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1.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med ; 11: 199-210, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36909300

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need to invent alternative respiratory health diagnosis methodologies which provide improvement with respect to time, cost, physical distancing and detection performance. In this context, identifying acoustic bio-markers of respiratory diseases has received renewed interest. OBJECTIVE: In this paper, we aim to design COVID-19 diagnostics based on analyzing the acoustics and symptoms data. Towards this, the data is composed of cough, breathing, and speech signals, and health symptoms record, collected using a web-application over a period of twenty months. METHODS: We investigate the use of time-frequency features for acoustic signals and binary features for encoding different health symptoms. We experiment with use of classifiers like logistic regression, support vector machines and long-short term memory (LSTM) network models on the acoustic data, while decision tree models are proposed for the symptoms data. RESULTS: We show that a multi-modal integration of inference from different acoustic signal categories and symptoms achieves an area-under-curve (AUC) of 96.3%, a statistically significant improvement when compared against any individual modality ([Formula: see text]). Experimentation with different feature representations suggests that the mel-spectrogram acoustic features performs relatively better across the three kinds of acoustic signals. Further, a score analysis with data recorded from newer SARS-CoV-2 variants highlights the generalization ability of the proposed diagnostic approach for COVID-19 detection. CONCLUSION: The proposed method shows a promising direction for COVID-19 detection using a multi-modal dataset, while generalizing to new COVID variants.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2 , Acoustics , COVID-19 Testing
2.
Comput Speech Lang ; 73: 101320, 2022 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34840419

ABSTRACT

The technology development for point-of-care tests (POCTs) targeting respiratory diseases has witnessed a growing demand in the recent past. Investigating the presence of acoustic biomarkers in modalities such as cough, breathing and speech sounds, and using them for building POCTs can offer fast, contactless and inexpensive testing. In view of this, over the past year, we launched the "Coswara" project to collect cough, breathing and speech sound recordings via worldwide crowdsourcing. With this data, a call for development of diagnostic tools was announced in the Interspeech 2021 as a special session titled "Diagnostics of COVID-19 using Acoustics (DiCOVA) Challenge". The goal was to bring together researchers and practitioners interested in developing acoustics-based COVID-19 POCTs by enabling them to work on the same set of development and test datasets. As part of the challenge, datasets with breathing, cough, and speech sound samples from COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 individuals were released to the participants. The challenge consisted of two tracks. The Track-1 focused only on cough sounds, and participants competed in a leaderboard setting. In Track-2, breathing and speech samples were provided for the participants, without a competitive leaderboard. The challenge attracted 85 plus registrations with 29 final submissions for Track-1. This paper describes the challenge (datasets, tasks, baseline system), and presents a focused summary of the various systems submitted by the participating teams. An analysis of the results from the top four teams showed that a fusion of the scores from these teams yields an area-under-the-receiver operating curve (AUC-ROC) of 95.1% on the blind test data. By summarizing the lessons learned, we foresee the challenge overview in this paper to help accelerate technological development of acoustic-based POCTs.

4.
J Clin Gastroenterol ; 47(9): e87-90, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23470641

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The incidence of acute hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in the United States is declining, and precise epidemiology for newly acquired infection remains obscure. GOALS: We sought to clarify the clinical presentation and management of acute symptomatic HBV infection at a hepatology referral center. STUDY: We prospectively evaluated the demographic, epidemiological, clinical, and treatment data of 32 patients with acute symptomatic HBV who were referred to a single urban tertiary care hospital in the United States. RESULTS: Slightly more than half of the patients were male (53%) or belonged to the black race (53%) and slightly fewer than half of the patients (47%) were unemployed. The median patient age was 41.9 years, and 20 (63%) patients were unmarried. The most common HBV risk factor was a new sexual partner over the previous months (34%). Fifteen percent of the patients reported no known risk factors. Four (13%) patients were diabetic. Presenting symptoms included jaundice (75%), abdominal pain (63%), and marked fatigue (59%). The mean peak for aspartate aminotransferase/alanine aminotransferase was 1822/2109 IU/L, for total bilirubin was 12.6 mg/dL, and for International Normalized Ratio was 1.53. Eight patients (25%) were started on oral nucleot(s)ide therapy. One diabetic patient underwent liver transplantation. CONCLUSIONS: In a sample of patients from a US urban tertiary hepatology center, common epidemiological features of acute symptomatic hepatitis B were being middle aged and unmarried and having acquired the infection through a new sexual contact. Antiviral therapy was sometimes but not commonly started. These data reinforce the need for HBV vaccination of individuals at risk, including those not traditionally targeted.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Hepatitis B/epidemiology , Acute Disease , Adult , Aged , Alanine Transaminase/metabolism , Aspartate Aminotransferases/metabolism , Bilirubin/metabolism , Cohort Studies , Female , Hepatitis B/physiopathology , Hepatitis B/therapy , Humans , International Normalized Ratio , Liver Transplantation/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Nucleosides/therapeutic use , Nucleotides/therapeutic use , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Tertiary Care Centers , United States/epidemiology , Young Adult
5.
J Hepatol ; 58(2): 212-6, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23022497

