keyword
Keywords Early childhood and infant phy...

Early childhood and infant physical therapy

https://read.qxmd.com/read/34087819/infant-with-right-hemiplegia-due-to-acute-encephalopathy-with-biphasic-seizures-and-late-reduced-diffusion-aesd-a-case-report
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ai Takahashi, Erina Kamei, Yuri Sato, Seiichiro Shimada, Misao Tsubokawa, Genrei Ohta, Yusei Ohshima, Akihiko Matsumine
RATIONALE: Acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion (AESD) is a condition characterized by biphasic convulsions and disturbance of consciousness. In Japan, the most common pediatric cases of acute encephalopathy are associated with infection. AESD usually occurs in early childhood, with the characteristic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) appearance called "bright tree appearance." The disease often has neurological sequelae and interferes with the schooling of children and their activities of daily living; however, there are few clinical case reports of hemiplegia caused by AESD...
June 4, 2021: Medicine (Baltimore)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33868220/management-of-monogenic-il-1-mediated-autoinflammatory-diseases-in-childhood
#22
REVIEW
Tatjana Welzel, Susanne M Benseler, Jasmin B Kuemmerle-Deschner
Monogenic Interleukin 1 (IL-1) mediated autoinflammatory diseases (AID) are rare, often severe illnesses of the innate immune system associated with constitutively increased secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Clinical characteristics include recurrent fevers, inflammation of joints, skin, and serous membranes. CNS and eye inflammation can be seen. Characteristically, clinical symptoms are coupled with elevated inflammatory markers, such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum amyloid A (SAA). Typically, AID affect infants and children, but late-onset and atypical phenotypes are described...
2021: Frontiers in Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33734799/a-prenatal-programming-perspective-on-the-intergenerational-transmission-of-maternal-adverse-childhood-experiences-to-offspring-health-problems
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danielle S Roubinov, Linda J Luecken, Sarah G Curci, Jennifer A Somers, Laura K Winstone
Decades of research indicate that individuals exposed to childhood adversity are at risk for poor physical and mental health across their life span. More recently, intergenerational transmission of trauma and prenatal programming frameworks suggest an even longer reach for adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), with consequences that extend to subsequent generations. Beyond the individual-level consequences typically observed by empirical studies of ACEs, mothers' experiences of early adversity may also compromise the maternal-child dyadic relationship...
February 2021: American Psychologist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33562339/preventing-brain-injury-in-the-preterm-infant-current-controversies-and-potential-therapies
#24
REVIEW
Nathanael Yates, Alistair J Gunn, Laura Bennet, Simerdeep K Dhillon, Joanne O Davidson
Preterm birth is associated with a high risk of morbidity and mortality including brain damage and cerebral palsy. The development of brain injury in the preterm infant may be influenced by many factors including perinatal asphyxia, infection/inflammation, chronic hypoxia and exposure to treatments such as mechanical ventilation and corticosteroids. There are currently very limited treatment options available. In clinical trials, magnesium sulfate has been associated with a small, significant reduction in the risk of cerebral palsy and gross motor dysfunction in early childhood but no effect on the combined outcome of death or disability, and longer-term follow up to date has not shown improved neurological outcomes in school-age children...
February 7, 2021: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33507861/-autism-spectrum-disorder-in-infancy-and-early-childhood-the-model-of-the-centro-de-estudos-do-beb%C3%A3-e-da-crian%C3%A3-a-for-diagnosis-and-therapeutic-intervention
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cristina Martins Halpern, Pedro Caldeira da Silva, Diana Costa, Maria João Nascimento, Joana Mesquita Reis, Maria Teresa Martins, Berta Pinto Ferreira, Isabel Santos, Lília Carvalho, Madalena Paiva Gomes, Manuela Martins, Maria João Pimentel, Patrícia Lopes, Paula Silva, Rita Rapazote, Sílvia Catarino, Susana Aires Pereira, Susana Pereira, Sílvia Afonso
INTRODUCTION: The Centro de Estudos do Bebé e da Criança in Hospital Dona Estefânia has organized a multidisciplinary model for children under three with suspected autism spectrum disorder, thus implementing the recent guidelines established by the Directorate General for Health. The aim of this study is to describe this model and case series. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A retrospective descriptive study of observed children with suspected ASD. They were observed according to the model of the Centro de Estudos do Bebé e da Criança and DC:0-5TM classification, between January 2018 and September 2019...
