Bullockhughes6688
To assess morphological optic disc dimensions using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) in a Nigerian population.
Good quality SD-OCT scans of the optic disc of 147 eyes of 88 participants were selected, enrolled, and retrospectively reviewed. All subjects had optic nerve head and retinal nerve fibre layer OCT imaging, as well as analysis, done using the Topcon 3D OCT-1 Maestro
. The age, sex, and some OCT-generated optic disc dimensions namely disc area (DA), vertical disc diameter (VDD), horizontal disc diameter (HDD) were retrieved from the database and analyzed.
The mean age of the study subjects was 52.6±20.9 years with a range of 8-90 years; male to female ratio was 11.3. The right eye and left eye accounted for 75 and 72 of the 147 scans respectively. The mean DA, VDD, and HDD were 2.54 ± 0.48 mm
, 1926.5 ± 189.6 μm and 1673.9 ± 173.9 μm, respectively. Males had significantly larger DA than females (2.56 ± 0.53 mm
vs 2.51 ± 0.44 mm
,
= 0.043). The mean DA and VDD of eyes of subjects aged 21-40 years were significantly higher compared to subjects aged 60 years and more (
= 0.008 and 0.001, respectively).
The mean optic disc area and diameters are larger than those reported in similar studies involving blacks and other races. The mean disc area reduces with increasing age.
The mean optic disc area and diameters are larger than those reported in similar studies involving blacks and other races. The mean disc area reduces with increasing age.Aims Communication barriers in healthcare encounters contribute to ethnic inequality in health outcomes. This study aimed to examine, in a large national Danish sample of women, whether ethnicity was associated with pregnant women's Active engagement with healthcare providers. Methods A cross-sectional survey of 1898 pregnant women attending 19 Danish maternity wards. The key variable of interest was maternal ethnicity among ethnic Danish, European, African and Asian immigrant women and their descendants. Syrian immigrant women were studied as a subgroup. The outcome was the health literacy questionnaire domain Ability to engage actively with healthcare providers (five-item domain scored from 'cannot do/always difficult' (1) to 'always easy' (5)) which is a reflection of a respondent's lived experiences of engaging with healthcare providers. Adjusted mixed effect multivariate linear regression was used to compare Active engagement across groups expressed as the mean difference (95% confidence interval). Results Lower means of Active engagement were reported for immigrant women compared to ethnic Danish women in all models. When adjusting for age, parity, complications and occupation, the difference between ethnic Danish women's Active engagement and other groups was smallest among European -0.15 (-0.26 to -0.05), slightly larger in African -0.19 (-0.40 to 0.02), and largest in Asian immigrant women -0.31 (-0.41 to -0.21). Syrian immigrant women had the largest difference -0.42 (-0.58 to -0.27). AT406 Conclusions Pregnant immigrant women reported lower means of Active engagement than ethnic Danish women did. Increased health literacy responsiveness in maternity care is required to mitigate the potential for differential care and health inequity.Aims Socio-economic inequalities in health behaviour may be influenced by health interventions. We examined whether the XIT II intervention, aiming at preventing smoking in adolescence, was equally effective among students from different occupational social classes (OSC). Methods We used data from the multi-component school-based smoking preventive intervention XIT II, targeting 13- to 15-year-olds in Denmark. The intervention was tested in 46 schools with 2307 eligible students at baseline (response rate=86.6%) and had three main intervention components smoke-free school time, smoke-free curriculum and parental involvement. We used a difference-in-difference design and estimated the change in current smoking after the first year of implementation in high versus low OSC. Analyses were based on available cases (N=1190) and imputation of missing data at follow-up (N=1967). Results We found that 1% of the students from high OSC and 4.9% from low OSC were smokers at baseline (imputed data), and 8.2% of the students from high OSC and 12.2% from low OSC were smokers at follow-up. Difference-in-difference estimates were close to zero, indicating no differential trajectory. Conclusions As intended, the XIT II intervention, designed to apply equally to students from all socio-economic groups, did not seem to create different trajectories in current smoking among adolescents in high and low socio-economic groups. To diminish social inequality in health, future studies should carefully consider the ability to affect all socio-economic groups equally, or even to appeal mainly to participants from lower socio-economic groups, as they are often the ones most in need of intervention.Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) initiating long-term effects on white matter integrity resembles brain-aging changes, implying an aging process accelerated by mTBI. This longitudinal study aims to investigate the mTBI-induced acceleration of the brain-aging process by developing a neuroimaging model to predict brain age. The brain-age prediction model was defined using relevance vector regression based on fractional anisotropy from diffusion tensor imaging of 523 healthy individuals. The model was used to estimate the brain-predicted age difference (brain-PAD) between the chronological and estimated brain age in 116 acute mTBI patients and 63 healthy controls. Fifty patients were followed for 6 ∼ 12 months to evaluate the longitudinal changes in brain-PAD. We investigated whether brain-PAD was greater in patients of older age, post-concussion complaints, and apolipoprotein E (APOE) ɛ4 genotype, and whether it had the potential to predict neuropsychological outcomes. The brain-age prediction model predicted brain age accurately (r = 0.96). The brains of mTBI patients in the acute phase were estimated to be "older," with greater brain-PAD (2.59 ± 5.97 years) than the healthy controls (0.12 ± 3.19 years) (p less then 0.05), and remained stable 6-12 month post-injury (2.50 ± 4.54 years). Patients who were older or who had post-concussion complaints, rather than APOE ɛ4 genotype, had greater brain-PADs (p less then 0.001, p = 0.024). Additionally, brain-PAD in the acute phase predicted information processing speed at the 6 ∼ 12 month follow-up (r = -0.36, p = 0.01). In conclusion, mTBI accelerates the brain-aging process, and brain-PAD may be capable of evaluating aging-associated issues post-injury, such as increased risks of neurodegeneration.