9 results on '"Fung, Kenneth"'
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2. Contributors
- Author
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Alvarez-Jimenez, Mario, primary, Andermann, Lisa, additional, Andrea, Alexandra, additional, Badcock, Johanna C., additional, Baker, Amanda L., additional, Bell, Vaughan, additional, Bell, Imogen H., additional, Berry, Katherine, additional, Bjornestad, Jone, additional, Blanchard, Jack J., additional, Cohen, Alex S., additional, Corrigan, Patrick W., additional, Cosgrave, Jan, additional, de la Lune, Clair, additional, Denham, Alexandra M.J., additional, Ellett, Lyn, additional, Elvevåg, Brita, additional, Fedechko, Taylor L., additional, Fibbins, Hamish, additional, Firth, Joseph, additional, Fung, Kenneth P., additional, Garety, Philippa Anne, additional, Gates, Jesse, additional, Gehrman, Philip, additional, Glasshouse, Evie, additional, González-Blanch, César, additional, Haddock, Gillian, additional, Hamm, Jay A., additional, Hardy, Amy, additional, Harris, Anthony, additional, Hayward, Mark, additional, Holmlund, Terje B., additional, Humpston, Clara S., additional, Ichinose, Megan, additional, Isham, Louise, additional, Iyer, Srividya N., additional, Jackson, Henry J., additional, Jarvis, G. Eric, additional, Johns, Louise, additional, Kelly, Rebecca, additional, Killackey, Eóin, additional, Kingston, Jessica, additional, Klingaman, Elizabeth A., additional, Kring, Ann M., additional, Lederman, Oscar, additional, Leonhardt, Bethany L., additional, Lim, Michelle H., additional, Lysaker, Paul H., additional, Manser, Rachel, additional, McCarter, Kristen, additional, Medalia, Alice, additional, Mueser, Kim T., additional, Nieweglowski, Katherine, additional, Paniagua, Deysi, additional, Park, Sohee, additional, Paulik, Georgie, additional, Pinkham, Amy E., additional, Pohlman, Sonja, additional, Qin, Sang, additional, Rice, Simon, additional, Rosenbaum, Simon, additional, Rus-Calafell, Mar, additional, Santesteban-Echarri, Olga, additional, Saperstein, Alice, additional, Savage, Christina, additional, Shan, LeeAnn, additional, Sheaves, Bryony, additional, Shoulder, Christopher, additional, Stain, Helen J., additional, Suetani, Shuichi, additional, Thomas, Neil, additional, van de Giessen, Irene, additional, van den Berg, David, additional, van Zelst, Catherine, additional, Waite, Felicity, additional, Ward, Thomas, additional, and Weittenhiller, Lauren, additional
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- 2020
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3. Integrating neuroscience in psychiatry: a cultural-ecosocial systemic approach.
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Gómez-Carrillo A, Kirmayer LJ, Aggarwal NK, Bhui KS, Fung KP, Kohrt BA, Weiss MG, and Lewis-Fernández R
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- Humans, Psychopathology, Psychiatry, Neurosciences
- Abstract
Psychiatry has increasingly adopted explanations for psychopathology that are based on neurobiological reductionism. With the recognition of health disparities and the realisation that someone's postcode can be a better predictor of health outcomes than their genetic code, there are increasing efforts to ensure cultural and social-structural competence in psychiatric practice. Although neuroscientific and social-cultural approaches in psychiatry remain largely separate, they can be brought together in a multilevel explanatory framework to advance psychiatric theory, research, and practice. In this Personal View, we outline how a cultural-ecosocial systems approach to integrating neuroscience in psychiatry can promote social-contextual and systemic thinking for more clinically useful formulations and person-centred care., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests AG-C was supported by an Ittelson Fellowship from the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry and a Banting Fellowship from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. LJK received support from the McGill Canada First Research Excellence Fund Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives Program through a grant towards a Canadian Framework for Brain Health (3c-KM-61). All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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4. Mitral Annular Disjunction Assessed Using CMR Imaging: Insights From the UK Biobank Population Study.
