55 results on '"Corwin DJ"'
Search Results
2. Invasive thymoma metastatic to the cavernous sinus
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Cusimano, Corwin Dj, Fabio Rotondo, Kovacs K, Kaplan Hg, Farshad Nassiri, Mayberg M, and Scheithauer Bw
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sellar metastases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thymoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Case Report ,Bioinformatics ,metastatic tumor ,Metastasis ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Nose ,Cancer ,Transsphenoidal surgery ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,thymoma ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,immunohistochemistry ,Cavernous sinus ,pathology ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Headaches ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: Thymomas are typically benign tumors of thymic epithelium. Metastases to distal sites, particularly intracranial locations, are extremely rare. Herein, we present the third case of thymoma and the second invasive thymoma to metastasize to the cavernous sinus, adjacent to the pituitary. Case Description: A 41-year-old female patient presented with headaches, stuffy nose, and drooping of the right face. A magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed a complex, multilobulated mass centered upon the right cavernous sinus. The mass was removed via transsphenoidal surgery, and histopathological investigation confirmed the diagnosis of metastatic thymoma. A positron emission tomography-computed tomography scan demonstrated a large anterior mediastinal mass. A biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of invasive thymoma morphologically identical to the World Health Organization type B2 sellar region metastasis. Conclusion: Although rare, thymomas can metastasize to the central nervous system. Our case is the second invasive thymoma to metastasize to the cavernous sinus, adjacent to the pituitary.
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- 2013
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3. An intervention to improve pain management in the pediatric emergency department.
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Corwin DJ, Kessler DO, Auerbach M, Liang A, and Kristinsson G
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- 2012
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4. International Consensus Definition of 'Sport & Exercise' in Toddlers and Young Children, Children, and Adolescents.
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Davis GA, Anderson N, Babl FE, Ballard DW, Barlow KM, Barrett MJ, Beauchamp MH, Borland ML, Bressan S, Crowe L, Chong SL, Corwin DJ, Dalziel SR, Emery CA, Fauteux-Lamarre E, Gioia GA, Haarbauer-Krupa J, Kirkwood MW, Löllgen RMC, Master CL, McKinlay A, Olver J, Mintegi S, Pavlicich V, Purcell L, Raman R, Rino P, Suskauer SJ, Shavit I, Tavender EJ, van Ierssel J, Yeates KO, Zuckerman SL, and Anderson V
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Aim: The study aim was to develop an age-appropriate definition of sport and exercise in children and adolescents for use in concussion research and management., Methods: A modified Delphi methodology, with three rounds and consensus defined a priori as ≥ 80% agreement., Results: Thirty-one participants (13 male, 18 female) from 13 countries, including clinical psychologists, epidemiologists, implementation scientists, neurologists, neuropsychologists, neurosurgeons, paediatric emergency physicians, paediatricians, physiotherapists, rehabilitation physicians, speech-language pathologists, and sports medicine physicians came to a consensus that sport-related paediatric concussion extends beyond the sporting arena, and includes the school yard, playground, park, street, recreational site, and home; excludes non-accidental violence, assault, and passenger vehicle road trauma; may include falls; and age-group terminology includes Toddlers and Young Children (1-4 years), Children (5-12 years), and Adolescents (13 to < 18 years). Sport and exercise categories and individual examples are provided., Conclusions: This consensus definition of sport and exercise in paediatrics for concussion research and management will enable researchers and guideline development groups to expand paediatric concussion research and management guidelines to encompass the broad range of activities commonly associated with sport- and exercise-related concussion in children and adolescents and thus limit exclusion of relevant studies from systematic reviews and guideline development., (© 2025 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2025
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5. Identifying fatal poisonings using child fatality review, poison centre and death certificate data in the USA.
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Gaw CE, Curry AE, Osterhoudt KC, Helwig S, Wood JN, Dykstra H, and Corwin DJ
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Background: Three sources used for poisoning surveillance-child fatality reviews (CFRs), poison centre (PC) calls and death certificates-employ disparate data methodologies. Our study objectives were to (1) characterise the number of fatalities captured by CFRs and PC data compared with death certificates by age and (2) compare demographic and substance characteristics of fatalities captured by the three sources., Methods: We acquired CFR data from the National Fatality Review-Case Reporting System (NFR-CRS), PC calls from the National Poison Data System (NPDS) and death certificate data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) on poisoning fatalities among children 0-17 years old between 2005 and 2020., Results: A total of 6376 poisoning fatalities among children 0-17 years were reported to WONDER, 3460 to NFR-CRS and 1622 to NPDS. Using WONDER as the reference standard, NFR-CRS captured 71.1% of fatalities among infants, and 68.0% among children 1-4 years. NPDS captured 30.9% of fatalities among infants and 59.3% among children 1-4 years. Children≤4 years represented a greater proportion of fatalities in NFR-CRS (25.5%) and NPDS (37.0%) than WONDER (19.9%). NFR-CRS had a slightly higher proportion of fatalities involving Black or African American race (16.8%) compared with WONDER (14.4%). Opioids were the most common fatal substances associated with NFR-CRS and WONDER., Conclusions: Fatality counts, as well as demographic and substance characteristics of those fatalities, differ between poisoning databases used by investigators and health agencies. Reliable death classification can improve data quality. Optimising poisoning fatality capture is critical for informing effective prevention strategies., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.)
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- 2025
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6. Characteristics of Pediatric Concussion across Different Mechanisms of Injury in 5 through 12-Year-Olds.
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Roby PR, McDonald CC, Corwin DJ, Grady MF, Master CL, and Arbogast KB
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Child, Preschool, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Athletic Injuries epidemiology
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Objective: To investigate characteristics of sport-related concussion (SRC), recreation-related concussion (RRC), and nonsport or recreation-related concussion (non-SRRC) in patients 5 through 12 years old, an understudied population in youth concussion., Study Design: This observational study included patients aged 5 through 12 years presenting to a specialty care concussion setting at ≤28 days postinjury from 2018 through 2022. The following characteristics were assessed: demographics, injury mechanism (SRC, RRC, or SRRC), point of healthcare entry, and clinical signs and symptoms. Kruskal-Wallis and chi-square tests were used to assess group differences. Posthoc pairwise comparisons were employed for all analyses (α = 0.017)., Results: One thousand one hundred forty-one patients reported at ≤28 days of injury (female = 42.9%, median age = 11, interquartile range (IQR) = 9-12) with the most common mechanism being RRC (37.3%), followed by non-SRRC (31.9%). More non-SRRCs (39.6%) and RRC (35.7%) were first seen in the emergency department (P < .001) compared with SRC (27.9%). Patients with RRC and non-SRRC were first evaluated at specialists 2 and 3 days later than SRC (P < .001). Patients with non-SRRC reported with higher symptom burden, more frequent visio-vestibular abnormalities, and more changes to sleep and daily habits (P < .001) compared with RRC and SRC (P < .001)., Conclusions: In concussion patients 5 through 12 years, RRCs and non-SRRC were more prevalent than SRC, presenting first more commonly to the emergency department and taking longer to present to specialists. Non-SRRC had more severe clinical features. RRC and non-SRRC are distinct from SRC in potential for less supervision at time of injury and less direct access to established concussion health care following injury., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest This study was funded by the National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health under award numbers R01NS097549 (Christina Master and Kristy Arbogast) and T32NS043126 (Patricia Roby) and the Pennsylvania Department of Health. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. The funder/sponsor did not participate in the work., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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7. Community and Patient Features and Health Care Point of Entry for Pediatric Concussion.
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Corwin DJ, Fedonni D, McDonald CC, Peterson A, Haarbauer-Krupa J, Godfrey M, Camacho P, Bryant-Stephens T, Master CL, and Arbogast KB
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Infant, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, United States, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Infant, Newborn, Brain Concussion therapy
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Importance: Many recent advances in pediatric concussion care are implemented by specialists; however, children with concussion receive care across varied locations. Thus, it is critical to identify which children have access to the most up-to-date treatment strategies., Objective: To evaluate differences in the sociodemographic and community characteristics of pediatric patients who sought care for concussion across various points of entry into a regional health care network., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study included children seen for concussions across a regional US health care network from January 1, 2017, to August 4, 2023. Pediatric patients aged 0 to 18 years who received an International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification code for concussion were included. The study took place at emergency department (ED) and outpatient (primary care [PC] and specialty care [SC]) settings., Exposures: Age at visit, biological sex, parent-identified race and ethnicity, payer type, median income and percentage of adults with a bachelor's degree for home zip code, and overall and subdomain Child Opportunity Index (COI) score based on patient address., Main Outcomes and Measures: The association of exposures with point of entry of ED, PC, and SC were examined in both bivariate analysis and a multinomial logistic regression., Results: Overall, 15 631 patients were included in the study (median [IQR] age, 13 [11-15] years; 7879 [50.4%] male; 1055 [6.7%] Hispanic, 2865 [18.3%] non-Hispanic Black, and 9887 [63.7%] non-Hispanic White individuals). Race and ethnicity were significantly different across settings (1485 patients [50.0%] seen in the ED were non-Hispanic Black vs 1012 [12.0%] in PC and 368 [8.7%] in SC; P < .001) as was insurance status (1562 patients [52.6%] seen in the ED possessed public insurance vs 1624 [19.3%] in PC and 683 [16.1%] in SC; P < .001). Overall and individual COI subdomain scores were also significantly different between settings (overall COI median [IQR]: ED, 30 [9-71]; PC, 87 [68-95]; SC, 87 [69-95]; P < .001). Race, insurance status, and overall COI had the strongest associations with point of entry in the multivariable model (eg, non-Hispanic Black patients seen in the ED compared with non-Hispanic White patients: odds ratio, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.69-2.45)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, children with concussion seen in the ED setting were more likely to be non-Hispanic Black, have public insurance, and have a lower Child Opportunity Index compared with children cared for in the PC or SC setting. This highlights the importance of providing education and training for ED clinicians as well as establishing up-to-date community-level resources to optimize care delivery for pediatric patients with concussion at high risk of care inequities.
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- 2024
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8. Age-Related Variations in Clinical Profiles for Children with Sports- and Recreation-Related Concussions.
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Ren S, Corwin DJ, McDonald CC, Fedonni D, Master CL, and Arbogast KB
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Objective: The purpose was to examine clinical profiles in concussed children aged 5-9 and 10-12 years and compare them with those of adolescents >12 years., Methods: This study included patients aged 5-18 years presenting to a specialty care concussion program with a sports- and recreation-related (SRR) concussion ≤28 days postinjury. Demographics, injury mechanisms, symptoms, and clinical features were assessed. Chi-squared tests, one-way ANOVA, and Kruskal-Wallis were used for comparisons across age groups., Results: A total of 3280 patients with SRR concussion were included: 5.0% were 5-9 years, 18.4% were 10-12 years, and 76.6% were 13-18 years. Younger age groups had more males than females (5-9 years: 70.7% vs. 29.3%) and more commonly sustained their injury during limited- (28.7%), and non-contact (7.9%) activities compared to other age groups ( p < 0.01). Younger children presented less symptoms frequently ( p ≤ 0.042), but higher symptom severity in somatic and emotional domains ( p ≤ 0.016). Fewer 5-9-year-olds reported changes in school (25.6%), sleep (46.3%), and daily habits (40.9%) than adolescents ( p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Among SRR-concussed children and adolescents, we found significant age-related variations in demographics, injury mechanism, symptoms, and clinical features. Recognizing these unique features in younger children may facilitate targeted management and treatment.
