10 results on '"Brent Thomas"'
Search Results
2. Impact of insecticide resistance in Anopheles arabiensis on malaria incidence and prevalence in Sudan and the costs of mitigation
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Bashir Adam Ismail, Janet Hemingway, Jihad Sulieman Eltaher, Abraham Mnzava, Krishanthi Subramaniam, Jonathan Lines, Brent Thomas, Anuar Osman Banaga, Immo Kleinschmidt, Mogahid Shiekh Eldin Abdin, Martin J. Donnelly, Joshua Yukich, Philippa A. West, Tessa B. Knox, John S. Bradley, Jackie Cook, Elfatih M. Malik, and Hmooda Toto Kafy
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Multidisciplinary ,Pyrethroid ,biology ,business.industry ,030231 tropical medicine ,Anopheles ,Indoor residual spraying ,Bendiocarb ,biology.organism_classification ,Rate ratio ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Deltamethrin ,chemistry ,Environmental health ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Disease burden ,Malaria - Abstract
Insecticide-based interventions have contributed to ∼78% of the reduction in the malaria burden in sub-Saharan Africa since 2000. Insecticide resistance in malaria vectors could presage a catastrophic rebound in disease incidence and mortality. A major impediment to the implementation of insecticide resistance management strategies is that evidence of the impact of resistance on malaria disease burden is limited. A cluster randomized trial was conducted in Sudan with pyrethroid-resistant and carbamate-susceptible malaria vectors. Clusters were randomly allocated to receive either long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) alone or LLINs in combination with indoor residual spraying (IRS) with a pyrethroid (deltamethrin) insecticide in the first year and a carbamate (bendiocarb) insecticide in the two subsequent years. Malaria incidence was monitored for 3 y through active case detection in cohorts of children aged 1 to
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- 2017
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3. Optimising cluster survey design for planning schistosomiasis preventive chemotherapy
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Wendy Harrison, Charlotte M. Gower, Catherine Thomas, Samuel Jemu, Hugh J. W. Sturrock, Jane M. Whitton, Michelle N. Clements, Brent Thomas, Alan Fenwick, Ben Styles, Karsor Kollie, Anna E. Phillips, Hugo C. Turner, Fiona M. Fleming, Sarah C. L. Knowles, Aboulaye Meite, Maria P. Rebollo, and Department for International Development (UK) (DFID)
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Malawi ,Veterinary medicine ,Schistosoma Mansoni ,Cost effectiveness ,Social Sciences ,Praziquantel ,Geographical Locations ,COST-EFFECTIVENESS ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sociology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,INFECTION ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Schistosomiasis ,Medicine ,Child ,Schistosoma haematobium ,Schools ,biology ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,wa_108 ,Survey research ,Health Care Costs ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,wc_810 ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,Helminth Infections ,Child, Preschool ,Physical Sciences ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Schistosoma ,Female ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,Research Article ,AFRICA ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,wa_950 ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,030231 tropical medicine ,education ,MANSONI ,TRACHOMA ,World Health Organization ,Disease cluster ,Chemoprevention ,wa_110 ,Education ,THRESHOLD ,03 medical and health sciences ,Helminths ,Tropical Medicine ,Environmental health ,NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES ,Parasitic Diseases ,Confidence Intervals ,Animals ,CONTROL PROGRAM ,Humans ,Treatment Guidelines ,INTEGRATED CONTROL ,Health Care Policy ,Science & Technology ,URINARY SCHISTOSOMIASIS ,business.industry ,Gold standard ,Organisms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biology and Life Sciences ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,06 Biological Sciences ,Tropical Diseases ,Liberia ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Invertebrates ,Schistosoma Haematobium ,Confidence interval ,Health Care ,Cote d'Ivoire ,Logistic Models ,030104 developmental biology ,People and Places ,Parasitology ,business ,Mathematics - Abstract
