Co-authors are: Charles T. Quinn, M.D., M.S; Patricia Plumb, R.N., M.S.N.; Zora R. Rogers, M.D.; Nancy Rollins, M.D.; Korgun Koral, M.D.; Robert Barber, Ph.D. and George R Buchanan, M.D.
Author disclosures are on the abstract.
The Children's Clinical Research Advisory Committee of Children's Medical Center Dallas funded the study.
Statements and conclusions of study authors that are presented at American Heart Association scientific meetings are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect association policy or position. The association makes no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability. The association receives funding primarily from individuals; foundations and corporations (including pharmaceutical, device manufacturers and other companies) also make donations and fund specific association programs and events. The association has strict policies to prevent these relationships from influencing science content. Revenues from pharmaceutical and device corporations are available at www.heart.org/corporatefunding.
Additional resources:
Multimedia resources (animation, audio, images and video footage & interviews) are available in our newsroom at ISC 2011 Multimedia. This will include audio or video interview clips with AHA/ASA experts offering perspective on the news releases. Video clips with researchers (if available) will be added to this link after each embargo lifts.
Stay up to date on the latest news from American Heart Association scientific meetings, including the International Stroke Conference 2011, by following us at www.twitter.com/heartnews. We will be tweeting from the conference using hashtag #ASA11News.
For more information about stroke in children, visit www.strokeassociation.org/children
Acute anemia linked to silent strokes in children
American Stroke Association meeting report
2011-02-14
(Press-News.org) Silent strokes, which have no immediate symptoms but could cause long-term cognitive and learning deficits, occur in a significant number of severely anemic children, especially those with sickle cell disease, according to research presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference 2011.
One-quarter to one-third of children with sickle cell disease have evidence of silent strokes in their brains, according to Michael M. Dowling, M.D., Ph.D., lead author of the study and assistant professor of pediatrics and neurology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
"These are 5- to 10-year-old children who have brains that look like the brains of 80-year-olds," Dowling said. "These strokes are called 'silent' because they don't cause you to be weak on one side or have any obvious neurologic symptoms. But they can lead to poor academic performance and severe cognitive impairments."
Sickle cell disease is a blood disorder characterized by low levels of hemoglobin, the iron-containing component of red blood cells that carries oxygen. Low hemoglobin causes anemia. In sickle cell disease, the blood cells are misshapen (sickle-shaped) and may form clots or block blood vessels. About 10 percent of children with sickle cell disease suffer a stroke. Blood transfusions can reduce the high risk of repeat strokes.
Dowling and colleagues hypothesized that silent strokes occur during severe anemia and may be detectable by MRI. They used MRI on the brains of 52 hospitalized children 2- to 19-years-old at Children's Medical Center Dallas with hemoglobin concentrations dropping below 5.5 g/dL. They compared severely anemic children with sickle cell disease to a group of children without sickle cell disease who had hemoglobin levels below 5.5 g/dL.
They identified silent strokes in about 20 percent of the children with sickle cell disease who were experiencing acute anemia. They also saw evidence of silent strokes, though not as often, in severely anemic children who didn't have sickle cell disease.
The many reasons, besides sickle cell disease, why children could have anemia include trauma, surgery, iron deficiency or cancer such as leukemia.
"These are brain injuries that go unnoticed by doctors, unless the children have testing with a special MRI," he said. "We looked at every child who went to the hospital for a 30-month period and identified about 400 children that came in with hemoglobin below 5.5 g/dL. That represented about 12 percent of the admissions for sickle cell disease and about 1 percent of the total admissions to Children's Medical Center."
The findings suggest that children with or without sickle cell disease who have acute anemia could be suffering undetected brain damage. The researchers suggest that all children with severe anemia need careful examination for silent strokes.
Improved recognition and timely transfusion to increase blood hemoglobin levels could prevent permanent brain damage in children with silent strokes, according to the study.
Future studies should look at larger groups of children for longer periods to better understand the impact of acute anemia on children, Dowling said.
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study finds even with fetal lung maturity, babies delivered prior to 39 weeks are at risk
2011-02-14
SAN FRANCISCO (February 11, 2011) — In a study to be presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine's (SMFM) annual meeting, The Pregnancy Meeting ™, in San Francisco, researchers will present findings that show that despite fetal pulmonary maturity, babies delivered at between 36 to 38 weeks, still have a significantly increased risk of neonatal morbidities.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends that fetal pulmonary maturity be documented for scheduled deliveries occurring prior to 39 weeks of gestation in order to prevent neonatal ...
Record and Supervise with Face Sensor
2011-02-14
Alan Soft has issued new product - Record and supervise with face sensor.
The program has pre-event and post-event recording.
Playing back recorded picture is fairly simple and performs on the security computer as well as on distant server through Online interface.
The software has been designed as universal application for surveillance cross platforms functioning concurrently with wireless and wired IP cameras, TV-boards, capture cards, power-line, and USB webcams.
Software's modular structure considerably boosts reliability because all parts work as autonomous ...
Leptin resistance may prevent severe lung disease in patients with diabetes
2011-02-14
Resistance to leptin, a protein that plays a key role in regulating metabolism and appetite, may help prevent the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and acute lung injury (ALI) in individuals with type II diabetes, according to a study conducted by researchers in Chicago. The study indicates leptin resistance, a common characteristic of diabetes, may help prevent the formation of inflexible, fibrous tissue that develops in ALI and ARDS.
The findings were published online ahead of the print edition of the American Thoracic Society's American Journal ...