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- 2024
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9. PECARN prediction rule for cervical spine imaging of children presenting to the emergency department with blunt trauma: a multicentre prospective observational study.
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Leonard JC, Harding M, Cook LJ, Leonard JR, Adelgais KM, Ahmad FA, Browne LR, Burger RK, Chaudhari PP, Corwin DJ, Glomb NW, Lee LK, Owusu-Ansah S, Riney LC, Rogers AJ, Rubalcava DM, Sapien RE, Szadkowski MA, Tzimenatos L, Ward CE, Yen K, and Kuppermann N
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Infant, Adolescent, Infant, Newborn, Algorithms, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Emergency Service, Hospital, Wounds, Nonpenetrating diagnostic imaging, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Spinal Injuries diagnostic imaging, Spinal Injuries diagnosis, Clinical Decision Rules
- Abstract
Background: Cervical spine injuries in children are uncommon but potentially devastating; however, indiscriminate neck imaging after trauma unnecessarily exposes children to ionising radiation. The aim of this study was to derive and validate a paediatric clinical prediction rule that can be incorporated into an algorithm to guide radiographic screening for cervical spine injury among children in the emergency department., Methods: In this prospective observational cohort study, we screened children aged 0-17 years presenting with known or suspected blunt trauma at 18 specialised children's emergency departments in hospitals in the USA affiliated with the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). Injured children were eligible for enrolment into derivation or validation cohorts by fulfilling one of the following criteria: transported from the scene of injury to the emergency department by emergency medical services; evaluated by a trauma team; and undergone neck imaging for concern for cervical spine injury either at or before arriving at the PECARN-affiliated emergency department. Children presenting with solely penetrating trauma were excluded. Before viewing an enrolled child's neck imaging results, the attending emergency department clinician completed a clinical examination and prospectively documented cervical spine injury risk factors in an electronic questionnaire. Cervical spine injuries were determined by imaging reports and telephone follow-up with guardians within 21-28 days of the emergency room encounter, and cervical spine injury was confirmed by a paediatric neurosurgeon. Factors associated with a high risk of cervical spine injury (>10%) were identified by bivariable Poisson regression with robust error estimates, and factors associated with non-negligible risk were identified by classification and regression tree (CART) analysis. Variables were combined in the cervical spine injury prediction rule. The primary outcome of interest was cervical spine injury within 28 days of initial trauma warranting inpatient observation or surgical intervention. Rule performance measures were calculated for both derivation and validation cohorts. A clinical care algorithm for determining which risk factors warrant radiographic screening for cervical spine injury after blunt trauma was applied to the study population to estimate the potential effect on reducing CT and x-ray use in the paediatric emergency department. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05049330., Findings: Nine emergency departments participated in the derivation cohort, and nine participated in the validation cohort. In total, 22 430 children presenting with known or suspected blunt trauma were enrolled (11 857 children in the derivation cohort; 10 573 in the validation cohort). 433 (1·9%) of the total population had confirmed cervical spine injuries. The following factors were associated with a high risk of cervical spine injury: altered mental status (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score of 3-8 or unresponsive on the Alert, Verbal, Pain, Unresponsive scale [AVPU] of consciousness); abnormal airway, breathing, or circulation findings; and focal neurological deficits including paresthesia, numbness, or weakness. Of 928 in the derivation cohort presenting with at least one of these risk factors, 118 (12·7%) had cervical spine injury (risk ratio 8·9 [95% CI 7·1-11·2]). The following factors were associated with non-negligible risk of cervical spine injury by CART analysis: neck pain; altered mental status (GCS score of 9-14; verbal or pain on the AVPU; or other signs of altered mental status); substantial head injury; substantial torso injury; and midline neck tenderness. The high-risk and CART-derived factors combined and applied to the validation cohort performed with 94·3% (95% CI 90·7-97·9) sensitivity, 60·4% (59·4-61·3) specificity, and 99·9% (99·8-100·0) negative predictive value. Had the algorithm been applied to all participants to guide the use of imaging, we estimated the number of children having CT might have decreased from 3856 (17·2%) to 1549 (6·9%) of 22 430 children without increasing the number of children getting plain x-rays., Interpretation: Incorporated into a clinical algorithm, the cervical spine injury prediction rule showed strong potential for aiding clinicians in determining which children arriving in the emergency department after blunt trauma should undergo radiographic neck imaging for potential cervical spine injury. Implementation of the clinical algorithm could decrease use of unnecessary radiographic testing in the emergency department and eliminate high-risk radiation exposure. Future work should validate the prediction rule and care algorithm in more general settings such as community emergency departments., Funding: The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the Health Resources and Services Administration of the US Department of Health and Human Services in the Maternal and Child Health Bureau under the Emergency Medical Services for Children programme., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.)
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- 2024
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10. Using mobile health to expedite access to specialty care for youth presenting to the emergency department with concussion at highest risk of developing persisting symptoms: a protocol paper for a non-randomised hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial.
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Corwin DJ, Godfrey M, Arbogast KB, Zorc JJ, Wiebe DJ, Michel JJ, Barnett I, Stenger KM, Calandra LM, Cobb J, Winston FK, and Master CL
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- Humans, Adolescent, Health Services Accessibility, Male, Female, Brain Concussion therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital, Telemedicine, Post-Concussion Syndrome therapy
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Introduction: Paediatric concussion is a common injury. Approximately 30% of youth with concussion will experience persisting postconcussion symptoms (PPCS) extending at least 1 month following injury. Recently, studies have shown the benefit of early, active, targeted therapeutic strategies. However, these are primarily prescribed from the specialty setting. Early access to concussion specialty care has been shown to improve recovery times for those at risk for persisting symptoms, but there are disparities in which youth are able to access such care. Mobile health (mHealth) technology has the potential to improve access to concussion specialists. This trial will evaluate the feasibility of a mHealth remote patient monitoring (RPM)-based care handoff model to facilitate access to specialty care, and the effectiveness of the handoff model in reducing the incidence of PPCS., Methods and Analysis: This study is a non-randomised type I, hybrid implementation-effectiveness trial. Youth with concussion ages 13-18 will be enrolled from the emergency department of a large paediatric healthcare network. Patients deemed a moderate-to-high risk for PPCS using the predicting and preventing postconcussive problems in paediatrics (5P) stratification tool will be registered for a web-based chat platform that uses RPM to collect information on symptoms and activity. Those patients with escalating or plateauing symptoms will be contacted for a specialty visit using data collected from RPM to guide management. The primary effectiveness outcome will be the incidence of PPCS, defined as at least three concussion-related symptoms above baseline at 28 days following injury. Secondary effectiveness outcomes will include the number of days until return to preinjury symptom score, clearance for full activity and return to school without accommodations. The primary implementation outcome will be fidelity, defined as the per cent of patients meeting specialty care referral criteria who are ultimately seen in concussion specialty care. Secondary implementation outcomes will include patient-defined and clinician-defined appropriateness and acceptability., Ethics and Dissemination: This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (IRB 22-019755). Study findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated at national and international meetings., Trial Registration Number: NCT05741411., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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11. Head Injury Treatment With Healthy and Advanced Dietary Supplements: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of the Tolerability, Safety, and Efficacy of Branched Chain Amino Acids in the Treatment of Concussion in Adolescents and Young Adults.
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Corwin DJ, Myers SR, Arbogast KB, Lim MM, Elliott JE, Metzger KB, LeRoux P, Elkind J, Metheny H, Berg J, Pettijohn K, Master CL, Kirschen MP, and Cohen AS
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Male, Female, Adolescent, Double-Blind Method, Young Adult, Adult, Child, Treatment Outcome, Dietary Supplements, Amino Acids, Branched-Chain administration & dosage, Amino Acids, Branched-Chain therapeutic use, Brain Concussion drug therapy, Brain Concussion therapy
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Concussion is a common injury in the adolescent and young adult populations. Although branched chain amino acid (BCAA) supplementation has shown improvements in neurocognitive and sleep function in pre-clinical animal models of mild-to-moderate traumatic brain injury (TBI), to date, no studies have been performed evaluating the efficacy of BCAAs in concussed adolescents and young adults. The goal of this pilot trial was to determine the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of varied doses of oral BCAA supplementation in a group of concussed adolescents and young adults. The study was conducted as a pilot, double-blind, randomized controlled trial of participants ages 11-34 presenting with concussion to outpatient clinics (sports medicine and primary care), urgent care, and emergency departments of a tertiary care pediatric children's hospital and an urban tertiary care adult hospital, between June 24, 2014 and December 5, 2020. Participants were randomized to one of five study arms (placebo and 15 g, 30 g, 45 g, and 54 g BCAA treatment daily) and followed for 21 days after enrollment. Outcome measures included daily computerized neurocognitive tests (processing speed, the a priori primary outcome; and attention, visual learning, and working memory), symptom score, physical and cognitive activity, sleep/wake alterations, treatment compliance, and adverse events. In total, 42 participants were randomized, 38 of whom provided analyzable data. We found no difference in our primary outcome of processing speed between the arms; however, there was a significant reduction in total symptom score (decrease of 4.4 points on a 0-54 scale for every 500 g of study drug consumed, p value for trend = 0.0036, [uncorrected]) and return to physical activity (increase of 0.503 points on a 0-5 scale for every 500 g of study drug consumed, p value for trend = 0.005 [uncorrected]). There were no serious adverse events. Eight of 38 participants reported a mild (not interfering with daily activity) or moderate (limitation of daily activity) adverse event; there were no differences in adverse events by arm, with only two reported mild adverse events (both gastrointestinal) in the highest (45 g and 54 g) BCAA arms. Although limited by slow enrollment, small sample size, and missing data, this study provides the first demonstration of efficacy, as well as safety and tolerability, of BCAAs in concussed adolescents and young adults; specifically, a dose-response effect in reducing concussion symptoms and a return to baseline physical activity in those treated with higher total doses of BCAAs. These findings provide important preliminary data to inform a larger trial of BCAA therapy to expedite concussion recovery.
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- 2024
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12. Response Rate Patterns in Adolescents With Concussion Using Mobile Health and Remote Patient Monitoring: Observational Study.
