91 results on '"Thomas M Jenkins"'
Search Results
2. VoxelHop: Successive Subspace Learning for ALS Disease Classification Using Structural MRI
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Xiaofeng Liu, Suma Babu, Fangxu Xing, Georges El Fakhri, C.-C. Jay Kuo, Thomas M Jenkins, Chao Yang, and Jonghye Woo
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer science ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV) ,Concatenation ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Convolutional neural network ,Article ,Health Information Management ,Robustness (computer science) ,FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Humans ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business.industry ,Dimensionality reduction ,Deep learning ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Image and Video Processing (eess.IV) ,Pattern recognition ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Backpropagation ,Regression ,Computer Science Applications ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Subspace topology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Deep learning has great potential for accurate detection and classification of diseases with medical imaging data, but the performance is often limited by the number of training datasets and memory requirements. In addition, many deep learning models are considered a "black-box," thereby often limiting their adoption in clinical applications. To address this, we present a successive subspace learning model, termed VoxelHop, for accurate classification of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) using T2-weighted structural MRI data. Compared with popular convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures, VoxelHop has modular and transparent structures with fewer parameters without any backpropagation, so it is well-suited to small dataset size and 3D imaging data. Our VoxelHop has four key components, including (1) sequential expansion of near-to-far neighborhood for multi-channel 3D data; (2) subspace approximation for unsupervised dimension reduction; (3) label-assisted regression for supervised dimension reduction; and (4) concatenation of features and classification between controls and patients. Our experimental results demonstrate that our framework using a total of 20 controls and 26 patients achieves an accuracy of 93.48 % and an AUC score of 0.9394 in differentiating patients from controls, even with a relatively small number of datasets, showing its robustness and effectiveness. Our thorough evaluations also show its validity and superiority to the state-of-the-art 3D CNN classification approaches. Our framework can easily be generalized to other classification tasks using different imaging modalities.
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- 2022
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3. Muscle MRI in motor neuron diseases: a systematic review
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Thomas M Jenkins and Alexander Kriss
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Concordance ,Fat infiltration ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Motor Neuron Disease ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Muscle mri ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Inclusion and exclusion criteria ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective: To summarize applications of muscle magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in cross-sectional assessment and longitudinal monitoring of motor neuron diseases and evaluate associations with clinical assessment techniques.Methods: PubMed and Scopus were searched for research published up to May 2021 relating to muscle MRI in motor neuron diseases, according to predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Studies were systematically appraised for bias and data were extracted for discussion.Results: Twenty-eight papers met inclusion criteria. The studies assessed muscle T1- and T2-weighted signal, diffusion, muscle volume, and fat infiltration, employing quantitative, qualitative, and semi-quantitative approaches. Various regions of interest were considered; changes in thigh and calf muscles were most frequently reported. Preliminary evidence of concordance between clinical and radiological findings and utility as an objective longitudinal biomarker is emerging.Conclusion: Muscle MRI appears a promising objective, versatile, and practical biomarker to assess motor neuron diseases.
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- 2021
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4. Simultaneous ALS and SCA2 associated with an intermediate-length ATXN2 CAG-repeat expansion
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Pamela J. Shaw, John P Franklin, James J.P. Alix, David Paling, Johnathan Cooper-Knock, Priya Shanmugarajah, Tobias Moll, Marios Hadjivissiliou, Nicholas J. Beauchamp, Christopher J McDermott, Michael Pattrick, Helia Ghahremani Nezhad, and Thomas M Jenkins
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congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cytoplasmic inclusion ,Late stage ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neurology ,mental disorders ,Cohort ,Spinocerebellar ataxia ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,10. No inequality ,business ,Trinucleotide repeat expansion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) share a common molecular basis: both are associated with CAG-repeat expansion of ATXN2 and TDP-43-positive neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions. To date, the two disorders are viewed as clinically distinct with ALS resulting from 30-33 CAG-repeats and SCA2 from >34 CAG-repeats. We describe a 67-year old with a 32 CAG-repeat expansion of ATXN2 who presented with simultaneous symptoms of ALS and SCA2. Our case demonstrates that the clinical dichotomy between SCA2 and ATXN2-ALS is false. We suggest instead that CAG-repeat expansion length determines the timing of SCA2 clinical symptoms relative to onset of ALS; consistent with this age of onset of SCA2 but not ATXN2-ALS, is dependent upon expansion length. Review of the literature and our local cohort provides evidence for occurrence of ALS in late stage SCA2, which may be under-recognised by clinicians who think of the two diseases as distinct.
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- 2020
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5. Reinnervation as measured by the motor unit size index is associated with preservation of muscle strength in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, but not all muscles reinnervate
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Christopher J McDermott, José Castro Tech, Thomas M Jenkins, Young Chan, Paul E. Barkhaus, Pamela J. Shaw, Sanjeev D. Nandedkar, Christoph Neuwirth, Mamede de Carvalho, Erik Stålberg, Markus Weber, and James J.P. Alix
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Weakness ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Biceps ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Physiology (medical) ,Abductor digiti minimi ,Medicine ,Humans ,Muscle Strength ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Motor Neurons ,business.industry ,Electromyography ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Compound muscle action potential ,Motor unit ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Muscle strength ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Reinnervation - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The motor unit size index (MUSIX) may provide insight into reinnervation patterns in diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). However, it is not known if MUSIX detects clinically relevant changes in reinnervation, or if all muscles manifest changes in MUSIX in response reinnervation following motor unit loss. METHODS: 57 patients with ALS were assessed at 3-monthly intervals for 12 months in 4 centres. Muscles examined were abductor pollicis brevis, abductor digiti minimi, biceps brachii and tibialis anterior. Results were split into two groups: muscles with increases in MUSIX and those without. Longitudinal changes in MUSIX, motor unit number index (MUNIX), compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitude and medical research council (MRC) strength score were investigated. RESULTS: 133 muscles were examined. 59% of muscles exhibited an increase in MUSIX during the study. Muscles with MUSIX increases lost more motor units (MUNIX decline at 12 months -58%, p
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- 2021
6. Longitudinal multi-modal muscle-based biomarker assessment in motor neuron disease
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Iain D. Wilkinson, Nigel Hoggard, Taniya Esmail, James J.P. Alix, Christopher J McDermott, Jacob Fingret, Thomas M Jenkins, Pamela J. Shaw, and Kathleen Baster
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,Neurology ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Motor Neuron Disease ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Aged ,Denervation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Electromyography ,Surrogate endpoint ,business.industry ,Correction ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Disease Progression ,Cardiology ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Clinical phenotypic heterogeneity represents a major barrier to trials in motor neuron disease (MND) and objective surrogate outcome measures are required, especially for slowly progressive patients. We assessed responsiveness of clinical, electrophysiological and radiological muscle-based assessments to detect MND-related progression. Materials and methods A prospective, longitudinal cohort study of 29 MND patients and 22 healthy controls was performed. Clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index/size (MUNIX/MUSIX) and relative T2- and diffusion-weighted whole-body muscle magnetic resonance (MR) were assessed three times over 12 months. Multi-variable regression models assessed between-group differences, clinico-electrophysiological associations, and longitudinal changes. Standardized response means (SRMs) assessed sensitivity to change over 12 months. Results MND patients exhibited 18% higher whole-body mean muscle relative T2-signal than controls (95% CI 7–29%, p p p Conclusion MUNIX and relative T2-weighted MR represent objective surrogate markers of progressive denervation in MND. Radiological changes were maximal in leg muscles, irrespective of clinical onset-site.
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- 2019
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7. Assessment of the Precision in Measuring Glutathione at 3 T With a MEGA-PRESS Sequence in Primary Motor Cortex and Occipital Cortex
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Julia Bigley, Adriana Anton, Nigel Hoggard, Pamela J. Shaw, Richard A.E. Edden, Thomas M Jenkins, Iain D. Wilkinson, Jim M. Wild, and Richard J. Mead
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Adult ,Central nervous system ,Imaging phantom ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,In vivo ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Reproducibility ,business.industry ,Motor Cortex ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Glutathione ,Middle Aged ,Mega press ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Occipital Lobe ,Primary motor cortex ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
Background Glutathione (GSH) is an important brain antioxidant and a number of studies have reported its measurement by edited and nonedited localized 1 H spectroscopy techniques within a range of applications in healthy volunteers and disease states. Good test-retest reproducibility is key when assessing the efficacy of treatments aimed at modulating GSH levels within the central nervous system or when noninvasively assessing changes in GSH content over time. Purpose To evaluate the intraday (in vitro and in vivo) and 1-month apart (in vivo) test-retest reproducibility of GSH measurements from GSH-edited MEGA-PRESS acquisitions at 3 T in a phantom and in the brain of a cohort of middle-aged and older healthy volunteers. Study type Prospective. Subjects/phantoms A phantom containing physiological concentrations of GSH and metabolites with overlapping spectral signatures and 10 healthy volunteers (4 F, 6 M, 55 ± 14 years old). Field strength/sequence GSH-edited spectra were acquired at 3 T using the MEGA-PRESS sequence. Assessment The phantom was scanned twice and the healthy subjects were scanned three times (on two separate days, 1 month apart). GSH was quantified from each acquisition, with the in vivo voxels placed at the primary motor cortex (PMC) and the occipital cortex (OCC). Statistical tests Mean coefficients of variation (CV) were used to assess short-term (in vitro and in vivo) and longer-term (in vivo) test-retest reproducibility. Results In vitro, the CV was 2.3%. In vivo, the mean intraday CV was 3.3% in the PMC and 2.4% in the OCC, while the CVs at 1 month apart were 4.6% in the PMC and 7.8% in the OCC. Data conclusion GSH-edited MEGA-PRESS spectroscopy allows measurement of GSH with excellent precision. Evidence level 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.
