167 results match your criteria: "Medical City Dallas Hospital.[Affiliation]"

Objective: To evaluate the association of CPR quality metrics with survival outcomes in children with and without congenital heart disease experiencing in-hospital cardiac arrest.

Design: Retrospective cohort study of data from the Pediatric Resuscitation Quality (pediRES-Q) Collaborative.

Setting: 28 participating sites.

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Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare, locally invasive tumor that develops from mesothelial cells lining the lung's pleura. It is mostly associated with prolonged asbestos exposure. The long latency period between asbestos exposure and clinical symptoms makes diagnosing MPM challenging.

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We analyzed access barriers to anti-CD19+ chimeric antigen receptor T-cells (CART) for non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) within a community-based transplant and cell therapy network registry. 357 intended recipients of FDA-approved anti-CD19+ CART were identified in the study period (2018 to 2022). Results showed that the median age at referral was 61 years, referral year was 2018 (4%), 2019 (14%), 2020 (18%), 2021 (26%), and 2022 (38%).

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The treatment setting influences acute myeloid leukemia (AML) outcomes. Most cancer patients receive care in the community, yet few studies have evaluated the effectiveness of clinical programs outside of academic or National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cancer centers. This was a multi-level, case-controlled study of real-world outcomes for initial AML treatment in a community-based network for 1,391 patients with AML between 2011 and 2018.

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Genetic counselors (GCs) practice in critical care settings. Some GCs have full-time inpatient roles, while most GCs who see inpatients do so as needed or on a rotating schedule in addition to seeing patients in an outpatient setting. Few studies have tracked and compared the amount of time it takes GCs to perform tasks in the inpatient and outpatient settings.

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Comparison of Efficacy and Pharmacoeconomic Outcomes Between Calfactant and Poractant Alfa in Preterm Infants With Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther

June 2024

Department of Neonatology (C. Schwendeman), Pediatrix Medical Group, North Dallas Practice, Dallas, TX.

Objectives: In order to evaluate the impact of the surfactant of choice selection, primary end points were to compare the average number of doses per patient, need for mechanical ventilation on day 3, hospital length of stay, and in-hospital mortality between calfactant and poractant alfa in preterm infants with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Secondary outcomes included administration complications, development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and estimated average per patient cost among the study population.

Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed at a level IV neonatal intensive care unit between January 2020 and December 2021 to compare the efficacy, safety, and pharmacoeconomic outcomes -following a surfactant of choice switch from calfactant to poractant alfa in preterm infants with RDS.

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Background: Children with syndromic craniosynostosis require multiple cranial expansion procedures. The purpose of this study was to determine how many expansions are typically performed through maturity, to assess complication rates, and to identify trends that might reduce the burden of care.

Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted of all consecutive patients undergoing cranial vault enlargement procedures for syndromic craniosynostosis performed by a single surgeon.

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Background: Poor weight gain has been identified as an independent risk factor for increased surgical morbidity and mortality for patients with single-ventricle physiology undergoing staged surgical palliation. Conversely, excessive weight gain has also emerged as an independent risk factor predicting increased morbidity and mortality in a single-center study. Given this novel single-center concept, we investigated the impact of excessive weight on patients with single-ventricle physiology undergoing bidirectional Glenn palliation in a multicenter study model.

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Utilization of a High Potency Probiotic Product for Prevention of Necrotizing Enterocolitis in Preterm Infants at a Level IV NICU.

J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther

October 2023

Department of Neonatology (C. Schwendeman), Pediatrix Medical Group, North Dallas Practice, Dallas, TX.

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a serious gastrointestinal disease that can be seen in premature infants with high risk for morbidity and mortality. There is currently no US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) medication approved for the prevention of NEC. Despite great heterogeneity among available studies, large meta-analyses of clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of multiple-strain probiotics in reducing NEC and all-cause mortality.

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Background And Objectives: The labyrinthine structures obstruct the surgical view of the deep petroclival region in the transpetrosal approach. Historically, labyrinthectomy and removal of all 3 semicircular canals, with resultant deafness, was used in patients with ipsilateral functional hearing deficits to improve access. The advent and systematization of superior and posterior semicircular canal removal (transcrusal approach) with good rates of hearing preservation has allowed a redefinition of the possibility of partial labyrinthectomy in patients without previous hearing deficits.