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Reported HBV drug resistance mutations among previously untreated patients with chronic hepatitis B are variable. Whether resistant HBV strains are transmitted in the acute setting is uncertain. We sought to document the presence of antiviral resistance (AVR) mutations in patients with acute HBV (AHB) infection. METHODS: AHB infection was defined by HBsAg/IgM anti-HBc positivity, ALT>10X ULN and compatible clinical history. The TRUGENE HBV kit was used to perform genotyping and direct sequencing of the viral polymerase. INNO-LiPA HBV DRv2 and DRv3 were used to detect AVR mutations. Clonal sequencing was conducted on selected specimens. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients were evaluated (mean age, 43 years; 54% male; 39% African American, 39% Caucasian, 13% Hispanic and 4% Asian). The mean peak ALT was 1554.2IU/L and mean peak total serum bilirubin was 12 mg/dl. The HBV DNA median viral load (N = 15) was 5.14 log(10)IU/ml. Nineteen patients were genotype A, and 1 each were genotype C, D, E and G. HBV drug resistance mutations were not detected by direct sequencing or INNO-LiPA. Clonal sequencing was conducted on 192 clones isolated from three patients and showed rtA181T, rtM250V and rtS202G mutations at an overall frequency of 1.54%, 1.39%, and 1.67% respectively. CONCLUSIONS: We detected adefovir/lamivudine and entecavir relevant mutations in a minor population (<2%) of viral clones by clonal sequencing only. The clinical significance of these mutations is uncertain and may represent small populations of quasi-species vs. transmission of drug resistant strains.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Drug Resistance, Viral/genetics , Hepatitis B/drug therapy , Hepatitis B/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Acute Disease , Adenine/analogs & derivatives , Adenine/therapeutic use , Adult , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Genotype , Guanine/analogs & derivatives , Guanine/therapeutic use , Hepatitis B/epidemiology , Humans , Lamivudine/therapeutic use , Male , Organophosphonates/therapeutic use , Retrospective Studies , Sequence Analysis, DNA , United States/epidemiology
6.
Dig Endosc ; 24(6): 439-42, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23078436

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It is essential to determine the factors that predict prolonged procedural time during colonoscopy. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of body mass index (BMI) on cecal insertion time (CIT) during colonsocopy. METHODS: Consecutive outpatients who received colonoscopies over a 10 month period (April-October 2007) were enrolled. Exclusion criteria included colonic resection, strictures or exophytic masses precluding colonic evaluation. Data were collected for age, sex, race, height, weight, BMI, waist circumference, prior history of abdominal or pelvic surgery, history of diverticulosis, participation of fellow, CIT, quality of colon cleansing and the amount of sedation used during the procedure. RESULTS: A total of 1430 patients (586 men and 844 women; mean age 60.3 years) were included in the final analysis. The mean CIT was 648.5 seconds (SE = 11.47). Older age, female gender, fellow involvement, poor bowel preparation and lower BMI were associated with prolonged mean CIT on linear regression analysis ((R2) = 0.116; P < 0.001). Mean CIT declined linearly with increasing BMI. CONCLUSION: A higher BMI is strongly associated with progressively shorter CIT.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Cecal Diseases/diagnosis , Colonoscopy/methods , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cecum , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Outpatients , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies , Time Factors , Young Adult
7.
J Clin Gastroenterol ; 43(7): 672-5, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19238093

ABSTRACT

The illegal enrichment of anabolic androgenic steroids in over-the-counter dietary supplements is well documented, but the health consequences have not been widely recognized. Three recent reports document cholestatic jaundice and nephropathy due to these compounds. We present 3 additional cases of anabolic androgenic steroid-enriched dietary supplement-induced hepatotoxicity and 1 case of renal failure, and we review the literature and the relevant features of this growing health concern. Recognition of this entity could obviate the need for invasive diagnostic testing and hospitalization and facilitate diagnosis and appropriate counseling.


Subject(s)
Anabolic Agents/adverse effects , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic/chemically induced , Dietary Supplements/adverse effects , Renal Insufficiency/chemically induced , Adult , Androgens/adverse effects , Humans , Male , Young Adult
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