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- 2021
8. Using 31-phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) to identify Parkinson’s Disease subgroups with bioenergetic dysfunction
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Thomas Payne, Toby Burgess, Matilde Sassani, Stephen Bradley, Sarah Roscoe, Emily Reed, Iain D Wilkinson, Heather Mortiboys, Thomas M Jenkins, and Oliver Bandmann
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
BackgroundSporadic Parkinson’s disease (sPD) is an aetiologically heterogeneous disorder. Identification of distinct pathogenic mechanisms causing sPD will be crucial to develop future “Precision Medicine” approaches. 31P-MRS is a non-invasive tool that can quantify key bionenergetic metabolites in individual patients.ObjectiveTo determine whether 31P-MRS can identify mitochondrial dysfunction in the midbrain/sub- stantia nigra of individual PD patients and correlates with trial-relevant clinical aspects of PD.Methods31P-MRS spectra were obtained from 35 sPD patients and 25 healthy, age-matched controls. Spectra were analysed using the jMRUI software package and AMARES spectral fitting algorithm. Clinical assessment included widely utilised clinical rating scales, genetic analysis and the calculation of predicted risk of rapid disease progression.ResultsThere was a significantly broader variance in 31P-MRS midbrain ATP with 1/3 of all PD patients having ATP levels > 2 standard deviations outside the mean control values (p=0.0030). Higher midbrain phosphocreatine was associated with greater risk of rapid disease progression (p= 0.0384).Conclusions31P-MRS may help to identify a subgroup of sPD with significant mitochondrial dysfunction or at higher risk of more rapid progression and facilitate stratification for future precision medicine neu- roprotective trials. Longitudinal studies are required to characterise if changes 31P-MRS measures mirror clinical progression.
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- 2022
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9. Simultaneous ALS and SCA2 associated with an intermediate-length
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Helia, Ghahremani Nezhad, John P, Franklin, James J P, Alix, Tobias, Moll, Michael, Pattrick, Johnathan, Cooper-Knock, Priya, Shanmugarajah, Nick J, Beauchamp, Marios, Hadjivissiliou, David, Paling, Christopher, Mcdermott, Pamela J, Shaw, and Thomas M, Jenkins
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Cohort Studies ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Humans ,Spinocerebellar Ataxias ,Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion ,Aged ,Ataxin-2 - Abstract
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) share a common molecular basis: both are associated with CAG-repeat expansion of
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- 2020
10. Diagnostic and investigative approach of consultant neurologists in a real‐world clinical setting: A pilot study
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Richard A. Grünewald, Chris Aitchison, Thomas M Jenkins, Daniel Blackburn, and Aijaz Khan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Consultants ,Concordance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Pilot Projects ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Ordinal regression ,Likert scale ,Odds ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurologists ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Variance (accounting) ,Certainty ,Family medicine ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE Whilst core curricula in neurology are nationally standardised, in real-world clinical practice, different approaches may be taken by individual consultants. The aims of this study were to investigate differences by assessing: (a) variance in diagnostic and investigative practice, using a case-based analysis of inter-rater agreement; (b) potential importance of any differences in terms of patient care; (c) relationships between clinical experience, diagnostic certainty, diagnostic peer-agreement and investigative approach. The objective was to develop novel individualised metrics to facilitate reflection and appraisal. METHODS Three neurologists with 6-23 years' experience at consultant level provided diagnosis, certainty (10-point Likert scale), and investigative approach for 200 consecutive general neurology outpatients seen by a newly qualified consultant in 2015. Diagnostic agreement was evaluated by percentage agreement. The potential importance of any diagnostic differences on patient outcome was assigned a score (6-point Likert scale) by the evaluating neurologist. Associations between diagnostic agreement, certainty and investigative approach were assessed using Spearman correlation, logistic and ordinal regression, and reported as individualised metrics for each rater. RESULTS Diagnostic peer-agreement was 3/3, 2/3 and 1/3 in 55.5%, 31.0% and 13.5% of cases, respectively. In 15.5%, differences in patient management were judged potentially important. Investigation rates were 42%-73%. Mean diagnostic certainty ranged from 6.63/10 (SD 1.98) to 7.72/10 (SD 2.20) between least and most experienced consultants. Greater diagnostic certainty was associated with greater diagnostic peer-agreement (individual-rater regression coefficients 0.33-0.44, P
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- 2020
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11. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals mitochondrial dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Matilde Sassani, Pamela J. Shaw, Nigel Hoggard, Thomas M Jenkins, Heather Mortiboys, Iain D. Wilkinson, Christopher J McDermott, James J.P. Alix, Kathleen Baster, and Jim M. Wild
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Mitochondrial Diseases ,Phosphocreatine ,Walking ,Oxidative Phosphorylation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Tibialis anterior muscle ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscle Strength ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Aged ,Brain Chemistry ,Motor Neurons ,Upper motor neuron ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Skeletal muscle ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Mitochondria ,Adenosine diphosphate ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,chemistry ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Energy Metabolism ,Adenosine triphosphate ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Phosphomonoesters ,Muscle Contraction - Abstract
Mitochondrial dysfunction is postulated to be central to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis pathophysiology. Evidence comes primarily from disease models and conclusive data to support bioenergetic dysfunction in vivo in patients is currently lacking. This study is the first to assess mitochondrial dysfunction in brain and muscle in people living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis using phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy, the modality of choice to assess energy metabolism in vivo. We recruited twenty patients and 10 healthy age and gender-matched controls in this cross-sectional clinico-radiological study. Phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy was acquired from cerebral motor regions and from tibialis anterior during rest and exercise. Bioenergetic parameter estimates were derived including: adenosine triphosphate, phosphocreatine, inorganic phosphate, adenosine diphosphate, Gibbs free energy of adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis, phosphomonoesters, phosphodiesters, pH, free magnesium concentration, and muscle dynamic recovery constants. Linear regression was used to test for associations between brain data and clinical parameters (revised amyotrophic functional rating scale, slow vital capacity, and upper motor neuron score) and between muscle data and clinico-neurophysiological measures (motor unit number and size indices, force of contraction, and speed of walking). Evidence for primary dysfunction of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation was detected in brainstem where Gibbs free energy of adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis and phosphocreatine were reduced. Alterations were also detected in skeletal muscle in patients where resting inorganic phosphate, pH, and phosphomonoesters were increased, whereas resting Gibbs free energy of adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis, magnesium, and dynamic phosphocreatine to inorganic phosphate recovery were decreased. Phosphocreatine in brainstem correlated with respiratory dysfunction and disability; in muscle, energy metabolites correlated with motor unit number index, muscle power, and speed of walking. This study provides in vivo evidence for bioenergetic dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in brain and skeletal muscle, which appears clinically and electrophysiologically relevant. Phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy represents a promising technique to assess the pathophysiology of mitochondrial function in vivo in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and a potential tool for future clinical trials targeting bioenergetic dysfunction.
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- 2020
12. Brain energy metabolism in ALS: A phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy study
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Heather Mortiboys, Pamela J. Shaw, Nigel Hoggard, Jim M. Wild, Christopher J McDermott, Matilde Sassani, James J.P. Alix, Thomas M Jenkins, Kathleen Baster, and Iain D. Wilkinson
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Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Neurology ,Chemistry ,Energy metabolism ,Phosphorus-31 NMR spectroscopy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy - Published
- 2021
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13. Imaging muscle as a potential biomarker of denervation in motor neuron disease
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Eoghan O’Brien, Charlotte David, James J.P. Alix, Christopher J McDermott, Kathleen Baster, Nigel Hoggard, Eilish Pearson, Iain D. Wilkinson, D. Ganesh Rao, Pamela J. Shaw, Thomas M Jenkins, Mike Bradburn, and Julia Bigley
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Action Potentials ,Electromyography ,Cohort Studies ,Muscular Atrophy, Spinal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Whole Body Imaging ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Motor Neuron Disease ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Denervation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Case-control study ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Motor neuron ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Cardiology ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
ObjectiveTo assess clinical, electrophysiological and whole-body muscle MRI measurements of progression in patients with motor neuron disease (MND), as tools for future clinical trials, and to probe pathophysiological mechanisms in vivo.MethodsA prospective, longitudinal, observational, clinicoelectrophysiological and radiological cohort study was performed. Twenty-nine patients with MND and 22 age-matched and gender-matched healthy controls were assessed with clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index (MUNIX) and T2-weighted whole-body muscle MRI, at first clinical presentation and 4 months later. Between-group differences and associations were assessed using age-adjusted and gender-adjusted multivariable regression models. Within-subject longitudinal changes were assessed using paired t-tests. Patterns of disease spread were modelled using mixed-effects multivariable regression, assessing associations between muscle relative T2 signal and anatomical adjacency to site of clinical onset.ResultsPatients with MND had 30% higher relative T2 muscle signal than controls at baseline (all regions mean, 95% CI 15% to 45%, pConclusionsWhole-body muscle MRI offers a new approach to objective assessment of denervation over short timescales in MND and enables investigation of patterns of disease spread in vivo. Muscles inaccessible to conventional clinical and electrophysiological assessment may be investigated using this methodology.
