Renin-Angiotensin Ii-Aldosterone System Blockers And Time To Renal Replacement Therapy In Children With Ckd., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Renin-Angiotensin Ii-Aldosterone System Blockers And Time To Renal Replacement Therapy In Children With Ckd., Alison G. Abraham, Aisha Betoko, Jeffrey J. Fadrowski, Christopher Pierce, Susan L. Furth, Bradley A. Warady, Alvaro Muñoz
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
BACKGROUND: Clinical care decisions to treat chronic kidney disease (CKD) in a growing child must often be made without the benefit of evidence from clinical trials. We used observational data from the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children cohort to estimate the effectiveness of renin-angiotensin II-aldosterone system blockade (RAAS) to delay renal replacement therapy (RRT) in children with CKD.
METHODS: A total of 851 participants (median age: 11 years, median glomerular filtration rate [GFR]: 52 ml/min/1.73 m
RESULTS: There were 217 RRT events over a 4.1-year median follow-up. At baseline, 472 children (55 %) were prevalent RAAS users, who were more …
Expectations For Treatment In Pediatric Weight Management And Relationship To Attrition., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Expectations For Treatment In Pediatric Weight Management And Relationship To Attrition., Erinn T. Rhodes, Richard E. Boles, Kimberly Chin, Amy Christison, Elizabeth Getzoff Testa, Kimberly Guion, Mary Jane Hawkins, Carter R. Petty, Bethany Sallinen Gaffka, Melissa Santos, Laura Shaffer, Jared Tucker, Sarah Hampl
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
BACKGROUND: Attrition in pediatric weight management negatively impacts treatment outcomes. A potentially modifiable contributor to attrition is unmet family expectations. This study aimed to evaluate the association between adolescent and parent/guardian treatment expectations and attrition.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: A prospective, nonrandomized, uncontrolled, single-arm pilot trial was conducted among 12 pediatric weight management programs in the Children's Hospital Association's FOCUS on a Fitter Future collaborative. Parents/guardians and adolescents completed an expectations/goals survey at their initial visit, with categories including healthier food/drinks, physical activity/exercise, family support/behavior, and weight management goals. Attrition was assessed at 3 months.
RESULTS: From January to August 2013, …
Multiple Organ Dysfunction In Children Mechanically Ventilated For Acute Respiratory Failure., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Multiple Organ Dysfunction In Children Mechanically Ventilated For Acute Respiratory Failure., Scott L. Weiss, Lisa A. Asaro, Heidi R. Flori, Geoffrey L. Allen, David Wypij, Martha A Q Curley, Randomized Evaluation Of Sedation Titration For Respiratory Failure (Restore) Study Investigators
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
OBJECTIVES: The impact of extrapulmonary organ dysfunction, independent from sepsis and lung injury severity, on outcomes in pediatric acute respiratory failure is unclear. We sought to determine the frequency, timing, and risk factors for extrapulmonary organ dysfunction and the independent association of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome with outcomes in pediatric acute respiratory failure.
DESIGN: Secondary observational analysis of the Randomized Evaluation of Sedation Titration for Respiratory Failure cluster-randomized prospective clinical trial conducted between 2009 and 2013.
SETTING: Thirty-one academic PICUs in the United States.
PATIENTS: Two thousand four hundred forty-nine children mechanically ventilated for acute respiratory failure enrolled in Randomized …
Causal Pathways From Enteropathogens To Environmental Enteropathy: Findings From The Mal-Ed Birth Cohort Study, 2017 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Causal Pathways From Enteropathogens To Environmental Enteropathy: Findings From The Mal-Ed Birth Cohort Study, Margaret N. Kosek, Zulfiqar Ahmed Bhutta, Anita K. M. Zaidi, Imran Ahmed, Syed Asad Ali, Muneera Rasheed, Sajid Bashir Soofi, Ali Turab, Didar Alam, Shahida Qureshi
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health
Background: Environmental enteropathy (EE), the adverse impact of frequent and numerous enteric infections on the gut resulting in a state of persistent immune activation and altered permeability, has been proposed as a key determinant of growth failure in children in low- and middle-income populations. A theory-driven systems model to critically evaluate pathways through which enteropathogens, gut permeability, and intestinal and systemic inflammation affect child growth was conducted within the framework of the Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) birth cohort study that included children from eight countries. …
The Randomized, Controlled Trial Of Late Surfactant: Effects On Respiratory Outcomes At 1-Year Corrected Age., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
The Randomized, Controlled Trial Of Late Surfactant: Effects On Respiratory Outcomes At 1-Year Corrected Age., Roberta L. Keller, Eric C. Eichenwald, Anna Maria Hibbs, Elizabeth E. Rogers, Katherine C. Wai, Dennis M. Black, Philip L. Ballard, Jeanette M. Asselin, William E Truog, Jeffrey D. Merrill, Mark C. Mammel, Robin H. Steinhorn, Rita M. Ryan, David J. Durand, Catherine M. Bendel, Ellen M. Bendel-Stenzel, Sherry E. Courtney, Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy, Mark L. Hudak, Frances R. Koch, Dennis E. Mayock, Victor J. Mckay, Jennifer Helderman, Nicolas F. Porta, Rajan Wadhawan, Lisa Palermo, Roberta A. Ballard, Tolsurf Study Group
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of late surfactant on respiratory outcomes determined at 1-year corrected age in the Trial of Late Surfactant (TOLSURF), which randomized newborns of extremely low gestational age (≤28 weeks' gestational age) ventilated at 7-14 days to late surfactant and inhaled nitric oxide vs inhaled nitric oxide-alone (control).