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Ren S, McDonald CC, Corwin DJ, Wiebe DJ, Master CL, and Arbogast KB
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Background: A concussion is a common adolescent injury that can result in a constellation of symptoms, negatively affecting academic performance, neurobiological development, and quality of life. Mobile health (mHealth) technologies, such as apps for patients to report symptoms or wearables to measure physiological metrics like heart rate, have been shown to be promising in health maintenance. However, there is limited evidence about mHealth engagement in adolescents with a concussion during their recovery course., Objective: This study aims to determine the response rate and response rate patterns in concussed adolescents reporting their daily symptoms through mHealth technology. It will also examine the effect of time-, demographic-, and injury-related characteristics on response rate patterns., Methods: Participants aged between 11-18 years (median days since injury at enrollment: 11 days) were recruited from the concussion program of a tertiary care academic medical center and a suburban school's athletic teams. They were asked to report their daily symptoms using a mobile app. Participants were prompted to complete the Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI) 3 times (ie, morning, afternoon, and evening) per day for 4 weeks following enrollment. The primary outcome was the response rate pattern over time (by day since initial app use and the day since injury). Time-, demographic-, and injury-related differences in reporting behaviors were compared using Mann Whitney U tests., Results: A total of 56 participants were enrolled (mean age 15.3, SD 1.9 years; n=32, 57% female). The median response rate across all days of app use in the evening was 37.0% (IQR 27.2%-46.4%), which was significantly higher than the morning (21.2%, IQR 15.6%-30.5%) or afternoon (26.4%, IQR 21.1%-31.5%; P<.001). The median daily response was significantly different by sex (female: 53.8%, IQR 46.2%-64.2% vs male: 42.0%, IQR 28.6%-51.1%; P=.003), days since injury to app use (participants starting to use the app >7 days since injury: 54.1%, IQR 47.4%-62.2% vs starting to use the app ≤7 days since injury: 38.0%, IQR 26.0%-53.3%; P=.002), and concussion history (participants with a history of at least one prior concussion: 57.4%, IQR 44.5%-70.5% vs participants without concussion history: 42.3%, IQR 36.8%-53.5%; P=.03). There were no significant differences by age. Differences by injury mechanism (sports- and recreation-related injury: 39.6%, IQR 36.1%-50.4% vs non-sports- or recreation-related injury: 30.6%, IQR 20.0%-42.9%; P=.04) and initial symptom burden (PCSI scores greater than the median score of 47: 40.9%, IQR 35.2%-53.8% vs PCSI scores less than or equal to the median score: 31.9%, IQR 24.6%-40.6%; P=.04) were evident in the evening response rates; however, daily rates were not statistically different., Conclusions: Evening may be the optimal time to prompt for daily concussion symptom assessment among concussed adolescents compared with morning or afternoon. Multiple demographic- and injury-related characteristics were associated with higher daily response rates, including for female participants, those with more than 1 week from injury to beginning mHealth monitoring, and those with a history of at least one previous concussion. Future studies may consider incentive strategies or adaptive digital concussion assessments to increase response rates in populations with low engagement., (© Sicong Ren, Catherine C McDonald, Daniel J Corwin, Douglas J Wiebe, Christina L Master, Kristy B Arbogast. Originally published in JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting (https://pediatrics.jmir.org).)
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- 2024
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13. Driver's Licensure and Driving Outcomes Among Youths With Mood Disorders.
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Gaw CE, Metzger KB, Pfeiffer MR, Yerys BE, Boyd RC, Corwin DJ, and Curry AE
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- Child, Young Adult, Humans, Adolescent, Female, Child, Preschool, Adult, Male, Cohort Studies, Hospitals, Pediatric, International Classification of Diseases, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Eligibility Determination
- Abstract
Importance: Mood disorders are prevalent among adolescents and young adults, and their onset often coincides with driving eligibility. The understanding of how mood disorders are associated with youth driving outcomes is limited., Objective: To examine the association between the presence of a mood disorder and rates of licensing, crashes, violations, and suspensions among adolescents and young adults., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study was conducted among New Jersey residents who were born 1987 to 2000, age eligible to acquire a driver's license from 2004 to 2017, and patients of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia network within 2 years of licensure eligibility at age 17 years. The presence of a current (ie, ≤2 years of driving eligibility) mood disorder was identified using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) or International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) codes. Rates of licensure and driving outcomes among youths who were licensed were compared among 1879 youths with and 84 294 youths without a current mood disorder from 2004 to 2017. Data were analyzed from June 2022 to July 2023., Main Outcomes and Measures: Acquisition of a driver's license and first involvement as a driver in a police-reported crash and rates of other adverse driving outcomes were assessed. Survival analysis was used to estimate adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) for licensing and driving outcomes. Adjusted rate ratios (aRRs) were estimated for driving outcomes 12 and 48 months after licensure., Results: Among 86 173 youths (median [IQR] age at the end of the study, 22.8 [19.7-26.5] years; 42 894 female [49.8%]), there were 1879 youths with and 84 294 youths without a mood disorder. A greater proportion of youths with mood disorders were female (1226 female [65.2%]) compared with those without mood disorders (41 668 female [49.4%]). At 48 months after licensure eligibility, 75.5% (95% CI, 73.3%-77.7%) and 83.8% (95% CI, 83.5%-84.1%) of youths with and without mood disorders, respectively, had acquired a license. Youths with mood disorders were 30% less likely to acquire a license than those without a mood disorder (aHR, 0.70 [95% CI, 0.66-0.74]). Licensed youths with mood disorders had higher overall crash rates than those without mood disorders over the first 48 months of driving (137.8 vs 104.8 crashes per 10 000 driver-months; aRR, 1.19 [95% CI, 1.08-1.31]); licensed youths with mood disorders also had higher rates of moving violations (aRR, 1.25 [95% CI, 1.13-1.38]) and license suspensions (aRR, 1.95 [95% CI, 1.53-2.49])., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that youths with mood disorders were less likely to be licensed and had higher rates of adverse driving outcomes than youths without mood disorders. These findings suggest that opportunities may exist to enhance driving mobility in this population and elucidate the mechanisms by which mood disorders are associated with crash risk.
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- 2024
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14. Dose-Response Effect of Mental Health Diagnoses on Concussion Recovery in Children and Adolescents.
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Master CL, Corwin DJ, Fedonni D, Ampah SB, Housel KC, McDonald C, Arbogast KB, and Grady MF
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- Male, Female, Child, Adolescent, Humans, Mental Health, Emotions, Post-Concussion Syndrome, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion complications, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Brain Concussion psychology
- Abstract
Background: Pre-existing mental health diagnoses may contribute to greater emotional symptom burden and prolonged recovery after concussion., Hypothesis: Youth with pre-existing mental health diagnoses will have greater emotional symptom burden, greater risk for delayed return to exercise, and more prolonged recovery from concussion than those without those diagnoses., Study Design: Prospective cohort., Level of Evidence: Level 3., Methods: A prospective registry of youth concussion was examined for differences in emotional symptom burden after injury to develop a predictive risk model for prolonged recovery. The impact of individual and total number of pre-existing mental health diagnoses (0, 1, 2, and 3+) was assessed, and multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify factors associated with prolonged recovery., Results: Among a cohort of 3105 youth with concussion, those with a history of mental health diagnoses, in a dose-response fashion, had greater postinjury emotional symptom burden (7 emotional symptoms vs 4; P < 0.01), visio-vestibular dysfunction (65% abnormal vs 56% abnormal; P < 0.01), later return to symptom-limited exercise (23 vs 21 days; P < 0.01), and overall longer concussion recovery (38 days, interquartile range [IQR] 18, 80) versus 25 days (IQR 13, 54; P < 0.01). Boys with prolonged recovery after concussion had greater emotional symptom burden than girls (5 emotional symptoms vs 3; P < 0.01)., Conclusion: Pre-existing mental health diagnoses are associated with greater postinjury emotional symptom burden and longer concussion recovery in a dose-response fashion. Visiovestibular deficits and delayed return to exercise are also associated with pre-existing mental health diagnoses and prolonged recovery. Boys with prolonged recovery from concussion experience greater emotional symptom burden than girls., Clinical Relevance: Addressing pre-existing mental health diagnoses is essential to concussion management. Boys with prolonged recovery from concussion may particularly benefit from interventions to address their higher emotional symptom burden. Interventions, including a home visio-vestibular exercise program and symptom-limited exercise, may contribute to improving time to concussion recovery., Competing Interests: The following author declared potential conflicts of interest: C.L.M. has received speaking fees from the AAP, AAOPT, Indiana University, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, and NYU Concussion.
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- 2024
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15. Optimizing the Combination of Common Clinical Concussion Batteries to Predict Persistent Postconcussion Symptoms in a Prospective Cohort of Concussed Youth.
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Corwin DJ, Mandel F, McDonald CC, Barnett I, Arbogast KB, and Master CL
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- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Brain Concussion etiology, Post-Concussion Syndrome diagnosis, Post-Concussion Syndrome etiology
- Abstract
Background: Studies have evaluated individual factors associated with persistent postconcussion symptoms (PPCS) in youth concussion, but no study has combined individual elements of common concussion batteries with patient characteristics, comorbidities, and visio-vestibular deficits in assessing an optimal model to predict PPCS., Purpose: To determine the combination of elements from 4 commonly used clinical concussion batteries and known patient characteristics and comorbid risk factors that maximize the ability to predict PPCS., Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2., Methods: We enrolled 198 concussed participants-87 developed PPCS and 111 did not-aged 8 to 19 years assessed within 14 days of injury from a suburban high school and the concussion program of a tertiary care academic medical center. We defined PPCS as a Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI) score at 28 days from injury of ≥3 points compared with the preinjury PCSI score-scaled for younger children. Predictors included the individual elements of the visio-vestibular examination (VVE), Sport Concussion Assessment Tool, 5th Edition (SCAT-5), King-Devick test, and PCSI, in addition to age, sex, concussion history, and migraine headache history. The individual elements of these tests were grouped into interpretable factors using sparse principal component analysis. The 12 resultant factors were combined into a logistic regression and ranked by frequency of inclusion into the combined optimal model, whose predictive performance was compared with the VVE, initial PCSI, and the current existing predictive model (the Predicting and Prevention Postconcussive Problems in Pediatrics (5P) prediction rule) using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC)., Results: A cluster of 2 factors (SCAT-5/PCSI symptoms and VVE near point of convergence/accommodation) emerged. A model fit with these factors had an AUC of 0.805 (95% CI, 0.661-0.929). This was a higher AUC point estimate, with overlapping 95% CIs, compared with the PCSI (AUC, 0.773 [95% CI, 0.617-0.912]), VVE (AUC, 0.736 [95% CI, 0.569-0.878]), and 5P Prediction Rule (AUC, 0.728 [95% CI, 0.554-0.870])., Conclusion: Among commonly used clinical assessments for youth concussion, a combination of symptom burden and the vision component of the VVE has the potential to augment predictive power for PPCS over either current risk models or individual batteries., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: Funding for this research has been provided by the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Research reported in this publication was also supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the NIH under award No. R01NS097549 awarded to K.B.A. and C.L.M. and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the NIH under award No. K23NS128275-01 awarded to D.J.C. C.L.M. has received a grant from DJO. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto.
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- 2024
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16. The Variability of Recovery From Pediatric Concussion Using Multimodal Clinical Definitions.
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Corwin DJ, Metzger KB, McDonald CC, Pfeiffer MR, Arbogast KB, and Master CL
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Prospective Studies, Schools, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Sports
- Abstract
Background: While concussions are common pediatric injuries, a lack of agreement on a standard definition of recovery creates multiple challenges for clinicians and researchers alike., Hypothesis: The percentage of concussed youth deemed recovered as part of a prospective cohort study will differ depending on the recovery definition., Study Design: Descriptive epidemiologic study of a prospectively enrolled observational cohort., Level of Evidence: Level 3., Methods: Participants aged 11 to 18 years were enrolled from the concussion program of a tertiary care academic center. Data were collected from initial and follow-up clinical visits ≤12 weeks from injury. A total of 10 recovery definitions were assessed: (1) cleared to full return to sports; (2) return to full school; (3) self-reported return to normal; (4) self-reported full return to school; (5) self-reported full return to exercise; (6) symptom return to preinjury state; (7) complete symptom resolution; (8) symptoms below standardized threshold; (9) no abnormal visio-vestibular examination (VVE) elements; and (10) ≤1 abnormal VVE assessments., Results: In total, 174 participants were enrolled. By week 4, 63.8% met at least 1 recovery definition versus 78.2% by week 8 versus 88.5% by week 12. For individual measures of recovery at week 4, percent recovered ranged from 5% by self-reported full return to exercise to 45% for ≤1 VVE abnormality (similar trends at 8 and 12 weeks)., Conclusion: There is wide variability in the proportion of youth considered recovered at various points following concussion depending on the definition of recovery, with higher proportions using physiologic examination-based measures and lower proportions using patient-reported measures., Clinical Relevance: These results further emphasize the need for a multimodal assessment of recovery by clinicians as a single and standardized definition of recovery that captures the broad impact of concussion on a given patient continues to be elusive., Competing Interests: The following authors declared potential conflicts of interest: K.B.M., C.C.M., M.R.P., K.B.A., and C.L.M. received a grant from Pennsylvania Department of Health (DOH). K.B.A. and C.L.M. received grant R01NS097549 from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
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- 2024
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17. Maximizing the Accuracy of Adolescent Concussion Diagnosis Using Individual Elements of Common Standardized Clinical Assessment Tools.
