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Dive into the research topics where Susan H. Ballinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan H. Ballinger.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999

Development of validated disease activity and damage indices for the juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: II. The childhood myositis assessment scale (CMAS): a quantitative tool for the evaluation of muscle function

Daniel J. Lovell; Carol B. Lindsley; Robert M. Rennebohm; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Edward H. Giannini; Jeanne E. Hicks; Joseph E. Levinson; Richard J. Mier; Lauren M. Pachman; Murray H. Passo; Maria D. Perez; Ann M. Reed; Kenneth N. Schikler; Michaele Smith; Lawrence S. Zemel; Lisa G. Rider

OBJECTIVE To develop, validate, and determine the measurement characteristics of a quantitative tool for assessing the severity of muscle involvement in children with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. METHODS The Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale (CMAS) was developed from 2 existing observational functional assessment tools to assess muscle function in the areas of strength and endurance across a wide range of ability and ages. The 14 ordinal items included were chosen to assess primarily axial and proximal muscle groups and are ranked with standard performance and scoring methods. Following the development of the CMAS, a training video and written instructions were developed and reviewed by the physicians participating in this study. Subsequently, utilizing a randomized block design, 12 physicians independently scored 10 children (9 with dermatomyositis, 1 with polymyositis; ages 4-15 years) twice in one day (morning and afternoon) on the CMAS. A pediatric physical therapist performed quantitative manual muscle strength testing (MMT) twice on each child (morning and afternoon), including the neck, trunk, and proximal and distal extremity muscle groups. RESULTS The CMAS has a potential range of 0-51, with higher scores indicating greater muscle strength and endurance. The observed mean for the 10 patients was 36.4 (median 44, SD 14.1, observed range 5-51). The total score for the CMAS correlated with the physicians global assessment (by visual analog scale) of disease activity, the MMT score, serum creatine kinase level, and the Juvenile Arthritis Functional Assessment Report score. The score on the CMAS was not correlated with patient age. Interrater reliability (Kendalls coefficient of concordance) ranged from 0.77 to 1.0 for individual items (all P < 0.001), and overall, it was 0.95 (P < 0.001). Intrarater reliability for the individual physicians was measured by correlation of the CMAS scores for each patient on 2 separate evaluations and ranged from 0.97 to 0.99, with an overall correlation for all physicians of 0.98 (all P < 0.001). CONCLUSION The CMAS demonstrated an acceptable range of observed scores, excellent convergent validity, and excellent inter- and intrarater reliability. The CMAS is validated to quantitatively assess muscle function in the areas of strength and endurance in children with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. It can be used in routine clinical care as well as therapeutic trials.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1997

Development of validated disease activity and damage indices for the juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: I. Physician, parent, and patient global assessments. Juvenile Dermatomyositis Disease Activity Collaborative Study Group.

Lisa G. Rider; Brian M. Feldman; Perez; Robert M. Rennebohm; Carol B. Lindsley; Lawrence S. Zemel; Carol A. Wallace; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Ann M. Reed; Murray H. Passo; Ildy M. Katona; F. W. Miller; Peter A. Lachenbruch

OBJECTIVE To determine the reliability, content validity, and responsiveness of physician global assessments of disease activity and damage in the juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM), and to investigate concordance among physician, parent, and patient global ratings. METHODS Sixteen pediatric rheumatologists rated 10 juvenile IIM paper patient cases for global disease activity and damage, and assessed the importance of 51 clinical and laboratory parameters in formulating their global assessments. Then, 117 juvenile IIM patients were enrolled in a protocol to examine the relationship between Likert and visual analog scale global assessments, their sensitivity to change, and the comparability of physician, parent, and patient global ratings. RESULTS Pediatric rheumatologists demonstrated excellent interrater reliability in their global assessments of juvenile IIM disease activity and damage (97.7% and 94.7% agreement among raters, respectively), and agreed on a core set of clinical parameters in formulating their judgments. Likert scale ratings correlated with those on a visual analog scale, and both were comparable in responsiveness (standardized response means -0.56 for disease activity, 0.02 [Likert] and 0.14 [visual analog] for damage, measured over 8 months). Parent global ratings of disease activity correlated with physician assessments, but were not colinear (Spearmans correlation [r] = 0.41-0.45). Patient global disease activity assessments correlated with those done by parents (r = 0.57-0.84) and physicians (r = 0.37-0.63), but demonstrated less responsiveness (standardized response means -0.21 and -0.12, respectively, over 8 months). CONCLUSION Physician global assessments of juvenile IIM disease activity and damage demonstrated high interrater reliability and were shown to be comprehensive measures. Both physician and parent disease activity assessments should be considered valuable as quantitative measures for evaluating therapeutic responses in juvenile IIM patients.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2008

