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Featured researches published by Bernard J. Roth.


Sleep | 2013

Sleep disorders and associated medical comorbidities in active duty military personnel.

Vincent Mysliwiec; Leigh McGraw; Roslyn Pierce; Patrick Smith; Brandon Trapp; Bernard J. Roth

STUDY OBJECTIVES Describe the prevalence of sleep disorders in military personnel referred for polysomnography and identify relationships between demographic characteristics, comorbid diagnoses, and specific sleep disorders. DESIGN Retrospective cross-sectional study. SETTING Military medical treatment facility. PARTICIPANTS Active duty military personnel with diagnostic polysomnogram in 2010. MEASUREMENTS Primary sleep disorder rendered by review of polysomnogram and medical record by a board certified sleep medicine physician. Demographic characteristics and conditions of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), anxiety, depression, and pain syndromes determined by medical record review. RESULTS Primary sleep diagnoses (n = 725) included: mild obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), 207 (27.2%); insomnia, 188 (24.7%); moderate-to-severe OSA, 183 (24.0 %); and paradoxical insomnia,39 (5.1%); behaviorally induced insufficient sleep syndrome, 68 (8.9%) and snoring, 40 (5.3%) comprised our control group. Short sleep duration (< 5 h) was reported by 41.8%. Overall 85.2% had deployed, with 58.1% having one or more comorbid diagnoses. Characteristics associated with moderate-to-severe OSA were age (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 1.03 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 1.0-1.05], sex (male) (adjusted OR, 19.97 [95% CI, 2.66-150.05], anxiety (adjusted OR, 0.58 [95% CI, 0.34-0.99]), and body mass index, BMI (adjusted OR 1.19 [95% CI, 1.13-1.25]; for insomnia, characteristics included PTSD (adjusted OR, 2.12 [95% CI, 1.31-3.44]), pain syndromes (adjusted OR, 1.48 [95%CI, 1.01-2.12]), sex (female) (adjusted OR, 0.22 [95% CI, 0.12-0.41]) and lower BMI (adjusted OR, 0.91 [95% CI, 0.87, 0.95]). CONCLUSIONS Service-related illnesses are prevalent in military personnel who undergo polysomnography with significant associations between PTSD, pain syndromes, and insomnia. Despite having sleep disorders, almost half reported short sleep duration. Multidisciplinary assessment and treatment of military personnel with sleep disorders and service-related illnesses are required. CITATION Mysliwiec V; McGraw L; Pierce R; Smith P; Trapp B; Roth BJ. Sleep disorders and associated medical comorbidities in active duty military personnel. SLEEP 2013;36(2):167-174.


Chest | 2013

Sleep Disorders in US Military Personnel: A High Rate of Comorbid Insomnia and Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Vincent Mysliwiec; Jessica Gill; Hyunhwa Lee; Tristin Baxter; Roslyn Pierce; Taura L. Barr; Barry Krakow; Bernard J. Roth

BACKGROUND Sleep disturbances are among the most common symptoms of military personnel who return from deployment. The objective of our study was to determine the presence of sleep disorders in US military personnel referred for evaluation of sleep disturbances after deployment and examine associations between sleep disorders and service-related diagnoses of depression, mild traumatic brain injury, pain, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). METHODS This was a cross-sectional study of military personnel with sleep disturbances who returned from combat within 18 months of deployment. Sleep disorders were assessed by clinical evaluation and polysomnogram with validated instruments to diagnose service-related illnesses. RESULTS Of 110 military personnel included in our analysis, 97.3% were men (mean age, 33.6 ± 8.0 years; mean BMI, 30.0 ± 4.3 kg/m2), and 70.9% returned from combat within 12 months. Nearly one-half (47.3%) met diagnostic criteria for two or more service-related diagnoses. Sleep disorders were diagnosed in 88.2% of subjects; 11.8% had a normal sleep evaluation and served as control subjects. Overall, 62.7% met diagnostic criteria for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and 63.6% for insomnia. The exclusive diagnoses of insomnia and OSA were present in 25.5% and 24.5% of subjects, respectively; 38.2% had comorbid insomnia and OSA. Military personnel with comorbid insomnia and OSA were significantly more likely to meet criteria for depression (P < .01) and PTSD (P < .01) compared with control subjects and those with OSA only. CONCLUSIONS Comorbid insomnia and OSA is a frequent diagnosis in military personnel referred for evaluation of sleep disturbances after deployment. This diagnosis, which is difficult to treat, may explain the refractory nature of many service-related diagnoses.


