138 results on '"T. A. O’Brien"'
Search Results
2. Separating Family-Level and Direct Exposure Effects of Smoking During Pregnancy on Offspring Externalizing Symptoms: Bridging the Behavior Genetic and Behavior Teratologic Divide
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Suena H. Massey, Lauren S. Wakschlag, Edwin H. Cook, T. Caitlin O'Brien, Ryne Estabrook, James L. Burns, Caron A. C. Clark, Beth Makowski, Brian Mustanski, and Kimberly Andrews Espy
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Proband ,Offspring ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Genetics, Behavioral ,Article ,Structural equation modeling ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sibling ,Child ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Teratology ,Smoking ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Child development ,Health psychology ,Conduct disorder ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Maternal smoking during pregnancy (MSDP) has been robustly associated with externalizing problems and their developmental precursors in offspring in studies using behavioral teratologic designs (Wakschlag et al., Am J Public Health 92(6):966-974, 2002; Espy et al., Dev Psychol 47(1):153-169, 2011). In contrast, the use of behavior genetic approaches has shown that the effects commonly attributed to MSDP can be explained by family-level variables (D'Onofrio et al., Dev Psychopathol 20(01):139-164, 2008). Reconciling these conflicting findings requires integration of these study designs. We utilize longitudinal data on a preschool proband and his/her sibling from the Midwest Infant Development Study-Preschool (MIDS-P) to test for teratologic and family level effects of MSDP. We find considerable variation in prenatal smoking patterns both within and across pregnancies within families, indicating that binary smoking measures are not sufficiently capturing exposure. Structural equation models indicate that both conduct disorder and oppositional defiant disorder symptoms showed unique effects of MSDP over and above family level effects. Blending high quality exposure measurement with a within-family design suggests that it is premature to foreclose the possibility of a teratologic effect of MSDP on externalizing problems. Implications and recommendations for future studies are discussed.
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- 2015
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3. Preliminary evidence for the interaction of the oxytocin receptor gene (oxtr) and face processing in differentiating prenatal smoking patterns
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Lauren S. Wakschlag, T. Caitlin O'Brien, James L. Burns, Suena H. Massey, Ryne Estabrook, Suma Jacob, Daniel S. Pine, and Edwin H. Cook
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Offspring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Emotions ,Empathy ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Prospective cohort study ,media_common ,General Neuroscience ,Smoking ,Recognition, Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Oxytocin receptor ,Distress ,chemistry ,Maternal Exposure ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,Face ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Visual Perception ,Smoking cessation ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,Cotinine ,Psychology - Abstract
Prenatal smoking cessation has been described as an empathic action “for the baby,” but this has not been empirically demonstrated. We capitalized on a genetically-characterized extant dataset with outstanding measurement of prenatal smoking patterns and maternal face processing data (as an indicator of empathy) to test this hypothesis, and explore how empathy and smoking patterns may be moderated by a genetic substrate of empathy, the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR). Participants were 143Caucasian women from the East Boston family study with repeated prospective reports of smoking level, adjusted based on repeated cotinine bioassays. Salivary DNA and face processing (Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy-2) were assessed 14 years later at an adolescent follow-up of offspring. Two-thirds of participants reported smoking prior to pregnancy recognition. Of these, 21% quit during pregnancy; 56% reduced smoking, and 22% smoked persistently at the same level. A significant interaction between face processing and OXTR variants previously associated with increased sensitivity to social context, rs53576GG and rs2254298A, was found (β = −.181; p = .015); greater ability to identify distress in others was associated with lower levels of smoking during pregnancy for rs53576(GG)/rs2254298(A) individuals (p = .013), but not for other genotypes (p = .892). Testing this “empathy hypothesis of prenatal smoking cessation” in larger studies designed to examine this question can elucidate whether interventions to enhance empathy can improve prenatal smoking cessation rates.
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- 2015
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4. Second cancer risk in adults receiving autologous haematopoietic SCT for cancer: a population-based cohort study
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I A, Bilmon, L J, Ashton, R E, Le Marsney, A J, Dodds, T A, O'Brien, L, Wilcox, I, Nivison-Smith, B, Daniels, C M, Vajdic, and K, Chaplin
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Adolescent ,Population ,Transplantation, Autologous ,National Death Index ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Autologous transplantation ,Registries ,Young adult ,Lung cancer ,education ,Melanoma ,Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin ,Australia ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Cancer ,Neoplasms, Second Primary ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Myelodysplastic Syndromes ,Population Surveillance ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Population-based evidence on second cancer risk following autologous haematopoietic SCT (HCT) is lacking. We quantified second cancer risk for a national, population-based cohort of adult Australians receiving autologous HCT for cancer and notified to the Australasian Bone Marrow Transplant Recipient Registry 1992-2007 (n=7765). Cancer diagnoses and deaths were ascertained by linkage with the Australian Cancer Database and National Death Index. Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) were calculated and Cox regression models were used to estimate within-cohort risk factors treating death as a competing risk. During a median 2.5 years follow-up, second cancer risk was modestly increased compared with the general population (SIR 1.4, 95% confidence interval 1.2-1.6); significantly elevated risk was also observed for AML/myelodysplastic syndrome (SIR=20.6), melanoma (SIR=2.6) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=3.3). Recipients at elevated risk of any second cancer included males, and those transplanted at a younger age, in an earlier HCT era, or for lymphoma or testicular cancer. Male sex, older age (>45 years) and history of relapse after HCT predicted melanoma risk. Transplantation for Hodgkin lymphoma and older age were associated with lung cancer risk. Second malignancies are an important late effect and these results inform and emphasize the need for cancer surveillance in autologous HCT survivors.
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- 2014
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5. Mineral Oil and Aliphatic Alcohols: Toxicity and Analysis of Synergistic Effects on German Cockroaches (Dictyoptera: Blattellidae)
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S. R. Sims and T. E. O'Brien
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Male ,Alcohol ,Median lethal dose ,Lethal Dose 50 ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,biology.animal ,Toxicity Tests, Acute ,medicine ,Animals ,Mineral Oil ,Food science ,Mineral oil ,Cockroach ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Ecology ,biology ,Dictyoptera ,Drug Synergism ,Blattellidae ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,chemistry ,Alcohols ,Insect Science ,Toxicity ,Regression Analysis ,Methanol ,Nonlinear regression ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Two mineral oils and 12 linear primary alcohols were studied, alone and in combination, to determine their contact toxicity to adult German cockroaches, Blattella germanica (L.) (Dictyoptera: Blattellidae). The more toxic oil, PD23 (LD50 = 1.45 mg per cockroach) was used for combination studies. Alcohols with carbon chain lengths of C3 and C8 through C12 were the most toxic, with LD50 values ranging from 0.3 to 0.6 mg. C1 (methanol) and C14 (1-tetradecanol) were least toxic, with LD50 values of 2.35 and 1.75 mg, respectively. Eight of the 12 combinations of a nonlethal dose of PD23 oil with an LD10 dose of alcohol produced significantly greater mortality than predicted under the assumption of additive effects. A sample of five synergistic oil + alcohol combinations, covering most of the alcohol carbon chain length range over which synergy occurred, was further studied by calculating LD50 values for three fixed mixture ratios (80:20, 50:50, and 20:80) of each combination. Results were analyzed using both graphical techniques (isobole analysis) and by nonlinear regression. At least one, but not necessarily all, of the three fixed ratio combinations of each oil + alcohol pairing indicated synergy. The conclusions drawn from the isobole and regression analyses were consistent.
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- 2011
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6. Osteochondral Defects of the Lateral Trochlear Ridge of the Distal Femur of the Horse Clinical, Radiographic, and Pathological Examination and Results of Surgical Treatment
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Roy R. Pool, T. R. O'Brien, J. D. Wheat, and John Pascoe
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Arthrotomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Granulation tissue ,Stifle joint ,Anatomy ,Dehiscence ,medicine.disease ,Curettage ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lameness ,Seroma ,Medicine ,Fibrocartilage ,business - Abstract
Osteochondral defects of the lateral trochlear ridge of the distal femur were identified in 15 joints of 10 horses. Lesions were bilateral in five horses and unilateral in five horses. Thirteen of these 15 defects were treated by curettage through a craniolateral femoropatellar arthrotomy. Subcutaneous seroma formation and partial skin dehiscence occurred in nine stifles. Lameness attributable to the stifle joint was no longer apparent at 6 and 12 months after surgery. The normal subchondral bony contour of the lateral trochlear ridge was altered in all joints after surgery. The subchondral bone was uniformly increased in density in all joints, and six lateral trochlear ridges had small focal radiolucent regions within the subchondral bone, which suggested that complete removal of the original lesion had not been achieved. Healing of the surgical site between 2 weeks and 14 months was evaluated in four joints. Granulation tissue from mesenchymal elements in subchondral marrow spaces gradually filled the defects with fibrocartilage.
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- 2008
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7. A COMPARISON OF RADIOGRAPHY, COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY, AND MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF PALMAR PROCESS FRACTURES IN FOALS
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T. R. O'Brien, Roy R. Pool, Dominique M. Freeman, Philip D. Koblik, and A. J. Kaneps
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medicine.medical_specialty ,integumentary system ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Flexor tendon ,business.industry ,Hoof ,Radiography ,Soft tissue ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Computed tomography ,Phalanx ,musculoskeletal system ,body regions ,medicine ,Radiology ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business ,Process (anatomy) - Abstract
The relative sensitivity of radiography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging for detecting palmar process fractures of the distal phalanx in foals was determined and the imaging findings were compared with histomorphologic evaluations of the palmar processes. Compared to radiography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging did not improve the sensitivity for detection of palmar process fractures. Statistical agreement for palmar process fracture diagnosis was excellent among the three imaging modalities. Histomorphologic evaluations were more sensitive for diagnosis of palmar process fracture than any of the imaging modalities. Three-dimensional image reconstructions and volume measurements of distal phalanges and palmar process fracture fragments from computed tomography studies provided more complete anatomical information than radiography. Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed that the deep digital flexor tendon insertion on the distal phalanx is immediately axial to the site where palmar process fractures occur, and differentiated cartilage, bone, and soft tissue structures of the hoof.
