Publications by authors named "A Telsey"

Objectives: Recorded music risks overstimulation in NICUs. The live elements of music such as rhythm, breath, and parent-preferred lullabies may affect physiologic function (eg, heart and respiratory rates, O2 saturation levels, and activity levels) and developmental function (eg, sleep, feeding behavior, and weight gain) in premature infants.

Methods: A randomized clinical multisite trial of 272 premature infants aged ≥32 weeks with respiratory distress syndrome, clinical sepsis, and/or SGA (small for gestational age) served as their own controls in 11 NICUs.

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Cocaine use has increased dramatically in the past several years, and multiple medical complications associated with its use have been reported in adults, including bowel infarction and colitis. Maternal use of cocaine during pregnancy has been associated with complications in the fetus and newborn infant, including spontaneous abortions, preterm labor, cerebral infarctions, seizures, renal anomalies, and neurobehavioral and neurophysiologic abnormalities. This paper presents a case of necrotizing enterocolitis at birth in a term newborn exposed to cocaine antenatally.

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We assessed postnatal growth, neurodevelopmental outcome, and occurrence of respiratory illnesses in 46 infants of very low birth weight who were enrolled in a randomized, controlled, bicenter clinical trial of human surfactant treatment for respiratory distress syndrome. No long-term adverse effects of human surfactant treatment were detected between control and human surfactant-treated infants with respect to growth, neurologic, or developmental outcome. Infants with chronic lung disease, regardless of treatment group, had poorer growth and were more likely to have neurodevelopmental abnormalities at 12 to 24 months of age.

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We report here nine children with AIDS. The risk factors of these patients were hemophilia in one, blood transfusions in four, maternal intravenous drug use in three and paternal AIDS in one. One baby was also of Haitian parentage.

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Genetically determined prolongation of the QT interval on ECGs has been proposed as one basic pathogenetic mechanism for the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). ECG studies in a total of 108 first-degree relatives of 26 patients with this syndrome in comparison with 99 such subjects from 22 control families failed to show any significant differences in the QT interval in these two groups. Hereditary prolongation of the QT interval is therefore unlikely to be a significant factor in the etiology of the vast majority of cases of SIDS.

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