9 results on '"Marilyn Moy"'
Search Results
2. Pain in Veterans with COPD: Relationship with Physical Activity and Exercise Capacity
- Author
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Rebecca Raphaely, Maria Mongiardo, Rebekah L. Goldstein, Stephanie A. Robinson, Emily S. Wan, and Marilyn Moy
- Abstract
Background: Pain is a common but underappreciated symptom experienced by people with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). The relationships between pain and physical activity (PA) and exercise capacity are poorly understood. Methods: This retrospective secondary analysis included three cohorts of Veterans with COPD and objective measures of PA (daily step counts) and exercise capacity (6-minute walk test [6MWT] distance) who participated in longitudinal studies evaluating PA. Pain was assessed using the Bodily Pain (BP) domain of the Veterans RAND-36. In two cohorts, participants were randomly assigned to a web-based, pedometer-mediated PA intervention which has previously been demonstrated to improve PA. Results: Three-hundred and seventy-three (373) unique study participants were included in this analysis. Eighty-three percent (n=311) of the population reported at least mild pain and/or at least a little bit of interference due to pain at baseline. Cross-sectionally, greater BP was associated with lower 6MWT distance (β=0.51; 95% CI 0.20, 0.82; p=0.0013). Longitudinally, worsening BP was associated with a decline in 6MWT distance (β=0.30; 95% CI 0.03, 0.58; p=0.0312). There was no association between baseline BP and baseline daily step counts, baseline BP and change in PA, or change in BP and change in PA. Compared to usual care, our PA intervention improved BP scores (β=6.17; 95% CI 1.84, 10.45; p=0.0054). BP scores did not affect the impact of the intervention on daily step counts.Conclusion: Pain is highly prevalent and significantly associated with lower exercise capacity among Veterans with COPD. Worsening pain co-occurred with decline in exercise capacity but not PA. Our intervention reduced pain, although pain did not affect the impact of the intervention on PA.
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- 2021
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3. The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Rationale, Design, and Lessons Learned
- Author
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Roger D. Yusen, Gerard J. Criner, Alice L. Sternberg, David H. Au, Anne L. Fuhlbrigge, Richard K. Albert, Richard Casaburi, James K. Stoller, Kathleen F. Harrington, J. Allen D. Cooper, Philip Diaz, Steven Gay, Richard Kanner, Neil MacIntyre, Fernando J. Martinez, Steven Piantadosi, Frank Sciurba, David Shade, Thomas Stibolt, James Tonascia, Robert Wise, William C. Bailey, Ernestina Sampong, Karin Sloan, Ashley Wagner, Susan Anderson, Marilyn Moy, Osarenoma Okunbor, Scott Marlow, Yvonne Meli, Richard Rice, Loutfi S. Aboussouan, Robert Castele, Joseph Parambil, Sumita Khatri, Aman Pande, Joe Zein, Thomas Olbrych, Stephan Alkins, Christine Jocko, Franck Rahaghi, Jean Barton, Jennifer Underwood, Barry Make, John Davies, Richard Mularski, Allison Naleway, Sarah Vertrees, Janos Porszasz, Peggy Walker, Renee Indelicato, Lennard Specht, Kathleen Ellstrom, Jamie Portillo, David Horak, Brian Tiep, Mary Barnett, Janice Drake, Mahasti Rittinger, Rachael Compton, Scott Miller, Ralph J. Panos, Laura A. Lach, Gerard Criner, Carla Grabianowski, Francis Cordova, Parag Desai, Samuel Krachman, James Mamary, Nathaniel Marchetti, Aditi Satti, Eileen Mumm, Michelle Vega-Olivo, Jenny Hua, Vanna Tauch, Lii-Yoong Criner, Michael Jacobs, Peter Rising, Paul Simonelli, Michele Mitchell, Matthew Lammi, Connie Romaine, Howard Lee, Mary Ianacone, Steven Scharf, Wanda Bell-Farrell, M. Jeffery Mador, Ayesha Rahman, Mumtaz Zaman, Lisa Hill, Alec Platt, J. Allen Cooper, Kathleen Harrington, Mark Dransfield, Patti Smith, Donald Davis, Peruvemba Sriram, Katherine Herring, Fernando Martinez, Meilan Han, Kelly Rysso, Catherine Meldrum, K. P. Ravikrishnan, Daniel Keena, Jennifer DeRidder, Beth Kring, Antonio Anzueto, Alex Aguilera, Timothy Houlihan, Reda Girgis, Jennifer Cannestra, Benjamin Kelly, Mary Beth Scholand, G. Martin Villegas, Judy Carle, Edmunds Udris, Randall Curtis, David Au, Laura C. Feemster, Richard Goodman, Brianna Moss, Lynn Reinke, Moira Aitken, Bruce Culver, Mario Castro, Brigitte Mittler, Jeanne Heaghney, Myron Jacobs, Min Joo, Nina Bracken, Edward Diamond, Mary K. Joseph, Xavier Soler, Arianna Villa, Daniel Layish, Edwin Silverman, Roxanne Kelly, Daniel Cossette, Patricia Belt, Amanda Blackford, Betty Collison, John Dodge, Michele Donithan, Cathleen Ewing, Rosetta Jackson, K Patrick May, Jill Meinert, Girlie Reyes, Michael Smith, Mark Van Natta, Laura Wilson, Annette Wagoner, Katherine P. Yates, Rosemarie Hakim, Antonello Punturieri, Julie Bamdad, Thomas Croxton, Joanne Deshler, Pamela McCord-Reynolds, Mario Stylianou, Gail Weinmann, Gordon Bernard, James Anderson, Bernard Lo, Andrew Ries, Stuart Stoloff, Byron Thomashow, Barbara Tilley, and Kevin Weiss