Preliminary validation and clinical meaning of the cutaneous assessment tool in juvenile dermatomyositis

Adam M. Huber; Elizabeth M. Dugan; Peter A. Lachenbruch; Brian M. Feldman; Maria D. Perez; Lawrence S. Zemel; Carol B. Lindsley; Robert M. Rennebohm; Carol A. Wallace; Murray H. Passo; Ann M. Reed; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Susan H. Ballinger; Frederick W. Miller; Lisa G. Rider

OBJECTIVE To provide preliminary validation of the Cutaneous Assessment Tool (CAT), a new tool to assess cutaneous manifestations of juvenile dermatomyositis (DM), and to explore the clinical meaning of CAT scores. METHODS Children with juvenile DM (n = 113) were assessed at baseline and 7-9 months later (n = 94). Internal consistency, redundancy, construct validity, and responsiveness of the CAT were examined. CAT scores corresponding to ordinal global assessments were determined. RESULTS Item-total correlations ranged from 0.27-0.67 for activity lesions present in > or =10% of patients; item-domain and domain-total correlations ranged from 0.25-0.99. Cronbachs alpha was 0.79 for the CAT activity score and 0.74 for the CAT damage score. As predicted, the CAT activity score correlated strongly with both global disease activity and skin disease activity and moderately with the Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale, whereas the CAT damage score correlated moderately with the physician global disease and skin disease damage scores. Median CAT activity scores of 1, 7, 13, 18, and 31 corresponded to absent, mild, moderate, severe, and extremely severe skin disease activity, respectively. Median CAT damage scores of 0, 1, 2, and 5 correlated with the same descriptions of damage (severe and extremely severe combined). CONCLUSION Preliminary validation of the CAT demonstrated good internal consistency, nonredundancy, good construct validity, and appropriate responsiveness. The CAT is a comprehensive, semiquantitative assessment tool for skin disease in juvenile DM.


Jcr-journal of Clinical Rheumatology | 2001

Current medication choices in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis II--update of a survey performed in 1993.

Hermine I. Brunner; Kwan N. Kim; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Thomas A. Griffin; Gloria C. Higgins; Richard J. Mier; Murray H. Passo; Robert M. Rennebohm; Kenneth N. Schikler; Daniel J. Lovell

The documentation of treatments used for Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis (JRA) is important to allow for the evaluation of practice patterns for future outcome studies. A survey of nine pediatric rheumatologists was performed between September 1999 and February 2000. Each of the physicians prospectively recorded demographic and treatment information on consecutively sampled JRA patients (n=395). Pauciarticular onset JRA was present in 46%, polyarticular onset JRA in 35%, and systemic onset JRA in 19% of the children. Naproxen was the most frequently prescribed medication (55% of the patients), followed by methotrexate (MTX), which was used in 39% of the patients. Folic acid supplementation (1 mg/day) was provided to 69% of the patients treated with MTX. Etanercept was used in 11% of the children. Eleven percent of the patients received corticosteroids, and 13% of children on corticosteroids took calcium supplements. Uveitis was present in 8% and had a chronic course in 79% of those cases. Although systemic medications were used in 50% of the children with uveitis to control eye inflammation, severe damage to the eyes developed in 30% of them. Fourteen percent of the patients required gastroprotective medications. Compared with findings of a similar survey performed in 1993, there was no significant change in the frequency of use of naproxen, but nabumetone is now more often prescribed, and COX-2 inhibitors have been introduced in the therapy of JRA. Changes among second-line agents used for JRA have also occurred, although there was no change in the frequency of use of MTX or corticosteroids. JRA continues to be a treatment challenge for the practicing pediatric rheumatologist. Patients often show incomplete response to the currently available medications. Therefore, new therapeutic agents need to be evaluated for their use in JRA, and the treatment of JRA associated uveitis especially needs to be improved.


