248 results on '"K. Gardiner"'
Search Results
2. Variation in adoption of skin and nipple sparing mastectomy: An opportunity to enhance patient outcomes
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Catherine L. Wetzel, Stuart K. Gardiner, Nathalie Johnson, Jennifer R. Garreau, and Thomas L. Sutton
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Mammaplasty ,Mastectomy, Subcutaneous ,Nipples ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Organ Sparing Treatments ,Mastectomy ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Nipple-sparing mastectomies (NSM) for breast cancer are under-utilized. We sought to investigate NSM utilization.Females with nonmetastatic breast cancer undergoing mastectomy in the Legacy Health System from 2007 to 2020 were identified. Multivariable logistic regression was utilized to evaluate odds of receiving NSM.Three-thousand-four-hundred-seventeen mastectomies were performed with 772 undergoing NSM. On multivariable analysis, later year (OR 1.22/year, P 0.001), neoadjuvant chemotherapy (OR 1.33, P = 0.04), HR+ (OR 1.61, P = 0.001) and surgeon volume (OR 1.16/10 yearly mastectomies, P 0.001) were independently associated with increased odds of receiving a NSM while age (OR 0.94/year, P 0.001), IDC (OR 0.58, P = 0.01), T3/T4 stage (OR 0.36, P = 0.009), and clinical node positivity (OR 0.63, P = 0.003) were independently associated with decreased odds. Surgeon volume was not associated with odds of receiving a non-NSM with reconstruction (OR 1.01 P = 0.48).NSM is under-utilized by low-volume breast surgeons. Understanding barriers to adoption is an is an opportunity to enhance patient-centered outcomes.
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- 2022
3. Patients with Low-vision Struggle with Placing Eye Drops and Benefit from an Eye Drop Aid
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Nick Grissom, Stuart K. Gardiner, Jack P. Rees, Facundo G. Sanchez, Steven L. Mansberger, Emmett T. Cunningham, Claude F. Burgoyne, Karen Rice, Christina Belter, and Robert M. Kinast
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
4. Cataract Surgery Lowers Intraocular Pressure and Medication Use in the Medication Group of the Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study
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Pradeep Y. Ramulu, Stuart K. Gardiner, Michael A. Kass, Mae O. Gordon, and Steven L. Mansberger
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Intraocular pressure ,genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Visual Acuity ,Glaucoma ,Ocular hypertension ,Cataract Extraction ,Article ,Cataract ,law.invention ,Tonometry, Ocular ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Secondary analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Intraocular Pressure ,Medication use ,Phacoemulsification ,business.industry ,Cataract surgery ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Anesthesia ,Treatment study ,Ocular Hypertension ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE: To determine the change in intraocular pressure (IOP), ocular hypotensive medication use after cataract extraction in the Medication Group of the Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study (OHTS). DESIGN: Secondary analysis of randomized clinical trial data METHODS: We included 92 participants (n=149 eyes) of the OHTS Medication Group who underwent cataract surgery in at least one eye during the study, and 531 participants (n=1004 eyes) of the Medication Group who did not undergo cataract surgery. We defined the “split date” as the first study visit that cataract surgery was reported for the cataract surgery group, and the 15(th) visit in the control group to equalize the median number of visits. We then compared the two groups at visits relative to this split date. • MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Difference in preoperative and postoperative IOP, and number of classes of ocular hypotensive medications between the cataract and control group over a 72 month period. RESULTS: Cataract surgery significantly decreased the number of ocular hypotensive medications at all postoperative visits (mean −0.4 medications, p
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- 2022
5. Towards a framework for flourishing through social media: a systematic review of 118 research studies
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Tim Lomas, Maya Gudka, and Kirsty L. K. Gardiner
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Social support ,Flourishing ,Identity (social science) ,Social media ,Positive psychology ,Psychology ,Mental health ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,Self-determination theory ,Social capital - Abstract
Background: Over 50% of the world uses social media. There has been significant academic and public discourse around its negative mental health impacts. There has not, however, been a broad systema...
- Published
- 2021
6. Novel Eye Drop Delivery Aid Improves Outcomes and Satisfaction
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Facundo G. Sanchez, Emmett T. Cunningham, Robert M. Kinast, Jack P. Rees, Stuart K. Gardiner, Claude F. Burgoyne, Yungtai Kung, Emily P Jones, and Steven L. Mansberger
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genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glaucoma ,Self Administration ,Personal Satisfaction ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,0101 mathematics ,business.industry ,Drop (liquid) ,010102 general mathematics ,Digital video ,Outcome measures ,Eye drop ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optometry ,sense organs ,Ophthalmic Solutions ,business ,Ocular surface - Abstract
To compare a nose-pivoted drop delivery device (NPDD) with traditional eye drop delivery in glaucoma subjects.Repeated-measures case series.Fifty glaucoma subjects (100 eyes) who reported difficulty self-administering eye drops.We compared eye drop delivery using a NPDD against traditional delivery techniques at baseline (baseline traditional) and after standardized teaching (post-teaching traditional). Subjects used a 1-to-10 scale (10 being easiest) to rate the ease of delivery with each technique and completed a satisfaction survey. Two graders used digital video to independently review eye drop delivery and recorded: (1) accurate placement: the eye drop reached the ocular surface; (2) no contact: no bottle tip contact against the ocular or periocular surface; and (3)number of eye drops dispensed. We defined primary success as accurate placement and no contact; secondary success as primary success with only 1 drop dispensed.We used logistic-transformed generalized estimating equation (GEE) regression to compare technique satisfaction, accuracy, no contact, and primary and secondary success. Number of drops dispensed was compared using a Cox model.Forty-seven of 50 subjects (94%) preferred the NPDD over traditional eye drop delivery. The mean score for ease of use was higher for the NPDD (8.9 ± 1.1) than baseline traditional (6.7 ± 2.1; P0.001) and post-teaching traditional (7.0 ± 2.0; P0.001). Forty-nine of 50 (98%) subjects thought the NPDD was comfortable to use and would recommend the device. The eye drop reached the ocular surface in a similar percentage of subjects (90%) with each method. The bottle tip contacted fewer eyes with the NPDD (10 eyes) than baseline traditional (33 eyes; P0.001) and post-teaching traditional (25 eyes; P = 0.009). The number of drops dispensed was lower with the NPDD (1.7 ± 1.2) than baseline traditional (2.2 ± 1.6; P = 0.017) and post-teaching traditional (2.4 ± 1.8; P = 0.006). The NPDD increased primary and secondary success of eye drop delivery (86% and 54%, respectively) compared to baseline traditional (66% [P = 0.001] and 28% [P0.001]) and post-teaching traditional (70% [P = 0.005] and 40% [P = 0.018]).Eye drop users preferred the NPDD over traditional eye drop delivery. The NPDD improved eye drop delivery success, reduced bottle tip contact, and decreased the number of eye drops wasted.
- Published
- 2021
7. Moving Stimulus Perimetry: A New Functional Test for Glaucoma
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Stuart K. Gardiner and Steven L. Mansberger
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Ophthalmology ,Psychometrics ,Biomedical Engineering ,Humans ,Visual Field Tests ,Glaucoma ,Ocular Hypertension ,Visual Fields - Abstract
Static pointwise perimetric sensitivities of less than approximately 19 dB are unreliable in glaucoma owing to excessive variability. We propose using moving stimuli to increase detectability, decrease variability, and hence increase this dynamic range.A moving stimulus was designed to travel parallel to the average nerve fiber bundle orientation at each location, and compared against an otherwise identical static stimulus. To assess dynamic range, psychometric functions were measured at 4 locations of each of 10 subjects. To assess clinically realistic test-retest variability, 34 locations of 94 subjects with glaucoma and glaucoma suspects were tested twice, 6 months apart. Pointwise sensitivity estimates were compared using generalized estimating equation regression models. The test-retest limits of agreement for each stimulus were assessed, adjusted for within-eye clustering.Using static stimuli, 9 of the 40 psychometric functions had less than a 90% maximum response probability, suggesting being beyond the dynamic range. Eight of those locations had asymptotic maximum of more than 90% with moving stimuli. Sensitivities were higher for moving stimuli (P0.001); the difference increased as sensitivity decreased (P0.001). Test-retest limits of agreement were narrower for moving stimuli (-6.35 to +6.48 dB) than static stimuli (-12.7 to +7.81 dB). Sixty-two percent of subjects preferred using moving stimuli versus 19% who preferred static stimuli.Using a moving stimulus increases perimetric sensitivities in regions of glaucomatous loss. This extends the effective dynamic range, allowing reliable testing later into the disease. Results are more repeatable, and the test is preferred by most subjects.Moving stimuli allow reliable testing in patients with more severe glaucoma than currently possible.
- Published
- 2022
8. Loss of HER2‐positivity following neoadjuvant targeted therapy for breast cancer is not associated with inferior oncologic outcomes
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Stuart K. Gardiner, Catherine L Wetzel, Maryam Farinola, Jennifer R. Garreau, Nathalie A. Johnson, and Thomas L. Sutton
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Adult ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptor, ErbB-2 ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Targeted therapy ,Breast cancer ,Trastuzumab ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Humans ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,neoplasms ,Neoadjuvant therapy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Cancer registry ,Survival Rate ,Log-rank test ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-positive breast cancer are treated with trastuzumab-based neoadjuvant therapy (NAT); some patients with residual disease post-NAT show loss of HER2 amplification and has been inconsistently associated with oncologic outcomes. Methods We queried our multi-institutional cancer registry for women with HER2-positive breast cancer undergoing NAT from 2011 to 2018. Clinicopathologic, treatment-related, and outcomes data were collected. Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards analysis were used to evaluate oncologic outcomes. Results A total of 348 patients were identified; 166 (48%) had a pathologic complete response. Of the 182 patients with residual disease, 87 (48%) were HER2-positive, 34 (19%) were HER2-negative, and 61 (33%) were HER2-unknown, with a median follow-up of 44 months. There were no factors associated with HER2 loss apart from age. On Kaplan-Meier analysis, estimated 5-year recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) for patients with HER2-positive residual disease was 81% and 92%, respectively, and 74% (log rank p = 0.75) and 81% (p = 0.35) in patients with HER2-negative residual disease. Conclusion The loss of HER2-positivity following NAT is not associated with worse 5-year RFS or OS. We do not recommend retesting HER2 status following NAT for the purpose of clinical management; these patients should complete targeted adjuvant therapy.
