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Comparative Effectiveness of Acellular Versus Whole-Cell Pertussis Vaccines in Teenagers

The United States switched from whole-cell to acellular pertussis vaccines during the 1990s. Whether pertussis risk during a California outbreak differed between teenagers who previously received whole-cell or acellular pertussis vaccines early in life has not been reported.

We evaluated pertussis risk in 10 to 17 year olds at Kaiser Permanente Northern California during a recent pertussis outbreak. Those given whole-cell pertussis vaccines in childhood were more protected than those given acellular pertussis vaccines. (Read the full article)




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Usefulness of Routine Head Ultrasound Scans Before Surgery for Congenital Heart Disease

Routine head ultrasound scans (HUSs) are frequently performed in the preoperative evaluation of the infants with congenital heart disease, and brain MRI is being increasingly used in the research setting. The utility of HUSs in this population has not yet been established.

This is the first study to prospectively evaluate the utility of routine HUSs compared with MRIs in asymptomatic newborns and young infants undergoing cardiac surgery. Our findings suggest that routine HUS is not indicated in asymptomatic term or near-term neonates undergoing surgery for CHD. (Read the full article)




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Weight Gain in Infancy and Vascular Risk Factors in Later Childhood

Excessive weight gain over the first 18 months of life may have consequences for later body size. However, the relationship of weight gain in this period to atherogenic risk factors in later childhood is not well characterized.

Early postnatal weight gain from birth to 18 months is independently associated with childhood overweight and obesity, excess central adiposity, and greater arterial wall thickness at age 8 years. (Read the full article)




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Adult Prescription Drug Use and Pediatric Medication Exposures and Poisonings

Medication ingestions are increasing among children despite a number of public health interventions. The majority of these poisonings are related to prescription as opposed to over-the-counter medications.

Rising rates of poisonings in children are strongly correlated with rising use of hypoglycemics, antihyperlipidemics, β-blockers, and opioids among adults. These events are associated with considerable health care utilization, both in terms of emergency department visits and hospital admissions. (Read the full article)




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Association of Fitness With Vascular Intima-Media Thickness and Elasticity in Adolescence

Atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases are rooted in childhood. Vascular intima-media thickness (IMT) and elasticity are early surrogate markers of atherosclerosis. In adults, cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with enhanced arterial elasticity and decreased IMT.

Fitness was favorably associated with aortic IMT and elasticity in adolescents. The association was independent of several cardiometabolic risk factors. In fit adolescents, the increase in IMT during the preceding 6 years was smaller compared with low-fit peers. (Read the full article)




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Simplified Definitions of Elevated Pediatric Blood Pressure and High Adult Arterial Stiffness

Elevated blood pressure (BP) has long-term influence on the atherosclerotic process. The relative predictive ability of the standard BP definition endorsed by the National High Blood Pressure Education Program and the recently proposed 2 simplified definitions has not been studied.

Simplified pediatric BP tables predict risk of high adult arterial stiffness as well as the complex table does. These simple screening tools could be used for identifying pediatric subjects at risk and for intervening to improve adult cardiovascular outcomes. (Read the full article)




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Serum Uric Acid and Blood Pressure in Children at Cardiovascular Risk

Uric acid (UA) is associated with hypertension in children, after body weight adjustment. Whether the whole spectrum of variables, such as visceral adiposity, insulin resistance, puberty, and renal function, influence the relationship between UA and blood pressure is unknown.

In a cohort of children at relatively high cardiovascular risk, the association between UA and blood pressure levels is independent of several well-known factors implicated in the development of hypertension, such as insulin resistance, pubertal status, and renal function. (Read the full article)




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Functional Somatic Symptoms and Consultation Patterns in 5- to 7-Year-Olds

Functional somatic symptoms (FSS) in children account for 10% to 15% of visits in medical services. Few studies have investigated the full range of pediatric FSS and factors linked to the medical help-seeking for young children with these symptoms.

More parental worries, higher symptom severity and impact, and previous contact to medical services are found among the children with FSS who seek medical consultation. Putative risk mechanisms include the early pattern of health care use and parental worries. (Read the full article)




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Firearm Possession Among Adolescents Presenting to an Urban Emergency Department for Assault

Violence involving firearms is a leading cause of death among US youth ages 14 to 24. The emergency department is the primary medical setting for care of assault-injured youth and an underused but important setting for violence-prevention programs.

