19 results on '"Tao BK"'
Search Results
2. Utility of ChatGPT for Automated Creation of Patient Education Handouts: An Application in Neuro-Ophthalmology: Response.
- Author
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Tao BK, Handzic A, Hua NJ, Vosoughi AR, Margolin EA, and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Ophthalmology education, Neurology education, Patient Education as Topic methods
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Sustained Remission From Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension After Shunt Removal.
- Author
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Tao BK and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Device Removal methods, Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt adverse effects, Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts, Adult, Intracranial Pressure physiology, Pseudotumor Cerebri surgery, Pseudotumor Cerebri diagnosis
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2024
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4. Gender, Race, and Ethnicity of US Academic Ophthalmology Faculty and Department Chairs From 1966 to 2021.
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Tao BK, Ding J, Ing EB, Kohly RP, Langan R, Nathoo N, Rocha G, Sogbesan E, Teja S, Siddiqi J, and Khosa F
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- Humans, Female, United States, Male, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Academic Medical Centers, Cultural Diversity, Sex Distribution, Physicians, Women statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Faculty, Medical statistics & numerical data, Ophthalmology, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Leadership
- Abstract
Importance: Workforce diversity is integral to optimal function within health care teams., Objective: To analyze gender, race, and ethnicity trends in rank and leadership among US full-time academic ophthalmology faculty and department chairs between 1966 and 2021., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study included full-time US academic ophthalmology faculty and department chairs registered in the Association of American Medical Colleges. Study data were analyzed in September 2023., Exposure: Identifying with an underrepresented in medicine (URiM) group., Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome measures were demographic (ie, gender, race, and ethnicity) changes among academic faculty and department chairs, assessed in 5-year intervals. The term minoritized race refers to any racial group other than White race., Results: There were 221 academic physicians in 1966 (27 women [12.2%]; 38 minoritized race [17.2%]; 8 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish [3.6%]) and 3158 academic faculty by 2021 (1320 women [41.8%]; 1298 minoritized race [41.1%]; 147 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish ethnicity [4.7%]). The annual proportional change for women, minoritized race, and Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish ethnicity was +0.63% per year (95% CI, 0.53%-0.72%), +0.54% per year (95% CI, 0.72%-0.36%), and -0.01% (95% CI, -0.03% to 0%), respectively. Women were underrepresented across academic ranks and increasingly so at higher echelons, ranging from nonprofessor/instructor roles (period-averaged mean difference [PA-MD], 19.88%; 95% CI, 16.82%-22.94%) to professor (PA-MD, 81.33%; 95% CI, 78.80%-83.86%). The corpus of department chairs grew from 77 in 1977 (0 women; 7 minoritized race [9.09%]; 2 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish ethnicity [2.60%]) to 104 by 2021 (17 women [16.35%]; 22 minoritized race [21.15%]; 4 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish ethnicity [3.85%]). For department chairs, the annual rate of change in the proportion of women, minoritized race, and Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish ethnicity was +0.32% per year (95% CI, 0.20%-0.44%), +0.34% per year (95% CI, 0.19%-0.49%), and +0.05% per year (95% CI, 0.02%-0.08%), respectively. In both faculty and department chairs, the proportion of URiM groups (American Indian or Alaska Native, Black or African American, Hispanic, and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander) grew the least. Intersectionality analysis suggested that men and non-URiM status were associated with greater representation across ophthalmology faculty and department chairs. However, among ophthalmology faculty, URiM women and men did not significantly differ across strata of academic ranks, whereas for department chairs, no difference was observed in representation between URiM men and non-URiM women., Conclusion & Relevance: Results of this cohort study revealed that since 1966, workforce diversity progressed slowly and was limited to lower academic ranks and leadership positions. Intersectionality of URiM status and gender persisted in representation trends. These findings suggest further advocacy and intervention are needed to increase workforce diversity.
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- 2024
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5. Herpes zoster in neuro-ophthalmology: a practical approach.
