Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Timothy A. DeRouen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Timothy A. DeRouen.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

A cohort study of the risk of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 in relation to papillomavirus infection.

Laura A. Koutsky; King K. Holmes; Cathy W. Critchlow; Claire E. Stevens; Jorma Paavonen; Anna Marie Beckmann; Timothy A. DeRouen; Denise A. Galloway; Debra Vernon; Nancy B. Kiviat

Abstract Background. Human papillomavirus (HPV) has been associated with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, but the temporal relation between the infection and the neoplasia remains unclear, as does the relative importance of the specific type of HPV, other sexually transmitted diseases, and other risk factors. Methods. We studied prospectively a cohort of 241 women who presented for evaluation of sexually transmitted disease and had negative cervical cytologic tests. The women were followed every four months with cytologic and colposcopic examinations of the uterine cervix and tests for HPV DNA and other sexually transmitted diseases. Results. Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or 3 was confirmed by biopsy in 28 women. On the basis of survival analysis, the cumulative incidence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia at two years was 28 percent among women with a positive test for HPV and 3 percent among those without detectable HPV DNA. The risk was highest among those with HPV type 16 or 18 infe...


Circulation | 1979

Variables predictive of survival in patients with coronary disease. Selection by univariate and multivariate analyses from the clinical, electrocardiographic, exercise, arteriographic, and quantitative angiographic evaluations.

K E Hammermeister; Timothy A. DeRouen; Harold T. Dodge

A progression of univariate followed by multivariate analyses was applied to 46 variables selected from the clinical examination, exercise test, coronary arteriography, and quantitative angiographic assessment of left ventricular function in patients with coronary disease to determine those variables most predictive of survival. For the 733 medically treated patients, the final Coxs regression analysis showed that the left ventricular ejection fraction was most predictive of survival, followed by age, number of vessels with stenosis(es) greater than or equal to 70%, and ventricular arrhythmia on the resting electrocardiogram. For the 1870 surgically treated patients, ventricular arrhythmia on the resting electrocardiogram was most predictive of survival followed by ejection fraction, heart murmur, left main coronary artery stenosis greater than or equal to 50%, and use of diuretic agents.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988

Diagnosis and clinical manifestations of bacterial vaginosis

David A. Eschenbach; Sharon L. Hillier; Cathy W. Critchlow; Claire E. Stevens; Timothy A. DeRouen; King K. Holmes

Among 640 randomly selected women who were attending a sexually transmitted disease clinic and did not have trichomoniasis, 33% had bacterial vaginosis as defined by a composite of four clinical criteria: (1) Vaginal discharge was homogeneous; (2) vaginal discharge had a pH greater than or equal to 4.7; (3) vaginal discharge had an amine-like odor when mixed with 10% potassium hydroxide; (4) vaginal discharge contained clue cells representing greater than or equal to 20% of vaginal epithelial cells. Previously published Gram stain criteria for bacterial vaginosis correlated better than results of semiquantitative cultures for Gardnerella vaginalis with presence or absence of clue cells and with composite clinical criteria. Of 293 women with bacterial vaginosis by Gram stain criteria, 65% had symptoms of increased vaginal discharge and/or vaginal malodor, while 74% had signs of characteristic homogeneous vaginal discharge or amine-like odor. Elevated vaginal pH was the least specific and amine-like odor the least sensitive sign of bacterial vaginosis. Gram stain criteria for bacterial vaginosis were not associated with the concentrations of endocervical or vaginal inflammatory cells but were significantly associated with a clinical diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease. After adjusting for coinfection, sexual behavior, and other variables, bacterial vaginosis remained associated with adnexal tenderness (odds ratio = 9.2, p = 0.04). Bacterial vaginosis, previously implicated as a risk factor for obstetric infections, may be a risk factor for pelvic inflammatory disease.


Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry | 1990

Assessing clinical signs of temporomandibular disorders: Reliability of clinical examiners

Samuel F. Dworkin; Linda LeResche; Timothy A. DeRouen; Michael Von Korff

Data on interrater reliability in assessing a number of clinical signs commonly evaluated in the diagnosis and treatment of temporomandibular disorders (TMD) is presented in this article. Four experienced dental hygienists who were field examiners for a large epidemiologic study of TMD and three experienced clinical TMD specialists (dentists) who are coinvestigators in the same study followed carefully detailed specifications and criteria for examination of TMD patients and pain-free controls. Excellent reliability was found for vertical range of motion measures and for summary indices measuring the overall presence of a clinical sign that could arise from several sources (for example, summary indices of muscle palpation pain). However, many clinical signs important in the differential diagnosis of subtypes of TMD were not measured with high reliability. In particular, assessment of pain in response to muscle palpation and identification of specific temporomandibular joint sounds seemed to be possible only with modest, sometimes marginal, reliability. These modest reliabilities could arise from examiner error because the clinical signs are themselves unreliable, changing spontaneously over time and making it difficult to find the same sign on successive examinations. The finding that, without calibration, experienced clinicians showed low reliability with other clinicians suggests the importance of establishing reliable clinical standards for the examination and diagnostic classification of TMD.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1980