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Zugwitz D, Fung K, Aung N, Rauseo E, McCracken C, Cooper J, El Messaoudi S, Anderson RH, Piechnik SK, Neubauer S, Petersen SE, and Nijveldt R
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- Humans, Biological Specimen Banks, Predictive Value of Tests, Prolapse, United Kingdom epidemiology, Mitral Valve, Mitral Valve Prolapse diagnostic imaging, Mitral Valve Prolapse epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Mitral annular disjunction is the atrial displacement of the mural mitral valve leaflet hinge point within the atrioventricular junction. Said to be associated with malignant ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death, its prevalence in the general population is not known., Objectives: The purpose of this study was to assess the frequency of occurrence and extent of mitral annular disjunction in a large population cohort., Methods: The authors assessed the cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) images in 2,646 Caucasian subjects enrolled in the UK Biobank imaging study, measuring the length of disjunction at 4 points around the mitral annulus, assessing for presence of prolapse or billowing of the leaflets, and for curling motion of the inferolateral left ventricular wall., Results: From 2,607 included participants, the authors found disjunction in 1,990 (76%) cases, most commonly at the anterior and inferior ventricular wall. The authors found inferolateral disjunction, reported as clinically important, in 134 (5%) cases. Prolapse was more frequent in subjects with disjunction (odds ratio [OR]: 2.5; P = 0.02), with positive associations found between systolic curling and disjunction at any site (OR: 3.6; P < 0.01), and systolic curling and prolapse (OR: 71.9; P < 0.01)., Conclusions: This large-scale study shows that disjunction is a common finding when using CMR. Disjunction at the inferolateral ventricular wall, however, was rare. The authors found associations between disjunction and both prolapse and billowing of the mural mitral valve leaflet. These findings support the notion that only extensive inferolateral disjunction, when found, warrants consideration of further investigation, but disjunction elsewhere in the annulus should be considered a normal finding., Competing Interests: Funding Support and Author Disclosures This work was partly funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement number 825903 (euCanSHare project, Dr Petersen). Dr Petersen acknowledges support from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Barts, London, United Kingdom. Drs Petersen, Neubauer, and Piechnik acknowledge the British Heart Foundation, London, United Kingdom, for funding the manual analysis to create a cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging reference standard for the UK Biobank imaging resource in 5000 CMR scans (PG/14/89/31194). This project was enabled through access to the Medical Research Council eMedLab Medical Bioinformatics infrastructure, supported by the Medical Research Council (MR/L016311/1). Dr Zugwitz acknowledges funding received from the European Society of Cardiology, Sophia Antipolis Cedex, France, in the form of an European Society of Cardiology Training Grant. Dr Neubauer acknowledges support from the Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre and the Oxford British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence. Dr Aung recognizes the NIHR Integrated Academic Training program, which supports his Academic Clinical Lectureship post. Drs McCracken and Neubauer are supported by the Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. Drs Petersen and Rauseo acknowledge support by the London Medical Imaging and Artificial Intelligence Centre for Value Based Healthcare (AI4VBH), which is funded from the Data to Early Diagnosis and Precision Medicine strand of the government’s Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund, managed and delivered by Innovate UK on behalf of United Kingdom Research and Innovation (UKRI). Dr Nijveldt has received research grants from Philips Volcano and Biotronik. Dr Petersen provides consultancy to Circle Cardiovascular Imaging, Inc. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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5. Association Between Recreational Cannabis Use and Cardiac Structure and Function.
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Khanji MY, Jensen MT, Kenawy AA, Raisi-Estabragh Z, Paiva JM, Aung N, Fung K, Lukaschuk E, Zemrak F, Lee AM, Barutcu A, Maclean E, Cooper J, Piechnik SK, Neubauer S, and Petersen SE
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- Aged, Female, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging, Heart Diseases physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Heart Diseases etiology, Marijuana Abuse complications, Marijuana Smoking adverse effects, Myocardial Contraction, Ventricular Function, Left
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- 2020
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6. Quantitative CMR population imaging on 20,000 subjects of the UK Biobank imaging study: LV/RV quantification pipeline and its evaluation.
