233 results on '"Ramgopal S"'
Search Results
2. PP199 [Healthcare systems » Other]: IDENTIFICATION OF CHILDREN WITH MULTISYSTEM COMPLEXITY IN UNITED STATES INTENSIVE CARE UNITS
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Heneghan, J. A., primary, Goodman, D. M., additional, and Ramgopal, S., additional
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- 2022
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3. Susceptible and protective associations of HLA DRB1*/DQB1* alleles and haplotypes with ischaemic stroke
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Murali, V., Rathika, C., Ramgopal, S., Malini, Padma R., Arun Kumar, M. J., Arasu, Neethi V., Illiayaraja, Jeyaram K., and Balakrishnan, K.
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- 2016
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4. US estimates for dog bite injuries presenting to emergency departments
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Ramgopal, S. and Macy, M.L.
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- 2021
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5. Diurnal and Sleep/wake Patterns of Focal Seizures in Pediatric Patients: 9.
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Ramgopal, S, Shah, A, Zarowski, M, Vendrame, M, Alexopoulos, A V, Rotenberg, A, Kothare, S V, and Loddenkemper, T
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- 2012
6. 89 Effect of Ketamine on Intracranial Pressure in Pediatric Patients Assessed by Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound: A Pilot Study
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Stem, C.T., primary, Ramgopal, S., additional, Manole, M.D., additional, Perera, A.D., additional, Hickey, R.W., additional, and Balzer, J.R., additional
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- 2020
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7. Poly(ethylene glycol) Supported Metal Nitrates as Well-Organized Reagents for Hunsdiecker Conversion of α,β-Unsaturated Acids to β-Nitrostyrenes under Solvent and Acid-Free Conditions
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Ramesh, K., primary, Shylaja, S., additional, Ramgopal, S., additional, Rao, A. Sambashiva, additional, and Rajanna, K.C., additional
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- 2019
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8. Critical amino acid variations in HLA-DQB1* molecules confers susceptibility to Autoimmune Thyroid Disease in south India
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Rathika, C., additional, Padma Malini, R., additional, Murali, V., additional, Arun, K., additional, and Balakrishnan, K., additional
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- 2018
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9. Long-term Mortality in Patients with Permanent Pacemaker Implantation
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Abraham, Speedie, Cinosh, Mathew, Ramgopal S, Shahi, and Rajneesh, Calton
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Death, Sudden ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,Bradycardia ,Humans ,India ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Atrioventricular Block ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The development of implantable technology for cardiac rhythm management remains one of the seminal achievements of the second half of the 20th century. The development of artificial pacemakers for the electrical control of the cardiac rhythm has greatly enhanced the physician's ability to treat cardiac dysrhythmias. An ageing population and the extension of indications will in all probability result in an increasing number of cardiac device implantations.To study mortality and morbidity in patients with permanent pacemaker implantation at a tertiary care hospital in North India.This was a two year prospective observational study conducted in the Department of Cardiology of Christian Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana. This included a retrospective period of ten years from 1st July 2002 to 30th June 2012, and a prospective period of two years from 1st July 2012 to 31st July 2014. All patients admitted to Christian Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana, who received a permanent pacemaker for bradyarrhythmias were included in the study. A detailed analysis of demographic profile, indications, complications and mortality data was performed.A total of 323 patients were included in the study of which more than 75% of the patients receiving the pacemaker were in the age group 56-85 yrs. Males received more pacemakers than females. The commonest presenting symptom was syncope. Complete heart block was the commonest ECG finding. Acquired A-V block was the most common indication of pacing. VVI was the commonest mode of pacemaker implantation. Complications were seen in 3.72% patients. During the entire study period death occurred in 7.1% patients.Permanent pacemaker implantation is a relatively safe procedure with low complication rates and low mortality particularly in patients who have been on a regular follow up.
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- 2016
10. Near field communication based system for health monitoring
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Supriya, A, primary, Ramgopal, S, additional, and George, Sara Mohan, additional
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- 2017
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11. A novel module of synthesis of energy by tactile sensor and its application for charging life saving devices
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Kumar, K.V. Ranjith, additional, and Angel, Jeba, additional
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- 2017
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12. IDENTIFICATION OF CHILDREN WITH MULTISYSTEM COMPLEXITY IN UNITED STATES INTENSIVE CARE UNITS.
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Heneghan, J. A., Goodman, D. M., and Ramgopal, S.
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- 2022
13. Predictions of Energy Content in Stretched Ribbons of Segmented Polymer Piezoelectrics
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Prakash, K, primary, Ramgopal, S, additional, and Sambandan, Sanjiv, additional
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- 2015
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14. Dairy effluent treatment and lipids production byChlorella pyrenoidosaandEuglena gracilis: study on open and closed systems
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Yadavalli, Rajasri, primary, Rao, C. S., additional, Rao, Ramgopal S., additional, and Potumarthi, Ravichandra, additional
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- 2014
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15. Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide as an Efficient Catalyst for Regioselective Bromination of Alkoxy Naphthalenes with Trimethyl Benzyl Ammonium Tribromide: Synthetic and Kinetic Approach
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Reddy, K. Rajendar, primary, Rajanna, K. C., additional, Uppalaiah, K., additional, and Ramgopal, S., additional
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- 2013
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16. Susceptible and protective associations of HLA DRB1*/ DQB1* alleles and haplotypes with ischaemic stroke.
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Murali, V., Rathika, C., Ramgopal, S., Padma Malini, R., Arun Kumar, M. J., Neethi Arasu, V., Jeyaram Illiayaraja, K., and Balakrishnan, K.
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STROKE ,MORTALITY ,ATHEROSCLEROSIS ,HUMAN leucocytes ,ALLELES ,ANTIGEN synthesis - Abstract
Stroke has emerged as the second commonest cause of mortality worldwide and is a major public health problem. For the first time, we present here the association of human leucocyte antigen ( HLA)- DRB1*/ DQB1* alleles and haplotypes with ischaemic stroke in South Indian patients. Ischaemic stroke ( IS) cases and controls were genotyped for HLA- DRB1*/ DQB1* alleles by polymerase chain reaction sequence-specific primers ( PCR- SSP) method. The frequencies of HLA class II alleles such as DRB1*04, DRB1*07, DRB1*11, DRB1*12, DRB1*13, DQB1*02 and DQB1*07 were high in IS patients than in the age- and gender-matched controls, suggesting that the individuals with these alleles are susceptible to ischaemic stroke in South India. The frequencies of alleles such as DRB1*03, DRB1*10, DRB1*14, DQB1*04 and DQB1*05 were less in IS cases than in the controls, suggesting a protective association. Haplotypes DRB1*04- DQB1*0301, DRB1*07- DQB1*02, DRB1*07- DQB1*0301, DRB1*11- DQB1*0301 and DRB1*13- DQB1*06 were found to be high in IS patients conferring susceptibility. The frequency of haplotype DRB1*10- DQB1*05 was high in controls conferring protection. IS- LVD and gender-stratified analysis too confirmed these susceptible and protective associations. Thus, HLA- DRB1*/ DQB1* alleles and haplotypes strongly predispose South Indian population to ischaemic stroke. Further studies in different populations with large sample size or the meta-analysis are needed to explain the exact mechanism of associations of HLA gene(s) with IS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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17. Diurnal and Sleep/Wake Patterns of Evolutions to Tonic-Clonic Seizures in Pediatric Epilepsy (P04.019)
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Shah, A., additional, Vendrame, M., additional, Zarowski, M., additional, Alexopoulos, A., additional, Wyllie, E., additional, Kothare, S., additional, and Loddenkemper, T., additional
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- 2012
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18. Sleep/Wake and Diurnal Variations of Seizure Evolution in Pediatric Patients (P02.167)
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Loddenkemper, T., primary, Ramgopal, S., additional, Shah, A., additional, Zarowski, M., additional, Vendrame, M., additional, Alexopoulos, A., additional, Wyllie, E., additional, and Kothare, S., additional
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- 2012
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19. Combination of Ictal EEG and Seizure Semiology Provides 24-Hour Seizure Susceptibility Profile (P04.018)
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Loddenkemper, T., additional, Vendrame, M., additional, Shah, A., additional, Zarowski, M., additional, Alexopoulos, A., additional, Wyllie, E., additional, and Kothare, S., additional
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- 2012
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20. Metal Nitrate Driven Nitro Hunsdiecker Reaction with α,β-Unsaturated Carboxylic Acids under Solvent-Free Conditions.