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Corwin DJ, Mandel F, McDonald CC, Mohammed FN, Margulies S, Barnett I, Arbogast KB, and Master CL
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- Humans, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Neuropsychological Tests, Schools, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Sports, Athletic Injuries diagnosis
- Abstract
Context: Multiple clinical evaluation tools exist for adolescent concussion with various degrees of correlation, presenting challenges for clinicians in identifying which elements of these tools provide the greatest diagnostic utility., Objective: To determine the combination of elements from 4 commonly used clinical concussion batteries that maximize discrimination of adolescents with concussion from those without concussion., Design: Cross-sectional study., Setting: Suburban school and concussion program of a tertiary care academic center., Patients or Other Participants: A total of 231 participants with concussion (from a suburban school and a concussion program) and 166 participants without concussion (from a suburban school) between the ages of 13 and 19 years., Main Outcome Measure(s): Individual elements of the visio-vestibular examination (VVE), Sport Concussion Assessment Tool, fifth edition (SCAT5; including the modified Balance Error Scoring System), King-Devick test (K-D), and Postconcussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI) were evaluated. The 24 subcomponents of these tests were grouped into interpretable factors using sparse principal component analysis. The 13 resultant factors were combined with demographic and clinical covariates into a logistic regression model and ranked by frequency of inclusion into the ideal model, and the predictive performance of the ideal model was compared with each of the clinical batteries using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC)., Results: A cluster of 4 factors (factor 1 [VVE saccades and vestibulo-ocular reflex], factor 2 [modified Balance Error Scoring System double-legged stance], factor 3 [SCAT5/PCSI symptom scores], and factor 4 [K-D completion time]) emerged. A model fit with the top factors performed as well as each battery in predicting concussion status (AUC = 0.816 [95% CI = 0.731, 0.889]) compared with the SCAT5 (AUC = 0.784 [95% CI = 0.692, 0.866]), PCSI (AUC = 0.776 [95% CI = 0.674, 0.863]), VVE (AUC = 0.711 [95% CI = 0.602, 0.814]), and K-D (AUC = 0.708 [95% CI = 0.590, 0.819])., Conclusions: A multifaceted assessment for adolescents with concussion, comprising symptoms, attention, balance, and the visio-vestibular system, is critical. Current diagnostic batteries likely measure overlapping domains, and the sparse principal component analysis demonstrated strategies for streamlining comprehensive concussion assessment across a variety of settings., (© by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, Inc.)
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- 2023
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18. Hormone Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer Sensitive to Pembrolizumab: Evidence of the Pathogenicity of the MLH1 Variant 1835del3.
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Kaplan HG, Whiteaker JR, Nelson B, Ivey RG, Lorentzen TD, Voytovich U, Zhao L, Corwin DJ, Resta R, and Paulovich AG
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- Humans, Female, Virulence, Germ-Line Mutation, MutL Protein Homolog 1 genetics, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis drug therapy, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis genetics, Colonic Neoplasms
- Abstract
A woman with estrogen/progesterone receptor-positive, ERBB2-negative metastatic breast cancer developed progressive disease despite treatment with multiple hormonal and chemotherapeutic modalities. She carried a germline variant of MLH1 (1835del3), also known as c.1835_1837del and v612del, the pathogenicity of which has not been conclusively determined. MLH1 staining was not seen on immunohistochemical staining of her tumor tissue. The patient experienced a >5-year dramatic response to 4 doses of pembrolizumab. Family studies revealed multiple other relatives with the MLH1 1835del3 variant, as well as multiple relatives with colon cancer. The one relative with colon cancer who underwent genetic testing demonstrated the same variant. Laboratory studies revealed that the patient's tumor showed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the MLH1 region, high levels of microsatellite instability, and a high tumor mutational burden. LOH in the MLH1 region, along with the remarkable clinical response to pembrolizumab treatment and the presence of the same MLH1 variant in affected relatives, supports the hypothesis that the MLH1 1835del3 variant is pathogenic. Given the patient's family history, this likely represents an uncommon presentation of Lynch syndrome. Physicians should be alert to evaluate patients for targetable genetic variants even in unlikely clinical situations such as the one described here.
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- 2023
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19. A Randomized Trial of Incentivization to Maximize Retention for Real-Time Symptom and Activity Monitoring Using Ecological Momentary Assessment in Pediatric Concussion.
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Corwin DJ, Orchinik J, D'Alonzo B, Agarwal AK, Pettijohn KW, Master CL, and Wiebe DJ
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- Adolescent, Humans, Child, Male, Female, Prospective Studies, Exercise, Emergency Service, Hospital, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Brain Concussion diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study were to determine the incentivization strategy that maximizes patient adherence to report symptoms and activity via ecological momentary assessment (EMA) after pediatric concussion, and assess the feasibility of tracking concussed youth using EMA from the emergency department (ED) setting., Methods: This study was a randomized controlled trial of participants ages 13 to 18 years with concussion presenting to an urban, academic pediatric ED within 5 days of injury. Participants were randomized to 1 of 4 incentive arms: 2 dynamic (loss-based and streak) and 2 control flat-rate (monetary and electronic device). Participants reported symptoms 3 times per day and cognitive activity once each evening for 3 weeks. Physical activity (step count) and sleep were monitored using a Fitbit (kept by participants in the device flat-rate arm). The primary outcome was proportion of prompts to which participants responded. Secondary outcomes included differential response rates by demographics, and comparison of outcome determination between EMA and subsequent clinical visits., Results: Thirty participants were enrolled, with a median age of 15.5 years and 60% female. Median cumulative proportion of prompts responded to was 68.3% (interquartile range, 47.6%-82.5%) in the dynamic arms versus 54.0% (interquartile range. 20.6%-68.3%) in the flat-rate arms, P = 0.065. There were nonsignificant differences in median response by sex (65.9% for female vs 40.0% for male, P = 0.072), race/ethnicity (61.9% for non-Hispanic White vs 43.7% for non-Hispanic Black participants, P = 0.097), and insurance (61.9% for private insurance vs 47.6% for public insurance, P = 0.305). Recovery at 3 weeks was discernible for all but 2 participants (93.3%) using EMA data, compared with only 9 participants (30.0%) ( P < 0.001) from clinical visits., Conclusions: Dynamic incentivization showed higher rates of response to tridaily symptom prompts compared with flat-rate incentivization. These data show tracking concussed youth using EMA from the ED is feasible using a dynamic incentivization strategy, with improved ability to discern outcomes compared with prospective monitoring using follow-up clinical visits., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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20. Characteristics of Fatal Poisonings Among Infants and Young Children in the United States.
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Gaw CE, Curry AE, Osterhoudt KC, Wood JN, and Corwin DJ
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- Child, Humans, Infant, United States epidemiology, Child, Preschool, Analgesics, Opioid, Poisoning epidemiology
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Background and Objectives: Fatal poisoning is a preventable cause of death among young children. Understanding factors surrounding these deaths will inform future prevention efforts. Our objective was to describe the characteristics of fatal pediatric poisonings using child death review data., Methods: We acquired data from 40 states participating in the National Fatality Review-Case Reporting System on deaths attributed to poisonings among children aged ≤5 years from 2005 to 2018. We analyzed select demographic, supervisor, death investigation, and substance-related variables using descriptive statistics., Results: During the study period, 731 poisoning-related fatalities were reported by child death reviews to the National Fatality Review-Case Reporting System. Over two-fifths (42.1%, 308 of 731) occurred among infants aged <1 year, and most fatalities (65.1%, 444 of 682) occurred in the child's home. One-sixth of children (97 of 581) had an open child protective services case at time of death. Nearly one-third (32.2%, 203 of 631) of children were supervised by an individual other than the biological parent. Opioids (47.3%, 346 of 731) were the most common substance contributing to death, followed by over-the-counter pain, cold, and allergy medications (14.8%, 108 of 731). Opioids accounted for 24.1% (7 of 29) of the substances contributing to deaths in 2005 compared with 52.2% (24 of 46) in 2018., Conclusions: Opioids were the most common substances contributing to fatal poisonings among young children. Over-the-counter medications continue to account for pediatric fatalities even after regulatory changes. These data highlight the importance of tailored prevention measures to further reduce fatal child poisonings., (Copyright © 2023 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2023
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21. Documented Visio-Vestibular Examination and Anticipatory Guidance for Pediatric Concussion Patients.
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Donner JR, Corwin DJ, Master CL, and Zonfrillo MR
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Physical Examination, Rest, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Brain Concussion therapy
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Objectives: Pediatric concussion patients are frequently managed in the primary care or acute care settings. Optimal care includes vision and vestibular assessments, as well as targeted anticipatory guidance for return to school and activity. We aimed to examine clinical practices related to the evaluation and management of concussion patients at children's hospital-based emergency department (ED) and primary care/urgent care settings., Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of children aged 5 to 18 years who presented to either the ED or the primary and urgent care settings during a 2-year period. We evaluated 2 concussion management practices: (1) completion of the visio-vestibular examination and (2) provision of anticipatory guidance and follow-up., Results: Among patients seen in the ED (n = 500), only 12.4% had at least 1 component of the visio-vestibular examination performed compared with 51.3% of patients (n = 78) in the primary and urgent care settings ( P < 0.05). Regarding anticipatory guidance, 86.2% of ED patients were advised to engage in cognitive rest, and 94.2% were told to physically rest compared with 67.9% and 72.8% in the primary and urgent care settings ( P < 0.05), respectively. Follow-up recommendations were provided similarly for both settings (92.0% in the ED and 85.9% in the primary/urgent care, P = 0.077)., Conclusions: Although most pediatric concussion patients receive instructions acutely about cognitive and physical rest, there is opportunity to increase the frequency of visio-vestibular testing in both the ED and the primary care settings. Future efforts should focus on strategies to consistently optimize visio-vestibular assessment given its value in concussion diagnosis., Competing Interests: Disclosures: The authors declare no conflict of interest. No funding was received for this work., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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22. Disparities in Adherence to Concussion Clinical Care Recommendations in a Pediatric Population.