Among assault-injured youth seeking emergency department care, firearm possession rates are high, most obtained outside of legal channels. Higher rates of negative retaliatory attitudes and substance use among those youth with firearms increases risk of future lethal violence. (Read the full article)




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Results From the New Jersey Statewide Critical Congenital Heart Defects Screening Program

Prenatal diagnosis and clinical examination do not identify all infants with critical congenital heart defects before hospital discharge. To improve early critical congenital heart defect detection, New Jersey was the first state to implement legislatively mandated newborn pulse oximetry screening.

This report is the first to evaluate statewide pulse oximetry screening implementation. New Jersey had a high statewide screening rate and identified 3 infants with previously unsuspected critical congenital heart defects that otherwise might have resulted in significant morbidity and mortality. (Read the full article)




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Harsh Physical Punishment in Childhood and Adult Physical Health

Physical punishment is associated with a range of Axis I and II mental disorders in adulthood. More research is needed on the possible long-term relationship between physical punishment and physical health.

To our knowledge, this is the first nationally representative examination of harsh physical punishment and physical health. Harsh physical punishment in the absence of child maltreatment is associated with higher odds of cardiovascular disease (borderline significance), arthritis, and obesity. (Read the full article)




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A Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) for Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia

Twin studies suggest that bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is heritable; however, only a small number of genetic loci have been associated with BPD and these explain only a limited amount of this heritability.

A genome-wide association study of singleton infants (899 BPD cases and 827 controls) of 25 to 30 weeks’ gestational age did not identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with BPD at the genome-wide significance level but did identify polymorphisms warranting further study. (Read the full article)




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Parent and Child Cigarette Use: A Longitudinal, Multigenerational Study

Adolescents are likely to smoke if their parent(s) smoke. Little research uses prospective longitudinal data from parents and children to more confidently document these intergenerational associations, alongside potential confounders (parental education) and mediators (school achievement, mental health, older sibling smoking).

Analyses of long-term multigenerational data show how diverse parental smoking trajectories influence child smoking, controlling for measured confounders. The risk of smoking is especially high among children residing with a persistent heavy smoking parent and an older sibling who smokes. (Read the full article)




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Blood Cultures in the Evaluation of Uncomplicated Skin and Soft Tissue Infections

Blood cultures are a common investigation in children admitted to the hospital with skin and soft tissue infections. The yield of blood cultures in this condition is unknown.

Blood cultures are not useful in children admitted to the hospital with uncomplicated skin and soft tissue infections, and they may be associated with increased length of hospital stay. (Read the full article)




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Outcomes of Children With Severe Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia Who Were Ventilator Dependent at Home

Respiratory outcomes of patients with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) range from no oxygen requirement to chronic respiratory failure. Outcomes of least severe types of BPD are well described. Limited data exist on outcomes of patients with BPD-related chronic ventilator dependency.

Along with a first estimation of the incidence of patients with severe BPD-related chronic respiratory failure who were dependent on positive pressure ventilation via tracheostomy at home, we describe their survival rate, liberation from positive pressure ventilation, and decannulation. (Read the full article)




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Ethnic Differences in the Link Between Insulin Resistance and Elevated ALT

Evaluating for elevations in alanine aminotransferase (ALT) is a common screening test for the presence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD is less common among non-Hispanic blacks. Better predictors of NAFLD are needed to identify individuals in most need of screening.

Relative to other ethnicities, metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance performed poorly at identifying non-Hispanic black adolescents with ALT elevations. The presence of metabolic syndrome may therefore not be an adequate trigger for NAFLD screening. Triglyceride elevations performed similarly between groups in identifying ALT elevations. (Read the full article)




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Functional Abdominal Pain in Childhood and Long-term Vulnerability to Anxiety Disorders

At the time of their pediatric medical evaluation, patients with functional abdominal pain (FAP) have higher levels of emotional symptoms compared with youth without FAP. No controlled prospective study has evaluated psychiatric outcomes for FAP patients in adulthood.

