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Dive into the research topics where Timothy D. Dye is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy D. Dye.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2007

Concentrations of Urinary Phthalate Metabolites Are Associated with Increased Waist Circumference and Insulin Resistance in Adult U.S. Males

Richard W. Stahlhut; I Edwin van Wijngaarden; Timothy D. Dye; Stephen Cook; Shanna H. Swan

Background Phthalates impair rodent testicular function and have been associated with anti-androgenic effects in humans, including decreased testosterone levels. Low testosterone in adult human males has been associated with increased prevalence of obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes. Objectives Our objective in this study was to investigate phthalate exposure and its associations with abdominal obesity and insulin resistance. Methods Subjects were adult U.S. male participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999–2002. We modeled six phthalate metabolites with prevalent exposure and known or suspected antiandrogenic activity as predictors of waist circumference and log-transformed homeostatic model assessment (HOMA; a measure of insulin resistance) using multiple linear regression, adjusted for age, race/ethnicity, fat and total calorie consumption, physical activity level, serum cotinine, and urine creatinine (model 1); and adjusted for model 1 covariates plus measures of renal and hepatic function (model 2). Metabolites were mono-butyl phthalates (MBP), mono-ethyl phthalate (MEP), mono-(2-ethyl)-hexyl phthalate (MEHP), mono-benzyl phthalate (MBzP), mono-(2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl) phthalate (MEHHP), and mono-(2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl) phthalate (MEOHP). Results In model 1, four metabolites were associated with increased waist circumference (MBzP, MEHHP, MEOHP, and MEP; p-values ≤ 0.013) and three with increased HOMA (MBP, MBzP, and MEP; p-values ≤ 0.011). When we also adjusted for renal and hepatic function, parameter estimates declined but all significant results remained so except HOMA-MBP. Conclusions In this national cross-section of U.S. men, concentrations of several prevalent phthalate metabolites showed statistically significant correlations with abdominal obesity and insulin resistance. If confirmed by longitudinal studies, our findings would suggest that exposure to these phthalates may contribute to the population burden of obesity, insulin resistance, and related clinical disorders.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1997

Association between pre-pregnancy obesity and the risk of cesarean delivery

Stephen S. Crane; Martha A. Wojtowycz; Timothy D. Dye; Richard H. Aubry; Raul Artal

Objective To explore the relationship between prepregnancy obesity and the risk for cesarean delivery. Methods The population studied included 20,130 women with live births after 20 weeks gestation in central New York state between June 1, 1994, and May 31, 1995. Women who were obese before pregnancy were compare with nonobese women with regard to mode of delivery. Obesity was defined as body mass index (BMI) greater than 29. Separate analyses were conducted on the entire sample and on a subset of women with singleton pregnancies and no prior cesarean deliveries, as an estimate of the risk of primary cesarean delivery in obese women. Statistical analyses included χ2 test, crude odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI), and adjusted OR with 95% CI, using logistic regression to control for confounding variables. Results The adjusted OR was 1.64 (95% CI 1.46, 1.83) for obese women with singleton pregnancies and no prior cesarean deliveries to undergo cesarean delivery. The adjusted OR was 1.66 (95% CI 1.51, 1.82) for obese women in the entire sample to undergo cesarean delivery. In addition, increasing BMI was associated with increased risk for cesarean delivery. conclusion Compared with nonobese women, women who are obese before pregnancy are at increased risk for cesarean delivery. Preconceptional counseling regarding dietary and life-style nmodifications may alter this pattern.


Headache | 2009

Migraine and the environment.

Deborah I. Friedman; Timothy D. Dye

Migraineurs often describe environmental triggers of their headaches, such as barometric pressure change, bright sunlight, flickering lights, air quality, and odors. Environmental aspects of indoor space and workplaces are also implicated in migraine experience. Comprehensive migraine treatment programs emphasize awareness and avoidance of trigger factors as part of the therapeutic regimen. As migraine has a substantial economic impact, remediation of correctable environmental triggers may benefit employee attendance and productivity among migraineurs. Few controlled studies in the literature, however, confirm environmental influences on migraine and headaches. Although some are controversial, migraineurs worldwide consistently report similar environmental triggers. This article addresses commonly mentioned environmental triggers with a discussion of their pathophysiology and proposed preventive measures.


American Journal of Public Health | 1997

Unintended pregnancy and breast-feeding behavior.

