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Featured researches published by Dan Tandberg.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2000

A Controlled Study of Imagery Rehearsal for Chronic Nightmares in Sexual Assault Survivors With PTSD: A Preliminary Report

Barry Krakow; Michael Hollifield; Ron Schrader; Mary P. Koss; Dan Tandberg; John Lauriello; Leslie McBride; Teddy D. Warner; Diana Cheng; Tonya Edmond; Robert Kellner

Imagery-rehearsal therapy for chronic nightmares was assessed in a randomized, controlled study of sexual assault survivors with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Nightmares, sleep quality, and PTSD were assessed at baseline for 169 women, who were randomized into two groups: treatment (n = 87) and wait-list control (n = 82). Treatment consisted of two 3-hr sessions and one 1-hr session conducted over 5 weeks. Of 169 participants, 91 women (Treatment, n = 43, Control, n = 48) completed a 3-month follow-up and 78 did not. At follow-up, nightmare frequency and PTSD severity decreased and sleep quality improved in the treatment group with small to minimal changes in the control group. Treatment effects were moderate to high (Cohens d ranged from 0.57 to 1.26). Notwithstanding the large dropout rate, imagery-rehearsal therapy is an effective treatment for chronic nightmares in sexual assault survivors with PTSD and is associated with improvement in sleep quality and decreases in PTSD severity.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2002

Nightmare frequency in sexual assault survivors with PTSD.

Barry Krakow; Ron Schrader; Dan Tandberg; Michael Hollifield; Mary P. Koss; C.Lillian Yau; Diana T Cheng

Sexual assault survivors with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were assessed for frequency of nightmares, measured retrospectively on the Nightmare Frequency Questionnaire (NFQ) and prospectively on nightmare dream logs (NLOG). Retrospective frequency was extremely high, averaging occurrences every other night and an estimated number of nightmares greater than five per week. Test-retest reliability data on the NFQ yielded weighted kappa coefficients of .85 (95% CI, .74-.95) for nights and .90 (95% CI, .83-.97) for nightmares. Correlations between retrospective and prospective nightmare frequencies ranged between .53 (P = .001) for nights and .63 (P = .001) for nightmares. Correlations between frequency and distress measures (anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress) yielded coefficients ranging from (r = .28-.53). Compared with intrusive, cumbersome and time-consuming prospective measurements, the NFQ appears reliable, convenient, and equally useful in assessing nightmare frequency in a group of sexual assault survivors. Nightmare frequency, prevalence, distress and impairment are discussed.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2000

A retrospective study on improvements in nightmares and post-traumatic stress disorder following treatment for co-morbid sleep-disordered breathing

Barry Krakow; Carmen S. Lowry; Anne Germain; Lane Gaddy; Michael Hollifield; Mary P. Koss; Dan Tandberg; Lisa Johnston; Dominic Melendrez

OBJECTIVE To assess the impact of treatment for co-morbid sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) on patients with nightmares and post-traumatic stress. METHODS Twenty-three chronic nightmare sufferers (15 with post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD) who also suffered co-morbid SDB (obstructive sleep apnea, OSA, n=16; upper airway resistance syndrome, UARS, n=7) completed a telephone interview, on average, 21 months after having been offered treatment for SDB at a university sleep disorders clinic. RESULTS At follow-up, 14 reported maintaining treatment (Treatment Group) and 9 reported discontinuing treatment (No-Treatment Group). More patients in the Treatment Group reported improvement in sleep (93% vs. 33%) and in daytime well being (93% vs. 33%) compared with those in the No-Treatment group. The Treatment Group reported a median improvement in nightmares of 85% compared with a median 10% worsening in the No-Treatment Group. In the PTSD subset (n=15), nine in the Treatment Group reported a median 75% improvement in PTSD symptoms whereas six in the No-Treatment Group reported a median 43% worsening. CONCLUSION In this small sample of patients, treatment of SDB was associated with improvements in nightmares and PTSD. Relationships between nightmares, PTSD and SDB are discussed.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Effect of Tachypnea on the Estimation of Body Temperature by an Oral Thermometer

Dan Tandberg; David P. Sklar

Hermann BOERHAAVE introduced clinical thermometry into the practice of medicine in 1709, and since that time a measurement of body temperature has been included in the early evaluation of most sick...