Value of maximal exercise tests in risk assessment of primary coronary heart disease events in healthy men: Five years' experience of the seattle heart watch study☆

Robert A. Bruce; Timothy A. DeRouen; Kenneth F. Hossack; Barbara Blake; Verona Hofer

Abstract Of 2,365 clinically healthy men who participated in the exercise testing unit of the Seattle Heart Watch, follow-up by annual mail questionnaires identified 47 persons (2 percent) who experienced primary coronary heart disease events. The mean follow-up period (± standard deviation) was 5.6 ±1.4 years. The rates of such events was higher in men 55 or more years of age than in the younger men. A count of the conventional risk factors identified at the time of initial examination was associated with increased 5 year probability of primary coronary heart disease events. However, univariate analysis of the individual risk factors (positive family history, hypertension, smoking, hypercholesterolemia) did not show a significant increase in 5 year probability. Four variables obtained from the response to symptom-limited maximal exercise testing were significantly associated with subsequent primary coronary heart disease events. These predictors were chest pain during maximal exertion, duration of exercise less than 6 minutes with the Bruce protocol, failure to attain at least 90 percent of the age-predicted maximal heart rate and ischemie S-T segment depression. When the conventional risk factors and the exercise predictors are both considered in asymptomatic men, maximal exercise testing identified a small group (1 percent of the total population) who had the highest 5 year probability of primary coronary heart disease (0.33). This group had one or more conventional risk factors and two or more exercise predictors identified. The probability in those with conventional risk factors but with less than two exercise predictors was 0.015. Forty-one percent of the population had no risk factors and the 5 year probability in this group was 0.01. Exercise testing was of no predictive value in the latter group.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983

Enhanced risk assessment for primary coronary heart disease events by maximal exercise testing: 10 years' experience of Seattle heart watch

Robert A. Bruce; Kenneth F. Hossack; Timothy A. DeRouen; Verona Hofer

A 10 year prospective community practice study in Seattle of risk of primary morbidity (defined by hospital admission) and mortality due to coronary heart disease in 3,611 men and 547 women initially free of clinical manifestations of this disease revealed a crude incidence of 202 coronary heart disease events, or 4.9% in 6.1 +/- 2.6 years of follow-up. The case fatality rate was 16.8%. Stratification by clinical classification of asymptomatic healthy persons versus patients with atypical chest pain syndrome (not angina pectoris) and hypertension (as classified by physicians) showed an incidence rate of primary events due to coronary heart disease of 2.9, 5.5 (not significant) and 10.0% (p less than 0.001), respectively. Identification of conventional risk factors is known to be important for risk assessment. However, the presence of any conventional risk factor, in conjunction with two or more selected maximal exercise predictors (which vary with the clinical classification) at enrollment, substantially increased the cumulative 6 year incidence rate to 24.3, 15.5 and 33.3% in asymptomatic healthy men, patients with atypical chest pain syndrome and hypertensive patients, respectively. Observation of the exercise predictors in the absence of conventional risk factors increased the risk much less, suggesting that the use of maximal exercise testing for risk assessment in those with no clinical manifestations of disease might be limited to persons with one or more conventional risk factors.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1977

Noninvasive Predictors of Sudden Cardiac Death In Men With Coronary Heart Disease Predictive Value of Maximal Stress Testing

Robert A. Bruce; Timothy A. DeRouen; Donald R. Peterson; John B. Irving; Nina M. Chinn; Barbara Blake; Verona Hofer

In a follow-up study of 1,852 men with coronary heart disease, 195 deaths occurred within the first 3 years (33 +/- 13 months [mean +/- standard deviation]). Analysis of these cases indicated that the risk of sudden cardiac death in ambulatory men with clinical manifestations of coronary heart disease may be readily estimated from noninvasive clinical and exercise criteria. The important predictors are indexes of the severity of coronary heart disease and impairment of peak left ventricular function demonstrated with symptom-limited maximal exercise. The advantages of these predictors are that they may be elicited on the initial study as well as on follow-up noninvasive examinations of ambulatory patients. The appearance of nonelectrocardiographic predictors in serial examinations may provide an indication for invasive studies and be a more important finding than the ischemic S-T reponse to exertion.