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- 2021
9. Time to surgery following neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer impacts residual cancer burden, recurrence, and survival
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Nathalie Johnson, Alexander Schlitt, Jennifer R. Garreau, Thomas L. Sutton, and Stuart K. Gardiner
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Adult ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Time Factors ,Multivariate analysis ,Residual cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Time-to-Treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Time to surgery ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Risk factor ,Mastectomy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chemotherapy ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Carcinoma, Ductal ,Survival Rate ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The impact of length of time to surgery (TTS) on oncologic outcomes following neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) in breast cancer patients is unclear. We investigated the relationship between TTS on residual cancer burden (RCB) score and oncologic outcomes.Patients with breast cancer receiving NAC from 2011 to 2017 were identified. The association of TTS with recurrence-free survival (RFS), overall and disease-specific survival (OS, DSS), and RCB score was examined with Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards analysis, adjusting for relevant clinicopathologic factors.We identified 463 patients. Median TTS was 29 days (range 11-153). Median follow-up was 57 months (range, 2-93 months). Five-year local recurrence-free survival, locoregional RFS, OS, and DSS was 86%, 96%, 89%, and 91%, respectively. On multivariate analysis, TTS 6 weeks was independently associated with worse RFS (HR [hazard ratio] 3.45; p .001) and DSS (HR 2.82; p .05), while TTS 6 weeks was independently associated with a positive size of the effect on RCB score of 0.59 (p .0001).Prolonged TTS is a modifiable risk factor for adverse oncologic outcomes following NAC for breast cancer, possibly mediated by increasing RCB score overtime after NAC. In the absence of contraindications, surgery should be performed within 6 weeks following NAC for optimal oncologic outcomes.
- Published
- 2020
10. Optical Coherence Tomography Optic Nerve Head Morphology in Myopia I: Implications of Anterior Scleral Canal Opening Versus Bruch Membrane Opening Offset
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Ya Xing Wang, Michael J A Girard, Claude F. Burgoyne, Ping Wei, Jayme R Vianna, Brad Fortune, Seung Woo Hong, Marcelo T. Nicolela, Christy Hardin, Balwantray C. Chauhan, Jin Wook Jeoung, Hongli Yang, and Stuart K. Gardiner
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Physics ,0303 health sciences ,Offset (computer science) ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Anatomy ,eye diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ophthalmology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optical coherence tomography ,Healthy control ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,medicine ,Optic nerve ,Perpendicular ,sense organs ,Neural Canal ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Purpose To measure the magnitude and direction of anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO) offset relative to the Bruch membrane opening (BMO) (ASCO/BMO offset) to characterize neural canal obliqueness and minimum cross-sectional area (NCMCA) in 69 highly myopic and 138 healthy, age-matched, control eyes. Design Cross-sectional study. Methods Using optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans of the optic nerve head (ONH), BMO and ASCO were manually segmented and their centroids and size and shape were calculated. ASCO/BMO offset magnitude and direction were measured after projecting the ASCO/BMO centroid vector onto the BMO plane. Neural canal axis obliqueness was defined as the angle between the ASCO/BMO centroid vector and the vector perpendicular to the BMO plane. NCMCA was defined by projecting BMO and ASCO points onto a plane perpendicular to the neural canal axis and measuring their overlapping area. Results ASCO/BMO offset magnitude was greater (highly myopic eyes 264.3 ± 131.1 μm; healthy control subjects 89.0 ± 55.8 μm, P Conclusions Our data suggest that increased temporal displacement of BMO relative to the ASCO, increased BMO and ASCO area, decreased NCMCA, and increased neural canal obliqueness are characteristic components of ONH morphology in highly myopic eyes.
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- 2020
11. Health Behavior Interventions
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Casey K. Gardiner, Courtney J. Stevens, Angela D. Bryan, and Arielle S. Gillman
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Intervention design ,Health behavior theory ,Behavior change ,Psychological intervention ,Health behavior ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2020
12. Optical Coherence Tomography Structural Abnormality Detection in Glaucoma Using Topographically Correspondent Rim and Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Criteria
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Balwantray C. Chauhan, Haomin Luo, Glen P. Sharpe, Christy Hardin, Brad Fortune, Jin Wook Jeoung, Marcelo T. Nicolela, Jayme R Vianna, Claude F. Burgoyne, Steven L. Mansberger, Ya Xing Wang, Hongli Yang, Cindy Albert, Juan Reynaud, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Shaban Demirel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Nerve fiber layer ,Glaucoma ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optical coherence tomography ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,Abnormality detection ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Retinal ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,sense organs ,Tomography ,Abnormality ,business - Abstract
Purpose This study evaluated the ability of topographically correspondent (TC) minimum rim width (MRW) and peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (pRNFLT) criteria to detect optical coherence tomography (OCT) structural abnormality in glaucoma (GL) and glaucoma suspect (GLS) eyes. Design Retrospective cross-sectional study. Methods A total of 196 GL eyes, 150 GLS eyes, and 303 heathy eyes underwent pRNFL and 24 radial optic nerve head OCT imaging and manual correction of the internal limiting membrane, Bruch's membrane opening (BMO), and outer pRNFL segmentations. MRW and pRNFLT were quantified in 6 Garway-Heath or 12 30-degree (clock-hour) sectors. OCT abnormality for each parameter was defined to be less than the 5th percentile of the healthy eye distribution. OCT abnormality for individual eyes was defined using global, sectoral, and combined parameter criteria that achieved ≥95% specificity in the healthy eyes. TC combination criteria required the sectoral location of MRW and pRNFLT abnormality to be topographically aligned and included comMR (a previously reported TC combination consisting of MRW and pRNFLT parameter: [MRW + pRNFLT × (average MRW healthy eyes/average pRNFLT healthy eyes) MRW]. Results TC sectoral criteria (1 Garway-Heath MRW + corresponding Garway-Heath RNFLT), (one 30-degree MRW + any 1 corresponding or adjacent 30-degree pRNFLT), 30-degree and Garway-Heath comMR-TI and global comMR were the best performing criteria, demonstrating (96%-99% specificity), 86%-91% sensitivity for GL, 80%-84% sensitivity for early GL (MD ≥ −4.0 dB) and 93%-96% sensitivity for moderate-to-advanced GL (MD Conclusions Clinically intuitive TC MRW and pRNFLT combination criteria identified the sectoral location of OCT abnormality in GL eyes with high diagnostic precision.
- Published
- 2020
13. Effect of Trabeculectomy on OCT Measurements of the Optic Nerve Head Neuroretinal Rim Tissue
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Juan Reynaud, Brad Fortune, Stuart K. Gardiner, Facundo G. Sanchez, Jessica Moon, David S. Sanders, and Steven L. Mansberger
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Male ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraocular pressure ,genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Optic Disk ,Nerve fiber layer ,Glaucoma ,Article ,Nerve Fibers ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Glaucoma surgery ,Humans ,Trabeculectomy ,Prospective Studies ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Visual field ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Disease Progression ,Optic nerve ,Female ,sense organs ,Visual Fields ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Follow-Up Studies ,Optic disc - Abstract
PURPOSE: Ophthalmologists commonly perform glaucoma surgery to treat progressive glaucoma. Few studies have examined the stability of OCT neuroretinal rim parameters after glaucoma surgery for ongoing detection of glaucoma progression. DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: 20 eyes (16 subjects) with primary open angle glaucoma who had undergone a trabeculectomy. METHODS: We calculated the change in OCT parameters (minimum rim area (MRA), minimum rim width (MRW), Bruch’s membrane opening (BMO) area, mean cup depth (MCD), anterior lamina cribrosa surface depth (ALCSD), prelaminar tissue thickness (PLTT), retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RFNLT) during an interval from the visit before the surgery to the visit after the surgery, a span of approximately 6-months. We also calculated changes in the same eyes over two separate 6-month intervals that did not contain trabeculectomy to serve as control. We compared these intervals using a generalized linear model (with compound symmetry correlation structure), accounting for the correlation between time intervals for the same eye. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: MRW, MRA, angle above the reference plane for MRW and MRA, BMO area, MCD, mean ALCSD, PLTT, RNFLT and visual field parameters (mean deviation (MD), pattern standard deviation (PSD), and visual field index (VFI)). RESULTS: The intervals containing trabeculectomy showed a significant decrease in intraocular pressure (−9.2 mmHg, p
- Published
- 2020
14. Longitudinal Signal-to-Noise Ratio of Perimetry at Different Severities of Glaucoma
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Stuart K. Gardiner
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Ophthalmology ,Biomedical Engineering - Published
- 2023
15. Clinicians' Use of Quantitative Information while Assessing the Rate of Functional Progression in Glaucoma
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Stuart K. Gardiner, Robert M. Kinast, Carlos Gustavo De Moraes, Donald L. Budenz, Jin Wook Jeoung, John T. Lind, Jonathan S. Myers, Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi, Lindsay A. Rhodes, Nicholas G. Strouthidis, Teresa C. Chen, and Steven L. Mansberger
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Disease Progression ,Vision Disorders ,Humans ,Visual Field Tests ,Glaucoma ,General Medicine ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
Clinicians use both global and point-wise information from visual fields to assess the rate of glaucomatous functional progression. We asked which objective, quantitative measures best correlated with subjective assessment by glaucoma experts. In particular, we aimed to determine how much that judgment was based on localized rates of change vs. on global indices reported by the perimeter.Prospective cohort study.Eleven academic, expert glaucoma specialists independently scored the rate of functional progression, from 1 (improvement) to 7 (very rapid progression), for a series of 5 biannual clinical printouts from 100 glaucoma or glaucoma suspect eyes of 51 participants, 20 of which were scored twice to assess repeatability.Regression models were used to predict the average of the 11 clinicians' scores based on objective rates of change of mean deviation (MD), visual field index (VFI), pattern standard deviation (PSD), the Nth fastest progressing location, and the Nth fastest progressing of 10 anatomically defined clusters of locations after weighting by eccentricity.Correlation between the objective rates of change and the average of the 11 clinicians' scores.The average MD of the study eyes was -2.4 dB (range, -16.8 to +2.8 dB). The mean clinician score was highly repeatable, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.95. It correlated better with the rate of change of VFI (pseudo-RExpert academic glaucoma specialists' assessment of the rate of change correlated best with VFI rates, except in eyes with a VFI near the ceiling of 100%. Sensitivities averaged within clusters of locations have been shown to detect change sooner, but the experts' opinions correlated more closely with global VFI. This could be because it is currently the only index for which the perimeter automatically provides a quantitative estimate of the rate of functional progression.