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- 2005
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8. Identifying under-performing surgeons
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Nigel Smeeton, R Singh, and T S O'Brien
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Surgical results ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mortality rate ,General surgery ,Treatment outcome ,Medical audit ,Statistical sensitivity ,Surgery ,Cystectomy ,Sample size determination ,medicine ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To estimate the likelihood of poor surgical results being explained by chance rather than under-performance. METHODS The 30-day mortality rates after radical cystectomy for bladder cancer were analysed theoretically. Surgical competence was defined as a mortality rate of 4%, excellence as 2% and under-performance as 8%, 12%, 20% or 40%. Four scenarios were explored for surgeons of different competence: first, the sample size required to show that a given level of under-performance is very unlikely to be due to chance; second, the likelihood of two or more consecutive deaths in a series of cases; third, the likelihood of clustering of deaths, defined as two deaths in five or in 10 cases; and last, the likelihood of outstanding surgical results (i.e. no deaths) being achieved in small cohorts by surgeons of differing competence. RESULTS For surgeons with a mortality rate of 8%, 12%, 20% or 40%, the sample sizes needed to prove under-performance are 211, 65, 21 and seven, respectively. For consecutive deaths, 0.4% of excellent, 1.4% of competent and 21% of surgeons with a mortality rate of 12% will experience two or more consecutive deaths in the next 10 cases. For clustered deaths, 1% of excellent, 5% of competent and 23% of seriously under-performing surgeons (mortality rates ≥ 12%) will experience two deaths in their next 10 cases. Lastly, for the likelihood of outstanding results, only 3.6% of surgeons with an 8% mortality rate and < 1% of surgeons with a mortality rate ≥ 12% will experience no deaths over 40 consecutive cases. CONCLUSIONS Very large cohorts are needed to confirm even significant under-performance. Consecutive deaths are very unlikely events for competent surgeons. Clustered deaths (two deaths in 10 cases) are very unlikely events for excellent surgeons but plausible for competent ones. Analysis of consecutive/clustered deaths is limited by low statistical sensitivity; only up to a quarter of seriously under-performing surgeons are identified. No deaths in 40 consecutive cases implies competence.
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- 2003
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9. Preconception care and the risk of congenital anomalies in the offspring of women with diabetes mellitus: a meta-analysis
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Joel G. Ray, Wee-Shian Chan, and T. E. O'brien
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Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Offspring ,Pregnancy in Diabetics ,Lower risk ,Preconception Care ,Folic Acid ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes mellitus ,Confidence Intervals ,medicine ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Prospective cohort study ,Glycemic ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Gynecology ,Obstetrics ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pregnancy Trimester, First ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Treatment Outcome ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Meta-analysis ,Relative risk ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,business ,Publication Bias ,Cohort study - Abstract
Preconception care (PCC) and strict periconceptional glycemic control are both used to minimize the risk of congenital birth defects in offspring of women with type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). These malformations are ascribed in large measure to poor periconceptional control. This study evaluated PCC by a meta-analysis of published studies of PCC in women with DM, published from 1970 to 2000. Two reviewers independently abstracted the data, and the rate and relative risk (RR) of major and minor malformations were pooled from eligible studies using a random effects model. Early first-trimester values of glycosylated hemoglobin were recorded. Eight retrospective and eight prospective cohort studies were included; they were carried out in Europe, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Israel. Most participants had type 1 DM, but three studies included women with type 2 DM. Women given PCC tended to be about 2 years older on average than the others. Methods of PCC were quite variable, although most centers provided some maternal education about the pregnancy risks associated with poor glycemic control. In seven studies reporting early gestational glycosylated hemoglobin values, mean levels were consistently lower in PCC patients. Among 2104 offspring, the pooled rate for major and minor anomalies was 2.4% in the PCC group and 7.7% in non-PCC recipients, for a pooled RR of 0.32. Among 2651 offspring, major malformations were less prevalent in the PCC group (2.1 vs. 6.5%; pooled RR = 0.36). Comparable results were obtained when only prospective studies were analyzed and in studies where the infant examiners were unaware of the mothers' PCC status. The lowest risk of major anomalies was in a study that administered folic acid periconceptionally to its PCC recipients; the RR was 0.11. This meta-analysis, which included both retrospective and prospective studies, demonstrates an association of PCC with a significantly lower risk of congenital anomalies in the offspring of women with established DM. The lowered risk was accompanied by significantly lower glycosylated hemoglobin values in the first trimester in recipients of PCC.
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- 2001
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10. Changes in actin organization in the living egg apparatus of Torenia fournieri during fertilization
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Ming Yuan, Ying Fu, T. P. O’Brien, Bing-Quan Huang, Hong-Yuan Yang, and S. Y. Zee
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Egg cell ,biology ,Arp2/3 complex ,macromolecular substances ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,Filiform apparatus ,Microfilament ,Actin cytoskeleton ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Botany ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Cytoskeleton ,Actin ,Torenia fournieri - Abstract
Changes in actin organization in the living egg apparatus of Torenia fournieri from anthesis to post-fertilization have been investigated using microinjection and confocal microscopy. Our results revealed that the actin cytoskeleton displays dramatic changes in the egg apparatus and appears to coordinate the events of synergid degeneration, pollen tube arrival and gametic fusion during fertilization. Synergid degeneration occurs after anthesis and is accompanied by actin fragmentation and degradation. The actin cytoskeleton becomes organized with numerous aggregates in the chalazal end of the degenerating synergid, and some of the actin infiltrates into the intercellular gap between synergids, egg and central cell, forming a distinct actin band. An actin cap is present near the filiform apparatus after anthesis and disappears after pollen tube arrival. In the egg cell, actin filaments initially organize into a network and after pollination become fragmented into numerous patches in the cortex. These structures, along with the actin in the degenerating synergid and intercellular spaces form two distinct actin coronas during fertilization. The actin coronas vanish after gametic fusion. This is the first report of changes in actin organization in the living egg apparatus. The reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton in the egg apparatus and the presence of the actin coronas during fertilization suggest these events may be a necessary prelude to reception of the pollen tube and fusion of the male and female gametes.
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- 2000
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11. Evaluation of Samarium-153 for synovectomy in an osteochondral fragment-induced model of synovitis in horses
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H.R. Schumacher, T. R. O'Brien, William J. Hornof, M.R. Lee, and Tom B. Yarbrough
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Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biocompatible Materials ,Synovectomy ,Injections, Intra-Articular ,Random Allocation ,Synovitis ,Forelimb ,Animals ,Medicine ,Horses ,Radioisotopes ,Analysis of Variance ,Samarium ,Carpal Joint ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Cartilage ,Metacarpophalangeal joint ,medicine.disease ,Microspheres ,Surgery ,Disease Models, Animal ,Durapatite ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Effusion ,Lameness ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Synovial membrane ,business - Abstract
Objective— To determine the effects of intraarticular administration of Samarium-153 (153Sm) bound to hydroxyapatite microspheres (153SmM) on an osteochondral chip–Ninduced synovitis. Study Design— Sixty days after implantation of autogenous osteochondral fragments in the middle carpal and metacarpophalangeal joints, 153SmM was administered into 1 joint of each type. The contralateral joints were used as untreated controls. Animals or Sample Population— Fifteen horses without preexisting joint disease were randomly divided into 2 groups (7 in the carpal group, 8 in the metacarpophalangeal group). Methods— Horses had osteochondral fragments that were harvested from the lateral ridge of the trochlea of the talus and implanted bilaterally into a middle carpal joint and a metacarpophalangeal joint; the opposite joint type served as a control. Sixty days later, 10 to 15 mCi of 153SmM (20 to 50 μm diam) was injected into the fragment-implanted joints. Three horses were treated with nonradioactive hydroxyapatite fragments. Horses were examined clinically until they were killed 14 or 30 days later. Control and treated joints were examined grossly and microscopically to determine the effects of 153SmM on synovial membrane and cartilage. Results— Intraarticular 153SmM caused a transient flare with lameness, effusion, and edema for 48 to 72 hours. Implanted osteochondral chips induced a synovitis characterized by variable degrees of joint damage and synovial infiltrate. Use of 153SmM resulted in synovectomy of variable depth and extent. Conclusions— Intraarticular 153SmM may be a useful method for synovectomy of inflamed synovial membrane. Clinical Relevance— With further testing, radioactive pharmaceuticals might become useful clinical treatments for persistent synovitis not responsive to conventional techniques.
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- 2000
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12. Ornithine decarboxylase transgenic mice as a model for human atrichia with papular lesions
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Angela M. Christiano, T. G. O'Brien, Andrey A. Panteleyev, and John P. Sundberg
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Genetically modified mouse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,integumentary system ,Transgene ,Atrichia with papular lesions ,Dermatology ,Biology ,Hair follicle ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Ornithine decarboxylase ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hair loss ,Endocrinology ,Dermis ,Hair cycle ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
The hair follicle is characterized by cyclic transformations from active growth and hair fiber production through regression into a resting phase. The growth phase, known as anagen, is associated with rapid rates of cell turnover, and variations in the rate of DNA synthesis in mouse skin throughout the hair cycle are accompanied by changes in the activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), a key enzyme in the synthesis of polyamines, which are actively involved in regulation of normal cell division, differentiation, and growth. Previously, a transgenic mouse was created that overexpressed ODC in the skin using a K6 promoter. The first hair cycle in neonatal transgenic mice appeared to be normal, but by the third week of postnatal life transgenic pups begin to progressively lose hair. The lower portion of the hair follicle was progressively replaced with enlarging cystic structures located in the deep dermis, and the transgenic mice exhibited excessive growth of skin mass resulting in pronounced wrinkling and folding. Interestingly, these findings bore striking resemblance to the rhino mouse phenotype and to human patients with papular atrichia, a rare congenital ectodermal disorder characterized by progressive and irreversible hair loss in early childhood. The similarities in phenotype between transgenic mice and human atrichia with papular lesions suggest that ODC transgenics may represent a useful model for studying this disorder. It appears that ODC plays a functionally important, yet still obscure role in a complex metabolic pathway that is critical in hair follicle function not only in mice, but in humans as well.