This prospective study showed that pediatric FAP was associated with high risk of anxiety disorders in adolescence and young adulthood. Risk was highest if abdominal pain persisted, but was significantly higher than in controls even if pain resolved. (Read the full article)




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Urinary Phthalates and Increased Insulin Resistance in Adolescents

Phthalate exposure has been associated with insulin resistance in animal studies and cross-sectional studies of adults, but has not been studied in adolescents.

We detect associations of urinary phthalate metabolites in a cross-sectional study of US adolescents. The association is highly robust to multiple sensitivity analyses, and specific to phthalates commonly found in food. Further longitudinal study of dietary phthalate exposures is needed. (Read the full article)




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ADHD and Learning Disabilities in Former Late Preterm Infants: A Population-Based Birth Cohort

Previous studies have reported that former late preterm infants are at increased risk for future learning and behavioral problems; thus it has been suggested that their development be closely monitored.

This population-based study indicates that the risk for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and learning disabilities may not be higher in former late preterm infants, and therefore intensive neurodevelopmental follow-up may not be required for all late preterm infants. (Read the full article)




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Pulmonary Embolism in the Pediatric Emergency Department

Pulmonary embolism (PE) in the pediatric population is rare but does occur and is underrecognized. In adult emergency medicine, there are validated clinical decision rules derived to provide reliable and reproducible means of determining pretest probability of PE.

There are known risk factors, signs, and symptoms that should raise the clinician’s suspicion of pulmonary embolism, even in the pediatric population. (Read the full article)




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Randomized Trial of a Population-Based, Home-Delivered Intervention for Preschool Language Delay

Preschool language delay is associated with poorer academic performance, more limited employment opportunities, and relationship difficulties. Despite its importance within public health, there has been little progress toward effective population-based prevention and intervention approaches to improve outcomes.

It is feasible to identify low language in 4-year-olds on a population basis and deliver a 1-on-1 intervention. By age 5 years, this resulted in better phonological awareness and letter knowledge. There was weak evidence of better expressive, but not receptive, language. (Read the full article)




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Approval and Perceived Impact of Duty Hour Regulations: Survey of Pediatric Program Directors

Several studies have been published evaluating the impact of 2011 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education duty hour regulations. Although resident quality of life may be improved, it appears that resident education and patient care may be worse.

This is the first study to evaluate pediatric program director approval of 2011 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Program Requirements and the perceived impact of the regulations on patient care, resident education, and quality of life. (Read the full article)




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Clinical Utility of the Colorado Learning Difficulties Questionnaire

Caregiver behavioral symptom ratings are frequently used to assist in diagnosing childhood behavioral disorders. Although behavioral disorders are highly comorbid with learning disabilities (LDs), little work has examined the utility of caregiver ratings of learning concerns for screening of comorbid LD.

The validity of a time- and cost-efficient caregiver rating of academic concerns (Colorado Learning Difficulties Questionnaire) was examined. The screening measure accurately predicted children without LD, suggesting that the absence of parent-reported difficulties may be adequate to rule out overt LD. (Read the full article)




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Changes in Bedtime Schedules and Behavioral Difficulties in 7 Year Old Children

Links between clinically diagnosed sleep problems and adverse behavioral outcomes are well documented. However, in nonclinical populations, causal links between disrupted sleep and the development of behavioral difficulties are far from clear.

Seven-year-old children with nonregular bedtimes had more behavioral difficulties than children who had regular bedtimes. There were clear dose–response relationships, and the effects of not having regular bedtimes appeared to be reversible. (Read the full article)




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Health Outcomes Associated With Transition From Pediatric to Adult Cystic Fibrosis Care

Transition from pediatric to adult care is often reported to be unsuccessful. Little evidential research has examined the actual proportion of youth in pediatric versus adult care or impact on health status outcomes after transferring from pediatric to adult care.

Our article extends the literature by providing health transition outcome data, something that has been recognized as a critical gap to developing evidence-based programming and health care transition policy. (Read the full article)




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Fetal Growth and Childhood Cancer: A Population-Based Study

The etiology of childhood cancers is largely unknown. However, excessive fetal growth has been associated with some childhood cancers. One of the most consistent findings is that high birth weight is associated with an increased risk of childhood leukemia.