- Published
- 2021
16. Clinicians' Use of Quantitative Information When Assessing the Rate of Structural Progression in Glaucoma
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Stuart K. Gardiner, Robert M. Kinast, Teresa C. Chen, Nicholas G. Strouthidis, Carlos Gustavo De Moraes, Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi, Jonathan S. Myers, Jin Wook Jeoung, John T. Lind, Lindsay A. Rhodes, Donald L. Budenz, and Steven L. Mansberger
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Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Nerve Fibers ,Optic Disk ,Humans ,Glaucoma ,General Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Intraocular Pressure ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
OCT scans contain large amounts of information, but clinicians often rely on reported layer thicknesses when assessing the rate of glaucomatous progression. We sought to determine which of these quantifications most closely relate to the subjective assessment of glaucoma experts who had all the diagnostic information available.Prospective cohort study.Eleven glaucoma specialists independently scored the rate of structural progression from a series of 5 biannual clinical OCT printouts.A total of 100 glaucoma or glaucoma suspect eyes of 51 participants were included; 20 were scored twice to assess repeatability. Scores ranged from 1 (improvement) to 7 (very rapid progression). Generalized estimating equation linear models were used to predict the mean clinician score from the rates of change of retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) or minimum rim width (MRW) globally or in the most rapidly thinning of the 6 sectors.The correlation between the objective rates of change and the average of the 11 clinicians' scores.Average RNFLT within the series of study eyes was 79.3 μm (range, 41.4-126.6). Some 95% of individual clinician scores varied by ≤ 1 point when repeated. The mean clinician score was more strongly correlated with the rate of change of RNFLT in the most rapidly changing sector in %/year (pseudo-RThe rate of change of RNFLT in the most rapidly changing sector predicted experts' assessment of the rate of structural progression better than global rates or MRW. Sectoral rates may be a useful addition to current clinical printouts.
- Published
- 2021
17. Intraocular Pressure and Medication Burden With Cataract Surgery Alone, or Cataract Surgery Combined With Trabecular Bypass or Goniotomy
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Christopher L. McNiel, Facundo G. Sanchez, Jack P. Rees, Stuart K. Gardiner, Jonathan W. Young, Robert M. Kinast, Amber Young, Emily P. Jones, and Steven L. Mansberger
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Ophthalmology ,Phacoemulsification ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Glaucoma ,Trabeculectomy ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Cataract ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Intraocular Pressure - Abstract
When compared with cataract surgery in glaucoma patients, trabecular micro-bypass and goniotomy resulted in a large decrease in the incidence of intraocular pressure (IOP) spikes, a modest effect on IOP, and a minimal effect on medication burden.To compare changes in IOP and ocular hypotensive medications in 3 surgical cohorts: cataract surgery, cataract surgery with trabecular micro-bypass (cataract/trabecular), and cataract surgery with goniotomy (cataract/goniotomy).We included 138 eyes diagnosed with open-angle glaucoma: (1) 84 eyes with cataract surgery alone, (2) 25 eyes with cataract/trabecular surgery, and (3) 29 eyes with cataract/goniotomy surgery. We compared the groups for postoperative IOP and the number of ocular hypotensive medications. We adjusted for preoperative IOP, and preoperative and postoperative number of ocular hypotensive medications. We defined an IOP spike as IOP ≥21 mm Hg and 10 mm Hg higher than preoperative on postoperative day 1.All 3 surgeries showed a decrease in IOP (P≤0.004) and medication burden (P≤0.001) at 3 and 6 months postoperatively when compared with their own preoperative baselines. When compared with cataract surgery alone, cataract/trabecular and cataract/goniotomy had similar IOP lowering at 1 month postoperatively, and variable results at 3 and 6 months. The change in ocular hypotensive medications was not statistically different between the surgical groups at any postoperative visit. Cataract/trabecular and cataract/goniotomy decreased IOP on postoperative day 1, and had relative risk reduction of ~70% for IOP spikes (P≤0.001 for both).Trabecular micro-bypass and goniotomy when added to cataract surgery resulted in a large decrease in IOP spikes, a modest effect on IOP, and a minimal effect on medication burden when compared with cataract surgery alone in glaucoma patients.
- Published
- 2021
18. Long Range In-Well Radar Measurements utilizing Higher-order Propagation Modes
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S. Littleford, K. Gardiner, D. Shepherd, T. Neumann, C. Schulz, and Michael Gerding
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Physics ,Field (physics) ,business.industry ,Mode (statistics) ,law.invention ,Continuous-wave radar ,Length measurement ,Optics ,Horn antenna ,law ,Reflection (physics) ,Radar ,business ,Excitation - Abstract
Long range in-well radar measurements are presented in this contribution. Using an FMCW radar at 24 GHz, the benefits of higher-order propagation modes are demonstrated by a comparison between standard TE 11 and advantageous TE 01 -mode. The TE 01 -mode is excited by a compact in-line mode converter, which can be mounted directly between radar and horn antenna. Hence, the achievable distance of the radar system in long subsurface pipe applications can be increased. Due to its field distribution, the TE 01 -mode reduces wall losses and the excitation of further higher modes is reduced. Consequently, the resulting reflection at the end of a test pipe measuring over 500 m in length, is increased by more than 35 dB.
- Published
- 2021
19. Stress and number of servings of fruit and vegetables consumed: Buffering effects of monetary incentives
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Sarah L. Hagerty, Casey K. Gardiner, and Angela D. Bryan
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Consumption (economics) ,Motivation ,Linear mixed effect model ,Daily stress ,Feeding Behavior ,Healthy diet ,Affect (psychology) ,Diet Surveys ,United States ,Additional research ,Diet ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Incentive ,Health promotion ,Fruit ,Environmental health ,Vegetables ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Diet is a key factor of human health, and additional research is needed in order to understand the psychological causes, consequences, and moderators of dietary behavior. Participants in two studies in the United States completed a 21-day intervention that involved either self-monitoring their fruit and vegetable consumption or self-monitoring combined with earning monetary incentives for behavior. Each day, participants reported their stress, affect, and consumption of fruits and vegetables. Hierarchical linear mixed effects model results suggest that on average, daily reports of higher stress were associated with fewer fruits and vegetables consumed on that day. This effect was moderated by incentive condition, such that the relationship between stress and fruit and vegetable consumption was reduced among incented participants. There was also a marginal negative effect of time on consumption of fruits and vegetables, but this was also significantly moderated by condition, such that those participants who did not receive incentives decreased their daily servings, while incented participants did not decrease over the course of the intervention. These studies suggest that incentives may be a novel method for buffering against the negative effect of daily stress on eating a healthy diet.
- Published
- 2019
20. Optical Coherence Tomography Segmentation Errors of the Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Persist Over Time
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Brad Fortune, Stuart K. Gardiner, Steven L. Mansberger, Nisha Nagarkatti-Gude, and Shaban Demirel
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Male ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Nerve fiber layer ,Automated segmentation ,Glaucoma ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Tonometry, Ocular ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nerve Fibers ,Text mining ,Optical coherence tomography ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Segmentation ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Retinal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Ocular Hypertension ,sense organs ,Tomography ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
PRéCIS:: There are errors in automated segmentation of the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) in glaucoma suspects or patients with mild glaucoma that appear to persist over time; however, automated segmentation has greater repeatability than manual segmentation.To identify whether optical coherence tomography (OCT) segmentation errors in RNFL thickness measurements persist longitudinally.This was a cohort study. We used spectral domain OCT (Spectralis) to measure RNFL thickness in a 6-degree peripapillary circle, and exported the native "automated segmentation only" results. In addition, we exported RNFL thickness results after "manual refinement" to correct errors in the automated segmentation, and used the differences in these measurements as "error" in segmentation. We used Bland-Altman plots and linear regression to determine the magnitude, location, and repeatability of RNFL thickness error in all twelve 30-degree sectors and compared the error at baseline to follow-up time points at 6 months, 2 years, 3 years, and 4 years.We included 406 eyes from 213 participants. The 95% confidence interval for errors at baseline was -6.5 to +13.2 μm. The correlation between the baseline error and the errors in the follow-up time periods were high (r0.5, P0.001 for all). Automated segmentation had a smaller SD of residuals from the longitudinal trend line when compared to manual refinement (1.56 vs. 1.80 μm, P0.001), and a higher ability (P=0.009) to monitor progression using an analysis of a longitudinal signal-to-noise ratio.Errors in automated segmentation remain relatively stable, and baseline error is highly likely to persist in the same direction and magnitude in subsequent time periods. However, automated segmentation (without manual refinement) is more repeatable and may be more sensitive to glaucomatous progression. Future segmentation algorithms could exploit these findings to improve automated segmentation in the future.
- Published
- 2019
21. Glaucoma Specialist Detection of Optical Coherence Tomography Suspicious Rim Tissue in Glaucoma and Glaucoma Suspect Eyes
- Author
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Brad Fortune, Ruojin Ren, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, Shaban Demirel, Seung Woo Hong, Helen Koenigsman, Juan Reynaud, Claude F. Burgoyne, Robert M. Kinast, and Steven L. Mansberger
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Infrared image ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Glaucoma ,Article ,Nerve Fibers ,Optical coherence tomography ,Ophthalmology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Extramural ,Reproducibility of Results ,Glaucoma suspect ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Optic nerve ,Female ,Ocular Hypertension ,Bruch Membrane ,sense organs ,Visual Fields ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Specialization - Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess glaucoma specialists’ detection of optic nerve head (ONH) rim tissue that is thin by optical coherence tomography (OCT) criteria. DESIGN: Reliability analysis METHODS: 5 clinicians marked the disc margin (DM) and rim margin (RM) on stereo-photos of 151 glaucoma or glaucoma suspect eyes obtained within 3 months of OCT imaging. The photo and OCT infrared image for each eye were colocalized and regionalized into twelve sectors relative to the axis between Bruch’s membrane opening (BMO) centroid and the fovea. For each clinician, the distance from BMO centroid to their DM (DM radius) and RM (RM radius) was used to generate sectoral rim width (RW) (DM radius – RM radius) and cup-to-disc ratio (CDR) (RM radius / DM radius) estimates. OCT minimum rim width (MRW) was determined by sector. Among all eyes, for each OCT MRW suspicious sector (< 5% of OCT normative data base), we determined each clinician’s detection (clinician CDR ≥ 0.7). RESULTS: Clinicians most commonly failed to detect OCT suspicious rim tissue in the nasal sectors. Among 502 sectors with suspicious OCT MRW all 5 clinicians rated CDR ≥ 0.7 in only 29.5% and all 5 clinicians rated CDR < 0.7 in 21%. OCT suspicious rim thickness was most common (32% of eyes) in the nasal and inferior sectors. MRW vs clinician RW discordance was greatest nasally, while BMO vs clinician DM discordance was greatest temporally. CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians most commonly failed to detect OCT suspicious rim thickness nasally where suspicious rim tissues were also most common.