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- 2017
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14. Nontargeted mass-spectral detection of chloroperfluoropolyether carboxylates in New Jersey soils
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Sandra M. Goodrow, Charlita G. Rosal, A. N. Pilant, John W. Washington, Haile K. Tadesse, Benjamin J. Washington, Thomas M. Jenkins, Mary J. B. Davis, Erica L. Bergman, Andrew B. Lindstrom, Mark J. Strynar, James McCord, and Brittany G. Stuart
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Conservation of Natural Resources ,Fluorocarbons ,Multidisciplinary ,New Jersey ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Carboxylic Acids ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Geographic distribution ,Soil ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Ethers - Abstract
Perfluorocarbons' path into soils Covering carbon chains with fluorines has produced a variety of useful nonstick coatings. However, growing concern about the toxicity and extraordinary environmental persistence of the underlying compounds is spurring a search for alternatives. The precise structure of these next-generation alternatives often remains a trade secret. Washington et al. sampled soils in New Jersey and then used mass spectrometry to assign plausible structures—incorporating chlorine and ether segments into the CF 2 chain—to compounds that appear to have emanated from their manufacture (see the Policy Forum by Gold and Wagner). The data can inform in-depth studies of these compounds' environmental transport and persistence. Science , this issue p. 1103 ; see also p. 1066
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- 2019
15. Cognitive deficits in vasculitis of the nervous system: a cross-sectional study
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Vasileia Aristotelidou, Daniel Blackburn, Edward Mullin, Thomas M Jenkins, and Marios Hadjivassiliou
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Nervous system ,Adult ,Male ,Vasculitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Status ,Giant Cell Arteritis ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Vasculitis ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Internal medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Cognitive rehabilitation therapy ,Functional ability ,Cognitive decline ,Vasculitis, Central Nervous System ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis ,Peripheral Nervous System Diseases ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Peripheral nervous system ,Quality of Life ,Female ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents - Abstract
Objectives: To identify the cognitive and functional deficits in a well-characterized group of patients with vasculitis of the nervous system. Methods: Sixty-seven patients diagnosed with Central Nervous System (CNS) or Peripheral nervous System (PNS) vasculitis over a 14-year period were retrospectively identified. Data on clinical presentation, laboratory, radiographic and tissue biopsy investigations, and treatment were collated. Cognitive, functional and quality of life evaluation assessments were performed in 31 patients who agreed to participate and included Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-revised (ACE-R), Nottingham Extended Activities of Daily Living (NEADL) and EQ-5D-3L quality of life questionnaires. Results: CNS vasculitis patients exhibited cognitive impairment, with a mean ACE-R score of 74/100 (standard deviation (SD) 16). NEADL and EQ-5D-3L scores were in the impaired range at 41/66 (SD 21) and 57/81 (SD 22), respectively. Patients with just PNS vasculitis exhibited fewer cognitive deficits with ACE-R and NEADL scores of 87 (SD 8) and 46 (SD 16) respectively. EQ-5D-3L score was in the impaired range of 65 (SD 22). Conclusions: Vasculitis of the nervous system and, in particular, CNS vasculitis causes cognitive impairment and deficits in functional ability. Such patients should be targeted for cognitive rehabilitation.
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- 2019
16. The role of cranial and thoracic electromyography within diagnostic criteria for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Christopher J McDermott, Thomas M Jenkins, James J.P. Alix, R.H. Kandler, and Pamela J. Shaw
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Physiology ,business.industry ,Lower motor neuron involvement ,Retrospective cohort study ,Electromyography ,Clinical neurophysiology ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Thoracic region ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lumbar ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Muscle nerve ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction The contribution of cranial and thoracic region electromyography (EMG) to diagnostic criteria for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has not been evaluated. Methods Clinical and EMG data from each craniospinal region were retrospectively assessed in 470 patients; 214 had ALS. Changes to diagnostic classification in Awaji-Shima and revised El Escorial criteria after withdrawal of cranial/thoracic EMG data were ascertained. Results Sensitivity for lower motor neuron involvement in ALS was highest in the cervical/lumbar regions; specificity was highest in cranial/thoracic regions. Cranial EMG contributed to definite/probable Awaji-Shima categorization in 1.4% of patients. Thoracic EMG made no contribution. For revised El Escorial criteria, cranial and thoracic data reclassified 1% and 5% of patients, respectively. Conclusion Cranial EMG data make small contributions to both criteria, whereas thoracic data contribute only to the revised El Escorial criteria. However, cranial and thoracic region abnormalities are specific in ALS. Consideration should be given to allowing greater diagnostic contribution from thoracic EMG. Muscle Nerve 54: 378-385, 2016.
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- 2016
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17. Neurological letter from Bangladesh
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Tauhidul Islam Chowdhury, Mohammad Selim Shahi, Oliver Bandmann, and Thomas M Jenkins
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Waiting time ,Bangladesh ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Free access ,General Medicine ,Patient registration ,Guillain-Barre Syndrome ,Outpatient visits ,Excellence ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Outpatient clinic ,Neurology (clinical) ,education ,business ,media_common - Abstract
MSS and TI: Dhaka is the capital of Bangladesh (figure 1) and the fifth largest city by population in the world. It is home to more than 14 million people and to the National Institute of Neurosciences & Hospital (NINS), a government-run neurological centre of excellence, recognised with the health minister’s best performance award for the past 3 consecutive years, since inauguration in 2012. Patients with neurological disorders from all over the country access the hospital resulting in ever-increasing caseloads. There were more than 268 000 outpatient visits and 36 000 emergency visits last year to a hospital with 450 beds, staffed by 13 professors, 19 associate professors, 34 assistant professors, 11 registrars and medical officers. Figure 1 Map of Asia (A) showing location of Bangladesh (B) Table reports national statistics for Bangladesh. Images adapted from free Wikimedia Commons (free access). Specialised outpatient clinics are run by senior neurologists. Patient registration costs 10 taka (approximately 9 pence). Experienced neurologists may see more than a hundred patients in each clinic per day, meaning that consultations are extremely focused, each lasting only a few minutes, and require a high level of clinical acumen. Waiting times can be long. Outpatient services run from 8:30 until 14:30 6 days a week and emergency services are open 24/7. NINS has both paying and non-paying beds. Paying bed costs are 275 taka per day including food (£2.50). Most medication is free …
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- 2020
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18. Subtle, Seasonal and Potentially Important: Are Phytotoxic Foliage Leachates Overlooked in Plant Invasion Studies?
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Ana L. Winters, Dylan Gwynn-Jones, Max Jasper Tomlinson, John Ratcliffe, Thomas M Jenkins, Rhys Owen, John Scullion, and Gruffydd Lloyd Jones
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biology ,ved/biology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Lactuca ,Native plant ,biology.organism_classification ,Shrub ,Competition (biology) ,Agronomy ,Germination ,Soil pH ,Phytotoxicity ,Rhododendron ponticum ,media_common - Abstract
Invasive species pose a threat to global biodiversity. Recently there has been a growth in research into the chemical aspect of invasions, with some plants reported to introduce compounds to the soil which impair the growth of competing native plants. One such species is Rhododendron ponticum, which has become a damaging invasive shrub in Britain. Here we investigate whether water-soluble compounds introduced from R. ponticum leaves in Ceredigion, Wales, suppressed seed germination, and whether this varied temporally. Leachates from leaf material collected monthly (March to July) were analysed for their chemical composition by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and Lactuca sotiva bioassays. In total, 19 compounds were identified, displaying both qualitative and quantitative seasonal variation. Total concentrations peaked in June, however L sativa germination inhibition was only found in leachates from April and May (15% and 17% respectively). The study provides evidence that phytotoxic chemical introduction from R. ponticum leaves is seasonal and most bioactive at a time of year when the seeds of other species germinate. We propose this is one of several mechanisms including shading, lowering of soil pH and the deposition of thick litter, that this species exploits when in competition with other species. We argue that for studies on the phytotoxicity of invasive plants, there is a need to consider temporal variation in the rate and quality of bioactive chemicals produced and released, local precipitation rates, persistence of chemicals in the soil plus synergistic interactions between individual chemicals.
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- 2019
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19. Use of carbon isotopic ratios in nontargeted analysis to screen for anthropogenic compounds in complex environmental matrices
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Thomas M. Jenkins, Elin M. Ulrich, Charlita G. Rosal, and John W. Washington
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chemistry.chemical_element ,Fractionation ,Environment ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,Isotopic signature ,Soil ,Humans ,Isotopologue ,Human Activities ,Carbon Isotopes ,Chromatography ,Volatilisation ,Isotope ,Atmosphere ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Dust ,General Medicine ,Contamination ,Carbon ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Wastewater ,Environmental chemistry ,Volatilization - Abstract
Analytical data for ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC), nontargeted, high-resolution, mass-spectrometry (HR/MS) molecular features from a wide array of samples are used to calculate (13)C(1)(12)C((n-1))/(12)C(n) isotopologue ratios. These ratios increase with molecular carbon number roughly following a trend defined by atmospheric carbon. When the effective source reservoir (13)C/(12)C ratio is calculated from the isotopologue ratio (assuming a fractionation factor of unity), features in biotic samples uniformly are tightly grouped, proximate to atmospheric (13)C/(12)C ratio. In contrast, features in soil natural organic matter (NOM), dust NOM and anthropogenic compounds range from proximate to relatively divergent from atmospheric (13)C/(12)C. For the NOM, (13)C/(12)C ratios are consistent with an expected preferential volatilization of (12)C, rendering features in soil NOM (13)C-enriched and some features in dust NOM (13)C-depleted. Anthropogenic compounds tend to diverge most dramatically from atmospheric (13)C/(12)C, generally toward (13)C-depletion, but pesticides we tested tended toward (13)C-enriched. This pattern is robust and evident in: i) anthropogenic vs natural features in dust; ii) perfluorinated compounds in standards and as soil contaminants; and iii) sunscreen compounds in commercial products and wastewater. Considering the observed wide (13)C/(12)C range for anthropogenic compounds, we suggest Rayleigh distillation during synthetic processes commonly favors one isotope over the other, rendering a source reservoir that is progressively depleted as synthesis proceeds and, consequently, generates a wide variation in (13)C/(12)C for man-made products. However, kinetic-isotopic effects and/or synthesis from petroleum/natural gas might contribute to the anthropogenic isotopic signature as well. Regardless of cause, (13)C/(12)C can be used to cull HR/MS molecular features that are more likely to be of anthropogenic or non-biotic origin.