- Author
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Tao BK, Soor D, and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Eye Infections, Viral diagnosis, Eye Infections, Viral virology, Herpes Zoster diagnosis, Risk Factors, Neurology, Ophthalmology, Cranial Nerve Diseases virology, Cranial Nerve Diseases diagnosis, Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus diagnosis, Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus drug therapy, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Herpesvirus 3, Human
- Abstract
Herpes Zoster (HZ) or shingles is the reactivation of the Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV), usually along a single sensory nerve, but can affect both sensory and motor cranial nerves. Major risk factors for HZ include immunosuppressed status and age older than 60 years. In the United States, the lifetime risk of HZ is approximately 30%. Worldwide, the median incidence of HZ is 4-4.5 per 1000 person-years across the Americas, Eurasia, and Australia. HZ ophthalmicus, occurring in 10-20% of patients, is an ophthalmic emergency characterized by VZV reactivation along the V
1 branch of the trigeminal nerve. Approximately half of this patient subgroup will go on to develop ocular manifestations, requiring prompt diagnosis and management. While anterior segment complications are more common, neuro-ophthalmic manifestations are rarer and can also occur outside the context of overt HZ ophthalmicus. Neuro-ophthalmic manifestations include optic neuropathy, acute retinal necrosis or progressive outer retinal necrosis, cranial neuropathy (isolated or multiple), orbitopathy, and CNS manifestations. Although typically a clinical diagnosis, diagnosis may be aided by neuroimaging and laboratory (e.g., PCR and serology) studies. Early antiviral therapy is indicated as soon as a presumptive diagnosis of VZV is made and the role of corticosteroids remains debated. Generally, there is wide variation of prognosis with neuro-ophthalmic involvement. Vaccine-mediated prevention is recommended. In this review, we summarize neuro-ophthalmic manifestations of VZV., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Royal College of Ophthalmologists.)- Published
- 2024
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6. Disease burden descriptions in trial protocols.
- Author
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Tao BK, Xie JS, Kohly RP, and Margolin E
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- Humans, Clinical Trial Protocols as Topic, Clinical Trials as Topic, Research Design, Cost of Illness
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- 2024
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7. ChatGPT-3.5 and Bing Chat in ophthalmology: an updated evaluation of performance, readability, and informative sources.
- Author
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Tao BK, Hua N, Milkovich J, and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Internet, Reading, Ophthalmology, Comprehension, Educational Measurement methods
- Abstract
Background/objectives: Experimental investigation. Bing Chat (Microsoft) integration with ChatGPT-4 (OpenAI) integration has conferred the capability of accessing online data past 2021. We investigate its performance against ChatGPT-3.5 on a multiple-choice question ophthalmology exam., Subjects/methods: In August 2023, ChatGPT-3.5 and Bing Chat were evaluated against 913 questions derived from the Academy's Basic and Clinical Science Collection collection. For each response, the sub-topic, performance, Simple Measure of Gobbledygook readability score (measuring years of required education to understand a given passage), and cited resources were collected. The primary outcomes were the comparative scores between models, and qualitatively, the resources referenced by Bing Chat. Secondary outcomes included performance stratified by response readability, question type (explicit or situational), and BCSC sub-topic., Results: Across 913 questions, ChatGPT-3.5 scored 59.69% [95% CI 56.45,62.94] while Bing Chat scored 73.60% [95% CI 70.69,76.52]. Both models performed significantly better in explicit than clinical reasoning questions. Both models performed best on general medicine questions than ophthalmology subsections. Bing Chat referenced 927 online entities and provided at-least one citation to 836 of the 913 questions. The use of more reliable (peer-reviewed) sources was associated with higher likelihood of correct response. The most-cited resources were eyewiki.aao.org, aao.org, wikipedia.org, and ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Bing Chat showed significantly better readability than ChatGPT-3.5, averaging a reading level of grade 11.4 [95% CI 7.14, 15.7] versus 12.4 [95% CI 8.77, 16.1], respectively (p-value < 0.0001, ρ = 0.25)., Conclusions: The online access, improved readability, and citation feature of Bing Chat confers additional utility for ophthalmology learners. We recommend critical appraisal of cited sources during response interpretation., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Royal College of Ophthalmologists.)
