286 results on '"M. Lad"'
Search Results
2. Robotic Optical Coherence Tomography Retinal Imaging for Emergency Department Patients: A Pilot Study for Emergency Physicians’ Diagnostic Performance
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Ailin Song, Kyung-Min Roh, Jay B. Lusk, Nita G. Valikodath, Eleonora M. Lad, Mark Draelos, Pablo Ortiz, Rebecca G. Theophanous, Alexander T. Limkakeng, Joseph A. Izatt, Ryan P. McNabb, and Anthony N. Kuo
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Emergency Medicine - Published
- 2023
3. Frequency-Tunable Multiband Reconfigurable Microstrip Patch Antenna for Wireless Application
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Varsharani M. Lad, Kshama Vishwanath Kulhalli, Jayendra Kumar, and Ganesh Patil
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Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Computer Science Applications - Published
- 2023
4. Baseline Microperimetry and OCT in the RUSH2A Study: Structure−Function Association and Correlation With Disease Severity
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Eleonora M. Lad, Jacque L. Duncan, Wendi Liang, Maureen G. Maguire, Allison R. Ayala, Isabelle Audo, David G. Birch, Joseph Carroll, Janet K. Cheetham, Todd A. Durham, Abigail T. Fahim, Jessica Loo, Zengtian Deng, Dibyendu Mukherjee, Elise Heon, Robert B. Hufnagel, Bin Guan, Alessandro Iannaccone, Glenn J. Jaffe, Christine N. Kay, Michel Michaelides, Mark E. Pennesi, Ajoy Vincent, Christina Y. Weng, and Sina Farsiu
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Ophthalmology ,Retinal Degeneration ,Visual Acuity ,Humans ,Visual Field Tests ,Usher Syndromes ,Severity of Illness Index ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
To investigate baseline mesopic microperimetry (MP) and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) in the Rate of Progression in USH2A-related Retinal Degeneration (RUSH2A) study.Natural history study METHODS: Setting: 16 clinical sites in Europe and North AmericaStudy Population: Participants with Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2) (N = 80) or autosomal recessive nonsyndromic RP (ARRP) (N = 47) associated with biallelic disease-causing sequence variants in USH2AObservation Procedures: General linear models were used to assess characteristics including disease duration, MP mean sensitivity and OCT intact ellipsoid zone (EZ) area. The associations between mean sensitivity and EZ area with other measures, including best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and central subfield thickness (CST) within the central 1 mm, were assessed using Spearman correlation coefficients.Mean sensitivity on MP; EZ area and CST on OCT.All participants (N = 127) had OCT, while MP was obtained at selected sites (N = 93). Participants with Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2, N = 80) and nonsyndromic autosomal recessive Retinitis Pigmentosa (ARRP, N = 47) had the following similar measurements: EZ area (median (interquartile range [IQR]): 1.4 (0.4, 3.1) mmLonger disease duration correlated with more severe retinal structure and function abnormalities, and there were associations between MP and OCT metrics. Monitoring changes in retinal structure-function relationships during disease progression will provide important insights into disease mechanism in USH2A-related retinal degeneration.
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- 2022
5. Color Vision and Microperimetry Changes in Nonexudative Age-Related Macular Degeneration After Risuteganib Treatment: Exploratory Endpoints in a Multicenter Phase 2a Double-Masked, Randomized, Sham-Controlled, Crossover Clinical Trial
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Eleonora M, Lad, David S, Boyer, Jeffrey S, Heier, Julie A, Kornfield, Baruch D, Kuppermann, Hugo, Quiroz-Mercado, Janine M, Aubel, Lisa S, Karageozian, Hampar L, Karageozian, Melvin A, Sarayba, Vicken H, Karageozian, and Peter K, Kaiser
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Treatment Outcome ,Color Vision ,Double-Blind Method ,Geographic Atrophy ,Intravitreal Injections ,Visual Acuity ,Humans ,Visual Field Tests ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Prospective Studies ,Peptides - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: To explore the association between best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) improvement and changes in microperimetry (MP) and color vision in patients with nonexudative age-related macular degeneration following administration of two 1.0-mg intravitreal doses of risuteganib. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In a phase 2a, prospective, double-masked, sham-controlled study, eyes with nonexudative age-related macular degeneration and Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study BCVA between 20/40 and 20/200 were randomized to intravitreal risuteganib (1.0 mg) or sham injection. The risuteganib group received a second 1.0-mg dose, and patients in the sham group crossed over to receive 1.0 mg of risuteganib at week 16. Exploratory endpoints included changes in color vision and mesopic MP. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients (risuteganib, n = 25; sham, n = 14) completed the study. There was a significant ( P < .05) correlation between BCVA and the total error score (TES) for both Lanthony and Hue Style. Confusion index was close to the criterion for significance ( P = .056) in the risuteganib group. All color vision metrics demonstrated a trend toward improvement in risuteganib responders (BCVA letter gain ≥8 letters) and no change in the nonresponders, with significant differences seen in confusion index between the risuteganib and control group ( P = .0493) and between responders and nonresponders ( P = .0478). MP showed that risuteganib responders improved in mean sensitivity and change in number of loci ≤11 dB and ≤0 dB, whereas nonresponders worsened. CONCLUSION: All color vision and MP parameters tested trended toward improvement in risuteganib-treated patients and risuteganib responders. Statistically significant improvement was evident in two metrics: confusion index (in risuteganib-treated patients and responders) and number of loci with decreased sensitivity (in responders). A significant correlation between BCVA and both TES Lanthony and TES Hue Style in risuteganib patients provides concurrent evidence of objective and subjective improvement of retinal function. [ Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina 2022;53:430–438.]
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- 2022
6. Longitudinal Analysis of the Retina and Choroid in Cognitively Normal Individuals at Higher Genetic Risk of Alzheimer Disease
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Justin P. Ma, Cason B. Robbins, Jia Min Lee, Srinath Soundararajan, Sandra S. Stinnett, Rupesh Agrawal, Brenda L. Plassman, Eleonora M. Lad, Heather Whitson, Dilraj S. Grewal, and Sharon Fekrat
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Ophthalmology ,Alzheimer Disease ,Choroid ,Apolipoprotein E4 ,Humans ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Prospective Studies ,Article ,Retina - Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess baseline differences and longitudinal rate of change in retinal and choroidal imaging parameters between APOE ε4 carriers and non-carriers with normal cognition. DESIGN: Prospective study. SUBJECTS: 413 eyes of 218 individuals with normal cognition aged ≥55 years with known APOE status (98 ε4 carriers, 120 non-carriers). Exclusion criteria included diabetes mellitus, uncontrolled hypertension, glaucoma, and vitreoretinal or neurodegenerative disease. METHODS: Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and OCT angiography (OCTA) was performed at baseline and at 2 years [Zeiss Cirrus HD-OCT 5000 with AngioPlex (Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, CA)]. Groups were compared using sex- and age-adjusted generalized estimating equations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: OCT: retinal nerve fiber layer thickness, macular ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer thickness, central subfield thickness (CST), choroidal vascularity index. OCTA: foveal avascular zone area, perfusion density (PD), vessel density, peripapillary capillary perfusion density and capillary flux index (CFI). Rate of change per year was calculated. RESULTS: At baseline, ε4 carriers had lower CST (p=0.018), PD in the 6mm Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) circle (p=0.049), and temporal CFI (p=0.047). Seventy-one ε4 carriers and 78 non-carriers returned at 2 years; at follow-up, the 6mm ETDRS circle (p=0.05) and outer ring (p=0.049) showed lower PD in ε4 carriers, with no differences in rates of change between groups (all p>0.05). CONCLUSIONS: There was exploratory evidence of differences in CST, PD, and peripapillary CFI between APOE ε4 carriers and non-carriers, both with normal cognition. Larger and longer-term studies may further elucidate the potential value of these findings.
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- 2022
7. From Data to Deployment
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Eliot R. Dow, Tiarnan D.L. Keenan, Eleonora M. Lad, Aaron Y. Lee, Cecilia S. Lee, Anat Loewenstein, Malvina B. Eydelman, Emily Y. Chew, Pearse A. Keane, and Jennifer I. Lim
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Ophthalmology - Published
- 2022
8. Osteopontin accumulates in basal deposits of human eyes with age-related macular degeneration and may serve as a biomarker of aging
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Michael Lekwuwa, Goldis Malek, Eleonora M. Lad, and Mayur Choudhary
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Apolipoprotein E ,Aging ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Retina ,Article ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Pathogenesis ,Macular Degeneration ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,stomatognathic system ,Extracellular ,medicine ,Humans ,Osteopontin ,Inflammation ,biology ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,biology.protein ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Vitronectin ,sense organs ,Biomarkers - Abstract
A common clinical phenotype of several neurodegenerative and systemic disorders including Alzheimer’s disease and atherosclerosis is the abnormal accumulation of extracellular material, which interferes with routine cellular functions. Similarly, patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of vision loss among the aged population, present with extracellular lipid- and protein-filled basal deposits in the back of the eye. While the exact mechanism of growth and formation of these deposits is poorly understood, much has been learned from investigating their composition, providing critical insights into AMD pathogenesis, prevention, and therapeutics. We identified human osteopontin (OPN), a phosphoprotein expressed in a variety of tissues in the body, as a newly discovered component of basal deposits in AMD patients, with a distinctive punctate staining pattern. OPN expression within these lesions, which are associated with AMD disease progression, were found to co-localize with abnormal calcium deposition. Additionally, OPN puncta colocalized with an AMD risk-associated complement pathway protein, but not with apolipoprotein E or vitronectin, two other well-established basal deposit components. Mechanistically, we found that retinal pigment epithelial cells, cells vulnerable in AMD, will secrete OPN into the extracellular space, under oxidative stress conditions, supporting OPN biosynthesis locally within the outer retina. Finally, we report that OPN levels in plasma of aged (non-AMD) human donors were significantly higher than levels in young (non-AMD) donors, but were not significantly different from donors with the different clinical subtypes of AMD. Collectively, our study defines the expression pattern of OPN in the posterior pole as a function of disease, and its local expression as a potential histopathologic biomarker of AMD.
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- 2022
9. List of contributors
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Hani Nasser Abdelhamid, V.L.N. Balaji Gupta Tiruveedhi, Jigna R. Bhamore, More Bhikhu, Yoon-Young Chang, Theodoros Chatzimitakos, Anila Rose Cherian, Joydeep Chowdhury, Flávia Oliveira Monteiro da Silva Abreu, Deepthi Priyanka Damera, Sobhi Daniel, Mittal L. Desai, Khemchand Dewangan, Rohant S. Dhabbe, Pravin R. Dongare, Gollavelli Ganesh, D. Gangadharan, Shah Gaurav, Gangaraju Gedda, Anil H. Gore, Datta B. Gunjal, Nitin Kumar Jaiswal, Suresh Kumar Kailasa, Tushar Kant, Janardhan Reddy Koduru, Govind B. Kolekar, R. Krishnaveni, Manju Kurian, Urvi M. Lad, Lakshmi Prasanna Lingamdinne, Shweta J. Malode, Mehta Mansi, Vaibhavkumar N. Mehta, Chetan K. Modi, Pranjal D. Modi, Amit Nag, Durgadevi Nagarajan, Vaibhav M. Naik, Omkar S. Nille, Bruno Peixoto de Oliveira, Chandrika Ashwinikumar Pal, Amit B. Patel, Swati Patel, Bhimanagouda S. Patil, Anju Paul, Shweta Pawar, Keerthana Ponmudi, Vimalkumar S. Prajapati, C. Ramalechume, Juhi B. Raval, Ankita G. Ravani, Jigneshkumar V. Rohit, Ashima Sharma, Rajendra V. Shejwal, Nagaraj P. Shetti, Kamlesh Shrivas, T. Sivaramakrishnan, Gourav Spolia, Constantine Stalikas, Joga Suribabu, Caroline Mercy Andrew Swamidoss, Humairah Tabasum, Kavita Tapadia, Le Minh Tu Phan, Anitha Varghese, Swarnalatha Venkatanarasimhan, and P. Vijayarohini
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- 2023
10. Multicolor carbon dots for imaging applications
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Urvi M. Lad and Chetan K. Modi
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- 2023
11. C1q and the classical complement cascade in geographic atrophy secondary to age-related macular degeneration
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Ted Yednock, Donald S. Fong, and Eleonora M. Lad
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Ophthalmology - Abstract
Geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a retinal neurodegenerative disorder. Human genetic data support the complement system as a key component of pathogenesis in AMD, which has been further supported by pre-clinical and recent clinical studies. However, the involvement of the different complement pathways (classical, lectin, alternative), and thus the optimal complement inhibition target, has yet to be fully defined. There is evidence that C1q, the initiating molecule of the classical pathway, is a key driver of complement activity in AMD. C1q is expressed locally by infiltrating phagocytic cells and C1q-activating ligands are present at disease onset and continue to accumulate with disease progression. The accumulation of C1q on photoreceptor synapses with age and disease is consistent with its role in synapse elimination and neurodegeneration that has been observed in other neurodegenerative disorders. Furthermore, genetic deletion of C1q, local pharmacologic inhibition within the eye, or genetic deletion of downstream C4 prevents photoreceptor cell damage in mouse models. Hence, targeting the classical pathway in GA could provide a more specific therapeutic approach with potential for favorable efficacy and safety.
