Publications by authors named "Riddle S"

Objective: To estimate inter-center variation (ICV) in hospital length of stay (LOS) and oral feeding at discharge among infants with gastroschisis.

Study Design: The Children's Hospitals Neonatal Consortium's (CHNC) database was used to identify hospitalized survivors with gastroschisis. Two outcomes were evaluated: LOS and discharge without tube feedings.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pulmonary hypertension (PH) severely affects exercise ability and quality of life by impacting various organ systems like the right ventricle, lungs, and muscles.
  • Recent studies suggest that issues with metabolism and mitochondria are key factors in the reduced exercise tolerance seen in PH patients.
  • This research found that using the SIRT3 activator Honokiol with NAD significantly improved exercise performance in a PH rat model, mainly by enhancing mitochondrial function in skeletal muscles and reducing muscle wasting, highlighting a potential therapeutic strategy for PH patients.
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Article Synopsis
  • The Children's Hospitals Neonatal Consortium (CHNC), founded in 2010, aims to enhance care for seriously ill infants in level IV NICUs across North America through data collection, benchmarking, and quality improvement.
  • CHNC has made strides in the treatment of various surgical conditions like congenital diaphragmatic hernia and gastroschisis by promoting collaboration among institutions and creating focus groups for specific diagnoses.
  • Additionally, the consortium emphasizes the importance of addressing post-birth hospitalization needs and explores the role of telemedicine in improving care for these infants.
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Objective: To examine neonatal outcomes of infants with gastroschisis born <32 weeks' gestation compared to matched infants without gastroschisis.

Study Design: Retrospective matched-cohort analysis of infants with gastroschisis born <32 weeks' gestation at Children's Hospitals Neonatal Consortium (CHNC) NICUs from 2010 to 2022 compared to gestational age-matched controls.

Results: The study included 119 infants with gastroschisis and 357 matched infants; 60% of infants born 29-32 weeks, 23% born 26-28 weeks, and 16% born < 25 weeks.

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Objectives: To evaluate the association between race and the named etiology for inadequate weight gain among hospitalized infants and assess the differences in management.

Methods: This single-center retrospective cohort study of infants hospitalized for the workup and management of inadequate weight gain used infant race and neighborhood-level socioeconomic deprivation as exposures. The etiology of inadequate weight gain was categorized as nonorganic, subjective organic (ie, gastroesophageal reflux and cow's milk protein intolerance), or objective organic (eg, hypothyroidism).

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Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a common complication in preterm infants, leading to chronic respiratory disease. There has been an improvement in perinatal care, but many infants still suffer from impaired branching morphogenesis, alveolarization, and pulmonary capillary formation, causing lung function impairments and BPD. There is an increased risk of respiratory infections, pulmonary hypertension, and neurodevelopmental delays in infants with BPD, all of which can lead to long-term morbidity and mortality.

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Background: Children and young adults with medical complexity (CMC) experience high rates of healthcare reutilization following hospital discharge. Prior studies have identified common hospital-to-home transition failures that may increase the risk for reutilization, including medication, technology and equipment issues, financial concerns, and confusion about which providers can help with posthospitalization needs. Few interventions have been developed and evaluated for CMC during this transition period.

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Congenital gastrointestinal disorders and other surgical diagnoses share many common problems: increased nutritional requirements to prevent catabolism, enhance wound healing, and provide optimal growth; impaired motility and altered intestinal flora leading to feeding intolerance requiring long-term parenteral nutrition; gastroesophageal reflux and poor feeding mechanics requiring tube feedings and support; growth failure; poor barrier function and risk of infection; and other long-term sequelae. Consequently, the surgical "at-risk" infant requires specialized nutritional support to meet their increased requirements to ensure adequate growth and meet the increased demands from critical illness.

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Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a heterogeneous and life-threatening cardiopulmonary disorder in which mitochondrial dysfunction is believed to drive pathogenesis, although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. To determine if abnormal SIRT3 (sirtuin 3) activity is related to mitochondrial dysfunction in adventitial fibroblasts from patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and hypoxic PH calves (PH-Fibs) and whether SIRT3 could be a potential therapeutic target to improve mitochondrial function, SIRT3 concentrations in control fibroblasts, PH-Fibs, and lung tissues were determined using quantitative real-time PCR and western blot. SIRT3 deacetylase activity in cells and lung tissues was determined using western blot, immunohistochemistry staining, and immunoprecipitation.