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- 2000
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13. Seroprevalence of hepatitis C virus in the general population of northwest Tanzania
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Beatriz Helena Tess, J E Drummond, A Levin, Glen Brubaker, Harvey J. Alter, T R O'Brien, and John F. Shao
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Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Cross-sectional study ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunoblotting ,Population ,Hepacivirus ,Antibodies, Viral ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tanzania ,Gastroenterology ,Serology ,Cohort Studies ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Seroprevalence ,False Positive Reactions ,education ,False Negative Reactions ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Urbanization ,Hepatitis C ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Female ,Parasitology ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
Sera from 516 participants enrolled in a population-based cross-sectional study in northwest Tanzania were tested for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV). The mean age of study subjects was 29 years (range = 16-49 years); 43% were men, 6% reported a history of blood transfusion, and 4% were infected with human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1). Although 53 of 516 sera (10.3%, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 7.8-13.2%) were repeatedly reactive by a third-generation enzyme immunoassay (EIA-3), only 6 of the 53 were positive when tested with a third-generation recombinant immunoblot assay (confirmed HCV seroprevalence = 1.2%, 95% CI = 0.4-2.5%). The positive predictive value of the HCV EIA-3 in this population was 18.8% (95% CI = 7.0-36.4%). False positivity was not correlated with EIA-3 optical density values, age, sex, infection with HIV-1, or a history of blood transfusion, but it was marginally associated with increased serum IgG levels. We conclude that the prevalence of HCV is low in this region and that the HCV EIA-3 has a higher false-positivity rate in this population than has been reported among U.S. blood donors.
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- 2000
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14. [Untitled]
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T. K. O'Brien, Fiona Kelly, David Marston Band, Robert Anthony Fox Linton, Nick Linton, and M. M. Jonas
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Cardiac output ,business.industry ,Basilic Vein ,Antecubital Fossa ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemodynamics ,Health Informatics ,Blood flow ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Bolus (medicine) ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Lithium chloride ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Central venous catheter - Abstract
Objective.We have previously described an indicator dilutiontechnique of measuring cardiac output in which lithium chloride is injectedas a bolus via a central venous catheter and cardiac output derived from thearterial lithium dilution curve recorded from a lithium-selective electrode,which we have developed for this purpose. It would be an advantage if thelithium could be injected via the basilic vein (in the antecubital fossa) inthose patients who do not need central venous catheterisation for otherreasons. We have therefore compared cardiac output measurements made usingthese two routes of lithium chloride administration. Methods.Lithiumdilution cardiac output was measured 10 times in each of 10 patients,injecting the lithium chloride alternately via the basilic or central venouscatheter. Results.The mean difference was 0.8 ± 5.2% (SD)(range −8.5 to +7.0%) over a range of cardiac output of 4.5–13l/min. Conclusions.Injection of lithium chloride via the basilic veinin the antecubital fossa allows accurate lithium dilution cardiac outputmeasurements to be made in patients who do not have central venous cathetersin place.
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- 1999
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15. Royal academy of medicine in Ireland section of bioengineering
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P. J. Prendergast, I. Callanan, C. Simms, C. G. Lyons, C. L. Brady, M. S. Feeney, D. Lennon, L. J. Curley, B. A. O. McCormack, T. M. O’Brien, V. Waide, A. J. Carr, P. Ferris, H. J. Rice, A. W. Blayney, S. Tierney, D. Buckley, F. Bonnadio, J. M. Fitzpatrick, T. F. Gorey, P. G. Donnelly, G. T. H. Wright, K. E. Tanner, W. Bonfield, N. V. Girish Kumar, D. Rawlings, J. L. Sher, R. Cullinan, M. T. Young, S. C. O’Rourke, R. Howard-Hildige, G. Insley, D. P. Dowling, K. Donnelly, P. V. Kola, T. C. Kelly, K. Brummitt, L. Lloyd, R. Eloy, M. Therin, N. Weill, E. P. Battles, R. G. Hill, A. Devitt, J. Rice, D. McCormack, P. Felle, F. McManus, K. J. Bryan, M. Buggy, F. Kirrane, J. F. Malone, E. Coyle, B. Stewart, S. Hatfield, M. Farrell, F. Duignan, R. Reilly, D. Bray, P. Kenny, S. K. O’Rourke, A. K. Ryan, J. F. Orr, C. Mitchell, A. C. Murphy, P. O’Neill, P. Chawke, C. Birkinshaw, J. J. Leahy, D. Taylor, J. P. O’Reilly, J. M. Manning, B. F. Masterson, J. M. Duffy, R. J. Winder, G. J. Gilmore, D. Gallagher, H. K. Graham, J. Rodda, R. Boyd, D. Cantillon, F. Fushimi, C. D. Nugent, J. A. C. Webb, N. D. Black, A. Boyd, B. J. Meenan, M. Akay, N. Leyland, S. Maher, N. Smith, D. C. Sun, C. Stark, J. H. Dumbleton, D. B. Keenan, F. J. Owens, D. Pichon, N. Nawana, A. Kavanagh, T. McGloughlin, W. D. van Driel, R. Huiskes, J. O’Connor, A. Leardini, T. W. Lu, F. Catani, T. C. Lee, T. L. Arthur, L, J. Gibson, E. R. Myers, W. C. Hayes, R. Gill, W. L. Chen, and P. Kelly
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ophthalmology ,Section (typography) ,Library science ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Published
- 1998
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16. Radiographic features of mastocytosis in the equine limb
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A. A. Stannard, T. R. O'brien, and Valerie F. Samii
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Extremities ,General Medicine ,Tarsus, Animal ,Carpus, Animal ,Text mining ,Animals ,Medicine ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Horses ,Mast Cells ,Radiology ,business ,Mastocytosis ,Retrospective Studies - Published
- 1997
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17. Mechanisms whereby Propofol Mediates Peripheral Vasolidation in Humans
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Maelynn D. Colinco, Michael Muzi, T. J. O'Brien, B. J. Robinson, and Thomas J. Ebert
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Sympathetic nervous system ,Relaxation (psychology) ,business.industry ,Peripheral resistance ,Vasodilation ,Pharmacology ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Decreased blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Brachial artery ,Propofol ,business ,Blood vessel ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Anesthetic induction and maintenance with propofol are associated with decreased blood pressure that is, in part, due to decreased peripheral resistance. Several possible mechanisms whereby propofol could reduce peripheral resistance include a direct action of propofol on vascular smooth muscle, an inhibition of sympathetic activity to the vasculature, or both. This study examined these two possibilities in humans by measuring the forearm vascular responses to infusions of propofol into the brachial artery (study 1) and by determining the forearm arterial and venous responses to systemic (intravenous) infusions of propofol after sympathetic denervation of the forearm by stellate blockade (study 2). Methods Bilateral forearm venous occlusion plethysmography was used to examine forearm vascular resistance (FVR) and forearm vein compliance (FVC). Study 1 used infusion of intralipid (time control) and propofol at rates between 83 and 664 micrograms/min into the brachial artery of 11 conscious persons and compared responses to arterial infusions of sodium nitroprusside (SNP) at 0.3, 3.0, and 10 micrograms/min. Venous blood from the infusion arm was assayed for plasma propofol concentrations. In study 2, after left stellate block (12 ml 0.25% bupivacaine + 1% lidocaine), six participants were anesthetized and maintained with propofol infusions of 125 and 200 micrograms.kg-1.min-1. Simultaneous right forearm (unblocked) blood flow dynamics served as the time control. In three additional conscious participants, intrabrachial artery infusions of SNP and nitroglycerin, both at 10 micrograms/min, were performed before and after stellate blockade of the left forearm to determine whether the sympathetically denervated forearm vessels could dilate beyond the level produced by denervation alone. Results In study 1, infusion of intralipid or propofol into the brachial artery did not change FVR or FVC. Sodium nitroprusside significantly decreased FVR in a dose-dependent manner by 22 +/- 5%, 65 +/- 3%, and 78 +/- 2% (mean +/- SEM) but did not change FVC. During the incremental propofol infusions, plasma propofol concentrations increased from 0.2 to 10.1 micrograms/ml and averaged 7.4 +/- 1.1 micrograms/ml during the highest infusion rate. In study 2, stellate ganglion blockade decreased FVR by 50 +/- 6% and increased FVC by 58 +/- 10%. Propofol anesthesia at 125 and 200 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 progressively reduced mean arterial pressure. In the arm with sympathetic denervation, FVR and FVC showed no further changes during propofol anesthesia, whereas in the control arm FVR significantly decreased by 41 +/- 9% and 42 +/- 7%, and FVC increased significantly by 89 +/- 27% and 85 +/- 32% during 125 and 200 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 infusions of propofol, respectively. In the three additional conscious participants, intraarterial infusion of SNP and nitroglycerin (TNG) after the stellate blockade resulted in a further decrease of FVR and a further increase of FVC. Conclusions In contrast to SNP infusions, propofol infusions into the brachial artery of conscious persons caused no significant vascular responses, despite the presence of therapeutic plasma concentrations of propofol within the forearm. The effects of propofol anesthesia on FVR and FVC are similar to the effects of sympathetic denervation by stellate ganglion blockade. Thus the peripheral vascular actions of propofol appear to be due primarily to an inhibition of sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve activity.
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- 1997
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18. Do dopamine gene variants and prenatal smoking interactively predict youth externalizing behavior?
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Andrew D. Skol, Edwin H. Cook, T. Caitlin O'Brien, Brian Mustanski, and Lauren S. Wakschlag
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Male ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Toxicology ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Correlation ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Sex Factors ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Dopamine ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Dopamine receptor D4 ,Humans ,Allele ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,biology ,Receptors, Dopamine D4 ,Smoking ,medicine.disease ,Dopamine receptor ,Conduct disorder ,Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,biology.protein ,Female ,Psychology ,Developmental psychopathology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Externalizing behaviors (encompassing antisocial, impulsive, and substance use behaviors) are pervasive and impairing across a multitude of settings and developmental contexts. These behaviors, though often investigated separately, are highly comorbid. Prenatal tobacco exposure in interaction with various genetic influences has predicted later externalizing behavior, and recent evidence supports investigating sex differences in these patterns. In the current study, we extend this work by (a) examining two functional genetic markers in the dopamine system: the transporter gene ( DAT1 ) and the dopamine receptor D 4 gene ( DRD4 ) in interaction with prenatal tobacco exposure to predict a latent composite of externalizing behavior and (b) testing whether these patterns differ by sex of youth in a community sample of adolescents (n = 176). The relatively small sample is partially offset by high quality, multi-method prospective measurement. We assessed prenatal tobacco exposure using prospective repeated cotinine-corrected reports and externalizing behaviors were assessed utilizing multiple measures across three waves. The interaction between DAT1 (but not DRD4 ) and prenatal tobacco exposure was statistically significant in boys, and patterns appeared to differ by sex. Risk for externalizing behaviors for exposed boys increased linearly as a function of the 10r DAT1 allele. For exposed girls, there was a trend such that DAT1 heterozygotes had a marginally higher risk than homozygotes. This pattern was not explained by passive gene-environment correlation. Elucidating sex-specific pathways through which early adverse exposures and genetic susceptibilities contribute to externalizing behavior can inform early targeted prevention efforts for those children at highest risk.
