Growth Charts for Children 0 to 18 Years of Age

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 497-502
Author(s):  
Burris Duncan ◽  
Lula O. Lubchenco ◽  
Charlotte Hansman

The purpose of this communication is to present growth grids which incorporate many of the recommendations set forth by the Committee on Growth and Development of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Maternal, Child Health Service of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.1 The percentile curves depicted on these grids are based on longitudinal data collected by the Child Research Council of Denver2 which represent optimal values for whites living in this area. The charts have been in use at the University of Colorado Medical Center for over one year and have proven to be quite satisfactory. CLINICAL MATERIAL AND METHODS FOR THE GROWTH CURVES

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 825-829
Author(s):  
Thomas E. Starzl ◽  
Lawrence J. Koep ◽  
Gerhard P.J. Schröter ◽  
Charles G. Halgrimson ◽  
Kendrick A. Porter ◽  
...  

Between March 1963 and January 1978, 74 patients 18 years of age or younger have had liver replacements at the University of Colorado Medical Center, Denver. The most common cause of native liver failure was biliary atresia (48/74, 65%); the second most common cause was chronic aggressive hepatitis (12/74, 16%). Twenty-nine patients (39%) lived for at least one year, and 16 are still alive one to nine years after transplantation. Technical surgical problems, rejection, and infection were the main causes of death. Improved immunosuppression is needed; nevertheless, the quality of life in the long-term survivors has encouraged continuation of this difficult work.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 841-847
Author(s):  
HARRY H. GORDON

IT IS my purpose this morning to describe some facets of the program at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, the development of which has been conditioned by the needs of our community, i.e., of Denver and of Colorado. A word is in order about some of the local stimuli to these developments. First, Dean Ward Darley and President Robert L. Stearns point out that as a state-supported institution we bear a special obligation to meet the varying needs of both rural and urban Colorado. Second, members of the faculty have participated actively in the reorganization of the Department of Health and Hospitals of Denver since 1947. Third, under the guidance of Dr. Alfred H. Washburn, the Child Research Council of Denver has for the past 20 years been making a multidisciplined study of the factors influencing human growth and adaptation. Fourth, from the Department of Philosophy on the Boulder campus comes Professor David Hawkins to tell us that the Hippocratic vision of medicine is of a "science extending far beyond the boundaries of the organism and including the investigation of whatever touches upon human health and welfare." Finally because our practice at the medical school is at present limited to the medically indigent, we have daily examples of our need to concern ourselves with social factors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Blake M Snyder ◽  
Jessica S Mounessa ◽  
Melissa Fazzari ◽  
Joseph V Caravaglio ◽  
Alexandra Kretowicz ◽  
...  

1981 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 398-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
James F. Reibel ◽  
W. Copley McLean ◽  
Robert W. Cantrell

Only three examples of acinic cell carcinoma of the larynx or trachea are found in the recent literature. A case of acinic cell carcinoma of the subglottic larynx and trachea was diagnosed and treated at the University of Virginia Medical Center. To our knowledge this is the first such case with a prior history of radiation to the neck. The patient is a 56-year-old woman who was irradiated for hyperthyroidism 46 years ago. When seen she also had parathyroid hyperplasia and multiple thyroid adenomas, conditions that frequently follow irradiation of the thyroid in children. These findings in this case support the concept that radiation may be responsible for inducing this tumor, which otherwise rarely occurs in this location. The use of electron microscopy was extremely useful in the diagnosis of this tumor. She was treated with total laryngectomy and right neck dissection and is now free of disease one year after surgery.


Stroke ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert G Kowalski ◽  
Jamie Pospishil ◽  
Jarrett D Leech ◽  
William J Jones

Background: Stroke alert systems provide rapid evaluation of suspected strokes to aid timely thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy. Given consequences of delayed or missed diagnosis, these systems are intentionally more sensitive than specific for confirmed stroke. However, substantial physician and hospital resources are involved. We sought to evaluate characteristics and predictors of stroke mimics and confirmed strokes in a large stroke alert program. Methods: The study is a retrospective investigation of the stroke alert system at the University of Colorado Hospital. Variables included patient, clinical, stroke and stroke alert characteristics, and outcome. Variables were compared for patients with confirmed stroke, and mimics. Results: Stroke alerts were evaluated in 125 patients over a one-month period in 2019. Median age was 60 years (IQR 47-72), 52% were female, 51% were white, and 24% black or African American. Median initial NIHSS score was 4 (IQR 1-11), and onset was outside the hospital in 70%. One third of stroke alerts were confirmed stroke or TIA, and 66% were mimics. Most stroke alerts were called by the departments of Emergency Medicine (78%), Medicine (10%) and Surgery (9%). The most common of more than 40 stroke alert symptoms and combinations were weakness (45%), aphasia (20%), altered mental status (16%) and facial droop or numbness (each 14%). Stroke mimics were more likely to be female (58% female vs. 41% male, OR 2.206, 95% CI 1.025-4.745, p=0.041), had better initial NIHSS scores [3 (IQR 1-9) mimics vs. 6 (IQR 2-15) stroke, p=0.015), and were more often discharged to home (77% mimics vs. 51% strokes, OR 2.051, 95% CI 1.269-3.316, p=0.004). Stroke onset location and service initiating stroke alert were not associated with confirmed stroke. Weakness was the only symptom associated with confirmed stroke (58% stroke vs. 37% mimics, OR 2.447, 95% CI 1.137-5.268, p=0.021). Conclusions: Of stroke alerts in our institution, two thirds were stroke mimics, and these were more likely to be female patients. Weakness as a stroke alert symptom, alone or with other symptoms, was associated with confirmed stroke. Additional study is warranted to improve specificity and optimize utilization of physician and hospital resources in stroke alert programs.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 552-565