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- 2022
12. Biomarkers for Nonexudative Age-Related Macular Degeneration and Relevance for Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review
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Eleonora M. Lad, Maria Gomez-Caraballo, and Vivienne Fang
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Pharmacology ,Oncology ,Color fundus photography ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Patient characteristics ,General Medicine ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Geographic atrophy ,Clinical trial ,Age related ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,sense organs ,business ,Microperimetry - Abstract
The purpose of the review was to identify structural, functional, blood-based, and other types of biomarkers for early, intermediate, and late nonexudative stages of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and summarize the relevant data for proof-of-concept clinical trials. AMD is a leading cause of blindness in the aging population, yet no treatments exist for its most common nonexudative form. There are limited data on the diagnosis and progression of nonexudative AMD compared to neovascular AMD. Our objective was to provide a comprehensive, systematic review of recently published biomarkers (molecular, structural, and functional) for early AMD, intermediate AMD, and geographic atrophy and to evaluate the relevance of these biomarkers for use in future clinical trials. A literature search of PubMed, ScienceDirect, EMBASE, and Web of Science from January 1, 1996 to November 30, 2020 and a patent search were conducted. Search terms included “early AMD,” “dry AMD,” “intermediate AMD,” “biomarkers for nonexudative AMD,” “fundus autofluorescence patterns,” “color fundus photography,” “dark adaptation,” and “microperimetry.” Articles were assessed for bias and quality with the Mixed-Methods Appraisal Tool. A total of 94 articles were included (61,842 individuals). Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography was superior at highlighting detailed structural changes in earlier stages of AMD. Fundus autofluorescence patterns were found to be most important in estimating progression of geographic atrophy. Delayed rod intercept time on dark adaptation was the most widely recommended surrogate functional endpoint for early AMD, while retinal sensitivity on microperimetry was most relevant for intermediate AMD. Combinational studies accounting for various patient characteristics and machine/deep-learning approaches were best suited for assessing individualized risk of AMD onset and progression. This systematic review supports the use of structural and functional biomarkers in early AMD and intermediate AMD, which are more reproducible and less invasive than the other classes of biomarkers described. The use of deep learning and combinational algorithms will gain increasing importance in future clinical trials of nonexudative AMD.
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- 2021
13. Age-related Macular Degeneration is associated with faster rates of structural brain changes and widespread differences in connectivity
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Jacques A Stout, Rui Dai, Robert J Anderson, Scott Cousins, Jie Zhuang, Eleonora M Lad, Diane Whitaker, David Madden, Guy Potter, Heather E Whitson, and Alexandra Badea
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Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a prevalent disease impeding vision. More recently, AMD has also been linked to cognitive impairment, such as deficits in language and memory skills. In order to better understand the extent of AMD-related changes in the whole brain structure and connectivity, we have conducted an MRI diffusion acquisition study on 40 participants (20 diagnosed with AMD and 20 controls). These acquisitions were then performed again in a follow up two years later. We developed novel analysis methods for diffusion based tractography and connectomes to better determine which, if any, brain region connections saw the greatest changes between the AMD and the age-matched control groups. Using voxel-based analysis, we identified atrophy in AMD participants in the cuneate gyrus, which has been associated with vision, and the left superior temporal gyrus, which has been associated with language, while later acquisitions compounded this with a deficiency in the bilateral cingulate gyrus, itself linked to higher cognition and memory. These regional atrophy findings support that people with AMD experience widespread neuronal degradation that is not limited to retinal neurons. Regions that saw drastically lowered fractional anisotropy among AMD vs. control included the visual cortex, such as the bilateral occipital lobe and the frontoparietal cortex. Tensor Network Principal Component Analysis (TN-PCA) isolated lingual and temporal connections as important differentiators of AMD connectomes compared to controls, thus supporting our morphometric and texture findings in regions related to vision, but also connectopathies of language and memory brain regions. Bundle based analyses in baseline data revealed that the lingual gyrus had greater spread of tracts overall in the AMD participants, which may be explained by prior reorganization in this area, demonstrating a connection between retinal health and lingual structure. Moreover, we noted group differences in the interhemispheric temporal connections, and lingual cerebellar connections, supporting extensive downstream effects of vision loss. Our bundle-based analyses expand the toolset available for neuroimaging-based phenotyping, and reveal widespread changes in AMD participants beyond brain regions and tractography networks directly involved in vision processing, including those involved in language and memory.
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- 2022
14. Subretinal Mononuclear Cells in Coats' Disease Studied with RPE65 and CD163: Evidence for Histiocytoid Pigment Epithelial Cells
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Paula Cortes Barrantes, Eleonora M. Lad, Frederick A. Jakobiec, Alan D. Proia, and Yoshihiro Yonekawa
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Male ,cis-trans-Isomerases ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fundus Oculi ,Antigens, Differentiation, Myelomonocytic ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Retinal Pigment Epithelium ,Antigens, CD ,medicine ,Humans ,Coats' disease ,Fluorescein Angiography ,Subretinal exudate ,Histiocyte ,Retrospective Studies ,Retina ,Retinal pigment epithelium ,Chemistry ,Retinal Vessels ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,eye diseases ,Epithelium ,Ophthalmology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,RPE65 ,Child, Preschool ,Retinal Telangiectasis ,sense organs ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Purpose To evaluate the mononuclear cells in the subretinal exudate in Coats' disease. Design Retrospective case series. Methods Five enucleated globes and 1 cytology sample from a patient with Coats' disease and 1 case of chronic retinal detachment following repair of an open globe injury were examined immunohistochemically to identify intraretinal and subretinal exudative cells. The 2 biomarkers were RPE65 for retinal pigment epithelium and CD163 for histiocytes, each tagged with different chromogens, yellow for pigment epithelium and purple for CD163-positive (CD163+) monocytes/histiocytes. Expression levels were sought from both biomarkers together and singly. A color shift to red in the cells' chromogenic reaction indicated the simultaneous presence of the 2 biomarkers. Results Most of the mononuclear cells in Coats' disease samples were CD163+ (purple), and a minority were RPE65+ (yellow). An intermediate number of cells were RPE65+/CD163+ (orange-red). The eye with a chronic retinal detachment had an equal distribution of CD163+ and RPE65+/CD163+ cells. Conclusions RPE has several well-delineated phenotypes and functions. In normal visual physiology, the pigment epithelium supports photoreceptors and participates in their renewal by phagocytosis of the tips of the photoreceptors. The expression of CD163, a feature of hematopoietically derived monocytes, together with RPE65 in the retinal pigment epithelium, supports differentiation toward histiocytes. Yellow staining of detached pigment epithelial cells were rare. The presence of histiocytoid pigment epithelium at the Bruch membrane probably also has implications for macular degeneration.
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- 2021
15. Natural history of central sparing in geographic atrophy secondary to non-exudative age-related macular degeneration
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Liangbo Shen, Lucian V. Del Priore, Michael M. Park, Aneesha Ahluwalia, Cynthia A. Toth, Eleonora M. Lad, Benjamin K Young, and Mengyuan Sun
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Central Zone ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,Fundus Oculi ,Eye disease ,Visual Acuity ,Residual ,Article ,Macular Degeneration ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Geographic Atrophy ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Fluorescein Angiography ,business.industry ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,Exudative age-related macular degeneration ,Sensory Systems ,language.human_language ,Natural history ,Geographic atrophy ,Disease Progression ,language ,Atrophy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BackgroundThe macular central 1 mm diameter zone is crucial to patients’ visual acuity, but the long-term natural history of central sparing in eyes with geographic atrophy (GA) is unknown.MethodsWe manually segmented GA in 210 eyes with GA involving central 1 mm diameter zone (mean follow-up=3.8 years) in the Age-Related Eye Disease Study. We measured the residual area in central 1 mm diameter zone and calculated central residual effective radius (CRER) as square root of (residual area/π). A linear mixed-effects model was used to model residual size over time. We added a horizontal translation factor to each data set to account for different durations of GA involving the central zone.ResultsThe decline rate of central residual area was associated with baseline residual area (p=0.008), but a transformation from central residual area to CRER eliminated this relationship (p=0.51). After the introduction of horizontal translation factors to each data set, CRER declined linearly over approximately 13 years (r2=0.80). The growth rate of total GA effective radius was 0.14 mm/year (95% CI 0.12 to 0.15), 3.7-fold higher than the decline rate of CRER (0.038 mm/year, 95% CI 0.034 to 0.042). The decline rate of CRER was 53.3% higher in eyes with than without advanced age-related macular degeneration in the fellow eyes at any visit (p=0.007).ConclusionsCRER in eyes with GA declined linearly over approximately 13 years and may serve as an anatomic endpoint in future clinical trials aiming to preserve the central zone.
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- 2020
16. Therapeutic Options Under Development for Nonneovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration and Geographic Atrophy
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Eleonora M. Lad and Joon-Bom Kim
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Late stage ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Unmet needs ,Clinical trial ,Geographic atrophy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,Internal medicine ,Age related ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,sense organs ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a chronic, multifactorial disease and a leading cause of irreversible blindness in the elderly population in the Western Hemisphere. Among the two major subtypes of AMD, the prevalence of the nonneovascular (dry) type is approximately 85-90% and the neovascular (wet) type is 10-15%. Healthy lifestyle and nutritional supplements of anti-oxidative micronutrients have been shown to delay the progression of dry AMD and lower the risk of development of wet AMD, and anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) injections have been shown to improve visual acuity for wet AMD patients. However, to date, there is no approved treatment for geographic atrophy (GA), a debilitating late stage of dry AMD. Thus, this represents a large unmet need in this patient population. This review focuses on the current management and treatment of nonneovascular AMD, the drugs and devices that have been under investigation for the treatment of GA, and the latest clinical trial results. A few therapeutic options have shown initial promising clinical trial results, but failed to show efficacy in larger trials, while others are awaiting future clinical trial results and long-term follow-up to evaluate safety and efficacy.
