Publications by authors named "Todd Barron"

Introduction: Despite advances in stroke care, readmission rates for patients with ischemic stroke remain high. Although factors such as age, diabetes, and continuous use of antiplatelet agents have been found to predict readmission rates, the impact of after-hospital care has not been examined.

Methods: The present study reviewed the charts of 416 patients with acute ischemic stroke and recorded stroke-related comorbidities, neurology follow-up within 21 days, readmission at 0 to 30 days, readmission at 31 to 90 days, and any reasons for readmission.

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The size and shape of the corpus callosum and its major components (genu, body, and splenium) were measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 118 normocephalic individuals aged from 1 postnatal week to 18.7 years. Genu, body, splenial, and total corpus callosal areas increased by 40-100% during the first year of life (p < 0.

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Purpose: With the increase in knowledge and management of sport-related concussion over the last 15 years, there has been a shift from a grading scale approach to an individualized management approach. As a result, there is an increased need to better understand the factors involved in delayed recovery of concussion. The purpose of this retrospective study was to examine factors that may be associated with recovery from sport-related concussion in student athletes aged 11 to 18 years old.

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A major hall of hominid brain evolution is an expansion of the frontal lobes. To determine if a similar trajectory occurs during modern human development, the MRI scans of 118 living infants, children, and adolescents were reviewed and three specific measurements obtained: frontal width (FW), maximal cerebral width (MW), and maximal cerebral length (ML). The infantile brain is uniformly wide but relatively short, with near equal FW and MW.

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The designation of Homo floresiensis as a new species derived from an ancient population is controversial, because the type specimen, LB1, might represent a pathological microcephalic modern Homo sapiens. Accordingly, two specific craniometric ratios (relative frontal breadth and cerebellar protrusion) were ascertained in 21 microcephalic infants and children by using MRI. Data on 118 age-equivalent control (normocephalic) subjects were collected for comparative purposes.

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Background: Microcephalic brains exhibit varying sizes, shapes, and dimensions when compared to normocephalic counterparts, but the extent of these differences is unresolved.

Aims: To ascertain developmental changes in brain morphology using craniometric (linear brain) measures derived from MRI in microcephalic individuals and in normocephalic controls.

Study Design: A retrospective, cross-sectional cohort study.

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Developmental changes in brain volume and shape in infants, children, and adolescents were ascertained with MRI, using craniometric (linear brain) measures in 118 individuals, ages 1 postnatal week to 18.7years. Collected clinical data included age, sex, weight, height, body mass index, occipito-frontal circumference (OFC), and diagnosis prompting the MRI scan.

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This case report describes a child with an expanded CTA/CTG repeat in one allele of the spinocerebellar ataxia 8 gene. This patient presented with ataxia at a much earlier age than is typical for patients with this condition. This unique patient further highlights the complexity of the role that this molecular defect plays in the onset and course of the disease.

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A 10-year, retrospective review of the etiology, outcome, and complications of ischemic stroke in children from a nonurban population was conducted. Twenty-seven children were identified (14 boys, 13 girls), ages 1.25 to 17 years (mean 7.

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Purpose: The constellation of early-onset, unprovoked, alternating electroclinical seizures and neurodevelopmental devastation was first described by Coppola et al. We report six new patients and the prospect of a more optimistic developmental outcome.

Methods: Retrospective chart reviews were performed on six infants evaluated at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (five patients) and at Hershey Medical Center (one patient) who had electroclinically alternating seizures before age 6 months of age.

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The use of low-molecular-weight heparin offers multiple advantages over unfractionated heparins in pediatric patients with acute ischemic stroke. The safety and efficacy of low-molecular-weight heparin have been demonstrated in adults, but less is known about their use in children. This study reviews retrospectively the use of low-molecular-weight heparin in children with acute, ischemic, nonhemorrhagic strokes.

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