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Institution

Primary Children's Hospital

HealthcareSalt Lake City, Utah, United States
About: Primary Children's Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 1770 authors who have published 2594 publications receiving 107857 citations. The organization is also known as: Intermountain Primary Children's Medical Center & Intermountain Primary Children's Hospital.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The case of a 12-year-old boy who had severe Crohn's disease and a nasal septal perforation is reported and this complication is discussed in the context of its otolaryngologic manifestations.
Abstract: Nasal manifestations of Crohn's disease are quite rare. They are typified by chronic mucosal inflammation, obstruction, bleeding, and occasionally septal perforation--signs and symptoms that are common to many disease states of the nose. Nasal findings, much like oral lesions, can precede the more typical gastroenterologic manifestations of Crohn's disease. Otolaryngologists should be aware of such an association and consider the diagnosis of Crohn's disease in atypical cases of nasal disease. We report the case of a 12-year-old boy who had severe Crohn's disease and a nasal septal perforation, and we discuss this complication in the context of its otolaryngologic manifestations.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In four children with communicating Hydrocephalus the development of the hydrocephalus appears to be related to the use of bilateral jugular catheters inserted for total parenteral nutrition.

38 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Early post–cardiac arrest hypotension was associated with lower odds of discharge survival, even after adjusting for covariates of interest, in the THAPCA trial.
Abstract: Importance Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) occurs in more than 6000 children each year in the United States, with survival rates of less than 10% and severe neurologic morbidity in many survivors. Post-cardiac arrest hypotension can occur, but its frequency and association with survival have not been well described during targeted temperature management. Objective To determine whether hypotension is associated with survival to discharge in children and adolescents after resuscitation from OHCA. Design, setting, and participants This post hoc secondary analysis of the Therapeutic Hypothermia After Pediatric Cardiac Arrest (THAPCA) trial included 292 pediatric patients older than 48 hours and younger than 18 years treated in 36 pediatric intensive care units from September 1, 2009, through December 31, 2012. Participants underwent therapeutic hypothermia (33.0°C) vs therapeutic normothermia (36.8°C) for 48 hours. All participants had hourly systolic blood pressure measurements documented during the initial 6 hours of temperature intervention. Hourly blood pressures beginning at the time of temperature intervention (time 0) were normalized for age, sex, and height. Early hypotension was defined as a systolic blood pressure less than the fifth percentile during the first 6 hours after temperature intervention. With use of forward stepwise logistic regression, covariates of interest (age, sex, initial cardiac rhythm, any preexisting condition, estimated duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation [CPR], primary cause of cardiac arrest, temperature intervention group, night or weekend cardiac arrest, witnessed status, and bystander CPR) were evaluated in the final model. Data were analyzed from February 5, 2016, through June 13, 2017. Exposures Hypotension. Main outcomes and measure Survival to hospital discharge. Results Of 292 children (194 boys [66.4%] and 98 girls [33.6%]; median age, 23.0 months [interquartile range, 5.0-105.0 months]), 78 (26.7%) had at least 1 episode of early hypotension. No difference was observed between the therapeutic hypothermia and therapeutic normothermia groups in the prevalence of hypotension during induction and maintenance (73 of 153 [47.7%] vs 72 of 139 [51.8%]; P = .50) or rewarming (35 of 118 [29.7%] vs 19 of 95 [20.0%]; P = .10) during the first 72 hours. Participants who had early hypotension were less likely to survive to hospital discharge (20 of 78 [25.6%] vs 93 of 214 [43.5%]; adjusted odds ratio, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.20-0.74). Conclusions and relevance In this post hoc secondary analysis of the THAPCA trial, 26.7% of participants had hypotension within 6 hours after temperature intervention. Early post-cardiac arrest hypotension was associated with lower odds of discharge survival, even after adjusting for covariates of interest.

38 citations


Authors

Showing all 1777 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Scott Thomas131121985507
Michael R. Bristow11350860747
Ikuo Ueda106105348642
David Robinson10175738372
Pedram Argani9737235607
Glenn D. Prestwich8869042758
Melvin M. Scheinman8653125883
John M. Opitz85119340257
George R. Saade8287230325
James Neil Weinstein8132524918
Michael Charlton7933328494
James M. Ford7931420750
Michael W. Varner7440519346
Murray D. Mitchell7454020408
Jeffrey L. Anderson7330025916
Network Information
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20228
2021197
2020178
2019131
2018137