October 1, 2021: Acta Médica Portuguesa
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33189024/defining-the-expanding-clinical-spectrum-of-pediatric-onset-stiff-person-syndrome
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anusha K Yeshokumar, Lisa R Sun, Scott D Newsome
BACKGROUND: We aimed to characterize the spectrum of clinical features and examination findings in pediatric-onset stiff person syndrome. METHODS: Medical records were reviewed for all patients treated for stiff person syndrome with symptom onset in childhood at a tertiary medical center between March 2001 and February 2019. RESULTS: Of the 15 individuals who met inclusion criteria, 11 (73%) were female and 13 (87%) were Caucasian. Median age at symptom onset was 14...
January 2021: Pediatric Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28912993/bilateral-peritonsillar-abscess-in-an-infant-an-unusual-presentation-of-sore-throat
#27
Mariana Manzoni Seerig, Letícia Chueiri, Janaina Jacques, Maria Fernanda Piccoli Cardoso de Mello, Martin Batista Coutinho da Silva, Daniel Buffon Zatt, Rosana Cristine Otero Cunha, Andre Souza de Albuquerque Maranhão
INTRODUCTION: Peritonsillar abscess is considered a suppurative complication of acute tonsillitis. It is usually unilateral and clinically evident bilateral presentation is uncommon. The condition affects mainly children older than 10 years and young adults. Herein we present a rare case of bilateral peritonsillar abscess in an infant. PRESENTATION OF CASE: A 1-year-old boy presented with a two-day history of worsening sore throat, loss of appetite, vomiting, and fever...
2017: Case Reports in Otolaryngology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28011082/-neonatal-arterial-ischemic-stroke-review-of-the-current-guidelines
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E Saliba, T Debillon, S Auvin, O Baud, V Biran, J-L Chabernaud, S Chabrier, F Cneude, A-G Cordier, V Darmency-Stamboul, J-F Diependaele, T Debillon, M Dinomais, C Durand, A Ego, G Favrais, Y Gruel, L Hertz-Pannier, B Husson, S Marret, S N'Guyen The Tich, T Perez, E Saliba, J-B Valentin, C Vuillerot
Neonatal arterial ischemic stroke (NAIS) is a rare event that occurs in approximately one in 5000 term or close-to-term infants. Most affected infants will present with seizures. Although a well-recognized clinical entity, many questions remain regarding diagnosis, risk factors, treatment, and follow-up modalities. In the absence of a known pathophysiological mechanism and lack of evidence-based guidelines, only supportive care is currently provided. To address these issues, a French national committee set up by the French Neonatal Society (Société française de néonatologie) and the national referral center (Centre national de référence) for arterial ischemic stroke in children drew up guidelines based on an HAS (Haute Autorité de santé [HAS]; French national authority for health) methodology...
February 2017: Archives de Pédiatrie: Organe Officiel de la Sociéte Française de Pédiatrie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27386757/physical-therapy-management-of-infants-and-children-with-hypophosphatasia
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dawn Phillips, Laura E Case, Donna Griffin, Kim Hamilton, Sergio Lerma Lara, Beth Leiro, Jessica Monfreda, Elaine Westlake, Priya S Kishnani
Hypophosphatasia (HPP) is a rare inborn error of metabolism resulting in undermineralization of bone and subsequent skeletal abnormalities. The natural history of HPP is characterized by rickets and osteomalacia, increased propensity for bone fracture, early loss of teeth in childhood, and muscle weakness. There is a wide heterogeneity in disease presentation, and the functional impact of the disease can vary from perinatal death to gait abnormalities. Recent clinical trials of enzyme replacement therapy have begun to offer an opportunity for improvement in survival and function...