Journal of Dental Research | 2002

Pre-existing Cardiovascular Disease and Periodontitis: A Follow-up Study

Philippe P. Hujoel; Mark Drangsholt; Charles Spiekerman; Timothy A. DeRouen

Periodontal infections in individuals with pre-existing heart disease are believed to increase the risk for future coronary heart disease (CHD) events. The goal of this study was to search for an association between periodontitis and CHD events among individuals with pre-existing heart disease, reported in the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey Epidemiologic Follow-up Study. Dentate adults (n = 636) with a history of pre-existing cardiovascular disease were followed for CHD events. The presence of periodontitis and gingivitis did not increase CHD risk among these at-risk individuals (hazard ratio [HR], 0.97, and 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72-1.31; and HR, 1.09, and 95% CI, 0.79-1.50, respectively). When limited to individuals with a self-reported prior heart attack, periodontitis was associated with a 34% decreased CHD risk (HR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.42-1.05). It is concluded that periodontitis or gingivitis does not elevate CHD risk among individuals with a prior heart attack or self-reported pre-existing cardiovascular disease.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 1988

Reliability of clinical measurement in temporomandibular disorders

Samuel F. Dworkin; Linda LeResche; Timothy A. DeRouen

SummaryThe ability to dependably measure clinical signs and symptoms is a minimum requirement for arriving at rational diagnoses and treatment plans for any health problem. This report examines interexaminer reliability as it applies to the measurement of signs and symptoms of temporomandibular diso


American Journal of Cardiology | 1977

Variations in and Significance of Systolic Pressure During Maximal Exercise (Treadmill) Testing Relation to Severity of Coronary Artery Disease and Cardiac Mortality

John B. Irving; Robert A. Bruce; Timothy A. DeRouen

Variations in clinical noninvasive systolic pressure at the point of symptom-limited exercise on a treadmill were examined in six groups of subjects: 5,459 men and 749 women classified into three categories each. Among the men, 2,532 were asymptomatic healthy, 592 were hypertensive and 1,586 had clinical manifestations of coronary heart disease (that is, typical angina pectoris, prior myocardial infarction or sudden cardiac arrest with resuscitation). Among the women, 244, 158 and 347 were in the corresponding clinical categories. None had had cardiac surgery; all had follow-up status ascertained by periodic mail questionnaires. Reported deaths were reviewed and classified by three cardiologists; 140 deaths were attributed to coronary heart disease, 118 of them in the men classified as having coronary heart disease. The majority of maximal systolic blood pressure readings were reported to the nearest centimeter rather than millimeter of pressure. Retesting of 156 persons from 1 to 32 months later showed that pressure values agreed within 10 percent in two thirds, the overall mean difference was only 8.6 mm Hg and the correlation at maximal exercise was superior to that of the resting observations just before exercise. Hypertensive patients had a significantly greater body weight than normotensive persons. Among men, the lowest maximal systolic pressure was observed in the group with coronary heart disease; among women, the lowest mean pressure was found in the healthy group. Patients with coronary heart disease were slightly older, and only the women showed a significant correlation in maximal pressure with age. Only 5 percent of the variation in maximal systolic pressure in the patients with coronary heart disease was due to a shortened duration of exercise. Maximal systolic pressures correlated fairly well (r equals 0.46 to 0.68 for the various groups) with resting systolic pressure, and this relation was independent of the diagnosis of cardiovascular disease in both men and women. Relations between pressure and the number of stenotic coronary arteries and imparied ejection fraction at rest were examined in 22 men without and 182 men with coronary artery disease. Lower maximal systolic pressures were often associated with two or three vessel disease or reduced ejection fraction, or both. The prognostic value of maximal systolic pressure for subsequent death due to coronary heart disease was examined in the men with coronary heart disease. The annual rate of sudden cardiac death decreased from 97.9 per 1,000 men to 25.3 and 6.6 per 1,000 men as the range of maximal systolic pressure increased from less than 140 to 140 to 199 and to 200 mm Hg or more, respectively. Cardiomegaly, Q waves in the resting electrocardiogram and persistent postexertional S-T depression were more common in men with the lowest systolic pressure at maximal exercise.

Collaboration


Dive into the Timothy A. DeRouen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James S. Woods

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

King K. Holmes

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge