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Dive into the research topics where Douglas F. Eggli is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas F. Eggli.


Osteoporosis International | 1996

The effect of calcium supplementation and tanner stage on bone density, content and area in teenage women

Tom Lloyd; Juliann K. Martel; Nan Rollings; Mark Benson Andon; Howard E. Kulin; Laurence M. Demers; Douglas F. Eggli; K. Kieselhorst; Vernon M. Chinchilli

One hundred and twelve Caucasian girls, 11.9±0.5 years of age at entry, were randomized into a 24-month, double-masked, placebo-controlled trial to determine the effect of calcium supplementation on bone mineral content, bone area and bone density. Supplementation was 500 mg calcium as calcium citrate malate (CCM) per day. Controls received placebo pills, and compliance of both groups averaged 72%. Bone mineral content, bone mineral area and bone mineral density of the lumbar spine and total body were measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Calcium intake from dietary sources averaged 983 mg/day for the entire study group. The supplemented group received, on average, an additional 360 mg calcium/day from CCM. At baseline and after 24 months, the two groups did not differ with respect to anthropometric measurements, urinary reproductive hormone levels or any measurement of pubertal progression. The supplemented group had greater increases of total body bone measures: content 39.9% versus 35.7% (p=0.01), area 24.2% versus 22.5% (p=0.15) and density 12.2% versus 10.1% (p=0.005). Region-of-interest analyses showed that the supplemented group had greater gains compared with the control group for bone mineral density, content and area. In particular, in the lumbar spine and pelvis, the gains made by the supplemented group were 12%–24% greater than the increases made by the control group. Bone acquisition rates in the two study groups were further compared by subdividing the groups into those with below- or above-median values for Tanner score and dietary calcium intake. In subjects with below-median Tanner scores, bone acquisition was not affected by calcium supplementation or dietary calicum level. However, the calcium supplemented subjects with above-median Tanner had higher bone acqusition rates than the placebo group with above-median Tanner scores. Relative to the placebo group, the supplemented group had increased yearly gains of bone content, area and density which represented about 1.5% of adult female values. Such increases, if held to adult skeletal maturity, could provide protection against future risk of osteoporotic fractures.


Pediatrics | 2000

Adult Female Hip Bone Density Reflects Teenage Sports–Exercise Patterns But Not Teenage Calcium Intake

Tom Lloyd; Vernon M. Chinchilli; Nan Johnson-Rollings; Kessey Kieselhorst; Douglas F. Eggli; Robert Marcus

Objective. To examine how cumulative teenage sports histories and time-averaged teenage calcium intake are related to total body bone mineral gain between ages 12 and 18 years and to proximal femur bone mineral density (BMD) at age 18 years. Design. Longitudinal. Setting. University Hospital and local suburban community in Central Pennsylvania. Study Participants. Eighty-one white females in the ongoing Penn State Young Womens Health Study. Outcome Measures. Total body and proximal femur (hip) bone measurements by dual energy radiograph absorptiometry; nutrient intakes, including calcium, from 33 days of prospective food records collected at regular intervals between ages 12 and 18 years; and self-reported sports–exercise scores between ages 12 and 18 years. Results. Cumulative sports–exercise scores between ages 12 and 18 years were associated with hip BMD at age 18 years (r = .42) but were not related to total body bone mineral gain. Time-averaged daily calcium intake, which ranged from 500 to 1500 mg/day in this cohort was not associated with hip BMD at age 18 years, or with total body bone mineral gain at age 12 through 18 years. Conclusions. The amount of physical activity that distinguishes a primarily sedentary teenager from one who engages in some form of exercise on a nearly daily basis is related to a significant increase in peak hip BMD.


Gastroenterology | 1987

Gastric emptying of solid food in patients with gastroesophageal reflux

Steven S. Shay; Douglas F. Eggli; Carol McDonald; Lawrence F. Johnson

While delayed gastric emptying of solid food has been reported in patients with symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux, the study populations were not defined by 24-h intraesophageal pH monitoring. Moreover, the influence that the gastric emptying rate may have on patterns of reflux during the day or night, as well as on esophagitis, is not known. In this study, we compared the gastric emptying rate of solid food (in vivo intracellular labeled chicken liver) observed in asymptomatic control volunteers (n = 15) with that of symptomatic patients with an abnormal 24-h pH record who had either the presence (n = 22) or absence (n = 11) of endoscopic esophagitis. We found no significant difference in the gastric emptying rate between the asymptomatic control volunteers and the symptomatic patients with and without esophagitis. Moreover, there was no significant correlation between the gastric emptying rate and the degree of daytime or nighttime distal esophageal acid exposure found during 24-h intraesophageal pH monitoring. Only 6% of the symptomatic patients had a gastric emptying rate that exceeded the mean value plus 2 SD of that found in the asymptomatic control volunteers. We believe these support a de-emphasis of the role that delayed gastric emptying of solid food may play in the pathophysiology of gastroesophageal reflux in most patients.