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- 2020
17. Relationship between neural functional connectivity and memory performance in age-related macular degeneration
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Eleonora M. Lad, Scott W. Cousins, Nan-kuei Chen, Guy G. Potter, David J. Madden, Jie Zhuang, Priscila Cunha, Xintong Zuo, and Heather E. Whitson
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,genetic structures ,Memory, Episodic ,Context (language use) ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Article ,Macular Degeneration ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,Episodic memory ,Default mode network ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Memory Disorders ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Recall ,General Neuroscience ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Posterior cingulate ,Mental Recall ,Female ,sense organs ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
AMD has been linked to memory deficits, with no established neural mechanisms. In order to describe how resting-state, brain network functional connectivity relates to memory and AMD status in older adults without dementia, we collected resting-state brain fMRI and standardized verbal recall tests from 42 older adults with AMD and 41 age-matched controls. We used seed-based whole brain analysis to quantify the strength of functional connectivity between hubs of the default mode network (DMN) and a network of medial temporal regions relevant for memory. Our results indicated neither memory performance nor network connectivity differed by AMD status. However, the AMD participants exhibited stronger relationships than the controls between memory performance and connectivity from the memory network hub (left parahippocampal) to two other regions: the left temporal pole and the right superior/middle frontal gyri. Also, the connectivity between the medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex of DMN correlated more strongly with memory performance in AMD compared to control. We concluded that stronger brain-behavior correlation in AMD may suggest a role for region-specific connectivity in supporting memory in the context of AMD.
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- 2020
18. A 150-kW Pulse Solid-State Amplifier for Radio Frequency Quadrupole Application
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M. Lad, Akhilesh Jain, Alok Gupta, and Deepak Kumar Sharma
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,business.industry ,Amplifier ,01 natural sciences ,Pulse (physics) ,Optics ,Amplitude ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Radio-frequency quadrupole ,Pulse-amplitude modulation ,0103 physical sciences ,Power dividers and directional couplers ,Voltage droop ,Radio frequency ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business - Abstract
The development of a four vane 3-MeV radio frequency quadrupole is under progress at Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology, as part of the Indian facility for spallation source. This quadrupole will be powered by four identical 150-kW solid-state amplifiers, each operating at 325 MHz. This article describes the design details, rigorous testing, and measured results of the first such constructed amplifier and its constituent components. Its output power is 150 kW, with variable pulsewidth from 1 to 5 ms, at 50 Hz of pulse repletion rate. Its pulse amplitude droop measured at 1 ms is 0.46 dB. The phase variation around an average value, measured within a single pulse at 1 ms, is less than 2.7°. Its pulse-to-pulse amplitude stability and phase stability are ±0.1 dB and ±2°, respectively. Its main features are its modular and scalable design architecture, comprising of multiple extended continuous class F 1.5-kW amplifiers, energy-efficient two-tier radial power dividers as well as combiners, compact dual-channel power sensors, and aperture-coupled directional couplers.
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- 2020
19. Visual Function Decline Resulting from Geographic Atrophy
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Eleonora M. Lad, Majid Anderesi, Jeffrey S. Heier, Erin C. Henry, Spectri Study Investigators, Sarah Gray, Andrew J. Lotery, Dante J. Pieramici, Daniela Ferrara, Sunil S Patel, Sunil Gupta, Usha Chakravarthy, Elizabeth Tschosik, David Silverman, Robyn H. Guymer, and Chroma
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0303 health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Lampalizumab ,Clinical trial ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ophthalmology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Choroidal neovascularization ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Ranibizumab ,business ,Microperimetry ,030304 developmental biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose To assess visual function outcomes to 48 weeks in patients with bilateral geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration included in 2 interventional clinical trials: relationship to baseline lesion size, outcomes by baseline lesion characteristic subgroups, and correlation of visual function outcomes with GA area. Design The Chroma and Spectri studies ( ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers, NCT02247479 and NCT02247531 , respectively) were identically designed phase 3, double-masked, multicenter, randomized, sham injection-controlled clinical trials that evaluated intravitreal lampalizumab in GA. Participants Eligible patients were 50 years of age or older with well-demarcated bilateral GA (lesion size, 1–7 disc areas) without evidence of or previous treatment for choroidal neovascularization in either eye and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) letter score of 49 letters or more (≥1 GA lesion within 250 μm of foveal center if BCVA ≥79 letters). Methods Patients (pooled n = 1881) were randomized 2:1:2:1 to lampalizumab every 4 weeks, sham every 4 weeks, lampalizumab every 6 weeks, or sham every 6 weeks. Sham arms were pooled for analysis. Main Outcome Measures Functional end points included change in BCVA from baseline to week 48, low-luminance visual acuity, mesopic microperimetry (number of absolute scotomatous points, mean macular sensitivity), binocular and monocular maximum reading speed, and 2 validated patient-reported outcome measures: Functional Reading Independence Index and 25-item National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire. Results Enlargement of GA area, approximately 2 mm2/year on average across all treatment groups in each study, was accompanied by overall deterioration in all functional end points. No statistically significant differences were found between lampalizumab or sham arms for changes from baseline in functional assessment scores. Of visual function tests, only microperimetry outcomes were correlated moderately with GA lesion area when assessed cross-sectionally at baseline and week 48. Conclusions Chroma and Spectri provide a unique data set of functional end points in GA that are relevant for future clinical trials. Patients with bilateral GA experienced a consistent decline in visual function over 48 weeks, but measures of visual function were not correlated strongly with GA lesion area. It is not possible to predict visual function outcomes from GA lesion size.
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- 2020
20. Age-Related Macular Degeneration is Associated with Faster Rates of Structural Brain Changes and Widespread Differences in Connectivity
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Jacques Andrew Stout, Rui A. Dai, Robert BJ Anderson, Scott William Cousins, Jie Zhuang, Eleonora M. Lad, Diane Beasley Whitaker, David Joseph Madden, Guy Glenn Potter, Heather Elizabeth Whitson, and Alexandra A. Badea
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
21. Design and development of a rapid, high voltage capacitor charging power supply based on third order resonant converter topology
- Author
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Purushottam Shrivastava, Sandeep Bhongade, M. Lad, Reghu Thekkeppat, and Sonu K. Singh
- Subjects
Capacitor ,Third order ,Materials science ,Series (mathematics) ,Proof of concept ,law ,Topology (electrical circuits) ,High voltage ,Topology ,Instrumentation ,Electrical impedance ,law.invention ,Power (physics) - Abstract
A rapid, high voltage capacitor charging power supply (CCPS) based on a third order resonant converter topology has been proposed, analyzed, and simulated using the PSpice software, and as a proof of concept, a prototype of the 6.0 kV, 6.0 A CCPS is also developed. High charging power, low resonant current, and high pulse repetition rate were targeted in the design. In this paper, ac analysis for the calculation of impedance and resonant frequency, and frequency dependence on current gain, and the steady state analysis of the proposed scheme have been studied and presented. The performance is analyzed by simulating the circuit for two values of load capacitances. The simulation and prototype results show linear charging of the load for both values of load capacitances. The charging times of 1.47 and 0.97 ms have been achieved for load capacitances of 1.5 and 1.0 µF, respectively. The performance of the LLC topology has been compared with a conventionally used series resonant scheme. A high charging power of 18.4 kJ/s has been achieved. The topology shows a faster charging rate by ∼36% in comparison with the series LC resonant topology. The results of the analysis match with the simulation and prototype results, which confirms that the proposed scheme is suitable for rapid and reliable CCPS applications.
- Published
- 2021
22. Apolipoprotein E4 impairs the response of neurodegenerative retinal microglia and prevents neuronal loss in glaucoma
- Author
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Milica A. Margeta, Zhuoran Yin, Charlotte Madore, Kristen M. Pitts, Sophia M. Letcher, Jing Tang, Shuhong Jiang, Christian D. Gauthier, Sebastian R. Silveira, Caitlin M. Schroeder, Eleonora M. Lad, Alan D. Proia, Rudolph E. Tanzi, David M. Holtzman, Susanne Krasemann, Dong Feng Chen, and Oleg Butovsky
- Subjects
Disease Models, Animal ,Mice ,Infectious Diseases ,Apolipoproteins E ,Galectin 3 ,Immunology ,Apolipoprotein E4 ,Immunology and Allergy ,Animals ,Humans ,Glaucoma ,Microglia - Abstract
The apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) allele is associated with an increased risk of Alzheimer disease and a decreased risk of glaucoma, but the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we found that in two mouse glaucoma models, microglia transitioned to a neurodegenerative phenotype characterized by upregulation of Apoe and Lgals3 (Galectin-3), which were also upregulated in human glaucomatous retinas. Mice with targeted deletion of Apoe in microglia or carrying the human APOE4 allele were protected from retinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss, despite elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). Similarly to Apoe
- Published
- 2021
23. Longitudinal Evaluation of Visual Function Impairments in Early and Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration Patients
- Author
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Eleonora M. Lad, Vivienne Fang, Michel Tessier, Anna Rautanen, Javier Gayan, Sandra S. Stinnett, and Ulrich F.O. Luhmann
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
To evaluate visual function (VF) changes in early and intermediate age-related macular degeneration (eAMD and iAMD) over 24 months.Prospective, observational natural history study.Participants were enrolled at the Duke Eye Center.A total of 101 subjects (33 with eAMD, 47 with iAMD, and 21 normal controls) were recruited. Visual function (VF) tests included best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), low- luminance visual acuity (LLVA), microperimetry (MP), cone contrast tests (CCTs), and dark adaptation (DA). Mixed-effect model repeated measures based on absolute values and change from baseline identified VF tests differentiating AMD from controls and revealing longitudinal VF decline when controlling for covariates (baseline value, age, coronary artery disease, dry eye, and phakic status). Nine AMD genetic risk variants, combinations of these (genetic burden score), reticular pseudodrusen (RPD), and hyperreflective foci (HRF) were tested as predictors of diagnosis and VF performance.Longitudinal changes in VF metrics over 24 months.A total of 70 subjects completed the 2-year visit (22 with eAMD, 31 with iAMD, and 17 controls). Percent reduced threshold (PRT) on MP and CCT red significantly distinguished iAMD versus controls after 12 and 24 months, respectively. Cone contrast test red, PRT, and absolute threshold (AT) on MP showed significant longitudinal deterioration of VF in iAMD versus baseline at 12 months and onward, however, with a reduced rate of worsening. The DA data confirmed a preexisting functional deficit in iAMD at baseline and revealed an increasing proportion of poorly performing iAMD subjects in DA over the study period. None of the other VF measures showed consistent significant changes among the normal, early, and intermediate groups or over time. The genetic burden score was significantly associated with AMD diagnosis (relative risk for iAMD = 1.64,In iAMD, MP variables, CCT red, and DA revealed slow and nonlinear functional decline over 24 months. A structure-function relationship in eAMD and iAMD stages was demonstrated among HRF, RPD, and DA, possibly modified by genetic risk factors. These structural and functional features represent potential end points for clinical trials in iAMD.
- Published
- 2022
24. Experimental Study on Fiber Reinforced Self Compacting Concrete
- Author
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Divya M. Lad
- Subjects
Materials science ,Fiber ,Composite material - Published
- 2019
25. Effect of Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor on Retinal Neurodegeneration in Patients with Macular Telangiectasia Type 2
- Author
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Jiong Yan, Eleonora M. Lad, Emily Y. Chew, Philip J. Rosenfeld, Mark C Gillies, Jean-Pierre Hubschman, Barbara A Blodi, Henry E. Wiley, Dean Eliott, Lawrence J. Singerman, Robyn H. Guymer, Charles A Johnson, Martin Friedlander, Glenn J. Jaffe, Ian J. Constable, Grant M. Comer, Traci E Clemons, Sina Farsiu, and Alan C. Bird
- Subjects
Retinal degeneration ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,Ciliary neurotrophic factor ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,Macular telangiectasia ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,business.industry ,Retinal ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,chemistry ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,biology.protein ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Microperimetry - Abstract
Purpose To test the effects of an encapsulated cell-based delivery of a neuroprotective agent, ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), on progression of macular telangiectasia type 2, a neurodegenerative disease with no proven effective therapy. Design Randomized sham-controlled clinical trial. Participants Ninety-nine study eyes of 67 eligible participants were enrolled. Methods Single-masked randomized clinical trial of 24 months’ duration conducted from May 2014 through April 2017 in 11 clinical centers of retinal specialists in the United States and Australia. Participants were randomized 1:1 to surgical implantation of intravitreal sustained delivery of human CNTF versus a sham procedure. Main Outcome Measures The primary outcome was the difference in the area of neurodegeneration as measured in the area of the ellipsoid zone disruption (or photoreceptor loss) measured on spectral-domain (SD) OCT images at 24 months from baseline between the treated and untreated groups. Secondary outcomes included comparison of visual function changes between treatment groups. Results Among the 67 participants who were randomized (mean age, 62±8.9 years; 41 women [61%]; 58 white persons [86%]), 65 (97%) completed the study. Two participants (3 study eyes) died and 3 participants (4 eyes) were found ineligible. The eyes receiving sham treatment had 31% greater progression of neurodegeneration than the CNTF-treated eyes. The difference in mean area of photoreceptor loss was 0.05±0.03 mm2 (P = 0.04) at 24 months. Retinal sensitivity changes, measured using microperimetry, were correlated highly with the changes in the area of photoreceptor loss (r = 0.86; P Conclusions In participants with macular telangiectasia type 2, a surgical implant that released CNTF into the vitreous cavity, compared with a sham procedure, slowed the progression of retinal degeneration. Further research is needed to assess longer-term clinical outcomes and safety.
- Published
- 2019
26. Spectral-Domain OCT Measurements in Alzheimer’s Disease
- Author
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Christopher Chen, Carol Y. Cheung, Shu Min Tang, Adrian Wong, Li Jia Chen, Heather E. Whitson, Zihan Sun, Eleonora M. Lad, Kamran Ikram, Victor T. T. Chan, Vincent Mok, Tien Yin Wong, and Clement C Y Tham
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Cross-sectional study ,business.industry ,Nerve fiber layer ,Retinal ,Publication bias ,eye diseases ,Confidence interval ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ophthalmology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Strictly standardized mean difference ,Meta-analysis ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,medicine ,Clinical significance ,sense organs ,business ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Topic OCT is a noninvasive tool to measure specific retinal layers in the eye. The relationship of retinal spectral-domain (SD) OCT measurements with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) remains unclear. Hence, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to examine the SD OCT measurements in AD and MCI. Clinical Relevance Current methods of diagnosing early AD are expensive and invasive. Retinal measurements of SD OCT, which are noninvasive, technically simple, and inexpensive, are potential biomarkers of AD. Methods We conducted a literature search in PubMed and Excerpta Medica Database to identify studies published before December 31, 2017, that assessed the associations between AD, MCI, and measurements of SD OCT: ganglion cell–inner plexiform layer (GC-IPL), ganglion cell complex (GCC), macular volume, and choroidal thickness, in addition to retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and macular thickness. We used a random-effects model to examine these relationships. We also conducted meta-regression and assessed heterogeneity, publication bias, and study quality. Results We identified 30 eligible studies, involving 1257 AD patients, 305 MCI patients, and 1460 controls, all of which were cross-sectional studies. In terms of the macular structure, AD patients showed significant differences in GC-IPL thickness (standardized mean difference [SMD], –0.46; 95% confidence interval [CI], –0.80 to –0.11; I2 = 71%), GCC thickness (SMD, –0.84; 95% CI, –1.10 to –0.57; I2 = 0%), macular volume (SMD, –0.58; 95% CI, –1.03 to –0.14; I2 = 80%), and macular thickness of all inner and outer sectors (SMD range, –0.52 to –0.74; all P Conclusions Our results confirmed the associations between retinal measurements of SD OCT and AD, highlighting the potential usefulness of SD OCT measurements as biomarkers of AD.
- Published
- 2019
27. Design and development of FPGA-based real-time RF cavity simulator using LabVIEW
- Author
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M. Lad, Sweta Khare, Nitesh Tiwari, and Pritam Singh Bagduwal
- Subjects
Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Rf cavity ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Computer Science::Hardware Architecture ,Development (topology) ,Bilinear transform ,Electronic engineering ,Radio frequency ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Field-programmable gate array ,Instrumentation ,Infinite impulse response - Abstract
To understand the behaviour of RF (Radio Frequency) cavity in different machine operating conditions and to optimise the low-level radio frequency systems, FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array)-base...
- Published
- 2019
28. Machine Learning OCT Predictors of Progression from Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration to Geographic Atrophy and Vision Loss
- Author
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Eleonora M. Lad, Karim Sleiman, David L. Banks, Sanjay Hariharan, Traci Clemons, Rolf Herrmann, Daniyar Dauletbekov, Andrea Giani, Victor Chong, Emily Y. Chew, Cynthia A. Toth, Wai Wong, Thomas Huang, G. Baker Hubbard, Sunil Srivastava, Michelle McCall, Katrina Winter, Neeru Sarin, Katherine Hall, Patti McCollum, Linda Curtis, Stefanie Schuman, Stephanie J. Chiu, Sina Farsiu, Vincent Tai, and Emily Chew
- Subjects
General Medicine - Abstract
To describe optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) features, age, gender, and systemic variables that may be used in machine/deep learning studies to identify high-risk patient subpopulations with high risk of progression to geographic atrophy (GA) and visual acuity (VA) loss in the short term.prospective, longitudinal study.We analyzed imaging data from patients with iAMD (N= 316) enrolled in Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 (AREDS2) Ancillary SD-OCT with adequate SD-OCT imaging for repeated measures.Qualitative and quantitative multimodal variables from the database were derived at each yearly visit over 5 years. Based on statistical analyses developed in the field of cardiology, an algorithm was developed and used to select person-years without GA on colour fundus photography or SD-OCT at baseline. The analysis employed machine learning approaches to generate classification trees. Eyes were stratified as low, average, above average and high risk in 1 or 2 years, based on OCT and demographic features by the risk of GA development or decreased VA by 5+ and 10+ letters.new onset of SD-OCT-determined GA and VA loss.We identified multiple retinal and subretinal SD-OCT and demographic features from the baseline visit, each of which independently conveyed low to high risk of new-onset GA or VA loss on each of the follow-up visits at 1 or 2 years.We propose a risk-stratified classification of iAMD based on the combination of OCT-derived retinal features, age, gender and systemic variables for progression to OCT-determined GA and/or VA loss. After external validation, the composite early endpoints may be used as exclusion or inclusion criteria for future clinical studies of iAMD focused on prevention of GA progression or VA loss.
- Published
- 2022
29. Therapeutic Options Under Development for Nonneovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration and Geographic Atrophy
- Author
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Joon-Bom, Kim and Eleonora M, Lad
- Subjects
Geographic Atrophy ,Dietary Supplements ,Visual Acuity ,Wet Macular Degeneration ,Humans ,Aged - Abstract
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a chronic, multifactorial disease and a leading cause of irreversible blindness in the elderly population in the Western Hemisphere. Among the two major subtypes of AMD, the prevalence of the nonneovascular (dry) type is approximately 85-90% and the neovascular (wet) type is 10-15%. Healthy lifestyle and nutritional supplements of anti-oxidative micronutrients have been shown to delay the progression of dry AMD and lower the risk of development of wet AMD, and anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) injections have been shown to improve visual acuity for wet AMD patients. However, to date, there is no approved treatment for geographic atrophy (GA), a debilitating late stage of dry AMD. Thus, this represents a large unmet need in this patient population. This review focuses on the current management and treatment of nonneovascular AMD, the drugs and devices that have been under investigation for the treatment of GA, and the latest clinical trial results. A few therapeutic options have shown initial promising clinical trial results, but failed to show efficacy in larger trials, while others are awaiting future clinical trial results and long-term follow-up to evaluate safety and efficacy.
- Published
- 2020
30. Impact of Baseline Characteristics on Geographic Atrophy Progression in the FILLY Trial Evaluating the Complement C3 Inhibitor Pegcetacoplan
- Author
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Philip J. Rosenfeld, Ian Pearce, Ravi Metlapally, Eleonora M. Lad, Jordi Monés, Ramiro Ribeiro, Namrata Saroj, Mohamed Hamdani, and Nathan C. Steinle
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Visual acuity ,Urology ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Peptides, Cyclic ,law.invention ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Geographic Atrophy ,Post-hoc analysis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,Univariate analysis ,business.industry ,Complement C3 ,Middle Aged ,Clinical trial ,Ophthalmology ,Complement Inactivating Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Intravitreal Injections ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Disease Progression ,Female ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate the effect of select baseline characteristics on geographic atrophy (GA) progression in eyes receiving intravitreal pegcetacoplan or sham. DESIGN Phase 2 multicenter, randomized, single-masked, sham-controlled trial. METHODS Patients with GA received 15 mg pegcetacoplan monthly or every other month (EOM), or sham injection monthly or EOM for 12 months. Primary efficacy endpoint was change in GA lesion size (square root) from baseline. Post hoc analysis evaluated the effects of age; gender; lesion size, focality, and location (extrafoveal vs foveal); pseudodrusen status; best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA); and low-luminance deficit (LLD) on GA progression at Month 12. RESULTS Of 246 randomized patients, 192 with 12-month data were included in this analysis. Overall mean (standard deviation) change in lesion size (mm) was 0.26 (0.17) (P < .01), 0.27 (0.27) (P
- Published
- 2020
31. Cerebral white matter connectivity, cognition, and age-related macular degeneration
- Author
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Nan-kuei Chen, Eleonora M. Lad, Simon W. Davis, Abigail J. Maciejewski, David J. Madden, Priscila Cunha, Heather E. Whitson, Scott W. Cousins, Alexandra Badea, Jie Zhuang, Guy G. Potter, Michele T. Diaz, Xuan Duong Fernandez, and Kala Allen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Splenium ,Neural degeneration ,Audiology ,AMD ,Verbal fluency ,050105 experimental psychology ,White matter ,03 medical and health sciences ,Macular Degeneration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Medicine ,Verbal fluency test ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Inferior longitudinal fasciculus ,Cognitive decline ,RC346-429 ,Cognitive reserve ,Aged ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,Regular Article ,White Matter ,eye diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,DTI ,Quantitative anisotropy (QA) ,Anisotropy ,White matter connectivity ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,sense organs ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Highlights • AMD patients show weaker connection in the splenium and left optic radiation. • Verbal fluency scores correlate with connection in the splenium and left IFOF/ILF. • AMD is linked with weaker correlations of cognition and white matter connection., Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a common retina disease associated with cognitive impairment in older adults. The mechanism(s) that account for the link between AMD and cognitive decline remain unclear. Here we aim to shed light on this issue by investigating whether relationships between cognition and white matter in the brain differ by AMD status. In a direct group comparison of brain connectometry maps from diffusion weighted images, AMD patients showed significantly weaker quantitative anisotropy (QA) than healthy controls, predominantly in the splenium and left optic radiation. The QA of these tracts, however, did not correlate with the visual acuity measure, indicating that this group effect is not directly driven by visual loss. The AMD and control groups did not differ significantly in cognitive performance. Across all participants, better cognitive performance (e.g. verbal fluency) is associated with stronger connectivity strength in white matter tracts including the splenium and the left inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus/inferior longitudinal fasciculus. However, there were significant interactions between group and cognitive performance (verbal fluency, memory), suggesting that the relation between QA and cognitive performance was weaker in AMD patients than in controls. This may be explained by unmeasured determinants of performance that are more common or impactful in AMD or by a recruitment bias whereby the AMD group had higher cognitive reserve. In general, our findings suggest that neural degeneration in the brain might occur in parallel to AMD in the eyes, although the participants studied here do not (yet) exhibit overt cognitive declines per standard assessments.