- Published
- 2019
22. Long- and Short-Term Variability of Perimetry in Glaucoma
- Author
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Stuart K, Gardiner, William H, Swanson, and Steven L, Mansberger
- Subjects
Ophthalmology ,Pregnancy ,Seizures ,Normal Distribution ,Biomedical Engineering ,Humans ,Visual Field Tests ,Female ,Glaucoma ,Visual Fields ,Algorithms - Abstract
Test-retest variability in perimetry consists of short-term and long-term components, both of which impede assessment of progression. By minimizing and quantifying the algorithm-dependent short-term variability, we can quantify the algorithm-independent long-term variability that reflects true fluctuations in sensitivity between visits. We do this at locations with sensitivity both28 dB (when the stimulus is smaller than Ricco's area and complete spatial summation can be assumed) and28 dB (when partial summation occurs).Frequency-of-seeing curves were measured at four locations of 35 participants with glaucoma. The standard deviation of cumulative Gaussian fits to those curves was modeled for a given sensitivity and used to simulate the expected short-term variability of a 30-presentation algorithm. A separate group of 137 participants was tested twice with that algorithm, 6 months apart. Long-term variance at different sensitivities was calculated as the LOESS fit of observed test-retest variance minus the LOESS fit of simulated short-term variance.Below 28 dB, short-term variability increased approximately linearly with increasing loss. Long-term variability also increased with damage below this point, attaining a maximum standard deviation of 2.4 dB at sensitivity 21 dB, before decreasing due to the floor effect of the algorithm. Above 30 dB, the observed test-retest variance was slightly smaller than the simulated short-term variance.Long-term and short-term variability both increase with damage for perimetric stimuli smaller than Ricco's area. Above 28 dB, long-term variability constitutes a negligible proportion of test-retest variability.Fluctuations in true sensitivity increase in glaucoma, even after accounting for increased short-term variability. This long-term variability cannot be reduced by altering testing algorithms alone.
- Published
- 2022
23. Randomized controlled trials of self-monitoring interventions with or without incentives for diet and exercise among individuals with overweight or obesity: Psychological and behavioural effects
- Author
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Casey K. Gardiner and Angela D. Bryan
- Subjects
Adult ,Psychological intervention ,Overweight ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Obesity ,Exercise ,Applied Psychology ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Self-efficacy ,Motivation ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Diet ,Incentive ,Self-monitoring ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objectives To test the effects of three behavioural interventions (daily monetary incentives + self-monitoring, delayed lump sum monetary incentives + self-monitoring, and self-monitoring only) on psychological constructs and fruit and vegetable consumption or physical activity behaviour change among a sample of adults with overweight or obesity. Design A pair of 3-arm longitudinal randomized controlled trials compared daily monetary incentives + self-monitoring, delayed lump sum monetary incentives + self-monitoring, and self-monitoring only interventions for either fruit and vegetable consumption or physical activity. Methods Individuals reporting elevated weight status and insufficient engagement in one of the target behaviours were randomly assigned to one of three 3-week interventions. All three interventions involved daily self-monitoring of the behaviour, and two provided monetary incentives contingent upon reported behaviour. Participants completed measures of psychological constructs and reported behaviour at baseline, the end of the intervention, and two and four weeks post-intervention. Results Participants across all three intervention conditions demonstrated increased engagement in the target behaviour from pre- to post-intervention and reported behaviour remained above baseline levels at both follow-up time points. Increases in reported behaviour during the intervention were associated with increases in self-efficacy, and this enhanced self-efficacy prospectively predicted sustained reported behaviour at follow-up. However, contrary to hypotheses, the incentive interventions including self-monitoring were not more efficacious than self-monitoring alone, and increased reported behaviour was not associated with enhancements in attitudes. Conclusions Self-monitoring interventions can aid behaviour change efforts, and behavioural practice during these interventions can increase self-efficacy. However, among adults with overweight or obesity who are seeking behaviour change interventions, incentive-based self-monitoring approaches may not be superior to self-monitoring alone in driving behaviour change and maintenance.
- Published
- 2021
24. Time Lag Between Functional Change and Loss of Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer in Glaucoma
- Author
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Brad Fortune, Steven L. Mansberger, and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Nerve fiber layer ,Time lag ,Glaucoma ,01 natural sciences ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,structural equation models ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nerve Fibers ,Ophthalmology ,Optic Nerve Diseases ,medicine ,diagnostics ,Humans ,0101 mathematics ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Retinal ,Middle Aged ,Models, Theoretical ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Structure and function ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Functional change ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,structure-function relation ,Visual Field Tests ,Female ,sense organs ,progression ,Visual Fields ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
Purpose It is often suggested that structural change is detectable before functional change in glaucoma. However, this may be related to the lower variability and hence narrower normative limits of structural tests. In this study, we ask whether a time lag exists between the true rates of change in structure and function, regardless of clinical detectability of those changes. Methods Structural equation models were used to determine whether the rate of change in function (mean linearized total deviation, AveTDLin) or structure (retinal nerve fiber layer thickness [RNFLT]) was predicted by the concurrent or previous rate for the other modality, after adjusting for its own rate in the previous time interval. Rates were calculated over 1135 pairs of consecutive visits from 318 eyes of 164 participants in the Portland Progression Project, with mean 207 days between visits. Results The rate of change of AveTDLin was predicted by its own rate in the previous time interval, but not by rates of RNFLT change in either the concurrent or previous time interval (both P > 0.05). Similarly, the rate of RNFLT change was not predicted by concurrent AveTDLin change after adjusting for its own previous rate. However, the rate of AveTDLin change in the previous time interval did significantly improve prediction of the current rate for RNFLT, with P = 0.005, suggesting a time lag of around six months between changes in AveTDLin and RNFLT. Conclusions Although RNFL thinning may be detectable sooner, true functional change appears to predict and precede thinning of the RNFL in glaucoma.
- Published
- 2020
25. Peripapillary Scleral Bowing Increases with Age and Is Inversely Associated with Peripapillary Choroidal Thickness in Healthy Eyes
- Author
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Christy Hardin, Claude F. Burgoyne, Shaban Demirel, Jeffrey M. Liebmann, Jin Wook Jeoung, Joseph Caprioli, Christopher A. Girkin, Hongli Yang, Ya Xing Wang, Glen P. Sharpe, Christian Y. Mardin, Stuart K. Gardiner, Balwantray C. Chauhan, Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi, Alexander F. Scheuerle, Brad Fortune, Haomin Luo, Seung Woo Hong, and Harry A. Quigley
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,genetic structures ,Glaucoma ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Imaging ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Peripapillary atrophy ,Tomography ,Dioptre ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,Healthy Volunteers ,Sclera ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Optic nerve ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Optic disc ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Optic Disk ,Clinical Sciences ,Article ,Young Adult ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Optical coherence tomography ,Clinical Research ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Ophthalmology ,Humans ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,business.industry ,Bowing ,Choroid ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Optical Coherence ,Three-Dimensional ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
Purpose To use optical coherence tomography (OCT) to 3-dimensionally characterize the optic nerve head (ONH) in peripapillary scleral bowing in non-highly myopic healthy eyes. Design Cross-sectional, multicenter study. Methods A total of 362 non-highly myopic (+6 diopters [D] > spherical equivalent > −6D) eyes of 362 healthy subjects from 20-90 years old underwent OCT ONH radial B-scan imaging. Bruch's membrane (BM), BM opening (BMO), anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO), and the peripapillary scleral surface were segmented. BMO and ASCO planes were fit, and their centroids, major axes, ovality, areas and offsets were determined. Peripapillary scleral bowing was characterized by 2 parameters: peripapillary scleral slope (ppSS) of 3 anterior peripapillary scleral segments (0-300, 300-700, and 700-1,000 μm from the ASCO centroid); and ASCO depth relative to a peripapillary scleral reference plane (ASCOD-ppScleral). Peripapillary choroidal thickness (ppCT) was calculated relative to the ASCO as the minimum distance between the anterior scleral surface and BM. Results Both ppSS and ASCOD-ppScleral ranged from slightly inward through profoundly outward in direction. Both parameters increased with age and were independently associated with decreased ppCT. Conclusions In non-highly myopic healthy eyes, outward peripapillary scleral bowing achieved substantial levels, was markedly increased with age, and was independently associated with decreased peripapillary choroidal thickness. These findings provide a normative foundation for characterizing this anatomy in cases of high myopia and glaucoma and in eyes with optic disc tilt, torsion, and peripapillary atrophy.
- Published
- 2020
26. Microwave Radar-based In-Well Sensing
- Author
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D. Shepherd, T. Neumann, S. Littleford, C. Schulz, K. Gardiner, and Michael Gerding
- Subjects
Continuous-wave radar ,Physics ,Waveguide (electromagnetism) ,Optics ,business.industry ,law ,Bandwidth (signal processing) ,Range (statistics) ,Test rig ,Radar ,business ,Microwave radar ,law.invention - Abstract
This contribution presents an FMCW radar-based in-well sensing concept. The radar works at 24 GHz and is mounted on an overmoded waveguide like tube, measuring 76 mm in diameter. In order to reduce wall losses and to increase the achievable measuring distance of the radar, an optimized $TE_{11}-TE_{01}$ mode converter is used. The applicability of the radar-based in-well sensing is demonstrated on a 500 m test rig, build up of single elements measuring 12 m. Here, each joint can clearly be identified within the range measurement using 200 MHz bandwidth.
- Published
- 2020
27. Using the Rate of Glaucomatous Visual Field Progression in One Eye to Help Assess the Rate in the Fellow Eye
- Author
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Andrew J. Anderson and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Glaucoma ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Linear regression ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,0101 mathematics ,Prospective cohort study ,Intraocular Pressure ,Decibel ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Outcome measures ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Visual field ,Absolute deviation ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Disease Progression ,Visual Field Tests ,sense organs ,Analysis of variance ,Visual Fields ,business - Abstract
Risk factors for visual field progression in glaucoma can affect both eyes, meaning that progression rates (in decibels per year) between eyes likely are correlated. We investigated whether incorporating information about the progression rate in one eye can improve the estimate of the rate in the fellow eye.Prospective cohort analysis.We analyzed series of 10 visual field results drawn from the Portland Progression Project and the Rotterdam Eye Study.We determined visual field progression rates using linear regression of the summary index mean deviation (MD) over time. We determined best-fitting linear models for the rates over the entire series based on the rate across n visual fields (n = 3 to 6) and used an analysis of variance to determine if incorporating the fellow eye's level of visual field damage (MD) or rate significantly improved these models.Visual field progression rate (in decibels per year).Visual field progression rates were correlated positively between eyes for the 262 individuals analyzed (r = 0.51; P0.0001). For short series (n = 3 to 4), predicting the rate over the entire 10 fields was improved significantly by incorporating rate information from the fellow eye (P0.05), but not by incorporating knowledge about the level of damage in the fellow eye (P0.61). The fellow eye no longer aided predictions for n = 5 or 6 fields (P = 0.11 and P = 0.42, respectively). Although the coefficient quantifying the influence of the fellow eye's rate changed relatively little for n = 3 to 5 fields, the coefficient for the rate of the eye under consideration increased markedly with the n value.The long-term rate of visual field change in an eye is, in part, predicted by the rate in the fellow eye, particularly when only a few visual field results are available for each eye. Because of this, apparent rapid progression in an eye is more likely to be real if the fellow eye also seems to be progressing rapidly.
- Published
- 2020
28. Impact of Nurses Taking Daily Work Breaks in a Hospital Garden on Burnout
- Author
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Alar Mirka, Roger S. Ulrich, Stuart K. Gardiner, Teresia M. Hazen, Bette J Manulik, Paul S Fitzpatrick, Makayla Cordoza, and R. Serene Perkins
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual analogue scale ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Burnout ,Critical Care Nursing ,Washout period ,Job Satisfaction ,Clinical study ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Depersonalization ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Emotional exhaustion ,Burnout, Professional ,Generalized estimating equation ,Cross-Over Studies ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Job satisfaction ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Gardens - Abstract
Background Nurses working in hospital environments are at risk for burnout. Exposure to nature has psychological benefits, but the effect of hospital gardens on nurse burnout is less understood. Objective To compare the effect on nurse burnout of taking daily work breaks in a hospital-integrated garden with the effect of indoor-only breaks. Methods A prospective crossover trial was conducted of nurses assigned to either 6 weeks of a work break in an outdoor hospital garden or 6 weeks of indoor-only breaks. After a 1-week washout period, break assignments were switched for a subsequent 6 weeks. The Maslach Burnout Inventory was administered at the beginning and end of each 6-week period, and a Present Functioning Visual Analogue Scale was completed at the start and end of each break to capture immediate psychological symptoms. Change scores were analyzed by using generalized estimating equations. Results For 29 nurses, for garden compared with indoor breaks, significant improvement was apparent in scores on the Maslach Burnout Inventory subscales for emotional exhaustion (4.5 vs -0.2; P < .001) and depersonalization (1.8 vs 0.0; P = .02) but not for personal accomplishment (-0.6 vs -0.0; P = .55). Compared with indoor breaks, total symptom scores on the Present Functioning Visual Analog Scale improved significantly when nurses took a break in the garden (garden vs indoor breaks, 4.0 vs 2.4; P = .04). Conclusions Taking daily work breaks in an outdoor garden may be beneficial in mitigating burnout for nurses working in hospital environments.
- Published
- 2018
29. Glaucoma Specialist Optic Disc Margin, Rim Margin, and Rim Width Discordance in Glaucoma and Glaucoma Suspect Eyes
- Author
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Steven L. Mansberger, Claude F. Burgoyne, Brad Fortune, Ruojin Ren, Shaban Demirel, Seung Woo Hong, Juan Reynaud, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, Helen Koenigsman, and Robert M. Kinast
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Intraocular pressure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Intraclass correlation ,Optic Disk ,Vision Disorders ,Ocular hypertension ,Glaucoma ,Slit Lamp Microscopy ,Article ,Ophthalmoscopy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Margin (machine learning) ,Ophthalmology ,Optic Nerve Diseases ,Photography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Glaucoma suspect ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,Ocular Hypertension ,sense organs ,Visual Fields ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Follow-Up Studies ,Specialization ,Optic disc - Abstract
PURPOSE: To quantify the variability of 5 glaucoma specialists’ optic disc margin (DM), rim margin (RM) and rim width (RW) estimates. DESIGN: Inter-Observer Reliability analysis. METHODS: Clinicians viewed stereo-photos from 214 subjects with glaucoma or ocular hypertension and digitally marked the DM and RM. For each photo, the centroid of each clinician’s DM was calculated, and an averaged DM(centroid) was determined. The axis between the DM(centroid) and the fovea was used to establish twelve 30° sectors. Measurements from the DM centroid to each clinician’s DM (DM(radius)) and RM (RM(radius)) were used to generate a RW (DM(radius) – RM(radius)) and cup disc ratio (CDR) (RM(radius)/DM(radius)) by sector. Parameter means, standard deviations and coefficient of variations (COVs) were calculated across all clinicians for each eye. Parameter means for each clinician, and intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC), were calculated across all eyes by sector. RESULTS: Among all eyes, the median COV by sector ranged from 3–5% for DM(radius), 20–25% for RM(radius), and 26–30% for RW. Sectoral ICCs for CDR ranged from 0.566 to 0.668. Sectors suspicious for rim thinning by one clinician were frequently overlooked by others. Among 1724 sectors in which at least one clinician was suspicious for rim thinning, (CDR ≥ 0.7), all 5 clinicians’ CDRs were ≥ 0.7 in only 499 (29%) and 2 of the 5 clinicians failed to detect rim thinning (CDR < 0.7) in 442 (26%). CONCLUSION: In this study, glaucoma specialist RM, DM and RW discordance was frequent and substantial even in sectors that were suspicious for rim thinning.
- Published
- 2018
30. Psychiatric ward design can reduce aggressive behavior
- Author
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Lennart Bogren, Stefan Lundin, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Roger S. Ulrich
- Subjects
Social Psychology ,Aggression ,business.industry ,Hospitalized patients ,05 social sciences ,Physical restraints ,050109 social psychology ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Evidence-based design ,medicine ,Psychiatric hospital ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Medical emergency ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychiatric ward ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
The article describes a conceptual model proposing that aggression in psychiatric facilities may be reduced by designing the physical environment with ten evidence-grounded stress-reducing features. The model was tested in a newer hospital in Sweden having wards with nine of the ten features. Data on two clinical markers of aggressive behavior, compulsory injections and physical restraints, were compared with data from an older facility (replaced by the newer hospital) that had only one stress-reducing feature. Another hospital with one feature, which did not change during the study period, served as a control. The proportion of patients requiring injections declined (p
- Published
- 2018
31. Neural activation during delay discounting is associated with 6-month change in risky sexual behavior in adolescents
- Author
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Casey K. Gardiner, Arielle S. Gillman, Rachel E. Thayer, Hollis C. Karoly, Angela D. Bryan, and Amithrupa Sabbineni
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Sexual Behavior ,Psychological intervention ,Inferior frontal gyrus ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Executive Function ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk-Taking ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,Cerebral Cortex ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Corpus Striatum ,Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Delay Discounting ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Special Section - Sex and the Brain ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Insula ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Identifying cognitive and neural mechanisms of decision making in adolescence can enhance understanding of, and interventions to reduce, risky health behaviors in adolescence. Delay discounting, or the propensity to discount the magnitude of temporally distal rewards, has been associated with diverse health risk behaviors, including risky sex. This cognitive process involves recruitment of reward and cognitive control brain regions, which develop on different trajectories in adolescence and are also implicated in real-world risky decision making. However, no extant research has examined how neural activation during delay discounting is associated with adolescents' risky sexual behavior. Purpose To determine whether a relationship exists between adolescents' risky sexual behavior and neural activation during delay discounting. Methods Adolescent participants completed a delay discounting paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning, and they reported risky sexual behavior at baseline, 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12-month follow-up time points. Latent growth curve models were employed to determine relationships between brain activation during delay discounting and change in risky sexual behavior over time. Results Greater activation in brain regions associated with reward and cognitive control (caudate, putamen, nucleus accumbens, anterior cingulate, insula, orbitofrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) during delay discounting was associated with lower mean levels of risky sexual behavior but greater growth over the period from baseline to 6 months. Conclusions Neural activation during delay discounting is cross-sectionally and prospectively associated with risky sexual behavior in adolescence, highlighting a neural basis of risky decision-making as well as opportunities for early identification and intervention.
- Published
- 2018
32. Strain by virtual extensometers and video-imaging optical coherence tomography as a repeatable metric for IOP-Induced optic nerve head deformations
- Author
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Jihee Kim, Andrea Ramazzotti, Christopher A. Girkin, Luigi Bruno, Massimo A. Fazio, Stuart K. Gardiner, J. Crawford Downs, and Udayakumar Karuppanan
- Subjects
Male ,Digital image correlation ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Video Recording ,Glaucoma ,Article ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Optical coherence tomography ,Optic Nerve Diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Intraocular Pressure ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Orientation (computer vision) ,business.industry ,Repeatability ,medicine.disease ,Macaca mulatta ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Disease Models, Animal ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Optic nerve ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Ocular Hypertension ,sense organs ,Choroid ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Extensometer ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
PURPOSE. To determine if in vivo strain response of the Optic Nerve Head (ONH) to IOP elevation visualized using Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) video imaging and quantified using novel virtual extensometers was able to be provided repeatable measurements of tissue specific deformations. METHODS. The ONHs of 5 eyes from 5 non-human primates (NHPs) were imaged by Spectralis OCT. A vertical and a horizontal B-scan of the ONH were continuously recorded for 60 seconds at 9Hz (video imaging mode) during IOP elevation from 10 to 30 mmHg. Imaging was repeated over three imaging sessions. The 2D normal strain was computed by template-matching digital image correlation using virtual extensometers. ANOVA F-test (F) was used to compare inter-eye, inter-session, and inter-tissue variability for the prelaminar, Bruch’s membrane opening (BMO), lamina cribrosa (LC) and choroidal regions (against variance the error term). F-test of the ratio between inter-eye to inter-session variability was used to test for strain repeatability across imaging sessions (F(IS)). RESULTS. Variability of strain across imaging session (F=0.7263, p=0.4855) and scan orientation was not significant (F=1.053, p=0.3066). Inter session variability of strain was significantly lower than inter-eye variability (F(IS)=22.63, p=0.0428) and inter-tissue variability (F(IS)=99.33 p=0.00998). After IOP elevation, strain was highest in the choroid (−18.11%, p
- Published
- 2021
33. The connective tissue phenotype of glaucomatous cupping in the monkey eye - Clinical and research implications
- Author
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Christy Hardin, Claude F. Burgoyne, Galen Williams, Cheri Stowell, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, Luke Reyes, Juan Reynaud, and Howard Lockwood
- Subjects
Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Intraocular pressure ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Connective tissue ,Glaucoma ,Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mechanobiology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optic Nerve Diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Low Tension Glaucoma ,Axon ,Intraocular Pressure ,Haplorhini ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Disease Models, Animal ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Retinal ganglion cell ,Connective Tissue ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,sense organs ,Cerebrospinal fluid pressure ,Neuroscience ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In a series of previous publications we have proposed a framework for conceptualizing the optic nerve head (ONH) as a biomechanical structure. That framework proposes important roles for intraocular pressure (IOP), IOP-related stress and strain, cerebrospinal fluid pressure (CSFp), systemic and ocular determinants of blood flow, inflammation, auto-immunity, genetics, and other non-IOP related risk factors in the physiology of ONH aging and the pathophysiology of glaucomatous damage to the ONH. The present report summarizes 20 years of technique development and study results pertinent to the characterization of ONH connective tissue deformation and remodeling in the unilateral monkey experimental glaucoma (EG) model. In it we propose that the defining pathophysiology of a glaucomatous optic neuropathy involves deformation, remodeling, and mechanical failure of the ONH connective tissues. We view this as an active process, driven by astrocyte, microglial, fibroblast and oligodendrocyte mechanobiology. These cells, and the connective tissue phenomena they propagate, have primary and secondary effects on retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axon and laminar beam and retrolaminar capillary homeostasis that may initially be “protective” but eventually lead to RGC axonal injury, repair and/or cell death. The primary goal of this report is to summarize our 3D histomorphometric and optical coherence tomography (OCT)-based evidence for the early onset and progression of ONH connective tissue deformation and remodeling in monkey EG. A second goal is to explain the importance of including ONH connective tissue processes in characterizing the phenotype of a glaucomatous optic neuropathy in all species. A third goal is to summarize our current efforts to move from ONH morphology to the cell biology of connective tissue remodeling and axonal insult early in the disease. A final goal is to facilitate the translation of our findings and ideas into neuroprotective interventions that target these ONH phenomena for therapeutic effect.