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Ramesh, K., additional, Chakradhar, A., additional, Reddy, N. Maasi, additional, and Rajanna, K. C., additional
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- 2007
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21. Pressure Sensor Based Tsunami Detection System: A Laboratory Study
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Viveka, K.R., primary, Ramgopal, S., additional, Praveen, N., additional, Rajanna, K., additional, and Nayak, M.M., additional
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- 2006
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22. Dairy effluent treatment and lipids production by Chlorella pyrenoidosa and Euglena gracilis: study on open and closed systems.
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Yadavalli, Rajasri, Rao, C. S., Rao, Ramgopal S., and Potumarthi, Ravichandra
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SEWAGE purification by-products ,DAIRY farms ,WATER purification ,SEWAGE purification ,BIOCHEMICAL oxygen demand - Abstract
ABSTRACT Organic content and nutrients from dairy effluent by immobilized Chlorella pyrenoidosa and Euglena gracilis were removed in both open and closed systems. Biochemical constituents viz, carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins were analyzed to assess the changes in their proximate composition in both the systems for both species. Euglena gracilis has a high lipid content of 11% at the end of 7 days of cultivation period compared and to C. pyrenoidosa resulted in 7% at the end of 10 days, respectively. Whereas protein content of Chlorella sp . was found to be higher at 44% compared to 29% of Euglena sp. A significant increase was also observed in carbohydrates in C. pyrenoidosa at the end of 10 days. Whilst NH
4 + -N was completely removed by immobilized Chlorella sp ., it was reduced by 96% compared to Euglena sp. Further, 98% PO4 3− -P removal was achieved with immobilized cultures of both species in two modes of operation. Biological oxygen demand and chemical oxygen demand were observed in the range of significant decrease (~80%-96%) by this approach. © 2014 Curtin University of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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23. Depression among AIDS-orphaned children higher than among other orphaned children in southern India.
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Prem Kumar, S. G., Rakhi Dandona, Anil Kumar, G., Ramgopal, S. P., and Dandona, Lalit
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DEPRESSED persons ,MENTAL depression ,CHILDREN'S health ,HEALTH ,AIDS - Abstract
Background Systematic data on mental health issues among orphaned children are not readily available in India. This study explored depression and its associated risk factors among orphaned children in Hyderabad city in south India. Methods 400 orphaned children drawn equally from AIDS and non-AIDS orphan groups aged 12-16 years residing in orphanages in and around Hyderabad city in southern India were recruited to assess depression and associated risk factors using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-DC). Variation in the intensity of depression was assessed using multiple classification analysis (MCA). Results 397 (99%) orphans provided complete interviews in the study of whom 306 (76.5%) were aged 12 to 14 years, and 206 (51.8%) were paternal orphans. Children orphaned by AIDS were significantly more likely to report being bullied by friends or relatives (50.3%) and report experiencing discrimination (12.6%) than those orphaned due to other reasons (p < 0.001). The overall prevalence of depression score >15 with CES-DC was 74.1% (95% CI 69.7-78.4) with this being significantly higher for children orphaned by AIDS (84.4%, 95% CI 79.4 - 89.5) than those due to other reasons (63.6%, 95% CI 56.9 - 70.4). Mean depression score was significantly higher for children orphaned by AIDS (34.6) than the other group (20.6; p < 0.001). Among the children orphaned by AIDS, the bulk of depression score was clustered in 12-14 years age groups whereas in the children orphaned by other reasons it was clustered in the 15-16 years age group (p = 0.001). MCA analysis showed being a child orphaned by AIDS had the highest effect on the intensity of depression (Beta = 0.473). Conclusions Children orphaned by AIDS had significantly higher depressive symptoms than the other orphaned children. These findings could be used for further planning of mental health interventions to meet the mental health needs of orphaned children, that could include preventive, diagnostic and treatment services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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24. Cetyltrimethylammonium Bromide as an Efficient Catalyst for Regioselective Bromination of Alkoxy Naphthalenes with Trimethyl Benzyl Ammonium Tribromide: Synthetic and Kinetic Approach.
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Reddy, K. Rajendar, Rajanna, K. C., Uppalaiah, K., and Ramgopal, S.
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CETYLTRIMETHYLAMMONIUM bromide ,REGIOSELECTIVITY (Chemistry) ,BROMINATION ,ALKOXY compounds ,METHYL groups ,CHEMICAL derivatives ,CHEMICAL kinetics ,CATALYSTS - Abstract
ABSTRACT Bromination of 2-alkoxynaphthalene (2-ANP) and its derivatives with trimethyl benzyl ammonium tribromide (TMBATB) did not proceed smoothly even under reflux conditions. But the addition of microconcentrations of cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) to the reaction afforded dramatic rate accelerations as well as good-to-excellent yield of the products ranging from 70% to 90%. Reactions underwent regioselective monobromination at 1-position of 2-alkoxynaphthalene. The rate of bromination has been followed conductometrically. The reaction kinetics indicated first-order kinetics in [2-ANP] as well as in [TMBATB]. Kinetic results in the presence of CTAB were explained on the basis of the Raghavan-Srinivasan model as applied to micelle-mediated bimolecular reactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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25. SECURE TRANSMISSION OF BIO-MEDICAL DATA USING STEGANOGRAPHY
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S Thenmozhi, P Sureka, and Ramgopal Segu
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Steganography ,Bio-Medical Signal ,Arduino Uno Board ,Pulse Sensor ,Temperature Sensor ,BP Sensor ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
To transmit secret data over the internet, the information should be sent in a way attacker finds it difficult to read the secret data. In this paper patient’s secret information is hidden in the bio-medical signal like ECG/EEG/PPG. The transmitted information generally contains (1) biomedical-signals (2) patient data. Main concerns include privacy and authenticity of the data being transmitted. A secret key is used which is known to sender and receiver. This paper introduces a novel steganography technique that guarantees (1) protection of private data utilizing a key and (2) originality of the bio-medical-signals. To maximize embedding, Fast-Walsh-Hadamard Transform is used to convert the signals into a set of coefficients. The proposed technique can be applied on three bio-medical signals like ECG/EEG/PPG unlike any other technique which uses only one bio-medical signal. To achieve least distortion, coefficients of least significant bit is considered. The algorithm has less impact on the bio-medical signal and the signal at the transmitting side can be recovered with less distortion.