Examining large, population-based birth and cancer registry data from 4 Nordic countries, high birth weight was the most strongly associated with risk of many childhood cancers among several measures of fetal growth that have not previously been extensively assessed. (Read the full article)




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Catheter Dwell Time and CLABSIs in Neonates With PICCs: A Multicenter Cohort Study

Peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs) are essential to deliver life-saving treatment to neonates. Longer PICC dwell times may increase the risk of central line–associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) in neonates, but previous studies have yielded inconsistent results, likely due to different study designs, analytic methods, and small sample sizes.

The risk of CLABSIs increases during the 2 weeks after PICC insertion and remains elevated for the catheter duration. These data support daily review of PICC necessity, optimization of catheter maintenance practices, and consideration of novel strategies to prevent CLABSIs. (Read the full article)




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Sexual Risk Taking and Bullying Among Adolescents

Bullying involvement is associated with deleterious psychological, educational, and health effects. However, little is known about relations between bullying involvement and sexual risk-taking behaviors or whether similar patterns hold for heterosexual and gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, or questioning adolescents.

Among adolescents, bullies and bully-victims engaged in more casual sex and sex under the influence than their peers. Controlling for demographic characteristics and other victimization exposures, bully and bully-victim status predicted sexual risk taking but primarily for heterosexual adolescents. (Read the full article)




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Development and Evaluation of Global Child Health Educational Modules

Global health is of increasing interest and relevance to North American pediatric trainees. Opportunities for resident global health training and exposure are most often limited to electives or trainees in dedicated global health tracks.

A series of short, structured, participatory global child health modules improved knowledge and were well received and integrated within academic programs. Such modules enable global health learning for all residents, including those who never intend to practice overseas. (Read the full article)




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Psychosocial Outcomes of Young Adults Born Very Low Birth Weight

Several studies have suggested that very low birth weight young adults have increased risks of physical and health problems, educational underachievement, and poorer social functioning than their peers, but there are limited population-based and longitudinal data.

Former VLBW young adults in this national cohort scored as well as term controls on many measures of health and social functioning, including quality-of-life scores, with some differences largely confined to those with disability at age 7 to 8 years. (Read the full article)




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The Effect of Obesity in Adolescence on Adult Health Status

Adverse effects of excess weight are likely related to both obesity severity and duration. Little is known about the contribution of adolescent weight status to development of specific comorbid conditions in adults.

Severe obesity at age 18 was independently associated with increased risk of lower extremity venous edema, walking limitation, kidney dysfunction, polycystic ovary syndrome, respiratory conditions, diabetes, and hypertension in adulthood. (Read the full article)




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Intravenous Magnesium Sulfate for Vaso-occlusive Episodes in Sickle Cell Disease

Vaso-occlusive episodes (VOEs) are a common complication of sickle cell disease, resulting in morbidity. Magnesium is a vasodilator and has been shown to improve red blood cell hydration. Previous small studies have suggested that treatment with magnesium may decrease VOEs.

Intravenous magnesium sulfate is well tolerated in relatively high doses but had no effect on the length of stay in hospital, pain scores, or cumulative analgesia used in children admitted with painful VOEs in sickle cell disease. (Read the full article)




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Telemedicine Consultations and Medication Errors in Rural Emergency Departments

Medication errors occur frequently among pediatric patients, particularly those treated in rural emergency departments (EDs). Although telemedicine has been proposed as a potential solution, there are few data supporting its clinical effectiveness and its effect on medication errors.

The use of telemedicine to provide pediatric critical care consultations to rural EDs is associated with less frequent physician-related ED medication errors among seriously ill and injured children. Therefore, this model of care may improve patient safety in rural hospital EDs. (Read the full article)




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Identifying Potential Kidney Donors Among Newborns Undergoing Circulatory Determination of Death

The demand for donor kidneys for transplantation exceeds supply. En bloc kidney transplantation and donation after determination of circulatory death from pediatric donors increases the potential donor pool.