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- 2024
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8. Gender inclusivity of ophthalmology journal submission guidelines and associated research metrics.
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Tao BK, Xie JS, Leong R, Xia M, Nguyen AX, Ling J, Nathoo N, Ing EB, Kohly RP, and Khosa F
- Abstract
Purpose: This cross-sectional study evaluated the prevalence of inclusive author submission guidelines across ophthalmology journals., Methods: Journals were identified from the 2021 Journal Citations Report (Clarivate Analytics). Independent reviewers rated each author submission guideline as "inclusive" for satisfying at-least one of six criteria: i) included examples of gender inclusive language; ii) recommended the use of gender-inclusive language; iii) distinguished between sex and gender; iv) provided educational resources on gender-inclusive language; v) provided a policy permitting name changes (e.g., in case of gender and name transition); and/or vi) provided a statement of commitment to inclusivity. The primary objective was to investigate the proportion of journals with "gender-inclusive" author submission guidelines and the elements of the gender-inclusive content within these guidelines. A secondary objective was to review the association between "gender-inclusivity" in author submission guidelines with publisher, origin country, and journal/source/influence metrics (Clarivate Analytics)., Results: Across 94 journals, 29.8% journals were rated as inclusive. Inclusive journals had significantly higher relative impact factor, citations, and article influence scores compared to non-inclusive journals. Of the 29.8% of inclusive journals, the three most common domains were inclusion of an inclusivity statement (71.4% of inclusive journals), distinguishing between sex and gender (67.9%), and provision of additional educational resources on gender reporting for authors (60.7%)., Conclusion: A minority of ophthalmology journals have gender-inclusive author submission guidelines. Ophthalmology journals should update their submission guidelines to advance gender equity of both authors and study participants and promote the inclusion of gender-diverse communities., Competing Interests: AuthorshipAll authors attest that they meet the current ICMJE criteria for authorship. Contribution statementConception/Design/Acquisition/Analysis/Interpretation (BT, JX, JL, AXLN), Acquisition (MX, RL), Drafting/Revision (all authors), Final Approval (all authors), Agreement of Accountability (all authors). Declaration of conflicting interestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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9. Sustained remission of pediatric choroidal neovascular membrane secondary to choroidal rupture with intravitreal aflibercept.
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Tao BK, Pereira A, and Koushan K
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Rupture, Spontaneous, Female, Angiogenesis Inhibitors administration & dosage, Child, Fundus Oculi, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A antagonists & inhibitors, Remission Induction, Intravitreal Injections, Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor administration & dosage, Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor therapeutic use, Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor antagonists & inhibitors, Choroidal Neovascularization drug therapy, Choroidal Neovascularization diagnosis, Choroidal Neovascularization etiology, Recombinant Fusion Proteins administration & dosage, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Fluorescein Angiography methods, Choroid blood supply, Visual Acuity
- Published
- 2024
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10. Corneal ulcer as the presenting sign of prolonged contact lens retention over 25 years.
- Author
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Tao BK, Hassanlou M, and Ong Tone S
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- Humans, Male, Female, Time Factors, Contact Lenses, Hydrophilic adverse effects, Contact Lenses adverse effects, Corneal Ulcer diagnosis
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- 2024
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11. Diversity in enrollment to clinical trials for cataract medicine and surgery: meta-analysis.
