K
Kristy Seidel
Researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Publications - 95
Citations - 9354
Kristy Seidel is an academic researcher from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Total body irradiation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 88 publications receiving 8898 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristy Seidel include University of Washington & Seattle Children's Research Institute.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Predicting Obesity in Young Adulthood from Childhood and Parental Obesity
TL;DR: Obese children under three years of age without obese parents are at low risk for obesity in adulthood, but among older children, obesity is an increasingly important predictor of adult obesity, regardless of whether the parents are obese.
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Early Adiposity Rebound and the Risk of Adult Obesity
TL;DR: An early AR is associated with an increased risk of adult obesity independent of parent obesity and the BMI at AR, and future research should examine the biological and behavioral determinants of AR.
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Candidemia in Allogeneic Blood and Marrow Transplant Recipients: Evolution of Risk Factors after the Adoption of Prophylactic Fluconazole
TL;DR: The use of prophylactic fluconazole is associated with a low incidence of candidemia and attributable mortality, despite colonization with azole-resistant Candida species in BMT recipients.
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Prolonged fluconazole prophylaxis is associated with persistent protection against candidiasis-related death in allogeneic marrow transplant recipients: long-term follow-up of a randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
Kieren A. Marr,Kristy Seidel,Monica A. Slavin,Raleigh A. Bowden,H. Gary Schoch,Mary E.D. Flowers,Lawrence Corey,Michael Boeckh +7 more
TL;DR: Administration of fluconazole (400 mg/d) for 75 days after BMT appears to be associated with decreased gut GVHD, a persistent protection against disseminated candidal infections and candidiasis-related death, resulting in an overall survival benefit in allogeneic BMT recipients.
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Effect of fluid overload and dose of replacement fluid on survival in hemofiltration.
TL;DR: The data support previous findings that volume overload in excess of 10% is strongly correlated with poor outcome and favor early institution of CRRT, before excessive fluid overload occurs.