- Published
- 2020
32. Fundus-controlled perimetry (microperimetry): Application as outcome measure in clinical trials
- Author
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Frank G. Holz, Monika Fleckenstein, Zhichao Wu, Steffen Schmitz-Valckenberg, Robyn H. Guymer, Eleonora M. Lad, Maximilian Pfau, Jonathan Denniss, and Jasleen K Jolly
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Fixation stability ,Visual acuity ,Computer science ,Fundus Oculi ,Visual Acuity ,Retina ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Disease severity ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Outcome measures ,Visual sensitivity ,Sensory Systems ,Clinical trial ,Ophthalmology ,030104 developmental biology ,Fixation (visual) ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optometry ,Visual Field Tests ,medicine.symptom ,Visual Fields ,Microperimetry - Abstract
Fundus-controlled perimetry (FCP, also called 'microperimetry') allows for spatially-resolved mapping of visual sensitivity and measurement of fixation stability, both in clinical practice as well as research. The accurate spatial characterization of visual function enabled by FCP can provide insightful information about disease severity and progression not reflected by best-corrected visual acuity in a large range of disorders. This is especially important for monitoring of retinal diseases that initially spare the central retina in earlier disease stages. Improved intra- and inter-session retest-variability through fundus-tracking and precise point-wise follow-up examinations even in patients with unstable fixation represent key advantages of these technique. The design of disease-specific test patterns and protocols reduces the burden of extensive and time-consuming FCP testing, permitting a more meaningful and focused application. Recent developments also allow for photoreceptor-specific testing through implementation of dark-adapted chromatic and photopic testing. A detailed understanding of the variety of available devices and test settings is a key prerequisite for the design and optimization of FCP protocols in future natural history studies and clinical trials. Accordingly, this review describes the theoretical and technical background of FCP, its prior application in clinical and research settings, data that qualify the application of FCP as an outcome measure in clinical trials as well as ongoing and future developments.
- Published
- 2020
33. Relationship of Topographic Distribution of Geographic Atrophy to Visual Acuity in Nonexudative Age-Related Macular Degeneration
- Author
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Benjamin K Young, Eleonora M. Lad, Michael M. Park, Lucian V. Del Priore, Liangbo Shen, Aneesha Ahluwalia, Cynthia A. Toth, and Mengyuan Sun
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,Fundus Oculi ,Eye disease ,Visual Acuity ,Fundus (eye) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Macular Degeneration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Age related ,Geographic Atrophy ,medicine ,Humans ,Macula Lutea ,Prospective Studies ,Fluorescein Angiography ,Pigment Epithelium of Eye ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Surrogate endpoint ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Macular degeneration ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Geographic atrophy ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence - Abstract
Purpose To investigate the topographic distribution of geographic atrophy (GA) and to identify an anatomic endpoint that correlates with visual acuity (VA) in eyes with GA. Design Retrospective analysis of a multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled trial. Participants The Age-Related Eye Disease Study participants with GA secondary to nonexudative age-related macular degeneration. Methods We manually delineated GA on 1654 fundus photographs of 365 eyes. We measured GA areas in 9 subfields on the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) grid and correlated them with VA via a mixed-effects model. We determined the optimal diameter for the central zone by varying the diameter from 0 to 10 mm until the highest r2 between GA area in the central zone and VA was achieved. We estimated the VA decline rate over 8 years using a linear mixed model. Main Outcome Measures Geographic atrophy area in macular subfields and VA. Results The percentage of area affected by GA declined as a function of retinal eccentricity. GA area was higher in the temporal than the nasal region (1.30 ± 1.75 mm2 vs. 1.10 ± 1.62 mm2; P = 0.005) and in the superior than the inferior region (1.26 ± 1.73 mm2 vs. 1.03 ± 1.53 mm2; P Conclusions The prevalence of GA varies significantly across different macular regions. Although total GA area was associated poorly with VA, GA area in the central 1-mm diameter zone was correlated significantly with VA and may serve as a surrogate endpoint in clinical trials.
- Published
- 2020
34. Co-Prevalence of Alzheimer's Disease and Age-Related Macular Degeneration Established by Histopathologic Diagnosis
- Author
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Eleonora M. Lad, Eric J Schwaber, Atalie C. Thompson, Sandra S. Stinnett, Heather E. Whitson, and Gordon Smilnak
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Autopsy ,Disease ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,Macular Degeneration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Dementia ,Humans ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,030104 developmental biology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Histopathology ,Female ,sense organs ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Braak staging - Abstract
Background Previous epidemiologic studies have suggested an association between AMD and AD, and several therapeutic agents are being developed based on this principle. However, prior studies have provided conflicting results due in part to their reliance on clinical diagnoses that are not based on gold-standard histopathology. Objective To use histopathologic standards for diagnosis in order to determine the co-prevalence of AD among patients with and without AMD. Methods This is a cross-sectional study of 157 autopsy ocular specimens from patients with and without AMD that were greater than 75 years of age at death. Sarks staging was used to document the severity of AMD, and Braak and Braak staging was used to assess the severity of AD in corresponding brain specimens. The prevalence of AD within different severities of AMD was determined using univariable and multivariable logistic regression. Results 58% of autopsy eyes had AMD. The prevalence of AD was lower in AMD subjects (63%) compared to non-AMD subjects (73%), even when grouped by severity (all p > 0.15). The likelihood of AD was significantly less in AMD subjects, even after adjusting for age and sex in multivariable analysis (OR 0.47, p = 0.049). Conclusion Histopathologic diagnoses fail to support an increase in prevalence of AD among subjects with AMD, even when disease severity is considered.
- Published
- 2020
35. Local Anatomic Precursors to New-Onset Geographic Atrophy in Age-Related Macular Degeneration as Defined on OCT
- Author
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Malini Veerappan Pasricha, Vincent Tai, Karim Sleiman, Katrina Winter, Stephanie J. Chiu, Sina Farsiu, Sandra S. Stinnett, Eleonora M. Lad, Wai T. Wong, Emily Y. Chew, Cynthia A. Toth, Michelle McCall, Sunil Srivastava, Neeru Sarin, Stefanie Schuman, Monica Sevilla, Christopher Harrington, Randall Gunther, Du Tran-Viet, Francisco Folgar, Eric Yuan, Wai Wong, Katherine Hall, Emily Chew, Thomas Hwang, Patti McCollum, G. Baker Hubbard, Linda Curtis, Traci Clemons, and Molly Harrington
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,genetic structures ,Eye disease ,Retinal Pigment Epithelium ,Drusen ,New onset ,03 medical and health sciences ,Macular Degeneration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Optical coherence tomography ,Ophthalmology ,Age related ,Geographic Atrophy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Macula Lutea ,Prospective Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Macular degeneration ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Hyperreflective foci ,Geographic atrophy ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
In macula-wide analyses, spectral-domain (SD) optical coherence tomography (OCT) features including drusen volume, hyperreflective foci, and OCT-reflective drusen substructures independently predict geographic atrophy (GA) onset secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD). We sought to identify SD OCT features in the location of new GA before its onset.Retrospective study.Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 Ancillary SD OCT Study participants.We analyzed longitudinally captured SD OCT images and color photographs from 488 eyes of 488 participants with intermediate AMD at baseline. Sixty-two eyes with sufficient image quality demonstrated new-onset GA on color photographs during study years 2 through 7. The area of new-onset GA and one size-matched control region in the same eye were segmented separately, and corresponding spatial volumes on registered SD OCT images at the GA incident year and at 2, 3, and 4 years previously were defined. Differences in SD OCT features between paired precursor regions were evaluated through matched-pairs analyses.Localized SD OCT features 2 years before GA onset.Compared with paired control regions, GA precursor regions at 2, 3, and 4 years before (n = 54, 33, and 25, respectively) showed greater drusen volume (P = 0.01, P = 0.003, and P = 0.003, respectively). At 2 and 3 years before GA onset, they were associated with the presence of hypertransmission (P0.001 and P = 0.03, respectively), hyperreflective foci (P0.001 and P = 0.045, respectively), OCT-reflective drusen substructures (P = 0.004 and P = 0.03, respectively), and loss or disruption of the photoreceptor zone, ellipsoid zone, and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE, P0.001 and P = 0.005-0.045, respectively). At 4 years before GA onset, precursor regions were associated with photoreceptor zone thinning (P = 0.007) and interdigitation zone loss (P = 0.045).Evolution to GA is heralded by early local photoreceptor changes and drusen accumulation, detectable 4 years before GA onset. These precede other anatomic heralds such as RPE changes and drusen substructure emergence detectable 1 to 2 years before GA. This study thus identified earlier end points for GA as potential therapeutic targets in clinical trials.
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- 2020
36. Visual Function Decline Resulting from Geographic Atrophy: Results from the Chroma and Spectri Phase 3 Trials
- Author
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Jeffrey S, Heier, Dante, Pieramici, Usha, Chakravarthy, Sunil S, Patel, Sunil, Gupta, Andrew, Lotery, Eleonora M, Lad, David, Silverman, Erin C, Henry, Majid, Anderesi, Elizabeth A, Tschosik, Sarah, Gray, Daniela, Ferrara, and Robyn, Guymer
- Subjects
Male ,Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments ,Double-Blind Method ,Fundus Oculi ,Geographic Atrophy ,Intravitreal Injections ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Humans ,Female ,Fluorescein Angiography ,Middle Aged - Abstract
To assess visual function outcomes to 48 weeks in patients with bilateral geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration included in 2 interventional clinical trials: relationship to baseline lesion size, outcomes by baseline lesion characteristic subgroups, and correlation of visual function outcomes with GA area.The Chroma and Spectri studies (ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers, NCT02247479 and NCT02247531, respectively) were identically designed phase 3, double-masked, multicenter, randomized, sham injection-controlled clinical trials that evaluated intravitreal lampalizumab in GA.Eligible patients were 50 years of age or older with well-demarcated bilateral GA (lesion size, 1-7 disc areas) without evidence of or previous treatment for choroidal neovascularization in either eye and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) letter score of 49 letters or more (≥1 GA lesion within 250 μm of foveal center if BCVA ≥79 letters).Patients (pooled n = 1881) were randomized 2:1:2:1 to lampalizumab every 4 weeks, sham every 4 weeks, lampalizumab every 6 weeks, or sham every 6 weeks. Sham arms were pooled for analysis.Functional end points included change in BCVA from baseline to week 48, low-luminance visual acuity, mesopic microperimetry (number of absolute scotomatous points, mean macular sensitivity), binocular and monocular maximum reading speed, and 2 validated patient-reported outcome measures: Functional Reading Independence Index and 25-item National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire.Enlargement of GA area, approximately 2 mmChroma and Spectri provide a unique data set of functional end points in GA that are relevant for future clinical trials. Patients with bilateral GA experienced a consistent decline in visual function over 48 weeks, but measures of visual function were not correlated strongly with GA lesion area. It is not possible to predict visual function outcomes from GA lesion size.