Background The cornerstone of current schistosomiasis control programmes is delivery of praziquantel to at-risk populations. Such preventive chemotherapy requires accurate information on the geographic distribution of infection, yet the performance of alternative survey designs for estimating prevalence and converting this into treatment decisions has not been thoroughly evaluated. Methodology/Principal findings We used baseline schistosomiasis mapping surveys from three countries (Malawi, Côte d’Ivoire and Liberia) to generate spatially realistic gold standard datasets, against which we tested alternative two-stage cluster survey designs. We assessed how sampling different numbers of schools per district (2–20) and children per school (10–50) influences the accuracy of prevalence estimates and treatment class assignment, and we compared survey cost-efficiency using data from Malawi. Due to the focal nature of schistosomiasis, up to 53% simulated surveys involving 2–5 schools per district failed to detect schistosomiasis in low endemicity areas (1–10% prevalence). Increasing the number of schools surveyed per district improved treatment class assignment far more than increasing the number of children sampled per school. For Malawi, surveys of 15 schools per district and 20–30 children per school reliably detected endemic schistosomiasis and maximised cost-efficiency. In sensitivity analyses where treatment costs and the country considered were varied, optimal survey size was remarkably consistent, with cost-efficiency maximised at 15–20 schools per district. Conclusions/Significance Among two-stage cluster surveys for schistosomiasis, our simulations indicated that surveying 15–20 schools per district and 20–30 children per school optimised cost-efficiency and minimised the risk of under-treatment, with surveys involving more schools of greater cost-efficiency as treatment costs rose., Author summary Many countries are currently scaling up efforts to control schistosomiasis, a helminthic disease for which preventive chemotherapy with praziquantel is the main control tool. In order to apply WHO guidelines on how frequently to treat a given district or similar geographic unit for schistosomiasis, survey-based estimates of infection prevalence are required. However, the optimal size and design of survey for generating such data is not clear, and there is a clear trade-off between accuracy and cost–larger surveys provide more accurate information with which to target treatment, but cost more to carry out. Here, we systematically assess what size and design of simple 2-stage cluster survey (where primary school children are tested for infection), might best enable control programmes to implement WHO treatment guidelines. We use empirical data on schistosomiasis distribution from three African countries together with computer simulations to compare survey performance, in terms of accuracy and cost-efficiency–the ability of a survey to accurately determine treatment frequency, per unit cost. We show that although small surveys of around 5 schools per district are frequently adopted for mapping schistosomiasis, such small surveys are prone to miss endemic schistosomiasis fairly often, and are also not cost efficient. Our results suggest that among the designs tested, surveys involving 15–20 schools per district optimise cost-efficiency, providing the most accurate treatment decisions per dollar spent. These findings have important implications for the schistosomiasis control community, and provide the first evidence-based suggestion of a simple survey design for mapping schistosomiasis in endemic countries.
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- 2017
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4. Commentary: restarting NTD programme activities after the Ebola outbreak in Liberia
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Benjamin G. Koudou, Brent Thomas, Charles D. Mackenzie, and Karsor Kollie
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Economic growth ,030231 tropical medicine ,wa_395 ,Disease ,Global Health ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,Disease Outbreaks ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Health systems ,0302 clinical medicine ,Preventive Health Services ,West Africa ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Mass drug administration ,wb_330 ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Lymphatic filariasis ,Ebola virus ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Neglected Diseases ,Outbreak ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,General Medicine ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,wc_534 ,Ebolavirus ,Liberia ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Ebola ,Commentary ,business ,Onchocerciasis - Abstract
It is widely known that the recent Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in West Africa caused a serious disruption to the national health system, with many of ongoing disease focused programmes, such as mass drug administration (MDA) for onchocerciasis (ONC), lymphatic filariasis (LF) and schistosomiasis (SCH), being suspended or scaled-down. As these MDA programmes attempt to restart post-EVD it is important to understand the challenges that may be encountered. This commentary addresses the opinions of the major health sectors involved, as well as those of community members, regarding logistic needs and challenges faced as these important public health programmes consider restarting. There appears to be a strong desire by the communities to resume NTD programme activities, although it is clear that some important challenges remain, the most prominent being those resulting from the severe loss of trained staff. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40249-017-0272-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2017
