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Dive into the research topics where David Kreindler is active.

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Featured researches published by David Kreindler.


Neurosurgery | 1991

Computer- and Robot-assisted Resection of Thalamic Astrocytomas in Children

James M. Drake; Michael L. G. Joy; Andrew A. Goldenberg; David Kreindler

Six children ranging in age from 2 to 10 years who harbored deep benign astrocytomas were operated upon using a computer- and robot-assisted system. A radical excision was achieved in all cases with no significant morbidity nor any mortality. The system consists of an interactive, three-dimensional display of computed tomographic image contours and digitized cerebral angiograms taken using the Brown-Roberts-Wells stereotactic frame. The surgical retractor is held and manipulated using a PUMA 200 robot. The position and orientation of the surgical retractor is displayed on the three-dimensional display. Preoperative planning and simulation are important features of this system. Movement of the brain after removal of the tumor and cerebrospinal fluid is substantial, so the tumor removal is based on visually defined margins. Enhanced computer graphics and robotic devices are important adjuncts to neurosurgical procedures and will find increasing use in the future.


international conference on advanced robotics robots in unstructured environments | 1991

Computer and robotic assisted resection of brain tumours

James M. Drake; Michael L. G. Joy; Andrew A. Goldenberg; David Kreindler

Six children ages 2 to 10 years harbouring deep brain tumours were operated upon using a computer and robotic assisted system. A radical excision was achieved in all cases with no significant morbidity or any mortality. The system consists of an interactive 3 dimensional (3D) display of computed tomography image contours and digitized cerebral angiograms taken using the BRW stereotactic frame. The surgical retractor is held and manipulated using a PUMA 200 robot. The position and orientation of the surgical retractor is displayed on the 3D display. Preoperative planning and simulation are important features of this system. Movement of the brain following tumour and cerebrospinal fluid removal is substantial so the tumour removal is based on visually defined margins. Enhanced computer graphics and robotic devices are important adjuncts to neurosurgical procedures and will find increasing use in the future.<<ETX>>


Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2013

Mood and the Menstrual Cycle

Sarah E. Romans; David Kreindler; Eriola Asllani; Gillian Einstein; Sheila Laredo; Anthony Levitt; Kathryn Morgan; Michele J. Petrovic; Brenda Toner; Donna E. Stewart

Background: Premenstrual mood symptoms are considered common in women, but such prevailing attitudes are shaped by social expectations about gender, emotionality and hormonal influences. There are few prospective, community studies of women reporting mood data from all phases of the menstrual cycle (MC). We aimed (i) to analyze daily mood data over 6 months for MC phase cyclicity and (ii) to compare MC phase influences on a woman’s daily mood with that attributable to key alternate explanatory variables (physical health, perceived stress and social support). Method: A random sample of Canadian women aged 18–40 years collected mood and health data daily over 6 months, using telemetry, producing 395 complete MCs for analysis. Results: Only half the individual mood items showed any MC phase association; these links were either with the menses phase alone or the menses plus the premenstrual phase. With one exception, the association was not solely premenstrual. The menses-follicular-luteal MC division gave similar results. Less than 0.5% of the women’s individual periodogram records for each mood item showed MC entrainment. Physical health, perceived stress and social support were much stronger predictors of mood (p < 0.0001 in each case) than MC phase. Conclusions: The results of this study do not support the widespread idea of specific premenstrual dysphoria in women. Daily physical health status, perceived stress and social support explain daily mood better than MC phase.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2009

Mood assessment via animated characters: a novel instrument to evaluate feelings in young children with anxiety disorders.

Katharina Manassis; Sandra Mendlowitz; David Kreindler; Charles J. Lumsden; Jason Sharpe; Mark D. Simon; Nicholas Woolridge; Suneeta Monga; Gili Adler-Nevo

We evaluated a novel, computerized feelings assessment instrument (MAAC) in 54 children with anxiety disorders and 35 nonanxious children ages 5 to 11. They rated their feelings relative to 16 feeling animations. Ratings of feelings, order of feeling selection, and correlations with standardized anxiety measures were examined. Positive emotions were rated more highly and visited earlier by nonanxious children. Children with anxiety disorders explored fewer emotions. MAAC ratings on several positive emotions showed inverse correlations with state anxiety. Although needing further evaluation, MAAC may facilitate feelings assessment in young children and may distinguish children with anxiety disorders from nonanxious children.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2013

Use of mental health telemetry to enhance identification and predictive value of early changes during augmentation treatment of major depression.

Ayal Schaffer; David Kreindler; Catherine Reis; Anthony J. Levitt

Abstract Standard clinical trial methodology in depression does not allow for careful examination of early changes in symptom intensity. The purpose of this study was to use daily “Mental Health Telemetry” (MHT) to prospectively record change in depressive and anxiety symptoms for depressed patients receiving augmentation treatment, and determine the extent and predictive capacity of early changes. We report results of a 6-week, open-label study of the addition of quetiapine XR (range, 50–300 mg) for adult patients (n = 26) with major depressive disorder who were nonresponsive to antidepressant treatment. In addition to regular study visits, all participants completed daily, wirelessly transmitted self-report ratings of symptoms on a Smartphone. Daily and 3-day moving average mean scores were calculated, and associations between early symptom change and eventual response to treatment were determined. Improvement in depressive and anxiety symptoms was identified as early as day 1 of treatment. Of the total decline in depression severity over 6 weeks, 9% was present at day 1, 28% at day 2, 39% at days 3 and 4, 65% at day 7, and 80% at day 10. Self-report rating of early improvement (≥20%) in depressive symptoms at day 7 significantly predicted responder status at week 6 (P = 0.03). Clinician-rated depressive and anxiety symptoms only became significantly associated with responder status at day 14. In conclusion, very early changes in depressive symptoms were identified using MHT, early changes accounted for most of total change, and MHT-recorded improvement as early as day 7 significantly predicted response to treatment at study end point.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1990