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- 2018
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26. Circadian patterns of generalized tonic-clonic evolutions in pediatric epilepsy patients.
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Ramgopal S, Vendrame M, Shah A, Gregas M, Zarowski M, Rotenberg A, Alexopoulos AV, Wyllie E, Kothare SV, and Loddenkemper T
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- 2012
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27. Pressure Sensor Based Tsunami Detection System: A Laboratory Study.
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Viveka, K.R., Ramgopal, S., Praveen, N., Rajanna, K., and Nayak, M.M.
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- 2007
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28. Metal nitrate driven nitro Hunsdiecker reaction with α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acids under solvent-free conditions
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Ramgopal, S., Ramesh, K., Chakradhar, A., Reddy, N. Maasi, and Rajanna, K.C.
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NITRATES , *NITROGEN compounds , *CARBOXYLIC acids , *CHEMICAL reactions - Abstract
Abstract: Hunsdiecker reactions with α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acids were conducted under solvent-free conditions in the presence of a few drops of HNO3 together with a variety of metal nitrates [Mg(NO3)2, Sr(NO3)2], Al(NO3)3, Ca(NO3)2, Ni(NO3)2, Cd(NO3)2, Zn(NO3)2, Hg(NO3)2, AgNO3, ZrO(NO3)2, UO2(NO3)2, Th(NO3)2] or ammonium nitrate. α,β-Unsaturated aromatic carboxylic acids underwent nitro decarboxylation to afford β-nitro styrenes in moderate to good yields, while α,β-unsaturated aliphatic carboxylic acids underwent decarboxylation to yield the corresponding nitro derivatives. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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29. Polymorphic Alu Insertion/Deletion in Different Caste and Tribal Populations from South India.
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Rathika Chinniah, Murali Vijayan, Manikandan Thirunavukkarasu, Dhivakar Mani, Kamaraj Raju, Padma Malini Ravi, Ramgopal Sivanadham, Kandeepan C, Mahalakshmi N, and Balakrishnan Karuppiah
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Seven human-specific Alu markers were studied in 574 unrelated individuals from 10 endogamous groups and 2 hill tribes of Tamil Nadu and Kerala states. DNA was isolated, amplified by PCR-SSP, and subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis, and genotypes were assigned for various Alu loci. Average heterozygosity among caste populations was in the range of 0.292-0.468. Among tribes, the average heterozygosity was higher for Paliyan (0.3759) than for Kani (0.2915). Frequency differences were prominent in all loci studied except Alu CD4. For Alu CD4, the frequency was 0.0363 in Yadavas, a traditional pastoral and herd maintaining population, and 0.2439 in Narikuravars, a nomadic gypsy population. The overall genetic difference (Gst) of 12 populations (castes and tribes) studied was 3.6%, which corresponds to the Gst values of 3.6% recorded earlier for Western Asian populations. Thus, our study confirms the genetic similarities between West Asian populations and South Indian castes and tribes and supported the large scale coastal migrations from Africa into India through West Asia. However, the average genetic difference (Gst) of Kani and Paliyan tribes with other South Indian tribes studied earlier was 8.3%. The average Gst of combined South and North Indian Tribes (CSNIT) was 9.5%. Neighbor joining tree constructed showed close proximity of Kani and Paliyan tribal groups to the other two South Indian tribes, Toda and Irula of Nilgiri hills studied earlier. Further, the analysis revealed the affinities among populations and confirmed the presence of North and South India specific lineages. Our findings have documented the highly diverse (micro differentiated) nature of South Indian tribes, predominantly due to isolation, than the endogamous population groups of South India. Thus, our study firmly established the genetic relationship of South Indian castes and tribes and supported the proposed large scale ancestral migrations from Africa, particularly into South India through West Asian corridor.
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- 2016
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30. Correction: Polymorphic Alu Insertion/Deletion in Different Caste and Tribal Populations from South India.
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Rathika Chinniah, Murali Vijayan, Manikandan Thirunavukkarasu, Dhivakar Mani, Kamaraj Raju, Padma Malini Ravi, Ramgopal Sivanadham, Kandeepan Chithan, Mahalakshmi Nithyanandam, and Balakrishnan Karuppiah
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0157468.].
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- 2016
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31. Instructional aid for tactical wargame model
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Ramgopal, S., primary, Vikram Kumar, B.T., additional, Shivaprakash, N.C., additional, and Vasudevan, R., additional
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- 1988
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32. Fostemsavir in Adults with Multidrug-Resistant HIV-1 Infection
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Michael, Kozal, Judith, Aberg, Gilles, Pialoux, Pedro, Cahn, Melanie, Thompson, Jean-Michel, Molina, Beatriz, Grinsztejn, Ricardo, Diaz, Antonella, Castagna, Princy, Kumar, Gulam, Latiff, Edwin, DeJesus, Mark, Gummel, Margaret, Gartland, Amy, Pierce, Peter, Ackerman, Cyril, Llamoso, Max, Lataillade, A, Wurcel, Yale School of Medicine [New Haven, Connecticut] (YSM), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai [New York] (MSSM), CHU Tenon [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Fundación Huésped [Buenos Aires], Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France, Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7), Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (FIOCRUZ), Réseau International des Instituts Pasteur (RIIP), Federal University of Sao Paulo (Unifesp), IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute [Milan, Italie], Georgetown University [Washington] (GU), Orlando Immunology Center, GlaxoSmithKline, Glaxo Smith Kline, GlaxoSmithKline [Research Triangle Park] (GSK ), ViiV Healthcare US, ViiV Healthcare [Brentford, UK], BRIGHTE Trial Team: P Cahn, L Cassetti, D O David, E Loiza, D Cecchini, S Lupo, M Martins, C Zala, A Carr, J McMahon, S De Wit, E Florence, C R Alves, J Andrade Neto, M Della Negra, R Diaz, B Grinsztejn, J Madruga, K Morejon, F Ribeiro, E Sprinz, M Murray, J Szabo, S Trottier, S Walmsley, J Ballesteros, F Zamora, C Beltran, C Chahin Anania, C Perez, M Wolff Reyes, J Velez, P M Girard, C Katlama, J-M Molina, D Neau, G Pialoux, I Poizot-Martin, F Raffi, D Salmon-Ceron, K Arastéh, A Baumgarten, J Bogner, M Hower, W Kern, D Schürmann, C Stephan, S Metallidis, V Paparizos, P Mallon, A Antinori, R Cauda, A Lazzarin, G Migliorino, C Mussini, G Orofino, G Rizzardini, P F Belaunzaran, R Cabello, J Duque Rodríguez, M Santoscoy-Gómez, S C Treviño, I Hoepelman, F Mendo, Y Pinedo Ramirez, M Parczewski, B Knysz, N Janeiro, F Maltez, L Preotescu, A Streinu-Cercel, G Latiff, I Mitha, J M Libre Codina, S Moreno Guillén, J Pineda, S M Hsieh, A Pozniak, J Aberg, J Bartczak, M Berhe, T Campbell, C Creticos, E DeJesus, V Drelichman, C Durand, J Eron, C Fichtenbaum, R Grossberg, S Gupta, F Haas, D Hagins, M Jain, M Kozal, P Kumar, J Lalezari, J Lennox, R Loftus, R Lubelchek, J McGowan, M McKellar, A Mills, J Morales-Ramirez, O Osiyemi, N Ramgopal, S Schrader, J Slim, P Tebas, M Thompson, W Towner, T Wilkin, A Wurcel, Malbec, Odile, Kozal, M., Aberg, J., Pialoux, G., Cahn, P., Thompson, M., Molina, J. -M., Grinsztejn, B., Diaz, R., Castagna, A., Kumar, P., Latiff, G., Dejesus, E., Gummel, M., Gartland, M., Pierce, A., Ackerman, P., Llamoso, C., Lataillade, M., Yale University School of Medicine, and Sorbonne Université (SU)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)
