Anthony C. Kneebone
Flinders Medical Centre
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Anthony C. Kneebone.
Epilepsia | 1995
Anthony C. Kneebone; Gordon J. Chelune; Richard I. Naugle; Dudley S. Dinner; Issam A. Awad
Summary: Memory testing during the intracarotid amobarbital procedure (IAP) is used extensively to identify temporal lobe surgery candidates “at risk” for developing severe postoperative anterograde amnesia. However, the utility of the IAP in predicting commonly observed material‐specific memory deficits has not been thoroughly investigated. We examined the utility of contralateral IAP memory testing, as an index of the functional capacity of the surgical temporal lobe, to predict postoperative material‐specific memory changes on the Wechsler Memory Scale‐Revised (WMS‐R) in patients with left hemisphere speech dominance undergoing left (n = 32) and right (n = 31) temporal lobectomy (TL). Left TL patients who “passed” contralateral IAP memory testing (368% recognition of memory items) had significantly greater verbal memory decrements than those who “failed” the IAP, presumably as a result of removal of functional tissue. A similar relationship between contralateral IAP performance and visual memory performance was not observed among right TL patients. Thus, the functional adequacy of the tissue to be resected appears to be inversely related to postoperative verbal memory decrement, at least among left TL patients. This relationship is consistent with results of recent studies demonstrating an inverse relationship between verbal memory decrements after left TL and preoperative neuropsychological verbal memory performance, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) hippocampal volumes, and degree of mesiotemporal sclerosis (MTS).
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2008
Phillip J. Tully; Robert A. Baker; Anthony C. Kneebone; John L. Knight
OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to compare neuropsychologic and quality-of-life outcomes of patients undergoing off-pump coronary artery bypass surgery to those undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery using conventional cardiopulmonary bypass. DESIGN A prospective randomized trial of coronary artery bypass graft surgery with and without the use of cardiopulmonary bypass. SETTING A cardiothoracic surgery unit at a tertiary hospital. PARTICIPANTS Sixty-six patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery and a control group of 50 participants not undergoing cardiac surgery. INTERVENTIONS Patients were randomized to receive coronary artery bypass graft surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass or randomized to coronary artery bypass graft surgery without the use of cardiopulmonary bypass. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The proportions of neuropsychologic deficits and improvement in quality-of-life were comparable regardless of whether patients were randomized to receive off-pump coronary artery bypass graft surgery or conventional coronary artery graft surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. CONCLUSIONS Patients receiving coronary artery bypass grafts without cardiopulmonary bypass did not show fewer cognitive deficits or greater improvement in quality of life.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2005
Anthony C. Kneebone; Mary Alice Luszcz; Robert A. Baker; John L. Knight
Background: Studies of neuropsychological outcome following coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) have traditionally dichotomised patients as “impaired” or “unimpaired”. This conceals the potential heterogeneity of deficits due to different mechanisms and sites of brain injury. Objectives: To explore neuropsychological outcome following CABG and determine to what extent it conforms to prototypic cortical and/or subcortical neurobehavioral syndromes and whether different intraoperative physiologic measures are associated with different subtypes of neuropsychological outcome. Methods: Neuropsychological tests were administered to 85 patients before and after elective CABG and to 50 matched normal control subjects. Pre- to postoperative change scores were computed using standardised regression based norms. Change scores on selected memory measures were subjected to cluster analysis to identify qualitatively distinct subtypes of memory outcome. Emergent clusters were compared on non-memory measures, intraoperative physiologic measures, and demographic variables. Results: Three subtypes of memory outcome were identified: memory spared (48% of patients), retrieval deficit (35%), and encoding/storage deficit (17%). Contrary to expectation, the subgroups were indistinguishable on measures of confrontation naming and manual dexterity and on intraoperative cardiac surgical physiologic measures and demographic variables. The encoding/storage deficit subgroup exhibited executive dysfunction. Conclusions: Heterogeneous profiles of neuropsychological dysfunction were found following CABG although they did not tightly conform to prototypic cortical and subcortical neurobehavioral syndromes. This challenges the value and appropriateness of the common practice of collapsing individual test scores to arrive at a single figure to define “impairment”. Whether different subtypes of neuropsychological outcome are caused by different pathophysiologic mechanisms remains unknown.
