Over a five-year period, 41,869 women received care at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions during pregnancy. 84 women had at least one event concerning for seizure during their pregnancies. Of these, 11 had no prior history of seizures; 5 of these women were found to have first-time unprovoked epileptic seizures supported by epileptiform abnormalities on EEG. All women delivered at term with no major complications. Four of these women continued to have epileptic seizures after delivery. Conclusions: New onset seizures during pregnancy were rare. Most women with first-time epileptic seizures during pregnancy also had epileptic seizures after pregnancy, indicating a first presentation of epilepsy.
Introduction: Current ophthalmologic training in medical school is inadequate in preparing medical students to handle basic eye complaints as nonophthalmology residents. Most medical students are uncomfortable performing eye examinations, but increased ophthalmology training improves confidence in this area. The University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (UPSOM) teaches students the basics of ophthalmology with a required 1-week rotation during the 1-month specialty care clerkship (SCC), providing students with skills to perform rudimentary eye examinations as nonophthalmology providers. Methods: Within a 1-week ophthalmology rotation, we developed a series of interactive case-based teaching sessions, handouts, and homework that accompanied clinical instruction to familiarize third-and fourth-year medical students with ophthalmic equipment, terminology, diagnosis, and management. Of learners, 67 (roughly 11 per cohort) rotated on six consecutive SCCs beginning in May 2019. All learners completed an in-house exam and received resident clinical evaluations at the end of their rotation. Results: Of the 64 participants who responded to the survey, 100% rated the quality of teaching sessions outstanding or good, and 83% of students strongly agreed or agreed with the statement, "I believe the overall teaching in the ophthalmology clinical settings was good quality." The average clinical and exam score for ophthalmology over 6 months was 4.5 out of 5, and 83% respectively. Discussion: Generally positive student feedback as well as high clinical and exam scores suggested that the required UPSOM ophthalmology clerkship was both engaging and effective. This course can be easily adapted to teach students at other medical institutions.
Females and males respond differently to a number of systemic viral infections.Differences between females and males with respect to the severity of keratitis caused by Gram-negative bacteria such as Serratia marcescens are less well established. In this study we injected female and male New Zealand White rabbit corneas with a keratitis isolate of S. marcescens and evaluated the eyes after 48 hours for a number of clinical and microbiological parameters. No statistical differences in bacterial burden and corneal scores were recorded between female and male rabbits although there was a nonsignificant trend toward a higher frequency of female rabbits demonstrating hypopyons. This data suggests that for experimental bacterial keratitis studies involving Gramnegative rods, a single sex or mixed group of rabbit is sufficient for evaluating pathology and bacterial burdens. This will reduce the number of animals used for subsequent studies.
PurposeWe recently showed how a refined sequential detection pattern and image processing pipeline for multi-offset adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO) can increase the contrast of weakly scattering inner retinal structures, including microglia. However, sequential detection was still time-consuming, preventing dynamics from being monitored over short intervals (< 3 mins). Here we show that simultaneous fiber-bundle (FB) detection can overcomes this limitation to reveal the structure and dynamic activity of microglia and macrophage-like cells in healthy and diseased retinae.MethodsWe designed and implemented a custom 7-fiber optical FB with one central confocal fiber and six larger fibers for multi-offset detection in AOSLO at a single focal plane. We imaged the ganglion cell layer at several locations at multiple timepoints (from minutes to weeks) in 8 healthy participants and in 4 patients with ocular infections or inflammation, including ocular syphilis and posterior uveitis. Microglia and immune cells were manually segmented to quantify cell morphometry and motility.ResultsFiber-bundle detection reduced single acquisition time to 20-30 seconds, enabling imaging over larger areas and monitoring of dynamics over shorter intervals. Presumed microglia in healthy retinas had an average diameter of 12.8 μm and with a spectrum of morphologies including circular cells and elongated cells with visible processes. We also detected the somas of putative macroglia, potentially astrocytes, near the optic nerve head. Microglia moved slowly in normal eyes (0.02μm/sec, on average) but speed increased in patients with active infections or inflammation (up to 2.37μm/sec). Microglia activity was absent in a patient with chronic uveitis that was quiescent but apparent over short intervals in an active uveitis retina. In a patient with ocular syphilis imaged at multiple timepoints during treatment, macrophage-like cells containing granular internal structures were seen. Decreases in the quantity and motility of these immune cells were correlated with improvements to vision and other structural and systemic biomarkers.ConclusionsFB-AOSLO enable simplified optical setup with easy alignment and implementation. We imaged the fine-scale structure and dynamics of microglia and macrophage-like cells during active infection and inflammation in the living eye for the first time. In healthy eyes we also detected putative glia cell near the optic nerve head. FB-AOSLO offers promise as a powerful tool for detecting and monitoring retinal inflammation and infection in the living eye over short response to treatment.
Females and males respond differently to a number of systemic viral infections. Differences between females and males with respect to the severity of keratitis caused by Gram-negative bacteria such as Serratia marcescens are less well established. In this study we injected female and male New Zealand White rabbit corneas with a keratitis isolate of S. marcescens and evaluated the eyes after 48 hours for a number of clinical and microbiological parameters. No statistical differences in bacterial burden and corneal scores were recorded between female and male rabbits although there was a non-significant trend toward a higher frequency of female rabbits demonstrating hypopyons. This data suggests that for experimental bacterial keratitis studies involving Gram-negative rods, a single sex or mixed group of rabbit is sufficient for evaluating pathology and bacterial burdens. This will reduce the number of animals used for subsequent studies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.