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Adult ,Male ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Drug resistance ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Piperazines ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacotherapy ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prodrugs ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Virology ,Organophosphates ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,3. Good health ,[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Clinical trial ,Multiple drug resistance ,Fostemsavir ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Multicenter study ,HIV-1 ,RNA, Viral ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business - Abstract
International audience; Background: Among some patients with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection who have undergone multiple antiretroviral therapies and have limited options for treatment, new classes of antiretroviral drugs with novel mechanisms of action are needed. Fostemsavir is the prodrug of temsavir, a first-in-class investigational HIV-1 attachment inhibitor.Methods: In this ongoing phase 3 trial in 23 countries, we enrolled patients with multidrug-resistant HIV-1 infection in two cohorts, according to their remaining treatment options. In the first cohort, we assigned (in a 3:1 ratio) patients who had the option of using at least one fully active, approved antiretroviral drug in at least one but no more than two antiretroviral classes to add either fostemsavir (at a dose of 600 mg twice daily) or placebo to their failing regimen for 8 days, followed by open-label fostemsavir plus optimized background therapy (randomized cohort). In the second cohort, patients who had no remaining antiretroviral options were started on open-label fostemsavir plus optimized background therapy on day 1 (nonrandomized cohort). The primary end point was the mean change in the HIV-1 RNA level from day 1 through day 8 in the randomized cohort.Results: A total of 371 patients were treated, including 272 in the randomized cohort and 99 in the nonrandomized cohort. At day 8, the mean decrease in the HIV-1 RNA level was 0.79 log10 copies per milliliter in the fostemsavir group and 0.17 log10 copies in the placebo group (P
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- 2020
33. Characteristics and Utilization of Hospitalizations Among Children With Medical Complexity.
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Money NM, Michelson KA, and Ramgopal S
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- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, United States epidemiology, Infant, Adolescent, Infant, Newborn, Databases, Factual, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization economics
- Abstract
Objectives: Hospitalizations for children with medical complexity (CMC) have increased substantially over the past 2 decades and constitute a disproportionate percentage of hospitalization rates and costs among children. We sought to describe the etiology and utilization for hospitalizations of CMC using the Pediatric Clinical Classification System (PECCS)., Methods: Using the 2019 Kids' Inpatient Database, we classified hospitalizations for CMC using the PECCS, which groups diagnoses into mutually exclusive, pediatric-specific categories. For the medical, surgical, and medical/surgical PECCS clinical groups, we reported diagnosis groups accounting for ≥1% of hospital encounters for that group. We described admission frequency, cost, payer, length of stay, and mortality rates within each diagnosis grouping using survey-weighted statistics., Results: We identified 2 315 743 nonlivebirth hospitalizations, of which 712 139 (30.8%) were for CMC. Most (94.4%) hospitalizations occurred at a teaching hospital. Medical diagnosis comprised most hospitalizations (69.2%), whereas hospitalizations for surgical and medical/surgical conditions had a higher median cost. The most common diagnosis groups overall were encounters for chemotherapy, diabetic ketoacidosis, and respiratory failure, whereas the costliest were for necrotizing enterocolitis, transposition of the great vessels, and hypoplastic left heart syndrome., Conclusions: We evaluated the most common diagnoses and their associated resource use for hospitalized CMC using the PECCS, providing a more granular view on the etiology, utilization, cost, and outcomes of hospitalizations for CMC. These topics represent high-impact areas for further research and quality efforts for CMC., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2024
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34. The Association of the MeMed BV Test With Radiographic Pneumonia in Children.
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Ramgopal S, Lorenz D, Neveu M, Krauss J, Papan C, Tenenbaum T, Esposito S, and Florin TA
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- Humans, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Child, Infant, Prospective Studies, Adolescent, Sensitivity and Specificity, Radiography methods, Emergency Service, Hospital, Pneumonia, Bacterial diagnostic imaging, Pneumonia, Bacterial diagnosis, Pneumonia diagnostic imaging, Pneumonia diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: The MeMed BV Test produces a score that increases with increasing likelihood of bacterial infection. We evaluated its association with radiographic pneumonia in children., Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of a multicenter prospective study of febrile children 90 days to 18 years presenting to an emergency department. We evaluated the association of the MeMed BV test with radiographic pneumonia in adjusted logistic regression models., Results: Of 182 children, 74 (41%) had radiographic pneumonia. Among children with a high likelihood of having viral illness per the BV test, 26% had radiographic pneumonia; this increased to 64% among those with a BV test which indicated a high likelihood of bacterial infection. The sensitivity and specificity for radiographic pneumonia when using a BV test classification of moderate or high likelihood of bacterial infection were 60.8% and 62.0%, respectively. A BV test indicating the highest likelihood of bacterial infection had 23.61 higher adjusted odds (95% confidence interval 6.30-88.6) of radiographic pneumonia. The most common radiographic finding among children classified as having a high likelihood of viral infection by the BV test was interstitial opacities. The most common finding among children classified as having a high likelihood of bacterial infection were infiltrates. Except for antibiotic use, clinical outcomes occurred in similar proportions by BV category., Conclusions: Children with moderate to high likelihoods of bacterial infection on the BV test had higher odds of radiographic pneumonia. Apart from antibiotic use, the test was not significantly associated with clinical outcomes in this study., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2024
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35. Pediatric Utilization of Emergency Medical Services from Outpatient Offices and Urgent Care Centers.
