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Luigi Gagliardi

Researcher at Academy for Urban School Leadership

Publications -  119
Citations -  3006

Luigi Gagliardi is an academic researcher from Academy for Urban School Leadership. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Gestational age. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 102 publications receiving 2346 citations. Previous affiliations of Luigi Gagliardi include Schering-Plough & University of Padua.

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Neonatal anthropometric charts: the Italian neonatal study compared with other European studies.

TL;DR: The existing European neonatal charts, based on more or less recent data, were found to be inappropriate for Italy and until an international standard is developed, the use of national updated reference charts is recommended.
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Weight Growth Velocity and Postnatal Growth Failure in Infants 501 to 1500 Grams: 2000–2013

TL;DR: For infants weighing 501 to 1500 g at birth, average GV increased and the percentage with postnatal growth failure decreased, however, in 2013, half of these infants still demonstrated postnatal grow failure and one-quarter demonstrated severe postnatalgrowth failure.
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Assessing mortality risk in very low birthweight infants: a comparison of CRIB, CRIB-II, and SNAPPE-II

TL;DR: CRIB and CRIB-II had greater discriminatory ability than SNAPPE-II, and risk adjustment using all scores is imperfect, and other perinatal factors significantly influence VLBWI survival.
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Directed acyclic graphs: a tool for causal studies in paediatrics.

TL;DR: DAGs are a graphical tool which provide a way to visually represent and better understand the key concepts of exposure, outcome, causation, confounding, and bias and it is shown how DAGs can be most useful in identifying confounding and sources of bias.
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Reference Values for Respiratory Rate in the First 3 Years of Life

TL;DR: The repeatability of respiratory rate measured with a stethoscope was good and percentile curves would be particularly helpful in the first months of life when the decline in respiratory rate is very rapid and prevents to use cut off values for defining "normality."