Publications by authors named "Rebecca Grohman"

Article Synopsis
  • FPIES is a type of food allergy affecting about 0.51-0.9% of children and 0.22% of adults in the U.S., causing severe symptoms like projectile vomiting and diarrhea within hours of eating trigger foods.
  • The most common triggers include cow's milk, oat, rice, avocado, and in some cases, fruits like banana and apple; it can present in various forms, such as acute or chronic, with a generally favorable outcome for infants.
  • Diagnosis is challenging due to a lack of specific biomarkers, and management involves avoiding trigger foods, monitoring tolerance, and treating acute episodes with hydration and antiemetics.
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The transitional period between hospital discharge and primary care follow-up is a vulnerable time for patients that can result in adverse health outcomes and preventable hospital readmissions. This is especially true for patients of safety-net hospitals (SNHs) who often struggle to secure primary care access when leaving the hospital due to social, economic and cultural barriers. In this study, we describe a resident-led postdischarge clinic that serves patients discharged from NYU Langone Hospital-Brooklyn, an urban safety-net academic hospital.

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Since the discovery of immunoglobulin E (IgE) as a mediator of allergic diseases in 1967, our knowledge about the immunological mechanisms of IgE-mediated allergies has remarkably increased. In addition to understanding the immune response and clinical symptoms, allergy diagnosis and management depend strongly on the precise identification of the elicitors of the IgE-mediated allergic reaction. In the past four decades, innovations in bioscience and technology have facilitated the identification and production of well-defined, highly pure molecules for component-resolved diagnosis (CRD), allowing a personalized diagnosis and management of the allergic disease for individual patients.

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Context: Muscle damage and delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) can occur following intense exercise. Various modalities have been studied to improve blood lactate accumulation, which is a primary reason for DOMS. It has been well established that active recovery facilitates blood lactate removal more rapidly that passive recovery due to the pumping action of the muscle.

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