Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of severe head injured patients (GCS < = 8) have l... more Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of severe head injured patients (GCS < = 8) have led to major improvement in outcome, but have not eliminated high mortality rates, which range between 38 and 80% as reported in the literature. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome of patients with GCS 3 and 4 and to evaluate the role of early and late hypotension (systolic blood pressure SBP < 90 mmHg) in outcome. Sixty two patients with severe head injury were divided into two groups. In Group I-22 patients with GCS 3-4, and in Group II-40 patients with GCS 5-8. There was no significant difference between mortality (p = 0.5), poor outcome (p = 0.36), and the very best outcome in the groups (p = 0.06). There was a statistically significant difference in death rate (p = 0.0012), when hypotension was present at the scene. Our data suggest that patients with extremely severe head injury do not necessarily have a worse outcome, if prompt diagnosis and appropriate aggressive treatment is implemented.
A questionnaire survey was carried out to examine the attitudes and practices of Australian and N... more A questionnaire survey was carried out to examine the attitudes and practices of Australian and New Zealand intensivists with regard to brain death and organ donation. A return rate of 82.5% was achieved. Fifty-eight per cent had written evidence of their own wishes to donate organs and 94% would agree to donation from a dependent. At least one intensivist is involved in certifying brain death on 95% of occasions. Intensivists are involved in the request for organ donation over 90% of the time although one-third do not believe that it is their role to request organ donation. Although two-thirds believe that the family should always be approached for organ donation, another 52 out of 254 indicated that it was their (the intensivist's) role to decide if families should be asked for organ donation. Possible reasons for not requesting are language or other communication problems, perceptions of cultural differences and degrees of family distress. Twenty per cent of respondents do not provide haemodynamic support before brain death confirmation. Australian and New Zealand intensivists overwhelmingly support the concept of brain death, current methods of confirmation of brain death, organ donation and transplantation. Possible reasons behind loss of potential donors include decisions not to resuscitate both before and after brain death is confirmed. Perceptions of family grief and cultural differences clearly inhibit requests for organ donation. A very few units have an effective policy on approaching families about organ donation. Intensivists have almost exclusive control over requests for organ donation and thus bear a full professional responsibility for this element of hospital practice.
A number of studies have reported that an abnormal delay in the latency of the P300 event-related... more A number of studies have reported that an abnormal delay in the latency of the P300 event-related potential (ERP) is characteristic of the majority of patients with a dementing process. Another body of research suggests regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) is significantly reduced in Alzheimer's disease (AD). No previous study has compared the effectiveness of these 2 measures in identifying the same patients with AD. Furthermore, most of the studies on which the above findings are based examined patients in the moderate to severe stages of the disorder. In this study we examined P300 latency and rCBF in 10 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, and compared their responses with those of normal subjects of similar age. The P300 component was not evident in 2 of the patients: the remaining 8 had a latency within normal limits for their age. On the other hand, 8 of the patients had abnormally reduced rCBF. These results suggest rCBF measures may be useful for identifying AD in its early stages.
The interpretation of clinical tests for brain death is often complicated by the presence of faci... more The interpretation of clinical tests for brain death is often complicated by the presence of facial trauma, or the use of barbiturate therapy for reduction of intracranial pressure. We propose a non-invasive technique--transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonography for the diagnosis of brain death. One hundred and forty comatose patients, 111 of whom were believed to be brain dead underwent TCD examinations. TCD assessments of the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) and the basilar artery were performed before formal clinical testing for brain death. The TCD spectra recorded in the brain dead (BD) patients consisted of short, sharp systolic peaks followed by retrograde flow during diastole or just systolic peaks with absent flow in either direction. There were no survivors among patients who displayed these two TCD patterns. The 29 comatose control patients always showed flow throughout the cardiac cycle--no retrograde flow was ever recorded in these patients all of whom survived. Of particular interest were the basilar artery results. In nine BD patients no MCA signals could be obtained while good quality signals were recorded from the basilar artery. The TCD results agreed essentially with 100% accuracy with clinical testing and four vessel cerebral angiography. This paper illustrates the usefulness of TCD examination of the MCAs and especially the basilar artery in the diagnosis of brain death.
To collect nationally representative epidemiological data on early-onset eating disorders (EOEDs)... more To collect nationally representative epidemiological data on early-onset eating disorders (EOEDs) in children. Prospective, active surveillance using the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit with key informant design. Child health specialists in Australia (July 2002 to June 2005). Incident cases of EOEDs in children aged 5-13 years. Disease rates, demographic characteristics, clinical features and complications, hospitalisation, psychological comorbidity, and concordance of clinical features with Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV) criteria. We identified 101 children aged 5-13 years with EOEDs (median age, 12.2 years; range, 5.5-13.9 years), of whom one in four were boys. Most were hospitalised (78%), and the mean duration of hospitalisation was 24.7 days (range, 1-75 days). More than 70% of inpatients were admitted to specialised eating disorder units in paediatric teaching hospitals. Among inpatients, 37% met DSM-IV diagnostic criteri...
Childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD) is a group of rare chronic and complex disorders of v... more Childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD) is a group of rare chronic and complex disorders of variable pathology. There has been no systematic review of published chILD research. This study aimed to describe chILD classification systems, epidemiology, morbidity, treatments, outcomes, and the impact of chILD on families and the burden on health services. A systematic literature search for original studies on chILD was undertaken in the major biomedical databases to the end of December 2013. Epidemiological studies, case series and studies describing classification systems were included. Single case studies were excluded. The search yielded 37 publications that met study criteria. Four different chILD classification systems have been proposed in the past decade. The incidence of chILD has been estimated at 0.13-16.2 cases/100,000 children/year. One to five new cases presented to individual hospitals each year. In developed countries, the median mortality was 13% (6-19%). Morbidity a...
To describe the pattern of perinatal HIV exposure and outcomes among children born in Australia, ... more To describe the pattern of perinatal HIV exposure and outcomes among children born in Australia, 1982-2006. National surveillance for perinatal HIV exposure. Women with HIV infection and their perinatally exposed children. Trends in the age-standardised rate of perinatal exposure, uptake of interventions by women with an antenatal HIV diagnosis, and rate of mother-to-child transmission. Between 1982 and 2006, there were 354 reported cases of perinatal HIV exposure among children born in Australia. The age-standardised rate of perinatal exposure per 100,000 live births increased from 2.3 (1982-1986) to 5.1 (1991-1998), 9.9 (1999-2002) and 8.3 (2003-2006). Among children whose mother was diagnosed antenatally, the mother-to-child transmission rate declined significantly, from 25% (4/16; 95% CI, 7%-52%) in 1987-1990 to 5% (4/82; 95% CI, 1%-12%) in 2003-2006 (P < 0.001). The rate declined from 8% (4/51; 95% CI, 2%-19%) in 1987-1998 to 1% (2/151; 95% CI, 0.2%-5%) in 1999-2006 among ch...
Influenza contributes significantly to disease burden among children aged less than five years. E... more Influenza contributes significantly to disease burden among children aged less than five years. Existing influenza surveillance systems do not provide detailed data on clinical presentation, management, vaccination status, risk factors and complications in hospitalised children, or link such data with laboratory results. Following a number of child deaths due to influenza in 2007, the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing approached the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit (APSU) to examine the feasibility of enhancing APSU surveillance to identify children hospitalised with severe complications of influenza. Active, national, weekly surveillance was conducted during September 2007 with reporting by 1,256 Australian paediatricians working in hospitals and outpatient settings. The weekly report card return rate was 93%; detailed clinical data were provided on 88% of all notified cases and 15 children met the case criteria for severe complications of influenza. Admi...
Accurate data about Indigenous child health is vital to enable us to understand its current state... more Accurate data about Indigenous child health is vital to enable us to understand its current state, to acknowledge achievements, and to determine how to reduce inequalities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. We have identified a paucity of national, or nationally representative, data relating to Indigenous child health outcomes, and significant deficiencies in available data. A coordinated national approach will help address current data limitations, including lack of identification of Indigenous status, lack of currency, and lack of information about specific health disorders affecting Indigenous children. To ensure that health data collected are relevant and useful, Indigenous communities must have a role in data collection and management.
To examine the relationship between child weight and vehicle booster seat usage in the context of... more To examine the relationship between child weight and vehicle booster seat usage in the context of current Australasian booster seat standards. Questionnaire survey conducted between February and April 2005. A convenience sample of parents with children aged 4-11 years in New South Wales and Victoria completed a questionnaire, reporting on the height and weight of their children and the nature of restraint devices used in the family vehicle. Proportion of children meeting standard-specified weight and height criteria who are not restrained in booster seats; proportion of children who meet the specified height criteria but whose weight exceeds the specified weight. 699 of 3959 questionnaires were returned (response rate, 18%), of which seven lacked essential details. The remaining 692 responses provided information on 1500 children. Of these children, 633 aged 4-11 years fell within the recommended height range for using booster seats, but only 29% were typically restrained in booster...
Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of severe head injured patients (GCS &lt; = 8) have l... more Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of severe head injured patients (GCS &lt; = 8) have led to major improvement in outcome, but have not eliminated high mortality rates, which range between 38 and 80% as reported in the literature. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome of patients with GCS 3 and 4 and to evaluate the role of early and late hypotension (systolic blood pressure SBP &lt; 90 mmHg) in outcome. Sixty two patients with severe head injury were divided into two groups. In Group I-22 patients with GCS 3-4, and in Group II-40 patients with GCS 5-8. There was no significant difference between mortality (p = 0.5), poor outcome (p = 0.36), and the very best outcome in the groups (p = 0.06). There was a statistically significant difference in death rate (p = 0.0012), when hypotension was present at the scene. Our data suggest that patients with extremely severe head injury do not necessarily have a worse outcome, if prompt diagnosis and appropriate aggressive treatment is implemented.
