9 results match your criteria: "Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine[Affiliation]"
J Pediatr
October 2015
Monroe Carell Jr Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt, Nashville, TN; Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN. Electronic address:
Objective: To assess the relationship between secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure and disease severity among children hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP).
Study Design: Children hospitalized with clinical and radiographic CAP were enrolled between January 1, 2010, and June 30, 2012 at 3 hospitals in Tennessee and Utah as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Etiology of Pneumonia in the Community study. Household SHS exposure was defined based on the number of smokers in the child's home.
Am J Surg Pathol
March 2007
Department of Pathology, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Gardner fibroma (GAF) is a benign soft tissue lesion with a predilection for childhood and adolescence and an association with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) and desmoid type fibromatosis (desmoid). We report 45 patients with GAF with clinicopathologic correlation and immunohistochemical analysis for beta-catenin and related proteins. Forty-five patients with 57 GAFs were identified from surgical pathology and consultation files.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatrics
September 2006
Department of Pediatrics, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84113, USA.
Objective: Although the electrocardiogram is commonly obtained in the evaluation of patients with pulmonary hypertension, its value as a screening test for right ventricular hypertrophy or pulmonary hypertension is unclear. Therefore, we sought to determine the value of an electrocardiogram in the diagnosis of right ventricular hypertrophy using echocardiography as the gold standard.
Methods: We identified children without congenital heart disease who underwent evaluation for suspected pulmonary hypertension that included both an electrocardiogram and echocardiography within a specified time frame.
Arch Pathol Lab Med
July 2006
Division of Pediatric Pathology, Department of Pathology, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City 84113, USA.
Context: Laboratory data are essential to the medical care of fetuses, infants, children, and adolescents. However, the performance and interpretation of laboratory tests on specimens from these patients, which may constitute a significant component of the workload in general hospitals and integrated health care systems as well as specialized perinatal or pediatric centers, present unique challenges to the clinical pathologist and the laboratory. Therefore, pathology residents should receive training in pediatric laboratory medicine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
November 2004
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT 84113, USA.
Three infants with progressive upper esophageal stenosis had bilateral vocal fold paralysis. The patients were apparently normal at birth and without neurologic abnormality. Cricopharyngeal myotomy, followed by serial dilatations, relieved esophageal stenosis and restored the swallowing function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
August 2004
Department of Pathology, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, 100 North Medical Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84113, USA.
Evaluation for celiac disease (CD), an autoimmune enteropathy triggered by grain proteins in wheat, barley, rye, and possibly oats, is a common indication for pediatric endoscopy and biopsy. Duodenal or jejunal biopsy remains key for the initial diagnosis of CD. Small intestinal pathology may be diffuse or focal in CD, and histologic findings are nonspecific and must be interpreted in conjunction with clinical and serologic findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMod Pathol
September 2002
Department of Pathology, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132, USA.
Abnormalities of chromosome 2p23 with expression of ALK1 and p80 occur in both inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) and anaplastic large cell lymphoma. This immunohistochemical study investigates whether the ALK family of neoplasms includes fibroblastic-myofibroblastic, myogenic, and spindle cell tumors. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded archival tissues from 10 IMTs and 125 other soft tissue tumors were stained for ALK1 and p80 with standard immunohistochemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Dev Pathol
March 2001
Department of Pathology, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City 84132, USA.
Needle core biopsies (NCB) are widely used in adults but are less often used for the evaluation of pediatric tumors. To determine the diagnostic utility of NCB for pediatric tumors, we performed a retrospective analysis. Fifty NCB of masses from 1992 to 1998, subsequent pathologic specimens, and medical records were reviewed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
April 1998
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Primary Children's Medical Center and University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City 84113, USA.
Background: Gastric emptying scintiscans are currently used to select reflux patients for added pyloroplasty at the time of fundoplication. The accuracy of this scan selection approach has been assumed. If preoperative scintiscans do not reliably predict postfundoplication gastric emptying, however, the decision to add pyloroplasty to the fundoplication operation may be inappropriate and even harmful.
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