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1.
Clin Neuropsychol ; 28(8): 1243-57, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25343533

ABSTRACT

We aimed to compare executive function (EF) outcomes in pediatric brain tumor (BT) survivors compared with healthy children (HC) across multiple settings. This retrospective cross-sectional study of BT survivors and age- and gender-matched HC analyzed scale patterns of parent and teacher ratings of EF (Behavior Ratings of Executive Function; BRIEF). We also analyzed relationships between groups and raters (parent/teacher) and clinical elevations across EF domains on the BRIEF. Group differences in aspects of EF emerged from parent ratings in working memory (WM), while significant interactions from teacher ratings emerged on nearly all EF scales. Parents reported impaired cognitive/behavioral flexibility in the BT group four times more than parents of HC. Teachers rated survivors significantly more poorly as a group on the majority of EF domains, and indicated clinical impairment in cognitive/behavioral flexibility, emotional regulation, self-starting/initiation, WM, and planning and organization (P/O) four to ten times more often than the teachers of HC. Overall, teacher ratings of EF impairment in pediatric BT survivors were significantly greater than parent ratings, who reported far fewer EF problems. Possible explanations for inter-rater discrepancies include potential reporting bias/response shift in parents and/or differences in EF demands across settings.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/psychology , Executive Function , Faculty , Parents , Survivors/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions , Female , Humans , Judgment , Male , Memory, Short-Term , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Retrospective Studies
2.
J Appl Microbiol ; 103(4): 1074-80, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17897212

ABSTRACT

AIM: To evaluate US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended swab surface sample collection method for recovery efficiency and limit of detection for powdered Bacillus spores from nonporous surfaces. METHODS AND RESULTS: Stainless steel and painted wallboard surface coupons were seeded with dry aerosolized Bacillus atrophaeus spores and surface concentrations determined. The observed mean rayon swab recovery efficiency from stainless steel was 0.41 with a standard deviation (SD) of +/-0.17 and for painted wallboard was 0.41 with an SD of +/-0.23. Evaluation of a sonication extraction method for the rayon swabs produced a mean extraction efficiency of 0.76 with an SD of +/-0.12. Swab recovery quantitative limits of detection were estimated at 25 colony forming units (CFU) per sample area for both stainless steel and painted wallboard. CONCLUSIONS: The swab sample collection method may be appropriate for small area sampling (10 -25 cm2) with a high agent concentration, but has limited value for large surface areas with a low agent concentration. The results of this study provide information necessary for the interpretation of swab environmental sample collection data, that is, positive swab samples are indicative of high surface concentrations and may imply a potential for exposure, whereas negative swab samples do not assure that organisms are absent from the surfaces sampled and may not assure the absence of the potential for exposure. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: It is critical from a public health perspective that the information obtained is accurate and reproducible. The consequence of an inappropriate public health response founded on information gathered using an ineffective or unreliable sample collection method has the potential for undesired social and economic impact.


Subject(s)
Bacillus/isolation & purification , Cellulose , Specimen Handling/methods , Spores, Bacterial/isolation & purification , Colony Count, Microbial , Construction Materials/microbiology , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Equipment Contamination , Sonication , Stainless Steel , Surface Properties
3.
Neuroimage ; 28(3): 529-43, 2005 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16099178

ABSTRACT

Motion correction of fMRI data is a widely used step prior to data analysis. In this study, a comparison of the motion correction tools provided by several leading fMRI analysis software packages was performed, including AFNI, AIR, BrainVoyager, FSL, and SPM2. Comparisons were performed using data from typical human studies as well as phantom data. The identical reconstruction, preprocessing, and analysis steps were used on every data set, except that motion correction was performed using various configurations from each software package. Each package was studied using default parameters, as well as parameters optimized for speed and accuracy. Forty subjects performed a Go/No-go task (an event-related design that investigates inhibitory motor response) and an N-back task (a block-design paradigm investigating working memory). The human data were analyzed by extracting a set of general linear model (GLM)-derived activation results and comparing the effect of motion correction on thresholded activation cluster size and maximum t value. In addition, a series of simulated phantom data sets were created with known activation locations, magnitudes, and realistic motion. Results from the phantom data indicate that AFNI and SPM2 yield the most accurate motion estimation parameters, while AFNI's interpolation algorithm introduces the least smoothing. AFNI is also the fastest of the packages tested. However, these advantages did not produce noticeably better activation results in motion-corrected data from typical human fMRI experiments. Although differences in performance between packages were apparent in the human data, no single software package produced dramatically better results than the others. The "accurate" parameters showed virtually no improvement in cluster t values compared to the standard parameters. While the "fast" parameters did not result in a substantial increase in speed, they did not degrade the cluster results very much either. The phantom and human data indicate that motion correction can be a valuable step in the data processing chain, yielding improvements of up to 20% in the magnitude and up to 100% in the cluster size of detected activations, but the choice of software package does not substantially affect this improvement.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/statistics & numerical data , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/statistics & numerical data , Software , Algorithms , Artifacts , Computer Simulation , Humans , Linear Models , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Models, Neurological , Movement , Oxygen/blood
4.
Occup Environ Med ; 62(3): 181-7, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15723883

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To determine if verbal learning and memory requiring acquisition and retention of information is differentially affected by lead exposure. METHODS: The Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), a test of verbal learning and memory, was administered to 256 English speaking lead smelter workers who had a mean (SD) age of 41 (9.4) years and employment duration of 17 (8.1) years. Lead exposure variables, based on up to 25 years of prior blood lead data, included a mean (SD) current blood lead (PbB) of 28 (8.8) microg/dl, working lifetime time weighted average blood lead (TWA) of 39 (12.3) microg/dl, and working lifetime integrated blood lead index (IBL) of 728 (434.4) microg-y/dl. Associations of these chronic and recent lead exposure variables with measures from the RAVLT were modelled through multiple linear regressions after controlling for age and educational achievement. RESULTS: PbB was not associated with any of the RAVLT variables. However, TWA and IBL contributed significantly to the explanation of variance of measures of encoding/storage and retrieval but not to immediate memory span, attention, and learning. Grouping study participants by RAVLT performance according to three recognised clinical memory paradigms showed significantly higher TWA and IBL in the group with "generalised memory impairment" after adjusting for age and educational achievement. We examined recall mechanisms in each group by serial position in the word list and found stronger primacy (recall of words from the beginning of the list) in the "no impairment" and "retrieval difficulties" groups while the "generalised memory impairment" group had better performance on recency (recall of words from the end of the list). CONCLUSIONS: Lead exposure over years and not PbB interfered with the organisation and recall of previously learned verbal material. Chronic lead exposure affects encoding/storage and retrieval of verbal information.


Subject(s)
Lead Poisoning, Nervous System, Adult/psychology , Memory Disorders/chemically induced , Metallurgy , Occupational Diseases/chemically induced , Adult , Aging/psychology , Educational Status , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Humans , Lead/blood , Lead Poisoning, Nervous System, Adult/blood , Male , Memory Disorders/blood , Memory Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Recall/drug effects , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Occupational Diseases/blood , Occupational Exposure/analysis , Verbal Learning/drug effects
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