- Published
- 2018
20. Correction to: Longitudinal multi-modal muscle-based biomarker assessment in motor neuron disease
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Taniya Esmail, Christopher J McDermott, Kathleen Baster, Thomas M Jenkins, Jacob Fingret, Pamela J. Shaw, James J.P. Alix, Nigel Hoggard, and Iain D. Wilkinson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Original Communication ,Neurology ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Mistake ,Disease ,Motor neuron ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Muscle ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Motor neuron disease ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,MRI ,MUNIX ,Neuroradiology - Abstract
Background Clinical phenotypic heterogeneity represents a major barrier to trials in motor neuron disease (MND) and objective surrogate outcome measures are required, especially for slowly progressive patients. We assessed responsiveness of clinical, electrophysiological and radiological muscle-based assessments to detect MND-related progression. Materials and methods A prospective, longitudinal cohort study of 29 MND patients and 22 healthy controls was performed. Clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index/size (MUNIX/MUSIX) and relative T2- and diffusion-weighted whole-body muscle magnetic resonance (MR) were assessed three times over 12 months. Multi-variable regression models assessed between-group differences, clinico-electrophysiological associations, and longitudinal changes. Standardized response means (SRMs) assessed sensitivity to change over 12 months. Results MND patients exhibited 18% higher whole-body mean muscle relative T2-signal than controls (95% CI 7–29%, p
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- 2019
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21. Abiotic Hydrolysis of Fluorotelomer-Based Polymers as a Source of Perfluorocarboxylates at the Global Scale
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Thomas M. Jenkins and John W. Washington
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Abiotic component ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Fluorocarbons ,Polymers ,computer.internet_protocol ,Chemistry ,Hydrolysis ,General Chemistry ,Polymer ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,FTPS ,Environmental chemistry ,Thermodynamics ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Caprylates ,Fluorotelomer ,computer ,Half-Life - Abstract
Fluorotelomer-based polymers (FTPs) are the main product of the fluorotelomer industry. For nearly 10 years, whether FTPs degrade to form perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) and perfluorocarboxylate (PFCA) homologues has been vigorously contested. Here we show that circum-neutral abiotic hydrolysis of a commercial FTP proceeds with half-life estimates of 55-89 years and that base-mediated hydrolysis overtakes neutral hydrolysis at about pH = 10, with a half-life of ~0.7 years at pH ∼ 12. Considered in light of the large production volume of FTPs and the poor efficacy of conventional treatments for recovery of PFCAs from waste streams, these results suggest that FTPs manufactured to date potentially could increase PFCAs 4- to 8-fold over current oceanic loads, largely depending on the integrity of disposal units to contain PFCAs upon hydrolytic generation from FTPs.
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- 2015
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22. Identification of Unsaturated and 2H Polyfluorocarboxylate Homologous Series and Their Detection in Environmental Samples and as Polymer Degradation Products
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Eric J. Weber, John W. Washington, and Thomas M. Jenkins
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Fluorotelomer alcohol ,Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated ,Double bond ,Polymers ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,Soil ,Homologous series ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polymer degradation ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Animals ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Fluorotelomer ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Fluorocarbons ,Chromatography ,Sewage ,Chemistry ,General Chemistry ,Biodegradation ,Animal Feed ,Carbon ,Biodegradation, Environmental ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Alcohols ,Degradation (geology) ,Cattle - Abstract
A pair of homologous series of polyfluorinated degradation products have been identified, both having structures similar to perfluorocarboxylic acids but (i) having a H substitution for F on the α carbon for 2H polyfluorocarboxylic acids (2HPFCAs) and (ii) bearing a double bond between the α-β carbons for the unsaturated PFCAs (2uPFCAs). Obtaining an authentic sample containing 2uPFOA and 2HPFOA, we optimized a mass-spectrometric multiple-reaction-monitoring (MS/MS) technique and then identified uPFCA and HPFCA homologous series in sludge-applied agricultural soils and fodder grasses for cattle grazing. Analysis of samples from a degradation experiment of commercial fluorotelomer-based polymers (FTPs), the dominant product of the fluorotelomer industry, confirmed that commercial FTPs are a potential source of uPFCAs and HPFCAs to the environment. We further confirmed the identity of the uPFCAs by imposing high-energy ionization to decarboxylate the uPFCAs then focused on the fluorinated chains in the first MS quadrupole. We also employed this high-energy ionization to decarboxylate and analyze PFCAs by MS/MS (for the first time, to our knowledge). In exploratory efforts, we report the possible detection of unsaturated perfluorooctanesulfonate in environmental samples, having a conceptual double-bond structure analogous to uPFOA. Using microcosms spiked with fluorotelomer compounds, we found 2uPFOA and 2HPFOA to be generated from unsaturated 8:2 fluorotelomer acid (8:2 FTUCA) and propose β- and α-oxidation mechanisms for generation of these compounds from 8:2 FTUCA. In light of these experimental results, we also reexamined the proposed biodegradation pathways of 8:2 fluorotelomer alcohol.
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- 2015
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23. Nocebo in chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy; a systematic review and meta-analysis of placebo-controlled clinical trials
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Marios Hadjivassiliou, Thomas M Jenkins, Ptolemaios G. Sarrigiannis, Panagiotis Zis, and Dimos-Dimitrios Mitsikostas
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Nocebo ,Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy ,Placebo ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,030202 anesthesiology ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Nocebo Effect ,Adverse effect ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Neurology ,Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating ,Meta-analysis ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Nocebo is very prevalent among neurological disorders, resulting in low adherence and treatment outcome. We sought to examine the adverse events (AE) following placebo administration in placebo-controlled randomized clinical trials (RCTs) for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). Methods After a systematic literature search for RCTs for CIDP pharmacotherapy treatments, we assessed the number of AE in the placebo groups and the number discontinuations because of placebo intolerance. Results Our literature search strategy revealed 82 papers. Data were extracted from three RCTs fulfilling our inclusion criteria. Approximately two in five placebo-treated patients (42.0%) reported at least one AE and approximately one in fifty placebo-treated patients discontinued placebo treatment because of AEs (2.1%). All patients participating in the CIDP trials reported similar AEs independently of the study arm they belonged. Conclusion Compared to other neurological diseases the nocebo effect in CIDP is significantly smaller.
- Published
- 2017
24. 222 Investigating directionality of neurodegeneration in vivo in ALS using multimodal MRI
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Iain D. Wilkinson, Pamela J. Shaw, Kathleen Baster, Nigel Hoggard, Joseph Harding, Andrew Keslake, Thomas M Jenkins, Julia Bigley, Christopher J McDermott, and Charmaine L Toh
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Cord ,business.industry ,Neurodegeneration ,Precentral gyrus ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Fractional anisotropy ,Corticospinal tract ,medicine ,Directionality ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,business ,Neuroscience ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
BackgroundThe anatomical location of the earliest damage in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is still debated. Two main competing hypotheses have been proposed: the dying-forward hypothesis states the damage occurs in the precentral gyrus (PCG) and spreads caudally, which is in contrast with the dying-back hypothesis. This study aims to address this question of directionality of neurodegeneration in vivo using a multimodal neuroimaging approach to derive measures of damage of the motor pathway and analyse them in a common domain.MethodsMRI was performed on 78 ALS patients and 13 controls. PCG thickness was derived from using FreeSurfer, corticospinal tract (CST) fractional anisotropy (FA) from diffusion tensor imaging using FSL, and axial C3 cord area estimates using Philips online software. Comparisons between patients and controls were reported using unpaired t-tests. Parameter estimates were converted to z-scores, referenced to control data, plotted from PCG through CST to cord and directionality of damage assessed by fitting a mixed-effects linear regression model.ResultsZ-scores were not significantly different between PCG and FA (0.24,[95%CI -0.13,0.61], p=0.208) but were significantly lower in FA compared to cross-sectional cord area (-0.85,[95%CI -1.25,-0.46] pDiscussionThis novel multimodal imaging approach supports a dying-forward neurodegenerative process in ALS.
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- 2019
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25. Influence of Gestational Age and Body Weight on the Pharmacokinetics of Labetalol in Pregnancy
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Sarah J. Kilpatrick, Hyunyoung Jeong, Patricia A. Fischer, Stacie E. Geller, James H. Fischer, Gloria E. Sarto, Loraine K. Endres, Jennifer L. Hardman, Kelly L. Deyo, Keith A. Rodvold, and Thomas M. Jenkins
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Gestational Age ,Article ,Young Adult ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Labetalol ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,cardiovascular diseases ,education ,Prospective cohort study ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Gestational age ,Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced ,medicine.disease ,NONMEM ,Endocrinology ,Lean body mass ,Female ,business ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Labetalol is frequently prescribed for the treatment of hypertension during pregnancy; however, the influence of pregnancy on labetalol pharmacokinetics is uncertain, with inconsistent findings reported by previous studies. This study examined the population pharmacokinetics of oral labetalol during and after pregnancy in women receiving labetalol for hypertension. Data were collected from 57 women receiving the drug for hypertension from the 12th week of pregnancy through 12 weeks postpartum using a prospective, longitudinal design. A sparse sampling strategy guided collection of plasma samples. Samples were assayed for labetalol by high-performance liquid chromatography. Estimation of population pharmacokinetic parameters and covariate effects was performed by nonlinear mixed effects modeling using NONMEM. The final population model was validated by bootstrap analysis and visual predictive check. Simulations were performed with the final model to evaluate the appropriate body weight to guide labetalol dosing. Lean body weight (LBW) and gestational age, i.e. weeks of pregnancy, were identified as significantly influencing oral clearance (CL/F) of labetalol, with CL/F ranging from 1.4-fold greater than postpartum values at 12 weeks’ gestational age to 1.6-fold greater at 40 weeks. Doses adjusted for LBW provide more consistent drug exposure than doses adjusted for total body weight. The apparent volumes of distribution for the central compartment and at steady-state were 1.9-fold higher during pregnancy. Gestational age and LBW impact the pharmacokinetics of labetalol during pregnancy and have clinical implications for adjusting labetalol doses in these women.
