Fung Yee Chan
University of Queensland
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fung Yee Chan.
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2009
Robert Cincotta; Peter H. Gray; Glenn Gardener; Barbara Soong; Fung Yee Chan
Aims: To report the perinatal outcomes of a large series of twin pregnancies with severe twin–twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) managed with laser ablation surgery in an Australian tertiary perinatal centre and to compare the outcome with other large cohorts.
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2001
Fung Yee Chan; Barbara Soong; David Watson; John Whitehall
We have established a realtime fetal tele-ultrasound consultation service in Queensland, which has been integrated into our routine clinical practice. The service, which uses ISDN transmission at 384 kbit/s, allows patients in Townsville to be examined by subspecialists in Brisbane, 1500 km away. For the 90 tele-ultrasound consultations performed for the first 71 patients, 90% of the babies have been delivered, and outcome data have been received on all the pregnancies. All significant anomalies and diagnoses have been confirmed. The referring clinicians would have physically referred 24 of the 71 patients to Brisbane in the absence of telemedicine. A crude cost–benefit calculation suggests that the tele-ultrasound service resulted in a net saving of A
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 1999
Fung Yee Chan; J Whitehall; L Hayes; A Taylor; B Soong; K Lessing; R Cincotta; D Cooper; M Stone; A Lee-Tannock; S Baker; M Smith; E Green; R Whiting
6340, and at the same time enabled almost four times the number of consultations to be carried out.
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2003
S. F. Wong; Fung Yee Chan; Robert Cincotta; David McIntyre; Murray Stone
We studied the transmission bandwidth required for accurate diagnoses when performing realtime fetal tele-ultrasound consultations. The study was divided into three phases. In phase I, three experienced clinicians evaluated the quality of ultrasound images transmitted at various bandwidths (internally looped back within Brisbane) using eight commercially available codecs at random. The two codecs that performed best proceeded to phase 2, in which a realtime video-link of up to 2Mbit/s was set up between Brisbane and Townsville (1500 km apart). Testing with a standard video-tape was performed at seven different bandwidths selected at random, with four clinicians (who were blinded to the equipment and bandwidths used). The optimum line rates for transmission were determined, and testing was then performed using these line rates for fetuses with various anomalies (phase 3). The results showed significant differences in performance according to bandwidths used, but not according to observers. Bandwidths were grouped into three levels. At level I (256 kbit/s) the performance was significantly worse than at level II (384, 512 or 768 kbit/s), which was in turn worse than that at level III (1, 1.5 or 2Mbit/s). However, within each level, performance at one bandwidth was not significantly different from that at the others. The most cost-effective transmission rates therefore appeared to be 384kbit/s and 1Mbit/s. Further testing with fetuses affected by various anomalies confirmed that the majority could be diagnosed using a 384 kbit/s link, with slight improvement in evaluation when the bandwidth was increased to 1 Mbit/s.
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2007
S. F. Wong; C. Ward; A. Lee-Tannock; S. Le; Fung Yee Chan
Background: The usefulness of umbilical artery Doppler velocimetry for the monitoring of diabetic pregnancies is controversial. The aim of the present study was to assess whether umbilical artery Doppler velocity waveform analysis can predict adverse perinatal outcomes for pregnancies complicated by pre‐existing diabetes mellitus.
Twin Research and Human Genetics | 2006
Peter H. Gray; Robert Cincotta; Fung Yee Chan; Barbara Soong
Congenital heart disease is associated with high mortality and morbidity rates, being the most life‐threatening defect in the first month of postnatal life and accounting for approximately half of all childhood mortality from birth defects. Despite this, the prenatal detection rate for congenital outflow tract anomalies by ultrasound imaging is relatively low. The aim of this study was to establish a nomogram for the pulmonary artery/aorta (PA/AO) ratio measured in the three‐vessel view plane. This ratio was investigated as a simple screening tool for congenital cardiac outflow tract abnormalities.