September 2016: Molecular Genetics and Metabolism
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27245831/interstitial-lung-disease-in-children-younger-than-2-years
#30
REVIEW
Paolo Spagnolo, Andrew Bush
Childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD) represents a highly heterogeneous group of rare disorders associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. Although our understanding of chILD remains limited, important advances have recently been made, the most important being probably the appreciation that disorders that present in early life are distinct from those occurring in older children and adults, albeit with some overlap. chILD manifests with diffuse pulmonary infiltrates and nonspecific respiratory signs and symptoms, making exclusion of common conditions presenting in a similar fashion an essential preliminary step...
June 2016: Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26907858/computational-models-of-inhalation-therapy-in-early-childhood-therapeutic-aerosols-in-the-developing-acinus
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janna Tenenbaum Katan, Philipp Hofemeier, Josué Sznitman
BACKGROUND: Inhalation therapy targeted to the deep alveolated regions holds great promise, specifically in pediatric populations. Yet, inhalation devices and medical protocols are overwhelmingly derived from adult guidelines, with very low therapeutic efficiency in young children. During the first years of life, airway remodeling and changing ventilation patterns are anticipated to alter aerosol deposition with underachieving outcomes in infants. As past research is still overwhelmingly focused on adults or limited to models of upper airways, a fundamental understanding of inhaled therapeutic transport and deposition in the acinar regions is needed to shed light on delivering medication to the developing alveoli...
June 2016: Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26644127/early-childhood-constraint-therapy-for-sensory-motor-impairment-in-cerebral-palsy-a-randomised-clinical-trial-protocol
#32
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Olena Chorna, Jill Heathcock, Alexandra Key, Garey Noritz, Helen Carey, Ellyn Hamm, Mary Ann Nelin, Micah Murray, Amy Needham, James C Slaughter, Nathalie L Maitre
INTRODUCTION: Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common physical disability in childhood. It is a disorder resulting from sensory and motor impairments due to perinatal brain injury, with lifetime consequences that range from poor adaptive and social function to communication and emotional disturbances. Infants with CP have a fundamental disadvantage in recovering motor function: they do not receive accurate sensory feedback from their movements, leading to developmental disregard. Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) is one of the few effective neurorehabilitative strategies shown to improve upper extremity motor function in adults and older children with CP, potentially overcoming developmental disregard...
December 7, 2015: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25169312/what-must-we-treat-in-childhood-asthma-symptoms-and-or-abnormal-function
#33
L I Landau
The goals of asthma treatment are to eliminate symptoms, prevent acute attacks, maintain as normal a lifestyle as possible, avoid drug side-effects, and normalize lung function. Treatment must therefore be based on recognizing symptoms of asthma, accurately characterizing severity of asthma and perceiving increasing severity during an acute attack. Criteria are necessary to provide instructions for increasing reliever medications during acute attacks as well as for appropriate preventive medications in long term management...
April 1997: Pediatric Pulmonology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23869393/disorders-of-childhood-growth-and-development-screening-and-evaluation-of-the-child-who-misses-developmental-milestones
#34
REVIEW
Maureen Grissom
The family physician is one of the few individuals from whom families receive feedback about their children's development; this makes early identification of potential delays an important responsibility. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends formal developmental screening for all children at the 9-, 18-, and 24- and/or 30-month well-child visits as well as developmental surveillance at every office visit through age 5 years. A formal screening measure is recommended, taking into account administration time and cost, characteristics of the patient population (eg, availability of screening tool in numerous languages), and psychometrics (eg, reliability, sensitivity, specificity)...
July 2013: FP Essentials
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23701015/an-empirical-comparison-of-tree-based-methods-for-propensity-score-estimation
#35
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Stephanie Watkins, Michele Jonsson-Funk, M Alan Brookhart, Steven A Rosenberg, T Michael O'Shea, Julie Daniels
OBJECTIVE: To illustrate the use of ensemble tree-based methods (random forest classification [RFC] and bagging) for propensity score estimation and to compare these methods with logistic regression, in the context of evaluating the effect of physical and occupational therapy on preschool motor ability among very low birth weight (VLBW) children. DATA SOURCE: We used secondary data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Birth Cohort (ECLS-B) between 2001 and 2006...