- Author
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Tao BK, Xie JS, Xia M, Marzban S, Vosoughi AR, Ahuja N, and Rocha G
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate sex, racial, and ethnic disparities in patient enrollment across cataract trials registered in the United States., Setting: Participants enrolled in high-quality (reduced risk of bias), U.S.-registered (on ClinicalTrials.gov ), cataract-related randomized controlled trials (RCTs). RCTs must be completed, have used double or greater masking, and have published results through the registry or a scholarly journal., Design: Cross-sectional database study., Methods: Trial (study sponsor country, study site location, trial initiation year, study phase, and study masking) and demographic data (sex, race, and ethnicity according to U.S. reporting guidelines) were collected. The Global Burden of Disease database provided sex-based cataract disease burdens. Pooled participation-to-prevalence ratios (PPRs) with 95% CIs were calculated for female sex, with values between 0.8 and 1.2 constituting sufficient study enrollment. Kruskal-Wallis tests (α = 0.05) with subsequent post hoc comparisons were used to evaluate demographic representations stratified by trial characteristics., Results: From 864 records, 100 clinical trials (N = 67 874) were identified, of which 97 (N = 67 697) reported sex demographics with a pooled female PPR of 0.89 (95% CI, 0.85-0.94). Of the 67 697 total participants, the absolute female enrollment was 19 062 (28.16%). Ethnicity and race were reported in 9 (N = 1792) and 26 trials (N = 23 181), respectively. Among trials that reported race, most were White (N = 19 574; 84.44%)., Conclusions: High-quality, U.S.-registered, cataract trials enrolled acceptable proportions of women. However, the absolute number of female and racialized participants was low. Race and ethnicity were underreported. Disparity trends predominately held across secondary variables. To promote generalizability, future trials should pursue equitable demographic enrollment., (Copyright © 2024 Published by Wolters Kluwer on behalf of ASCRS and ESCRS.)
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- 2024
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12. The case for Indigenous land acknowledgments in scholarly publishing.
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Tao BK, Bondok M, and Ing EB
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- Humans, Scholarly Communication, Publishing
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- 2024
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13. Utility of ChatGPT for Automated Creation of Patient Education Handouts: An Application in Neuro-Ophthalmology.
- Author
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Tao BK, Handzic A, Hua NJ, Vosoughi AR, Margolin EA, and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Smog, Patient Education as Topic, Fellowships and Scholarships, Ophthalmology, Neurology
- Abstract
Background: Patient education in ophthalmology poses a challenge for physicians because of time and resource limitations. ChatGPT (OpenAI, San Francisco) may assist with automating production of patient handouts on common neuro-ophthalmic diseases., Methods: We queried ChatGPT-3.5 to generate 51 patient education handouts across 17 conditions. We devised the "Quality of Generated Language Outputs for Patients" (QGLOP) tool to assess handouts on the domains of accuracy/comprehensiveness, bias, currency, and tone, each scored out of 4 for a total of 16. A fellowship-trained neuro-ophthalmologist scored each passage. Handout readability was assessed using the Simple Measure of Gobbledygook (SMOG), which estimates years of education required to understand a text., Results: The QGLOP scores for accuracy, bias, currency, and tone were found to be 2.43, 3, 3.43, and 3.02 respectively. The mean QGLOP score was 11.9 [95% CI 8.98, 14.8] out of 16 points, indicating a performance of 74.4% [95% CI 56.1%, 92.5%]. The mean SMOG across responses as 10.9 [95% CI 9.36, 12.4] years of education., Conclusions: The mean QGLOP score suggests that a fellowship-trained ophthalmologist may have at-least a moderate level of satisfaction with the write-up quality conferred by ChatGPT. This still requires a final review and editing before dissemination. Comparatively, the rarer 5% of responses collectively on either extreme would require very mild or extensive revision. Also, the mean SMOG score exceeded the accepted upper limits of grade 8 reading level for health-related patient handouts. In its current iteration, ChatGPT should be used as an efficiency tool to generate an initial draft for the neuro-ophthalmologist, who may then refine the accuracy and readability for a lay readership., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2024
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14. Assessment of Reversibility of Transverse Venous Sinus Stenosis in Patients With Papilledema.