Transfusion | 2010

Transfusion medicine knowledge in Postgraduate Year 1 residents.

Kerry L. O'Brien; Anne L. Champeaux; Zoe E. Sundell; Matthew W. Short; Bernard J. Roth

BACKGROUND: Transfusion medicine is a complex important subspecialty of pathology. A transfusion carries measurable risks and benefits. Although fellowship training exists in transfusion medicine, the majority of transfusion decisions are made by clinicians without formal training.


Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine | 2014

Trauma associated sleep disorder: a proposed parasomnia encompassing disruptive nocturnal behaviors, nightmares, and REM without atonia in trauma survivors.

Mysliwiec; Brian O'Reilly; Polchinski J; Kwon Hp; Anne Germain; Bernard J. Roth

STUDY OBJECTIVES To characterize the clinical, polysomnographic and treatment responses of patients with disruptive nocturnal behaviors (DNB) and nightmares following traumatic experiences. METHODS A case series of four young male, active duty U.S. Army Soldiers who presented with DNB and trauma related nightmares. Patients underwent a clinical evaluation in a sleep medicine clinic, attended overnight polysomnogram (PSG) and received treatment. We report pertinent clinical and PSG findings from our patients and review prior literature on sleep disturbances in trauma survivors. RESULTS DNB ranged from vocalizations, somnambulism to combative behaviors that injured bed partners. Nightmares were replays of the patients traumatic experiences. All patients had REM without atonia during polysomnography; one patient had DNB and a nightmare captured during REM sleep. Prazosin improved DNB and nightmares in all patients. CONCLUSIONS We propose Trauma associated Sleep Disorder (TSD) as a unique sleep disorder encompassing the clinical features, PSG findings, and treatment responses of patients with DNB, nightmares, and REM without atonia after trauma.


Journal of Graduate Medical Education | 2009

Assessing Intern Core Competencies With an Objective Structured Clinical Examination

Matthew W. Short; Jennifer E. Jorgensen; John A. Edwards; Robert B. Blankenship; Bernard J. Roth

BACKGROUND Residents are evaluated using Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) core competencies. An Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) is a potential evaluation tool to measure these competencies and provide outcome data. OBJECTIVE Create an OSCE to evaluate and demonstrate improvement in intern core competencies of patient care, medical knowledge, practice-based learning and improvement, interpersonal and communication skills, professionalism, and systems-based practice before and after internship. METHODS From 2006 to 2008, 106 interns from 10 medical specialties were evaluated with a preinternship and postinternship OSCE at Madigan Army Medical Center. The OSCE included eight 12-minute stations that collectively evaluated the 6 ACGME core competencies using human patient simulators, standardized patients, and clinical scenarios. Interns were scored using objective and subjective criteria, with a maximum score of 100 for each competency. Stations included death notification, abdominal pain, transfusion consent, suture skills, wellness history, chest pain, altered mental status, and computer literature search. These stations were chosen by specialty program directors, created with input from board-certified specialists, and were peer reviewed. RESULTS All OSCE testing on the 106 interns (ages 25 to 44 [average, 28.6]; 70 [66%] men; 65 [58%] allopathic medical school graduates) resulted in statistically significant improvement in all ACGME core competencies: patient care (71.9% to 80.0%, P < .001), medical knowledge (59.6% to 78.6%, P < .001), practice-based learning and improvement (45.2% to 63.0%, P < .001), interpersonal and communication skills (77.5% to 83.1%, P < .001), professionalism (74.8% to 85.1%, P < .001), and systems-based practice (56.6% to 76.5%, P < .001). CONCLUSION An OSCE during internship can evaluate incoming baseline ACGME core competencies and test for interval improvement. The OSCE is a valuable assessment tool to provide outcome measures on resident competency performance and evaluate program effectiveness.