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Diabetes mellitus is a group of diseases characterized by hyperglycemia and its consequences, affecting over 34 million individuals in the United States and 422 million worldwide. While most diabetes is polygenic and is classified as type 1 (T1D), type 2 (T2D), or gestational diabetes (GDM), at least 0.4% of all diabetes is monogenic in nature.

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Background: Many single-suture craniosynostosis corrections end up needing secondary remodeling procedures. The authors sought to determine whether these more complicated operations carry higher complication rates, and to explore potential predisposing factors.

Methods: The authors performed a retrospective chart review of all patients undergoing primary and secondary remodeling corrections at a single center, between 2010 and 2020.

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Introduction: Prevalence of intracranial aneurysms in children with Apert syndrome has not been described, and development of an aneurysm as a complication secondary to craniofacial surgery has never been reported.

Case Presentation: We report the rare case of a 10-year-old boy with Apert syndrome who underwent craniofacial reconstruction surgery consisting of subcranial Le Fort III osteotomies, bilateral lateral canthopexies, and nasal nares dilations for midfacial hypoplasia and resultant obstructive sleep apnea, and on routine follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) 1 year later, he was found to have a large left ophthalmic internal carotid artery (ICA) aneurysm that was not seen on MRI obtained 2 years prior. Immediately after the craniofacial surgery, the patient experienced a severe headache behind his left eye and extraocular movement abnormalities that subsided over the next days to months.

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Challenges to Provision of Adequate Medical Nutrition Therapy in a Critically Ill COVID-19 Patient Fed in the Prone Position.

Top Clin Nutr

June 2022

Department of Clinical and Preventive Nutrition Sciences, Rutgers School of Health Professions, Newark, New Jersey (Ms Brown and Dr Touger-Decker); HealthTrust Supply Chain, Food and Nutrition Services, Coppell, Texas (Mr Brown); Keiser University, Melbourne, Florida (Dr Roberts); Medical City Dallas Hospital, Food and Nutrition Services, Dallas, Texas (Ms Reed); Department of Internal Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina (Dr Matarese); and Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey (Dr Matarese).

Adults with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) may experience enteral nutrition (EN) intolerance. They often require mechanical ventilation and other specialized management including prone positioning. There is a controversy as to whether patients fed in prone position experience more EN intolerance than when they are in supine position.

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Optic Nerve Atrophy in Syndromic Craniosynostosis.

Plast Reconstr Surg

August 2022

From The Craniofacial Center; Slocum-Dickson Medical Group; and the Department of Clinical Research, Medical City Dallas Hospital.

Background: Numerous children born with syndromic craniosynostosis will develop visual impairments. Based on the hypothesis that elevations in intracranial pressure might have greater impacts on vision than development, this review sought to ascertain the prevalence of optic nerve atrophy in syndromic craniosynostosis and to look for potential predictive factors.

Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective chart review of all children with syndromic craniosynostosis treated at a single center.

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Background: Survival after paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest is worse on nights and weekends without demonstration of disparity in cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality. It is unknown whether these findings differ in children with CHD. This study aimed to determine whether cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality might explain the hypothesised worse outcomes of children with CHD during nights and weekends.

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Unlabelled: National guidelines recommend sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) be offered to patients with > 10% likelihood of sentinel lymph node (SLN) positivity. On the other hand, guidelines do not recommend SLNB for patients with T1a tumors without high-risk features who have < 5% likelihood of a positive SLN. However, the decision to perform SLNB is less certain for patients with higher-risk T1 melanomas in which a positive node is expected 5%-10% of the time.

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Fatal coccidioidomycosis involving the lungs, brain, tongue, and adrenals in a cirrhotic patient. An autopsy case.

IDCases

January 2021

Medical Service, Division of Infectious Diseases, South Texas Veterans Healthcare System, 7400 Merton Minter Blvd, San Antonio, TX, 78229, United States.

In this paper, we describe a case of fatal disseminated coccidioidomycosis (CM). The patient was a 44-year old male with a history of cirrhosis who presented with altered mental status, cough, and an enlarged, ulcerated tongue. On evaluation, the patient was found to have coccidioidal infection of the tongue, lungs, and brain.

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Background: Ewing sarcoma breakpoint region 1 gene (EWSR1) rearrangements are largely associated with the Ewing sarcoma family of tumors.