Quantitative Phenotyping of Childhood Leukemia Identifies Variable and Invariable Cell Surface Antigens

David Kreindler; Dieter Petsche; Angela Hrincu; Anne Gougos; Elizabeth J. Quackenbush; Melvin H. Freedman; Erwin W. Gelfand; Michelle Letarte

Cells obtained from 75 cases of childhood leukemia were subjected to flow cytometry analysis to estimate the density of several cell surface antigens and derive a quantitative immunological phenotype. Sixty-five cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) including 10 T-ALL, 6 non-T ALL designated groups I and II (HLA-DRCALLA), 48 non-T ALL termed groups III and IV (HLA-DRCALLA) and one B-ALL were studied; 10 cases of acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) were also analysed. The estimation of the relative fluorescence index (RFI) on leukemic blasts led to the derivation of mean values for each marker in the leukemia subgroups. We have quantitated the levels of the antigens generally used in the classification of these leukemias (CALLA, CD5, CD20, CD13, HLA-DR and CD19) and of other cell surface antigens associated with leukemic cells. For example, CALLA (CD10) level was high (mean RFI value of 26.4) on the leukemic cells of non-T ALL groups III and IV. The CD5 antigen was present on T-ALL, as expected, with an RFI value of 4.5; however, low levels were observed on the more immature non-T ALL of groups I and II (RFI = 2.3 on only 27% of blast cells). The quantitative analysis of the cell surface antigens associated with non-T ALL has revealed molecules such as CALLA, HLA-DR, CD9 and CD44 present at high and variable levels and others such as CD19, CD38, 44G4, 44D7, 44H9 and 44H6 generally of lower intensity, less variable from one patient to another, and with similar mean levels of expression in the different subgroups. These invariable antigens are not altered by the lineage or stage of differentiation of the leukemic cells. The variable antigens could be correlated with the functional and/or differentiation status of the cells and could also be modified by the alterations of regulatory processes associated with malignancy. The quantitation of multiple leukemia-associated antigens, whose structure and function are becoming rapidly established, should help in elucidating the function of these molecules in leukemogenesis and/or disease progression.


Sleep Medicine | 2015

Sleep quality and the menstrual cycle

Sarah E. Romans; David Kreindler; Gillian Einstein; Sheila Laredo; Michele J. Petrovic; James Stanley

OBJECTIVE This study aimed to assess the temporal relationship of subjective sleep quality to menstrual cycle phase in a community (non help-seeking) sample of adult women over six months. Previous work has produced contradictory results and often used student samples. PARTICIPANTS/METHODS PATIENTS/METHODS This was a cohort study, using daily electronic data collection in the Greater Toronto Area, Ontario, Canada; 76 women aged 18-42 years recruited by random digit telephone dialing, recorded mood, sleep quality, and other health variables on a daily basis for 24 weeks. RESULTS Using linear mixed models, we assessed the relationship between subjective sleep quality and three menstrual cycle phases (menses, premenstrual and midcycle) over 395 cycles. Premenstrual sleep quality was poorer than during the rest of the cycle, with a mean difference of 1.32 between premenstrual and midcycle reference phase, on a 1-100 quality scale (higher score denotes poorer quality). This difference held when the independent variables of daily exercise and physical health were added to the model; it became non-significant when perceived stress and later, social support were also added to the model. CONCLUSIONS Sleep quality in adult non-help seeking women is statistically poorer in the premenstruum but the size of the difference is of little clinical significance and was no longer statistically significant with inclusion of the potentially confounding variables, perceived stress and social support.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2017

Crying, oral contraceptive use and the menstrual cycle

Sarah E. Romans; Rose F. Clarkson; Gillian Einstein; David Kreindler; Sheila Laredo; Michele J. Petrovic; James Stanley

BACKGROUND Crying, a complex neurobiological behavior with psychosocial and communication features, has been little studied in relationship to the menstrual cycle. METHODS In the Mood and Daily Life study (MiDL), a community sample of Canadian women aged 18-43 years, n=76, recorded crying proneness and crying frequency daily for six months along with menstrual cycle phase information. RESULTS Crying proneness was most likely during the premenstruum, a little less likely during menses and least likely during the mid-cycle phase, with statistically significant differences although the magnitude of these differences were small. By contrast, actual crying did not differ between the three menstrual cycle phases. Oral contraceptive use did not alter the relationship between menstrual cycle phase and either crying variable. A wide range of menstrual cycle phase - crying proneness patterns were seen with visual inspection of the individual womens line graphs. LIMITATIONS timing of ovulation was not ascertained. Using a three phase menstrual cycle division precluded separate late follicular and early luteal data analysis. The sample size was inadequate for a robust statistical test of actual crying. CONCLUSIONS reproductive aged women as a group report feeling more like crying premenstrually but may not actually cry more during this menstrual cycle phase. Individual patterns vary substantially. Oral contraceptive use did not affect these relationships. Suggestions for future research are included.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 1994

Extracting a Narrative′s Causal Gist: A Modeling Study Based on Fuzzy Trace Theory

David Kreindler; Charles J. Lumsden


Open Medicine | 2008

Email security in clinical practice: ensuring patient confidentiality.

David Kreindler

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