383 results match your criteria: "SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn[Affiliation]"

Scapegoats and Silence.

Skinmed

August 2024

Department of Dermatology, SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY and Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, NY;

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Diagnostic heuristics help ease the cognitive load in our day-to-day work. Occam's razor or the rule of diagnostic parsimony is a diagnostic heuristic often applied in dermatology. Occam's razor dictates that all things being equal, one diagnosis (as opposed to several diagnoses) should be sought to explain a patient's presentation.

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The darker side of head lice infestations.

Clin Dermatol

February 2022

Private Practice, Pembroke Pines, Fl USA. Electronic address:

Head lice (Pediculus humanus capitis) infestations are prevalent among young children and generally not considered a health hazard. Although massive chronic head lice infestations have been documented in paleo medical literature, their association with severe iron deficiency anemia has been rarely discussed in modern medicine. A recently published case implicating a head lice infestation as the cause of death of a 12-year-old girl brings this topic to the fore.

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Purpose: The Sedlis criteria define risk factors for recurrence warranting post-hysterectomy radiation for early-stage cervical cancer; however, these factors were defined for squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) at an estimated recurrence risk of ≥30%. Our study evaluates and compares risk factors for recurrence for cervical SCC compared with adenocarcinoma (AC) and develops histology-specific nomograms to estimate risk of recurrence and guide adjuvant treatment.

Methods: We performed an ancillary analysis of GOG 49, 92, and 141, and included stage I patients who were surgically managed and received no neoadjuvant/adjuvant therapy.

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Domestic violence in the coronavirus disease 2019 era: Insights from a survivor.

Clin Dermatol

December 2020

Private Practice, Pembroke Pines, Florida, USA. Electronic address:

Amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, there has been an alarming rise in domestic violence worldwide. Factors believed to be fueling this escalation in domestic violence include increasing social confinement at home during lockdowns and mounting stress levels from unemployment that have resulted from the economic uncertainties of these times. This contribution explores some of the challenges faced by physicians in clinically assessing victims of domestic violence during the COVID-19 era.

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The original version of the article contained an error in the electronic supplementary material. The caption of the figure in the electronic supplementary material was omitted.

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Introduction: Postoperative delirium is a common sequela in older adults in the peri-operative period leading to poor outcomes with a complex pathophysiology which has led to a variety of different pharmacologic agents employed in attempts to prevent and treat this syndrome. No pharmacologic agent has been approved to treat this disorder, but this review discusses the pharmacologic strategies which have been tried based on the hypotheses of the causation of the syndrome including neurotransmitter imbalance, inflammation, and oxidative stress.

Areas Covered: Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) were included via search of electronic databases specifically for the terms postoperative delirium and pharmacologic treatments.

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Brain tumors and paraneoplastic syndromes can cause various neuropsychiatric symptoms. Rarely, psychiatric symptoms may be the initial presentation of the underlying neurologic lesion. Brain imaging studies are crucial in the diagnosis of brain tumors.

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Balancing confidence and humility in the diagnostic process.

Diagnosis (Berl)

January 2020

SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA.

Humility in medicine can be difficult to achieve, yet arguably is one of the most important competencies to master. Overconfidence, on the contrary, is a natural tendency, having established its roots in evolution where quicker and more confident decisions likely conferred a selective advantage. Moreover, humility may evoke an image of weakness and vulnerability, antithetical to contemporary medicine, whose culture is dominated by overconfidence.

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Visual perception, cognition, and error in dermatologic diagnosis: Diagnosis and error.

J Am Acad Dermatol

December 2019

Department of Dermatology, Yale University Medical School, New Haven, Connecticut; Department of Pathology, Yale University Medical School, New Haven, Connecticut.

Diagnostic error in dermatology is a large practice gap that has received little attention. Diagnosis in dermatology relies heavily on a heuristic approach that is responsible for our perception of clinical findings. To improve our diagnostic accuracy, a better understanding of the strengths and limitations of heuristics (cognitive shortcuts) used in dermatology is essential.

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Visual perception, cognition, and error in dermatologic diagnosis: Key cognitive principles.

J Am Acad Dermatol

December 2019

Department of Dermatology, SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, Brooklyn, New York; Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York; South Nassau Dermatology PC, Oceanside and Long Beach, New York.