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- 2013
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26. Optic neuritis: the eye as a window to the brain
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Ahmed T. Toosy and Thomas M Jenkins
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0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Optic Neuritis ,genetic structures ,Central nervous system ,Axonal loss ,03 medical and health sciences ,Myelin ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Optic neuritis ,Neuromyelitis optica ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Brain ,Optic Nerve ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Oligodendrocyte ,Axons ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Optic nerve ,sense organs ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Acute optic neuritis is a common clinical problem, requiring a structured assessment to guide management and prevent visual loss. The optic nerve is the most accessible part of the central nervous system, so optic neuritis also represents an important paradigm to help decipher mechanisms of damage and recovery in the central nervous system. Important developments include the advent of optical coherence tomography as a biomarker of central nervous system axonal loss, the discovery of new pathological antibodies, notably against aquaporin-4 and, more recently, myelin oligodendrocyte protein, and emerging evidence for sodium channel blockade as a novel therapeutic approach to address energy failure in neuroinflammatory disease. RECENT FINDINGS: We will present a practical approach to assessment of optic neuritis, highlighting the role of optical coherence tomography, when to test for new antibodies and the results of recent trials of sodium channel blockers. SUMMARY: Optic neuritis remains a clinical diagnosis; increasingly optical coherence tomography is a key ancillary investigation. Patients with 'typical' optic neuritis, commonly a first presentation of multiple sclerosis, must be distinguished from 'atypical' optic neuritis, who require testing for new pathological antibodies and require more aggressive-targeted treatment. Sodium channel blockade is an emerging and novel potential therapeutic pathway in neuroinflammatory disease.
- Published
- 2016
27. A North American and global survey of perfluoroalkyl substances in surface soils: Distribution patterns and mode of occurrence
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Keegan Rankin, Scott A. Mabury, Thomas M. Jenkins, and John W. Washington
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Environmental Engineering ,Asia ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Carboxylic Acids ,Antarctic Regions ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Soil ,Dry weight ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants ,Fluorotelomer ,Southern Hemisphere ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Fluorocarbons ,Chemistry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Northern Hemisphere ,Australia ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,South America ,Pollution ,Europe ,Deposition (aerosol physics) ,Congener ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Africa ,North America ,Caprylates ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The distribution of 32 per/polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in surface soils was determined at 62 locations representing all continents (North America n = 33, Europe n = 10, Asia n = 6, Africa n = 5, Australia n = 4, South America n = 3 and Antarctica n = 1) using ultra performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) systems. Quantifiable levels of perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (PFCAs: PFHxA-PFTeDA) were observed in all samples with total concentrations ranging from 29 to 14,300 pg/g (dry weight), while perfluoroalkane sulfonates (PFSAs: PFHxS, PFOS and PFDS) were detected in all samples but one, ranging from
- Published
- 2016
28. Perfluorinated chemicals in surface waters and sediments from northwest Georgia, USA, and their bioaccumulation in Lumbriculus variegatus
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Sayed M. Hassan, Thomas M. Jenkins, John W. Washington, and Peter J. Lasier
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Fluorocarbons ,Geologic Sediments ,Lumbriculus variegatus ,Georgia ,biology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Aquatic ecosystem ,Sediment ,Contamination ,biology.organism_classification ,Industrial wastewater treatment ,Perfluorooctane ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Rivers ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Bioaccumulation ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Oligochaeta ,Surface water ,Ecosystem ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
Concentrations of perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) were measured in surface waters and sediments from the Coosa River watershed in northwest Georgia, USA, to examine their distribution downstream of a suspected source. Samples from eight sites were analyzed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Sediments were also used in 28-d exposures with the aquatic oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus, to assess PFC bioaccumulation. Concentrations of PFCs in surface waters and sediments increased significantly below a land-application site (LAS) of municipal/industrial wastewater and were further elevated by unknown sources downstream. Perfluorinated carboxylic acids (PFCAs) with eight or fewer carbons were the most prominent in surface waters. Those with 10 or more carbons predominated sediment and tissue samples. Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) was the major homolog in contaminated sediments and tissues. This pattern among sediment PFC concentrations was consistent among sites and reflected homolog concentrations emanating from the LAS. Concentrations of PFCs in oligochaete tissues revealed patterns similar to those observed in the respective sediments. The tendency to bioaccumulate increased with PFCA chain length and the presence of the sulfonate moiety. Biota-sediment accumulation factors indicated that short-chain PFCAs with fewer than seven carbons may be environmentally benign alternatives in aquatic ecosystems; however, sulfonates with four to seven carbons may be as likely to bioaccumulate as PFOS. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 2011;30:2194–2201. © 2011 SETAC
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- 2011
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29. A longitudinal functional MRI study of non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy patients
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Gordon T. Plant, Alan J. Thompson, Olga Ciccarelli, S. J. Hickman, Laura Mancini, Maria Aguirregomozcorta, Thomas M Jenkins, and Ahmed T. Toosy
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,Photic Stimulation ,Visual Acuity ,Stimulation ,Functional Laterality ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Optic Neuropathy, Ischemic ,Multiple sclerosis ,Cranial nerves ,Human brain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,eye diseases ,Frontal Lobe ,Surgery ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Neurology (clinical) ,Visual Fields ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NA-AION) can cause disabling visual loss and traditionally, visual prognosis has been considered poor, although recent studies have demonstrated improvements in visual acuity in about 30% of patients over time. The aim of the study was to determine whether there was significant cortical reorganisation with functional MRI (fMRI) after acute NA-AION by comparing affected individuals with healthy controls. Methods 9 patients with NA-AION were studied acutely and then after 1, 2, 3 and 6 months. 23 healthy volunteers underwent scanning at least twice. At each time point, patients were assessed clinically and with fMRI. For the fMRI experiments, subjects underwent monocular visual stimulation (wearing goggles with flashing LED displays). Results When stimulating the affected eye, occipital activation was reduced in patients compared with controls. Also, within the NA-AION group, activation in the right Brodmann areas (BA) 44 and 45 was seen during the early phase of the condition. The same areas were activated within the NA-AION group several months later for fellow eye stimulation. When the NA-AION and healthy control groups were formally compared however, these areas (BA 44/45) were not significantly different. NA-AION subjects did show greater activation in visual related areas compared with controls when stimulating the fellow eye. Visual acuity was correlated with more occipital cortex activation when stimulating the affected eye. Conclusions There is cortical re-organisation of the fMRI response in extra-visual areas, seen when both affected and fellow eyes are stimulated after NA-AION.
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- 2011
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30. Concentrations, Distribution, and Persistence of Perfluoroalkylates in Sludge-Applied Soils near Decatur, Alabama, USA
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E. Laurence Libelo, Hoon Yoo, John W. Washington, J. Jackson Ellington, and Thomas M. Jenkins
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Alkylation ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Soil ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Fluorotelomer ,Fluorocarbons ,Persistent organic pollutant ,Sewage ,Environmental engineering ,Lauric Acids ,Soil chemistry ,Agriculture ,General Chemistry ,Soil contamination ,Models, Chemical ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Alabama ,Perfluorooctanoic acid ,Caprylates ,Decanoic Acids ,Sludge ,Environmental Monitoring ,Half-Life ,Waste disposal - Abstract
Sludges generated at a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Decatur, Alabama have been applied to agricultural fields for more than a decade. Waste-stream sources to this WWTP during this period included industries that work with fluorotelomer compounds, and sludges from this facility have been found to be elevated in perfluoroalkylates (PFAs). With this knowledge, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency collected soil samples from sludge-applied fields as well as nearby "background" fields for PFA analysis. Samples from the sludge-applied fields had PFAs at much higher concentrations than in the background fields; generally the highest concentrations were perfluorodecanoic acid (≤ 990 ng/g), perfluorododecanoic acid (≤ 530 ng/g), perfluorooctanoic acid (≤ 320 ng/g), and perfluorooctane sulfonate (≤ 410 ng/g). Contrasts in PFA concentration between surface and deeper soil samples tended to be more pronounced in long-chain congeners than shorter chains, perhaps reflecting relatively lower environmental mobilities for longer chains. Several PFAs were correlated with secondary fluorotelomer alcohols (sec-FTOHs) suggesting that PFAs are being formed by degradation of sec-FTOHs. Calculated PFA disappearance half-lives for C6 through C11 alkylates ranged from about 1 to 3 years and increase with increasing chain-length, again perhaps reflecting lower mobility of the longer-chained compounds.