- Author
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Handzic A, Tao BK, O'Cearbhaill RM, Nicholson PJ, Margolin EA, and Micieli JA
- Abstract
Background: Bilateral transverse venous sinus stenosis (TVSS) or stenosis of a dominant venous sinus has been found to be very sensitive radiological findings in patients with intracranial hypertension (IH), yet there is still an ongoing debate whether they constitute reversible or permanent phenomena. Thus, the purpose of this study was to investigate the reversibility of TVSS in patients with IH, including conservatively treated patients with signs of IH as defined by the presence of papilledema., Methods: This was a retrospective chart review of all patients diagnosed with IH between 2016 and 2022, assessed from 2 tertiary university-affiliated neuro-ophthalmology practices. Inclusion criteria were the presence of papilledema, as quantified by optical coherence tomography, and bilateral TVSS, which is considered typical of IH on neuroimaging. During follow-up, included patients must have had confirmation of papilledema resolution as well as subsequent neuroimaging after conservative treatment or cerebrospinal fluid flow diversion. Patients with dural sinus vein thrombosis or intrinsic stenosis from sinus trabeculations or significant arachnoid granulations were excluded from the study. Either CT venography or MRI/MR venography was reviewed by a fellowship-trained neuroradiologist, and the degree of stenosis was scored through the combined conduit score (CCS), as described by Farb et al. The primary outcome was to assess TVSS changes after resolution or improvement of papilledema., Results: From 435 patients, we identified a subset of 10 who satisfied all inclusion criteria. Our cohort comprised entirely women with a median age of 29.5 years and a median BMI of 32.5 kg/m2. Treatment consisted of acetazolamide in 7 patients, of which 1 had additional topiramate and 2 underwent cerebrospinal fluid flow diversion. Furthermore, 6 patients demonstrated significant weight loss during follow-up. For the primary outcome, 5 of 10 patients exhibited no appreciable TVSS change, and 5 patients demonstrated significant improvement in TVSS, of which 4 received conservative treatment only. Papilledema resolution or improvement was statistically significantly associated with increasing average CCS, TVSS diameter, and grade., Conclusions: We were able to demonstrate that TVSS can be both irreversible and reversible in patients with resolved papilledema. The finding of TVSS reversibility from conservative treatment alone is novel and has important implications to optimize patient care. Future studies should work to identify factors associated with irreversible TVSS for subsequent targeted intervention and prevention., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2024
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15. Functional vision disorder: a review of diagnosis, management and costs.
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Tao BK, Xie JS, and Margolin E
- Abstract
Functional vision disorder (FVD) is a relatively common diagnosis in ophthalmic practice which can be difficult to make because of clinician's apprehension to miss organic pathology. We review the diagnostic approach to patients with FVD, organic mimics of FVD, its diagnostic and management strategies and associated cost burden. Patients with FVD typically present with visual acuity and/or field loss. Diagnostic work-up should include patient observation, detailed history, pupillary examination, dilated ophthalmoscopy, visual field testing and ganglion cell analysis of the macular complex. Most common organic mimickers of FVD are amblyopia, cortical blindness, retrobulbar optic neuritis, cone dystrophy and chiasmal tumours; however, all could be ruled out by structured diagnostic approach. For patients with unilateral visual loss, bottom-up refraction, fogging of the well-seeing eye in the phoropter, convex lens and base-down prism tests could aid in diagnosis. For patients claiming binocular vision loss, checking for eye movement during the mirror test or nystagmus elicited by an optokinetic drum can be helpful. Effective management of FVD involves reassurance, stress reduction and, if agreed on, management of comorbid anxiety and/or depression. The social cost of FVD is predominately economic as patients typically meet several healthcare providers over multiple visits and often undergo several neuroimaging studies before neuro-ophthalmology referral. Further, inappropriate granting of disability benefits confers additional stigma to patients with organic vision loss., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2024
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16. Prevalence of Person-First Language in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension: A Systematic Review of Case Reports.