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- 2020
37. Systematic review of gender bias in clinical trials of monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of multiple sclerosis
- Author
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M. Alonso-Moreno, M. Ladrón-Guevara, and P. Ciudad-Gutiérrez
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Género ,Sexo ,Ocrelizumab ,Natalizumab ,Alemtuzumab ,Rituximab ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: This article analyses the presence of gender bias in clinical trials of monoclonal antibodies used to treat multiple sclerosis. Material and methods: We performed a systematic review of controlled clinical trials of 4 monoclonal antibodies used to treat multiple sclerosis (natalizumab, rituximab, alemtuzumab, and ocrelizumab). We searched the PubMed/MEDLINE database for articles published in English before March 2020. The study was conducted in accordance with the relevant international recommendations. Results: The search identified 89 articles, 55 of which met the inclusion criteria. Of all patients included in these trials, 64.6% were women. The lead authors of 10 of the studies were women. Fifteen of the 55 studies included a sex-based analysis of the primary endpoint. Only 8 articles discussed the results separately for men and for women. Conclusions: The clinical trials of these 4 monoclonal antibodies present a significant gender bias. In most cases, the primary and secondary endpoints are not analyzed according to patient sex, despite the fact that international recommendations include this as a minimum requirement for ensuring scientific validity and obtaining appropriate results for extrapolation to the wider population. Resumen: Introducción: Este artículo evalúa el sesgo de género presente en los ensayos clínicos sobre anticuerpos monoclonales para el tratamiento de la esclerosis múltiple. Materiales y métodos: Se realizó una revisión sistemática de ensayos clínicos controlados de 4 anticuerpos monoclonales (natalizumab, rituximab, alemtuzumab y ocrelizumab) para el tratamiento de la esclerosis múltiple a través de las bases de datos Pubmed/Medline, publicados hasta marzo de 2020 y los cuales fueron escritos en inglés. El estudio siguió las correspondientes recomendaciones internacionales. Resultados: Se identificaron 89 artículos, de los cuales 55 cumplieron los criterios de inclusión. Se encontró que el 64,6% del total de pacientes eran mujeres. El sexo del primer autor era femenino en 10 ensayos clínicos. El análisis de la variable principal en función del sexo se realizó en 15 de los 55 artículos incluidos. Además, solo 8 ensayos clínicos discutieron los resultados separadamente de acuerdo al sexo. Conclusiones: Los ensayos clínicos de estos 4 anticuerpos monoclonales muestran un sesgo de género significativo. En su mayoría, la variable principal y secundarias no son analizadas en función del sexo. Esto se produce a pesar de las recomendaciones internacionales que lo establecen, como requisito mínimo, para dar validez científica y obtener unos resultados apropiados para extender su aplicación a la población global.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Vacuum impregnation: a promising way for mineral fortification in potato porous matrix (potato chips)
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Alka Joshi, M. Lad, Shalini Gaur Rudra, Islam Khan, Bijendra Singh, Vidya Sagar, Eldho Varghese, and Abhijit Kar
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0301 basic medicine ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Low fat potato chips ,Short Communication ,Vacuum pressure ,Fortification ,chemistry.chemical_element ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Zinc ,Calcium ,040401 food science ,Matrix (chemical analysis) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,Nutrient ,chemistry ,Food science ,Porosity ,Food Science - Abstract
Potato chips can be considered as an ideal carrier for targeted nutrient/s delivery as mostly consumed by the vulnerable group (children and teen agers). The present study was planned to fortifiy potato chips with calcium (Calcium lactate) and zinc (Zinc sulphate) using vacuum impregnation technique. At about 70–80 mm Hg vacuum pressure, maximum level of impregnation of both the minerals was achieved. Results showed that after optimization, calcium lactate at 4.81%, zinc sulphate at 0.72%, and vacuum of 33.53 mm Hg with restoration period of 19.52 min can fortify potato chips that can fulfil 10 and 21% need of calcium and zinc, respectively of targeted group (age 4–17 years). The present research work has shown that through this technique, fortification can be done in potato chips which are generally considered as a poor source of minerals. Further to make potato chips more fit to health conscious consumers, rather frying microwaving was done to develop mineral fortified low fat potato chips.
- Published
- 2016
39. Comorbidity of age-related macular degeneration with Alzheimer’s disease: A histopathologic case-control study
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Sandra S. Stinnett, P. Murali Doraiswamy, John R. Deans, Heather E. Whitson, Eleonora M. Lad, and Gordon Smilnak
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Male ,genetic structures ,Eye Diseases ,Autopsy ,Disease ,Comorbidity ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Severity of Illness Index ,Macular Degeneration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Geriatric Ophthalmology ,Cognitive Impairment ,Aged, 80 and over ,Multidisciplinary ,Cognitive Neurology ,Histocytochemistry ,Retinal Degeneration ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Neurology ,Alzheimer's Disease Diagnosis and Management ,Medicine ,Retinal Disorders ,Female ,Anatomy ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ocular System ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,medicine ,North Carolina ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Retrospective cohort study ,Glaucoma ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Geriatrics ,Macular Disorders ,Case-Control Studies ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Eyes ,Cognitive Science ,Histopathology ,Dementia ,sense organs ,business ,Head ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
IntroductionPrevious studies evaluating the association between clinically diagnosed Alzheimer's disease (AD) and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) have generated conflicting results. This study is the first to assess whether AMD prevalence is higher in AD patients than non-AD controls by using histopathology to definitively diagnose AD.MethodsThis was a retrospective case-control study utilizing diagnostic information extracted from autopsy reports of patients age 75 and above, including 115 with a neuropathological diagnosis of AD and 57 age-matched normal controls.ResultsThe rate of AMD was not significantly higher in AD cases (53.0%) than in controls (59.6%) (z = 0.820, p = 0.794). AMD severity as determined by Sarks score was similar between AD patients and controls (χ2 = 2.96, p = 0.706). There was also no significant association between Braak stage of AD severity and AMD (χ2 = 4.55, p = 0.602).DiscussionNo significant effect of AD diagnosis or pathologic severity on AMD comorbidity was found, suggesting that any shared mechanisms between AMD and AD may be nondeterministic.
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- 2019
40. Does Aspirin Worsen Macular Degeneration in a Clinically Meaningful Way?
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Eleonora M Lad
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Aspirin ,genetic structures ,Eye Diseases ,business.industry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,MEDLINE ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,Non steroidal ,eye diseases ,Article ,Ophthalmology ,Macular Degeneration ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,sense organs ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE: To analyze the potential association between aspirin use and progression of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). DESIGN: Two prospective cohort studies within two controlled clinical trials of oral supplementation for age-related eye disease. PARTICIPANTS: Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) participants, aged 55 to 80 years, and AREDS2 participants, aged 50 to 85 years. METHODS: Propensity scores for aspirin use were calculated for AREDS and AREDS2 participants, separately, by logistic regression. Of the participants without late AMD (geographic atrophy (GA) or neovascular AMD) in either eye at study baseline, aspirin users were matched 1:1 with non-users by propensity score (separately for AREDS and AREDS2). Proportional hazards regression was performed, adjusting for age, on the matched participants to evaluate associations between aspirin propensity score and progression to late AMD (and its subtypes). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Progression to late AMD on color fundus photographs, graded centrally. RESULTS: Of the 3734 eligible AREDS participants, 1049 (28.1%) were taking aspirin and 2685 (71.9%) were not. The equivalent figures in AREDS2 were 1198 (49.9%) and 1205 (50.1%), respectively. Following matching by propensity score, the characteristics of the users and non-users were similar, in both studies. Of the 1950 matched AREDS participants and 1694 matched AREDS2 participants, over median follow-up of 10.1 years (AREDS) and 5.0 years (AREDS2), the numbers who progressed to late AMD, GA, or neovascular AMD were 454 (23.3%), 345 (17.7%), and 278 (14.3%), respectively, in AREDS, and 643 (38.0%), 402 (24.6%), and 341 (20.1%), in AREDS2. The hazard ratios of progression in quintile 5 (highest propensity for aspirin use) versus 1 (reference) were 1.17 (p=0.35), 1.24 (p=0.25), and 0.95 (p=0.81), respectively, in AREDS, and 1.26 (p=0.09), 1.46 (p=0.03), and 1.12 (p=0.58), in AREDS2. No significant association with progression to late AMD was observed for any quintile 2–5, for any of the three outcomes, in either study. CONCLUSIONS: Aspirin use was not significantly associated with progression to late AMD, or its subtypes, in either the AREDS or the AREDS2. Patients with AMD need not avoid aspirin for this reason, when its use is medically indicated.
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- 2019
41. 24-Pulse Input System of a Solid State Modular −100 kV, 25 A DC Power Supply
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Akhilesh Tripathi, M.K. Badapanda, Rinki Upadhyay, and M. Lad
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Klystron ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Amplifier ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Electrical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Power factor ,Modular design ,01 natural sciences ,Inrush current ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,law ,Electromagnetic coil ,Harmonics ,0103 physical sciences ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,business ,Transformer - Abstract
A −100 kV, 25 A DC power supply is employed for biasing TH 2089 klystron amplifier of 1 MW, 352.2 MHz RF test setup developed at Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (RRCAT), Indore. Input to this power supply is taken directly from 3 phase, 11 kV line through step start unit to minimize inrush current. Issues related to inrush current and their mitigations are presented in this paper. Efforts have been put to make the 11 kV input 24-pulsed for reducing input line harmonics and improving input power factor (IPF). 24-pulse input system is realized by zig-zag primary windings of four numbers of multi secondary transformers having all their secondary windings connected in delta fashion and by judiciously selecting their number of turns to provide necessary phase shifts among them. The details of transformer windings arrangements along with their vector diagrams are presented in this paper. The experimental results of phase shifts among four transformers are also presented in this paper. These phase shifts are found to be approximately 15 degree which ensures 24-pulse input system. The spectrum of line current is also presented.
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- 2018
42. Abstract No. 498 Trends in utilization and Medicare reimbursement for TIPS and open surgical portal decompression
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A. Raman, M. Lad, N. Parikh, R. Gupta, A. Patel, and C. Arnold
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Decompression ,business.industry ,General surgery ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medicare reimbursement ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
43. Low voltage high current modular DC power supply for solid state RF amplifiers
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Rinki Upadhyay, Akhilesh Tripathi, M. Lad, and M.K. Badapanda
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Amplifier ,Electrical engineering ,Solid-state ,High current ,Modular design ,business ,Instrumentation ,Low voltage ,Mathematical Physics ,Power (physics) - Published
- 2021
44. High-power solid-state amplifier for superconducting radio frequency cavity test facility
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Akhilesh Jain, M. Lad, Kriti Pathak, Alok Gupta, and Deepak Kumar Sharma
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010302 applied physics ,Physics ,Power gain ,business.industry ,Amplifier ,Superconducting radio frequency ,Electrical engineering ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Wall-plug efficiency ,Cryomodule ,0103 physical sciences ,Power dividers and directional couplers ,Insertion loss ,Radio frequency ,business ,Instrumentation - Abstract
A horizontal test facility is set up at the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology to test the superconducting radio frequency dressed cavities. Along with the cryomodule, control instrumentation, and the power coupler, this facility incorporates a high-power solid-state amplifier for establishing the desired cavity voltage gradient during the testing. This article describes the design, construction, rigorous testing, and measured results of this high-power solid-state radio frequency amplifier and its constituent components. Its maximum output power is 36 kW (average) at the operating frequency of 650 MHz. Its main features are its modular and scalable design with in-house developed constituent components. These components include 500 W, 20 dB gain modules, novel two-tier radial dividers, combiners, power sensors, and aperture-coupled directional couplers. Their excellent reprise performance for the multiple quantities confirms the design methodology presented here. The measured wall plug efficiency of this 36 kW amplifier is 43.6%, and its power gain is 86 dB. The designed radial combiner is highly efficient (power-combining efficiency of 98.4%), and the directional coupler exhibits a very low loss (insertion loss of 0.05 dB).
- Published
- 2021
45. VISUAL FUNCTION MEASURES IN EARLY AND INTERMEDIATE AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION
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Arthika Chandramohan, Scott W. Cousins, Sandra S. Stinnett, Eleonora M. Lad, Cynthia A. Toth, Stefanie G. Schuman, and John T. Petrowski
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Visual Acuity ,Pilot Projects ,Macular Degeneration ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,Age related ,medicine ,Humans ,Contrast (vision) ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,media_common ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Repeatability ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Visual function ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optometry ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Microperimetry - Abstract
PURPOSE The objectives of this study were to evaluate 1) the feasibility of performing computerized tests of low luminance visual acuity (LLVA), cone-specific contrast (Cone Contrast Test [CCT]), contrast sensitivity, and microperimetry and 2) the test-retest repeatability of these outcomes in dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD). METHODS This prospective study enrolled 30 subjects at a single site (8 controls, 8 early AMD, and 12 intermediate AMD). Subjects underwent LLVA, contrast sensitivity, CCT, and microperimetry with eye tracking. Low luminance deficit was defined as best-corrected visual acuity minus LLVA in EDTRS letters. Follow-up testing was administered at approximately 1 month. RESULTS There was high test-retest repeatability at one month for all visual function metrics (intraclass correlations >0.7) except log contrast sensitivity (intraclass correlations 0.6). Compared with controls, patients with intermediate AMD showed significant deficits on best-corrected visual acuity, LLVA, low luminance deficit, percent-reduced threshold on microperimetry, and red CCT (P < 0.05), but not on contrast sensitivity, green and blue CCT. CONCLUSION This pilot study supports the feasibility and reliability of using LLVA, microperimetry, and CCT in early dry AMD. Our data suggest these measures can be used as alternative future clinical trial endpoints. A larger, prospective natural history study of alternative visual function measures in dry AMD is warranted.