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2001
S. F. Wong; Fung Yee Chan; Robert Cincotta; Jeremy Oats; Hd Mclntyre
The aim of this tertiary hospital-based cohort study was to determine and compare perinatal outcome and neonatal morbidities of pregnancies with twin-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) before and after the introduction of a treatment program with laser ablation of placental communicating vessels. Twenty-seven pregnancies with Stage II-IV TTTS treated with amnioreduction were identified (amnioreduction group). The data were compared with that obtained from the first 31 pregnancies with Stage II-IV TTTS managed with laser ablation of placental communicating vessels (laser group). Comparisons were made for perinatal survival and neonatal morbidities including abnormalities on brain imaging. The median gestation at therapy was similar between the two groups (20 vs. 21 weeks, p = .24), while the median gestation at delivery was significantly greater in the laser treated group (34 vs. 28 weeks, p = .002). The perinatal survival rate was higher in the laser group (77.4% vs. 59.3%, p = .03). Neonatal morbidities including acute respiratory distress, chronic lung disease, requirement for ventilatory assistance, patent ductus arteriosus, hypotension, and oliguric renal failure had a lower incidence in the laser group. On brain imaging, ischemic brain injury was seen in 12% of the amnioreduction group and none of the laser group of infants (p = .01). In conclusion, these findings indicate that perinatal outcomes are improved with less neonatal morbidity for monochorionic pregnancies with severe TTTS treated by laser ablation of communicating placental vessels when compared to treatment by amnioreduction.
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 2006
Scott Pain; Allan Chang; Vicki Flenady; Fung Yee Chan
The objective of this study is to compare the accuracy of sonographic estimation of fetal weight of maerosomic babies in diabetic vs non‐diabetic pregnancies. All babies weighing 4000 g or more at birth, and who had ultrasound scans performed within one week of delivery were included in this retrospective study. Pregnancies with diabetes mellitus were compared to those without diabetes mellitus. The mean simple error (actual birthweight ‐ estimated fetal weight); mean standardised absolute error (absolute value of simple error (g)/actual birthweight (kg)); and the percentage of estimated birthweight falling within 15% of the actual birthweight between the two groups were compared.
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2002
Fung Yee Chan; A Taylor; B Soong; B Martin; J Clark; P Timothy; A. Lee-Tannock; L Begg; Robert Cincotta; Richard Wootton
Background: Published birthweight references in Australia do not fully take into account constitutional factors that influence birthweight and therefore may not provide an accurate reference to identify the infant with abnormal growth. Furthermore, studies in other regions that have derived adjusted (customised) birthweight references have applied untested assumptions in the statistical modelling.
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2007
Fung Yee Chan
We compared the quality of realtime fetal ultrasound images transmitted using ISDN and IP networks. Four experienced obstetric ultrasound specialists viewed standard recordings in a randomized trial and rated the appearance of 30 fetal anatomical landmarks, each on a seven-point scale. A total of 12 evaluations were performed for various combinations of bandwidths (128, 384 or 768 kbit/s) and networks (ISDN or IP). The intraobserver coefficient of variation was 2.9%, 5.0%, 12.7% and 14.7% for the four observers. The mean overall ratings by each of the four observers were 4.6, 4.8, 5.0 and 5.3, respectively (a rating of 4 indicated satisfactory visualization and 7 indicated as good as the original recording). Analysis of variance showed that there were no significant interobserver variations nor significant differences in the mean scores for the different types of videoconferencing machines used. The most significant variable affecting the mean score was the bandwidth used. For ISDN, the mean score was 3.7 at 128 kbit/s, which was significantly worse than the mean score of 4.9 at 384 kbit/s, which was in turn significantly worse than the mean score of 5.9 at 768 kbit/s. The mean score for transmission using IP was about 0.5 points lower than that using ISDN across all the different bandwidths, but the differences were not significant. It appears that IP transmission in a private (non-shared) network is an acceptable alternative to ISDN for fetal tele-ultrasound and one deserving further study.