Timothy D. Dye; Martha A. Wojtowycz; Richard H. Aubry; J. Quade; H Kilburn

OBJECTIVES This study assessed the effect of unintended pregnancy on breast-feeding behavior. METHODS All women delivering a live birth between January 1, 1995, and July 31, 1996 (n = 33,735), in the 15-county central New York region were asked whether they had intended to become pregnant and their breast-feeding plans. RESULTS Women with mistimed pregnancies, and pregnancies that were not wanted were significantly less likely to breast-feed than were women whose pregnancies were planned. After adjustment for confounding variables and contraindications for breast-feeding, the odds ratios of not breast-feeding remained significant. CONCLUSIONS Promoting breast-feeding among women with unintended pregnancies is important to improve health status.


International Urogynecology Journal | 2001

Body Mass Index and Urinary Symptoms in Women

G. Elia; Timothy D. Dye; P. D. Scariati

The aim of this study was to assess a possible correlation between obesity and lower urinary tract symptoms in a selected population of women. All the subjects referred for lower urinary tract complaints over a 2-year period received a questionnaire and a frequency/volume chart. The patient population was divided into normal or low weight (BMI ≤29) and high weight and obese (BMI ≥30). The main outcome measures were lower urinary tract symptoms (infections, frequency, urgency, voiding difficulty, dysuria, nocturia and incontinence). The statistical analysis was performed using the Mann–Whitney U-test, χ2 test and odds ratios; 694 women received the questionnaire and 553 were evaluated (79.7% response). Overall, 229 (42.4%) were of low or normal BMI; 311 (57.5%) had a high or obese BMI. After adjusting for prior bladder surgery, any surgery, history of medical problems and physical inactivity, only the association between BMI and incontinence remained statistically significant (adjusted OR 1.95; 95% CI 1.18–3.19).


Pediatrics | 1998

Early Language Development in Children Exposed to or Infected With Human Immunodeficiency Virus

James Coplan; Kathie A. Contello; Coleen K. Cunningham; Leonard B. Weiner; Timothy D. Dye; Linda Roberge; Martha A. Wojtowycz; Kim Kirkwood

Objectives. To compare language development in infants and young children with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection to language development in children who had been exposed to HIV but were uninfected, and (among subjects with HIV infection) to compare language development with cognitive and neurologic status. Design. Prospective evaluation of language development in infected and in exposed but uninfected infants and young children. Setting. Pediatric Infectious Disease Clinic, State University of New York–Health Science Center at Syracuse. Subjects. Nine infants and young children infected with HIV and 69 seropositive but uninfected infants and children, age 6 weeks to 45 months. Results. Mean Early Language Milestone Scale, 2nd edition (ELM-2) Global Language scores were significantly lower for subjects with HIV infection, compared with uninfected subjects (89.3 vs 96.2, Mann–Whitney U test). The proportion of subjects scoring >2 SD below the mean on the ELM-2 on at least one occasion also was significantly greater for subjects with HIV infection, compared with uninfected subjects (4 of 9 infected subjects, but only 5 of 69 uninfected subjects; Fishers exact test). Seven of the 9 subjects with HIV infection manifested deterioration of language function. Four manifested unremitting deterioration; only 1 of these 4 demonstrated unequivocal abnormality on neurologic examination. Three subjects with HIV infection and language deterioration showed improvement in language almost immediately after the initiation of antiretroviral drug treatment. Magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography of the brain were performed in 6 of 7 infected subjects with language deterioration, and findings were normal in all 6. ELM-2 Global Language scaled scores showed good agreement with the Bayley Mental Developmental Index or the McCarthy Global Cognitive Index (r = 0.70). Language deterioration, or improvement in language after initiation of drug therapy, coincided with or preceded changes in global cognitive function, at times by intervals of up to 12 months. Conclusions. Language deterioration occurs commonly in infants and young children with HIV infection, is seen frequently in the absence of abnormalities on neurologic examination or central nervous system imaging, and may precede evidence of deterioration in global cognitive ability. Periodic assessment of language development should be added to the developmental monitoring of infants and young children with HIV infection as a means of monitoring disease progression and the efficacy of drug treatment.