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- 2010
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31. Concentrations, Distribution, and Persistence of Fluorotelomer Alcohols in Sludge-Applied Soils near Decatur, Alabama, USA
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John W. Washington, Michael P Neill, Hoon Yoo, J. Jackson Ellington, and Thomas M. Jenkins
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Fluorocarbons ,Fluorotelomer alcohol ,Persistent organic pollutant ,Sewage ,Environmental engineering ,General Chemistry ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Soil contamination ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Alcohols ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Alabama ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Perfluorooctanoic acid ,Fluorotelomer ,Sludge ,Environmental Monitoring ,Waste disposal - Abstract
Soil samples were collected for fluorotelomer alcohol (FTOH) analyses from six fields to which sludge had been applied and one "background" field that had not received sludge. Ten analytes in soil extracts were quantified using GC/MS. Sludge-applied fields had surface soil FTOH concentrations exceeding levels found in the background field. For 8:2nFTOH, which can degrade to perfluorooctanoic acid, impacted surface-soils ranged from 5 to 73 ng/g dry weight, clearly exceeding the background field in which 8:2nFTOH was not detected. The highest [FTOH] generally was 10:2nFTOH, which had concentrations of
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- 2010
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32. Response to Finsterer: CPT-II deficiency needs to be detected in army personnel
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Meena Balasubramanian, G.T. Gillett, M. Hill, Thomas M Jenkins, R.J. Kirk, I.M. Nesbitt, and S.E. Olpin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,business ,Letter to the Editor ,Molecular Biology ,CPT II Deficiency - Published
- 2018
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33. Combining tractography and cortical measures to test system-specific hypotheses in multiple sclerosis
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Olga Ciccarelli, Nikos Gorgoraptis, David Miller, Claudia A. M. Wheeler-Kingshott, Thomas M Jenkins, Daniel R. Altmann, and Alan J. Thompson
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Adult ,Male ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Pyramidal Tracts ,atrophy ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Humans ,Pyramidal tracts ,Motor Cortex ,relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis ,Precentral gyrus ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Hemiparesis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Corticospinal tract ,Anisotropy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Primary motor cortex ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Research Paper ,MRI ,Tractography ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
The objective was to test three motor system-specific hypotheses in multiple sclerosis patients: (i) corticospinal tract and primary motor cortex imaging measures differ between multiple sclerosis patients and controls; (ii) in patients, these measures correlate with disability; (iii) in patients, corticospinal tract measures correlate with measures of the ipsilateral primary motor cortex. Eleven multiple sclerosis patients with a history of hemiparesis attributable to a lesion within the contralateral corticospinal tract, and 12 controls were studied. We used two advanced imaging techniques: (i) diffusion-based probabilistic tractography, to obtain connectivity and fractional anisotropy of the corticospinal tract; and (ii) FreeSurfer, to measure volume, thickness, surface area, and curvature of precentral and paracentral cortices. Differences in these measures between patients and controls, and relationships between each other and to clinical scores, were investigated. Patients showed lower corticospinal tract fractional anisotropy and smaller volume and surface area of the precentral gyrus than controls. In patients, corticospinal tract connectivity and paracentral cortical volume, surface area, and curvature were lower with increasing disability; lower connectivity of the affected corticospinal tract was associated with greater surface area of the ipsilateral paracentral cortex. Corticospinal tract connectivity and new measures of the primary motor cortex, such as surface area and curvature, reflect the underlying white and grey matter damage that contributes to disability. The correlation between lower connectivity of the affected corticospinal tract and greater surface area of the ipsilateral paracentral cortex suggests the possibility of cortical adaptation. Combining tractography and cortical measures is a useful approach in testing hypotheses which are specific to clinically relevant functional systems in multiple sclerosis, and can be applied to other neurological diseases.
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- 2010
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34. Neuroplasticity predicts outcome of optic neuritis independent of tissue damage
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Claudia A. M. Wheeler-Kingshott, Katherine A. Miszkiel, Ahmed T. Toosy, Laura Mancini, Gordon T. Plant, Olga Ciccarelli, Alan J. Thompson, Andrew P. D. Henderson, Constantinos Kallis, David Miller, and Thomas M Jenkins
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Optic Neuritis ,Time Factors ,genetic structures ,Vision Disorders ,Visual system ,Young Adult ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Cranial nerve disease ,Visual Pathways ,Optic neuritis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Neuronal Plasticity ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Multiple sclerosis ,Brain ,Optic Nerve ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Axons ,eye diseases ,Neurology ,Optic nerve ,Evoked Potentials, Visual ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Demyelinating Diseases ,Follow-Up Studies ,Tractography - Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether lateral occipital complex (LOC) activation with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) predicts visual outcome after clinically isolated optic neuritis (ON). To investigate the reasons behind good recovery following ON, despite residual optic nerve demyelination and neuroaxonal damage.Methods: Patients with acute ON and healthy volunteers were studied longitudinally over 12 months. Structural MRI, visual evoked potentials (VEPs), and optical coherence tomography (OCT) were used to quantify acute inflammation, demyelination, conduction block, and later to estimate remyelination and neuroaxonal loss over the entire visual pathway. The role of neuroplasticity was investigated using fMRI. Multivariable linear regression analysis was used to study associations between vision, structure, and function.Results: Greater baseline fMRI responses in the LOCs were associated with better visual outcome at 12 months. This was evident on stimulation of either eye (p = 0.007 affected; p = 0.020 fellow eye), and was independent of measures of demyelination and neuroaxonal loss. A negative fMRI response in the LOCs at baseline was associated with a relatively worse visual outcome. No acute electrophysiological or structural measures, in the anterior or posterior visual pathways, were associated with visual outcome.Interpretation: Early neuroplasticity in higher visual areas appears to be an important determinant of recovery from ON, independent of tissue damage in the anterior or posterior visual pathway, including neuroaxonal loss (as measured by MRI, VEP, and OCT) and demyelination (as measured by VEP). ANN NEUROL 2010;67:99-113
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- 2010
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35. Analysis of perfluorinated chemicals in sludge: Method development and initial results
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John W. Washington, E. Laurence Libelo, Thomas M. Jenkins, and Hoon Yoo
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Fluorocarbons ,Potassium hydroxide ,Chromatography ,Sewage ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,General Medicine ,Potassium persulfate ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Certified reference materials ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Sodium hydroxide ,Solid phase extraction ,Sludge ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
A fast, rigorous method was developed to maximize the extraction efficacy for ten perfluorocarboxylic acids and perfluorooctanesulfonate from waste-water-treatment sludge and to quantitate using liquid chromatography, tandem-mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). First, organic solvents were tested for extraction efficiency, including acetonitrile (ACN), methanol (MeOH), isopropanol (IPA), tetrahydrofuran (THF), and 50/50 ACN/MeOH (v/v). Among the extractants tested, 50/50 ACN/MeOH yielded the best results for our combined criteria of extraction efficacy and solvent-handling convenience. Second, chemical pretreatment prior to solvent extraction was tested with sodium hydroxide (NaOH), potassium hydroxide (KOH), hydrochloric acid (HCl), and potassium persulfate (K(2)S(2)O(8)). Pretreatment with NaOH and HCl effectively recovered additional PFCs from the sludge, but KOH and K(2)S(2)O(8) digestion were less effective than no pretreatment. Third, cleanup methods were investigated with solid-phase extraction using HLB (hydrophilic-lipophilic balanced) and WAX (weak-anion exchange) stationary phases, and with ion-pairing. The HLB stationary phase yielded a slight edge over the other two cleanup strategies in terms of recoverable PFCs and chromatographic separation. Finally, the appropriateness of isotopically labeled PFCs for quantitating unlabeled PFCs using isotopic dilution in complex sludge extracts was evaluated by comparison to results obtained with the standard-addition method. A National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) domestic sludge (CRM 2781) was analyzed using our finalized method and compared with previously reported results.
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- 2009
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36. Contiguous-slice zonally oblique multislice (CO-ZOOM) diffusion tensor imaging: Examples of in vivo spinal cord and optic nerve applications
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Claudia A. M. Wheeler-Kingshott, Olga Ciccarelli, David Miller, Thomas M Jenkins, and Nicholas G. Dowell
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Adult ,Physics ,Echo-Planar Imaging ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Partial volume ,Optic Nerve ,Field of view ,Signal ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Spinal Cord ,Aliasing ,Fractional anisotropy ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Anisotropy ,Humans ,Female ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Multislice ,Radio frequency ,Artifacts ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Purpose: To describe and demonstrate a new technique that allows diffusion tensor imaging of small structures such as the spinal cord (SC) and optic nerve (ON) with contiguous slices and reduced image distortions using a narrow field of view (FOV). Materials and Methods: Images were acquired with a modified single-shot echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence that contains a refocusing radio frequency (RF) pulse in the presence of the phase-encoding (rather than slice-select) gradient. As a result, only a narrow volume may be both excited and refocused. removing the problem of signal aliasing for narrow FOVs. Two variants of this technique were developed: cardiac gating is included in the study of the SC to reduce pulsation artifacts, whereas inversion-recovery (IR) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) suppression is utilized in the study of the ON to eliminate partial volume effects. The technique was evaluated with phantoms, and mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) measurements were made in the SC and ON of two healthy volunteers. Results: The technique provides contiguous-slice, reduced-FOV images that do not suffer from aliasing and have reduced magnetic susceptibility artifacts. MD and FA values determined here lie within the ranges quoted in the literature. Conclusion: Contiguous-slice zonally orthogonal multislice (CO-ZOOM-EPI is a new technique for diffusion-weighted imaging of small structures such as the ON and SC with high resolution and reduced distortions due to susceptibility variations. This technique is able to acquire contiguous slices that may allow further nerve-tracking analyses.