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2001

The Relationship of Sleep Quality and Posttraumatic Stress to Potential Sleep Disorders in Sexual Assault Survivors with Nightmares, Insomnia, and PTSD

Barry Krakow; Anne Germain; Teddy D. Warner; Ronald Schrader; Mary P. Koss; Michael Hollifield; Dan Tandberg; Dominic Melendrez; Lisa Johnston

Sleep quality and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were examined in 151 sexual assault survivors, 77% of whom had previously reported symptoms of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) or sleep movement disorders (SMD) or both. Participants completed the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and the Posttraumatic Stress Scale (PSS). High PSQI scores reflected extremely poor sleep quality and correlated with PSS scores. PSQI scores were greater in participants with potential SDB or SMD or both. PSQI or PSS scores coupled with body-mass index and use of antidepressants or anxiolytics predicted potential sleep disorders. The relationship between sleep and posttraumatic stress appears to be more complex than can be explained by the current PTSD paradigm; and, sleep breathing and sleep movement disorders may be associated with this complexity.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1991

Magnetic resonance imaging in minor head injury

David Doezema; J N King; Dan Tandberg; Mary C. Espinosa; William W. Orrison

STUDY OBJECTIVES To investigate the role of cranial magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in evaluating patients discharged from the emergency department after minor head injury. DESIGN A prospective blinded cohort study. SETTING University hospital ED. TYPE OF PARTICIPANTS Fifty-eight patients with minor head injury who were discharged from the ED with written head injury instructions. Patients admitted to the hospital were excluded. INTERVENTIONS Ultra-low-field cranial MR scans were performed on patients within 24 hours of discharge. Scans were read blindly by two radiologists. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Fishers exact test was used to compare symptoms in patients with abnormal and normal MR scans. There was no significant difference in symptoms between patients with abnormal and those with normal scans (P greater than .10). The proportion of abnormal MR scans was analyzed using the binomial distribution. Six of the 58 patients (10.3%) had traumatic intracranial abnormalities (proportion, 0.103; SD, 0.04; 95% CI, 0.04-0.21). Three had cortical contusions, and three had small subdural hematomas. Two of the six patients with abnormal MR scans, both with small subdural hematomas, had normal computed tomography scans. CONCLUSION Ten percent of patients discharged from the ED after minor head injury had abnormal ultra-low-field cranial MR scans. Additional research is needed to establish the clinical importance of this unexpected observation.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1994

Time Series Forecasts of Emergency Department Patient Volume, Length of Stay, and Acuity

Dan Tandberg; Clifford Qualls

STUDY HYPOTHESIS Time series analysis can provide accurate predictions of emergency department volume, length of stay, and acuity. DESIGN Prospective stochastic time series modeling. SETTING A university teaching hospital. INTERVENTIONS All patients seen during two sequential years had time of arrival, discharge, and acuity recorded in a computer database. Time series variables were formed for patients arriving per hour, length of stay, and acuity. Prediction models were developed from the year 1 data and included five types: raw observations, moving averages, mean values with moving averages, seasonal indicators with moving averages, and autoregressive integrated moving averages. Forecasts from each model were compared with observations from the first 25 weeks of year 2. Model accuracy was tested on residuals by autocorrelation functions, periodograms, linear regression, and confidence intervals of the variance. RESULTS There were 42,428 patients seen in year 1 and 44,926 in year 2. Large periodic variations in patient volume with time of day were found (P < .00001). The models based on arithmetic means or seasonal indices with a single moving average term gave the most accurate forecasts and explained up to 42% of the variation present in the year 2 test series. No time series model explained more that 1% of the variation in length of stay or acuity. CONCLUSION Time series analysis can provide powerful, accurate short-range forecasts of future ED volume. Simpler models performed best in this study. Time series forecasts of length of stay and patient acuity are not likely to contribute additional useful information for staffing and resource allocation decisions.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1991