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Saper JK, Macy ML, Martin-Gill C, and Ramgopal S
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Adolescent, Infant, United States, Infant, Newborn, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Ambulatory Care Facilities statistics & numerical data, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: National efforts have highlighted the need for pediatric emergency readiness across all settings where children receive care. Outpatient offices and urgent care centers are frequent starting points for acutely injured and ill children, emphasizing the need to maintain pediatric readiness in these settings. We aimed to characterize emergency medical services (EMS) utilization from outpatient offices and urgent care centers to better understand pediatric readiness needs., Methods: We performed a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of EMS encounters using the National Emergency Medical Services Information System, a nationally representative EMS registry (2019-2022). We included four years of EMS encounters of children (<18 years old) that originated from an outpatient office or urgent care center. We described characteristics, including patient demographics, prehospital clinician impression, therapies, and procedures performed., Results: Of 179,854,336 EMS encounters during the study period, 164,387 pediatric encounters originated at an outpatient setting. Most EMS encounters originated from outpatient offices. Evening and weekend EMS encounters more frequently originated from urgent care centers. The most common impressions were respiratory distress (n = 60,716), systemic illness (n = 23,583), and psychiatric/behavioral health (n = 13,273). Ninety-four percent of EMS encounters resulted in transportation to a hospital., Conclusions: EMS encounters from outpatient settings most commonly originate from outpatient offices, relative to urgent care settings, where pediatric emergency readiness may be limited. It is important that outpatient settings and providers are ready for varied emergencies, including those occurring for a behavioral health concern, and that readiness guidelines are updated to address these needs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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36. Trends in Respiratory Viral Testing in Pediatric Emergency Departments Following the COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Ramgopal S, Badaki-Makun O, Eltorki M, Chaudhari P, Phamduy TT, Shapiro D, Rees CA, Bergmann KR, Neuman MI, Lorenz D, and Michelson KA
- Abstract
Study Objective: To evaluate for increases in the use and costs of respiratory viral testing in pediatric emergency departments (EDs) because of the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study using the pediatric health information system. Eligible subjects were children (90 days to 18 years) who were discharged from a pediatric ED and included in the pediatric health information system from October 2016 through March 2024. To evaluate for changes in the frequency and costs of respiratory viral testing, we performed an interrupted time series analysis across 3 study periods: prepandemic (October 1, 2016 to March 14, 2020), early pandemic (March 15, 2020 to December 31, 2023), and late pandemic (January 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024)., Results: We included 15,261,939 encounters from 34 pediatric EDs over the 90-month study period. At least 1 viral respiratory test was performed for 460,826 of 7,311,177 prepandemic encounters (6.3%), 1,240,807 of 5,100,796 early pandemic encounters (24.3%), and 545,696 of 2,849,966 late pandemic encounters (19.1%). There was a positive prepandemic slope in viral testing (0.17% encounters/month; 95% CI 0.17 to 0.18). The early pandemic was associated with a shift change of 4.98% (95% CI 4.90 to 5.07) and a positive slope (0.54% encounters/month; 95% CI 0.54 to 0.55). The late pandemic period was associated with a negative shift (-17.80%; 95% CI -17.90 to -17.70) and a positive slope (0.42% encounters/month; 95% CI 0.41 to 0.42). The slope in testing costs increased from $5,000/month (95% CI $4,200 to $5,700) to $33,000/month (95% CI $32,000 to $34,000) during the early pandemic., Conclusion: Respiratory testing and associated costs increased during the COVID-19 pandemic and were sustained despite decreasing incidence of disease. These findings highlight a need for further efforts to clarify indications for viral testing in the ED and efforts to reduce low-value testing., (Copyright © 2024 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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37. Characteristics and Trends of Prehospital Encounters for Opioid Overdoses Among US Youth, 2018-2022.
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Lim JK, Ramgopal S, Hoffmann JA, Lorenz D, and Toce MS
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, United States epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Narcotic Antagonists administration & dosage, Naloxone administration & dosage, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Analgesics, Opioid poisoning, Opiate Overdose epidemiology, Opiate Overdose therapy, Emergency Room Visits statistics & numerical data, Emergency Room Visits trends
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- 2024
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38. Trends and hospital practice variation for analgesia for children with sickle cell disease with vaso-occlusive pain episodes: An 11-year analysis.
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Eltorki M, Hall M, Ramgopal S, Chaudhari PP, Badaki-Makun O, Rees CA, Bergmann KR, Shapiro DJ, Gonzalez F, Phamduy T, and Neuman MI
- Abstract
This cross-sectional analysis of 86,111 visits for sickle cell disease and vaso-occlusive episodes (VOE) in U.S. pediatric emergency departments between 2013 and 2023 shows increased use of NSAIDs, ketamine, and acetaminophen, with unchanged opioid use. Hospitals with a higher volume of VOE visits more frequently administered opioids., Background: Vaso-occlusive episodes (VOEs) are a hallmark of sickle cell disease (SCD), leading to frequent emergency department (ED) visits. Effective pain management is crucial, with guidelines recommending routine use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) with opioids, and emerging evidence supporting ketamine use. However, these recommendations are based on low-certainty evidence, and the impact of these guidelines on analgesia use over time remains unclear., Objective: This study aimed to analyze trends in analgesia use over an 11-year period in pediatric SCD patients presenting to U.S. EDs with VOE and assess variations in treatment across hospitals., Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted using data from the Pediatric Health Information System covering 34 U.S. children's hospitals from January 1, 2013, to December 31, 2023. The primary outcomes were the proportions of visits where opioids, NSAIDs, acetaminophen, and/or ketamine were administered on the first calendar day of the initial visit. Secondary outcomes included the co-administration of NSAIDs with opioids. Logistic and linear regression models were used to assess trends and hospital-level variations., Results: A total of 86,111 ED visits for VOE were analyzed. Opioids were administered in 82 % of encounters, NSAIDs in 72 %, acetaminophen in 17 %, and ketamine in 1 %. Co-administration of NSAIDs with opioids occurred in 59 % of the visits. Among discharged patients, there was a positive trend for NSAID use (slope: 1.68 %/year, 95 % CI: 0.91 %, 2.45 %) and NSAID-opioid co-administration (slope: 1.03 %/year, 95 % CI: 0.37 %, 1.69 %) over time. Acetaminophen use also increased over the study period (slope: 0.99 %/year, 95 % CI: 0.80 %, 1.17 %). In hospitalized patients, there was a significant upward trend for acetaminophen (slope: 1.29 %/year, 95 % CI: 0.69 %, 1.89 %) and ketamine (slope: 0.36 %/year, 95 % CI: 0.27 %, 0.45 %), while opioid use remained unchanged. Significant hospital-level variations were observed, with larger hospitals more likely to administer opioids but less likely to co-administer NSAIDs with opioids compared to medium-volume hospitals., Conclusion: Over the past decade, the use of NSAIDs, acetaminophen, and ketamine has increased in the management of VOE in pediatric SCD patients, while opioid use remains consistent. The co-administration of NSAIDs and opioids has also increased, reflecting guideline adherence. Variations in analgesia practices across hospitals underscore the need for standardizing pain management strategies in this population., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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39. Comparison of Neighborhood Disadvantage Indices on Emergency Medical Services Interventions and Outcomes for Pediatric Out-of-Hospital Emergencies.
