Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
January 2025
We describe a series of five patients with bilateral parotid enlargement as a sequalae to envenomation by the common krait (Bungarus caeruleus). Fine-needle aspiration cytology of the parotid gland was performed in four cases. The cytology revealed a mild lymphocytic inflammatory response in a red blood cell mixed proteinaceous background.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare orphan disease and complex genetic neurodevelopmental disorder, with a birth incidence of approximately 1 in 10,000-30,000. Management of people with PWS requires a multi-disciplinary approach, ideally through a multi-disciplinary team (MDT) clinic with community support. Hypotonia, poor feeding and faltering growth are characteristic features in the neonatal period, followed by hyperphagia and risk of rapid weight gain later in childhood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Case Rep
January 2019
After 25 years of continuous lithium therapy, a woman with moderate intellectual disability and bipolar disorder developed symptoms suggestive of dementia. In fact, she had developed lithium neurotoxicity, but this was overlooked for 18 months as serial lithium levels were in the therapeutic range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare condition because of the deletion of paternal chromosomal material (del PWS), or a maternal uniparental disomy (mUPD PWS), at 15q11-13. Affective psychosis is more prevalent in mUPD PWS. We investigated the relationship between the two PWS genetic variants and brain-stem serotonin transporter (5-HTT) availability in adult humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Peripheral refractive error degrades the quality of retinal images and has been hypothesized to be a stimulus for the development of refractive error. The purpose of this study was to investigate the changes in refractive error across the horizontal visual field produced by contact lenses (CLs) and to quantify the effect of CLs on peripheral image blur.
Methods: A commercial Shack-Hartmann aberrometer measured ocular wavefront aberrations in 5 degrees steps across the central 60 degrees of visual field along the horizontal meridian before and after CLs correction.
The two main causes of Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) are a paternally derived deletion in the maternally imprinted 15q11-q13 region or UPD(15)mat. Both mechanisms result in a loss of the active paternal contribution to the region. The affective psychosis associated with PWS has been found to be mainly confined to the propositi with UPD(15)mat rather than to those with a deletion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with abnormalities of chromosome 15q11q13. The majority of cases result either from a deletion approximately 4 Mb in size, affecting chromosome 15 of paternal origin or from UPD(15)mat; these account for approximately 70 and approximately 20-25% of PWS cases, respectively. In the remaining 3-5% of PWS cases where neither the deletion nor UPD is detectable, PWS is thought to be caused either by a defect in the imprinting centre resulting in a failure to reset the paternally inherited chromosome 15 derived from the paternal grandmother or, very occasionally, from a balanced translocation involving a breakpoint in 15q11q13.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To evaluate long-term safety and effectiveness of overnight orthokeratology in a large sample of myopes by using three different lens designs and the highly gas-permeable Boston XO material (Bausch & Lomb, Rochester, NY).
Methods: A total of three hundred forty-two subjects, 99 of whom were juveniles, were enrolled in the investigation at 26 clinical centers in the United States and Canada. Three different lens designs in Boston XO material were used.
Purpose: To determine the refractive and corneal topographic recovery after the use of reverse-geometry contact lenses for overnight orthokeratology.
Methods: Both eyes of 15 subjects were fitted with reverse-geometry contact lenses that were worn by the subjects for 1 month. Uncorrected visual acuity, refractive correction (sphere and spherical equivalent), corneal curvature, and corneal thickness were measured during this time and for 2 weeks after discontinuation of lens wear.
Purpose: To achieve an optimal fit with reverse geometry Contex OK lenses and to determine a time course for and the stability of visual and corneal changes in achieving maximal refractive, corneal curvature, and corneal thickness changes after overnight wear of OK B and D series lenses.
Methods: This investigation was conducted under an Food and Drug Administration IDE G000059. Both eyes of 10 subjects were fitted with the lenses, and uncorrected visual acuity, refractive correction, contrast sensitivity, corneal curvature, and corneal thickness were measured at baseline and at 1 day, 1week, 1 month, and 3 months after lenses were worn.
Purpose: The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether new experimental multifocal optical designs incorporating diffractive/refractive optics for correction of presbyopia in a soft contact lens would compromise binocular contrast sensitivity at distance while achieving 20/20 binocular visual acuity at near.
Methods: Thirty presbyopic volunteers were fitted with Acuvue Bifocal soft lenses, two (FO1 and 3B1) experimental diffractive/refractive multifocal soft lenses separately and in combination as a pair and soft spherical lenses. Visual performance was evaluated via binocular contrast sensitivity and binocular distance high- and low-contrast visual acuity after 1 week of lens wear.
Eye Contact Lens
January 2003
Purpose: To examine if the variability in hypoxic corneal swelling in non-contact lens wearing and contact lens wearing groups can be explained by the variability in corneal metabolic activity or endothelial function.
Methods: Corneal thickness was measured by Orbscan before and after 2 hr of closed-eye hydrogel lens wear. De-swelling rates (percentage recovery per hour) were determined by continued corneal thickness measurements until open-eye steady-state thickness was reached.
Purpose: To determine if the variability in contact lens-induced corneal swelling is associated with variability in corneal oxygen consumption (Q(C)) or corneal endothelial function.
Methods: Corneal swelling was induced in 30 non-contact lens wearers by 2 hours of closed-eye contact lens wear, using thick (oxygen transmission [Dk/t] = 4.0 x 10-9) and thin (Dk/t = 12 x 10-9) hydrogel lenses of identical design.
Purpose: To examine the effect of proton beam irradiation on subfoveal choroidal neovascular membranes (CNVM) associated with age-related macular degeneration (AMD).Randomized, prospective, sham-controlled, double-masked treatment trial.
Methods: Thirty-seven subjects with subfoveal CNVM due to AMD were randomly assigned to 16-Gy proton irradiation delivered in two fractions 24 hours apart or to sham control treatment.
Purpose: To devise a procedure for direct estimation of corneal oxygen consumption in human subjects.
Methods: Tear oxygen tension (PO2) was measured at the posterior surface of two standard hydrogel contact lenses (38% water, 0.2 and 0.