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Mohammed FN, Master CL, Arbogast KB, McDonald CC, Sharma S, Kang B, and Corwin DJ
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- Child, Humans, United States, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Health Services Accessibility, Odds Ratio, Healthcare Disparities, Insurance, Health, Ethnicity
- Abstract
Objective: To characterize the relationship of sociodemographic factors to adherence to provider recommendations for pediatric concussion., Setting: Primary care (PC) practices within the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia network., Participants: Patients aged 5 to 18 years old who presented to any PC site for concussion from September 26, 2019, to December 31, 2019., Design: Retrospective medical record review., Main Measures: The primary outcome was adherence to follow-up recommendations as defined by (1) continued follow-up until provider clearance to return to full activity; (2) no more than 2 no-show visits; and (3) for those referred to specialty care (SC), attending at least 1 visit. We compared adherence by race/ethnicity, insurance, age, sex, injury mechanism, and repeat head injury using bivariate and multivariate analyses. A secondary outcome of referral to SC was compared by sociodemographic factors., Results: A total of 755 patients were included. Overall, 80.5% of the patients met adherence criteria. Following adjustment, non-Hispanic Black patients and publicly insured/self-pay patients were less likely to adhere to recommendations than non-Hispanic White patients (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.60; 95% CI, 0.37-1.00) and privately insured patients (AOR = 0.48; 95% CI, 0.30-0.75), respectively. When assessing differences in referral to SC, non-Hispanic Black patients and publicly insured/self-pay patients were more likely to receive a referral than their non-Hispanic White peers (OR = 1.56; 95% CI, 1.00-2.45) and privately insured patients (OR = 1.56; 95% CI, 1.05-2.32), respectively., Conclusion: This study highlights disparities in adherence to concussion care recommendations, with non-Hispanic Black and publicly insured/self-pay patients less likely to adhere to follow-up recommendations than non-Hispanic White and privately insured patients, respectively. These disparities may impact recovery trajectories. Future studies should aim to identify specific individual- and system-level barriers preventing adherence to care in order to ultimately inform targeted interventions to achieve equity in care delivery and outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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23. Pre- and post-season visio-vestibular function in healthy adolescent athletes.
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Roby PR, Metzger KB, McDonald CC, Corwin DJ, Huber CM, Patton DA, Margulies SS, Grady MF, Master CL, and Arbogast KB
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Seasons, Athletes, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Athletic Injuries diagnosis
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Objective: To evaluate pre - to post-season differences in individual subtests of the Visio-Vestibular Examination (VVE) in healthy middle and high school athletes., Methods: This prospective cohort study recruited participants from a private suburban United States secondary school. Participants completed a demographic questionnaire prior to the start of their season. A proxy for head impact exposure was estimated by incorporating previously published head impact frequencies by team and sport. The VVE was completed pre - and post-season and consisted of 9 subtests: smooth pursuit, horizontal/vertical saccades and gaze stability, binocular convergence, left/right monocular accommodation, and complex tandem gait. Generalized estimating equations were employed to assess the relative risk of an abnormal VVE outcome based on testing session (pre - vs. post-season)., Results: Participants included middle and high school athletes (n = 115; female = 59 (51.3%); median age at first assessment = 14.9 years, [IQR = 13.6, 16.0]) during 2017/18 - 2019/20 school years. During pre-season testing, accommodation (10.0%) and complex tandem gait (9.2%) had the largest proportion of abnormal outcomes, while smooth pursuits (10.6%) and convergence (9.5%) had the largest proportion of abnormal outcomes post-season. When assessing the effect of testing session on the relative risk of any abnormal VVE subtest, there were no significant findings (P ≥ 0.25). Additionally, there were no significant effects of testing session when adjusting for estimated head impact exposure for any VVE subtest (P ≥ 0.25)., Conclusions: Visio-vestibular function as measured by the VVE does not change from pre - to post-season in otherwise healthy adolescent athletes. Our findings suggest that the VVE may be stable and robust to typical neurodevelopment occurring in this dynamic age group and help inform post-injury interpretation of visio-vestibular impairments.
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- 2022
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24. Trajectories of Visual and Vestibular Markers of Youth Concussion.
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Arbogast KB, Ghosh RP, Corwin DJ, McDonald CC, Mohammed FN, Margulies SS, Barnett I, and Master CL
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- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Schools, Athletic Injuries complications, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Sports, Vestibular Diseases diagnosis, Vestibular Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Visual and vestibular deficits, as measured by a visio-vestibular examination (VVE), are markers of concussion in youth. Little is known about VVE evolution post-injury, nor influence of age or sex on trajectory. The objective was to describe the time trend of abnormal VVE elements after concussion. Two cohorts, 11-18 years, were enrolled: healthy adolescents ( n = 171) from a high school with VVE assessment before or immediately after their sport seasons and concussed participants ( n = 255) from a specialty care concussion program, with initial assessment ≤28 days from injury and VVE repeated throughout recovery during clinical visits. The primary outcome, compared between groups, is the time course of recovery of the VVE examination, defined as the probability of an abnormal VVE (≥2/9 abnormal elements) and modeled as a cubic polynomial of days after injury. We explored whether probability trajectories differed by: age (<14 years vs. 14+ years), sex, concussion history (0 versus 1+), and days from injury to last assessment (≤28 days vs. 29+ days). Overall, abnormal VVE probability peaked at 0.57 at day 8 post-injury, compared with an underlying prevalence of 0.083 for uninjured adolescents. Abnormal VVE probability peaked higher for those 14+ years, female, with a concussion history and whose recovery course was longer than 28 days post-injury, compared with their appropriate strata subgroups. Females and those <14 years demonstrated slower resolution of VVE abnormalities. VVE deficits are common in adolescents after concussion, and the trajectory of resolution varies by age, sex, and concussion history. These data provide insight to clinicians managing concussions on the timing of deficit resolution after injury.
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- 2022
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25. Assault-Related Concussion in a Pediatric Population.
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Means MJ, Myers RK, Master CL, Arbogast KB, Fein JA, and Corwin DJ
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- Child, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Athletic Injuries epidemiology, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Brain Concussion therapy, Post-Concussion Syndrome diagnosis, Sports
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to compare demographic characteristics, medical care, and outcomes among patients with assault-related concussion (ARC) versus sports and recreation-related concussion (SRC)., Methods: We conducted a retrospective chart review of 124 patients (62 ARC, 62 SRC) aged 8 to 17 years presenting to the care network of a large tertiary care pediatric hospital between July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2014 with a concussion diagnosis at time of presentation. We abstracted patient demographics, initial medical care visit characteristics, and outcome data, and compared proportions using χ2 testing and Fisher exact test and medians using Wilcoxon rank sum test., Results: Patients with ARC were more likely to be Black, publicly insured, and present first for care to the emergency department. Significantly fewer patients with ARC received visio-vestibular testing at initial visit (27% vs 74%, P < 0.001). During recovery, the total number of reported physical, cognitive, emotional, and sleep symptoms did not differ between groups; however, more than twice as many patients with ARC reported decline in grades postinjury compared with patients with SRC (47% vs 20%, P = 0.012). There were trends toward prolonged symptom recovery and time to physician clearance for full return to activities among patients with ARC compared with SRC., Conclusions: This study highlights potential disparities in the initial evaluation and outcomes of pediatric concussion patients based on mechanism of injury. Patients with ARC were less likely to receive a concussion-specific diagnostic evaluation and reported a greater impact on educational outcomes, suggesting differences in concussion diagnosis and management among assault-injured patients. Further examination in larger populations with prospective studies is needed to address potential inequities in concussion care and outcomes among patients with ARC., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The author declares no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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26. Visio-Vestibular Deficits in Healthy Child and Adolescent Athletes.
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Corwin DJ, McDonald CC, Arbogast KB, Mohammed FN, Grady MF, and Master CL
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- Adolescent, Athletes, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Post-Concussion Syndrome, Sports
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Objective: To determine the relationship between patient characteristics and performance on the visio-vestibular examination (VVE) in a cohort of healthy youth athletes and explore the potential association between the VVE and other standardized concussion batteries., Design: Cross-sectional., Setting: Suburban middle and high school., Patients: One hundred ninety subjects age 11 to 18 enrolled before their respective scholastic sport season between August 2017 and March 2020., Assessment of Independent Variables: Patient age, sex, concussion history, comorbidities, hours of weekly exercise, Sport Concussion Assessment Tool, 5th edition (SCAT-5), King-Devick (K-D), Postconcussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI)., Main Outcome Measures: Visio-vestibular examination abnormalities (smooth pursuit, horizontal and vertical saccades, horizontal and vertical gaze stability, convergence, right and left monocular accommodation, complex tandem gait)., Results: Overall, 29.5% of subjects had at least one of 9 VVE elements abnormal, 7.9% at least 2, and 3.2% at least 3. None of 72 comparisons of the VVE elements, when stratified by age, sex, concussion history, history of headaches, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, learning issues, psychiatric problems, motion sickness, or weekly hours of exercise, reached significance using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure at a false discovery rate of 5%. There were no significant associations between VVE elements and the SCAT-5, K-D, or PCSI., Conclusions: The VVE is robust across multiple patient characteristics. Although healthy subjects may have one abnormal element, multiple abnormal elements are a less common feature, making multiple abnormal elements more indicative of concussion, highlighting the use of this assessment in the setting of injury. The VVE tests unique domains when compared with the PCSI, SCAT-5, and K-D., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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27. Concussion Referral and Practice Patterns by Pediatric Emergency Medicine Providers.
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Corwin DJ, Root JM, Zonfrillo MR, and Thomas DG
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- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Referral and Consultation, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Brain Concussion therapy, Emergency Medicine, Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Abstract
Objectives: Concussion is a commonly encountered diagnosis for pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) providers, yet little is known regarding referral patterns to specialists. Our goal was to assess PEM providers' referral patterns and current usage of standardized evaluation tools., Methods: This study was conducted as cross-sectional survey of PEM providers recruited from the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Emergency Medicine Listserv. Surveys were distributed at 3 time points between December 1, 2020, and February 28, 2021, and included multiple choice, Likert scale, and free text questions. Descriptive statistics and bivariate analyses were used to describe the sample and compare responses between those with variable experience and confidence in concussion management., Results: In total, 162 of 491 Listserv members (33.0%) completed the survey. The factors most often reported to assist in referral decisions were history of severe (92.6%) or multiple (90.7%) prior concussions, prolonged symptom duration (89.5%), and severity of current symptoms (84.6%). Most providers reported having large experience (63.0%) and confidence (54.9%) in managing concussion. Standardized symptom scales (8.0%), vestibular (11.7%) and balance assessments (13.0%), and prognostic tools (6.8%) were infrequently used. Most (64.2%) providers felt specialty referral was important. More than 80% reported high likelihood to use an accurate risk stratification tool to facilitate referral., Conclusions: Although most PEM providers reported significant experience and confidence in managing pediatric concussion, standardized assessment tools were infrequently used. Most were likely to use a risk stratification tool to assist in specialty referral. Future studies should assess the ability of targeted referral strategies to improve recovery for concussed youth., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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28. Assessment of Saccades and Gaze Stability in the Diagnosis of Pediatric Concussion.