- Published
- 2017
34. Body mass is positively associated with neural response to sweet taste, but not alcohol, among drinkers
- Author
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Kent E. Hutchison, Angela D. Bryan, Sophie L. YorkWilliams, and Casey K. Gardiner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cingulate cortex ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Drinking ,Precuneus ,Overweight ,Article ,Body Mass Index ,Developmental psychology ,Beverages ,Food Preferences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Obesity ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,media_common ,Fusiform gyrus ,Alcoholic Beverages ,Addiction ,Public health ,Body Weight ,05 social sciences ,Caloric theory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Taste ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Energy Intake ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Obesity is a large and growing public health concern, presenting enormous economic and health costs to individuals and society. A burgeoning literature demonstrates that overweight and obese individuals display different neural processing of rewarding stimuli, including caloric substances, as compared to healthy weight individuals. However, much extant research on the neurobiology of obesity has focused on addiction models, without highlighting potentially separable neural underpinnings of caloric intake versus substance use. The present research explores these differences by examining neural response to alcoholic beverages and a sweet non-alcoholic beverage, among a sample of individuals with varying weight status and patterns of alcohol use and misuse. Participants received tastes of a sweet beverage (litchi juice) and alcoholic beverages during fMRI scanning. When controlling for alcohol use, elevated weight status was associated with increased activation in response to sweet taste in regions including the cingulate cortex, hippocampus, precuneus, and fusiform gyrus. However, weight status was not associated with neural response to alcoholic beverages.
- Published
- 2017
35. Detecting Change Using Standard Global Perimetric Indices in Glaucoma
- Author
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Shaban Demirel and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Vision Disorders ,Glaucoma ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pattern standard deviation ,Ophthalmology ,Statistics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Longitudinal cohort ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Visual field ,030104 developmental biology ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Visual Field Tests ,Female ,Visual Fields ,business ,Glaucoma, Open-Angle ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose Various global indices are available to summarize results from standard automated perimetry. This study asks which index can detect significant deterioration earliest, for a fixed specificity. Design Comparison of prognostic indices. Methods Two cohorts were tested. A test-retest cohort contained 5 reliable visual fields, within a short interval, from 45 eyes of 23 participants with glaucoma and/or likelihood of developing glaucoma. A separate longitudinal cohort contained 508 eyes from 330 participants, tested on average 13 times. Three global indices were extracted: mean deviation (MD), pattern standard deviation (PSD), and visual field index (VFI). For each index we defined a critical P value Crit Index , such that 5% of test-retest series showed significant deterioration with P Index , using artificial "test dates" in random order. Therefore these criteria have 95% specificity over series of 5 tests. The times to detect significant deterioration in the longitudinal cohort were compared using a survival analysis model. Results The median time to detect significant deterioration with MD was 7.3 years (95% confidence interval [CI] 6.8–7.9 years). For VFI, the median was 8.5 years (95% CI 7.9–9.0 years); this comparison had P = .088. For PSD, the median was 10.5 years (95% CI 9.3–11.7 years), slower than MD with P P = .0013) and 107 for PSD ( P = .029). Conclusions MD detected significant deterioration sooner than VFI or PSD. In particular, MD detected more eyes in the first 5 years of their follow-up, which were presumably undergoing more rapid progression.
- Published
- 2017
36. Surgical timing following neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer affects postoperative complication rates
- Author
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Thomas L. Sutton, Nathalie Johnson, Alexander Schlitt, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Jennifer R. Garreau
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,030230 surgery ,Time-to-Treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Outpatient setting ,Medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Postoperative complication ,General Medicine ,Cytotoxic chemotherapy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Surgery ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Wound complication ,Female ,business - Abstract
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) is increasingly used in the treatment of breast cancer. The time interval from last dose of cytotoxic chemotherapy to surgery (TTS) can vary widely. We aimed to evaluate the effect of TTS on postoperative complications.A retrospective review for women treated with NAC at our institution between January 2011 through December 2016 was performed. Charts were reviewed for postoperative wound complications, and multivariate analysis was performed.455 patients were identified. Median TTS was 30 days (range 11-228). On multivariate analysis, TTS of less than 28 days was associated with 70% higher odds of any wound complication (p 0.05). Increasing age had the strongest association with the presence of any wound complication (p 0.0001). The majority of complications were treated in the outpatient setting (n = 80, 83%).Following NAC for breast cancer, TTS less than 28 days is a risk factor for postoperative wound complications; however, the majority of complications are minor and treated in the outpatient setting. Additional data are needed to determine optimal TTS for oncologic outcomes.
- Published
- 2019
37. ICU Patient Family Stress Recovery During Breaks in a Hospital Garden and Indoor Environments
- Author
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Bette J Manulik, Paul S Fitzpatrick, Teresia M. Hazen, Makayla Cordoza, Roger S. Ulrich, Stuart K. Gardiner, and R. Serene Perkins
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,050109 social psychology ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Waiting Rooms ,Stress level ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Oregon ,Trauma Centers ,law ,medicine ,Family stress ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Family ,Stress recovery ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Intensive care unit ,Intensive Care Units ,Emergency medicine ,Health Facility Environment ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Gardens ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
Objectives: Measure the immediate change in intensive care unit (ICU) family members’ state stress levels from the beginning to the end of a person’s visit to a hospital garden and compare the changes produced by the garden with those associated with spending time in indoor hospital environments intended for respite and relaxation. Background: No previous research has compared the efficacy of different physical environments as interventions to foster stress reduction in family members of ICU patients, a group of hospital visitors known to experience high levels of distress. Method: A convenience sample of 42 ICU patient family (from 42 different families) completed the Present Functioning Visual Analogue Scales (PFVAS) before and after each visit (128 total visits) to a garden, an atrium/café, or ICU waiting room. Results: Stress scores significantly declined (i.e., improved) from the start to the end of a break on all PFVAS subscales ( p < .0001) in both the garden and indoors locations. However, it is noteworthy that garden breaks resulted in significantly greater improvement in the “sadness” scale than breaks in indoor locations ( p = .03), and changes in all five other PFVAS scores showed somewhat more reduction of stress for breaks spent in the garden than indoors, although these differences were not statistically significant. Conclusion: Creating an unlocked garden with abundant nature located close to an ICU can be an effective intervention for significantly mitigating state stress in family members of ICU patients and can be somewhat more effective than indoor areas expressly designed for family respite and relaxation.
- Published
- 2019
38. Factors Influencing Optical Coherence Tomography Peripapillary Choroidal Thickness: A Multicenter Study
- Author
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Claude F. Burgoyne, Christy Hardin, Haomin Luo, Brad Fortune, Harry A. Quigley, Christian Y. Mardin, Christopher A. Girkin, Joseph Caprioli, Hongli Yang, Balwantray C. Chauhan, Stuart K. Gardiner, Jeffrey M. Liebmann, Glen P. Sharpe, Alexander F. Scheuerle, and Shaban Demirel
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Aging ,genetic structures ,Optic disk ,Glaucoma ,Eye ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Medical and Health Sciences ,European descent ,imaging anatomy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ethnicity ,peripapillary choroid ,Tomography ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Age Factors ,optic nerve head ,Axial length ,Organ Size ,Biological Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Healthy Volunteers ,Sclera ,Axial Length, Eye ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,peripapillary atrophy ,Female ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Optic Disk ,Ethnic Groups ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,Optical coherence tomography ,3D imaging ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Axial Length ,education ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,optical coherence tomography ,business.industry ,Choroid ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,glaucoma ,Multicenter study ,Optical Coherence ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
Author(s): Yang, Hongli; Luo, Haomin; Gardiner, Stuart K; Hardin, Christy; Sharpe, Glen P; Caprioli, Joseph; Demirel, Shaban; Girkin, Christopher A; Liebmann, Jeffrey M; Mardin, Christian Y; Quigley, Harry A; Scheuerle, Alexander F; Fortune, Brad; Chauhan, Balwantray C; Burgoyne, Claude F | Abstract: Purpose:To quantify peripapillary choroidal thickness (PCT) and the factors that influence it in healthy participants who represent the racial and ethnic composition of the U.S. population. Methods:A total of 362 healthy participants underwent optical coherence tomography (OCT) enhanced depth imaging of the optic nerve head with a 24 radial B-scan pattern aligned to the fovea to Bruch's membrane opening axis. Bruch's membrane, anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO), and the anterior scleral surface were manually segmented. PCT was measured at 100, 300, 500, 700, 900, and 1100 μm from the ASCO globally and within 12 clock-hour sectors. The effects of age, axial length, intraocular pressure, ethnicity, sex, sector, and ASCO area on PCT were assessed by ANOVA and univariable and multivariable regressions. Results:Globally, PCT was thicker further from the ASCO border and thinner with older age, longer axial length, larger ASCO area, European descent, and female sex. Among these effectors, age and axial length explained the greatest proportion of variance. The rate of age-related decline increased further from the ASCO border. Sectorally, the inferior-temporal sectors were thinnest (10.7%-20.0% thinner than the thickest sector) and demonstrated a higher rate of age-related loss (from 15.6% to 20.7% faster) at each ASCO distance. Conclusions:In healthy eyes, PCT was thinnest in the inferior temporal sectors and thinner PCT was associated with older age, European descent, longer axial length, larger ASCO area, and female sex. Among these associations, age had the strongest influence, and its effect was greatest within the inferior temporal sectors.