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Ramgopal S, Kemal S, Attridge MM, Crowe R, Martin-Gill C, and Macy ML
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Objective: Measures of neighborhood disadvantage demonstrate correlations to health outcomes in children. We compared differing indices of neighborhood disadvantage with emergency medical services (EMS) interventions in children., Methods: We performed a retrospective study of EMS encounters for children (<18 years) from approximately 2000 US EMS agencies between 2021 and 2022. Our exposures were the Child Opportunity Index (COI; v2.0), 2021 Area Deprivation Index (ADI), and 2018 Social Vulnerability Index (SVI). We evaluated the agreement in how children were classified with each index using the intraclass correlation coefficient. We used logistic regression to evaluate the association of each index with transport status, presence of cardiac arrest, and condition-specific interventions and assessments., Results: We included 738,892 encounters. The correlation between the indices indicated good agreement (intraclass correlation coefficient=0.75). There was overlap in relationships between the COI, ADI, and SVI for each of the study outcomes, both when visualized as a splined predictor and when using representative odds ratios (OR) comparing the third quartile of each index to the lower quartile (most disadvantaged). For example, the OR of non-transport was 1.12 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.10-1.14) for COI, 1.18 (95% CI: 1.16-1.20) for ADI, and 1.22 (95% CI: 1.20-1.23) for SVI., Conclusion: The COI, ADI, and SVI had good correlation and demonstrated similar effect size estimates for a variety of clinical outcomes. While investigators should consider potential causal pathways for outcomes when selecting an index for neighborhood disadvantage, the relative strength of association between each index and all outcomes was similar., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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40. Association between initial antibiotic route and outcomes for children hospitalized with pneumonia.
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Cotter JM, Zaniletti I, Williams DJ, Ramgopal S, Fritz CQ, Taft M, Hall M, Temte E, Stassun J, Trivedi K, Kapes J, Lavey J, Kempe A, and Ambroggio L
- Abstract
Background: Initial oral antibiotics may be as effective as intravenous (IV) antibiotics for children hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), but further data are needed., Objective: We evaluated for associations of initial antibiotic route (IV vs. oral) with length of stay (LOS) and secondary outcomes for children hospitalized with CAP., Methods: This multicenter, retrospective cohort study included children with CAP who were hospitalized for >48 h, had chest radiographs, and received antibiotics at four children's hospitals between 2014 and 2020. Data were obtained from the Pediatric Health Information System and manual chart review. The exposure was initial antibiotic route (i.e., first antibiotic given intravenously or orally). We performed multivariable regression modeling using inverse probability treatment weights from propensity scores. Outcomes included LOS, oxygen duration, cost, care escalation, and readmission or emergency department revisit., Results: Of 1147 included children, 37% received initial oral antibiotics. Within the propensity balanced sample, LOS was 73.5 h (IQR 61.0, 99.5) and 78.7 (61.0, 118.0) for patients with initial oral and IV antibiotics, respectively. Children receiving initial oral antibiotics had an 8% reduction in LOS (OR 0.92 [95% CI: 0.87, 0.94]) and 14% reduction in cost (OR 0.86 [95% CI 0.79, 0.94]) versus those receiving initial IV antibiotics. There were no differences in other outcomes., Conclusions: Children with CAP receiving initial oral antibiotics had reduced LOS and hospital cost without differences in escalated care or return visits. Starting hospitalized children on oral antibiotics is likely a safe and effective alternative to IV treatment., (© 2024 Society of Hospital Medicine.)
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- 2024
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41. Clinician Perspectives on Decision Support and AI-based Decision Support in a Pediatric ED.
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Ramgopal S, Macy ML, Hayes A, Florin TA, Carroll MS, and Kshetrapal A
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- Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Female, Child, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Emergency Service, Hospital, Artificial Intelligence, Qualitative Research, Attitude of Health Personnel
- Abstract
Background: Clinical decision support (CDS) systems offer the potential to improve pediatric care through enhanced test ordering, prescribing, and standardization of care. Its augmentation with artificial intelligence (AI-CDS) may help address current limitations with CDS implementation regarding alarm fatigue and accuracy of recommendations. We sought to evaluate strengths and perceptions of CDS, with a focus on AI-CDS, through semistructured interviews of clinician partners., Methods: We conducted a qualitative study using semistructured interviews of physicians, nurse practitioners, and nurses at a single quaternary-care pediatric emergency department to evaluate clinician perceptions of CDS and AI-CDS. We used reflexive thematic analysis to identify themes and purposive sampling to complete recruitment with the goal of reaching theoretical sufficiency., Results: We interviewed 20 clinicians. Participants demonstrated a variable understanding of CDS and AI, with some lacking a clear definition. Most recognized the potential benefits of AI-CDS in clinical contexts, such as data summarization and interpretation. Identified themes included the potential of AI-CDS to improve diagnostic accuracy, standardize care, and improve efficiency, while also providing educational benefits to clinicians. Participants raised concerns about the ability of AI-based tools to appreciate nuanced pediatric care, accurately interpret data, and about tensions between AI recommendations and clinician autonomy., Conclusions: AI-CDS tools have a promising role in pediatric emergency medicine but require careful integration to address clinicians' concerns about autonomy, nuance recognition, and interpretability. A collaborative approach to development and implementation, informed by clinicians' insights and perspectives, will be pivotal for their successful adoption and efficacy in improving patient care., Competing Interests: CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2024
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42. New Morbidities During Critical Illness and Associated Risk of ICU Readmission: Virtual Pediatric Systems Cohort, 2017-2020.
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Heneghan JA, Akande MY, Ramgopal S, Evans MD, Hallman M, and Goodman DM
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Child, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Infant, Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospital Mortality, Risk Factors, Functional Status, Infant, Newborn, Morbidity trends, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Critical Illness, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe change in Functional Status Scale (FSS) associated with critical illness and assess associated development of new morbidities with PICU readmission., Design: Retrospective, cross-sectional cohort study using the Virtual Pediatric Systems (VPS; Los Angeles, CA) database., Setting: One hundred twenty-six U.S. PICUs participating in VPS., Subjects: Children younger than 21 years old admitted 2017-2020 and followed to December 2022., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: Among 40,654 patients, 86.2% were classified as having good function or mild dysfunction before illness. Most patients did not have a change in their FSS category during hospitalization. Survival with new morbidity occurred most in children with baseline good/mild dysfunction (8.7%). Hospital mortality increased across categories of baseline dysfunction. Of 39,701 survivors, 14.2% were readmitted within 1 year. Median time to readmission was 159 days. In multivariable, mixed-effects Cox modeling, time to readmission was most associated with discharge functional status (hazard ratio [HR], 5.3 [95% CI, 4.6-6.1] for those with very severe dysfunction), and associated with lower hazard in those who survived with new morbidity (HR, 0.7 [95% CI, 0.6-0.7])., Conclusions: Development of new morbidities occurs commonly in pediatric critical illness, but we failed to find an association with greater hazard of PICU readmission. Instead, patient functional status is associated with hazard of PICU readmission., Competing Interests: Dr. Evans’ institution received funding from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (UL1TR002494); he received support for article research from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Goodman received funding from Elsevier, McGraw-Hill, and the American College of Physician Advisors. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2024
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43. Mapping Glasgow Coma scale to AVPU scores among adults in the prehospital setting.