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5. Elimination of lymphatic filariasis in the Gambia
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Brent Thomas, Sana Sambou, Alba Gonzalez Escalada, Momodou C. Jaye, David H. Molyneux, Nana-Kwadwo Biritwum, Louise A. Kelly-Hope, Maria P. Rebollo, and Moses J. Bockarie
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Adult ,Male ,Veterinary medicine ,Insecticides ,wc_880 ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Mosquito Control ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,wa_395 ,medicine.disease_cause ,law.invention ,Filariasis ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,law ,qx_301 ,Environmental health ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,parasitic diseases ,qx_600 ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Disease Eradication ,Insecticide-Treated Bednets ,Mass drug administration ,Lymphatic filariasis ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Insect Vectors ,Mosquito control ,Infectious Diseases ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Neglected tropical diseases ,Gambia ,business ,Malaria ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The prevalence of Wuchereria bancrofti, which causes lymphatic filariasis (LF) in The Gambia was among the highest in Africa in the 1950s. However, surveys conducted in 1975 and 1976 revealed a dramatic decline in LF endemicity in the absence of mass drug administration (MDA). The decline in prevalence was partly attributed to a significant reduction in mosquito density through the widespread use of insecticidal nets. Based on findings elsewhere that vector control alone can interrupt LF, we asked the question in 2013 whether the rapid scale up in the use of insecticidal nets in The Gambia had interrupted LF transmission. Methodology/Principal Finding We present here the results of three independently designed filariasis surveys conducted over a period of 17 years (1997–2013), and involving over 6000 subjects in 21 districts across all administrative divisions in The Gambia. An immunochromatographic (ICT) test was used to detect W. bancrofti antigen during all three surveys. In 2001, tests performed on stored samples collected between 1997 and 2000, in three divisions, failed to show positive individuals from two divisions that were previously highly endemic for LF, suggesting a decline towards extinction in some areas. Results of the second survey conducted in 2003 showed that LF was no longer endemic in 16 of 21 districts surveyed. The 2013 survey used a WHO recommended LF transmission verification tool involving 3180 6–7 year-olds attending 60 schools across the country. We demonstrated that transmission of W. bancrofti has been interrupted in all 21 districts. Conclusions We conclude that LF transmission may have been interrupted in The Gambia through the extensive use of insecticidal nets for malaria control for decades. The growing evidence for the impact of malaria vector control activities on parasite transmission has been endorsed by WHO through a position statement in 2011 on integrated vector management to control malaria and LF., Author Summary The prevalence of lymphatic filariasis (LF), in The Gambia was among the highest in Africa in the 1950s when about 50% of the adult population was positive for microfilaraemia. However, surveys conducted in 1975 and 1976 revealed a dramatic decline in LF endemicity in the absence of systematic treatment with anti-filaria medicines. This decline in LF prevalence in all villages was partly attributed to a significant drop in human-mosquito contact through a sustained reduction in rainfall in the 1960s and 1970s and the widespread use of insecticidal nets to protect against malaria. We asked the question in 2013 whether the rapid scale up in the use of insecticidal nets for malaria control in Gambia had resulted in the interruption of LF transmission. In this paper we present the results of three independently designed filariasis surveys conducted over a period of 17 years (1997–2013), and involving over 6000 subjects in 21 districts across all administrative divisions in the country. In 2001, tests performed to detect circulating filarial antigens (CFA) in serum samples collected between 1997 and 2000, in three divisions, failed to show positive individuals from two that were previously highly endemic for the LF. Results of the second survey conducted in 2003 indicated that five of the 21 districts were slightly endemic for LF with CFA rates of 1% or 2% but MDA was never implemented in The Gambia. The results of our final survey conducted in 2013 were unequivocal in confirming the absence of transmission of LF in all 21 districts surveyed using WHO recommended statistically robust and validated tool known as transmission assessment survey (TAS). The Gambia achieving a non-endemic status for LF represents a significant step in the efforts to shrink the filariasis endemicity map and demonstrates the value of cross sector approaches in disease control.