- Author
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Storey EP, Corwin DJ, McDonald CC, Arbogast KB, Metzger KB, Pfeiffer MR, Margulies SS, Grady MF, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Athletes, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Saccades, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the discriminatory ability of different repetition increments of saccades and gaze stability testing for diagnosing concussion in adolescents., Design: Cross-sectional., Setting: Suburban high school and academic pediatric tertiary care center., Participants: Sixty-nine adolescent athletes within 28 days of a sports- or recreation-related concussion and 69 adolescent athletes without recent concussion., Assessment of Independent Variables: Symptom provocation with horizontal and vertical saccades and gaze stability testing performed up to 30 repetitions., Main Outcome Measures: Sensitivity and specificity at 10-repetition increments (≤10, ≤20, ≤30) and area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) of a visio-vestibular examination (VVE) subscore, scored 0 to 4 based on the number of assessments with symptom provocation, at each repetition increment., Results: Sensitivity improved when increasing from ≤10 to ≤20 to ≤30 repetitions for horizontal (25% to 50% to 69%) and vertical (32% to 52% to 74%) saccades and horizontal (19% to 45% to 71%) and vertical (23% to 45% to 72%) gaze stability. Specificity was comparable at ≤10 and ≤20 repetitions, but decreased at ≤30 repetitions across assessments. For a VVE subscore (0-4) based on the number of symptomatic assessments, the discriminatory ability of the test was highest at ≤20 repetitions (AUC of 0.79) with an optimal subscore of one (sensitivity 59%, specificity 96%)., Conclusions: A VVE including a higher threshold level of repetitions for saccades and gaze stability has improved discriminatory ability for concussion, with an optimized AUC of 0.79 at ≤20 repetitions., Clinical Relevance: The findings in this study suggest that a higher threshold level of repetitions of 2 commonly used visio-vestibular assessments enables clinicians to more accurately diagnose youth concussion., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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29. Trends in Emergent Head Computed Tomography Utilization for Minor Head Trauma After Implementation of a Clinical Pathway.
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Corwin DJ, Durbin DR, Hayes KL, and Zonfrillo MR
- Subjects
- Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Glasgow Coma Scale, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Craniocerebral Trauma diagnostic imaging, Critical Pathways
- Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study were to evaluate trends over time in computed tomography (CT) scan utilization after implementation of a clinical pathway in a tertiary care children's hospital emergency department (ED), to determine how ED throughput differs by CT utilization, and to determine provider reasoning for obtaining head CT in low-risk patients., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of patients 21 years or younger discharged from our ED with head trauma (Glasgow Coma Scale score ≥13 and a head trauma International Classification of Diseases code) over a 5-year period, starting 1 year after pathway implementation (January 2012 to December 2016). A manual chart review of 10% of patients who received a CT was performed to determine reasoning for CT utilization and guideline compliance., Results: In total, 6.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.9%-6.6%) of 21,129 discharged patients received a head CT, decreasing annually by an average of 0.9%. Pediatricians were more likely to obtain a CT than pediatric emergency medicine physicians after adjusting for acuity (odds ratio, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.02-1.82). Those who received a CT stayed 90 minutes longer (95% CI, 79-101 minutes) than those who did not after propensity score matching. Thirty percent of patients who received a CT in our manual chart review met low-risk Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network criteria., Conclusions: Head CT rates in patients with minor head trauma consistently decreased each year after guideline implementation. Children who received head CT did not have prolonged lengths of stay compared with those who did not. A minority of patients who received a CT and were discharged met low-risk criteria by standardized guidelines., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2019 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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30. Evaluation and Management of Pediatric Concussion in the Acute Setting.
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Corwin DJ, Grady MF, Master CL, Joffe MD, and Zonfrillo MR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Brain Concussion therapy
- Abstract
Abstract: Concussion, a type of mild traumatic brain injury, is a common injury encountered by providers caring for pediatric patients in the emergency department (ED) setting. Our understanding of the pathophysiologic basis for symptom and recovery trajectories for pediatric concussion continues to rapidly evolve. As this understanding changes, so do recommendations for optimal management of concussed youth. As more and more children present to EDs across the country for concussion, it is imperative that providers caring for children in these settings remain up-to-date with diagnostic recommendations and management techniques. This article will review the definition, epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of pediatric concussion in the ED setting., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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31. Characteristics and Outcomes for Delayed Diagnosis of Concussion in Pediatric Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department.
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Corwin DJ, Arbogast KB, Haber RA, Pettijohn KW, Zonfrillo MR, Grady MF, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Delayed Diagnosis, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Odds Ratio, Retrospective Studies, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Concussions are common pediatric injuries. Previous studies have found concussed youth may be underdiagnosed in the emergency department (ED), but outcomes for those with delayed diagnosis have yet to be described., Objective: Our aim was to compare visit characteristics and outcomes of patients who present to the ED with head injury who receive immediate vs. delayed diagnosis., Methods: Retrospective chart review of patients aged 6 to 18 years diagnosed with concussion on their first ED or urgent care (UC) visit and patients requiring a second visit for diagnosis between July 1, 2017 and June 20, 2019. We compared demographic information, ED or UC visit features, and recovery outcomes using χ
2 tests, Student's t-tests, and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests., Results: Overall, we included 85 patients with delayed concussion diagnosis and 159 with immediate diagnosis. Those with immediate diagnosis had more symptoms inquired at initial visit (5 vs. 4; p = 0.003) and a higher likelihood of receiving concussion-specific physical examinations (80% vs. 36.5%; p < 0.001); 76.5% of delayed diagnosis patients had at least 1 symptom at follow-up visit that was not inquired about at initial visit. Those with delayed diagnosis had more medical visits during recovery (3 vs. 2; p < 0.001), longer average time to symptom resolution (21 vs. 11 days; p = 0.004), and a higher likelihood of having persistent concussion symptoms (odds ratio 2.9; 95% confidence interval 1.4-5.9)., Conclusions: Concussed children evaluated acutely for head injury who do not receive an immediate diagnosis may be at risk for persistent symptoms. Performance of a concussion-specific physical examination and use of a standardized symptom scale may aid in identification of concussed youth acutely., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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32. Pediatric Health Care Provider Perspectives on Injury Prevention Counseling in Acute and Primary Care Settings.
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Gaw CE, Berthet E, Curry AE, Zonfrillo MR, Arbogast KB, and Corwin DJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Computers, Handheld, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pediatricians, Philadelphia, Counseling methods, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Health Personnel statistics & numerical data, Patient Education as Topic methods, Pediatrics methods, Primary Health Care methods
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to characterize how pediatric primary care and emergency medicine health care providers and trainees engage in injury prevention counseling and assess perceptions toward injury prevention resources. We surveyed physicians, advanced practice providers, and trainees in the Emergency Department, Primary Care Network, and Pediatric Residency Program at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia from September to November 2019. Of the 578 eligible participants, 208 (36.0%) completed the survey. When asked to rank the suitability of alternative personnel for providing counseling, 63.0% of the participants selected an injury prevention specialist as best suited. Seventy-six percent of the providers considered a tablet or mobile device used before a patient encounter to be a helpful resource. Variability existed in provider comfort, knowledge, and frequency of counseling by injury topic. Free-text responses cited time as a barrier to counseling. Opportunities exist to improve the provision of injury education through the utilization of novel resources and personnel.
- Published
- 2020
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33. Distinguishing Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children From Kawasaki Disease and Benign Inflammatory Illnesses in the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic.
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Corwin DJ, Sartori LF, Chiotos K, Odom John AR, Cohn K, Bassiri H, Behrens EM, Teachey DT, Henrickson SE, Diorio CJ, Zorc JJ, and Balamuth F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, COVID-19, Child, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Coronavirus Infections therapy, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Male, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Pneumonia, Viral therapy, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Critical Care methods, Disease Management, Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome diagnosis, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study was to compare presenting clinical and laboratory features among children meeting the surveillance definition for multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) across a range of illness severities., Methods: This is a retrospective single-center study of patients younger than 21 years presenting between March 1 and May 15, 2020. Included patients met the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for MIS-C (inflammation, fever, involvement of 2 organ systems, lack of alternative diagnoses). We defined 3 subgroups by clinical outcomes: (1) critical illness requiring intensive care interventions; (2) patients meeting Kawasaki disease (KD) criteria but not requiring critical care; and (3) mild illness not meeting either criteria. A comparator cohort included patients with KD at our institution during the same time frame in 2019., Results: Thirty-three patients were included (5, critical; 8, 2020 KD; 20, mild). The median age for the critical group was 10.9 years (2.7 for 2020 KD; 6.0 for mild, P = 0.033). The critical group had lower median absolute lymphocyte count (850 vs 3005 vs 2940/uL, P = 0.005), platelets (150 vs 361 vs 252 k/uL, P = 0.005), and sodium (129 vs 136 vs 136 mmol/L, P = 0.002), and higher creatinine (0.7 vs 0.2 vs 0.3 mg/dL, P = 0.002). In the critical group, 60% required vasoactive medications, and 40% required mechanical ventilation. Clinical and laboratories features were similar between the 2020 and 2019 KD groups., Conclusions: We describe 3 groups with inflammatory syndromes during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. The initial profile of lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, hyponatremia, and abnormal creatinine may help distinguish critically ill MIS-C patients from classic/atypical KD or more benign acute inflammation.
- Published
- 2020
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34. Agranulocytosis secondary to zinc excess: Clinically relevant observations, including response to G-CSF and oral copper.
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Weiden PL, Dunker M, and Corwin DJ
- Abstract
Anemia and leukopenia because of copper deficiency can be mistaken for myelodysplasia. Key issues, including response to G-CSF and oral copper, are discussed. This case illustrates a significant deleterious effect of excessive zinc consumption., Competing Interests: None declared., (© 2020 The Authors. Clinical Case Reports published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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35. The Economic Burden of Pediatric Postconcussive Syndrome.
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Corwin DJ, Master CL, Grady MF, and Zonfrillo MR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Amantadine economics, Amitriptyline economics, Child, Child, Preschool, Confidence Intervals, Education economics, Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Post-Concussion Syndrome therapy, Referral and Consultation economics, Retrospective Studies, Sports Medicine economics, Time Factors, United States, Direct Service Costs, Post-Concussion Syndrome economics
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the direct costs of pediatric postconcussive syndrome (PCS)., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting: Subspecialty sports medicine clinics of a large pediatric tertiary care network in the United States., Patients: One hundred fifty-four patients aged 5 to 18 years with PCS, evaluated between 2010 and 2011., Assessment of Independent Variables: Direct costs included visits to sports medicine clinic, visio-vestibular therapy, homebound education, subspecialist referral, and prescription-only medications (amantadine and amitriptyline), all measured beginning at 28 days after injury., Main Outcome Measures: Postconcussive syndrome was defined as persistence beyond 28 days from injury., Results: The cost incurred by each PCS patient for sports medicine visits was $1575, for visio-vestibular therapy was $985, for homebound tutoring was $55, for prescription medications was $22, and for subspecialist referral was $120, totaling $3557 per patient, with a 95% confidence interval range of $2886 to $4257., Conclusions: Given the high economic costs of PCS determined in this study, therapies that mitigate this syndrome may have the potential to be cost-effective and even cost saving.
- Published
- 2020
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36. Reliability of the visio-vestibular examination for concussion among providers in a pediatric emergency department.