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Ramgopal S, Cash RE, Okubo M, and Martin-Gill C
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Objective: To develop a translation between the Glasgow Come Scale and the Alert-Verbal-Pain-Unresponsive (AVPU) scale among adults with out-of-hospital emergencies., Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of adults (≥18 years) from the 2022 National Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Information System with a ground scene encounter with a concurrently documented GCS and AVPU assessment. Using a training partition of 2.5 million encounters, we performed a grid search to identify all combinations of mutually exclusive cutpoints which divided the GCS into four segments. We identified the combination with the highest Kappa statistic and reported metrics of performance in this sample in the test partition., Results: We identified 16,321,299 encounters with a concurrent AVPU and GCS. Using the AVPU scale, 93.3 % were classified as Alert; 2.9 % as Verbal; 1.5 % as Pain; and 2.3 % as Unresponsive. Using a grid-based search, optimal cutpoints were identified when using a GCS of 14-15 for Alert, 10-13 for Verbal, 7-9 for Pain, and 3-6 for Unresponsive. Cohen's Kappa was 0.63 in the test partition, indicating substantial agreement. Intraclass F1 score varied across different alertness levels and were 0.97 for "Alert", 0.43 for "Verbal", 0.49 for "Pain", and 0.83 for "Unresponsive". Findings were similar in analyses performed by age group and by the presence or absence of trauma., Conclusion: We report an optimal crosswalk between the AVPU and GCS scales. Performance in the Verbal and Pain categories was lower than the Alert and Unresponsive categories. These findings may facilitate clinician handovers between EMS and non-EMS clinicians., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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44. Establishing thresholds for shock index in children to identify major trauma.
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Ramgopal S, Gorski JK, Chaudhari PP, Spurrier RG, Horvat CM, Macy ML, Cash RE, Stey AM, and Martin-Gill C
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Background: An abnormal shock index (SI) is associated with greater injury severity among children with trauma. We sought to empirically-derive age-adjusted SI cutpoints associated with major trauma in children, and to compare the accuracy of these cutpoints to existing criteria for pediatric SI., Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study using the 2021 National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) Participant Use File. We included injured children (<18 years), excluding patients with traumatic arrests, mechanical ventilation upon hospital presentation, and inter-facility transfers. Our outcome was major trauma defined by the standardized triage assessment tool (STAT) criteria. Our exposure of interest was the SI. We empirically-derived upper and lower cutpoints for the SI using age-adjusted Z-scores. We compared the performance of these to the SI, pediatric-adjusted (SIPA), and the Pediatric SI (PSI). We validated the performance of the cutpoints in the 2019 NTDB., Results: We included 64,326 and 64,316 children in the derivation and validation samples, of whom 4.9 % (derivation) and 4.0 % (validation) experienced major trauma. The empirically-derived age-adjusted SI cutpoints had a sensitivity of 43.2 % and a specificity of 79.4 % for major trauma in the validation sample. The sensitivity of the PSI for major trauma was 33.9 %, with a specificity of 90.7 % among children 1-17 years of age. The sensitivity of the SIPA was 37.4 %, with a specificity of 87.8 % among children 4-16 years of age. Evaluated using logistic regression, patients with an elevated age-adjusted SI had 3.97 greater odds (95 % confidence interval [CI] 3.63-4.33) of major trauma compared to those with a normal age-adjusted SI. Patients with a depressed SI had 1.55 greater odds (95 % CI 1.36-1.78) of major trauma. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUROC) for the empirically-derived model (0.62, 95 % CI 0.61-0.63) was similar to the AUROC for PSI (0.62, 95 % CI 0.61-0.63); both of which were greater than the SIPA model (0.58, 95 % CI 0.57-0.59)., Conclusion: Age-adjusted SI cutpoints demonstrated a mild gain in sensitivity compared to existing measures. However, our findings suggest that the SI alone has a limited role in the identification of major trauma in children., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None, (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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45. External validation of two clinical prediction models for pediatric pneumonia.
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Ramgopal S, Neveu M, Lorenz D, Benedetti J, Lavey J, and Florin TA
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Objective: To externally validate two prediction models for pediatric radiographic pneumonia., Methods: We prospectively evaluated the performance of two prediction models (Pneumonia Risk Score [PRS] and CARPE DIEM models) from a prospective convenience sample of children 90 days - 18 years of age from a pediatric emergency department undergoing chest radiography for suspected pneumonia between January 1, 2022, to December 31
st , 2023. We evaluated model performance using the original intercepts and coefficients and evaluated for performance changes when performing recalibration and re-estimation procedures., Results: We included 202 patients (median age 3 years, IQR 1-6 years), of whom radiographic pneumonia was found in 92 (41.0%). The PRS model had an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of 0.72 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.64-0.79), which was higher than the CARPE DIEM (0.59; 95% CI 0.51-0.67) (P<0.01). Using optimal cutpoints, the PRS model showed higher sensitivity (65.2%, 95% CI 54.6-74.9) and specificity (72.7%, 95% CI 63.4-80.8) compared to the CARPE DIEM model (sensitivity 56.5 [95% CI 45.8-66.8]; specificity 60.9 [95% CI 50.2-69.2]). Recalibration and re-estimation of models improved performance, particularly for the CARPE DIEM model, with gains in sensitivity and specificity, and improved calibration., Conclusion: The PRS model demonstrated better performance than the CARPE DIEM model in predicting radiographic pneumonia. Among children with a high rate of pneumonia, these models did not reach a level of performance sufficient to be used independently of clinical judgement. These findings highlight the need for further validation and improvement of models to enhance their utility., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest none, (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2024
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46. The Shock Index among Children Presenting to the Emergency Department: Analysis of Nationally Representative Sample.
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Ramgopal S
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Female, Male, Infant, Triage methods, Triage statistics & numerical data, Severity of Illness Index, United States, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sepsis diagnosis, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Shock diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: The Shock Index (SI) is emerging as a potentially useful measure among children with injury or suspected sepsis., Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the distribution of the SI and evaluate its association with clinical outcomes among all children presenting to the emergency department (ED)., Methods: A complex survey of nonfederal U.S. ED encounters from 2016 through 2021 was analyzed. Among children, the Pediatric Age-Adjusted Shock Index (SIPA), Pediatric Shock Index (PSI), and the Temperature- and Age-Adjusted Shock Index (TAMSI) were analyzed. The association of these criteria with disposition, acuity, medication administration, diagnoses and procedures was analyzed., Results: A survey-weighted 81.5 million ED visits were included for children aged 4-16 years and 117.2 million visits were included for children aged 1-12 years. SI could be calculated for 78.6% of patients aged 4-16 years and 57.9% of patients aged 1-12 years. An abnormal SI was present in 15.9%, 11.1%, and 31.7% when using the SIPA, PSI, and TAMSI, respectively. With all criteria, an elevated SI was associated with greater hospitalization. The SIPA and PSI were associated with triage acuity. All criteria were associated with medical interventions, including provision of IV fluids and acquisition of blood cultures., Conclusions: An elevated SI is indicative of greater resource utilization needs among children in the ED. When using any criteria, an elevated SI was associated with clinically important outcomes. Further research is required to evaluate the distribution of the SI in children and to investigate its potential role within existing triage algorithms for children in the ED., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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47. Feasibility and reliability of telemedicine examinations for respiratory distress in children: A pilot study.
