1.A unilateral mild anterior uveitis due to intralenticular foreign body
Khairy-Shamel Sonny TEO ; Shatriah ISMAIL ; Adil HUSSEIN ; Mohtar IBRAHIM ; Zunaina EMBONG ; Bakiah SHAHARUDDIN
International Eye Science 2009;9(6):1032-1033
A 25-year man presented with symptom of photophobia and tearing in the right eye for 2 months duration. It was associated with painless gradual reduced vision. There was a history of hammering on a metal object prior to that. Ocular examination revealed signs of mild anterior uveitis due to a retained metallic intralenticular foreign body. Conjunctiva was white. Computed Tomography (CT) scan of the orbit confirmed presence of a single intraocular foreign body. The condition is misleading and can be easily overlooked. A detailed history and clinical examination are mandatory in this misleading situation.
2.Oncovascular Surgery and the Making of the Oncovascular Surgeon
Kareem SALLAM ; Hussein KHAIRY
Vascular Specialist International 2019;35(4):189-192
Patients diagnosed with tumors that are located in vicinity of the major axial vessels are inconsistently managed because they are often considered unresectable. The management of these patients remains at the periphery of various established sub-specialties that are prevalent under the current medical specialty. These patients are required to be treated by an oncovascular surgeon. This article discusses some key points in understanding the reasons for establishing a specialty branch, oncovascular surgery, to treat complex tumors with vessel invasion. This article also reviews important issues about leadership and how to train and educate oncovascular surgeons.
Humans
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Leadership
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Surgeons
3.Evaluation of Prevalence and Associated Factors of Dry Eye Syndrome among Medical Students Exposed to Visual Display Terminal in Health Campus, Universiti Sains Malaysia
Patricia Ann John ; Adil Hussein ; Khairy Shamel Sonny Teo
Malaysian Journal of Medicine and Health Sciences 2023;19(No.3):45-52
Introduction: Dry eye syndrome (DES) has become a public health concern, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Medical students are at risk due to an increase in visual display terminal (VDT) exposure given the transition
to full-time online lectures. The presence of reduced blink rate and tear film instability in VDT users causes an increase in tear evaporation leading to symptoms of DES. This study helps us to learn about the associated factors of
VDT use and DES among the young generation. This study aims to determine the prevalence and associated factors
of DES among medical students exposed to VDT at the health campus, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM). Methods:
A cross-sectional study involving 140 undergraduate medical students aged 22 to 29 years old who were VDT users.
Factors analysed are age, gender, race and duration of VDT usage. Data collection included both subjective assessment (OSDI questionnaire) and objective assessment (TBUT and Schirmer’s test). Statistical analysis was conducted
using Statistical Package for the Social Science (SPSS Inc Version 24). Results were analysed using descriptive analysis and multivariate logistic regression. Results: Most of the medical student cohort was female and Malay. Most
of the students use VDT for less than 8 hours. A high incidence of DES was noted among medical students (92.1%).
None of the factors showed significant association with positive findings DES by subjective and objective assessment
and duration of VDT usage. Conclusion: DES is common among VDT users. This study showed a high prevalence of
DES among medical students in USM. The factors analysed did not show a significant association between DES and
duration of VDT usage. This study may help to recognize the problem and will raise awareness of their daily practice
and implement preventive measures to avoid VDT-related DES.