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- 2016
46. Dissociations of the Fluocinolone Acetonide Implant: The Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial and Follow-up Study
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Janet T. Holbrook, Elizabeth A. Sugar, Alyce E. Burke, Albert T. Vitale, Jennifer E. Thorne, Janet L. Davis, Douglas A. Jabs, Glenn J. Jaffe, Brenda Branchaud, Paul Hahn, Larry Koreen, Eleonora (Nora) M. Lad, Phoebe Lin, Joseph Nissim Martel, Neha (Shah) Serrano, Cindy Skalak, Lejla Vajzovic, Claxton Baer, Joyce Bryant, Sai Chavala, Michael Cusick, Shelley Day, Pouya Dayani, Justis Ehlers, Muge Kesen, Annie Lee, Alex Melamud, Jawad A. Qureshi, Adrienne Williams Scott, Robert F. See, Robert K. Shuler, Megan Wood, Steven Yeh, Alcides Fernandes, Deborah Gibbs, Donna Leef, Daniel F. Martin, Sunil Srivastava, James P. Dunn, Hosne Begum, Jeff Boring, Kristen L. Brotherson, Bryn Burkholder, Nicholas J. Butler, Dennis Cain, Mary A. Cook, David Emmert, Janis R. Graul, Mark Herring, Ashley Laing, Theresa G. Leung, Michael C. Mahon, Ahmafreza Moradi, Antonia Nwankwo, Trucian L. Ostheimer, Terry Reed, Ellen Arnold, Patricia M. Barnabie, Marie-Lynn Belair, Stephen G. Bolton, Joseph B. Brodine, Diane M. Brown, Lisa M. Brune, Anat Galor, Theresa Gan, Adam Jacobowitz, Meera Kapoor, Sanjay Kedhar, Stephen Kim, Henry A. Leder, Alison G. Livingston, Yavette Morton, Kisten Nolan, George B. Peters, Priscilla Soto, Ricardo Stevenson, Michelle Tarver-Carr, Yue Wang, C. Stephen Foster, Stephen D. Anesi, null Linda Bruner, Olga Ceron, David M. Hinkle, Nancy Persons, Bailey Wentworth, Sarah Acevedo, Fahd Anzaar, Tom Cesca, Angelica Contero, Kayleigh Fitzpatrick, Faith Goronga, Jyothir Johnson, Karina Q. Lebron, Danielle Marvell, Chandra Morgan, Nita Patel, Jennifer Pinto, Sana S. Siddique, Janet Sprague, Taygan Yilmaz, H. Nida Sen, Michael Bono, Denise Cunningham, Darryl Hayes, Dessie Koutsandreas, Robert B. Nussenblatt, Patti R. Sherry, Gregory L. Short, Wendy Smith, Alana Temple, Allison Bamji, Hanna Coleman, Geetaniali Davuluri, Lisa Faia, Chloe Gottlieb, Guy V. Jirawuthiworavong, Julie C. Lew, Richard Mercer, Dominic Obiyor, Cheryl H. Perry, Natalia Potapova, Eric Weichel, Keith J. Wroblewski, Paul A. Latkany, Corinne Coonan, Andrea Honda, Monica Lorenzo-Latkany, Robert Masini, Susan Morell, Angela Nguyen, Jason Badamo, Kenneth M. Boyd, Matthew Enos, Jenny Gallardo, Jacek Jarczynski, Ji Yun Lee, Mirjana McGrosky, Ann Nour, Meredith Sanchez, Kate Steinberg, Richard J. Stawell, Lisa Breayley, Carly D'Sylva, Elizabeth Glatz, Lauren Hodgson, Lyndell Lim, Cecilia Ling, Rachel McIntosh, Julie Morrison (Ewing), Andrew Newton, Sutha Sanmugasundram, Richard Smallwood, Ehud Zamir, Nicola Hunt, Lisa Jones, Ignatios Koukouras, Suzanne Williams, Pauline T. Merrill, Danielle Carns, Len Richine, Denise L. Voskuil-Marre, Kisung Woo, Bruce Gaynes, Christina Giannoulis, Pam Hulvey, Elaine Kernbauer, Heena S. Khan, Sarah J. Levine, Scott Toennessen, Eileen Tonner, Robert C. Wang, Hank Aguado, Sally Arceneaux, Karen Duignan, Gary E. Fish, Nick Hesse, Diana Jaramillo, Michael Mackens, Jean Arnwine, David Callanan, Kimberly Cummings, Keith Gray, Susie Howden, Karin Mutz, Brenda Sanchez, Susan Lightman, Filis Ismetova, Ashley Prytherch, Sophie Seguin-Greenstein, Oren Tomkins, Asat Bar, Kate Edwards, Lavanish Joshi, Jiten Moraji, Ahmed Samy, Timothy Stubbs, Simon Taylor, Hamish Towler, Rebecca Tronnberg, Gary N. Holland, Robert D. Almanzor, Jose Castellanos, Jean Pierre Hubschman, Ann K. Johiro, Alla Kukuyev, Ralph D. Levinson, Colin A. McCannel, Susan S. Ransome, Christine R. Gonzales, Anurag Gupta, Partho S. Kalyani, Michael A. Kapamajian, Peter J. Kappel, Cheryl Arcinue, Janne Chuang, Giulio Barteselli, Glenn Currie, Veronica Mendoza, Debbie Powell, Tom Clark, Denine E. Cochran, William R. Freeman, Joshua Hedaya, Tiara Kemper, Igor Kozak, Jacqueline M. LeMoine, Megan E. Loughran, Luzandra Magana, Francesca Mojana, Victoria Morrison, Vivian Nguyen, Stephen F. Oster, Nisha Acharya, David Clay, Salena Lee, Mary Lew, Todd P. Margolis, Jay Stewart, Ira G. Wong, Debra Brown, Claire M. Khouri, Debra A. Goldstein, Andrea Birnbaum, Andrea Degillio, Gemma De la Rosa, Carmen Ramirez, Evica Simjanowski, Mariner Skelly, Anna L. Castro-Malek, Catherine E. Crooke, Melody Huntley, Katrina Nash, Marcia Niec, Dimitry Pyatetsky, Misel Ramirez, Zuzanna Rozenbajgier, Howard H. Tessler, Thomas A. Albini, Marie Chin, Daniela Castaño, Ariana Elizondo, Macy Ho, Jaclyn L. Kovach, Richard C-S. Lin, Efrem Mandelcorn, Jackie K-D. Nguyen, Aura Pacini, Susan Pineda, David A. Pinto, Jose Rebimbas, Kimberly E. Stepien, Claudia Teran, Susan G. Elner, Hillary Bernard, Linda Fournier, Lindsay Godsey, Linda Goings, Richard Hackel, Moella Hesselgrave, K. Thiran Jayasundera, Robert Prusak, Pamela Titus, Melissa Bergeron, Reneé Blosser, Rebecca Brown, Carrie Chrisman-McClure, Julie R. Gothrup, Stephen J. Saxe, Deanna Sizemore, John H. Kempen, James Berger, Sheri Drossner, Joan C. DuPont, Albert M. Maguire, Janice Petner, Stephanie Engelhard, Tim Hopkins, Dawn McCall, Monique McRay, Daniel Will, Wei Xu, Jonathan Lo, Rebecca Salvo, Elizabeth Windsor, Laurel Weeney, Peter R. Pavan, Ken Albritton, JoAnn Leto, Brian Madow, Lori Mayor, Scott E. Pautler, Wyatt Saxon, Judy Soto, Burton Goldstein, Amy Klukoff, Lucy Lambright, Kim McDonald, Maria Ortiz, Susan Scymanky, Dee Dee Szalay, Narsing Rao, Tamara Davis, Jackie Douglass, Judith Linton, Margaret Padilla, Sylvia Ramos, Alexia Aguirre, Lawrence Chong, Lupe Cisneros, Elizabeth Corona, Dean Eliott, Amani Fawzi, Jesse Garcia, Rahul Khurana, Jennifer Lim, Rachel Mead, Julie H. Tsai, Albert Vitale, Paul S. Bernstein, Bonnie Carlstrom, James Gilman, Sandra Hanseen, Paula Morris, Diana Ramirez, Kimberley Wegner, John D. Sheppard, Brianne Anthony, Amber Casper, Lisa Felix-Kent, Jeanette Fernandez, Tari Johnson, Stephen V. Scoper, R. Denise Cole, Nancy Crawford, Lisa Franklin, Krista Hamelin, Jen Martin, Rebecca Marx, Gregory Schultz, Joseph Webb, Pamela Yeager, Rosa Y. Kim, Matthew S. Benz, David M. Brown, Eric Chen, Richard H. Fish, Eric Kegley, Laura Shawver, Tien P. Wong, Rebecca De La Garza, Shayla Friday (Hay), P. Kumar Rao, Eve Adcock, Rajendra S. Apte, Amy Baladenski, Rhonda Curtis, Sarah Gould, Amanda Hebden, Jamie Kambarian, Charla Meyer, Sam Pistorius, Melanie Quinn, Greg Rathert, Kevin J. Blinder, Ashley Hartz, Pam Light, Gaurav K. Shah, Russell VanGelder, Michael M. Altaweel, Natalie Kurinij, Diane Brown, Nancy Prusakowski, Larry Hubbard, Janet Wittes, William E. Barlow, Marc Hochberg, Alice T. Lyon, Alan G. Palestine, Lee S. Simon, James T. Rosenbaum, Harmon Smith, Janet Davis, Jennifer Thorne, Nisha R. Acharya, Jeffrey A. Boring, Judith Alexander, Wai Ping Ng, David S. Friedman, Anna Adler, Alyce Burke, Joanne Katz, Susan Reed, Husam Ansari, Nicholas Cohen, Sanjukta Modak, Lea T. Drye, Mark L. Van Natta, Kevin Frick, Thomas A. Louis, David Shade, Karen Pascual, Jill S. Slutsky-Sanon, Colby Glomp, Melissa A. Nieves, Maria Stevens, Amanda Allen, Yasmin Hilal, Francis Abreu, Anne Shanklin Casper, Cathleen Ewing, Adante Hart, Andrea Lears, Shirley Li, Jill Meinert, Vinnette Morrison, Deborah Nowakowski, Girlie Reyes, Dave M. Shade, Jacqueline Smith, Karen Steuernagle, Mark Van Natta, Vidya Venugopal, Tsung Yu, Paul Chen, Karen Collins, John Dodge, Kevin D. Frick, Rosetta Jackson, Christian Jimenez, Ariel Landers, Hope Livingston, Curtis L. Meinert, Sobharani Rayapudi, Weijiang Shen, Charles Shiflett, Rochelle Smith, Ada Tieman, James A. Tonascia, Richard Zheng, James Allan, Wendy K. Benz, Amitha Domalpally, Kristine A. Johnson, Dawn J. Myers, Jeong Won Pak, James L. Reimers, Debra J. Christianson, Geoffrey Chambers, Margaret A. Fleischli, Jacquelyn Freund, Kathleen E. Glander, Anne Goulding, Vonnie Gama, Sapna Gangaputra, Dennis Hafford, Susan E. Harris, Larry D. Hubbard, Jeffrey M. Joyce, Christina N. Kruse, Lauren Nagle, Amy Remm, Gwyn E. Padden-Lechten, Alyson Pohlman, Ruth A. Shaw, Peggy Sivesind, Dennis Thayer, Erika Treichel, Kelly J. Warren, Sheila M. Watson, Mary K. Webster, James K. White, Tara Wilhelmson, and Grace Zhang
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,Visual acuity ,Adolescent ,genetic structures ,Visual Acuity ,Article ,law.invention ,Uveitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Foreign-Body Migration ,Randomized controlled trial ,Fluocinolone acetonide ,Risk Factors ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucocorticoids ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Drug Implants ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,Ophthalmology ,Steroid therapy ,Fluocinolone Acetonide ,Anesthesia ,Intravitreal Injections ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Equipment Failure ,Female ,Implant ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To describe fluocinolone acetonide implant dissociations in the Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial.Randomized clinical trial with extended follow-up.Review of data collected on the first implant in the eye(s) of participants. Dissociation was defined as the drug pellet no longer being affixed to the strut and categorized as spontaneous or surgically related.A total of 250 eyes (146 patients) had at least 1 implant placed. Median follow-up time after implant placement was 6 years (range 0.5-9.2 years). Thirty-four dissociations were reported in 30 participants. There were 22 spontaneous events in 22 participants; 6-year cumulative risk of a spontaneous dissociation was 4.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.4%-9.1%). The earliest event occurred 4.8 years after placement. Nine of 22 eyes with data had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters temporally related to the dissociation. Thirty-nine implant removal surgeries were performed, 33 with replacement. Twelve dissociations were noted during implant removal surgeries in 10 participants (26%, 95% CI 15%-48%); 5 of these eyes had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters after surgery. The time from implant placement to removal surgery was longer for the surgeries at which dissociated implants were identified than for those without one (5.7 vs 3.7 years, P.001). Overall, visual acuity declined 15 or more letters from pre-implant values in 22% of affected eyes; declines were frequently associated with complications of uveitis or its treatment.There is an increasing risk of dissociation of Retisert implants during follow-up; the risk is greater with removal/exchange surgeries, but the risk of both spontaneous and surgically related events increases with longevity of the implants. In 22% of affected eyes visual acuity declined by 15 letters. In the context of eyes with moderate to severe uveitis for years, this rate is not unexpected.