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- 2013
19. Regulation of Epithelial Na + Permeability by Protein Kinase C is Tissue Specific
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M. L. Chalfant, Kim Peterson-Yantorno, J.M. Civan, T. G. O'Brien, D. R. DiBona, and Mortimer M. Civan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Urinary Bladder ,Biophysics ,Regulator ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Epithelium ,Piperazines ,Membrane Potentials ,Amiloride ,Alkaloids ,1-(5-Isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-Methylpiperazine ,Skin Physiological Phenomena ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Tissue specific ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Aldosterone ,Protein Kinase C ,Protein kinase C ,Skin ,Benzophenanthridines ,Na permeability ,Rana catesbeiana ,Rana pipiens ,Sodium ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Isoquinolines ,Staurosporine ,Phenanthridines ,Cell biology ,Kinetics ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Organ Specificity ,Permeability (electromagnetism) ,Bufo marinus ,Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate ,Frog Skin - Abstract
Protein kinase C (PKC) is a major regulator of a broad range of cellular functions. Activation of PKC has been reported to stimulate Na+ transport across frog skin epithelium by increasing the apical Na+ permeability. This positive natriferic response has not been observed with other epithelial preparations, and could reflect the specific experimental conditions of different laboratories, or species or organ specificity of the response to PKC. In the present study, measurements were conducted with skins and urinary bladders from the same animals of two different species. The PKC activator TPA uniformly increased the transepithelial Na+ transport (measured as amiloride-sensitive short-circuit current, ISC, across skins from Rana temporaria and Bufo marinus, and inhibited ISC across bladders from the same animals. Inhibitors of PKC (staurosporine, H-7 and chelerythrine) partially blocked the TPA-induced stimulation of ISC across frog skin. The specificity of the PKC response by amphibian skin could have reflected an induction of moulting, similar to that observed with aldosterone. However, light micrographs of paired areas of frog skin revealed no evidence of the putative moulting. Separation of stratum corneum from the underlying stratum granulosum could be detected following application of aldosterone. We conclude that the effect of PKC on epithelial Na+ channels is organ, and not species specific. The stimulation of Na+ permeability in amphibian skin does not arise from sloughing of the stratum corneum. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that the natriferic action arises from the calcium-independent isozyme of PKC previously detected in frog skin.
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- 1996
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20. Determination of T-lymphocyte subsets on site in rural Tanzania: results in HIV-1 infected and non-infected individuals
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T R O'Brien, A Levin, W A Blattner, G Brubaker, J S Shao, J J Goedert, Kenneth Strauss, I Hannet, and D Kumby
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cellular immunity ,Adolescent ,CD3 Complex ,CD8 Antigens ,T-Lymphocytes ,Population ,CD4-CD8 Ratio ,HIV Infections ,Dermatology ,Tanzania ,Patient Education as Topic ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,HIV Seroprevalence ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,HIV Seronegativity ,Immunopathology ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Sida ,education ,Aged ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Hospitalization ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,Female ,Viral disease ,business ,CD8 - Abstract
With the FACSCount TM flow cytometer, counts of CD4, CD8 and CD3 lymphocytes and CD4/CD8 ratios were performed in a rural hospital in Tanzania. A total of 168 subjects (21 HIV-1 seropositive and 147 HIV-1 seronegative) were tested as part of a population-based serosurvey and AIDS education programme; 134 other subjects were hospitalized patients who had signs and symptoms suggestive of AIDS (69 HIV-1 seropositive and 65 HIV-seronegative). Mean values for the 147 HIV-1 seronegative subjects from the local population were 980 CD4 cells (95% CI 930, 1031), 598 CD8 cells (560, 635) and CD4/CD8 ratio 1.78 (1.68, 1.89). Seropositive subjects from the local population had significantly lower CD4 cell counts, higher CD8 counts and a lower CD4/CD8 ratio. CD4 cells were significantly lower and CD8 cells significantly higher in HIV-1 seropositive hospital patients compared to HIV-1 seronegative patients. However, 23 (35%) seronegative hospital patients had CD4 counts lower than 600. These results establish baseline values for the lymphocyte subsets in this population and indicate that this technique can be used in remote areas to monitor progress of HIV-infected individuals.
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- 1996
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21. Liver function in early Lyme disease
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Harold W. Horowitz, Brad Dworkin, Gary P. Wormser, C Connolly, M Calmann, T A O'Brien, B B Luciano, John Nowakowski, Robert B. Nadelman, and G Forseter
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Time Factors ,Gastroenterology ,Hepatitis ,Lyme disease ,Borrelia burgdorferi Group ,Liver Function Tests ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Prospective Studies ,Lyme Disease ,Hepatology ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Hepatitis A ,Alanine Transaminase ,Early Disseminated Lyme Disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Liver ,Alanine transaminase ,Case-Control Studies ,biology.protein ,Abnormal Liver Function Test ,Female ,Liver function ,Liver function tests ,business - Abstract
To evaluate the frequency, pattern, and severity of liver function test abnormalities in patients with Lyme disease associated with erythema migrans (EM), 115 individuals with no other identifiable cause for liver function test abnormalities who presented with EM between July 1990 and September 1993 were prospectively evaluated. For individuals with abnormal liver function tests, common causes of hepatitis, including hepatitis A, B, and C, were excluded. A local control group was used for comparison. Forty-six (40%) patients had at least one liver test abnormality, and 31 (27%) had more than 1 abnormality compared with 19 (19%) and 4 (4%) of controls, respectively (P < .01 for each comparison). gamma-Glutamyl transpeptidase (28%) and alanine transaminase (ALT) (27%) were the most frequently elevated liver function tests among Lyme disease patients. Anorexia, nausea, or vomiting was reported by 30% of patients, but did not occur more frequently in patients with elevated liver function tests compared with those with normal values. Patients with early disseminated Lyme disease were more likely to have elevated liver function studies (66%) compared with patients with localized disease (34%) (P = .002). After antibiotic treatment, elevated liver function tests improved or resolved in most patients. Liver function test abnormalities are common in patients with EM but were mild, most often not associated with symptoms, and improved or resolved by 3 weeks after the onset of antibiotic therapy in most patients.
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- 1996
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22. Arthroscopic Anterior Labral Reconstruction Using a Transglenoid Suture Technique
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Jeffrey L. Zilberfarb, William D. Morin, John M. Lapoint, Timothy S. Mologne, and T. Jeff O'Brien
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Adult ,Joint Instability ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Shoulders ,Population ,Joint Dislocations ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Bone Nails ,Arthroscopy ,Immobilization ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Suture (anatomy) ,Recurrence ,medicine ,Humans ,Paralysis ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,education ,Retrospective Studies ,Postoperative Care ,Rupture ,Subluxation ,030222 orthopedics ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Suture Techniques ,Endoscopy ,030229 sport sciences ,Perioperative ,Suprascapular nerve ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Scapula ,Military Personnel ,Treatment Outcome ,Shoulder Injuries ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
We report the clinical outcome of arthroscopic labral reconstruction using a transglenoid suture technique in a young, active-duty military population. Forty-eight patients (49 shoulders) with varying degrees of gleno humeral instability underwent arthroscopic labral re construction using a transglenoid suture technique. All patients had traumatic injuries to their shoulders and all patients had magnetic resonance imaging scans dem onstrating anterior labral tears. Postoperatively, the patients' shoulders were immobilized for up to 6 weeks. At a mean followup of 30 months (range, 12 to 49), 17 of the 41 patients (41%) with preoperative dislocation or subluxation had recurrent instability. Nine of these patients subsequently underwent open reconstruction procedures for recurrent instability. On the basis of the Rowe rating system, 53% had excel lent or good results and 47% had fair or poor results. The overall perioperative complication rate was 14%. Suprascapular nerve palsy occurred in three cases (6%). Using the Fisher exact test, we determined that immobilization for 6 weeks postoperatively correlated with a lower recurrence rate in the patients with a history of glenohumeral dislocation (P = 0.007). The results of arthroscopic labral reconstruction using transglenoid sutures in the military patient are inferior to the reported 3% to 5% recurrence rate with open Bankart procedures, and the transglenoid pin tech nique jeopardizes the suprascapular nerve.
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- 1996
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23. Whole cell and unitary amiloride-sensitive sodium currents in M-1 mouse cortical collecting duct cells
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M. L. Chalfant, T. G. O'Brien, and Mortimer M. Civan
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Kidney Cortex ,Physiology ,Sodium ,Cytological Techniques ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Gating ,Sodium Chloride ,Cell Line ,Amiloride ,Cell membrane ,Mice ,Meglumine ,Chlorides ,medicine ,Animals ,Kidney Tubules, Collecting ,Ion transporter ,Transepithelial potential difference ,Chemistry ,Cell Membrane ,Electric Conductivity ,Conductance ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Ringer's Solution ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hypotonic Solutions ,Cell culture ,Biophysics ,Isotonic Solutions ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Amiloride-sensitive whole cell currents have been reported in M-1 mouse cortical collecting duct cells (Korbmacher et al., J. Gen. Physiol. 102: 761-793, 1993). We have confirmed that amiloride inhibits the whole cell currents but not necessarily the measured whole cell currents. Anomalous responses were eliminated by removing external Na+ and/or introducing paraepithelial shunts. The amiloride-sensitive whole cell currents displayed Goldman rectification. The ionic selectivity sequence of the amiloride-sensitive conductance was Li+ > Na+ >> K+. Growth of M-1 cells on permeable supports increased the amiloride-sensitive whole cell permeability, compared with cells grown on plastic. Single amiloride-sensitive channels were observed, which conformed to the highly selective low-conductance amiloride-sensitive class [Na(5)] of epithelial Na+ channels. Hypotonic pretreatment markedly slowed run-down of channel activity. The gating of the M-1 Na+ channel in excised patches was complex. Open- and closed-state dwell-time distributions from patches that display one operative channel were best described with two or more exponential terms each. We conclude that 1) study of M-1 whole cell Na+ currents is facilitated by reducing the transepithelial potential to zero, 2) these M-1 currents reflect the operation of Na(5) channels, and 3) the Na+ channels display complex kinetics, involving > or = 2 open and > or = 2 closed states.