- Published
- 2019
39. OCT-Detected Optic Nerve Head Neural Canal Direction, Obliqueness, and Minimum Cross-Sectional Area in Healthy Eyes
- Author
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Joseph Caprioli, Christian Y. Mardin, Glen P. Sharpe, Brad Fortune, Harry A. Quigley, Seung Woo Hong, Shaban Demirel, Balwantray C. Chauhan, Claude F. Burgoyne, Christopher A. Girkin, Hongli Yang, Christy Hardin, Stuart K. Gardiner, Alexander F. Scheuerle, Jeffrey M. Liebmann, and Haomin Luo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Neural Tube ,Clinical Sciences ,Optic Disk ,Nerve fiber layer ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nerve Fibers ,Optical coherence tomography ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Healthy volunteers ,medicine ,Perpendicular ,Humans ,Tomography ,030304 developmental biology ,Physics ,Observer Variation ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Anatomy, Cross-Sectional ,Neurosciences ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,eye diseases ,Healthy Volunteers ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Multicenter study ,Optical Coherence ,Public Health and Health Services ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,Female ,Cross-Sectional ,sense organs ,Bruch Membrane ,Neural Canal ,Sclera ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
PurposeTo assess anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO) offset relative to Bruch's membrane opening (BMO) (ASCO/BMO offset) so as to determine neural canal direction, obliqueness, and minimum cross-sectional area (NCMCA) in 362 healthy eyes.DesignCross-sectional study.MethodsAfter optical coherence tomography optic nerve head and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) imaging, BMO and ASCO were manually segmented. Planes, centroids, size, and shape were calculated. Neural canal direction was defined by projecting the neural canal axis vector (connecting BMO and ASCO centroids) onto the BMO plane. Neural canal obliqueness was defined by the angle between the neural canal axis and the BMO plane perpendicular vector. NCMCA was defined by projecting BMO and ASCO points onto a neural canal axis perpendicular plane and measuring the area of overlap. The angular distance between superior and inferior peak RNFLT was measured, and correlations between RFNLT, BMO, ASCO, ASCO/BMO offset, and NCMCA were assessed.ResultsMean (SD) NCMCA was significantly smaller than either the BMO or ASCO area (1.33 (0.42), 1.82 (0.38), 2.22 (0.43) mm2, respectively), and most closely correlated to RNFLT (P < .001, R2= 0.158). Neural canal direction was most commonly superior-nasal (55%). Mean neural canal obliqueness was 39.4° (17.3°). The angular distance between superior and inferior peak RNFLT correlated to neural canal direction (P ≤ .008, R2= 0.093).ConclusionsASCO/BMO offset underlies neural canal direction, obliqueness, and NCMCA. RNFLT is more strongly correlated to NCMCA than to BMO or ASCO, and its peripapillary distribution is influenced by neural canal direction.
- Published
- 2019
40. Aging Effect on Lamina Cribrosa Depth in Ocular Hypertension and Glaucoma
- Author
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Claude F. Burgoyne, Ruojin Ren, Hongli Yang, Christy Hardin, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Shaban Demirel
- Subjects
Lamina ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Ocular hypertension ,Glaucoma ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,sense organs ,Visual field loss ,Aging effect ,business - Abstract
In clinic, “deep” vs. “shallow” cupping is well established in human glaucoma. Our central hypothesis is that the “shallow” or senile sclerotic cupping of aged eyes is a manifestation of their stiffer connective tissues. We predicted that there are age-related differences in structure/function relationships. The relationship between the magnitude of laminar deformation and visual field loss will be different in young (“compliant”) eyes compared to old (“stiff”) eyes.
- Published
- 2019
41. Histologic validation of optical coherence tomography-based three-dimensional morphometric measurements of the human optic nerve head: Methodology and preliminary results
- Author
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Udayakumar Karuppanan, Meredith G. Hubbard, Mustapha El Hamdaoui, Gianfranco Bianco, Jihee Kim, Rafael Grytz, J. Crawford Downs, Massimo A. Fazio, Christopher A. Girkin, Luigi Bruno, and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Enucleation ,Glaucoma ,Eye Enucleation ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optical coherence tomography ,In vivo ,Ophthalmology ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Fixation (histology) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Histological Techniques ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Tissue Donors ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,sense organs ,Choroid ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Ex vivo - Abstract
PURPOSE: To compare the three-dimensional (3D) morphology of the deep load-bearing structures of the human optic nerve head (ONH) as revealed in vivo by spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) with ex vivo quantitative 3D histology. METHODS: SDOCT imaging of the ONH was performed in six eyes from three brain-dead organ donors on life-support equipment awaiting organ procurement (in vivo conditions). Following organ procurement (ex vivo conditions), the eyes were enucleated and underwent a pars plana vitrectomy followed by pressurization to physiologic IOP and immersion fixation. Ex vivo ONH morphology was obtained from high-fidelity episcopic fluorescent 3D reconstruction. Morphologic parameters of the observed ONH canal geometry and peripapillary choroid, as well as the shape, visibility and depth of the lamina cribrosa were compared between ex vivo and in vivo measurements using custom software to align, scale, and manually delineate the different regions of the ONH. RESULTS: There was significant correspondence between in vivo and ex vivo measurements of the depth and shape of the lamina cribrosa, along with the size and shape of Bruch’s membrane opening (BMO) and anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO). Weaker correspondence was observed for choroidal thickness; as expected, a thinner choroid was seen ex vivo due to loss of blood volume upon enucleation (−79.9 %, p
- Published
- 2021
42. Vision-related Quality of Life in Glaucoma Suspect or Early Glaucoma Patients
- Author
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Asem A. Alqudah, Steven L. Mansberger, Shaban Demirel, and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraocular pressure ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,Color vision ,Cross-sectional study ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Glaucoma ,Audiology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Sickness Impact Profile ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,National Eye Institute (U.S.) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United States ,eye diseases ,Visual field ,Ophthalmology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Peripheral vision ,Quality of Life ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,Visual Fields ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE To determine the association of vision-related quality of life (QoL) to demographic factors and visual function in glaucoma suspect or early glaucoma patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS We administered the 25-item National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire (VFQ-25) on the same day as a comprehensive ocular examination to participants either with glaucoma or at high risk for developing glaucoma. Regression models were used to determine the association between VFQ-25 composite and subscale scores, visual field status, logMAR equivalent visual acuity (VA), age, and sex. In all analyses we used data from the eye with the best mean deviation (MD), best pattern SD, and best VA. RESULTS Data from 198 participants were analyzed. The mean best MD (±SD) was 0.02±1.52 dB (range, -5.11 to 2.63 dB) and the mean best pattern SD was 1.75±1.03 dB (range, 0.91 to 8.36 dB). The mean VFQ-25 composite score was 91.6±6.7 (range, 54.5 to 100.0). Composite score and the Distance Activities, Color Vision subscale scores were associated with best MD (P≤0.05). The General Vision and Driving subscale scores were associated with best VA (P≤0.03). The composite score and the Distance Activities, Driving, and Color Vision subscale scores were associated with age (P≤0.05). Finally, the Distance Activities, Driving, and Peripheral Vision subscale scores were associated with sex (P≤0.04). CONCLUSIONS Vision-related QoL is associated with visual field status even in early and suspected glaucoma. It is also associated with VA, age, and sex. Particular decreases in QoL are related to distance activities, driving, and color vision.
- Published
- 2016
43. Extended right hemicolectomy and left hemicolectomy for colorectal cancers between the distal transverse and proximal descending colon
- Author
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Roberto Sorge, Saleem El-Rabaa, T Alhammali, Salem Al-Hamali, B Drake, R Parker, R Agarwal, EU Rahman, M Elshaer, Adimabua Christopher Mogekwu, A Aboelkassem, M Rashed, Gianpiero Gravante, K Gardiner, and Ashish Kelkar
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Anastomosis ,Descending colon ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hemicolectomy ,Pathological ,Colectomy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Colon, Descending ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Left hemicolectomy ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Colorectal Surgery - Abstract
Introduction We report our experience with extended right hemicolectomy (ERH) and left hemicolectomy (LH) for the treatment of cancers located between the distal transverse and the proximal descending colon, and compare postoperative morbidity, mortality, pathological results and survival for the two techniques. Methods A retrospective review was performed of a single institution series over ten years. Patients who underwent different operations, had benign disease or received palliative resections were excluded. Data collected were patient demographics, type and duration of surgery, tumour site, postoperative complications and histology results. Results Ninety-eight patients were analysed (64 ERHs, 34 LHs). ERH was conducted using an open approach in 93.8% of cases compared with 73.5% for LH. The anastomotic leak rate was similar for both groups (ERH: 6.3%, LH: 5.9%). This was also the case for other postoperative complications, mortality (ERH: 1.6%, LH: 2.9%) and overall survival (ERH: 50.4 months, LH: 51.8 months). All but one patient in the ERH cohort had clear surgical margins. Nodal evaluation for staging was adequate in 78.1% of ERH cases and 58.8% of LH cases. Conclusions In our experience, both ERH and LH are adequate for tumours located between the distal transverse and the proximal descending colon.