October 2013: Health Services Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23675924/towards-a-personalised-approach-to-managing-influenza-infections-in-infants-and-children-food-for-thought-and-a-note-on-oseltamivir
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barbara Rath, Franziska Tief, Katharina Karsch, Susann Muehlhans, Patrick Obermeier, Eleni Adamou, Xi Chen, Lea Seeber, Christian Peiser, Christian Hoppe, Max von Kleist, Tim Conrad, Brunhilde Schweiger
Acute respiratory infections represent common diseases in childhood and a challenge to infection control, public heath, and the clinical management of patients and their families. Children are avid spreaders of respiratory viruses, and seasonal outbreaks of influenza create additional disease burden and healthcare cost. Infants under the age of two and children with chronic conditions are at high risk. The absence of pre-defined risk factors however, does not protect from serious disease. Immunisation rates remain low, and physical interventions are of limited value in young children...
February 2013: Infectious Disorders Drug Targets
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23431212/clinical-decision-making-in-hypotonia-and-gross-motor-delay-a-case-report-of-type-1-spinal-muscular-atrophy-in-an-infant
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kirsten Hawkins Malerba, Jan Stephen Tecklin
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Children often are referred for physical therapy with the diagnosis of hypotonia when the definitive cause of hypotonia is unknown. The purpose of this case report is to describe the clinical decision-making process using the Hypothesis-Oriented Algorithm for Clinicians II (HOAC II) for an infant with hypotonia and gross motor delay. CASE DESCRIPTION: The patient was a 5-month-old infant who had been evaluated by a neurologist and then referred for physical therapy by his pediatrician...
June 2013: Physical Therapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23338775/behavioral-interventions-and-counseling-to-prevent-child-abuse-and-neglect-a-systematic-review-to-update-the-us-preventive-services-task-force-recommendation
#38
REVIEW
Shelley S Selph, Christina Bougatsos, Ian Blazina, Heidi D Nelson
BACKGROUND: In 2004, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force determined that evidence was insufficient to recommend behavioral interventions and counseling to prevent child abuse and neglect. PURPOSE: To review new evidence on the effectiveness of behavioral interventions and counseling in health care settings for reducing child abuse and neglect and related health outcomes, as well as adverse effects of interventions. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE and PsycINFO (January 2002 to June 2012), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (through the second quarter of 2012), Scopus, and reference lists...
February 5, 2013: Annals of Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23165551/-delay-in-the-acquisition-of-sucking-swallowing-breathing-in-the-preterm-efects-of-early-stimulation
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E La Orden Izquierdo, E Salcedo Lobato, I Cuadrado Pérez, M S Herráez Sánchez, L Cabanillas Vilaplana
INTRODUCTION: Premature baby's oral feeding is not possible until the reflex of sucking-swallowing-breathing adquisition. Its delay extends hospital stay and increases the incidence of oral motor disorders in early childhood. AIMS: To analyze the transition from enteral to oral nutrition, the comorbidity associated with its delay and the impact of an early suction stimulation in a cohort of premature babies. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Retrospective checking of 95 infants less than 32 gestation weeks (GW) admitted to a neonatal ICU in the last 4 years...
July 2012: Nutrición Hospitalaria: Organo Oficial de la Sociedad Española de Nutrición Parenteral y Enteral
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22789648/facilitating-hiv-testing-care-and-treatment-for-orphans-and-vulnerable-children-aged-five-years-and-younger-through-community-based-early-childhood-development-playcentres-in-rural-zimbabwe
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diana Patel, Priscilla Matyanga, Tichaona Nyamundaya, Delia Chimedza, Karen Webb, Barbara Engelsmann
INTRODUCTION: Early diagnosis of children living with HIV is a prerequisite for accessing timely paediatric HIV care and treatment services and for optimizing treatment outcomes. Testing of HIV-exposed infants at 6 weeks and later is part of the national prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV programme in Zimbabwe, but many opportunities to test infants and children are being missed. Early childhood development (ECD) playcentres can act as an entry point providing multiple health and social services for orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) under 5 years, including facilitating access to HIV treatment and care...
2012: Journal of the International AIDS Society
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