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- 1996
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24. A One Year Analysis of Appeals Made to Mental Health Review Tribunals in New Zealand
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K. P. McDonald, C. B. Ruthe, T. A. O'Brien, and G. W. Mellsop
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Appeal ,Compulsory treatment ,Legislation ,Treatment Refusal ,Forensic psychiatry ,medicine ,Humans ,Mental Competency ,Justice (ethics) ,Psychiatry ,Expert Testimony ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Public health ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Mental health ,Patient Discharge ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Tribunal ,Commitment of Mentally Ill ,Female ,Psychology ,New Zealand - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of the paper is to present data on the first year of all appeals lodged with a Mental Health Review Tribunal against compulsory treatment orders of psychiatric inpatients. Method: Two tribunals have been in operation in New Zealand since the introduction of a new Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act in 1992. The case records of all patients who had appeals heard by either the Northern or Southern regional tribunal from 16/12/92 to 7/12/93 inclusive were examined. Results: 145 appeals were heard by the tribunals: 14.5% of appeal hearings resulted in the discharge of a patient from their compulsory treatment status. Discharge rates for the Southern Tribunal were found to be significantly higher at 22%, compared with 10% for the Northern Tribunal (p Conclusions: Ambiguities within the Act need to be addressed in order that criteria used to judge a patient's fitness for discharge may be standardised. In addition, the Act stipulates a maximum delay of 14 days in reviewing a patient's case; however in practice a mean of 22 days elapses, indicating that this stipulation requires review.
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- 1995
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25. Intra-articular analgesia for arthroscopic meniscectomy
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Girish P. Joshi, B. Lyons, T M O'Brien, C G Flynn, D. Lohan, and M. McCarroll
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Adult ,Male ,Arthroscopic meniscectomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Meperidine ,Visual analogue scale ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Analgesic ,Menisci, Tibial ,Injections, Intra-Articular ,Arthroscopy ,Double-Blind Method ,Humans ,Medicine ,Saline ,Pain, Postoperative ,Chemotherapy ,Morphine ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Pethidine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Analgesia ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Intra-articular morphine has been shown to provide prolonged analgesia after arthroscopic knee surgery; the addition of local anaesthetic agents has been reported to improve this analgesic effect. Pethidine possesses local anaesthetic properties, and therefore this study was designed to evaluate its analgesic efficacy after arthroscopic meniscectomy. Sixty patients were allocated randomly to receive intra-articular injections of pethidine 50 mg, morphine 5 mg or saline after elective arthroscopic meniscectomy. Postoperative pain was assessed using an interval visual analogue scale and measuring analgesic requirements. Both treatment groups had significantly lower pain scores compared with the control group. Patients in the pethidine group had lower pain scores than those in the morphine group at 0.5, 1 and 2 h, but significantly higher scores at 12 and 24 h. These observations suggest that the local anaesthetic effect of pethidine may be responsible for the improved early analgesia, but its duration of action appears to be less than that of morphine.
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- 1995
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26. RADIOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE FORELIMB DISTAL PHALANX AND MICROSCOPIC MORPHOLOGY OF THE LATERAL PALMAR PROCESS IN FOALS 3-32 WEEKS OLD
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A. J. Kaneps, Neil H. Willits, Susan M. Stover, T. R. O'Brien, and Roy R. Pool
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integumentary system ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Anatomy ,Phalanx ,Sulcus ,musculoskeletal system ,Sagittal plane ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Forelimb ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,business ,Cancellous bone ,Endochondral ossification ,Process (anatomy) - Abstract
Developmental morphology of the forelimb distal phalanges and lateral palmar processes of 9 Thoroughbred foals aged 3–32 weeks was assessed using radiography, microradiography and histology. For inclusion in the study, all distal phalanges had no pathologic radiographic abnormalities. Vascular channels that are characteristically found in the dorsal region of the distal phalanx were not evident radiographically in the palmar process. The proximal and distal angles of the palmar processes were separated by a lucent line continuous with the incisure in foals only through 12 weeks of age. The distal phalanges were triangular-shaped in foals 3–12 weeks of age, and were oval-shaped in older foals. The palmar aspect of the distal phalanx was the major contributor to growth of the distal phalanx in the sagittal plane, especially between 3 and 12 weeks of age. Growth of the lateral palmar process occurred through the means of endochondral ossification. The body and cortices of the lateral palmar process were composed of coarse cancellous bone. Porosity within the lateral palmar process was greater in regions sampled axial, compared to abaxial, to the parietal sulcus and did not change with age. A fracture was identified microradiographically and/or histologically in 9 of 18 (50%) and 10 of 17 (59%), respectively, of the lateral palmar processes examined. The fracture line was consistently associated with the parietal sulcus on the dorsal cortical surface and was always immediately abaxial to the deep digital flexor tendon attachment. No age-related morphological changes of the lateral palmar processes were identified with microradiography or histological examinations.
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- 1995
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27. Focal brain injury and upregulation of a developmentally regulated extracellular matrix protein
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Dennis A. Steindler, Andreas Faissner, Eric D. Laywell, K Stefansson, H U Dörries, M Schachner, J. A. Brodkey, and T F O'Brien
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Adult ,Male ,Cell Adhesion Molecules, Neuronal ,Immunocytochemistry ,Central nervous system ,Gene Expression ,Tenascin ,Extracellular matrix ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,medicine ,Humans ,Extracellular Matrix Proteins ,Wound Healing ,biology ,Cell adhesion molecule ,Tenascin C ,musculoskeletal system ,Immunohistochemistry ,Up-Regulation ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Brain Injuries ,embryonic structures ,biology.protein ,Wounds, Gunshot ,Neuroscience - Abstract
✓ Tenascin is an extracellular matrix glycoprotein expressed during both normal development and neoplastic growth in both neural and nonneural tissues. During development of the central nervous system (CNS), tenascin is synthesized by glial cells, in particular by immature astrocytes, and is concentrated in transient boundaries around emerging groups of functionally distinct neurons. In the mature CNS, only low levels of the glycoprotein can be detected. The present study demonstrates that following trauma to the adult human cerebral cortex, discrete populations of reactive astrocytes upregulate their expression of tenascin and dramatically increase their transcription of the tenascin gene. The enhanced expression of tenascin may be involved in CNS wound healing, and may also affect neurite growth within and around a brain lesion.
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- 1995
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28. RADIOGRAPHIC AND PATHOLOGIC FEATURES OF OSTEOPETROSIS IN TWO PERUVIAN PASO FOALS
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T. R. O'Brien, John E Madigan, Roy R. Pool, Paul P. Poulos, Norman Ackerman, John K. House, J. Carroll Woodard, and Clifford R. Berry
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Medullary cavity ,business.industry ,animal diseases ,Radiography ,Bacterial pneumonia ,Osteopetrosis ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,digestive system ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Foal ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,Failure to thrive ,medicine ,Histopathology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The radiographic and pathologic findings of two Peruvian Paso foals with osteopetrosis are described. Both foals, one male and one female, presented with respiratory difficulty, brachygnathia and failure to rise after birth. Both foals were mildly anemic, hypogammaglobulinemic and had elevations in serum alkaline phosphatase. Increased medullary bone opacity was noted on radiographs of the extremities, spine and skull in both foals. A lack of normal cortical:medullary bone distinction was evident radiographically. The medullary primary spongiosa appeared to run in parallel columns away from the physes of all long bones and the vertebrae. This created a distinctive hour glass appearance to the osteopetrotic bones. One foal developed a bacterial pneumonia. Both foals were euthanized due to failure to thrive. Histopathology and electron microscopy documented these foals to have normal osteoclastic numbers but lack normal ruffled borders, lack of a clear zone and normal lysosomal numbers indicative of cellular dysfunction. These clinical, radiographic and pathologic findings are similar to the juvenile, lethal autosomal recessive form of osteopetrosis described in humans. Osteopetrosis has not been previously described in a female foal.
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- 1994
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29. Radiographic and microscopic correlation of diffuse interstitial and bronchointerstitial pulmonary patterns in the caudodorsal lung of adult Thoroughbred horses in race training
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Jeffrey Lakritz, T. R. O'Brien, Erik R. Wisner, Dennis W Wilson, Walter S. Tyler, and John Pascoe
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Volume of interest ,Radiography ,Bronchi ,Breeding ,Region of interest ,Physical Conditioning, Animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,Lung ,Fixation (histology) ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Area of interest ,respiratory system ,respiratory tract diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diagnostic quality ,Female ,Radiology ,business ,Blood vessel - Abstract
Summary Complete thoracic radiographic examinations were performed on 7 horses ranging in age from 24 to 60 months, followed by in-situ lung fixation. Radiographs were examined by 3 radiologists for the presence, degree and distribution of generalised pulmonary patterns within a region of interest in the caudodorsal lung. Pulmonary tissue was obtained from 12 sites within a designated volume of interest in the caudodorsal lung, corresponding to the area of interest evaluated radiographically, and examined for the presence, character and severity of microscopic lesions. Radiographic findings within the volume of interest consisted of mild to moderate bronchial, bronchointerstitial, or interstitial pulmonary patterns. Interstitial and bronchointerstitial radiographic findings were related to severity of peribronchiolar mononuclear cell infiltrates, the degree of bronchiolar mucosal plication, and alveolar capillary and peribronchial blood vessel erythrocyte content. The severity of the interstitial radiographic pattern was inversely associated with the perceived diagnostic quality of the radiographic examinations. There was no evidence of spatial variation in the severity of the microscopic changes examined in this limited pulmonary region. Inter-rater reliability between radiologists was good in the assessment of diagnostic quality of the radiographic examinations but poor in assessing severity of the primary generalised pulmonary patterns within the radiographic region of interest.