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- 2015
6. Distribution, abundance, and diversity of stream fishes under variable environmental conditions
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R. Brent Thomas, Christopher M. Taylor, Lance R. Williams, Thomas L Holder, Melvin L. Warren, and Riccardo A. Fiorillo
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business.industry ,Scape ,Ecology ,Species distribution ,Distribution (economics) ,Aquatic Science ,Variable (computer science) ,Geography ,Abundance (ecology) ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,Species richness ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Environmental gradient - Abstract
The effects of stream size and flow regime on spatial and temporal variability of stream fish distribution, abundance, and diversity patterns were investigated. Assemblage variability and species richness were each significantly associated with a complex environmental gradient contrasting smaller, hydrologically variable stream localities with larger localities characterized by more stable flow regimes. Assemblages showing the least variability were the most species-rich and occurred in relatively large, stable environments. Theory suggests that species richness can be an important determinant of assemblage variability. Although this appears to be true in our system, we suggest that spatial and temporal heterogeneity in the environment largely determines both assemblage richness and variability, providing a more parsimonious explanation for the diversityvariability correlation. Changes in species richness of local assemblages across time were coordinated across the landscape, and assemblages formed spatially and temporally nested subset patterns. These results suggest an important link between local community dynamics and community-wide occurrence. At the species level, mean local persistence was significantly associated with regional occurrence. Thus, the more widespread a species was, the greater its local persistence. Our results illustrate how the integrity of local stream fish assemblages is dependent on local environmental conditions, regional patterns of species distribution, and landscape continuity.
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- 2006
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7. Cessation of mass drug administration for lymphatic filariasis in Zanzibar in 2006: was transmission interrupted?
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Maria P. Rebollo, Brent Thomas, Moses J. Bockarie, Said M. Ali, Shaali Ame, Jorge Cano, Alba Gonzalez Escalada, and Khalfan A. Mohammed
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Male ,wc_880 ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Physiology ,Elephantiasis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tanzania ,wa_110 ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,Indian Ocean Islands ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Disease Eradication ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Mass drug administration ,Child ,Lymphatic filariasis ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Immunology ,Communicable Disease Control ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is targeted for elimination through annual mass drug administration (MDA) for 4–6 years. In 2006, Zanzibar stopped MDA against LF after five rounds of MDA revealed no microfilaraemic individuals during surveys at selected sentinel sites. We asked the question if LF transmission was truly interrupted in 2006 when MDA was stopped. Methodology/Principal Findings In line with ongoing efforts to shrink the LF map, we performed the WHO recommended transmission assessment surveys (TAS) in January 2012 to verify the absence of LF transmission on the main Zanzibar islands of Unguja and Pemba. Altogether, 3275 children were tested on both islands and 89 were found to be CFA positive; 70 in Pemba and 19 in Unguja. The distribution of schools with positive children was heterogeneous with pronounced spatial variation on both islands. Based on the calculated TAS cut-offs of 18 and 20 CFA positive children for Pemba and Unguja respectively, we demonstrated that transmission was still ongoing in Pemba where the cut-off was exceeded. Conclusions Our findings indicated ongoing transmission of LF on Pemba in 2012. Moreover, we presented evidence from previous studies that LF transmission was also active on Unguja shortly after stopping MDA in 2006. Based on these observations the government of Zanzibar decided to resume MDA against LF on both islands in 2013., Author Summary Lymphatic filariasis was highly endemic in Zanzibar when MDA commenced in 2001 to eliminate the disease. In 2006, Zanzibar, in the United Republic of Tanzania, was the first territory in Africa to complete five rounds of annual treatment using a combination of albendazole and ivermectin at 100% geographic coverage and achieving effective treatment coverage of over 65% during each round. MDA was stopped in 2006 after sentinel site surveys revealed parasite infection rates of zero in both humans and mosquito populations. In 2012, when new tools became available to verify the absence of transmission, we asked the question if transmission was truly interrupted when MDA was stopped in 2006. In January 2012, we performed the WHO recommended transmission assessment surveys (TAS) on the main islands of Unguja and Pemba to verify the absence of LF transmission in line with ongoing efforts to shrink the LF risk map. Altogether, 3275 children were tested on both islands and 89 were found to be CFA positive; 70 in Pemba and 19 in Unguja. The distribution of schools with positive children was heterogeneous with pronounced spatial variation on both islands. Based on the calculated TAS cut-offs of 18 and 20 CFA positive children for Pemba and Unguja respectively, we demonstrated that transmission was still ongoing in Pemba where the cut-off value was exceeded. We also presented evidence from previous entomological studies that LF transmission was active on Unguja shortly after stopping MDA in 2006. Based on these findings we concluded that LF transmission was still active in Zanzibar, and one million people at risk of acquiring LF, and recommended the resumption of MDA on both islands to eliminate the disease. In 2013, the government of Zanzibar decided to resume MDA with ivermectin plus albendazole on both islands.