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Endothelial dysfunction and inflammation contribute to the vascular pathology of coronavirus disease (COVID-19). However, emerging evidence does not support direct infection of endothelial or other vascular wall cells, and thus inflammation may be better explained as a secondary response to epithelial cell infection. In this study, we sought to determine whether lung endothelial or other resident vascular cells are susceptible to productive severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and how local complement activation contributes to endothelial dysfunction and inflammation in response to hypoxia and SARS-CoV-2-infected lung alveolar epithelial cells.

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Circular RNA (circRNA) is a newly discovered noncoding RNA that regulates gene transcription, binds to RNA-related proteins, and encodes protein microRNAs (miRNAs). The development of molecular biomarkers such as circRNAs holds great promise in the diagnosis and prognosis of clinical disorders. Importantly, circRNA-mediated maternal-fetus risk factors including environmental (high altitude), maternal (preeclampsia, smoking, and chorioamnionitis), placental, and fetal (preterm birth and low birth weight) factors are the early origins and likely to contribute to the occurrence and progression of developmental and pediatric cardiopulmonary disorders.

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Right ventricular (RV) failure is the major determinant of outcome in pulmonary hypertension (PH). Calves exposed to 2-wk hypoxia develop severe PH and unlike rodents, hypoxia-induced PH in this species can lead to right heart failure. We, therefore, sought to examine the molecular and structural changes in the RV in calves with hypoxia-induced PH, hypothesizing that we could identify mechanisms underlying compensated physiological function in the face of developing severe PH.

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Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) has received much attention as a potential pulmonary hypertension (PH) treatment target because inhibition of HIF reduces the severity of established PH in rodent models. However, the limitations of small-animal models of PH in predicting the therapeutic effects of pharmacologic interventions in humans PH are well known. Therefore, we sought to interrogate the role of HIFs in driving the activated phenotype of PH cells from human and bovine vessels.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sildenafil, a drug commonly used to treat pulmonary hypertension (PH), has impacts beyond vasodilation, particularly on the metabolic changes in vascular cells, specifically adventitial fibroblasts that are crucial in PH.
  • The study utilized integrated omics, examining plasma and cultured fibroblasts from PH patients to analyze sildenafil's effects on purine metabolism, revealing some alterations in purine metabolites post-treatment.
  • Results indicated that while sildenafil modestly reduced fibroblast proliferation and affected purine metabolism, it failed to fully normalize metabolic changes associated with PH, highlighting the complexity of its therapeutic impact.
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Soft earthworm-like robots that exhibit mechanical compliance can, in principle, navigate through uneven terrains and constricted spaces that are inaccessible to traditional legged and wheeled robots. However, unlike the biological originals that they mimic, most of the worm-like robots reported to date contain rigid components that limit their compliance, such as electromotors or pressure-driven actuation systems. Here, a mechanically compliant worm-like robot with a fully modular body that is based on soft polymers is reported.

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Isolated endothelial cells are valuable in vitro model for vascular research. At present, investigation of disease-relevant changes in vascular endothelium at the molecular level requires established endothelial cell cultures, preserving vascular bed-specific phenotypic characteristics. Vasa vasorum (VV) form a microvascular network around large blood vessels, in both the pulmonary and systemic circulations, that are critically important for maintaining the integrity and oxygen supply of the vascular wall.

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Background: Obesity is associated with chronic inflammation and is a risk factor for insufficient milk production. Inflammation-mediated suppression of LPL could inhibit mammary uptake of long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs; >16 carbons).

Objectives: In an ancillary case-control analysis, we investigated whether women with low milk production despite regular breast emptying have elevated inflammation and disrupted transfer of LCFAs from plasma into milk.

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Objectives: Children with chronic kidney disease display poor growth that impacts health outcomes; data on infants with severe congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) are limited. We examined growth patterns in infants with CAKUT requiring dialysis in the first 30 days.

Methods: This study evaluated infants with severe CAKUT from 2014 to 2018 surviving past 30 days.

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Objective: Early onset infection (EOI) in gastroschisis is rare. Excess antibiotic exposure in neonates increases necrotizing enterocolitis and mortality. We evaluated antibiotic exposure and EOI in gastroschisis.

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