Joseph Terdiman
Kaiser Permanente
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Featured researches published by Joseph Terdiman.
Pm&r | 2009
M. Elizabeth Sandel; Hua Wang; Joseph Terdiman; Jeanne M. Hoffman; Marcia A. Ciol; Steven Sidney; Charles P. Quesenberry; Qi Lu; Leighton Chan
To determine whether there are disparities in postacute stroke rehabilitation based on type of stroke, race/ethnicity, sex/gender, age, socioeconomic status, geographic region, or service area referral patterns in a large integrated health system with multiple levels of care.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1993
Steven M. Snyder; Joseph Terdiman; Bette J. Caan; Kenneth R. Feingold; Susan T. Hubl; Richard S. Smith; Stephen G. Young
PURPOSE Persons with total cholesterol (TC) levels less than 130 mg/dL (less than 3.26 mmol/L) make up less than 1% of a healthy population. Causes of hypocholesterolemia include a diet very low in cholesterol and saturated fat, disease, genetic factors (including low apolipoprotein B-100 [apo B-100] and the apo E allele), and drug therapy. The purpose of this study was to determine the causes of hypocholesterolemia in a healthy Kaiser Foundation Health Plan (KFHP) population. PATIENTS AND METHODS We conducted a dietary and health survey of 201 healthy hypocholesterolemic adults (range: 2.04 to 3.88 mmol/L [79 to 150 mg/dL]) and 200 matched control subjects with TC levels in the middle quintile of the population (range: 5.0 to 5.61 mmol/L [194 to 217 mg/dL]) who had routine health screening from 1983 through 1985. We did apo E phenotyping studies and lipid and apo A-1 and B-100 measurements in a subgroup of 45 hypocholesterolemic subjects (mean TC level: 3.26 mmol/L [126 mg/dL]) and in a comparison group of 49 unmatched volunteers (mean TC level: 5.04 +/- 0.75 mmol/L [195 +/- 29 mg/dL]). RESULTS We found no differences in dietary intake or clinically significant medical illness between hypocholesterolemic and control subjects. In the hypocholesterolemic subgroup, we found an increased frequency of the apo E2 allele (epsilon 2) and a decreased frequency of the apo E4 allele (epsilon 4); the frequencies of the epsilon 2, epsilon 3, and epsilon 4 alleles were 33.3%, 63.3%, and 3.3%, respectively. The corresponding apo E allele frequencies in the comparison subgroup were 8.2%, 73.5%, and 18.4%, similar to those previously reported for the general population and significantly different from those found in the hypocholesterolemic subgroup (p < 0.0001). One hypocholesterolemic subject (a 46th patient) had a mutation in the apo B gene that resulted in the synthesis of a truncated species of apo B (apo B-46). CONCLUSION Our study indicates that hypocholesterolemia in our KFHP urban population is usually not caused by diet or disease. Biochemical factors, including the increased frequency of the apo E-2 phenotype and the decreased frequency of the apo E-4 phenotype, are more important.
Pm&r | 2013
Hua Wang; Michelle Camicia; Joseph Terdiman; Murali K. Mannava; Stephen Sidney; M. Elizabeth Sandel
To study the effects of daily treatment time on functional gain of patients who have had a stroke.
Medical Imaging 1997: PACS Design and Evaluation: Engineering and Clinical Issues | 1997
Mary R. Thompson; William E. Johnston; Jin Guojun; Jason Lee; Brian Tierney; Joseph Terdiman
We have developed an ATM network-based system to collect and catalogue cardio-angiogram videos from the source at a Kaiser central facility and make them available for viewing by doctors at primary care Kaiser facilities. This an example of the general problem of diagnostic data being generated at tertiary facilities, while the images, or other large data objects they produce, need to be used from a variety of other locations such as doctors offices or local hospitals. We describe the use of a highly distributed computing and storage architecture to provide all aspects of collecting, storing, analyzing, and accessing such large data-objects in a metropolitan area ATM network. Our large data-object management system provides network interface between the object sources, the data management system and the user of the data. As the data is being stored, a cataloguing system automatically creates and stores condensed versions of the data, textural metadata and pointers to the original data. The catalogue system provides a Web-based graphical interface to the data. The user is able the view the low-resolution data with a standard Internet connection and Web browser. If high-resolution is required, a high-speed connection and special application programs can be used to view the high-resolution original data.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989
Stephen G. Young; Susan T. Hubl; David A. Chappell; Richard S. Smith; Frederica Claiborne; Steven M. Snyder; Joseph Terdiman
Archive | 2005
Enid M. Hunkeler; Joseph Terdiman
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2013
Leighton Chan; M. Elizabeth Sandel; Alan M. Jette; Jed Appelman; Diane E. Brandt; Pengfei Cheng; Marian TeSelle; Richard L. Delmonico; Joseph Terdiman; Elizabeth K. Rasch
Psychiatric Services | 2012
Enid M. Hunkeler; William A. Hargreaves; Bruce Fireman; Joseph Terdiman; Joel F. Meresman; Yvonnne Porterfield; Janelle Lee; Robin Dea; Gregory E. Simon; Mark S. Bauer; Jürgen Unützer; C. Barr Taylor
Archive | 2005
Enid M. Hunkeler; Joseph Terdiman
Stroke | 2012
Alan M. Jette; Pengsheng Ni; Elizabeth K. Rasch; Jed Appelman; M. Elizabeth Sandel; Joseph Terdiman; Leighton Chan