Newborn infants undergoing elective withdrawal of life support in the NICU are a previously unrecognized source of potential kidney donors. (Read the full article)




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Characteristics of Youth Seeking Emergency Care for Assault Injuries

The emergency department (ED) is a critical contact location for youth violence interventions. Information on the characteristics of youth, motivations for fights leading to the injury, as well as previous health service utilization of assault-injured youth seeking care is lacking.

Assault-injured youth are characterized in a systematic sample demonstrating frequent ED use and the need to address substance use and lethal means of force in interventions; context and motivations for the fight are novel and will inform intervention efforts. (Read the full article)




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Accuracy of Pulse Oximetry in Children

Saturations from pulse oximetry (SpO2) may overestimate arterial oxygen saturations measured by CO-oximetry (SaO2). The overestimation can be affected by location of measurement, perfusion, and skin color. Previous studies are limited by small numbers of observations in a hypoxemic range.

This large sample of hypoxemic patients identified that SpO2 typically overestimates SaO2. Bias and precision varied throughout the SpO2 range. The SpO2 range of 81% to 85% had the greatest bias: median SpO2 6% higher than SaO2 measured by CO-oximetry. (Read the full article)




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Pneumococcal Antibody Levels in Children With PID Receiving Immunoglobulin

Although immunoglobulin replacement is recognized as effective in children with primary immunodeficiency, pneumococcal infection may occur. There is no available prospective clinical study evaluating levels of protective serospecific antibodies in patients and products.

Protective (0.2 µg/mL) antibody levels for the most frequent pneumococcal serotypes were measured in children treated for primary immunodeficiencies. A linear relationship was demonstrated between peak and trough levels of serospecific antipneumococcal antibodies in patients and infused immunoglobulins. (Read the full article)




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Intraventricular Hemorrhage and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Extreme Preterm Infants

Cranial ultrasound is routinely used in identifying cerebral abnormalities in premature infants. Grade III and IV intraventricular hemorrhages, cystic periventricular leukomalacia, and late ventriculomegaly are all known predictors of adverse neurodevelopmental sequelae in these infants.

We reviewed neurodevelopmental outcomes among 2414 extreme preterm infants. Infants with grades I and II intraventricular hemorrhage had increased rates of neurosensory impairment, developmental delay, cerebral palsy, and deafness at 2 to 3 years’ corrected age. (Read the full article)




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Risk Factors and Outcomes for Multidrug-Resistant Gram-Negative Bacteremia in the NICU

There is a perception that Gram-negative bacilli (GNB) bloodstream infection is increasing in the NICU, and those infections caused by a multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain are a growing threat to hospitalized patients.

Exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics is the most important risk factor for MDR GNB bacteremia, which is associated with higher mortality. Neonates with risk factors for bacteremia caused by a MDR GNB strain may benefit from empirical antimicrobial therapy with carbapenem. (Read the full article)




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Emergency Department Visits Resulting From Intentional Injury In and Out of School

Injuries sustained by children in the school setting have a significant public health impact. A concerning subgroup of school injuries are due to intentional and violent etiologies. Several studies have identified a need for further research to understand intentional school-based injuries.

This study discusses national estimates and trends over time and risk factors of intentional injury–related emergency department visits due to injuries sustained in the school setting. (Read the full article)




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Shoulder Injuries Among US High School Athletes, 2005/2006-2011/2012

Shoulder injuries are common among high school athletes. These injuries, both traumatic and overuse, contribute to significant time loss from athletic activity. Understanding sport-specific injury patterns is critical for development of targeted injury prevention programs.

This study is the most comprehensive analysis of high school shoulder injuries to date, providing national injury estimates while examining injury rates, diagnoses, severity, and mechanisms of injury in 9 interscholastic sports. (Read the full article)




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Usefulness of Symptoms to Screen for Celiac Disease

Celiac disease (CD) often goes undiagnosed. Current guidelines suggest intensified active case-finding, with liberal testing of children with CD-associated symptoms and/or conditions. However, methods for also finding undiagnosed CD cases in the general population should be explored and evaluated.