Journal of Arthroplasty | 2014
Julia E. Scott; Jane L. Mathias; Anthony C. Kneebone
This meta-analysis consolidated the research on postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) following total joint arthroplasty (TJA). Data from 17 studies that assessed cognition pre- and post-surgery in TJA patients alone (15 studies) or matched TJA and control groups (2 studies) were analysed. Results were grouped by cognitive domain (memory, attention, language, speed, general cognition) and follow-up interval (pre-discharge, 3-6 months post-surgery). The TJA data revealed small declines in reaction time and general cognition pre-discharge, but no evidence of decline 3-6 months post-surgery. Very limited TJA and Control data indicated no group differences in the changes to performance over time; however, the TJA group was cognitively compromised pre- and post-surgery compared to Controls. Further appropriately controlled research is required to clarify whether POCD commonly occurs after TJA.
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2017
Julia E. Scott; Jane L. Mathias; Anthony C. Kneebone; J. Krishnan
ABSTRACT Whether total joint replacement (TJR) patients are susceptible to postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) remains unclear due to inconsistencies in research methodologies. Moreover, cognitive reserve may moderate the development of POCD after TJR, but has not been investigated in this context. The current study investigated POCD after TJR, and its relationship with cognitive reserve, using a more rigorous methodology than has previously been utilized. Fifty-three older adults (aged 50+) scheduled for TJR were assessed pre and post surgery (6 months). Forty-five healthy controls matched for age, gender, and premorbid IQ were re-assessed after an equivalent interval. Cognition, cognitive reserve, and physical and mental health were all measured. Standardized regression-based methods were used to assess cognitive changes, while controlling for the confounding effect of repeated cognitive testing. TJR patients only demonstrated a significant decline in Trail Making Test Part B (TMT B) performance, compared to controls. Cognitive reserve only predicted change in TMT B scores among a subset of TJR patients. Specifically, patients who showed the most improvement pre to post surgery had significantly higher reserve than those who showed the greatest decline. The current study provides limited evidence of POCD after TJR when examined using a rigorous methodology, which controlled for practice effects. Cognitive reserve only predicted performance within a subset of the TJR sample. However, the role of reserve in more cognitively compromised patients remains to be determined.
Aging & Mental Health | 2016
Julia E. Scott; Jane L. Mathias; Anthony C. Kneebone
Objective: Patients usually experience good physical recovery after total joint replacement (TJR); however, it is unclear whether mood also improves. The current meta-analysis examined changes in depression and anxiety following TJR in older (≥50 years) patients in order to address this gap in the literature. Methods: Data from 26 studies (4045 TJR, 55 controls) that assessed depression and/or anxiety pre- and post-surgery in TJR patients, with or without a control group, were analyzed. Prevalence rates and Cohens d effect sizes were used to evaluate changes in the prevalence and severity of depression/anxiety, respectively. Results: Approximately 23% of TJR patients had clinically significant levels of depression prior to surgery, which decreased to 13% one year later. The prevalence of anxiety could not be evaluated due to the limited available data. TJR patients did not show any clinically meaningful reductions in symptoms of depression or anxiety, following surgery. Compared to controls, there was no difference in symptom progression over time; although only one study examined this. Conclusions: TJR patients appear to have higher rates of clinically significant symptoms of depression before and after surgery, compared to the general population, however more research with adequate control groups is needed to confirm this. Only a modest improvement in the severity of depression and anxiety symptoms was noted post-surgery. However, existing research is limited; preventing definite conclusions regarding the impact of TJR on mood.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998
Anthony C. Kneebone; Marie J. Andrew; Robert A. Baker; John L. Knight
Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2007
Anthony C. Kneebone; Gregory P. Lee; Lee T. Wade; David W. Loring
Archive | 2014
Julia E. Scott; Jane L. Mathias; Anthony C. Kneebone; Dip App Psych
Archive | 2013
Anthony C. Kneebone; Marie J. Andrew; Robert A. Baker; John L. Knight