H
Howard Berger
Researcher at St. Michael's Hospital
Publications - 150
Citations - 3687
Howard Berger is an academic researcher from St. Michael's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Gestational diabetes. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 135 publications receiving 2977 citations. Previous affiliations of Howard Berger include Centre for Research on Inner City Health & University of Toronto.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Diabetes and pregnancy.
David M. Thompson,Howard Berger,Denice S. Feig,Robert Gagnon,Tina Kader,Erin Keely,Sharon E. Kozak,Edmond A. Ryan,Mathew Sermer,Christina Vinokuroff +9 more
TL;DR: Although it is rare for IDDM to be recognised for the first time in pregnancy, this can happen and should always be borne in mind particularly if hyperglycaemia occurs early in the pregnancy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Screening for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
TL;DR: This thesis aims to evaluate costs and effects of various screening strategies in order to obtain a uniform (cost-)effective strategy for detection of gestational diabetes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Substance Use in Pregnancy
Suzanne Wong,Alice Ordean,Meldon Kahan,Robert Gagnon,Lynda Hudon,Melanie Basso,Hayley Bos,Joan Crane,Gregory A.L. Davies,Marie-France Delisle,Dan Farine,Savas Menticoglou,William Mundle,Lynn Murphy-Kaulbeck,Annie Ouellet,Tracy Pressey,Anne Roggensack,Frank Sanderson,William Ehman,Anne Biringer,Andrée Gagnon,Lisa Graves,Jonathan Hey,Jill Konkin,Francine Léger,Cindy Marshall,Deborah Robertson,Douglas Bell,George Carson,Donna Gilmour,Owen Hughes,Caroline Le Jour,Dean Leduc,Nicholas Leyland,Paul Martyn,André Masse,Ron Abrahams,Sanja Avdic,Howard Berger,Mike Franklyn,Samuel Harper,Georgia Hunt,Patricia Mousmanis,Kellie E. Murphy,Sarah Payne,Deana Midmer,Sandra de la Ronde +46 more
TL;DR: This guideline is intended to increase the knowledge and comfort level of health care providers caring for pregnant women who have substance use disorders and to provide evidence-based recommendations for the management of this challenging clinical issue.
Journal Article
Changes in cerebral hemodynamics and oxygenation in the first 24 hours after birth asphyxia.
TL;DR: CBV, HbO2, HBR, and Cytaa3 decreased in the first 12 hours of life in severely asphyxiated neonates who subsequently developed neurologic abnormalities, suggesting that posthypoxic-ischemic reperfusion injury of the brain during early neonatal life occurs in neonates with severe birth asphyxia.
Journal ArticleDOI
High concentrations of folate and unmetabolized folic acid in a cohort of pregnant Canadian women and umbilical cord blood
Lesley Plumptre,Shannon Masih,Anna Ly,Susanne Aufreiter,Kyoung-Jin Sohn,Ruth Croxford,Andrea Lausman,Howard Berger,Deborah L O'Connor,Young-In Kim +9 more
TL;DR: Functional ramifications of high folate and UMFA concentrations in maternal and fetal circulation warrant additional investigation because an excess folate status may affect long-term health outcomes of the offspring.