Publications by authors named "Outerbridge E"

Background: In 2003 mean cord blood mercury concentrations in pregnant Bermudian women exceeded levels associated with adverse health outcomes in children. The principal mercury source was local fish species. Public health messages were developed suggesting pregnant women reduce consumption of fish species with higher mercury concentrations (e.

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Background And Objectives: This study compared the effectiveness of two booster strategies designed to improve retention of skills and knowledge in neonatal resuscitation by family practice residents.

Methods: Residents were randomly allocated to one of three groups: video, hands on, or control. Residents in the two experimental groups received a "booster" 3-5 months after the Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) course.

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Objective: To evaluate the long-term pulmonary sequelae of survivors of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) of sufficient severity to have required supplemental oxygen for at least 1 month after term.

Study Design: Fifteen patients with a mean age of 1.1 years were matched to preterm infants of similar gestational age and age at time of study.

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The efficacy of a 3-day course of dexamethasone (0.5 mg/kg/ day) in 10 preterm infants (< or = 30 weeks gestation) with pulmonary interstitial emphysema (PIE) was studied in a retrospective case review. PIE was diagnosed at a median age of 7.

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There is limited information concerning the exercise performance of long-term survivors of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and much of what is available pertains to those with relatively mild disease. The present study was undertaken to describe exercise responses in patients with a history of severe BPD, defined as those patients with a clinical and radiographic diagnosis of BPD who required supplemental oxygen at least until they were 44 wk postconceptual age and who were discharged home on oxygen. Fifteen children with a history of severe BPD were matched for gestational age with 15 children who had previously had respiratory distress syndrome but who did not develop BPD (Prem).

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Background: This study evaluated the knowledge gained and retained by family practice residents who participated in the Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) course.

Methods: Knowledge attainment and its retention was assessed by the administration of pre-, post-, and 6-month follow-up tests using the standard NRP written examination. Twenty-nine residents from the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University completed the pretests and posttests, and 10 of these completed the follow-up tests.

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The postnatal maturation of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) for unbound bilirubin was studied in 2-day- and 2-week-old piglets. Hyperbilirubinemia was induced by bolus infusion of bilirubin at 25 mg/kg followed by continuous infusion of 20 mg/kg/h for 3 h. During the study period, arterial blood pH and blood gas tensions, serum osmolarity, and mean arterial blood pressures were within the physiologic range.

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A rare vascular portohepatic anomaly was identified in a Down syndrome patient with a 47,XY,-2,+der(2),+der(21)t(2;21)(p13;q22.1) mat chromosomal complement. This vascular defect involves a direct communication between the right portal vein and the inferior vena cava (IVC).

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We studied a baby born with physical features suggestive of the aminopterin syndrome, but without exposure of the mother to aminopterin during pregnancy. G-banded chromosomes from peripheral blood lymphocytes had a normal 46,XX pattern. However, in 50 skin fibroblasts there was a normal female karyotype in 5 cells and 45 cells showed an apparently balanced reciprocal translocation involving the long arm of chromosome 5 (band q35) and the long arm of chromosome 10 (band q22).

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The precise measurement of esophageal pressure (Pes) as a reflection of pleural pressure (Ppl) is crucial to the measurement of lung mechanics in the newborn. The fidelity of Pes as a measurement of Ppl is determined by the occlusion test in which, during respiratory efforts against an occlusion at the airway opening, changes in pressure (delta Pao) (Pao is assumed to be equal to alveolar pressure) are shown to be equal to changes in Pes (delta Pes). Eight intubated premature infants (640-3,700 g) with chest wall distortion were studied using a water-filled catheter system to measure Pes.

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Acute illness in early childhood generates chronic anxiety in parents, which may manifest itself in part by inappropriate use of health care. To minimize this and the development of other psychosocial sequelae associated with neonatal illness, a family support system (FSS) was developed and implemented in a neonatal intensive care unit. The effectiveness of the FSS was assessed by the evaluation of emergency room and inpatient hospital service utilization in 80 patients born before, and 90 patients born after the institution of the program.

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The interactive effect of caffeine and continuous distending airway pressure was evaluated in two premature neonates with apnea. The application of a continuous negative pressure around the chest wall decreased minute ventilation in both infants and blunted the stimulatory effect of caffeine. This potential interaction should be considered if the desired effects of caffeine or distending airway pressure on apnea control are not achieved when they are used concurrently.

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103 school-age children (5 to 12 years) who survived mechanical ventilation for neonatal respiratory failure were evaluated for growth, neurological, intellectual, psychological and school function in order to determine those children most at risk for handicap. A major handicap occurred in seven children, preventing attendance at normal school or normal classes. Neurological sequelae were significantly associated with perinatal asphyxia and with birthweights of 1500g or less, and neurological sequelae and socio-economic factors were the major determinants of ability.

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A prospective study on the epidemiology of adverse drug reactions (ADR) in the 200 neonates consecutively admitted to a newborn intensive care unit had shown that 136 ADR occurred in 60 babies (incidence = 30%). 20 of these ADR (14.7%) were major (life-threatening), 34 (25%) were moderate (prolonged hospital stay) and 82 (60.

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The effect of blood transfusion on the occurrence of RLF was evaluated in 58 infants who weighed less than 1001 g at birth (Group I) and 70 oxygen treated infants of various birth weights (Group II). Although there was no significant difference between Group I infants with or without exchange transfusion as to birth weight, gestational age, duration of oxygen therapy, peak Pa02's, or multiple births, there was a significantly increased incidence of pre-retrolental fibroplasia in transfused over non-transfused Group II infants. When Group II infants were stratified for prematurity and oxygen duration, this difference persisted in those not already at risk for RLF.

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Possible determinant factors that may increase the risk of the occurrence of retrolental fibroplasia (RLF) were analyzed in 80 infants born in 1975 and 1976 with birth weights between 501 and 1,500 gm and who survived. Active and/or cicatricial RLF occurred in 27 (33.8%) infants and the factors significantly associated with RLF were: gestational age (P less than .

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The pharmacokinetic profile of caffeine was studied in 32 premature newborn infants with apnea: 12 following a single intravenous dose; 3 after a single oral dose; 7 during treatment with an initial empirical (high) maintenance dose schedule; and 10 during treatment with a revised (lower) dose schedule. Mean (+/- SE) AV d, t 1/2, ke1, and clearance following a single intravenous dose were 0.916 +/- 0.

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Two cases of acquired colonic atresia subsequent to necrotizing enterocolitis (ischemic enteropathy) in the neonatal period are reported. These infants were noted to have complete atresia of the colon in the region of the splenic flexure 8 and 11 weeks after small bowel resection and ileostomy formation. Recognition of this and other late sequelae of ischemic enterocolitis becomes critical to the successful outcome of these patients as survival rates increase.

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In 40 premature infants, in whom severe respiratory distress precluded oral feeding, peripheral total parenteral nutrition consisting of casein hydrosylate, dextrose, and soybean emulsion was compared to nutrition with dextrose and electrolytes. The TPN group received more calories, and the total serum protein in them increased significantly. Metabolic complications did not occur.

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The condition of 259 infants transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of the Montreal Children's Hospital from Oct. 1, 1974 to Mar. 31, 1975 was evaluated.

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