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,law.invention ,Hypoxemia ,Treatment and control groups ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient Admission ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Oxygen therapy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Aged ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Clinical Study Design ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Geography ,business.industry ,Oxygen Inhalation Therapy ,Middle Aged ,Long-Term Care ,United States ,Clinical trial ,Oxygen ,030228 respiratory system ,Sample size determination ,Emergency medicine ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial demonstrated that long-term supplemental oxygen did not reduce time to hospital admission or death for patients who have stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and resting and/or exercise-induced moderate oxyhemoglobin desaturation, nor did it provide benefit for any other outcome measured in the trial. Nine months after initiation of patient screening, after randomization of 34 patients to treatment, a trial design amendment broadened the eligible population, expanded the primary outcome, and reduced the goal sample size. Within a few years, the protocol underwent minor modifications, and a second trial design amendment lowered the required sample size because of lower than expected treatment group crossover rates. After 5.5 years of recruitment, the trial met its amended sample size goal, and 1 year later, it achieved its follow-up goal. The process of publishing the trial results brought renewed scrutiny of the study design and the amendments. This article expands on the previously published design and methods information, provides the rationale for the amendments, and gives insight into the investigators' decisions about trial conduct. The story of the Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial may assist investigators in future trials, especially those that seek to assess the efficacy and safety of long-term oxygen therapy. Clinical trial registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00692198).
- Published
- 2018
4. Particulate Matter, Pulmonary Function, and Oxidative Stress in COPD
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Stephanie Grady, Petros Koutrakis, Jaime Hart, Junfeng Zhang, Marilyn Moy, Brent Coull, Joel Schwartz, Francine Laden, Eric Garshick, and Harvard Medical School
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COPD ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Particulates ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,respiratory tract diseases ,Pulmonary function testing ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,In patient ,business ,Lung function ,Oxidative stress ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Introduction: Effects of particulate matter (PM) on lung function and oxidative stress in patients with COPD are unknown. Methods: We recruited 119 men with COPD who were not current smokers and ha...
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- 2016
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5. Compliance
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Marilyn Moy and Stephen Loring
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 1998
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6. Diabetes prevention and control: progress towards healthy people 2010 goals
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Annie, Gjelsvik, Dona, Goldman, and Marilyn, Moy
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Rhode Island ,Health Promotion ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Confidence Intervals ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Public Health ,Poverty ,Aged - Published
- 2009
7. Using Wearable Sensors to Monitor Physical Activities of Patients with COPD: A Comparison of Classifier Performance
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Chiara Mancinelli, Paolo Bonato, Jennifer Healey, Marilyn Moy, and Shyamal Patel
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COPD ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Exacerbation ,Remote patient monitoring ,business.industry ,Wearable computer ,medicine.disease ,Physical activity level ,Activity recognition ,Statistical classification ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major public health problem. Early detection and treatment of an exacerbation in the outpatient setting are important to prevent worsening of clinical status and need for emergency room care or hospital admission. In this study we use accelerometers to capture motion data; and heart rate and respiration rate to capture physiological responses from patients with COPD as they perform a range of Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and physical exercises. We present a comparative analysis of classification performance of a set of different classification techniques and factors that affect classification performance for activity recognition based on accelerometer data. This is the first step towards building a wearable sensor monitoring system for tracking changes in physiological responses of patients with COPD with respect to their physical activity level.
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- 2009
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8. Use of Internet Mediated Walking Program and Pedometer in COPD
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University of Michigan and Marilyn Moy, Associate Professor of Medicine
- Published
- 2017
9. Internet Walking Program and Pedometer in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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University of Michigan, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and Marilyn Moy, MD
- Published
- 2012
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