Few physicians refer patients to cancer clinical trials
2011-02-14
A small proportion of adult cancer patients participate in clinical trials in part due to a low level of physician referrals, according to an online study published Feb. 11 in The Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Although more than 8000 clinical trials are accepting participants, according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), only an estimated 2%% of newly diagnosed cancer patients participate in them. Prior studies suggest that most eligible patients do not enroll in trials because their physicians do not refer them.
To understand what types of ...
Amadeus Consulting CEO Lisa Calkins Featured in Robert Half Technology's CIO Insomnia Project
2011-02-14
Amadeus Consulting, a Boulder-based custom software development company, announced today that Chief Executive Officer Lisa Calkins has been featured in Robert Half Technology's CIO Insomnia Project. The project highlights CIO insights and advice on the topics that most concern CIOs.
Interviewees of the CIO Insomnia Project were asked to discuss areas of concern that as technology leaders are keeping them up at night. Several technology leaders were interviewed, including Lisa Calkins. Topics that were addressed include: staffing issues, prioritizing projects, managing ...
Child soldier trauma in Uganda shares similarities with Northern Ireland
2011-02-14
Psychology students at Queen's University have discovered similarities between child soldier trauma in Uganda and those children caught up in Northern Ireland's Troubles.
Post-graduate students from the Doctoral Programme in Educational, Child and Adolescent Psychology at Queen's recently travelled to Uganda to a school for ex-child soldiers. Their study analysed the levels of post-traumatic stress among ex-soldiers, explained the symptoms of trauma to the children and offered psychological therapy to the most traumatised children.
The children in the school were ...
Severely obese women may need to gain less weight during pregnancy
2011-02-14
Extremely obese women may not need to gain as much weight during pregnancy as current guidelines suggest, according to a new study presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine annual meeting.
Severely obese women who gained less than the recommended amount of weight during the second and third trimester of pregnancy suffered no ill effects, nor did their babies. In contrast, obese and non-obese women who gained less weight in the second and third trimester had undesirable outcomes, including a higher likelihood of delivering a baby that is small for gestational ...
Team hopes to cut years off development time of new antibiotics
2011-02-14
HOUSTON, Feb. 11, 2011 – Eliminating tens of thousands of manual lab experiments, two University of Houston (UH) professors are working toward a method to cut the development time of new antibiotics. While current practices typically last for more than a decade, a computerized modeling system being developed at UH will speed up this process.
Vincent Tam, associate professor of clinical sciences, and Michael Nikolaou, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, are focusing on dosing regimens to reveal which ones are most likely to be effective in combating infection ...
CDM Media Enters Strategic Partnership with insideHPC
2011-02-14
The CDM Media team announced today that it has formed a strategic partnership with insideHPC, a rapidly growing short-format news site that delivers the latest news on high performance computing to scientific and technical computing professionals around the globe, serving up an average of 850,000 page views per month.
CDM Media and insideHPC are partnering on the following technology events:
• CIO Summit, March 13-16, 2011, http://www.ciosummit.us
• CIO Life Sciences Summit, May 8-11, 2011, http://www.ciolifesciencessummit.com
• CIO Cloud Summit, June 14-16, 2011, ...
New Guest Speaker John D Kuhns Speaks On The MoneyMan Report
2011-02-14
"The MoneyMan Report" with Dan Frishberg on Tuesday featured guest John D. Kuhns, Chairman & CEO of Kuhns Brothers one of the first and best known U.S. Investment Bankers to create IPOs in Chinam and a insider In China for over twenty-five years.
Kuhns was able to debunk many of the misconceptions about China "overtaking" the U.S. as the world's foremost superpower. He said that fears regarding China becoming its own reserve currency and surpassing the U.S. militarily are misplaced, and that those events are unlikely, because the country will be focused on its own economic ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Sensitive ceramics for soft robotics
Trends in hospitalizations and liver transplants associated with alcohol-induced liver disease
Spinal cord stimulation vs medical management for chronic back and leg pain
Engineered receptors help the immune system home in on cancer
How conflicting memories of sex and starvation compete to drive behavior
Scientists discover ‘entirely unanticipated’ role of protein netrin1 in spinal cord development
Novel SOURCE study examining development of early COPD in ages 30 to 55
NRL completes development of robotics capable of servicing satellites, enabling resilience for the U.S. space infrastructure
Clinical trial shows positive results for potential treatment to combat a challenging rare disease
New research shows relationship between heart shape and risk of cardiovascular disease
Increase in crisis coverage, but not the number of crisis news events
New study provides first evidence of African children with severe malaria experiencing partial resistance to world’s most powerful malaria drug
Texting abbreviations makes senders seem insincere, study finds
Living microbes discovered in Earth’s driest desert
Artemisinin partial resistance in Ugandan children with complicated malaria
When is a hole not a hole? Researchers investigate the mystery of 'latent pores'
ETRI, demonstration of 8-photon qubit chip for quantum computation
Remote telemedicine tool found highly accurate in diagnosing melanoma
New roles in infectious process for molecule that inhibits flu
Transforming anion exchange membranes in water electrolysis for green hydrogen production
AI method can spot potential disease faster, better than humans
A development by Graz University of Technology makes concreting more reliable, safer and more economical
Pinpointing hydrogen isotopes in titanium hydride nanofilms
Political abuse on X is a global, widespread, and cross-partisan phenomenon, suggests new study
Reintroduction of resistant frogs facilitates landscape-scale recovery in the presence of a lethal fungal disease
Scientists compile library for evaluating exoplanet water
Updated first aid guidelines enhance care for opioid overdose, bleeding, other emergencies
Revolutionizing biology education: Scientists film ‘giant’ mimivirus in action
Genetic variation enhances cancer drug sensitivity
Protective genetic mutation offers new hope for understanding autism and brain development
[Press-News.org] Acute anemia linked to silent strokes in childrenAmerican Stroke Association meeting report