STUDY DESIGN: Caregivers were surveyed in a double-blinded manner at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months' corrected age to collect information on respiratory resource use (infant medication use, home support, and hospitalization). Infants were classified for composite outcomes of pulmonary morbidity (no PM, determined in infants with no reported …
Glucocorticoid Receptor Polymorphisms And Outcomes In Pediatric Septic Shock., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Glucocorticoid Receptor Polymorphisms And Outcomes In Pediatric Septic Shock., Natalie Z. Cvijanovich, Nick Anas, Geoffrey L. Allen, Neal J. Thomas, Michael T. Bigham, Scott L. Weiss, Julie Fitzgerald, Paul A. Checchia, Keith Meyer, Michael Quasney, Rainer Gedeit, Robert J. Freishtat, Jeffrey Nowak, Shekhar S. Raj, Shira Gertz, Jocelyn R. Grunwell, Amy Opoka, Hector R. Wong
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
OBJECTIVE: Polymorphisms of the glucocorticoid receptor gene are associated with outcome and corticosteroid responsiveness among patients with inflammatory disorders. We conducted a candidate gene association study to test the hypothesis that these polymorphisms are associated with outcome and corticosteroid responsiveness among children with septic shock.
DESIGN: We genotyped 482 children with septic shock for the presence of two glucocorticoid receptor polymorphisms (rs56149945 and rs41423247) associated with increased sensitivity and one glucocorticoid receptor polymorphism (rs6198) associated with decreased sensitivity to corticosteroids. The primary outcome variable was complicated course, defined as 28-day mortality or the persistence of two or more organ failures …
High Acuity Readmission Risk Pediatric Screen Tool (Harrps), 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
High Acuity Readmission Risk Pediatric Screen Tool (Harrps), Sarah Bradshaw, Anita Powell
Presentations
Podium Presentation on Quality Improvement Project: Implementing Use of HARRPS Tool
Objectives:
- Describe the development of an evidence-based pediatric risk screen tool for inpatient admissions
- Articulate how formal Continuous Quality Process Improvement (CQPI) methods were utilized during implementation
- Discuss lessons learned and next steps
Pediatric Oncology Nurses' Experiences With Prognosis-Related Communication, 2017 Marquette University
Pediatric Oncology Nurses' Experiences With Prognosis-Related Communication, Amy Rose Newman
Dissertations (1934 -)
Health care providers (HCPs) in pediatric oncology are faced with the challenge of communicating the devastating news of a cancer diagnosis and prognosis. This type of communication can be referred to as prognosis-related communication (PRC). While the initial conversation with the patient and family regarding prognosis is generally considered the responsibility of the physician, patients and family members will subsequently turn to nurses for clarification of the information presented. If nurses are excluded from initial conversations, they may feel as though they are “working in the dark,” trying to answer questions while not contradicting what the physician said. This strained …
Aspira: Employing A Serious Game In An Mhealth App To Improve Asthma Outcomes, 2017 Mad*Pow, Inc.