In a population-based CD screening, information on CD-associated symptoms and conditions, obtained before knowledge of CD status, was not useful in discriminating undiagnosed CD cases from non-CD children. The majority of screening-detected CD cases had no CD-associated symptoms or conditions. (Read the full article)




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Long-term Cardiovascular Outcomes in Survivors of Kawasaki Disease

Kawasaki disease (KD) results in coronary aneurysm formation and an increased risk of cardiovascular complications. Modern treatment of acute KD with intravenous immunoglobulin substantially reduces the rate of acute aneurysm formation.

This study reveals that long-term cardiovascular outcomes for KD patients in the current era are not significantly different than matched controls without KD. Late cardiovascular complications are almost exclusively seen in patients with persistent coronary aneurysms. (Read the full article)




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Sibship Size, Sibling Cognitive Sensitivity, and Children's Receptive Vocabulary

Sibship size has been negatively associated with children’s language, cognitive, and academic outcomes. This phenomenon is often explained in terms of resource dilution, wherein more children in the home is associated with fewer parental resources allocated to each child.

The current study identifies a moderator of this relationship. Specifically, if children’s next-in-age older siblings exhibit high levels of cognitive sensitivity then sibship size is not significantly related to children’s vocabulary. (Read the full article)




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Adult Talk in the NICU With Preterm Infants and Developmental Outcomes

It is known that adult language input is important to healthy language development and that preterm infants are at risk for language delay.

This is the first study to provide evidence that preterm infants’ exposure to adult words in the NICU before the mother’s due date are associated with better cognitive and language outcomes at 7 and 18 months’ corrected age. (Read the full article)




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Epidemiology of Tuberculosis in Young Children in the United States

More than 60% of all US tuberculosis cases occur among foreign-born persons, but ~90% of cases in young children occur among US-born; many of these children have foreign-born parents, suggesting that this is an important population for prevention.

This is the first study to calculate tuberculosis rates in US-born children by parental nativity. Compared with US-born children with US-born parents, rates were 32 times higher in foreign-born children and 6 times higher in US-born children with foreign-born parents. (Read the full article)




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Fertility Rate Trends Among Adolescent Girls With Major Mental Illness: A Population-Based Study

Although fertility rates among adolescents have declined in recent years, certain groups of adolescent girls remain at risk. Whereas adolescents with major mental illness have many risk factors for teenage pregnancy, their fertility rates have not been yet to be examined.

Fertility rates among adolescent girls with major mental illness are almost 3 times higher than among unaffected adolescents and are not decreasing to the same extent. Mental health considerations are highly important for pregnancy prevention and for perinatal interventions targeting adolescents. (Read the full article)




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Duration of Protection After First Dose of Acellular Pertussis Vaccine in Infants

Waning effectiveness of 5 doses of acellular pertussis vaccines is well documented after 6 years of age, but data are lacking for fewer doses in younger children.

In 2- to 3-month-old infants, 1 dose of the diphtheria–tetanus–acellular pertussis vaccine gave significant protection against hospitalized pertussis. The effectiveness of 3 doses decreased from 84% between 6 and 11 months to 59% after 3 years. (Read the full article)




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Ultrasound as a Screening Test for Genitourinary Anomalies in Children With UTI

Current guidelines recommend renal ultrasound as a screening test after febrile urinary tract infection, with voiding cystourethrogram (VCUG) only if the ultrasound is abnormal. Few studies have evaluated the accuracy of ultrasound as a screening test for VCUG-identified abnormalities.

This study shows that ultrasound is a poor screening test for genitourinary abnormalities identified on VCUG, such as vesicoureteral reflux. Neither positive nor negative ultrasounds reliably identify or rule out such abnormalities. Ultrasound and VCUG provide different, but complementary, information. (Read the full article)




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Effectiveness of Nebulized Beclomethasone in Preventing Viral Wheezing: An RCT

Viral wheezing is common in preschool-aged children. The efficacy of inhaled steroids in preventing viral wheezing is debated. Despite this debate, nebulized beclomethasone is widely prescribed (particularly in a few countries) to children with upper respiratory tract infections.

Findings from this study confirm that inhaled steroids are not effective in preventing viral wheezing. Moreover, no differences were found in the persistence of symptoms (eg, runny nose, sore throat) or in the parental perception of asthma-like symptom severity. (Read the full article)