Bone | 2002

Modifiable determinants of bone status in young women

Tom Lloyd; Thomas J. Beck; Hung-Mo Lin; Mark Tulchinsky; Douglas F. Eggli; T.L Oreskovic; P.R Cavanagh; Ego Seeman

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the contributions of exercise, fitness, body composition, and calcium intake during adolescence to peak bone mineral density and bone structural measurements in young women. University Hospital and 75 healthy, white females in the longitudinal Penn State Young Womens Health Study were included. Body composition, total body, and hip bone mineral density (BMD) were measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), exercise scores by sports-exercise questionnaire during ages 12-18 years, and estimated aerobic capacity by bike ergometry. Section modulus values (a measurement of bending strength) cross-sectional area (CSA), subperiosteal width, and cortical thickness were calculated from DXA scan data for the femoral neck and femoral shaft. Calcium intakes were calculated from 39 days of prospective food records collected at 13 timepoints between ages 12 and 20 years; supplemental calcium intakes were included. Section moduli at the femoral neck and shaft were correlated significantly with lean body mass, sports-exercise scores (R(2) = 0.07-0.19, p < 0.05), and aerobic capacity (R(2) = 0.06-0.57, p < 0.05). Sports-exercise scores correlated with BMD at the femoral neck and shaft. Average total daily calcium intake at age 12-20 years ranged from 486 to 1958 mg/day and was not significantly associated with total or regional peak BMD or bone structure measures at 20 years of age. It was shown that achievable levels of exercise and fitness have a favorable effect on BMD and section modulus of the femoral neck and femoral shaft in young adult women, whereas daily calcium intake of >500 mg in female adolescents appears to have little, if any effect.


Fertility and Sterility | 2000

Oral contraceptive use by teenage women does not affect peak bone mass: a longitudinal study

Tom Lloyd; Denise Shaffer Taylor; Hung-Mo Lin; Amy E. Matthews; Douglas F. Eggli; Richard S. Legro

OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of oral contraceptive pill (OCP) use during adolescence on peak bone mass. DESIGN Longitudinal observational study. SETTING Academic clinical research center. PATIENT(S) Sixty-two non-Hispanic, white females in The Penn State Young Womens Health Study, who were studied for 8 years during ages 12-20. INTERVENTION(S) There were 28 OCP users, who used OCPs for a minimum of 6 months and were still using at age 20, and 34 nonusers who had never used OCPs. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Total body bone, dedicated hip bone, and body composition measurements were made by dual-energy roentgenogram absorptiometry. RESULT(S) The OCP users and nonusers did not differ at entry in anthropometric, body composition, or total body bone measurements. By age 20, the average duration of OCP use by the user group was 22 months. At age 20, the groups remained indistinguishable in anthropometric, body composition, total body, and hip bone measures, and in age of menarche and sports exercise scores. CONCLUSION(S) Oral contraceptive pill use by healthy, white, teenage females does not affect acquisition of peak bone mass.


Seminars in Nuclear Medicine | 1993

Scintigraphic evaluation of pediatric urinary tract infection

Douglas F. Eggli; Mark Tulchinsky

Scintigraphic evaluation of urinary tract infection, pyelonephritis, and renal scarring represents a significant portion of a clinical pediatric nuclear medicine practice. Renal scarring from recurring infection remains an important cause of end-stage renal disease and hypertension in the pediatric population. However, the clinical presentation in infants and young children is often elusive, and clinical diagnosis of upper tract involvement is frequently unreliable. As a result, diagnostic imaging has a critical role to play in the localization of infection to the lower or upper urinary tract. Radionuclide cystography and renal cortical imaging have become mainstays of this evaluation. Direct radionuclide cystography is the preferred cystographic screening technique, because it has lower radiation exposure and greater sensitivity for the detection of vesicoureteral reflux than either indirect radionuclide cystography or fluoroscopic contrast cystography. Renal cortical scintigraphy has become the standard for the detection of pyelonephritis and renal scarring. Correlation with histopathology has demonstrated a high degree of diagnostic accuracy. Acute pyelonephritis has been shown to be the necessary etiologic factor for the development of subsequent renal scarring, and the mechanism of renal injury in pyelonephritis has been extensively studied in experimental models. The ability of prompt and appropriate antibiotic therapy to dramatically reduce the incidence of subsequent scarring also has been conclusively demonstrated both clinically and in the experimental model. Vesicoureteral reflux was once thought to be a necessary prerequisite for the development of renal scarring. Although it is clear that the intrarenal reflux of infected urine will create pyelonephritis in the experimental model, the high incidence of pyelonephritis and subsequent scarring in the absence of demonstrable vesicoureteral reflux leaves the role of reflux in question. Although the role of vesicoureteral reflux is incompletely understood, its detection nevertheless remains a standard part of the patients evaluation.


Pediatric Radiology | 1992

Color Doppler sonography in pyelonephritis

Kathleen D. Eggli; Douglas F. Eggli

Renal sonography detects abnormality in only 40% of pediatric pyelonephritis. In eight patients shown to have acute pyelonephritis by99mTc DMSA renal cortical scintigraphy, five were found to have focal abnormalities of renal perfusion by color Doppler sonography in the same sites as the scintigraphic defects (sensitivity-63%). Two of the five patients had normal plain sonograms. False positive studies occurred in patients with documented chronic renal scarring. The specificity of vascular asymmetry was 70%. This preliminary report suggests that, particularly in the patient without pre-existing renal scarring, color Doppler evaluation of the renal vasculature may increase the sensitivity of sonography in the diagnosis of pyelonephritis in children.