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Vosoughi AR, Pandya BU, Mezey N, Tao BK, and Micieli JA
- Abstract
Background: Person-first language (PFL) is a linguistic prescription, which places a person before their disease. It is considered an important tool to reduce stigma. However, PFL is not routinely used across the scientific literature, particularly in patients with overweight or obesity. Patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) face various stigmas through high rates of poverty, female gender, and frequent rates of comorbidities. Non-PFL language use intersects and worsen the health inequities faced by these patients., Methods: A systematic review of case reports. MEDLINE and EMBASE were searched for all case reports with "pseudotumor cerebri" [MESH] OR "Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension" as key word between January 1974 and August 2022. The primary criterion was the article's inclusion of patients with overweight or obesity. The secondary criterion was the article's discussion regarding obesity as risk factor. Articles not meeting primary or secondary criteria were excluded., Results: Approximately 514/716 (71.8%) articles used non-PFL language. The publication year was predictive of non-PFL language: 1976-1991 (82.3%) vs 1992-2007 (72.3%, P = 0.0394) and 2008-2022 (68.3%, P = 0.0056). Non-PFL was significantly higher in obesity compared with other medical conditions (60.3% vs 7.3%, P < 0.001). The patient gender (P = 0.111) and ethnicity (P = 0.697), author's specialty (P = 0.298), and primary English-speaking status (P = 0.231), as well as the journal's impact factor (P = 0.795), were not predictive of non-PFL., Conclusions: Most literature focused on IIH use non-PFL when discussing overweight or obesity, regardless of the patient's gender and ethnicity, journal's impact factor, senior author's specialty, and English-speaking status. Non-PFL use is much more common when discussing obesity compared with other medical conditions. Appropriate use of PFL can decrease stigma and, more importantly, decrease the intersectionality of health stigma faced by patients with IIH., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. Representational disparity of sex, race, and ethnicity in presbyopia clinical trials: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Tao BK, Vosoughi AR, He B, Ling J, Xia M, Rocha G, Ing E, and Khosa F
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Age Distribution, Ethnicity, Presbyopia therapy
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Inappropriate Indexing of Case Reports to the "Papilledema" Subject Heading: A Systematic Review.
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Tao BK, Vosoughi AR, Pandya BU, Ishaq J, Margolin EA, and Micieli JA
- Subjects
- Humans, Inflammation, Case Reports as Topic, Intracranial Hypertension diagnosis, Optic Neuritis diagnosis, Papilledema diagnosis, Papilledema etiology
- Abstract
Background: Papilledema must be managed distinctly from other causes of optic disc edema (ODE) due to its basis in raised intracranial pressure (ICP). However, evidence indicates that the term "papilledema" is widely misused across specialties to describe ODE without raised ICP. Sources of this misconception remain undiscerned. Because all physicians consult medical databases, our objective was to evaluate whether nonspecific "papilledema" subject heading definitions misleadingly associate articles on other conditions with papilledema proper., Methods: Systematic review of case reports, prospectively registered on PROSPERO (CRD42022363651). MEDLINE and Embase were searched to July 2022 for any full-length case report indexed to the "papilledema" subject heading. Studies were graded for incorrect indexing, defined as cases lacking evidence for raised ICP. Nonpapilledema diagnoses were assigned to a predefined set of diseases and pathophysiological mechanisms for subsequent comparison., Results: Incorrect indexing occurred in 40.67% of 949 included reports. Embase-derived studies were misindexed significantly less than MEDLINE-derived studies ( P < 0.01). There was also significant heterogeneity in incorrect indexing among specific diseases ( P = 0.0015) and mechanisms ( P = 0.0003). The most commonly misindexed diseases were uveitis (21.24% of errors), optic neuritis (13.47%), and instances with no mention of ODE (13.99%). The most commonly misindexed mechanisms were inflammation (34.97%), other mechanism (e.g., genetic; 25.91%), and ischemia (20.47%)., Conclusions: Database subject headings, especially from MEDLINE, do not adequately distinguish between true papilledema and other causes of ODE. Inflammatory diseases were most often incorrectly indexed among other diseases and mechanisms. Current "papilledema" subject headings should be revised to reduce the probability of misinformation., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. Dinuclear zinc synergistic catalytic asymmetric phospha-Michael/Michael cascade reaction: synthesis of 1,2,3-trisubstituted indanes bearing phosphoryl groups.
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Tao BK, Yang H, Hua YZ, and Wang MC
- Abstract
A new dinuclear zinc synergistic catalytic asymmetric phospha-Michael/Michael cascade reaction of o-dienones and dialkyl phosphates is reported. This method has been proven to be general and efficient for the formation of a range of chiral 1,2,3-trisubstituted indane compounds containing phosphorus groups in good yields (up to 92%) with excellent stereoselectivities (up to >99% ee and up to >99 : 1 dr). The relative configuration of the product was identified as having a trans,trans substitution pattern via two-dimensional (2D) nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy 1H-1H NMR experiments. A possible mechanism was proposed.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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