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Institution

Princess Margaret Hospital for Children

HealthcarePerth, Western Australia, Australia
About: Princess Margaret Hospital for Children is a healthcare organization based out in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Randomized controlled trial. The organization has 1501 authors who have published 2068 publications receiving 75773 citations. The organization is also known as: Perth Children's Hospital & PMH.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings indicate that there can be differences in the organization of sensory and motor pathways in cerebral palsy, and suggest that some of the residual motor dysfunction experienced by these subjects could be due to an impairment of sensorimotor integration at cortical level as a result of reorganization in the motor system.
Abstract: There have been a number of physiological studies of motor recovery in hemiplegic cerebral palsy which have identified the presence of novel ipsilateral projections from the undamaged hemisphere to the affected hand. However, little is known regarding the afferent projection to sensory cortex and its relationship to the reorganized cortical motor output. We used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to investigate the corticomotor projection to the affected and unaffected hands in a group of subjects with hemiplegic cerebral palsy, and also performed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies of the patterns of activation in cortical motor and sensory areas following active and passive movement of the hands. Both TMS and fMRI demonstrated a normal contralateral motor and sensory projection between the unaffected hand and the cerebral hemisphere. However, in the case of the affected hand, the TMS results indicated either a purely ipsilateral projection or a bilateral projection in which the ipsilateral pathway had the lower motor threshold, whereas passive movement resulted in fMRI activation in the contralateral hemisphere. These results demonstrate that there is a significant fast-conducting corticomotor projection to the affected hand from the ipsilateral hemisphere in this group of subjects, but that the predominant afferent projection from the hand is still directed to the affected contralateral hemisphere, resulting in an interhemispheric dissociation between afferent kinesthetic inputs and efferent corticomotor output. The findings indicate that there can be differences in the organization of sensory and motor pathways in cerebral palsy, and suggest that some of the residual motor dysfunction experienced by these subjects could be due to an impairment of sensorimotor integration at cortical level as a result of reorganization in the motor system.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To describe the obstetric and perinatal factors, in particular the method of delivery, associated with development of a subgaleal haematoma (SGH) and to determine the outcome of survivors with this type of birth trauma.
Abstract: Objective: To describe the obstetric and perinatal factors, in particular the method of delivery, associated with development of a subgaleal haematoma (SGH) and to determine the outcome of survivors with this type of birth trauma. Methodology: Perinatal and obstetric data were retrospectively reviewed for 37 infants admitted to the neonatal unit of the sole tertiary paediatric referral hospital in Western Australia with an SGH, over a 24 year period from 1970 to 1993. These data were compared to data for all Western Australian births. The long-term outcome was obtained through medical and private paediatric records for 26 of these infants. Results: All except one of the neonates had instrumental deliveries; 89% had a vacuum extractor applied to the head at some stage of delivery compared to 10% of the general population of births in Western Australia. There was also a significantly increased risk of failure of attempted vacuum extraction. Of the cases where a vacuum extraction was attempted, 45% also had forceps applied to the head. Coagulopathy was associated with the severity of the SGH. There was also a high frequency of occurrence (40%) of associated head trauma such as intracranial haemorrhage, skull fracture and cerebral oedema, as well as neonatal encephalopathy (73%). The occurrence of these associated features did not correlate significantly with the severity of SGH. Minor complications of SGH included jaundice and facial bruising. There was an excess mortality associated with SGH; however, the long-term outcome for neonatal survivors with this disorder was good. None of the cases studied subsequently developed cerebral palsy or intellectual disability, and minor neurological sequelae only were documented in four infants. Conclusions: SGH is an uncommon type of birth trauma, and is associated with delivery or attempted delivery by vacuum extraction. The most commonly associated clinical problems were hypovolaemia and coagulopathy. The long-term outcome for neonates with this condition is good.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Parents' and nurses' perceptions of children's pain should only be considered as estimates rather than expressions of the pain experienced, and not the same as children's self-reports.
Abstract: Title. Association between self-report pain ratings of child and parent, child and nurse and parent and nurse dyads: meta-analysis. Aim. This paper is a report of a meta-analysis to investigate the association between self-report pain ratings for the dyads of child and parent, child and nurse and parent and nurse. Background. Existing research has shown conflicting results with regard to agreements of self-report pain ratings between the three dyads. Data sources. The CINAHL, Medline, Ovid and PsycINFO databases were searched using keyword, such as ‘children/adolescents’, ‘parents/nurses’, ‘pain assessment’, ‘pain ratings’, ‘association’ and ‘agreement’. Studies published in English in or after 1990 were included. Methods. Meta-analysis methodology was applied to 12 pain assessment studies published between 1990 and 2007 which met the inclusion criteria. In the 12 studies a common effect size was estimated using the Pearson’s correlation coefficient. Therefore, a fixed-effects model was chosen for this meta-analysis. Results. We found moderate summary effect sizes between self-reported pain ratings for the dyad of child and parent (r = 0·64) and the child and nurse dyad (r = 0·58) and a weak summary effect size of r = 0·49 for the dyad of parent and nurse. The summarized effect sizes for each of the three dyads varied across the studies. A test of homogeneity (Q-statistic) indicated that all effect size estimates were not homogeneous. Conclusion. Parents’ and nurses’ perceptions of children’s pain should only be considered as estimates rather than expressions of the pain experienced, and not the same as children’s self-reports. There is a need for education on selection of appropriate pain assessment scales in relation to the age and development of the child.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Physiotherapists could facilitate these adolescents with congenital heart disease to achieve more moderate to vigorous physical activity, to offset adult sedentary behaviour.
Abstract: Regular physical activity prevents chronic disease and moderate to vigorous participation provides additional health benefits. Therefore, adolescents with congenital heart disease risk developing latent diseases due to real or perceived physical activity restrictions. Habitual physical activity levels, psychological determinants and advice received were examined by postal survey of 434 West Australian adolescents aged 12–18 years with congenital heart disease. Survey results (n = 153) were compared with published normative adolescent data. Total activity was classified as vigorous, adequate or inadequate according to metabolic equivalents, reported frequency and duration. Comparable numbers of respondents and healthy peers were active (winter 62% vs 74%; and summer 73% vs 82% respectively, p = 0.27). However, significantly fewer male respondents were classified as vigorously active compared with healthy peers, in both winter (48% vs 67%, p p = 0.04). Similar, but non-significant, trends were found when comparing female respondents with healthy peers and for mild versus severe disease groups. Self-efficacy ratings did not explain differences in physical activity intensity. Congenital heart disease may impact on the intensity of physical activity undertaken by affected adolescents thus denying additional health benefits. Physiotherapists could facilitate these adolescents to achieve more moderate to vigorous physical activity, to offset adult sedentary behaviour.