Journal of The American College of Nutrition | 2000

Bone status among postmenopausal women with different habitual caffeine intakes: a longitudinal investigation.

Tom Lloyd; Nan Johnson-Rollings; Douglas F. Eggli; Kessey Kieselhorst; Elizabeth A. Mauger; Deborah Cardamone Cusatis

Objective: Caffeine consumption has been proposed as a risk factor for bone loss in postmenopausal women. Past epidemiologic studies on caffeine and bone have been confounded by covariates including cigarette and alcohol use, differing levels of physical activity and hormone replacement therapy. The purpose of the study was to use a longitudinal design to determine the relationship between habitual dietary caffeine intake and postmenopausal bone status. Methods: Data were collected at two time points separated by two years; 138 women with little or no exposure to tobacco or to drugs known to affect bone status were seen at Visit 1, and 112 returned for Visit 2. Ninety-two of these subjects had received no drugs known to affect bone status over the two-year interval and were kept in the sample. Nutrient and caffeine intake were assessed from three-day diet records. Bone measurements were made by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Results: Correlation analyses indicated no association between dietary caffeine intake and total body or femoral neck bone density or bone mass. Similarly, no associations were found between caffeine consumption and longitudinal changes in total body or femoral neck bone measurements. These results held true both with and without statistical adjustment for calcium intake. Conclusions: This study does not support the idea that caffeine is a risk factor for bone loss in healthy postmenopausal women.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1991

Simultaneous esophageal pH monitoring and scintigraphy during the postprandial period in patients with severe reflux esophagitis

Steven S. Shay; Douglas F. Eggli; Lawrence F. Johnson

To compare reflux events detected by intraesophageal pH monitoring with that of scintigraphy, we simultaneously performed both techniques along with esophageal manometry in nine patients with severe reflux esophagitis. Two hundred eighteen reflux events were detected in the recumbent posture after a meal during a 40-min interval. Both techniques simultaneously detected only 23% of all reflux events. Scintigraphy alone detected 61% of all reflux events as opposed to 16% for pH monitoring. Of those reflux events diagnosed only by scintigraphy, more occurred while the intraesophageal pH was <4 (ie, during an acid-clearing interval) than while the intraesophageal pH was >4 (ie, when intragastric contents were neutralized by the meal). Most reflux events occurred during periods of stable, but low LES pressure. While reflux events diagnosed by scintigraphy significantly decreased during the second of two 20-min postprandial intervals, those by pH monitoring tended to increase. That simultaneous scintigraphy and pH monitoring agreed on less than 1/3 of all reflux events not only underscores the fact that both techniques measured different physical components of the esophageal refluxate (ie, volume vs acid concentration, respectively), but also were influenced by different physiologic events such as the ingestion of a meal, gastric emptying, and esophageal acid clearance.


The Journal of Urology | 1988

Delayed management of neonatal hydronephrosis.

Stephen W. Dejter; Douglas F. Eggli; M. David Gibbons

There is healthy debate over the management and timing of surgical reconstruction in the neonate with hydronephrosis. We have seen 23 neonates (35 renal units) with antenatal or neonatal hydronephrosis secondary to ureteropelvic junction obstruction or megaureter since 1984. All renal units with postnatally confirmed hydronephrosis (78 per cent) were studied initially and serially with diuretic 99mtechnetium-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid renography and entered into a delayed management protocol. A total of 23 renal units followed for an average of 7 months before any surgical procedures were done demonstrated maturation of renal function. Of these cases 9 obstructed renal units (half-time greater than 20 minutes) underwent delayed reconstruction (6 with ureteropelvic junction obstruction and 3 with megaureter) at an average patient age of 6 months. In this group there was no compromise in renal function nor were any complications encountered. Two units with initially obstructive patterns on renography demonstrated improved drainage and have not required an operation to date. Twelve renal units with indeterminant (half-time 10 to 20 minutes) and nonobstructive (half-time less than 10 minutes) half-times also showed stable, maturing renal function. Delayed reconstruction in the neonate with ureteropelvic junction or megaureter obstruction and normal diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid function is safe. In addition, a period of observation may obviate the need for an operation in some cases when ureteropelvic junction stabilization results in improved drainage. These as well as the added benefits of diminished anesthetic risk, enhanced technical ease, noninterrupted maternal-infant bonding and lower operative complication rate make this approach desirable in properly selected patients.

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Tom Lloyd

Pennsylvania State University

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Mark Tulchinsky

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Kessey Kieselhorst

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Nan Rollings

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Howard E. Kulin

Pennsylvania State University

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Kenneth L. Miller

Pennsylvania State University

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Laurence M. Demers

Pennsylvania State University

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Juliann K. Martel

Pennsylvania State University

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Kathleen D. Eggli

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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William C. Dodson

Pennsylvania State University

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