- Published
- 2016
47. LIBS depth profiling of Be-containing samples with different gaseous impurity concentrations
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P.G. Bhat, P. Veis, A. Marín Roldán, J. Karhunen, P. Paris, I. Jõgi, A. Hakola, J. Likonen, S. Almaviva, W. Gromelski, M. Ladygina, P. Gasior, J. Ristkok, I. Bogdanović Radović, Z. Siketić, O. Romanenko, C. Porosnicu, and C. Lungu
- Subjects
LIBS depth profiles ,Be-containing samples ,Deuterium ,Seeding gases ,Neon detectability ,Ablation rates ,Nuclear engineering. Atomic power ,TK9001-9401 - Abstract
Understanding the interaction between the fusion plasma and the plasma-facing materials (PFMs) is crucial for achieving the optimal performance, safety, and lifetime of the fusion devices. Relevant materials have been intensely studied to determine fuel retention and the composition of the co-deposited layers on the PFMs by depth profile analysis using Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) and Calibration-Free (CF)-LIBS. However, the comparison between the layers containing a mixture of different (seeding) gases using LIBS, has not been studied systematically. Consequently, the aim of this work is the LIBS depth profile analysis of Be-based samples containing the fuel (D) and one of the seeding gases (N, Ne, He) with variable concentrations to study the potential impact on fuel retention in the PFMs. The LIBS measurements were performed using Nd:YAG laser (1064 nm) under Ar atmosphere (at 2 and 100 mbar). In LIBS the ablation rate was evaluated, spectral lines of all relevant elements except N and Ne were detected and compared with the SIMS depth profiles. The reasons for the non-detectability of Ne are discussed in detail.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The RUSH2A Study: Best-Corrected Visual Acuity, Full-Field Electroretinography Amplitudes, and Full-Field Stimulus Thresholds at Baseline
- Author
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Katarina Stingl, Frederick L. Ferris, Michel Michaelides, Eleonora M. Lad, Rachel M. Huckfeldt, Isabelle Audo, Naheed W. Khan, Elise Héon, Allison R Ayala, Jacque L. Duncan, Ajoy Vincent, Christina Y. Weng, David G. Birch, Peiyao Cheng, Janet K. Cheetham, Maureen G. Maguire, Mark E. Pennesi, Alessandro Iannaccone, Abigail T. Fahim, Todd Durham, Retina Foundation of the Southwest, Jaeb Center for Health Research, University of California [San Francisco] (UCSF), University of California, University of Pennsylvania [Philadelphia], Institut de la Vision, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Foundation Fighting Blindness, Partenaires INRAE, University of Michigan [Ann Arbor], University of Michigan System, Ophthalmic Research Consultants, The Hospital for sick children [Toronto] (SickKids), Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS), Duke University Medical Center, Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust. Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, UK, Oregon Health and Science University [Portland] (OHSU), Tuebingen University [Germany], Baylor College of Medicine (BCM), Baylor University, University of California [San Francisco] (UC San Francisco), University of California (UC), University of Pennsylvania, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and HAL-SU, Gestionnaire
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Retinal degeneration ,Visual acuity ,genetic structures ,Usher syndrome ,Visual Acuity ,Eye ,0302 clinical medicine ,full-field stimulus test ,Best corrected visual acuity ,[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Usher Syndromes ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Engineering ,Usher syndrome type 2 ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,retinitis pigmentosa ,Ophthalmology ,best corrected visual acuity ,Retinitis pigmentosa ,Electroretinography ,medicine ,Humans ,Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2A) ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,business.industry ,Neurosciences ,Full field ,electroretinography (ERG) ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Foundation Fighting Blindness Consortium Investigator Group ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,sense organs ,Visual Fields ,business ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology - Abstract
Author(s): Birch, David G; Cheng, Peiyao; Duncan, Jacque L; Ayala, Allison R; Maguire, Maureen G; Audo, Isabelle; Cheetham, Janet K; Durham, Todd A; Fahim, Abigail T; Ferris, Frederick L; Heon, Elise; Huckfeldt, Rachel M; Iannaccone, Alessandro; Khan, Naheed W; Lad, Eleonora M; Michaelides, Michel; Pennesi, Mark E; Stingl, Katarina; Vincent, Ajoy; Weng, Christina Y; Foundation Fighting Blindness Consortium Investigator Group | Abstract: PurposeThe purpose of this study was to evaluate baseline best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), full-field electroretinography (ERG), full-field stimulus thresholds (FST), and their relationship with baseline demographic and clinical characteristics in the Rate of Progression in Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2A)-related Retinal Degeneration (RUSH2A) multicenter study.MethodsParticipants had Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2, N = 80) or autosomal recessive nonsyndromic retinitis pigmentosa (ARRP, Nn=n47) associated with biallelic variants in the USH2A gene. Associations of demographic and clinical characteristics with BCVA, ERG, and FST were assessed with regression models.ResultsIn comparison to ARRP, USH2 had worse BCVA (median 79 vs. 82 letters; P l 0.001 adjusted for age), lower rod-mediated ERG b-wave amplitudes (median 0.0 vs. 6.6nµV; P l 0.001) and 30 Hz flicker cone-mediated ERG amplitudes (median 1.5 vs. 3.1 µV; Pn=n0.001), and higher (white, blue, and red) FST thresholds (means [-26, -31, -23ndB] vs. [-39, -45, -28ndB]; P l 0.001 for all stimuli). After adjusting for age, gender, and duration of vision loss, the difference in BCVA between diagnosis groups was attenuated (Pn=n0.09). Only diagnosis was associated with rod- and cone-mediated ERG parameters, whereas both genders (Pn=n0.04) and duration of visual loss (P l 0.001) also were associated with FST white stimulus.ConclusionsUSH2 participants had worse BCVA, ERG, and FST than ARRP participants. FST was strongly associated with duration of disease; it remains to be determined whether it will be a sensitive measure of progression.Translational relevanceUsing standardized research protocols in RUSH2A, measures have been identified to monitor disease progression and treatment response and differentiate features of prognostic relevance between USH2 and ARRP participants with USH2A mutations.
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- 2020
49. A retrospective study of maternal mortality in a tertiary care hospital in Western Maharashtra, India
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Reshma M. Lad, Nandkishore B. Gaikwad, and M Poornima
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Retrospective cohort study ,Tertiary care hospital ,business - Abstract
Background: Maternal mortality is a vital index of the effectiveness of obstetric services prevailing in a country. The key to progress of a country lies in reducing its maternal morbidity and mortality, hence to give a better assessment of the problem a retrospective study on maternal mortality was carried out. An objective of the study was to find the cause and epidemiological factors for maternal mortality in a tertiary care hospital in western Maharashtra from January 2018 to August 2019.Methods: A retrospective, descriptive study done at tertiary care hospital in western Maharashtra from January 2018 to august 2019. Data was collected from medical records department and the study was conducted by reviewing the records of maternal death and scrutinizing for various aspects likely to be related to maternal death such as age, locality of residence, antenatal care, admission death time interval and cause of death.Results: during the study period 63 maternal deaths occurred and 75302 live births, Maternal Mortality Ratio were 83.66 per 1 lakh live birth. 46% of maternal deaths were in age group of 21-25 years, 87% of patients belonged to rural area, 74% belonged to lower socioeconomic status. 43% were unregistered patients, 43% had vaginal delivery, 73% had no free transportation, 68% were referred patients, 60% were referred from private hospitals, 48% of maternal death occurred
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- 2020
50. Longitudinal Study of Visual Function in Dry Age-Related Macular Degeneration at 12 Months
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Atalie C. Thompson, Lejla Vajzovic, Scott W. Cousins, Ulrich F O Luhmann, Anupama Horne, Eleonora M. Lad, Sandra S. Stinnett, Cynthia A. Toth, Stefanie G. Schuman, and S. Tammy Hsu
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Visual acuity ,Time Factors ,genetic structures ,Population ,Visual impairment ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Article ,Ophthalmology ,Geographic Atrophy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Macular degeneration ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Clinical trial ,Disease Progression ,Visual Field Tests ,Observational study ,Female ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,Visual Fields ,business ,Microperimetry - Abstract
Purpose To report the 1-year progression of visual impairment on psychophysical tests of visual function in patients with early and intermediate age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Design Prospective, observational study. Participants Patients with early and intermediate AMD were enrolled from the existing population at the Duke Eye Center, and healthy age-matched control participants were recruited from family members or friends of the AMD patients and from the Duke Optometry and Comprehensive Eye Clinics. Methods Patients and control participants recruited during the baseline study were assessed at both 6 and 12 months after the initial study visit. Measurements of visual function included best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), low-luminance visual acuity (LLVA), low-luminance deficit (LLD), microperimetry percent-reduced threshold (PRT), microperimetry average threshold (AT), and cone contrast tests (CCTs). Main Outcome Measures Changes in BCVA, LLVA, LLD, microperimetry PRT, microperimetry AT, and CCT results from baseline to 6 months and to 12 months were assessed. Results Eighty-five patients completed the 12-month examination (19 control participants, 27 early AMD patients, and 39 intermediate AMD patients). Longitudinal analysis detected significant changes from baseline within each group in microperimetry PRT and AT and in the intermediate AMD group only for BCVA and CCT results (P Conclusions Microperimetry and CCT are able to detect functional changes resulting from progression of dry AMD within a period as short as 12 months. These functional markers may be useful end points in future clinical trials that assess the effect of potential treatments for AMD.
- Published
- 2018
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