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Corwin DJ, Arbogast KB, Swann C, Haber R, Grady MF, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Brain Concussion physiopathology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Observer Variation, Reproducibility of Results, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Emergency Service, Hospital, Eye Movement Measurements, Vestibular Function Tests
- Abstract
Background: Visio-vestibular examination (VVE) deficits are common following pediatric concussion. Guidelines recommend assessing these deficits on all potentially concussed youth given their diagnostic and prognostic value, however test psychometrics of the VVE in the emergency department (ED) setting are unknown. Our objective was to determine the inter-rater (IRR) and test-retest reliability (TRR) of the VVE in a pediatric ED., Methods: We enrolled 155 patients (112 IRR; 43 TRR) age 6-18 years with head injury presenting to the ED of a tertiary care children's hospital. Exams were performed by a group of 65 attending/fellow physicians, pediatricians, and advanced practice providers. The VVE consisted of 9 maneuvers (smooth pursuits, horizontal/vertical saccades and gaze stability, binocular convergence, left/right monocular accommodation, complex tandem gait). Cohen's kappa was calculated for IRR and TRR for each element., Results: For IRR, 5/9 kappas (saccades, gaze stability, monocular accommodation) were in the moderate agreement range (0.40 to 0.60); remaining kappas showed fair agreement. For TRR, 6/9 maneuvers (saccades, horizontal gaze stability, monocular accommodation, tandem gait) showed substantial agreement (0.60 to 0.80). Kappas of 7/9 elements for subjects age 15-18 showed improved IRR and TRR., Conclusions: The individual elements of the VVE show fair to moderate agreement between providers and moderate to substantial agreement among the same provider in the ED setting. These findings suggest a role in the VVE in evaluating concussion acutely, particularly given its previously demonstrated ability to assist in risk stratification of concussed youth and the importance of early diagnosis for improved outcomes., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest relevant to this article to disclose., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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37. Clinical and Device-based Metrics of Gait and Balance in Diagnosing Youth Concussion.
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Corwin DJ, McDonald CC, Arbogast KB, Mohammed FN, Metzger KB, Pfeiffer MR, Patton DA, Huber CM, Margulies SS, Grady MF, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Vestibular Function Tests, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Gait Analysis, Postural Balance, Youth Sports injuries
- Abstract
Purpose: Evaluate the discriminatory ability of two clinical measures and one device-based measure of gait and balance for concussed youth., Methods: We enrolled 81 cases and 90 controls age 14-18 yr old from August 2017 to June 2018. Controls were recruited from a suburban high school, and cases were recruited from the concussion program of an academic pediatric tertiary care center. Tests included two clinical measures: 1) complex tandem gait, scored as sway/errors walking forward and backward eyes open and closed; 2) Modified Balance Error Scoring System (mBESS), scored as total number of errors on three standing tasks; and one device-based measure; 3) Modified Clinical Test of Sensory Interaction and Balance (mCTSIB) using the Biodex Biosway Balance System, scored as a sway index. Sensitivity, specificity, ideal cutpoint, and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) were calculated for all test components., Results: Ideal cutpoint for total number of sway/errors for tandem gait = 5, sensitivity 41%, specificity 90%. Ideal cutpoint for total mBESS errors = 4, sensitivity 55%, specificity 75%. Ideal cutpoint for mCTSIB = 1.37, sensitivity 37%, specificity 88%. Among each test, some individual components outperformed overall composites, in particular tandem gait (specificity forward eyes open = 99%, sensitivity backward eyes closed = 81%). Among the 40 cases and 65 controls with all three assessments, AUC (95% CI) for tandem gait = 0.63 (0.52,0.75), mBESS = 0.70 (0.60,0.81), and mCTSIB = 0.54 (0.42,0.66)., Conclusions: A device-based measure of balance did not produce better discriminatory ability than two clinical assessments. Complex tandem gait has the additional benefit of being an easy-to-perform and graded test with highly sensitive and specific individual components.
- Published
- 2020
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38. Factors Affecting Recovery Trajectories in Pediatric Female Concussion.
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Desai N, Wiebe DJ, Corwin DJ, Lockyer JE, Grady MF, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Athletic Injuries therapy, Brain Concussion therapy, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Post-Concussion Syndrome therapy, Recovery of Function, Retrospective Studies, Return to Sport, Sex Factors, Time Factors, Time-to-Treatment, Athletic Injuries physiopathology, Brain Concussion physiopathology, Post-Concussion Syndrome physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: Up to one-third of children with concussion have persistent postconcussion symptoms lasting beyond 4 weeks. Females have been shown to have prolonged concussion recovery compared with males. This study examined characteristics in pediatric athletes with concussion to investigate the underlying factors that may contribute to this difference and their relation to recovery trajectories in females compared with males., Design: A retrospective cohort study of pediatric patients with sports-related concussion (SRC)., Setting: A subspecialty pediatric concussion program., Subjects: One hundred ninety-two records were reviewed, 75 females and 117 males, ages 7 to 18 years old., Assessment of Risk Factors: Sex of patient, time to presentation to specialty care after injury, presence of vision, and vestibular deficits on initial clinical examination., Main Outcome Measures: The main outcome of interest was time to clinical recovery, defined by resolution of symptoms, recovery of physical examination deficits, including vision and vestibular examination, recovery of neurocognitive function, and return to school, exercise, and sport., Results: Pediatric females, on average, presented later to specialty care for evaluation after SRC than males. Females also took longer to recover on 5 markers of recovery: time to return to school without accommodations, time to return to noncontact exercise, time to return to full sport, time to recovery of neurocognitive function on computerized testing, and time to clinical recovery of vision and vestibular deficits on examination including smooth pursuits, saccades, gaze stability, near point of convergence, and balance. These sex-based differences in recovery disappeared when controlling for time to presentation to specialty care., Conclusions: In this cohort of pediatric patients, ages 7 to 18 years old with SRC, females took longer to recover than males. Our results indicate, however, that a modifiable extrinsic factor, time to presentation to specialty care, may contribute to this difference in recovery between the sexes.
- Published
- 2019
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39. Use of the vestibular and oculomotor examination for concussion in a pediatric emergency department.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Propert KJ, Zorc JJ, Zonfrillo MR, and Wiebe DJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Eye Movements, Vestibular Function Tests
- Abstract
Background: Concussion guidelines recommend a vestibular and oculomotor (VOM) examination be performed for all patients with concern for concussion, however the feasibility of performing testing is unknown. We aimed to measure rates of exam performance after implementation of training and support tools in a pediatric emergency department., Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of patients age 6 to 18 years old presenting over a 12-month period. Charts were obtained via natural language processing, where concussion was suggested as a diagnosis in the electronic health record, and then manually reviewed to record patient and provider factors. A multivariable logistic regression was performed to determine factors associated with exam performance, and a classification and regression tree (CART) analysis was performed to determine if a specific patient type was at risk for not having testing performed., Results: Four hundred patients were included in the analysis. Sixty-four percent received a VOM examination (including 73% of those diagnosed with concussion). Provider type, concussion history, symptom burden, injury mechanism, and final diagnosis were all significantly associated with exam performance. CART analysis determined patients with a non-concussion diagnosis, a non-sports injury mechanism, no prior history of concussion, and two or fewer symptoms had the lowest likelihood (46%) of receiving the exam., Conclusion: Performing a VOM examination for concussion is feasible in the acute setting following provider education and using clinical support tools. The exam is more likely to be performed on those children with history or exam findings associated with perceived risk for ongoing symptoms., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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40. Supraventricular Tachycardia Associated With Severe Anemia.
- Author
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Corwin DJ and Scarfone RJ
- Subjects
- Anemia, Iron-Deficiency therapy, Anti-Arrhythmia Agents therapeutic use, Atenolol therapeutic use, Child, Diagnosis, Differential, Electrocardiography, Erythrocyte Transfusion methods, Female, Humans, Iron therapeutic use, Tachycardia, Supraventricular drug therapy, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency complications, Tachycardia, Supraventricular complications
- Abstract
We present the unusual case of a 7-year-old girl with severe iron-deficiency anemia who concurrently was determined to be in a supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) rhythm. To our knowledge, the association of anemia with SVT has not been reported previously. We review the presentation of SVT, management strategies for treating both severe anemia and SVT, risks and benefits of using the classic treatments for SVT in a severely anemic patient and discuss iron-deficiency anemia-related cardiac disease.
- Published
- 2018
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41. Vestibular and oculomotor findings in neurologically-normal, non-concussed children.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Zonfrillo MR, Wiebe DJ, Master CL, Grady MF, and Arbogast KB
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Cerebellar Ataxia etiology, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Nystagmus, Pathologic etiology, Postural Balance, Sex Factors, Brain Concussion complications, Eye Movements physiology, Nervous System Diseases diagnosis, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Vestibule, Labyrinth physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the proportion of non-concussed, neurologically normal children with failures on a vestibular and oculomotor examination for concussion performed in an acute setting., Design: This was a cross-sectional study of subjects 6-18 years old presenting to a paediatric emergency department with non-neurologic chief complaints. The examination was administered by a paediatric emergency medicine physician, and includes assessments of dysmetria, nystagmus, smooth pursuits, saccades, gaze stability, near-point of convergence, and gait/balance testing., Results: Of the 295 subjects enrolled, 24% failed at least one element of testing. About 13% had >1 failed element and 5% had >2 failed elements. About 29% of females and 19% of males had failed examinations. By age, 15% of subjects 6-8 years old, 32% 9-11 years, 32% 12-14 years, and 26% 15-18 years had failed examinations. Overall, 10% were unable to complete the exam due to developmental age., Conclusions: The provider should be aware that a proportion of non-concussed children may demonstrate failure on a single element of the vestibular and oculomotor exam. While this testing is of benefit to the acute care provider in diagnosing paediatric concussion, its utility is greatest in the context of an injury history with acute onset of concussion symptoms.
- Published
- 2018
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42. Pediatric Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in the Acute Setting.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Grady MF, Joffe MD, and Zonfrillo MR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Brain Concussion complications, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Brain Concussion physiopathology, Child, Disease Management, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Mental Status and Dementia Tests, Mood Disorders complications, Neuroimaging methods, Rest physiology, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Ear physiopathology, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Pediatric mild traumatic brain injuries, most of which are concussions, are an increasingly common reason for presentation to emergency departments. The diagnosis of concussion has increased dramatically over the past decade, necessitating the acute care provider to have up-to-date knowledge of the definition, pathophysiology, signs and symptoms, physical examination findings, and acute management of pediatric concussion. This article also addresses populations most vulnerable to prolonged recovery from pediatric concussion and referral recommendations.
- Published
- 2017
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43. Adverse events associated with a large dose of intravenous lipid emulsion for suspected local anesthetic toxicity.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Topjian A, Banwell BL, and Osterhoudt K
- Subjects
- Anesthetics, Local administration & dosage, Antidotes administration & dosage, Child, Drug Overdose, Fat Emulsions, Intravenous administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Mepivacaine administration & dosage, Nerve Block adverse effects, Seizures chemically induced, Seizures therapy, Anesthetics, Local adverse effects, Antidotes adverse effects, Fat Emulsions, Intravenous adverse effects, Mepivacaine adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) has gained favor as a rescue treatment for cardiovascular collapse due to intravenous local anesthetic overdose, however, goals of ILE therapy are still being defined. We describe a case of a girl given 66 mL/kg of 20% lipid emulsion (ILE) in the treatment of presumed mepivacaine toxicity., Case Report: An 11-year-old girl weighing 55.6 kg developed pallor, rolling back of the eyes, and rhythmic muscle twitching after receiving a mandibular nerve block injection with a 1.8 mL ampule of 3% mepivacaine. With concern for persistent seizures she was given three 1 mL/kg boluses of ILE, followed by an infusion of 0.25 mL/kg/min. The total dose ultimately administered was 3670 mL (66 mL/kg) over 7 h. A serum triglyceride concentration, drawn 2 h after cessation of ILE infusion, was estimated to be 16,583 mg/dL (429 mmol/L) after several dilutions; her blood was grossly lipemic. Notable signs included hypersomnolence, tachypnea, and tachycardia. Other complications included apparent metabolic acidosis (serum bicarbonate of 5 mmol/L) with hyperlactatemia (lactate 7.0 mmol/L), difficulty with serum laboratory interpretation, and a non-contrast brain magnetic resonance imaging showing high signal in the dural venous sinuses. The lipemia cleared over three days and the patient recovered uneventfully. Case discussion: This case demonstrates a unique neurologic and metabolic toxicity associated with ILE given as an antidote in a high total dose, and highlights the need for cautious antidotal application of lipid emulsion infusions. Until more data is available, clinicians are advised to take great care if considering a dose in excess of 12.5 mL/kg/day, the maximum daily dosage recommended by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for nutritional supplementation. Careful monitoring of total doses administered across institutions and hospital wards during transfers is paramount to avoid inadvertent overdose of antidotes.