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- 2009
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37. Analysis of perfluorinated carboxylic acids in soils: Detection and quantitation issues at low concentrations
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J. Jackson Ellington, John J. Evans, Thomas M. Jenkins, and John W. Washington
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Detection limit ,Fluorocarbons ,Analyte ,Chromatography ,Organic Chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Carboxylic Acids ,Analytical chemistry ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Perfluorononanoic acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Standard addition ,Soil Pollutants ,Perfluorooctanoic acid ,Caprylates ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
Methods were developed for the extraction from soil, identification, confirmation and quantitation by LC/MS/MS of trace levels of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA) and perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA). Whereas PFOA, PFNA and PFDA all can be quantitated using the method of standard additions, PFOA also can be quantitated less laboriously using 13C4-PFOA as a matrix internal standard. The impact of extract matrices on signal varied between soils and temporally during analytical runs rendering 13C4-PFOA unsuitable as a matrix internal standard for quantitating perfluorinated carboxylic acids (PFCAs) other than PFOA, which co-elutes with 13C4-PFOA. In fact, for soil extracts, quantitation of PFCAs based on external calibrations proved about as accurate as use of matrix internal standards for target analytes that do not co-elute with the matrix internal standard. Also, 13C4-PFOA should be used carefully as a matrix internal standard for trace levels of PFOA because some 13C4-PFOA standards contain trace impurities of unlabelled PFOA. When the presence of PFCAs in soil extracts is being determined by LC/MS/MS, detection limits are best defined by statistical methods that quantify the significance of contrast between analytical signal and background noise using multiple analyses. Further, when developing a calibration of low concentrations using weighted regression, the central tendency of the calibration line is best fitted using graphical depictions of error. As the MDL for the transition-product quantitation ion is approached in LC/MS/MS, relatively weak signals of transition-product confirmation ions can be used as a rejection criterion by looking for anomalously high values of the ratio of the confirmation to the quantitation ion.
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- 2007
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38. A wolf in sheep's clothing
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Eleanor Lorenz, Marios Hadjivassiliou, Ganesh Rao, Robert A. Lewis, Robert K. Stevens, Thomas M Jenkins, Daniel Blackburn, and Stephen B. Wharton
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,Palpation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Eosinophilia ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myopathy ,Aged ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Neutrophilia ,Surgery ,Polyarteritis Nodosa ,Erythrocyte sedimentation rate ,Anesthesia ,Joint pain ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Liver function ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
A 77-year-old woman gave a 10-day history of pain and weakness in her arms and legs, worsening over 12 h. Her muscle aching in the neck, shoulders, back and limbs progressed over the next 48 h; her limbs weakened, and she became unable to walk. She reported intermittent abdominal pain, and had recently lost 12 kg of weight. She had no joint pain or swelling, headache, fever, breathlessness, visual disturbance, bladder or bowel dysfunction. She had travelled to Turkey 3 months before, but was well while away with no insect bites. She had a history of biopsy-proven nodular prurigo and a vestibular schwannoma under observation since 2013. Before admission, she had been very active and took no medications. She was a carer for her husband, and drove her grandchildren to school. There was no relevant family history. On examination, she was in severe pain. The proximal limb muscles were tender to palpation. Tone was normal. There was symmetrical proximal weakness in all four limbs with a give-way component. Reflexes were present, and plantars were flexor. Coordination and sensation were normal. She had a soft systolic murmur, but respiratory and abdominal examinations were normal. She had several skin lesions on her arm, previously diagnosed as nodular prurigo. The joints were normal. Investigations included an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 35 mm/1st h (
- Published
- 2015
39. Longitudinal evidence for anterograde trans-synaptic degeneration after optic neuritis
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Olga Ciccarelli, Olivia Goodkin, Ahmed T. Toosy, Claudia A. M. Wheeler-Kingshott, Katherine A. Miszkiel, C Fini, Daniel R. Altmann, Carmen Tur, Alessia Mirigliani, Alan J. Thompson, and Thomas M Jenkins
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Optic Neuritis ,genetic structures ,Neuritis ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Fractional anisotropy ,Retrograde Degeneration ,medicine ,Demyelinating disease ,Humans ,Optic neuritis ,Visual Pathways ,Longitudinal Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Anatomy ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Synapses ,Optic nerve ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,sense organs ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Optic radiation ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
In multiple sclerosis, microstructural damage of normal-appearing brain tissue is an important feature of its pathology. Understanding these mechanisms is vital to help develop neuroprotective strategies. The visual pathway is a key model to study mechanisms of damage and recovery in demyelination. Anterograde trans-synaptic degeneration across the lateral geniculate nuclei has been suggested as a mechanism of tissue damage to explain optic radiation abnormalities seen in association with demyelinating disease and optic neuritis, although evidence for this has relied solely on cross-sectional studies. We therefore aimed to assess: (i) longitudinal changes in the diffusion properties of optic radiations after optic neuritis suggesting trans-synaptic degeneration; (ii) the predictive value of early optic nerve magnetic resonance imaging measures for late optic radiations changes; and (iii) the impact on visual outcome of both optic nerve and brain post-optic neuritis changes. Twenty-eight consecutive patients with acute optic neuritis and eight healthy controls were assessed visually (logMAR, colour vision, and Sloan 1.25%, 5%, 25%) and by magnetic resonance imaging, at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months. Magnetic resonance imaging sequences performed (and metrics obtained) were: (i) optic nerve fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (optic nerve cross-sectional area); (ii) optic nerve proton density fast spin-echo (optic nerve proton density-lesion length); (iii) optic nerve post-gadolinium T1-weighted (Gd-enhanced lesion length); and (iv) brain diffusion-weighted imaging (to derive optic radiation fractional anisotropy, radial diffusivity, and axial diffusivity). Mixed-effects and multivariate regression models were performed, adjusting for age, gender, and optic radiation lesion load. These identified changes over time and associations between early optic nerve measures and 1-year global optic radiation/clinical measures. The fractional anisotropy in patients' optic radiations decreased (P = 0.018) and radial diffusivity increased (P = 0.002) over 1 year following optic neuritis, whereas optic radiation measures were unchanged in controls. Also, smaller cross-sectional areas of affected optic nerves at 3 months post-optic neuritis predicted lower fractional anisotropy and higher radial diffusivity at 1 year (P = 0.007) in the optic radiations, whereas none of the inflammatory measures of the optic nerve predicted changes in optic radiations. Finally, greater Gd-enhanced lesion length at baseline and greater optic nerve proton density-lesion length at 1 year were associated with worse visual function at 1 year (P = 0.034 for both). Neither the cross-sectional area of the affected optic nerve after optic neuritis nor the damage in optic radiations was associated with 1-year visual outcome. Our longitudinal study shows that, after optic neuritis, there is progressive damage to the optic radiations, greater in patients with early residual optic nerve atrophy, even after adjusting for optic radiation lesions. These findings provide evidence for trans-synaptic degeneration.
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- 2015
40. Polyfluorinated substances in abiotic standard reference materials
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Courtney D. Rich, Jeff Small, Jessica L. Reiner, Cleston C. Lange, Derek C. G. Muir, John W. Washington, Andrea C. Blaine, Hoon Yoo, Christiaan J. A. F. Kwadijk, Christopher P. Higgins, Mark J. Strynar, William K. Reagen, Thomas M. Jenkins, Jennifer M. Keller, and Carin A. Huset
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Aquatic Ecology and Water Quality Management ,Geologic Sediments ,Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,alkyl acid concentrations ,temporal trends ,Soil Pollutants ,Volume concentration ,house-dust ,perfluorooctane sulfonate ,Pollutant ,Fluorocarbons ,human plasma ,perfluorinated compounds ,Chemistry ,spatial trends ,perfluorochemicals ,Dust ,Contamination ,Aquatische Ecologie en Waterkwaliteitsbeheer ,Reference Standards ,Method development ,Vis ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Human plasma ,Environmental chemistry ,contaminants ,Environmental Pollutants ,china ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has a wide range of Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) which have values assigned for legacy organic pollutants and toxic elements. Existing SRMs serve as homogenous materials that can be used for method development, method validation, and measurement for contaminants that are now of concern. NIST and multiple groups have been measuring the mass fraction of a group of emerging contaminants, polyfluorinated substances (PFASs), in a variety of SRMs. Here we report levels determined in an interlaboratory comparison of up to 23 PFASs determined in five SRMs: sediment (SRMs 1941b and 1944), house dust (SRM 2585), soil (SRM 2586), and sludge (SRM 2781). Measurements presented show an array of PFASs, with perfluorooctane sulfonate being the most frequently detected. SRMs 1941b, 1944, and 2586 had relatively low concentrations of most PFASs measured while 23 PFASs were at detectable levels in SRM 2585 and most of the PFASs measured were at detectable levels in SRM 2781. The measurements made in this study were used to add values to the Certificates of Analysis for SRMs 2585 and 2781.
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- 2015
41. The role of cranial and thoracic electromyography within diagnostic criteria for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Thomas M, Jenkins, James J P, Alix, Rosalind H, Kandler, Pamela J, Shaw, and Christopher J, McDermott
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Neurologic Examination ,Skull Base ,Electromyography ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Lumbosacral Region ,Middle Aged ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Young Adult ,England ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Probability ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The contribution of cranial and thoracic region electromyography (EMG) to diagnostic criteria for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has not been evaluated.Clinical and EMG data from each craniospinal region were retrospectively assessed in 470 patients; 214 had ALS. Changes to diagnostic classification in Awaji-Shima and revised El Escorial criteria after withdrawal of cranial/thoracic EMG data were ascertained.Sensitivity for lower motor neuron involvement in ALS was highest in the cervical/lumbar regions; specificity was highest in cranial/thoracic regions. Cranial EMG contributed to definite/probable Awaji-Shima categorization in 1.4% of patients. Thoracic EMG made no contribution. For revised El Escorial criteria, cranial and thoracic data reclassified 1% and 5% of patients, respectively.Cranial EMG data make small contributions to both criteria, whereas thoracic data contribute only to the revised El Escorial criteria. However, cranial and thoracic region abnormalities are specific in ALS. Consideration should be given to allowing greater diagnostic contribution from thoracic EMG. Muscle Nerve 54: 378-385, 2016.
- Published
- 2015
42. Spinal neuropathic osteoarthropathy (Charcot) disease resulting in a traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage
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Permjit Singh Rangi, Catherine Ellis, Thomas M Jenkins, and Steve Connor
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Charcot Disease ,Traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage ,Spinal osteoarthropathy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Subarachnoid haemorrhage ,Radiology ,Headaches ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Thoracic deformity - Abstract
A 36-year-old man presented with progressive thoracic deformity, a short history of headaches and visual impairment. Investigations revealed a unique case of spinal subarachnoid haemorrhage (sSAH) in a patient with spinal neuropathic osteoarthropathy. We discuss the imaging findings, major radiological differential diagnoses and discuss the possible mechanisms for sSAH.