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Florin TA, Lorenz D, Ramgopal S, Burns R, Rainwater D, Benedetti J, Ruddy RM, Gerber JS, and Kuppermann N
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Child, Preschool, Female, Infant, Male, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Emergency Service, Hospital, Child, Telemedicine, Feasibility Studies
- Abstract
Respiratory disorders are a leading cause of acute care visits by children. Data establishing the reliability of telemedicine in evaluating children with respiratory concerns are limited. The overall objective of this pilot study was to evaluate the use of telemedicine to evaluate children with respiratory concerns. We performed a pilot prospective cohort study of children 12 to 71 months old presenting to the emergency department (ED) with lower respiratory tract signs and symptoms. Three examinations were performed simultaneously-one by the ED clinician with the patient, one by a remote ED clinician using telemedicine, and one by the child's parent. We evaluated measures of agreement between (a) the local and remote clinicians, (b) the local clinician and the parent, and (c) the parent and the remote clinician. Twenty-eight patients were enrolled (84 paired examinations). Except for heart rate, all examination findings evaluated (general appearance, capillary refill time, grunting, nasal flaring, shortness of breath, retractions, impression of respiratory distress, respiratory rate, and temperature) had acceptable or excellent agreement between raters. In this pilot study, we found that telemedicine respiratory examinations of young children are feasible and reliable, using readily available platforms and equipment., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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48. Comparing the performance of pediatric weight estimation methods.
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Shieh A, Rogers AJ, Chen CM, and Ramgopal S
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Body Mass Index, Infant, Body Weight, Emergency Service, Hospital
- Abstract
Background: Weight estimation is essential in the care of ill children when a weight cannot be obtained. This is particularly important for children with medical complexity, who are at higher risk for adverse drug events. Our objective was to compare the accuracy of different methods of weight estimation in children and stratify by the presence of medical complexity., Methods: We performed a retrospective cross-sectional study of children (<18 years) seen in the emergency department (ED) or ambulatory clinic from January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2022 at a tertiary academic pediatric center. We compared the performance of nine age-based formulae and two length-based methods using metrics of mean average error (MAE), root mean square error (RMSE), and agreement within 10% and 20% of measured weight. We additionally evaluated the approaches stratified by body mass index (BMI) and the presence of medical complexity., Results: Of 361,755 children (median age 8.2 years, IQR 2.5-14.2 years; 51.5% male), 59,283 (16.4%) were seen in the ED. Length was measured or available in 21,330 (36.0%) patients in the ED and 293,410 (97%) patients in clinics. The Broselow tape outperformed all methods, with 50.7% estimates within 10% of measured weight, 80.0% estimates within 20% of measured weight, the lowest MAE (2.5 kg), and lowest RMSE (4.5 kg). The Antevy formula was the most accurate age-based formula, with 49.2% estimates within 10% of measured weight, 80.1% estimates within 20% of measured weight, MAE of 2.8 kg, and RMSE of 4.7 kg. Estimates became less accurate as BMI and estimated weight increased for all methods. Among children with medical complexity (14.1%), the Broselow tape consistently outperformed age-based formulae, with 47.7% estimates within 10% of measured weight, 77.1% estimates within 20% of measured weight, MAE of 2.6 kg, and RMSE of 5.4 kg. The Antevy formula remained the most accurate age-based method among children with medical complexity., Conclusion: The Broselow tape predicted weight most accurately in this large sample of children, including among those with medical complexity. The Antevy formula is the most accurate age-based method for pediatric weight estimation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors received no external funding for this study and declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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49. Comparing AVPU and Glasgow Coma Scales Among Children Seen by Emergency Medical Services.
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Ramgopal S, Horvat CM, Cash RE, Pelletier JH, Martin-Gill C, and Macy ML
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Male, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Glasgow Coma Scale, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Objectives: Consciousness assessment is an important component in the prehospital care of ill or injured children. Both the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and the Alert, Verbal, Pain, Unresponsive (AVPU) scale are used for this purpose. We sought to identify cut points for the GCS to correspond to the AVPU scale for pediatric emergency medical services (EMS) encounters., Methods: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional analysis using the 2019-2022 National EMS Information System data set, including children (<18 years) with a GCS and AVPU score. We evaluated several approaches to develop cut points for the GCS within the AVPU scale and reported measures of performance., Results: Of 6 186 663 pediatric encounters, 4 311 598 with both GCS and AVPU documentation were included (median age was 10 years [interquartile range 3-15]; 50.9% boys). Lower AVPU scores correlated with life-sustaining procedures, including those for airway management, seizure, and cardiac arrest. Optimal GCS cut points obtained via a grid-based search were 14 to 15 for alert, 11 to 13 for verbal, 7 to 10 for pain, and 3 to 6 for unresponsive. Overall accuracy was 0.95, with kappa of 0.61. Intraclass F1 statistics were lower for verbal (0.37) and pain (0.50) categories compared with alert (0.98) and unresponsive (0.78)., Conclusions: We developed a cross-walking between the AVPU and GCS scales. Overall performance was high, though performance within the verbal and pain categories was lower. These findings can be useful to enhance clinician handovers and to aid in the development of EMS-based prediction models., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A randomized, embedded, pragmatic, Bayesian clinical trial examining clinical decision support for high flow nasal cannula management in children with bronchiolitis: design and statistical analysis plan.
- Author
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Horvat CM, Suresh S, James N, Aneja RK, Au AK, Berry S, Blumer A, Bricker K, Clark RSB, Dolinich H, Hahner S, Jockel C, Kalivoda J, Loar I, Marasco D, Marcinick A, Marroquin O, O'brien J, Pelletier J, Ramgopal S, Venkataraman S, Angus DC, and Butler G
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Treatment Outcome, Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Quality Improvement, Time Factors, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Bayes Theorem, Bronchiolitis therapy, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Cannula, Electronic Health Records, Oxygen Inhalation Therapy methods
- Abstract
Background: High flow nasal cannula (HFNC) has been increasingly adopted in the past 2 decades as a mode of respiratory support for children hospitalized with bronchiolitis. The growing use of HFNC despite a paucity of high-quality data regarding the therapy's efficacy has led to concerns about overutilization. We developed an electronic health record (EHR) embedded, quality improvement (QI) oriented clinical trial to determine whether standardized management of HFNC weaning guided by clinical decision support (CDS) results in a reduction in the duration of HFNC compared to usual care for children with bronchiolitis., Methods: The design and summary of the statistical analysis plan for the REspiratory SupporT for Efficient and cost-Effective Care (REST EEC; "rest easy") trial are presented. The investigators hypothesize that CDS-coupled, standardized HFNC weaning will reduce the duration of HFNC, the trial's primary endpoint, for children with bronchiolitis compared to usual care. Data supporting trial design and eventual analyses are collected from the EHR and other real world data sources using existing informatics infrastructure and QI data sources. The trial workflow, including randomization and deployment of the intervention, is embedded within the EHR of a large children's hospital using existing vendor features. Trial simulations indicate that by assuming a true hazard ratio effect size of 1.27, equivalent to a 6-h reduction in the median duration of HFNC, and enrolling a maximum of 350 children, there will be a > 0.75 probability of declaring superiority (interim analysis posterior probability of intervention effect > 0.99 or final analysis posterior probability of intervention effect > 0.9) and a > 0.85 probability of declaring superiority or the CDS intervention showing promise (final analysis posterior probability of intervention effect > 0.8). Iterative plan-do-study-act cycles are used to monitor the trial and provide targeted education to the workforce., Discussion: Through incorporation of the trial into usual care workflows, relying on QI tools and resources to support trial conduct, and relying on Bayesian inference to determine whether the intervention is superior to usual care, REST EEC is a learning health system intervention that blends health system operations with active evidence generation to optimize the use of HFNC and associated patient outcomes., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05909566. Registered on June 18, 2023., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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