Dermatologic diagnosis relies on vision primarily and auditory and verbal input secondarily. Accurate dermatologic diagnosis is predicated on seeing and perceiving a skin finding, categorizing and naming the finding correctly, and comparing the visual data and data obtained from the totality of the clinical encounter (ie, from other sensory modalities) with one's working mental database of dermatologic diagnoses. The baseline assumption-which is false-is that a dermatologist is an expert at each of the aforementioned steps and transitions sequentially between them seamlessly in an error-free fashion.

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Diagnostic errors are the most common, costly and dangerous of medical mistakes. In part 1 of this series, we described how general and dermatology-specific cognitive and perceptual biases underlie most of our correct diagnoses, as well as being a source of diagnostic medical errors. In this second part of the series, we describe some tactics to combat diagnostic error.

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Sir William Osler famously, and ironically, stated that 'Medicine is a science of uncertainty and an art of probability'. The processes by which each physician metes out diagnostic uncertainty and navigates probabilities in dermatology is far from uniform. While certain ubiquitous cognitive and visual heuristics can enhance diagnostic speed, they also create pitfalls and thinking traps that introduce significant variation in the diagnostic process.

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Study Design: Retrospective study of prospectively collected data.

Objective: To determine if patients undergoing spinal deformity surgery with pelvic fixation are at an increased risk of morbidity.

Methods: The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program is a large multicenter clinical registry that prospectively collects preoperative risk factors, intraoperative variables, and 30-day postoperative morbidity and mortality outcomes from ~400 hospitals nationwide.

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Distribution of Estimated 10-Year Risk of Recurrent Vascular Events and Residual Risk in a Secondary Prevention Population.

Circulation

November 2016

From Department of Vascular Medicine (L.K., J.W., F.L.J.V.), Julius Centre for Health Sciences and Primary Care (Y.v.d.G.), Department of Cardiology (M.J.M.C.), Department of Neurology (L.J.K.), and Department of Vascular Surgery (G.J.d.B.), University Medical Centre Utrecht, the Netherlands; Departments of Cardiology (S.M.B., R.J.G.P.) and Vascular Medicine (J.J.P.K.), Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; School of Public Health, Imperial College London, United Kingdom (K.K.R.); Department of Neurology and Stroke Center, Bichat University Hospital, Paris, France (P.A.); and SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, New York, NY (J.C.L.).

Background: Among patients with clinically manifest vascular disease, the risk of recurrent vascular events is likely to vary. We assessed the distribution of estimated 10-year risk of recurrent vascular events in a secondary prevention population. We also estimated the potential risk reduction and residual risk that can be achieved if patients reach guideline-recommended risk factor targets.

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Changes in brain connectivity in patients with early Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been investigated using graph analysis. However, these studies were based on small data sets, explored a limited range of network parameters, and did not focus on more restricted sub-networks, where neurodegenerative processes may introduce more prominent alterations. In this study, we constructed structural brain networks out of 87 regions using data from 135 healthy elders and 100 early AD patients selected from the Open Access Series of Imaging Studies (OASIS) database.

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Diabetes Incidence and Glucose Tolerance after Termination of Pioglitazone Therapy: Results from ACT NOW.

J Clin Endocrinol Metab

May 2016

Texas Diabetes Institute and University of Texas Health Science Center (D.T., N.M., R.A.D.), South Texas Veterans Health Care System, San Antonio, Texas 78229; Phoenix VA Health Care System (D.C.S., P.D.R.), Phoenix, Arizona 85012; College of Nursing & Health Innovation (D.C.S.), Arizona State University, Phoenix, Arizona 85281; SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn (M.A.B.), Brooklyn, New York 11203; Pennington Biomedical Research Center (G.A.B.), Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803; University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine (T.A.B.), Los Angeles, California; Inova Fairfax Hospital (S.C.C.), Falls Church, Virginia 22042; VA San Diego Healthcare System and University of California, San Diego (R.R.H., S.M.), San Diego, California 92093; Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism (A.E.K., F.B.S.), University of Tennessee-Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee; and Medstar Research Institute (R.E.R.), Hyattsville, Maryland 20782.

Context: Thiazolidinediones have proven efficacy in preventing diabetes in high-risk individuals. However, the effect of thiazolidinediones on glucose tolerance after cessation of therapy is unclear.

Objective: To examine the effect of pioglitazone (PIO) on incidence of diabetes after discontinuing therapy in ACT NOW.

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