24 results on '"Grunau, Ruth E."'
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2. Major Surgery, Brain Injury, and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Very Preterm Infants
3. Association of early skin breaks and neonatal thalamic maturation
4. Predicting developmental outcomes in preterm infants
5. Association of Histologic Chorioamnionitis With Perinatal Brain Injury and Early Childhood Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Among Preterm Neonates
6. Procedural pain and oral glucose in preterm neonates: brain development and sex-specific effects
7. Repeated exposure to sucrose for procedural pain in mouse pups leads to long-term widespread brain alterations
8. Quantitative assessment of white matter injury in preterm neonates
9. Neonatal Invasive Procedures Predict Pain Intensity at School Age in Children Born Very Preterm
10. Electroencephalographic Activity in Response to Procedural Pain in Preterm Infants Born at 28 and 33 Weeks Gestational Age
11. Neonatal pain-related stress, functional cortical activity and visual-perceptual abilities in school-age children born at extremely low gestational age
12. Parent behaviors moderate the relationship between neonatal pain and internalizing behaviors at 18 months corrected age in children born very prematurely
13. Survival Without Disability to Age 5 Years After Neonatal Caffeine Therapy for Apnea of Prematurity
14. Neonatal pain in relation to postnatal growth in infants born very preterm
15. Survival Without Disability to Age 5 Years After Neonatal Caffeine Therapy for Apnea of Prematurity
16. Cortisol, Behavior, and Heart Rate Reactivity to Immunization Pain at 4 Months Corrected Age in Infants Born Very Preterm
17. Neonatal pain, parenting stress and interaction, in relation to cognitive and motor development at 8 and 18 months in preterm infants
18. Is It Painful or Not?
19. Initial validation of the Behavioral Indicators of Infant Pain (BIIP)
20. Behavioral Responses to Pain Are Heightened After Clustered Care in Preterm Infants Born Between 30 and 32 Weeks Gestational Age
21. Body Movements: An Important Additional Factor in Discriminating Pain From Stress in Preterm Infants
22. Neonatal procedural pain exposure predicts lower cortisol and behavioral reactivity in preterm infants in the NICU
23. Neonatal Facial Coding System for Assessing Postoperative Pain in Infants: Item Reduction is Valid and Feasible
24. Relations Between Behavioral and Cardiac Autonomic Reactivity to Acute Pain in Preterm Neonates
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