Critical Care Medicine | 1997

Bedside videoscopic placement of feeding tubes: Development of fiberoptics through the tube

Kurt W. Grathwohl; Robert V. Gibbons; Thomas A. Dillard; John D. Horwhat; Bernard J. Roth; James W. Thompson; Patrick A. Cambier

OBJECTIVE Transpyloric small intestine feeding tube placement can be difficult and tedious. Currently accepted techniques are associated with disadvantages and risk. The purpose of this study is to describe the development of a new technique: bedside videoscopic placement using fiberoptics through the tube. DESIGN Prospective, descriptive case study. SETTING Intensive care unit in a teaching hospital. PATIENTS Subjects were divided into two groups: a) group 1: eight healthy volunteers (seven male, one female); b) group 2: nine critically ill patients (six male, three female; eight of these patients were intubated). INTERVENTIONS Standard 12-Fr (4.0-mm) feeding tubes (n = 19) were placed. Two patients from group 2 had feeding tubes placed on two separate occasions. The feeding tubes were inserted by the oral (n = 8) or nasal (n = 11) route under direct vision, using a 6.7-Fr (2.2-mm) fiberoptic scope through the feeding tube. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS We visualized enteric structures clearly through the feeding tube in all subjects and patients. Based on visual landmarks, we advanced the feeding tube through the pylorus and into the duodenum in all individuals. Transpyloric tube placement was confirmed videoscopically (n = 19) and radiographically (n = 18). In three subjects from group 1, the feeding tube entered the first part of the duodenum, while, in the remainder of the subjects, the tube passed into or beyond the second portion of the duodenum. In eight (73%) of 11 attempts on the nine critically ill patients from group 2, the feeding tubes were advanced to the distal duodenum or jejunum. The time required for placement in group 2 ranged from 2 to 43 mins (mean 18 +/- 12 [SD]). The feeding tubes remained in place 10 +/- 4 days and patients met their estimated caloric needs within 24 hrs. Residual volumes of nutrition in the small bowel were < 5 mL. There were no documented episodes of aspiration. CONCLUSION This new technique has the potential for rapid, accurate, and safe feeding tube placement in patients requiring nutritional support.


Military Medicine | 2014

Comorbid Insomnia and Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Military Personnel: Correlation With Polysomnographic Variables

Vincent Mysliwiec; Panagiotis Matsangas; Tristin Baxter; Leigh McGraw; Nici E. Bothwell; Bernard J. Roth

OBJECTIVES Military personnel undergoing polysomnography are typically diagnosed only with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Comorbid insomnia with OSA is a well-established, underappreciated diagnosis. We sought to determine if military personnel with mild OSA met clinical criteria for insomnia and if there was a pattern of polysomnogram (PSG) variables that identified insomnia in these patients. METHODS Retrospective chart review of military personnel with mild OSA; cluster analysis to describe PSG variables. RESULTS 206 personnel assessed, predominately male (96.6%), mean age 36.5 ± 8.14 years, body mass index 30.2 ± 3.66 kg/m(2) and apnea hypopnea index of 8.44 ± 2.92 per hour; 167 (81.1%) met criteria for insomnia. Cluster analysis identified a group of patients (N = 52) with PSG variables of increased wakefulness after sleep onset 77.3 minutes (27.7) (p < 0.001) and decreased sleep efficiency 82.6% (5.82) (p < 0.001) consistent with insomnia. Patients in this group were more likely to meet criteria for insomnia with an odds ratio 5.27 (1.20, 23.1), (p = 0.009). CONCLUSIONS The majority of military personnel with mild OSA meet criteria for insomnia. Roughly one-third of these patients can be identified by a pattern of PSG variables. Recognizing and treating both comorbid insomnia and OSA could improve clinical outcomes.


Neurology | 2008

Education Research: Evaluating acute altered mental status: Are incoming interns prepared?

Jessica Lee; Jay C. Erickson; Matthew W. Short; Bernard J. Roth

Background: Clinical evaluation of hospitalized patients with acute altered mental status (AMS) is a common task of interns, regardless of medical specialty. The effectiveness of medical education to ensure competence in this area is unknown. Objective: To measure competency of new interns in the evaluation and management of AMS using an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE). Methods: A cohort study was conducted with 61 medical school graduates entering internship at a single teaching hospital in 2006. Interns from all major specialty fields were included. The OSCE consisted of a 12-minute simulated encounter with a human patient simulator and nurse actor. Each intern’s performance was graded by the same neurologist, using criteria agreed upon by consensus of the neurology faculty. Competency in obtaining a history, performing a neurologic examination, generating a differential diagnosis, and ordering diagnostic studies was graded. Overall performance was scored on a percentage scale from 0 to 100. Results: Overall performance scores ranged from 19 to 43 with a mean of 31.4 (SD ± 5.6). Hypoglycemia was identified as a potential cause of AMS by 72.1% of interns, while fewer identified urinary tract infection (45.9%) and seizure (13.1%). While many interns ordered a CXR (86.9%) and head CT (80.3%), few requested a toxicology screen (21.3%) or lumbar puncture (3.3%). Only 41% of interns performed a neurologic examination. Conclusion: New interns are not well-prepared to evaluate patients with altered mental status in the inpatient setting as measured by an Objective Structured Clinical Examination.