- Published
- 2017
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44. Hyperthyroidism Presenting With Pathologic Fractures.
- Author
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Sarezky MD, Corwin DJ, Harrison VS, and Jacobstein C
- Subjects
- Child, Graves Disease complications, Humans, Male, Osteoporosis diagnosis, Osteoporotic Fractures diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Radius Fractures diagnostic imaging, Spinal Fractures diagnostic imaging, Thoracic Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Graves Disease diagnosis, Osteoporosis etiology, Osteoporotic Fractures etiology, Radius Fractures etiology, Spinal Fractures etiology, Thoracic Vertebrae injuries
- Abstract
Previous studies have shown that thyroid hormone directly stimulates bone resorption in in vitro organ culture, and in adults excess thyroid hormone is associated with decreased bone mineral density. There are limited data in children regarding the effect of hyperthyroidism on bone metabolism and even fewer instances in the literature of hyperthyroidism presenting with bone demineralization and fracture. We report a case of an 11-year-old boy with undiagnosed hyperthyroidism presenting with fractures and osteoporosis. This case emphasizes the importance of maintaining a broad differential diagnosis when a patient presents with a pathologic fracture., (Copyright © 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2016
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45. Vestibular Deficits following Youth Concussion.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Wiebe DJ, Zonfrillo MR, Grady MF, Robinson RL, Goodman AM, and Master CL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Female, Hospitals, Pediatric, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Recovery of Function, Retrospective Studies, Vestibular Function Tests, Athletic Injuries diagnosis, Brain Concussion complications, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Pediatrics methods, Vestibular Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To characterize the prevalence and recovery of pediatric patients with concussion who manifest clinical vestibular deficits and to describe the correlation of these deficits with neurocognitive function, based on computerized neurocognitive testing, in a sample of pediatric patients with concussion., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of patients ages 5-18 years with concussion referred to a tertiary pediatric hospital-affiliated sports medicine clinic from July 1, 2010 to December 31, 2011. A random sample of all eligible patient visits was obtained, and all related visits for those patients were reviewed., Results: A total of 247 patients were chosen from 3740 eligible visits for detailed review and abstraction; 81% showed a vestibular abnormality on initial clinical examination. Those patients with vestibular signs on the initial examination took a significantly longer time to return to school (median 59 days vs 6 days, P=.001) or to be fully cleared (median 106 days vs 29 days, P=.001). They additionally scored more poorly on initial computerized neurocognitive testing, and it took longer for them to recover from neurocognitive deficits. Those patients with 3 or more previous concussions had a greater prevalence of vestibular deficits, and it took longer for those deficits to resolve., Conclusion: Vestibular deficits in children and adolescents with a history of concussion are highly prevalent. These deficits appear to be associated with extended recovery times and poorer performance on neurocognitive testing. Further studies evaluating the effectiveness of vestibular therapy on improving such deficits are warranted., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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46. Characteristics of prolonged concussion recovery in a pediatric subspecialty referral population.
- Author
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Corwin DJ, Zonfrillo MR, Master CL, Arbogast KB, Grady MF, Robinson RL, Goodman AM, and Wiebe DJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affective Symptoms etiology, Brain Concussion complications, Brain Concussion physiopathology, Child, Cognition Disorders etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Referral and Consultation, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Brain Concussion pathology, Convalescence, Recovery of Function physiology
- Abstract
Objective: To identify pre-existing characteristics associated with prolonged recovery from concussion in a sample of patients referred to a pediatric sports medicine clinic., Study Design: This was a retrospective, exploratory cohort study of 247 patients age 5-18 years with concussion referred to a tertiary pediatric hospital-affiliated sports medicine clinic from July 1, 2010, through December 31, 2011. A random sample of all eligible patient visits (3740) was chosen for further review and abstraction. Statistical comparisons between subsets of patients were conducted using exact χ(2) tests, logistic regression, quantile regression, and Kaplan-Meier survival curves., Results: The median time until returning to school part-time was 12 days (IQR 6-21); until returning to school full-time without accommodations was 35 days (IQR 11-105); until becoming symptom-free was 64 days (IQR 18-119); and until being fully cleared to return to sports was 75 days (IQR 30-153). Furthermore, 73% of all patients were symptomatic for >4 weeks, 73% were prescribed some form of school accommodation, and 61% reported a decline in grades. Characteristics associated with a prolonged recovery included a history of depression or anxiety; an initial complaint of dizziness; abnormal convergence or symptom provocation following oculomotor examination on physical examination; and history of prior concussion., Conclusions: Pediatric and adolescent patients with concussion may experience cognitive and emotional morbidity that can last for several months following injury. Clinicians should consider specific pre-existing characteristics and presenting symptoms that may be associated with a more complicated recovery for concussion patients., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Extension of useful reagent shelf life beyond manufacturers' recommendations. Cell Markers Committee of the College of American Pathologists.
- Author
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Tubbs RR, Nagle R, Leslie K, Pettigrew NM, Said JW, Corwin DJ, Rickert RR, and Roche PC
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Humans, Immunohistochemistry economics, Indicators and Reagents economics, Indicators and Reagents standards, Neoplasms metabolism, Quality Control, Antibodies economics, Immunohistochemistry standards
- Abstract
Objective: The College of American Pathologists Cell Markers Committee designed a study to evaluate the use of immunohistochemistry primary antibodies beyond manufacturers' recommended dates., Methods: Pathologists were asked to save aliquots of primary antibodies during mid-1997 so that by spring 1998 the reagents would be "outdated" according to manufacturers' recommendations. Three tumors were immunostained both in mid-1997 and early 1998 (using outdated reagents in 1998). Two hundred twenty-one laboratories participated., Patient Samples: Immunostained materials consisted of an angiomyolipoma immunostained for muscle-specific actin and HMB-45, a melanoma immunostained for S100 protein and HMB-45, and a large cell lymphoma immunostained for common leukocyte antigen and HMB-45. Blocks from the same tumor were used in each instance., Main Outcome Measure: We compared the immunostaining results as a percentage of laboratories indicating a positive or negative immunohistochemical result between the 1997 and 1998 time points., Results: Only minor differences were identified for the 221 reporting laboratories in 1998 as compared with those in 1997., Conclusions: The data suggest review of the Health Care Financing Administration's ruling on extending the useful reagent shelf life beyond manufacturers recommendations. Similar studies using more inherently quantitative methodology are suggested.
- Published
- 1998
48. C-erbB-2 oncogene protein in in situ and invasive lobular breast neoplasia.
- Author
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Porter PL, Garcia R, Moe R, Corwin DJ, and Gown AM
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Monoclonal, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma pathology, Carcinoma, Intraductal, Noninfiltrating chemistry, Female, Gene Amplification, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic physiology, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Receptor, ErbB-2, Retrospective Studies, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Breast Neoplasms chemistry, Carcinoma chemistry, Carcinoma in Situ chemistry, Proto-Oncogene Proteins analysis
- Abstract
Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) has uncertain malignant potential; biologic markers that will identify patients at risk for a poor clinical outcome have been sought actively. Amplification of the c-erbB-2 protooncogene has been correlated with poor prognosis in invasive mammary carcinoma, and immunohistochemical evaluation for expression of the oncogene protein has been correlated with gene amplification. The authors retrospectively evaluated 62 cases of lobular neoplasia for expression of the c-erbB-2 gene product on formalin-fixed, deparaffinized sections, using two monoclonal anti-erbB-2 (p185) antibodies (c-neu Ab3 and m-erb) and one polyclonal anti-erbB-2 antibody (pAb 1) by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method. All 62 cases were negative with the pAb 1 antibody; one of 62 cases was weakly positive with the c-neu Ab3 in a membranous pattern. Expression of c-erbB-2 gene product was identified on adjacent invasive ductal carcinoma in one case and in adjacent ductal carcinoma in situ in another. None of 15 cases if infiltrating lobular carcinoma was positive with either of the two anti-c-erbB-2 antibodies. Strong positivity was found on benign epithelium in one case, demonstrating epitheliosis. In summary, evidence of expression of the c-erbB-2 gene product was found in one of 57 cases of LCIS and none of 15 cases of invasive lobular carcinoma. This suggests that, in contrast to reported data concerning intraductal and invasive ductal carcinoma, c-erbB-2 oncogene amplification and/or overexpression does not play a significant role in the progression of lobular breast neoplasia.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Invasive carcinoma after cone biopsy for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.
- Author
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Brown JV, Peters WA, and Corwin DJ
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma diagnosis, Adenocarcinoma epidemiology, Adult, Biopsy methods, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell diagnosis, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell epidemiology, Cervix Uteri pathology, Cervix Uteri surgery, Epithelium pathology, Female, Humans, Hysterectomy, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Retrospective Studies, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms epidemiology, Adenocarcinoma pathology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
A retrospective review of 578 patients with invasive cervical cancer identified 8 patients with a history of one or more cone biopsies for treatment of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia. The cone biopsy and hysterectomy specimens were reviewed to identify factors predictive of the subsequent development of invasive cancer. The mean interval from cone biopsy to diagnosis of invasive carcinoma was 6.7 years (range 1.5-16.5 years). High-grade intraepithelial neoplasia is a potentially invasive lesion. Adenocarcinoma in situ was identified as a high-risk lesion that may be inadequately treated by cone biopsy. Four patients developed invasive squamous cancer in spite of complete excision of the initial lesion. Patients who have high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia treated with cone biopsy require long-term follow-up, and conization may hamper the subsequent diagnosis of preinvasive lesions.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Review of selected lineage-directed antibodies useful in routinely processed tissues.
- Author
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Corwin DJ and Gown AM
- Subjects
- Actins immunology, Antibody Specificity, Antigens, Differentiation immunology, Cell Line, Cytoskeleton immunology, Desmin immunology, Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein immunology, Histocompatibility Antigens immunology, Humans, Intermediate Filaments immunology, Keratins immunology, Leukocyte Common Antigens, Melanoma immunology, Vimentin immunology, Antibodies immunology, Immunohistochemistry methods
- Abstract
This review discusses several commonly used lineage-directed antibodies, including those to cytokeratins, vimentin, glial fibrillary acidic protein, neurofilaments, desmin, actin, leukocyte common antigen, and melanoma-specific antigen. Discussion is particularly directed to issues of antibody sensitivity and specificity, with several confusing and/or potentially beneficial examples of cross-lineage antigenic co-expression cited. The value of using limited panels composed of antibodies with complementary specificities is also emphasized.
- Published
- 1989
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