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- 2014
8. The Relationship Between Collision History and a Computerized Assessment of Visual and Cognitive Skills in a Sample of School Bus Drivers
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Brent Thomas Ward, Robert Hubal, and Kenneth C Mills
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Engineering ,Percentile ,Visual perception ,business.industry ,Total cost ,Motor Vehicle Operators ,Applied psychology ,Sample (statistics) ,Collision ,Test (assessment) ,Cognitive skill ,business ,human activities ,Simulation - Abstract
The objective of this study was to explore whether measures of visual and cognitive performance in a safe computerized driving environment were associated with collision involvement and the cost of collisions in a sample of professional motor vehicle operators. One hundred and nine (109) school bus drivers in a large metropolitan area were asked to take a 15-minute interactive computer-based driving assessment. The skills included visual target identification, scanning in four directions, divided-attention, reaction time, steering smoothness, false positive responses, and evasive maneuvers. An overall score validated in previous research summarized each driver’s performance. Each driver’s collision history over the last three years was then compared to the driving assessment scores. Collision data included collision type, frequency, and damage cost associated with each incident. Drivers with collisions (n = 27) were compared to drivers with no collisions (n = 82). Drivers with collisions had significantly lower overall scanning and steering smoothness scores than drivers without collisions. Drivers with collisions also had significantly higher braking and target false-positive scores, indicating disorientation. The total cost of collisions for the lower 40th percentile test scores was $42,261, whereas the cost for the upper 60th percentile was $10,314. The results indicate that drivers who are prone to become disoriented and overwhelmed in a high-demand computerized assessment were more likely to have had collisions on the road. The relationship between collision cost/incidence and test scores suggests that a sufficiently complex and rapidly paced computerized assessment has utility in identifying drivers who would benefit from remedial training.
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- 2005
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9. Estimating the Operational Training Needs of Air Force Fighter Squadrons
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James H. Bigelow, William W. Taylor, Brent Thomas, and Craig Moore
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Engineering ,Military personnel ,Aeronautics ,Operations research ,business.industry ,Military science ,Training needs ,business - Published
- 2003
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10. Postaxial type-B polydactyly. Prevalence and treatment
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William L. Hennrikus and Brent Thomas Watson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Finger Joint ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Initial treatment ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Family history ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Ligation ,Average diameter ,Polydactyly ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Dysostosis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Numerical digit ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Upper limb ,Congenital disease ,business - Abstract
A prospective screening program of 11,161 newborns identified twenty-one infants who had postaxial type-B polydactyly (a prevalence of one in 531 live births). Sixteen infants (76 per cent) had bilateral postaxial type-B polydactyly. Eighteen infants (86 per cent) had a family history of the anomaly. The racial prevalence was one in 143 live births of black infants and one in 1339 live births of white infants. The duplicated small fingers were treated in the newborn nursery with suture ligation at the base of the pedicle. One infant had a second procedure to remove a blackened digit that remained firmly attached one month after the initial treatment. No other complications occurred. Fifteen patients (twenty-eight fingers) were reexamined at an average age of twenty months (range, twelve to thirty-seven months). Twelve fingers (43 per cent) had a residual bump, with an average diameter of two millimeters (range, one to six millimeters). Despite the residual bumps, all of the parents were satisfied with the cosmetic result.
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- 1997
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