Sleep Medicine Reviews | 2018

Trauma associated sleep disorder: A parasomnia induced by trauma

Vincent Mysliwiec; Matthew S. Brock; Jennifer L. Creamer; Brian O'Reilly; Anne Germain; Bernard J. Roth

Nightmares and disruptive nocturnal behaviors that develop after traumatic experiences have long been recognized as having different clinical characteristics that overlap with other established parasomnia diagnoses. The inciting experience is typically in the setting of extreme traumatic stress coupled with periods of sleep disruption and/or deprivation. The limited number of laboratory documented cases and symptomatic overlap with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have contributed to difficulties in identifying what is a unique parasomnia. Trauma associated sleep disorder (TSD) incorporates the inciting traumatic experience and clinical features of trauma related nightmares and disruptive nocturnal behaviors as a novel parasomnia. The aims of this theoretical review are to 1) summarize the known cases and clinical findings supporting TSD, 2) differentiate TSD from clinical disorders with which it has overlapping features, 3) propose criteria for the diagnosis of TSD, and 4) present a hypothetical neurobiological model for the pathophysiology of TSD. Hyperarousal, as opposed to neurodegenerative changes in RBD, is a component of TSD that likely contributes to overriding atonia during REM sleep and the comorbid diagnosis of insomnia. Lastly, a way forward to further establish TSD as an accepted sleep disorder is proposed.


Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine | 2015

A Comparative Analysis of Sleep Disordered Breathing in Active Duty Service Members with and without Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

Vincent Mysliwiec; Panagiotis Matsangas; Jessica Gill; Tristin Baxter; Brian O'Reilly; Jacob Collen; Bernard J. Roth

STUDY OBJECTIVES Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are frequently co-occurring illnesses. The purpose of this study was to determine whether comorbid PTSD/OSA is associated with increased PTSD symptoms or decreased OSA severity compared to PTSD or OSA alone in recently deployed Active Duty Service Members (ADSM). METHODS Cross-sectional observational study of ADSM who returned from combat within 24 months. Participants underwent an attended diagnostic polysomnogram and were assessed for PTSD, depression, combat exposure severity, sleepiness, and sleep quality with validated clinical instruments. RESULTS Our study included 109 military personnel who returned from a combat deployment within 24 months with a mean age of 34.3 ± 8.23 and BMI of 30.8 ± 3.99. Twenty-four participants had PTSD/OSA, 68 had OSA, and 17 had PTSD. Mean PTSD Checklist- Military Version (PCL-M) scores were 62.0 ± 8.95, 60.5 ± 4.73, and 32.5 ± 8.95 in PTSD/OSA, PTSD, and OSA, respectively. The mean AHI was 16.9 ± 15.0, 18.9 ± 17.0, and 1.73 ± 1.3 for those with PTSD/OSA, OSA, and PTSD. PTSD symptoms and OSA severity in military personnel with comorbid PTSD/OSA were not significantly different from those with PTSD or OSA alone. On multivariate analysis, BMI was a significant predictor of OSA (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.04-1.44) and age trended towards significance. Depression, but not OSA severity, was associated with PTSD symptoms. CONCLUSIONS Following recent combat exposure, comorbid PTSD/OSA is not associated with increased PTSD symptoms or decreased severity of OSA. Early evaluation after traumatic exposure for comorbid OSA is indicated in PTSD patients with sleep complaints given the high co-occurrence and adverse clinical implications.

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Vincent Mysliwiec

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Brian O'Reilly

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Matthew W. Short

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Thomas A. Dillard

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Tristin Baxter

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Anne Germain

University of Pittsburgh

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Jessica Gill

National Institutes of Health

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Kurt W. Grathwohl

Madigan Army Medical Center

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James W. Thompson

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Leigh McGraw

Madigan Army Medical Center

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