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Exposure to formaldehyde in homes may invoke a subclinical inflammatory response in the airways of healthy children, and eNO levels were significantly elevated in children living in homes with average formaldehyde levels >/= 50 ppb.
Abstract: Exposure to domestic levels of formaldehyde has been associated with adverse respiratory symptoms in both adults and children. The underlying mechanisms responsible for these findings have not been established. In order to investigate possible inflammatory effects of formaldehyde at levels typically found in the home, we measured exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) in 224 healthy children 6 to 13 yr of age (116 girls) and monitored formaldehyde levels in their homes. Formaldehyde was monitored using a passive sampling technique. Exhaled NO was measured directly into a fast response chemiluminescence nitric oxide analyzer. The children also undertook a lung function (spirometry) test. There was no effect of formaldehyde levels measured in homes on spirometric variables. However, eNO levels were significantly elevated in children living in homes with average formaldehyde levels ⩾ 50 ppb. Exhaled NO levels (geometric mean) were 15.5 ppb (95% CI: 10.5 to 22.9 ppb) for children from homes with formaldehyde concentratio...

128 citations


Authors

Showing all 1506 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mark E. Cooper1581463124887
Richard J. Simpson11385059378
Peter D. Sly10383744815
Patrick G. Holt10361941317
Lyle J. Palmer9937247423
Alan O Trounson9254133785
Malcolm R. Sears8637530802
Bart J. Currie8666229494
Paul Burton8541842766
Andrew J. Martin8481936203
Jonathan R. Carapetis7638475777
David A. Mackey7553124133
Simon Mallal7440024687
Sourav Ghosh7328750764
John M. Graham7238018745
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
20224
202113
202018
201948
2018144