Cancer | 2010

Complex Care Systems in Developing Countries: Breast Cancer Patient Navigation in Ethiopia

Timothy D. Dye; Solomon Bogale; Claire Hobden; Yared Tilahun; Vanessa Hechter; Teshome Deressa; Marion Bizé; Anne Reeler

As the global visibility and importance of breast cancer increases, especially in developing countries, ensuring that countries strengthen and develop health systems that support prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of a complex chronic disease is a priority. Understanding how breast cancer patients navigate health systems to reach appropriate levels of care is critical in assessing and improving the health system response in countries to an increasing breast cancer burden in their populations. Ethiopia has accelerated attention to breast cancer, expanding clinical and public health efforts at diagnosing and treating breast cancer earlier and more efficiently.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2008

Education status among orphans and non-orphans in communities affected by AIDS in Tanzania and Burkina Faso

M.L. Kürzinger; J. Pagnier; James G. Kahn; R. Hampshire; T. Wakabi; Timothy D. Dye

Abstract The AIDS pandemic has created an estimated 15 million orphans who may face elevated risk of poor health and social outcomes. This paper compares orphans and non-orphans regarding educational status and delay using data collected in three low-income communities affected by AIDS in Tanzania and Burkina Faso. Orphans were significantly more likely not to attend school than were non-orphans and also to be delayed when in school, though, after controlling for confounders, the risk was borderline and non-significant. Multivariate analysis indicates that variables such as age, religion, family of origin, the relation between the child and the head of household and the dependency ratio of the household better explain differences in education than does orphan status. This study suggests, therefore, that orphans’ educational status is relatively equivalent to non-orphans perhaps as a result of family based or community program safety nets.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1994

Amnioinfusion and the intrauterine prevention of meconium aspiration.

Timothy D. Dye; Richard H. Aubry; Steven J. Gross; Raul Artal

OBJECTIVE We evaluated the published literature on the effectiveness of amnioinfusion in reducing meconium below the vocal cords and meconium aspiration syndrome among infants born to women presenting with more than trace meconium-stained fluid. STUDY DESIGN A literature search was conducted to evaluate clinical trials of amnioinfusion and meconium aspiration. Trials meeting certain basic design criteria (n = 5), which included a prospective study design and blinded assessment of newborn outcome, were selected for statistical analyses estimating the average effects size and direction. In total, 247 women with meconium-stained fluid receiving amnioinfusion and 260 women with meconium-stained fluid not receiving amnioinfusion were represented by these trials. RESULTS Infants born to women with meconium-stained fluid receiving amnioinfusion were less likely to have meconium below the vocal cords (odds ratio 0.13, 95% confidence interval 0.08 to 0.20) and were less likely to have meconium aspiration syndrome (odds ratio 0.20, 95% confidence interval 0.08 to 0.48) than were infants born to women with meconium-stained fluid not receiving amnioinfusion. DISCUSSION Amnioinfusion appears to be an effective intrauterine intervention for the prevention of meconium aspiration. Clinicians should consider implementing amnioinfusion in women presenting with thick meconium to prevent intrapartal meconium aspiration in newborns.


Global Public Health | 2011

A mixed-method assessment of beliefs and practice around breast cancer in Ethiopia: implications for public health programming and cancer control.

Timothy D. Dye; Solomon Bogale; Claire Hobden; Yared Tilahun; Vanessa Hechter; Teshome Deressa; Marion Bizé; Anne Reeler

Abstract A large proportion of breast cancer patients in Ethiopia present for biomedical care too late, or not at all, resulting in high mortality. This study was conducted to better learn of beliefs and practices among patients accessing breast cancer services in a large referral centre in Ethiopia. Using a mixed-method design, we interviewed 69 breast cancer patients presenting for care at Tikur Anbessa Hospital in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, about their beliefs, experiences and perspectives on breast cancer. Awareness of breast cancer is low in Ethiopia and even among those who are aware of the disease, a sense of hopelessness and fatalism is common. Early signs/symptoms are frequently ignored and patients often first present to traditional healers. Breast cancer is perceived as being caused typically from humoral anomalies or difficulties resulting from breast feeding, and study participants indicate that stigmatisation and social isolation complicate discussion and action around breast cancer. Consistent with other studies, this study shows that traditional beliefs and practices are common around breast cancer and that numerous barriers exist to identification and treatment in Ethiopia. Integrating health beliefs and practice into public health action in innovative ways may reduce stigma, increase awareness and promote survivability among breast cancer patients.

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Dongmei Li

University of Rochester

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Martha A. Wojtowycz

State University of New York System

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Scott McIntosh

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Richard H. Aubry

State University of New York System

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J.G. Pérez-Ramos

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Deborah J. Ossip

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Kathie A. Contello

State University of New York System

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Leonard B. Weiner

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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