- Published
- 2006
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43. A Dysphasic Diabetic with Confusion and Fever
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Thomas M Jenkins, Naomi A. Sibtain, and Tibor Hortobágyi
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Type 1 diabetes ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aspirin ,Ataxia ,Diabetic ketoacidosis ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Dysarthria ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Medicine ,Brain magnetic resonance imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Confusion ,medicine.drug - Abstract
THE STORY A man in his forties was admitted with confusion, headache and diabetic ketoacidosis. He had a long history of type 1 diabetes mellitus and hypertension. His neighbours had found him pacing up and down, and not speaking. They said he had not been himself for the last few weeks. He had been complaining of headache. Over the previous 36 h he had developed word-finding difficulties. He was taking porcine insulin, aspirin and antihypertensive drugs. He did not smoke but he drank occasional alcohol. Seven years previously he had had an episode of ataxia, dysarthria and polyarthropathy for 4 months. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was normal but cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination showed a raised protein (155 mg/ 100 mL) and 86/cumm white cells (100% lymphocytes). He recovered without treatment. EXAMINATION AND INVESTIGATIONS His temperature was 39.2° C. He had a mixed expressive and receptive dysphasia, mild right facial
- Published
- 2005
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44. Evaluating Recent Innovations in Bait Fishing Tackle and Technique for Catch and Release of Rainbow Trout
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Thomas M. Jenkins
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Ecology ,Hook ,business.industry ,Fishing ,Weight change ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Hatchery ,Fishery ,Aquaculture ,%22">Fish ,Rainbow trout ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Catch and release - Abstract
Since some recent innovations in bait tackle and technique appear to reduce or eliminate the immediate mortality of released rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, this study tested the hypothesis that they are as effective for hook and release as artificial flies. Hatchery rainbow trout from aquaculture pens were caught using circle hooks, the new Shelton self-releasing hooks, standard J and treble hooks, and artificial flies (all barbless), noting hook location, 26-d weight change, and survival. Except for those caught on artificial flies, the fish were encouraged to swallow the hook, which was baited with a pasty attractant popular in eastern California (Berkley Powerbait). Most Shelton, J, and treble hooks (78, 65, and 63%, respectively) lodged in the esophagus, whereas all artificial flies and at least 70% of the circle hooks lodged in the mouth or jaw. Flies, circle hooks, and Shelton hooks were extracted from the fish, and the lines were cut on the J and treble hooks. The fish caught with flie...
- Published
- 2003
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45. Longitudinal Diffusion-Weighted Whole-Body MRI Demonstrates Dynamic Changes in Muscle Integrity in Motor Neuron Disease
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Jjp Alix, Thomas M Jenkins, Pamela J. Shaw, Christopher J McDermott, Nigel Hoggard, DG Rao, Iain D. Wilkinson, Julia Bigley, and IA Pierry
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Longitudinal diffusion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Whole body mri ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Motor neuron ,business ,Neuroscience - Published
- 2018
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46. PO215 Outcomes of neurology admissions to critical care
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Andrew Davidson, Ladan Akbarian-Tefaghi, and Thomas M Jenkins
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Poor prognosis ,Neurology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mean age ,Regression modelling ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,law ,Emergency medicine ,Medicine ,Intubation ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Meningitis ,Metabolic Problems - Abstract
Aims To assess neurological admissions to the critical care unit in our centre according to published prioritisation criteria and evaluate predictors of outcome. Methods We reviewed 39 patient records between November 2012-April 2015, and ranked from 1 to 4 according to prioritisation criteria. We evaluated predictors of outcome, including length of stay, using regression modelling. Results 18 females and 21 males were assessed with a mean age of 41 years (range 23–83). Twelve patients had strokes, 6 status epilepticus, 16 neuromuscular disorders, 1 post-arrest hypoxia-ischaemia, 3 metabolic problems and 1 meningitis. Six patients had serious co-morbidities. Mean time from ward to critical care was 5 days (range 0–39), time on critical care was 10 days (0–45), and time from critical care to home 23 days (2–84). Sixty-six percent received non-invasive ventilation, 51% intubation and ventilation, 27% tracheostomy and 8% inotropes. 23 patients were classed priority 1, 9 priority 2 and 7 priority 3. Seventy-four percent survived to discharge to the ward and of these 93% went home. Of survivors, 62% had a Rankin score 1–2. All the priority 3 patients died. There was no association between length of stay and outcome. Conclusions Neurological patients in critical care generally have good outcomes, even with prolonged stays. Meeting priority 3 criteria was associated with poor prognosis.
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- 2017
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47. 1736 Diagnostic classification of lower motor neuron disorders
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Jennifer Hosty, Amogh Patil, Dame Pamela Shaw, and Thomas M Jenkins
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,business.industry ,Disease ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,Lower motor neuron ,Fasciculation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Myelopathy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Upper limb ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business - Abstract
Background There is a lack of clear classification systems for non-progressive, benign lower motor neuron syndromes of the upper limb, resulting in misdiagnosis of motor neuron disease (MND) at first presentation. Appropriate investigation and identification of distinguishing features is required to reduce this risk. Methods A retrospective analysis of 91 patients with an atypical presentation of a pure lower motor neuron weakness and/or wasting of the upper limb was performed. These were divided into final diagnostic categories and disease onset, progression and investigations were compared to identify features more indicative of benign disease. In addition, we assessed whether flexion-extension MRI was performed appropriately to investigate for Hirayama disease, a benign cervical flexion myelopathy Discussion 24.2% of the cohort had benign disease, 45.1% developed MND. Features more predictive of a diagnosis of MND at initial presentation were bilateral arm involvement (OR 15.6, p=0.002), upper limb fasciculations (OR 29.07, p
- Published
- 2017
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48. Ultrasonographic measurement of the abdominal circumference in fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia
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G. Marc Jackson, Martha E. Rode, George A. Macones, and Thomas M. Jenkins
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Hernia, Diaphragmatic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fetus ,Anthropometry ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Gestational age ,Congenital diaphragmatic hernia ,medicine.disease ,Ultrasonography, Prenatal ,Surgery ,Perimeter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reference Values ,Abdomen ,Respiratory muscle ,medicine ,Humans ,Gestation ,Hernia ,Radiology ,Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital ,business - Abstract
Objective: To determine whether ultrasonographic measurements of the abdominal circumference are smaller in fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia and whether this is reflected as an underestimation of the estimated fetal weight. Study Design: A retrospective review of 225 abdominal circumference measurements made between 24 and 41 weeks of gestation in 85 fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia was performed. The individual and mean abdominal circumference value at each week of gestation versus gestational age was plotted and compared with normative data. Comparisons between abdominal circumference measurements and hernia variables were made with the χ 2 test. The Pearson correlation was used to examine the accuracy of ultrasonographic determination of the estimated fetal weight. Results: The mean measurements of abdominal circumference were not found to differ significantly from normative data until term, although fetuses with liver herniation were less likely to have measurements more than 2 standard deviations below the mean. Calculation of estimated fetal weight was similar in accuracy to that in normal fetuses. Conclusion: Small abdominal circumference measurements should not be expected in fetuses with congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Abnormalities of the abdominal circumference or an abdominal circumference–dependent estimated fetal weight should not be attributed to the anatomic defect without considering other etiologies. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 2002;186:321-4.)
- Published
- 2002
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49. Characterizing fluorotelomer and polyfluoroalkyl substances in new and aged fluorotelomer-based polymers for degradation studies with GC/MS and LC/MS/MS
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Thomas M. Jenkins, Jonathan E. Naile, David G. Lynch, and John W. Washington
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Hot Temperature ,Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated ,computer.internet_protocol ,Polymers ,General Chemistry ,Polymer ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,FTPS ,Solutions ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Soil ,Sonication ,Monomer ,chemistry ,Lc ms ms ,Environmental Chemistry ,Degradation (geology) ,Organic chemistry ,Perfluorooctanoic acid ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Fluorotelomer ,computer ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Fluorotelomer-based polymers (FTPs), the dominant product of the fluorotelomer industry, are antistaining and antiwetting agents that permeate the products and surfaces of modern society. However, the degree to which these materials expose humans and the environment to fluorotelomer and perfluorinated compounds, including recalcitrant and toxic compounds such as perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), is ill-defined. The design intent of FTPs, to minimize interaction with other substances, including solvents, heretofore has stymied efforts to develop robust methods to characterize the content of monomers and associated compounds of new commercial FTPs, as well as commercial FTPs that have been aged in environmental media for degradation testing. Here we show that FTPs can be exhausted of these compounds and quantitated by (i) drying the FTP on a suitable substrate at elevated temperature to achieve low, constant monomer concentrations; (ii) serial extraction with MTBE for fluorotelomer-monomer analysis by GC/MS in PCI mode; followed by (iii) serial extraction with 90/10 ACN/H2O for polyfluorocompound analysis by LC/MS/MS in negative ESI mode. This approach yields exhaustive, internally consistent accounting of monomers and associated compounds for FTPs, either alone or in a soil matrix (representing an environmental medium), for both new and simulated-aged FTPs to allow degradation testing, and for fluorinated compounds at least as long as C12.
- Published
- 2014
50. Transcervical Foley Catheter for Preinduction Cervical Ripening in an Outpatient Versus Inpatient Setting
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Anthony C. Sciscione, Michael Muench, Marjorie Pollock, Thomas M. Jenkins, Janice Tildon-Burton, and Garrett H. C. Colmorgen
- Subjects
Obstetrics and Gynecology - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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