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Attar R, Pereañez M, Gooya A, Albà X, Zhang L, de Vila MH, Lee AM, Aung N, Lukaschuk E, Sanghvi MM, Fung K, Paiva JM, Piechnik SK, Neubauer S, Petersen SE, and Frangi AF
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- Biological Specimen Banks, Female, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Pattern Recognition, Automated, United Kingdom, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Models, Statistical, Neural Networks, Computer
- Abstract
Population imaging studies generate data for developing and implementing personalised health strategies to prevent, or more effectively treat disease. Large prospective epidemiological studies acquire imaging for pre-symptomatic populations. These studies enable the early discovery of alterations due to impending disease, and enable early identification of individuals at risk. Such studies pose new challenges requiring automatic image analysis. To date, few large-scale population-level cardiac imaging studies have been conducted. One such study stands out for its sheer size, careful implementation, and availability of top quality expert annotation; the UK Biobank (UKB). The resulting massive imaging datasets (targeting ca. 100,000 subjects) has put published approaches for cardiac image quantification to the test. In this paper, we present and evaluate a cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) image analysis pipeline that properly scales up and can provide a fully automatic analysis of the UKB CMR study. Without manual user interactions, our pipeline performs end-to-end image analytics from multi-view cine CMR images all the way to anatomical and functional bi-ventricular quantification. All this, while maintaining relevant quality controls of the CMR input images, and resulting image segmentations. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first published attempt to fully automate the extraction of global and regional reference ranges of all key functional cardiovascular indexes, from both left and right cardiac ventricles, for a population of 20,000 subjects imaged at 50 time frames per subject, for a total of one million CMR volumes. In addition, our pipeline provides 3D anatomical bi-ventricular models of the heart. These models enable the extraction of detailed information of the morphodynamics of the two ventricles for subsequent association to genetic, omics, lifestyle habits, exposure information, and other information provided in population imaging studies. We validated our proposed CMR analytics pipeline against manual expert readings on a reference cohort of 4620 subjects with contour delineations and corresponding clinical indexes. Our results show broad significant agreement between the manually obtained reference indexes, and those automatically computed via our framework. 80.67% of subjects were processed with mean contour distance of less than 1 pixel, and 17.50% with mean contour distance between 1 and 2 pixels. Finally, we compare our pipeline with a recently published approach reporting on UKB data, and based on deep learning. Our comparison shows similar performance in terms of segmentation accuracy with respect to human experts., (Crown Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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7. Impact of Measurement Variations in Right Atrial Structure and Function on Outcomes.
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Khanji MY, Fung K, Donal E, and Petersen SE
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- Heart Atria, Humans, Stroke Volume, Atrial Function, Right, Heart Failure
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- 2019
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8. Study protocol: Mobilizing Asian men in Canada to reduce stigma of mental illness.
- Author
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Guruge S, Fung KP, Sidani S, Este D, Morrow M, McKenzie K, and Wong JP
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- Adult, Canada, Focus Groups, Health Promotion, Humans, Male, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Asian People psychology, Health Education methods, Health Education organization & administration, Mental Disorders ethnology, Mental Disorders psychology, Patient Participation methods, Patient Participation psychology, Self Concept, Social Stigma
- Abstract
Background: The available evidence on interventions addressing the stigma of mental illness is limited because of small samples, lack of diversity in study samples, and exclusion of people living with mental illness. To date, no published studies have evaluated anti-stigma interventions for Asian men in Canada. Aim This paper describes the protocol of a study to evaluate psychological and collective empowerment interventions (ACT, CEE, and ACT+CEE) in addressing self-stigma and social stigma in Asian communities in three urban settings in Canada: Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver. The study targets Asian men living with or affected by mental illness, and community leaders interested in stigma reduction and advocacy., Methods: Guided by a population health promotion framework and an ecological approach to health, the study will use a repeated measure design with mixed methods for data collection. In total, 2160 participants will be enrolled to detect moderate-to-large effect sizes, while accounting for possible attrition. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three interventions or a control group, using a randomization matrix. Established measures will be used to collect outcome data at pretest, post-test, and 3 and 6 months follow-up, along with focus group discussions and monthly activity logs. Mixed linear models will compare participants' stigma, psychological flexibility, valued life domains, mindfulness, and empowerment readiness within and between groups., Discussion: The project will generate new knowledge on the applicability and effectiveness of evidence-based psychological and collective empowerment interventions (ACT, CEE, and ACT+CEE) in addressing stigma of mental illness and mobilizing community leadership., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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9. Personality disorders in Asians: summary, and a call for cultural research.
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Ryder AG, Sun J, Dere J, and Fung K
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- Cross-Cultural Comparison, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Humans, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Personality Disorders etiology, Culture, Personality Disorders ethnology, Research
- Abstract
Epidemiological studies show relatively low rates of personality disorder (PD) in Asian-origin samples, but these low rates may result from a lack of understanding about what constitutes PD in Asian cultural contexts. Research on etiology, assessment, and treatment has rarely been extended to incorporate ways in which culture might shape PDs in general, let alone among Asians in particular. PDs did not officially change in DSM-5, but an alternative dimensional system may help link the Asian PD literature to non-clinical personality research. Personality and culture are deeply intertwined, and the research literature on Asian PDs - and on PDs more generally - would benefit greatly from more research unpacking the cultural mechanisms of variation., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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