Aspira: Employing A Serious Game In An Mhealth App To Improve Asthma Outcomes, Jamie Thomson, Chris Hass, Ivor Horn, Elizabeth Kleine, Stephanie Mitchell, Kevin Gary, Ishrat Ahmed, Derek Hamel, Ashish Amresh
Ashish Amresh
Forensic And Clinical Diagnosis In "Shaken Baby Syndrome", Between Child Abuse And Iatrogenic Abuse, 2017 M.D., Ph. D. Student at Carol Davila University of Bucharest; Legal Medicine Service of Teleorman County, Alexandria, Romania
Forensic And Clinical Diagnosis In "Shaken Baby Syndrome", Between Child Abuse And Iatrogenic Abuse, Roxana M. Duncea, Irina Apostol, Relu G. Calota, Vladimir Belis
Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences
“Shaken baby syndrome” in child abuse cases is a challenge for pediatrician and forensic experts, often a diagnosis of exclusion, with overwhelming moral and legal implications. Diagnosis is based on: subdural bleeding, rupture of retinal vessels, traumatic diffuse axonal injury with diffuse brain encephalopathy in the absence of external traumatic injuries and anamnesis data of an accidentally head injury.
Microscopic findings in diffuse axonal injuries were initially considered as a specific traumatic effect due to unrestricted movement and accelerated rotation of the head. Immunohistochemistry of beta amyloid protein precursor is gold standard method for identifying pathological diffuse axonal lesions, which …
Development Of A Mobile, Avatar-Based Application To Monitor Teens' Personal Body Shape Goals, 2017 Arizona State University
Development Of A Mobile, Avatar-Based Application To Monitor Teens' Personal Body Shape Goals, Annmarie Lyles, Ashish Amresh, Michael Todd, Rebecca E. Lee
Ashish Amresh
A Normative Spatiotemporal Mri Atlas Of The Fetal Brain For Automatic Segmentation And Analysis Of Early Brain Growth., 2017 George Washington University
A Normative Spatiotemporal Mri Atlas Of The Fetal Brain For Automatic Segmentation And Analysis Of Early Brain Growth., Ali Gholipour, Caitlin K Rollins, Clemente Velasco-Annis, Abdelhakim Ouaalam, Alireza Akhondi-Asl, Onur Afacan, Cynthia M Ortinau, Sean Clancy, Catherine Limperopoulos, Edward Yang, Judy A Estroff, Simon K Warfield
Pediatrics Faculty Publications
Longitudinal characterization of early brain growth in-utero has been limited by a number of challenges in fetal imaging, the rapid change in size, shape and volume of the developing brain, and the consequent lack of suitable algorithms for fetal brain image analysis. There is a need for an improved digital brain atlas of the spatiotemporal maturation of the fetal brain extending over the key developmental periods. We have developed an algorithm for construction of an unbiased four-dimensional atlas of the developing fetal brain by integrating symmetric diffeomorphic deformable registration in space with kernel regression in age. We applied this new …
Neutralizing Anti-Interleukin-1Β Antibodies Reduce Ischemia-Related Interleukin-1Β Transport Across The Blood-Brain Barrier In Fetal Sheep, 2017 University of Kentucky
Neutralizing Anti-Interleukin-1Β Antibodies Reduce Ischemia-Related Interleukin-1Β Transport Across The Blood-Brain Barrier In Fetal Sheep, Aparna Patra, Xiaodi Chen, Grazyna B. Sadowska, Jiyong Zhang, Yow-Pin Lim, James F. Padbury, William A. Banks, Barbara S. Stonestreet
Pediatrics Faculty Publications
Hypoxic ischemic insults predispose to perinatal brain injury. Pro-inflammatory cytokines are important in the evolution of this injury. Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is a key mediator of inflammatory responses and elevated IL-1β levels in brain correlate with adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes after brain injury. Impaired blood-brain barrier (BBB) function represents an important component of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in the fetus. In addition, ischemia-reperfusion increases cytokine transport across the BBB of the ovine fetus. Reducing pro-inflammatory cytokine entry into brain could represent a novel approach to attenuate ischemia-related brain injury. We hypothesized that infusions of neutralizing IL-1β monoclonal antibody (mAb) reduce IL-1β transport across …
The Role Of Asb3 Gene Single Nucleotide Polymorphism In The Progression To Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia In Extremely Low Birth Weight Infants, 2017 New York Medical College
The Role Of Asb3 Gene Single Nucleotide Polymorphism In The Progression To Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia In Extremely Low Birth Weight Infants, Anna Zylak, Leewen Hsu, Asma Amin, Shaili Amatya, Sharina Rajbhandari, Alexander Feldman, Umesh Paudel, Lance A. Parton
NYMC Faculty Posters
No abstract provided.
Outcomes In Necrotizing Enterocolitis (Nec) Treated With Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor (Gcsf) And Intravenous Immunoglobulin (Ivig) Vs Standard Of Care Alone: Rct Interim Safety Analysis, 2017 New York Medical College
Outcomes In Necrotizing Enterocolitis (Nec) Treated With Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor (Gcsf) And Intravenous Immunoglobulin (Ivig) Vs Standard Of Care Alone: Rct Interim Safety Analysis, Sanjeet Panda, Courtney Briggs-Steinberg, Brian Debenedictis, Sri Narayana, Edmund F. La Gamma
NYMC Faculty Posters
No abstract provided.