- Published
- 2016
44. Expansions of the neurovascular scleral canal and contained optic nerve occur early in the hypertonic saline rat experimental glaucoma model
- Author
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Elaine C. Johnson, Claude F. Burgoyne, Marta Pazos, William O. Cepurna, John C. Morrison, Hongli Yang, and Stuart K. Gardiner
- Subjects
Male ,Neural Tube ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Glaucoma ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Ulls -- Malalties i defectes ,medicine ,Animals ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Saline Solution, Hypertonic ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Neurovascular bundle ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Rats ,Hypertonic saline ,Disease Models, Animal ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,Bruch Membrane ,sense organs ,Neural Canal ,business ,Sclera ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
PURPOSE: To characterize early optic nerve head (ONH) structural change in rat experimental glaucoma (EG). METHODS: Unilateral intraocular pressure (IOP) elevation was induced in Brown Norway rats by hypertonic saline injection into the episcleral veins and animals were sacrificed 4 weeks later by perfusion fixation. Optic nerve cross-sections were graded from 1 (normal) to 5 (extensive injury) by 5 masked observers. ONHs with peripapillary retina and sclera were embedded, serial sectioned, 3-D reconstructed, delineated, and quantified. Overall and animal-specific EG versus Control eye ONH parameter differences were assessed globally and regionally by linear mixed effect models with significance criteria adjusted for multiple comparisons. RESULTS: Expansions of the optic nerve and surrounding anterior scleral canal opening achieved statistical significance overall (p < 0.0022), and in 7 of 8 EG eyes (p < 0.005). In at least 5 EG eyes, significant expansions (p < 0.005) in Bruch's membrane opening (BMO) (range 3-10%), the anterior and posterior scleral canal openings (8-21% and 5-21%, respectively), and the optic nerve at the anterior and posterior scleral canal openings (11-30% and 8-41%, respectively) were detected. Optic nerve expansion was greatest within the superior and inferior quadrants. Optic nerve expansion at the posterior scleral canal opening was significantly correlated to optic nerve damage (R = 0.768, p = 0.042). CONCLUSION: In the rat ONH, the optic nerve and surrounding BMO and neurovascular scleral canal expand early in their response to chronic experimental IOP elevation. These findings provide phenotypic landmarks and imaging targets for detecting the development of experimental glaucomatous optic neuropathy in the rat eye. Supported in part by NIH grants R01EY011610 (CFB), R01EY10145 (JCM) and R01EY16866 (ECJ)) from the National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; The Legacy Good Samaritan Foundation, Portland, Oregon; the Sears Trust for Biomedical Research, Mexico, Missouri; the Alcon Research Institute, Fort Worth, Texas; and an unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent Blindness.
- Published
- 2016
45. The Meaning of Independence
- Author
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R. K. Gardiner
- Published
- 2018
46. Factors Influencing Central Lamina Cribrosa Depth: A Multicenter Study
- Author
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Balwantray C. Chauhan, Glen P. Sharpe, Christopher A. Girkin, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, Christy Hardin, Christian Y. Mardin, Claude F. Burgoyne, Joseph Caprioli, Shaban Demirel, Harry A. Quigley, Brad Fortune, Jeffrey M. Liebmann, Alexander F. Scheuerle, and Haomin Luo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lamina ,Intraocular pressure ,genetic structures ,Optic Disk ,Optic disk ,Glaucoma ,laminar depth ,Cribriform plate ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Reference Values ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,80 and over ,Humans ,Tomography ,Intraocular Pressure ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,optical coherence tomography ,business.industry ,optic nerve head ,Middle Aged ,Bruch's membrane ,Biological Sciences ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sclera ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Multicenter study ,Optical Coherence ,Three-Dimensional ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optic nerve ,Female ,sense organs ,Bruch Membrane ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
Purpose:To quantify the influence of ocular and demographic factors on central laminar depth (LD) in healthy participants. Methods:A total of 362 normal subjects underwent optical coherence tomography (OCT) enhanced depth imaging of the optic nerve head (ONH) with a 24 radial B-scan pattern aligned to the fovea-to-Bruch's membrane opening (BMO) axis. BMO, anterior lamina, anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO), Bruch's membrane (BM), and the peripapillary scleral surface were manually segmented. The extent of laminar segmentation was quantified within 72 ASCO subsectors. Central LD was quantified relative to four reference planes: BMO, ASCO, BM, and scleral. The effects of age, sex, ethnicity, IOP, BMO area, ASCO area, and axial length on LD were assessed. Results:Laminar visibility was most consistent within the central ASCO (median 89%, range, 69%-95%). LDBMO and LDBM were significantly shallower in eyes with greater age, BMO area, and axial length and in females. LDASCO was shallower in eyes with greater ASCO area and axial length and in European and Hispanic descent compared to African descent eyes. LDSclera behaved similarly, but was not associated with axial length. BMO and ASCO area were not different between African descent and European descent eyes. Conclusions:Central LD was deeper in African descent eyes and influenced least by age, axial length, and sex, but more by ASCO area, when measured relative to the ASCO and sclera. However, the magnitude of these effects for all four reference planes was small, and their clinical importance in the detection of glaucoma and its progression remains to be determined.
- Published
- 2018
47. Improving Growth for Infants ≤1250 Grams Receiving an Exclusive Human Milk Diet
- Author
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Elizabeth A. McCulley, Robert K. Huston, Andrea M. Markell, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Sean L. Sweeney
- Subjects
Male ,Birth weight ,Fortification ,Day of life ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Nutritional Status ,Breast milk ,Weight Gain ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animal science ,Enteral Nutrition ,Clinical Protocols ,Enterocolitis, Necrotizing ,030225 pediatrics ,Medicine ,Animals ,Birth Weight ,Humans ,Infant, Very Low Birth Weight ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Milk Banks ,Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Retrospective Studies ,Food, Formulated ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Milk, Human ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Body Height ,Infant Formula ,Diet ,Necrotizing enterocolitis ,Food, Fortified ,Cattle ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Weight gain ,Head ,Infant, Premature - Abstract
Background An exclusive human milk diet (EHM) fortified with human milk-based fortifier decreases necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) compared to maternal milk supplemented with preterm formula and bovine fortifier (PTF). Growth has been less with EHM and also maternal milk supplemented with donor human milk and bovine fortifier (HMBF). The objective was to evaluate the effect of a standardized feeding protocol on the growth of infants ≤1250 g birth weight supported with EHM and HMBF. The effect on the incidence of NEC was also evaluated. Design/methods A retrospective study of growth before and after implementation of a feeding protocol for infants who received either EHM or HMBF. Primary outcomes were weight, length, and head circumference gain velocities from birth to discharge. The incidence of NEC was also recorded. Results Analysis of covariance for 379 total infants showed that earlier day of life for fortification to 24 Kcal/oz was associated with increased weight gain (p = 0.0166) and length gain (p = 0.0064). Implementation of the feeding protocol was associated with increased head circumference gain (p = 0.006). EHM was associated with decreased incidence of NEC (p = 0.0302). Conclusions Implementation of a standardized feeding protocol including earlier fortification of maternal milk was associated with improved growth for infants receiving human milk feedings. EHM significantly decreased NEC. Earlier fortification had no effect on NEC.
- Published
- 2018
48. 3D Histomorphometric Reconstruction and Quantification of the Optic Nerve Head Connective Tissues
- Author
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Hongli, Yang, Juan, Reynaud, Howard, Lockwood, Galen, Williams, Christy, Hardin, Luke, Reyes, Stuart K, Gardiner, and Claude F, Burgoyne
- Subjects
Disease Models, Animal ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Connective Tissue ,Finite Element Analysis ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Animals ,Humans ,Glaucoma ,Optic Nerve ,Haplorhini ,Models, Biological ,Rats - Abstract
Accurately characterizing the 3D geometry of the optic nerve head neural and connective tissues has been the goal of a large and important body of scientific work. In the present report, we summarize our methods for the high-resolution, digital, 3D histomorphometric reconstruction of the optic nerve head tissues, including their visualization, parameterization, and quantification. In addition, we present our methods for between-eye comparisons of this anatomy, and their use to determine animal-specific and experiment-wide experimental glaucoma versus Control eye differences in the unilateral, monkey experimental glaucoma model. Finally, we demonstrate its application to finite element modeling, 3D optic nerve head reconstruction of other species, and 3D optic nerve head reconstructions using other imaging modalities.
- Published
- 2017
49. 3D Histomorphometric Reconstruction and Quantification of the Optic Nerve Head Connective Tissues
- Author
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Claude F. Burgoyne, Luke Reyes, Juan Reynaud, Christy Hardin, Howard Lockwood, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, and Galen Williams
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,3D reconstruction ,Glaucoma ,Connective tissue ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sclera ,Imaging modalities ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,medicine ,Optic nerve ,Head (vessel) ,sense organs ,3d geometry ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Accurately characterizing the 3D geometry of the optic nerve head neural and connective tissues has been the goal of a large and important body of scientific work. In the present report, we summarize our methods for the high-resolution, digital, 3D histomorphometric reconstruction of the optic nerve head tissues, including their visualization, parameterization, and quantification. In addition, we present our methods for between-eye comparisons of this anatomy, and their use to determine animal-specific and experiment-wide experimental glaucoma versus Control eye differences in the unilateral, monkey experimental glaucoma model. Finally, we demonstrate its application to finite element modeling, 3D optic nerve head reconstruction of other species, and 3D optic nerve head reconstructions using other imaging modalities.
- Published
- 2017
50. Rat optic nerve head anatomy within 3D histomorphometric reconstructions of normal control eyes
- Author
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Elaine C. Johnson, Marta Pazos, William O. Cepurna, Hongli Yang, Stuart K. Gardiner, Claude F. Burgoyne, and John C. Morrison
- Subjects
Male ,Central retinal artery ,Materials science ,Central retinal vein ,genetic structures ,Long posterior ciliary arteries ,Optic Disk ,Optic disk ,Glaucoma ,Article ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Reference Values ,Rats, Inbred BN ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Animals ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,Rats ,Sclera ,Microscopy, Electron ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Optic nerve ,sense organs ,Choroid - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to three-dimensionally (3D) characterize the principal macroscopic and microscopic relationships within the rat optic nerve head (ONH) and quantify them in normal control eyes. Perfusion-fixed, trephinated ONH from 8 normal control eyes of 8 Brown Norway Rats were 3D histomorphometrically reconstructed, visualized, delineated and parameterized. The rat ONH consists of 2 scleral openings, (a superior neurovascular and inferior arterial) separated by a thin connective tissue strip we have termed the "scleral sling". Within the superior opening, the nerve abuts a prominent extension of Bruch's Membrane (BM) superiorly and is surrounded by a vascular plexus, as it passes through the sclera, that is a continuous from the choroid into and through the dural sheath and contains the central retinal vein (CRV), (inferiorly). The inferior scleral opening contains the central retinal artery and three long posterior ciliary arteries which obliquely pass through the sclera to obtain the choroid. Bruch's Membrane Opening (BMO) is irregular and vertically elongated, enclosing the nerve (superiorly) and CRV and CRA (inferiorly). Overall mean BMO Depth, BMO Area, Choroidal Thickness and peripapillary Scleral Thickness were 29 μm, 56.5 × 10(3) μm(2), 57 μm and 104 μm respectively. Mean anterior scleral canal opening (ASCO) and posterior scleral canal opening (PSCO) radii were 201 ± 15 μm and 204 ± 16 μm, respectively. Mean optic nerve area at the ASCO and PSCO were 46.3 × 10(3)±4.4 × 10(3) μm(2) and 44.1 × 10(3)±4.5 × 10(3) μm(2) respectively. In conclusion, the 3D complexity of the rat ONH and the extent to which it differs from the primate have been under-appreciated within previous 2D studies. Properly understood, these anatomic differences may provide new insights into the relative susceptibilities of the rat and primate ONH to elevated intraocular pressure.
- Published
- 2015
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