THE following articles by Robert L. Stearns, President of the University of Colorado, and Ward Darley, M.D., Dean of the University of Colorado Medical Center, describe the thinking which spurs members of the faculty of the University of Colorado Schools of Medicine and Nursing to participate daily in community activities. Dr. Fred A. Humphrey, President of the Colorado State Medical Society, health offićer and general practitioner in Ft. Collins, Cob., long interested in problems of rural medical care, presents the views of a practicing physician on community responsibilities. As indicated by Dr. Darley, every modern medical center contributes to the community by training of personnel, by research, by setting standards of medical care. Dr. Harper's invitation for these articles, however, stems from his knowledge of the conscious attempt being made by this school to discharge its obligations. From the moment one joins the faculty one becomes aware of responsibilities which are partly those of any medical school, partly those of any state university. The state university, said President Stearns at a convocation of medical students and faculty, is only incidentally interested in improving the earning power of its students by providing good technical education; its primary aim is to educate for good citizenship and service to the community. Interesting results stem from acceptance of this philosophy. A group of faculty members, thinking not only of their own departments or segments of their departments, but of the whole school and the whole community, are willing to reorganize drastically the curriculum.


2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 138-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Royce

Abstract The Minnesota Department of Health Ionizing Radiation Rules “prohibits the use of fluoroscopy by a person other than a licensed practitioner of the healing arts... when the licensed practitioner of the healing arts is not physically present in the room” (Minnesota Administrative Rules, 2007). Getting a licensed practitioner into the room caused delays in completing PICC line insertion procedures. To minimize these delays we considered multiple options; one of the options was to have PICC nurses licensed to operate the fluoroscopy machine. This article will explain the process the Vascular Access Department at the University of Minnesota Medical Center, Fairview went through to make this option a reality. Our team has demonstrated that with proper training, education, machine maintenance and completion of competencies, nurses can operate fluoroscopy independently and clear PICC lines for use with a high degree of safety, efficiency and accuracy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-30

Guest editor Dunbar Ivy, MD, Chief of Pediatric Cardiology and Director of the Pediatric Pulmonary Hypertension Program at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and Children's Hospital of Colorado led a discussion among Editor-in-Chief Harrison (Hap) Farber, MD, then Professor of Medicine and Director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Center at Boston University/Boston Medical Center; Mary P. Mullen, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, associate cardiologist at Boston Children's Hospital and Associate Director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Service as well as a member of the adult congenital heart program; Jeffrey R. Fineman, MD, Professor and Vice Chair of Pediatrics, Director of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Hypertension, University of California, San Francisco, Benioff Children's Hospital; and Gareth Morgan, MD, Associate Professor of Pediatrics-Cardiology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Lab at Children's Hospital of Colorado.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-248
Author(s):  
Henry Matthew

Editor, Pharmacology for the Pediatrician: In the December 1973 issue of Pediatrics there appeared an article attempting to summarize the British experience of acetaminophen overdosage.1 This drug has caused considerable concern in Britam, largely because, having been advocated as a substitute for salicylate,2 little thought was given when advising such change that it is more dangerous in overdose than aspirin.3 More than 30 informative papers have appeared in the British literature since 1966 on acetaminophen overdose. However, little toxicity has been reported from the United States where I understand it is usually regarded as a benign ingestion. This attitude would suggest that the diagnosis of acetaminophen overdose is being missed in patients with jaundice or severe hepatic damage of apparently unknown etiology. However, Dr. Barry Rumack, of the University of Colorado Medical Center, has pointed out to me that 68 overdosings were encountered there during the past year, with three deaths, two of adolescents. The paper by Goulding in the December issue requires critical comment regarding some of the factual information, certain omissions, and the views expressed. His statements regarding numbers of children involved in acetaminophen and aspirin poisoning in the United Kingdom are maccurate and misleading. In the first place, his reference 3 contains no mention of admissions of children to hospital for acetaminophen overdose. Under his reference 4 he states that admissions to hospital in England and Wales for accidental aspirim overdose in children under 5 years during 1970 was "about 6,000." Consultation of the reference shows that the total number in the age group mentioned admitted for all analgesic overdose was but 626!


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-142

On October 18, 1947, a dinner was given in honor of Dr. Franklin P. Gengenbach by the Rocky Mountain Pediatric Society at the University of Colorado Medical Center. Dr. Gengenbach, the first professor of Pediatrics at the University and one of the founders of the Rocky Mountain Pediatric Society in 1920, was president of the American Academy of Pediatrics in 1943-44 and vice-president of the American Pediatric Society in 1932 and 1936. At the dinner


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