Publications by authors named "Cristescu D"

Article Synopsis
  • - The research investigates the relationship between estimated glomerular filtration rates (eGFR), measured with the Schwartz equation, and renal scintigraphy in children with congenital kidney and urinary tract abnormalities (CAKUT), aiming to improve understanding of kidney function in this population.
  • - A study of 94 pediatric CAKUT patients revealed significant differences in eGFR between the right and left kidneys, particularly in relation to body surface area, indicating a potential bias in standard measurements.
  • - The findings suggest that current bedside eGFR methods may not be fully reliable for children with CAKUT, highlighting the need for more accurate diagnostic tools tailored for pediatric patients.
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Background And Objectives: This retrospective study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of preoperative blood transfusions in correcting anemia for pediatric patients with congenital malformations (CMs) versus those with acute abdomen (AA) conditions. The study hypothesized that the response to transfusions might vary significantly between these groups due to the differences in the underlying pathology and clinical status.

Methods: The study included 107 pediatric patients admitted to Timisoara 'Louis Turcanu' Emergency Hospital for Children between January 2015 and May 2023, who required blood transfusions for preoperative anemia.

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The COVID-19 pandemic underscores the need for accurate prognostic tools to predict patient outcomes. This study evaluates the effectiveness of four prominent COVID-19 prediction scores-PAINT, ISARIC4C, CHIS, and COVID-GRAM-at two critical time points: at admission and seven days post-symptom onset, to assess their utility in predicting mortality among hospitalized patients. Conducted at the Clinical Emergency Hospital Pius Brînzeu in Timișoara, this retrospective analysis included adult patients hospitalized with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection.

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The Social-Emotional Prevention Program (SEP) encompasses a multifaceted approach (classroom curriculum, with teacher and parent training) intended to increase preschool children's social adjustment, as well as to reduce risk of emotional and behavioral problems. The present study's focus was on implementing the technology-assisted SEP version and was aimed at (a) investigating the program's effectiveness on children's social-emotional competencies and parental practices, as well as (b) testing the program's conceptual framework, with an emphasis on children's emotion regulation (ER) skills and parental emotion socialization practices as explanatory intervention mechanisms. A randomized-controlled trial (RCT) was conducted with five schools assigned to either the intervention or to a comparison condition (wait-list control).

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Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP) is considered a benign disease of children. We report a severe case of HSP in an adult causing renal failure and gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage. Despite aggressive treatment with corticosteroids, cyclophosphamide, and plasmapheresis, the patient developed massive GI bleeding from 2 Dieulafoy lesions and died weeks after bowel resection.

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The report presents the peculiar characteristics of influenza epidemics in a big urban centre (B.) of Romania, between 1988 and 1990, surveyed by clinical, epidemiological and laboratory methods. Among the peculiarities of the epidemics: the low rate of endemic morbidity, the seasonal and preseasonal peaks, the very high implication of infantile population in influenza A(H3N2), A(H1N1) and B virus circulation, as well as the high level of mass specific humoral protection against these viruses.

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The study describes the peculiarities of the influenza infection evolution, in 1988, in a large urban centre, B., in Romania, as they result from the active surveillance of the epidemiological process of influenza and other viral respiratory tract infections, by means of a complex methodology based on clinical-epidemiological and laboratory techniques. The low endemic morbidity, the evolution of these seasonally ascendant specific incidence, the endemic aspect of influenza infection being maintained as a consequence of its predominance in infants and children, the clinically mild form of the outbreaks, all these are specific elements of the epidemiologic impact in the surveyed territory.

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The study presents the peculiarities of influenza evolution in 1987 in a large town in Romania. These features were defined by a complex methodology, based on clinical, epidemiologic and laboratory investigations, used in the active control of the epidemiologic process kinetics. The influenza viruses type A (H1N1 and H3N2) had a major role in the infecting and immunizing contacts in all age groups whereas the influenza virus type B had a reduced circulation.

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