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- 1993
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30. Characterisation of osseous bodies of the distal phalanx of foals
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Susan M. Stover, A. J. Kaneps, R. F. Redden, T. R. O'Brien, and Roy R. Pool
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Fracture Healing ,Male ,Dense connective tissue ,Hoof and Claw ,Ossicles ,business.industry ,animal diseases ,Radiography ,General Medicine ,Bone healing ,Anatomy ,Phalanx ,Sulcus ,Neurovascular bundle ,Microradiography ,Fractures, Bone ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Forelimb ,Animals ,Medicine ,Female ,Horses ,business ,Process (anatomy) - Abstract
The distal phalanx and metacarpal physis of both forelimbs of 32 Thoroughbred foals 3-32 weeks of age were radiographed to identify those limbs with osseous bodies at a palmar process (PP) of the distal phalanx. Osseous bodies (ossicles) were identified radiographically in 19% of the foals. Sixteen of the 32 foals were selected for microradiographic and histological evaluation: 6 foals with radiographic evidence of ossicles and 10 foals without. Fourteen ossicles of the PP were observed radiographically. Ossicles were either a triangular bone fragment at the palmar aspect of the distal angle of the PP, or an oblong bone fragment separated from P3 by a radiolucent line extending 1-3 cm from the incisure of the PP to the solar margin. One foal had radiographic evidence of bilateral distal metacarpal physitis. Seventeen of 35 PPs examined microradiographically were considered normal, in that the dorsal and solar cortices were thin with trabecular bone orientated parallel to the cortical surfaces, and there was a depression in the dorsal cortical surface (i.e. parietal sulcus). Abnormal microradiographic findings in the other 18 PPs included a fracture line extending from the dorsal cortical surfaces and trabecular bridging of the fracture gap. The fracture line was often continuous with the parietal sulcus. Microradiographic evidence of a fracture was found in 75% of foals evaluated. Normal histological findings in 16 PPs included thin dorsal and solar cortices with trabeculae orientated parallel to the cortical surfaces, parallel-fibred dense connective tissue attachments of the deep digital flexor tendon to the solar cortical surfaces, and a neurovascular bundle associated with the parietal sulcus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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- 1993
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31. Fetal responses to acute maternal cocaine injection in sheep
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C. A. Gleason, H. Iida, T. P. O'Brien, M. D. Jones, E. J. Cone, and R. J. Traystman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Hemodynamics ,Hematocrit ,Hypoxemia ,Fetus ,Oxygen Consumption ,Cocaine ,Pregnancy ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Animals ,Medicine ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Sheep ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Brain ,Blood flow ,Fetal Blood ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,Cerebral blood flow ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Renal blood flow ,Blood Circulation ,Injections, Intravenous ,Vascular resistance ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Maternal cocaine abuse has been associated with neonatal neurological and neurobehavioral problems of unknown pathogenesis. We administered a single intravenous dose of cocaine (2 mg/kg) to 12 unanesthetized pregnant sheep; their fetuses had been catheterized in utero 2 days before the study. We measured fetal cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral metabolic rate of O2 (CMRO2), mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), and blood gases before and 2, 5, 15, and 30 min after maternal cocaine injection. Fetal CBF increased by 37 +/- 33% (mean +/- SD) at 5 min and returned to baseline by 15 min. Regional brain blood flow changes paralleled CBF changes with the greatest increases occurring in cerebellum (54 +/- 43%) and brain stem (54 +/- 52%). Cerebral vascular resistance was decreased for cerebellum (22%) and brain stem (19%) but was unchanged for cerebral hemispheres and caudate. Increased CBF at 5 min was associated with a 20 +/- 9% increase in fetal MAP and a 38 +/- 13% decrease in fetal arterial O2 content. Fetal CMRO2 was unchanged. There was a decrease in fetal intestinal blood flow at 2 min, an increase in myocardial, adrenal, and renal blood flow at 5 min, and no change in placental blood flow. Maternal cocaine injection causes fetal hypoxemia, hypertension, and increased CBF. Possible mechanisms for cerebral vasodilation (in some areas) include hypoxemia, impaired autoregulatory response to increased blood pressure, and/or direct or indirect vascular effects of cocaine or its metabolites.
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- 1993
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32. Metatarsal Epiphyseal Bracket
- Author
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Scott J. Mubarak, Jon R. Davids, and T. J. O'brien
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Deformity ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Tibia ,Child ,business.industry ,Ossification ,Epiphysiodesis ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Synostosis ,medicine.disease ,Metatarsus ,Hallux varus ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Diaphysis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Epiphysis ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Hallux ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Epiphyses - Abstract
Longitudinal epiphyseal bracket (LEB) is a rare ossification anomaly in which an epiphysis brackets the diaphysis of a phalanx, metacarpal, or metatarsal. This abnormal epiphysis tethers longitudinal growth, resulting in a shortened and oval-shaped bone. Four patients with five LEBs were treated by central physiolysis and followed for a mean of 6 years. The patients had significant hallux varus deformity. Three patients had duplicated great toes, and two had tibia hemimelia significant enough to require epiphysiodesis as they neared adolescence. Resection of the LEB allowed the proximal and distal epiphysis to resume untethered growth. Silastic or methyl methacrylate was placed over the resected physis to prevent bony rebridging. The associated hallux varus deformity was corrected by capsulorrhaphy and K-wire fixation. In all patients, the metatarsal resumed longitudinal growth and correction of the hallux varus was maintained.
- Published
- 1993
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33. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring In A Nonacademic Setting: Effects of Age and Sex
- Author
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Samia J. Khoury, James R. Sowers, T K O'Brien, and Steven A. Yarows
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,Diastole ,Blood Pressure ,Rural Health ,Age and sex ,Sex Factors ,Internal medicine ,Ambulatory Care ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Circadian rhythm ,Systole ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Schools ,Primary Health Care ,White coat ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Middle Aged ,Circadian Rhythm ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Ambulatory ,Cardiology ,Female ,business - Abstract
Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure measurements (ABPM) are likely to eliminate the stress of visits and observer bias in office blood pressure (BP) recordings, allow consideration of the circadian variability in BP, and correlate well with target organ damage. To define the prevalence of "white coat" hypertension in a rural community to a nonacademic setting, and to assess age and sex related differences, we studied 131 patients who had more than two prior office diastolic BP measurements greater than 90 mm Hg and less than 115 mm Hg. Blood pressure was measured every 10 to 60 min for 24 h using the SpaceLabs 90207 device. Office BP readings were higher than ABPM in the group as a whole, in individual age groups, and in both sexes. The differences were more pronounced at night. Average differences between office and ambulatory BP ranged between 14.4 +/- 1.7/2.9 +/- 2.0 (ABPM at 10:00), and 33.8 +/- 2.3/22.8 +/- 1.5 mm Hg (systolic/diastolic +/- SE) (ABPM at 01:00). The nighttime drop in systolic BP was not apparent in subjects more than 65 years old. Women had a proportionately higher mean office BP than men (115.0 +/- 0.9 office v 110.2 +/- 1.3 mm Hg ABPM in women and 112.3 +/- 0.9 v 104.3 +/- 1.1 mm Hg in men) (P = .013), and the elderly did not display the relationship between ambulatory and office mean BP seen in younger subjects (r = 0.15, P = .30 v r = 0.36, P = .0004, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1992
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34. The effect of laser fluence on the ablation and deposition of YBa2Cu3O7
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J.F. Lawler, James G. Lunney, Werner J. Blau, and T. P. O'Brien
- Subjects
Materials science ,Low fluence ,Mechanical Engineering ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Analytical chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Ablation ,Fluence ,Deposition rate ,Mechanics of Materials ,Shot (pellet) ,medicine ,General Materials Science ,Atomic physics ,Deposition (chemistry) ,Stoichiometry - Abstract
The effects of laser fluence and shot number on the deposition of YBA2Cu3O7 are investigated. It is found that the evolution of target morphology during ablation is strongly dependent on fluence. Three ablation regimes are identified. In the low fluence region (fluence, less than 0.3 J cm−2, deposition is non-stoichiometric; at intermediate fluences ( 0.3 J cm −2 fluence J cm −2 ), both the stoichiometry and the deposition rate vary strongly with shot number; in the high fluence region (fluence, above 3 J cm−2), deposition is largely independent of shot number but particular contamination of films is a problem.
- Published
- 1992
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35. New monoclonal antibodies identify the glycoprotein carrying the CA 125 epitope
- Author
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T J, O'Brien, L M, Raymond, G A, Bannon, D H, Ford, H, Hardardottir, F C, Miller, and J G, Quirk
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Blotting, Western ,Biology ,Monoclonal antibody ,Binding, Competitive ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Mice ,Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Antigens, Tumor-Associated, Carbohydrate ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Hybridomas ,Linear epitope ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Ascites ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Precipitin Tests ,Molecular biology ,chemistry ,Cytoplasm ,Immunoassay ,Immunohistochemistry ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Glycoprotein - Abstract
CA 125 is an antigenic determinant located on the surface of ovarian carcinoma cells and elevated in the serum of greater than 90% of patients with carcinoma. The antigen, derived from the ovarian epithelium, has been described as a mucinlike glycoprotein greater than 200 kd. To date little is known of the metabolic regulation or expression of this antigen in either normal or neoplastic tissues. New monoclonal antibodies that we describe here recognize both unique and similar epitopes to OC 125. These reagents may allow for a more complete definition of the structure and expression of the CA 125 complex. These antibodies recognize high-molecular weight (greater than 200 kd) subspecies and a lower-molecular-weight (68 kd) subspecies of the antigen and identify it in the cytoplasm and the extracellular matrix of CA 125-producing cells.
- Published
- 1991
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36. Tears of the glenoid labrum: MR imaging of 88 arthroscopically confirmed cases
- Author
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D A Kallman, D D Burks, T J O'Brien, A J Martinez, W B Goff, Z N Balsara, J M Lapoint, J M Legan, and T K Burkhard
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Glenoid labrum ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Arthroscopy ,medicine ,Humans ,False Positive Reactions ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,False Negative Reactions ,Aged ,Labrum ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Endoscopy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tears ,Upper limb ,Female ,Shoulder joint ,Radiology ,Shoulder Injuries ,business - Abstract
Two hundred eighty-one patients underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the shoulder over a 2-year period. Eighty-eight patients underwent arthroscopic surgery, and their surgical results were correlated with the findings at MR imaging. MR imaging enabled accurate prediction of anterior labral tears, with a sensitivity of 95%, a specificity of 86%, and an accuracy of 92%. MR imaging was less effective in the prediction of tears of the superior labrum, with a sensitivity of 75%, a specificity of 99%, and an accuracy of 95%. These two categories accounted for the majority of the surgically correctable disease. MR imaging was found to be unreliable in the prediction of posterior (sensitivity, 7.7%) or inferior (sensitivity, 40%) labral tears, isolated cases of which occurred in only two (2%) of those undergoing surgery. MR imaging proved to be a highly accurate, noninvasive technique for the clinical evaluation of shoulder instability.