Cervical spine movement during airway management: Cinefluoroscopic appraisal in human cadavers

Mark Hauswald; David P. Sklar; Dan Tandberg; Jose F. Garcia

The objective of this study was to determine which airway maneuvers cause the least cervical spine movement. A controlled laboratory investigation was performed in a radiologic suite, using eight human traumatic arrest victims who were studied within 40 minutes of death. All subjects were ventilated by mask and intubated orally, over a lighted oral stylet and flexible laryngoscope, and nasally. Cinefluoroscopic measurement of maximum cervical displacement during each procedure was made with the subjects supine and secured by hard collar, backboard, and tape. The mean maximum cervical spine displacement was found to be 2.93 mm for mask ventilation, 1.51 mm for oral intubation, 1.65 mm for guided oral intubation, and 1.20 mm for nasal intubation. Ventilation by mask caused more cervical spine displacement than the other procedures studied (ANOVA: F = 9.298; P = .00004). It was concluded that mask ventilation moves the cervical spine more than any commonly used method of endotracheal intubation. Physicians should choose the intubation technique with which they have the greatest experience and skill.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2000

Sleep Breathing and Sleep Movement Disorders Masquerading as Insomnia in Sexual-Assault Survivors

Barry Krakow; Anne Germain; Dan Tandberg; Mary P. Koss; Ron Schrader; Michael Hollifield; Diana Cheng; Tonya Edmond

A descriptive, hypothesis-generating study was performed with 156 female sexual-assault survivors who suffered from insomnia, nightmares, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). They completed 2 self-report sleep questionnaires to assess the potential presence of intrinsic sleep disorders. Seventy-seven percent of the sample (120 of 156) endorsed additional sleep complaints, besides their insomnia symptoms, that indicate the potential presence of sleep-disordered breathing ([SDB] 81 of 156, 52%) and sleep-related movement disorders ([SMD] 94 of 156, 60%). The potential for SDB was strongly correlated with the body mass index (BMI), an increase in arousal symptoms, and greater total PTSD severity. In some sexual-assault survivors, the relationship between sleeplessness and posttraumatic stress may be caused or exacerbated by intrinsic sleep disorders, and not be solely a function of psychophysiological insomnia--the traditional diagnostic term usually offered to explain the sleep problems associated with PTSD. Prevalence studies that use objective diagnostic evaluations such as polysomnography (PSG) are needed to test these hypotheses.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1986

Ipecac-induced emesis versus gastric lavage: A controlled study in normal adults

Dan Tandberg; Benjamin G. Diven; Joy W. McLeod

Ipecac-induced emesis and gastric lavage are the two procedures most widely used to evacuate the stomachs of patients who have ingested poisons. To resolve a long-standing controversy over the relative efficacy of these two methods, the authors carried out a controlled study in which they administered 25 100-micrograms tablets of cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12) to 18 fasting normal adult volunteers on two separate days. On one day, each subject had emesis induced with 30 ml of ipecac syrup followed by 1,000 ml of tap water; on another day, each underwent gastric aspiration and lavage with a 1.1-cm orogastric tube using 3 l of fluid. Both procedures were begun 10 minutes after the ingestion. The recovered vomitus or gastric washings from each procedure were then analyzed for elemental cobalt using atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The mean rate of recovery of the ingested tracer with ipecac-induced emesis was only 28%, whereas gastric lavage resulted in retrieval of 45% (paired t-test, P less than 0.005). In this study, carefully performed gastric lavage was the more effective method of gastric evacuation of tablets in the adult subject.

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David P. Sklar

University of New Mexico

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Mark Hauswald

University of New Mexico

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Barry Krakow

University of New Mexico

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David Doezema

University of New Mexico

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Paul Cheney

University of New Mexico

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Ron Schrader

University of New Mexico

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Alda Moettus

University of New Mexico

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