Facing The Ongoing Challenge Of The Febrile Young Infant., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Facing The Ongoing Challenge Of The Febrile Young Infant., Adrienne G. Deporre, Paul L. Aronson, Russell J. Mcculloh
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2017. Other selected articles can be found online at http://ccforum.com/series/annualupdate2017 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/8901 .
Implementation Of Clinical Research Trials Using Web-Based And Mobile Devices: Challenges And Solutions., 2017 Western University
Implementation Of Clinical Research Trials Using Web-Based And Mobile Devices: Challenges And Solutions., Roy Eagleson, Luis Altamirano-Diaz, Alex Mcinnis, Eva Welisch, Stefanie De Jesus, Harry Prapavessis, Meghan Rombeek, Jamie A Seabrook, Teresa Park, Kambiz Norozi
Paediatrics Publications
BACKGROUND: With the increasing implementation of web-based, mobile health interventions in clinical trials, it is crucial for researchers to address the security and privacy concerns of patient information according to high ethical standards. The full process of meeting these standards is often made more complicated due to the use of internet-based technology and smartphones for treatment, telecommunication, and data collection; however, this process is not well-documented in the literature.
RESULTS: The Smart Heart Trial is a single-arm feasibility study that is currently assessing the effects of a web-based, mobile lifestyle intervention for overweight and obese children and youth with congenital …
Usage Of 3d Models Of Tetralogy Of Fallot For Medical Education: Impact On Learning Congenital Heart Disease., 2017 George Washington University
Usage Of 3d Models Of Tetralogy Of Fallot For Medical Education: Impact On Learning Congenital Heart Disease., Yue-Hin Loke, Ashraf S Harahsheh, Axel Krieger, Laura J Olivieri
Pediatrics Faculty Publications
BACKGROUND: Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common human birth defect, and clinicians need to understand the anatomy to effectively care for patients with CHD. However, standard two-dimensional (2D) display methods do not adequately carry the critical spatial information to reflect CHD anatomy. Three-dimensional (3D) models may be useful in improving the understanding of CHD, without requiring a mastery of cardiac imaging. The study aimed to evaluate the impact of 3D models on how pediatric residents understand and learn about tetralogy of Fallot following a teaching session.
METHODS: Pediatric residents rotating through an inpatient Cardiology rotation were recruited. The …
Impact Of A National Guideline On Antibiotic Selection For Hospitalized Pneumonia., 2017 George Washington University
Impact Of A National Guideline On Antibiotic Selection For Hospitalized Pneumonia., Derek J Williams, Matthew Hall, Jeffrey S Gerber, Mark I Neuman, Adam L Hersh, Thomas V Brogan, Kavita Parikh, Sanjay Mahant, Anne J Blaschke, Samir S Shah, Carlos G Grijalva
Pediatrics Faculty Publications
BACKGROUND: We evaluated the impact of the 2011 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society/Infectious Diseases Society of America pneumonia guideline and hospital-level implementation efforts on antibiotic prescribing for children hospitalized with pneumonia.
METHODS: We assessed inpatient antibiotic prescribing for pneumonia at 28 children's hospitals between August 2009 and March 2015. Each hospital was also surveyed regarding local implementation efforts targeting antibiotic prescribing and organizational readiness to adopt guideline recommendations. To estimate guideline impact, we used segmented linear regression to compare the proportion of children receiving penicillins in March 2015 with the expected proportion at this same time point had the guideline not …
Mortality Associated With Gastrointestinal Bleeding In Children: A Retrospective Cohort Study., 2017 Children's Mercy Hospital
Mortality Associated With Gastrointestinal Bleeding In Children: A Retrospective Cohort Study., Thomas M. Attard, Mikaela Miller, Chaitanya Pant, Ashwath Kumar, Mike Thomson
Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers
AIM: To determine the clinical characteristics of children with gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) who died during the course of their admission.
METHODS: We interrogated the Pediatric Hospital Information System database, including International Classification of Diseases, Current Procedural Terminology and Clinical Transaction Classification coding from 47 pediatric tertiary centers extracting the population of patients (1-21 years of age) admitted (inpatient or observation) with acute, upper or indeterminate GIB (1/2007-9/2015). Descriptive statistics, unadjusted univariate and adjusted multivariate analysis of the associations between patient characteristics and treatment course with mortality was performed with mortality as primary and endoscopy a secondary outcome of interest. All …