- Published
- 1991
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37. Relation of serum testosterone levels to high density lipoprotein cholesterol and other characteristics in men
- Author
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J. J. Barboriak, Frank DeStefano, W D Flanders, David S. Freedman, and T R O'Brien
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,White People ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,High-density lipoprotein ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Risk factor ,Serum testosterone ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,Cholesterol, HDL ,Smoking ,Confounding ,Testosterone (patch) ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Black or African American ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Negroid - Abstract
Although levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol in males decrease during adolescence and after treatment with testosterone derivatives, several studies have reported that levels of HDL cholesterol are positively associated with endogenous levels of testosterone in men. This association was further examined using data collected during 1985 and 1986 from 3,562 white and 500 black men who ranged in age from 31 to 45 years. Black men had higher mean levels of both HDL cholesterol (8 mg/dl) and total testosterone (33 ng/dl) than white men, and positive associations were observed between testosterone and HDL cholesterol levels (r = 0.22, whites; r = 0.26, blacks). In addition, levels of testosterone were related positively to alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking and negatively to age, Quetelet index, and use of beta-blockers. We used stratification and regression analyses to determine if any of these characteristics could account for the positive association between levels of HDL cholesterol and total testosterone. Although controlling for most factors had little influence, adjusting for Quetelet index reduced the strength of the association between levels of testosterone and HDL cholesterol by approximately 30%. These findings suggest that the positive association between levels of testosterone and HDL cholesterol may not be causal. Multivariable analyses that control for obesity and other potentially confounding characteristics should be used in studies that assess the relation of testosterone levels to coronary heart disease.
- Published
- 1991
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38. ULTRASONOGRAPHY OF THE EQUINE STIFLE
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Clifford R. Berry, T. R. O'Brien, J. D. Wheat, Thomas G. Nyland, and Dominique G. Penninck
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Cartilage ,Ultrasound ,Soft tissue ,Anatomy ,Joint effusion ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Ultrasonographic examination ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Osteochondrosis ,Medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Ultrasonography ,business ,Subcutaneous tissue - Abstract
Ten stifles from 5 clinically sound adult horses were scanned by high-resolution ultrasound. Normal anatomic structures seen consistently included the subcutaneous tissue, the medial, middle and lateral patellar ligaments, the medial and lateral collateral ligaments, the femoral trochlear ridges, and menisci. Cruciate ligaments could not be visualized in the standing horse. Four stifle specimens obtained from 2 of these normal horses at necropsy were scanned in a water bath to create optimal technical conditions. The sonographic appearance of stifle specimens was similar to that found in live horses. Results from ultrasonographic examination of 3 horses with stifle abnormalities were described to illustrate some applications of ultrasonography in the evaluation of the equine stifle. In these horses, ultrasound was a valuable diagnostic tool to study joint effusion, synovial thickening, articular cartilaginous and subchondral defects, and soft tissue/bony injuries.
- Published
- 1990
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39. Management of bacterial keratitis: beyond exorcism towards consideration of organism and host factors
- Author
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T P O'Brien
- Subjects
Keratitis ,Bacterial keratitis ,Host factors ,Genomics ,Eye infection ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Eye Infections, Bacterial ,Microbiology ,Exorcism ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Ophthalmology ,Ophthalmic solutions ,medicine ,Humans ,Ophthalmic Solutions ,Organism - Abstract
Management of bacterial keratitis: beyond exorcism towards consideration of organism and host factors
- Published
- 2003
40. Analysis and Design of e-Commerce Applications on the Web: A Case Study of OO Techniques and Notations
- Author
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Patrick T. R. O’Brien, Mohamed T. Ibrahim, and Maliheh Hamdollah
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Object-oriented programming ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Hypermedia ,E-commerce ,law.invention ,World Wide Web ,Cognitive dimensions of notations ,law ,medicine ,The Internet ,Hypertext ,business ,Web modeling ,Electronic data interchange - Abstract
This paper reports on a study and comparison of two techniques and notations suitable for the analysis and design of Web-based electronic commerce (ecommerce) applications. Some of the challenges facing developers of Webbased e-commerce applications are identified, examined and discussed. Individually these challenges are not unique but their combination and severity make the development of applications for the WWW a rather difficult softwareengineering problem. Techniques and notations devised to address some of these challenges are identified from the literature. The Technique for Analysing and Specifying Transactional Internet Sites of Beaudet et al. (1998) and the Object-Oriented Hypermedia Design Method (OOHDM) of Schwabe and Rossi (1998) were selected to analyse and design a typical e-commerce application. The results of this study are then used to evaluate the suitability of the two approaches for the development of Web-based applications. The paper concludes that the Beaudet et al. approach is more suited to rapid development projects and OOHDM to situations where comprehensiveness of specification is more important than speed. Both approaches need to be supplemented by additional techniques and supporting notations, particularly in the area of physical design.
- Published
- 2003
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41. Calf vessel preservation in peripheral vascular disease—angiography versus pulse generated run-off
- Author
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P.M. Lamont, H. Thomas, T. S. O'Brien, and A. Crow
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Postoperative Complications ,Ischemia ,Blood vessel prosthesis ,medicine.artery ,Humans ,Medicine ,Vascular Patency ,Peroneal Artery ,Leg ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Graft Occlusion, Vascular ,Hemodynamics ,Angiography, Digital Subtraction ,Arteries ,Digital subtraction angiography ,Vascular surgery ,medicine.disease ,Blood Vessel Prosthesis ,Surgery ,Posterior tibial artery ,Anterior tibial artery ,Angiography ,Vascular Resistance ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity - Abstract
Previous angiographic and radiological studies have suggested that the peroneal artery is the best preserved of the calf vessels in peripheral vascular disease and should be a site of preference for a femorodistal bypass graft. Calf vessel run-off assessed by pulse generated run-off (PGR) provides a more accurate prediction of graft success or failure than angiography and may therefore give a better functional picture of vessel patency than angiography. This study compares the presence and degree of preservation of the three calf vessels in patients with severe peripheral vascular disease using both intra-arterial digital subtraction angiography (IADSA) and PGR. Thirty-four limbs in patients with either ischaemic rest pain, ulceration or gangrene were studied and the results were scored according to the extent and severity of disease in the peroneal, posterior tibial and anterior tibial arteries. On IADSA, the peroneal artery was patent significantly more often (79%) than the posterior tibial artery (47%) or the anterior tibial artery (38%). Conversely, PGR examination showed no difference in patency between the three vessels (peroneal 91%, posterior tibial 88%, anterior tibial 79%). The peroneal artery was also significantly better preserved on IADSA (65%) compared to the posterior tibial artery (38%) and the anterior tibial artery (23%). PGR studies again showed no difference in the best preserved vessel between peroneal (47%), posterior tibial (50%) and anterior tibial (50%) arteries. Thus, the peroneal artery appears the better preserved vessel on angiography but this appearance may be misleading because the more functional PGR studies show no significant difference in the patency or degree of preservation of the three calf vessels.
- Published
- 1993
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42. Cardiac output measured by lithium dilution and transpulmonary thermodilution in patients in a paediatric intensive care unit
- Author
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T. K. O'Brien, M. M. Jonas, D. M. Band, IA Murdoch, Shane M. Tibby, Robert Anthony Fox Linton, and Nick Linton
- Subjects
Cardiac output ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheterization, Central Venous ,Time Factors ,Lithium (medication) ,Thermodilution ,Hemodynamics ,Pulmonary Artery ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Iliac Artery ,law.invention ,law ,Anesthesiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Cardiac Output ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Age Factors ,Dye Dilution Technique ,Infant, Newborn ,Intensive care unit ,Dilution ,Femoral Artery ,Anesthesia ,Intensive Care, Neonatal ,Linear Models ,Feasibility Studies ,business ,Lithium Chloride ,Shunt (electrical) ,medicine.drug ,Blood sampling - Abstract
Objective: To compare the results of cardiac output measurements obtained by lithium dilution and transpulmonary thermodilution in paediatric patients. Design: A prospective study.¶Setting: Paediatric intensive care unit in a university teaching hospital.¶Patients: Twenty patients (age 5 days–9 years; weight 2.6–28.2 kg) were studied.¶Interventions: Between two and four comparisons of lithium dilution cardiac output (LiDCO) and transpulmonary thermodilution (TPCO) were made in each patient.¶Measurements and results: Results from three patients were excluded: in one patient there was an unsuspected right-to-left shunt, in two patients there was a problem with blood sampling through the lithium sensor. There were 48 comparisons of LiDCO and TPCO in the remaining 17 patients over a range of 0.4–6 l/min. The mean of the differences (LiDCO–TPCO) was –0.1 ± 0.3 (SD) l/min. Linear regression analysis gave LiDCO = 0.11 + 0.90 × TPCO l/min (r 2 = 0.96). There were no adverse effects in any patient.¶Conclusions: These results suggest that the LiDCO method can be used to provide safe and accurate measurement of cardiac output in paediatric patients. The method is simple and quick to perform, requiring only arterial and venous catheters, which will already have been inserted for other reasons in these patients.
- Published
- 2000
43. Evaluation of the syndesmotic screw in low Weber C ankle fractures
- Author
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M.M. Stephens, P Dalla Vedova, Michael Walsh, T. M. O'Brien, F. McManus, John G. Kennedy, and K. E. Soffe
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Bone Screws ,Fracture Fixation, Internal ,Postoperative Complications ,Fracture fixation ,medicine ,Internal fixation ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Ankle Injuries ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Fracture Healing ,Osteosynthesis ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Radiography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Syndesmotic screw ,Treatment Outcome ,Orthopedic surgery ,Female ,Ankle ,Range of motion ,business - Abstract
Objective To determine the functional and radiographic outcome of low Weber C ankle fractures and to evaluate the contribution of the syndesmotic screw in their outcome. Design Prospective evaluation of a consecutive series. Setting Level I trauma center. Patients Forty-five patients divided into two groups matched for age, sex, and severity of injury. Twenty-six patients were treated with open reduction, internal fixation, and a supplemental syndesmotic screw, and nineteen patients were treated without a syndesmotic screw. Minimum time to follow-up was three years. Methods A subjective, objective, and radiographic ankle scoring system was used. Logistical regression analysis was performed to determine whether the presence or absence of a syndesmotic screw was a predictor of a poor outcome. The likelihood ratio test was used to evaluate the significance of each variable in both univariate and multivariate analyses. Results There was no statistically significant difference between either group, either using subjective outcome criteria (p = 0.86) or in ankle range of motion (p = 0.94). Logistical regression analysis indicated that fracture dislocation could be used as a predictor of a poor outcome for either group. Inadequate reduction and advancing age were also found to be significant predictors of a poorer outcome regardless of the use of a syndesmotic screw (p = 0.003, p = 0.004). Conclusions Judicious fixation of Weber C type injuries within five centimeters of the ankle joint, with or without a syndesmotic screw, gives similar results. Obligatory fixation of these fractures with syndesmotic screws appears to have no benefit and creates the need for an additional procedure.