Observations: We report the first case of infantile, mixed phenotype acute leukemia, B/myeloid (bilineal and biphenotypic [B-lymphoid and B-lymphoid/myeloid]), with a t(2;22)(q35;q12). The EWSR1-fifth Ewing variant gene fusion and nonsense mutation in STAG2 were detected by next-generation sequencing and markedly high expression of fifth Ewing sarcoma variant mRNA detected by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.

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The coronavirus disease 2019, SARS-COV-2 (the cause of COVID-19), has led to a worldwide shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) and an increased stress on hospital resources, which has resulted in a spike in the anxiety of the frontline healthcare workers. News reports and information about the virus are rapidly changing. We present a case of a patient with COVID-19 who had a seizure-like spell for which an EEG was performed.

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Background: Does bifrontal width change with growth following trigonocephaly corrections? Postoperative long-term growth was assessed, along with the impacts of phenotypic severity, surgical timing, and operative technique, to determine how wide to surgically set bifrontal width.

Methods: A retrospective review of all trigonocephaly repairs was performed. Exclusion criteria included syndromic conditions, incomplete records, and follow-up under 1 year.

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The clinical importance of subclinical, early T cell-mediated rejection (Banff TCMR 1A and borderline lesions) remains unclear, due, in part to the fact that histologic lesions used to characterize early TCMR can be nonspecific. Donor-derived cell-free DNA (dd-cfDNA) is an important molecular marker of active graft injury. Over a study period from June 2017 to May 2019, we assessed clinical outcomes in 79 patients diagnosed with TCMR 1A/borderline rejection across 11 US centers with a simultaneous measurement of dd-cfDNA.

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Five-Year Outcomes of Transcatheter or Surgical Aortic-Valve Replacement.

N Engl J Med

February 2020

From Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles (R.R.M., S.-H.Y., A.T.), Stanford University, Stanford (D.C.M., W.F.F.), and Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine (E.R., K.X., J.W.) - all in California; the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Piedmont Heart Institute (V.H.T.), and Emory University (V.B.) - both in Atlanta; Baylor Scott and White Healthcare, Plano (M.J.M., D.L.B.), and Medical City Dallas Hospital, Dallas (T.M.D.) - both in Texas; Columbia University Medical Center/New York-Presbyterian Hospital (S.K.K., R.T.H., M.C.A., C.R.S., M.B.L.) and NYU Langone Medical Center (M.R.W.) - both in New York; Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland (S.K., L.G.S., W.A.J.); St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC (J.G.W.), and Institut Universitaire de Cardiologie et de Pneumologie de Québec, Université Laval, Quebec, QC (P.P.) - both in Canada; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (H.C.H., W.Y.S.); Medstar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC (L.S.); University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine, Kansas City (D.J.C.); Christ Hospital, Cincinnati (D.J.K.); Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Washington University, St. Louis (A.Z.); Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN (K.L.G.); Intermountain Medical Center, Salt Lake City (B.K.W.); Providence St. Vincent Medical Center, Portland, OR (R.W.H.); and Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ (M.J.R.).

Background: There are scant data on long-term clinical outcomes and bioprosthetic-valve function after transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR) as compared with surgical aortic-valve replacement in patients with severe aortic stenosis and intermediate surgical risk.

Methods: We enrolled 2032 intermediate-risk patients with severe, symptomatic aortic stenosis at 57 centers. Patients were stratified according to intended transfemoral or transthoracic access (76.

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Background: The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) General Thoracic Surgery Database (GTSD) has developed composite quality measures for lobectomy and esophagectomy. This study sought to develop a composite measure including all resections for lung cancer.

Methods: The STS lung cancer composite score is based on 2 outcomes: risk-adjusted mortality and morbidity.

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Post transplant renal vein thrombosis, with successful thrombectomy and review of the literature.

Int J Surg Case Rep

July 2019

Renal Path Diagnostics at Pathologist Biomedical Laboratories, Dallas, TX, United States.

Article Synopsis
  • Renal vein thrombosis (RVT) after kidney transplant is rare (0.3-4.2% prevalence) but can lead to severe outcomes, including graft failure or death, especially if it occurs early.
  • The case study discusses a patient who had RVT in a living donor kidney transplant while still having some kidney function from the failing allograft.
  • The successful treatment involved quick diagnosis followed by emergency surgical thrombectomy and re-implantation of the allograft.
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