relationship, given that this has implications for our understanding of both self-control and exercise performance and adherence.
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- 2019
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