- Published
- 2000
44. Cardiac output measured by lithium dilution, thermodilution, and transesophageal Doppler echocardiography in anesthetized horses
- Author
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Lesley E. Young, Robert Anthony Fox Linton, David J. Marlin, Karen J. Blissitt, T. K. O'Brien, Chris Hollingworth, David Marston Band, Jackie C. Brearley, M. M. Jonas, Nick Linton, and Ronald S. Jones
- Subjects
Nitroprusside ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac output ,Cardiotonic Agents ,Vasodilator Agents ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Indicator Dilution Techniques ,Doppler echocardiography ,Dilution curve ,symbols.namesake ,Phenylephrine ,Internal medicine ,Dobutamine ,medicine ,Animals ,Vasoconstrictor Agents ,Horses ,Cardiac Output ,Dobutamine Hydrochloride ,General Veterinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Phenylephrine Hydrochloride ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,Dilution ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,cardiovascular system ,symbols ,Cardiology ,Linear Models ,Regression Analysis ,Lithium ,business ,Lithium Chloride ,Doppler effect ,Echocardiography, Transesophageal ,Ion-Selective Electrodes - Abstract
Objective—To assess the suitability of lithium dilution as a method for measuring cardiac output in anesthetized horses, compared with thermodilution and transesophageal Doppler echocardiography. Animals—6 horses (3 Thoroughbreds, 3 crossbreeds). Procedure—Cardiac output was measured in 6 anesthetized horses as lithium dilution cardiac output (LiDCO), thermodilution cardiac output (TDCO), and transesophageal Doppler echocardiographic cardiac output (DopplerCO). For the LiDCO measurements, lithium chloride was administered IV, and cardiac output was derived from the arterial lithium dilution curve. Sodium nitroprusside, phenylephrine hydrochloride, and dobutamine hydrochloride were used to alter cardiac output. Experiments were divided into 4 periods. During each period, 3 LiDCO measurements, 3 DopplerCO measurements, and 3 sets of 3 TDCO measurements were obtained. Results—70 comparisons were made between LiDCO, DopplerCO, and triplicate TDCO measurements over a range of 10 to 43 L/min. The mean (± SD) of the differences of LiDCO – TDCO was –0.86 ± 2.80 L/min; LiDCO = –1.90 + 1.05 TDCO (r = 0.94). The mean of the differences of DopplerCO – TDCO was 1.82 ± 2.67 L/min; DopplerCO = 2.36 + 0.98 TDCO (r = 0.94). The mean of the differences of LiDCO – DopplerCO was –2.68 ± 3.01 L/min; LiDCO = –2.53 + 0.99 DopplerCO (r = 0.93). Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—These results indicate that lithium dilution is a suitable method for measuring cardiac output in horses. As well as being accurate, it avoids the need for pulmonary artery catheterization and is quick and safe to use. Monitoring cardiac output during anesthesia in horses may help reduce the high anesthetic mortality in this species. (Am J Vet Res 2000;61:731–737)
- Published
- 2000
45. Samarium 153-labeled hydroxyapatite microspheres for radiation synovectomy in the horse: a study of the biokinetics, dosimetry, clinical, and morphologic response in normal metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints
- Author
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Tom B. Yarbrough, Cathy Troup, Roy R. Pool, William J. Hornof, Jim Brodack, T. R. O'Brien, Mark R. Lee, and Phil D. Koblik
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Metatarsophalangeal joints ,Synovectomy ,Biocompatible Materials ,Tarsal Joints ,Reference Values ,Synovitis ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,Radiometry ,Radioisotopes ,Samarium ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Cartilage ,Synovial Membrane ,Horse ,medicine.disease ,Microspheres ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Durapatite ,Effusion ,Lameness ,Synovial membrane ,business - Abstract
Objective— To determine the effects of Samarium-153 bound to hydroxyapatite microspheres (153SmM) when injected into the metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints of horses. Study Design— Horses were injected with 153SmM in metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints with the diagonal contralateral joints used as untreated controls. Animals or Sample Population Twelve adult horses without pre-existing disease involving the metacarpo/metatarsophalangeal joints. Methods— Horses were divided into three groups: high-dose Samarium-153 (12.5 to 17.0 millicurie [mCi]), intermediate dose (6.5 to 12.0 mCi), and low dose (3.5 to 6.0 mCi). Horses were examined daily for 7 days postinjection for clinical abnormalities, lameness, and surface and systemic radiation levels. One horse from each group was euthanatized at 14, 30, and 60 days postinjection and the effects of the 153SmM examined microscopically in the cartilage and synovial membrane. Results— Intraarticular153SmM caused inflammation characterized by lameness, effusion, and regional edema for 48 to 72 hours. Minimal levels of active 153SmM were identified in the blood or urine and were well below the maximal tolerance of 1 mCi. Microscopically the radiation caused no effects on the articular cartilage. The synovectomy created was good but not ideal in that some areas did have necrosis into the subintimal regions and a few islands of intact intimal cells persisted. Conclusions— The use of 153SmM is an effective means of targeting the synovial intimal cells with minimal extrasynovial leakage of radiation. Clinical Relevance— The metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints of the horse can be safely treated with 153SmM without damage to the cartilage or significant extracapsular leakage.
- Published
- 2000
46. Expanding the endangered species list to include the veterinary academic radiologist
- Author
-
T. R. O'Brien
- Subjects
Veterinary Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Academic Medical Centers ,Faculty, Medical ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Endangered species ,Internship and Residency ,Private Practice ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,business ,Education, Veterinary ,Radiology - Published
- 1999
47. A new technique for measuring cardiac output and shunt fraction during venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- Author
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N Wf Linton, R Af Linton, M Turtle, T. K. O'Brien, D. M. Band, and Maureen M. Jonas
- Subjects
Male ,Cardiac output ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Indicator Dilution Techniques ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation ,Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiac Output ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Cannula ,Pump flow ,surgical procedures, operative ,030228 respiratory system ,Anesthesia ,Indicator dilution technique ,Arterial blood ,Shunt fraction ,Inflow cannula ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Lithium Chloride ,Safety Research - Abstract
A new indicator dilution technique is described for measuring cardiac output and shunt fraction in patients undergoing venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Shunt fraction is the proportion of the ECMO pump flow which recirculates through the ECMO circuit (passing directly from the inflow cannula to the outflow cannula) instead of flowing through the pulmonary and systemic circulations. The indicator is an isotonic (150 mmol/l) solution of lithium chloride which is injected into the ECMO flow returning to the patient. Two lithium sensors are used simultaneously to record the resulting lithium dilution curves in arterial blood and in the blood in the ECMO circuit. Cardiac output and shunt fraction are derived from these curves. The technique, which is simple and safe, provides measurements that allow optimal adjustment of ECMO flow and cardiovascular support.
- Published
- 1999
48. Effect of hoof trimming on the occurrence of distal phalangeal palmar process fractures in foals
- Author
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Susan M. Stover, Neil H. Willits, T. R. O'Brien, J. E. Dykes, and A. J. Kaneps
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hoof and Claw ,Hoof ,animal diseases ,Dentistry ,Body weight ,digestive system ,Fractures, Bone ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,Hoof trimming ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Clinical course ,Horse ,General Medicine ,Toes ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Lameness ,Linear Models ,Female ,business - Abstract
This study sought to determine if extensive trimming of the front hooves of foals results in a higher incidence of palmar process fractures compared to untrimmed foals, and to characterise the clinical course of foals with palmar process fractures with physical findings, hoof measurements and radiography. Twenty foals age 4-8 weeks of multiple breeds were examined every 2 weeks over a 12 week period. Ten foals had both front hooves extensively trimmed every 4 weeks, while 10 foals remained untrimmed. Palmar process fractures occurred in 4 trimmed and 3 untrimmed foals. Four foals with fractures had brief lameness (Grades I-II/V) and hoof tester sensitivity was found inconsistently with fractures. All foals with fractures were sound at the end of the study. Fractures healed based on radiographic evaluations in an average of 8.4 weeks. Two of 3 foals with fractures developed club-footed conformation. None of the measured hoof parameters significantly differed between foals with and without fractures. We conclude that extensive trimming of the heels did not appear to affect the occurrence of palmar process fractures in this group of foals.
- Published
- 1999
49. Encephalopathy due to capillary leak syndrome
- Author
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Tulio E. Bertorini, Michael S. Gelfand, and T. F. O'brien
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain Diseases ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Encephalopathy ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Hemoconcentration ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Fatal Outcome ,Edema ,Hypovolemia ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Disease Progression ,Medicine ,Systemic capillary leak syndrome ,Humans ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Complication ,Capillary Leak Syndrome - Abstract
Systemic capillary leak syndrome (SCLS) is characterized by intermittent attacks of leakage of intravascular fluids into the extravascular space. Hypovolemia, hemoconcentration, weakness, edema, and visceral congestion are resulting manifestations of SCLS. Most patients with SCLS have clear mentation during attacks, and encephalopathy is not a known manifestation of the syndrome. We report a patient with acute idiopathic capillary leak syndrome manifested in an acute encephalopathy. The possibility of SCLS should be considered in patients who have an encephalopathy and hemoconcentration.
- Published
- 1997
50. Correction to: O’Brien, TP. Emerging guidelines for use of NSAID therapy to optimize cataract surgery patient care. Curr Med Res Opin 2005; 21(7):1131–37. doi:10.1185/030079905X50651
- Author
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T. P. O'Brien
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Cataract surgery ,Intensive care medicine ,Medical research ,business ,Patient care - Published
- 2005
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