International Ophthalmology | 2011

Acute pulmonary histoplasmosis in a patient with uveitis after infliximab therapy

Lik Thai Lim; Nargiz Ruzmetova; Susan H. Ballinger; Ramana S. Moorthy

The purpose of this study is to report a case of disseminated histoplasmosis in a patient with uveitis, after treatment with infliximab. The method employed in this study is single case report. Infliximab can be useful in controlling idiopathic uveitis, but can give rise to disseminated histoplamosis, especially in patients living in geographic areas where histoplasmosis is endemic. Clinicians should be aware of the possibility of rapid onset histoplasmosis in patients receiving anti-tumor necrosis factor agents. In such cases, these agents should be immediately stopped, investigations performed, and appropriate treatment started.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2004

Validation and clinical significance of the Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale for assessment of muscle function in the juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies

Adam M. Huber; Brian M. Feldman; Robert M. Rennebohm; Jeanne E. Hicks; Carol B. Lindsley; Maria D. Perez; Lawrence S. Zemel; Carol A. Wallace; Susan H. Ballinger; Murray H. Passo; Ann M. Reed; Ronald M. Summers; Patience H. White; Ildy M. Katona; Frederick W. Miller; Peter A. Lachenbruch; Lisa G. Rider


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2001

Validation of the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire in the juvenile idiopathic myopathies. Juvenile Dermatomyositis Disease Activity Collaborative Study Group.

Adam M. Huber; Jeanne E. Hicks; Peter A. Lachenbruch; Maria D. Perez; Lawrence S. Zemel; Robert M. Rennebohm; Carol A. Wallace; Carol B. Lindsley; Murray H. Passo; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Ann M. Reed; Patience H. White; Ildy M. Katona; Fredrick W. Miller; Lisa G. Rider; Brian M. Feldman


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1997

Development of validated disease activity and damage indices for the juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. I. Physician, parent, and patient global assessments

Lisa G. Rider; Brian M. Feldman; Maria D. Perez; Robert M. Rennebohm; Carol B. Lindsley; Lawrence S. Zemel; Carol A. Wallace; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Ann M. Reed; Murray H. Passo; Ildy M. Katona; Frederick W. Miller; Peter A. Lachenbruch


Pediatric Radiology | 2007

US findings of metacarpophalangeal joints in children with idiopathic juvenile arthritis

Boaz Karmazyn; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Kara Murphy Schmidt; Susan H. Ballinger; Kenneth A. Buckwalter; Thuy T. Beam; Jun Ying


Arthritis Care and Research | 2004

Normal scores for nine maneuvers of the Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale

Robert M. Rennebohm; Karla Jones; Adam M. Huber; Susan H. Ballinger; Suzanne L. Bowyer; Brian M. Feldman; Jeanne E. Hicks; Ildy M. Katona; Carol B. Lindsley; Frederick W. Miller; Murray H. Passo; Maria D. Perez; Ann M. Reed; Carol A. Wallace; Patience H. White; Lawrence S. Zemel; Peter A. Lachenbruch; John R. Hayes; Lisa G. Rider

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Murray H. Passo

Medical University of South Carolina

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Lisa G. Rider

National Institutes of Health

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Maria D. Perez

Baylor College of Medicine

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