A questionnaire survey was carried out to examine the attitudes and practices of Australian and N... more A questionnaire survey was carried out to examine the attitudes and practices of Australian and New Zealand intensivists with regard to brain death and organ donation. A return rate of 82.5% was achieved. Fifty-eight per cent had written evidence of their own wishes to donate organs and 94% would agree to donation from a dependent. At least one intensivist is involved in certifying brain death on 95% of occasions. Intensivists are involved in the request for organ donation over 90% of the time although one-third do not believe that it is their role to request organ donation. Although two-thirds believe that the family should always be approached for organ donation, another 52 out of 254 indicated that it was their (the intensivist&#39;s) role to decide if families should be asked for organ donation. Possible reasons for not requesting are language or other communication problems, perceptions of cultural differences and degrees of family distress. Twenty per cent of respondents do not provide haemodynamic support before brain death confirmation. Australian and New Zealand intensivists overwhelmingly support the concept of brain death, current methods of confirmation of brain death, organ donation and transplantation. Possible reasons behind loss of potential donors include decisions not to resuscitate both before and after brain death is confirmed. Perceptions of family grief and cultural differences clearly inhibit requests for organ donation. A very few units have an effective policy on approaching families about organ donation. Intensivists have almost exclusive control over requests for organ donation and thus bear a full professional responsibility for this element of hospital practice.
A number of studies have reported that an abnormal delay in the latency of the P300 event-related... more A number of studies have reported that an abnormal delay in the latency of the P300 event-related potential (ERP) is characteristic of the majority of patients with a dementing process. Another body of research suggests regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) is significantly reduced in Alzheimer&#39;s disease (AD). No previous study has compared the effectiveness of these 2 measures in identifying the same patients with AD. Furthermore, most of the studies on which the above findings are based examined patients in the moderate to severe stages of the disorder. In this study we examined P300 latency and rCBF in 10 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer&#39;s disease, and compared their responses with those of normal subjects of similar age. The P300 component was not evident in 2 of the patients: the remaining 8 had a latency within normal limits for their age. On the other hand, 8 of the patients had abnormally reduced rCBF. These results suggest rCBF measures may be useful for identifying AD in its early stages.
The interpretation of clinical tests for brain death is often complicated by the presence of faci... more The interpretation of clinical tests for brain death is often complicated by the presence of facial trauma, or the use of barbiturate therapy for reduction of intracranial pressure. We propose a non-invasive technique--transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonography for the diagnosis of brain death. One hundred and forty comatose patients, 111 of whom were believed to be brain dead underwent TCD examinations. TCD assessments of the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) and the basilar artery were performed before formal clinical testing for brain death. The TCD spectra recorded in the brain dead (BD) patients consisted of short, sharp systolic peaks followed by retrograde flow during diastole or just systolic peaks with absent flow in either direction. There were no survivors among patients who displayed these two TCD patterns. The 29 comatose control patients always showed flow throughout the cardiac cycle--no retrograde flow was ever recorded in these patients all of whom survived. Of particular interest were the basilar artery results. In nine BD patients no MCA signals could be obtained while good quality signals were recorded from the basilar artery. The TCD results agreed essentially with 100% accuracy with clinical testing and four vessel cerebral angiography. This paper illustrates the usefulness of TCD examination of the MCAs and especially the basilar artery in the diagnosis of brain death.
To collect nationally representative epidemiological data on early-onset eating disorders (EOEDs)... more To collect nationally representative epidemiological data on early-onset eating disorders (EOEDs) in children. Prospective, active surveillance using the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit with key informant design. Child health specialists in Australia (July 2002 to June 2005). Incident cases of EOEDs in children aged 5-13 years. Disease rates, demographic characteristics, clinical features and complications, hospitalisation, psychological comorbidity, and concordance of clinical features with Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV) criteria. We identified 101 children aged 5-13 years with EOEDs (median age, 12.2 years; range, 5.5-13.9 years), of whom one in four were boys. Most were hospitalised (78%), and the mean duration of hospitalisation was 24.7 days (range, 1-75 days). More than 70% of inpatients were admitted to specialised eating disorder units in paediatric teaching hospitals. Among inpatients, 37% met DSM-IV diagnostic criteri...
Childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD) is a group of rare chronic and complex disorders of v... more Childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD) is a group of rare chronic and complex disorders of variable pathology. There has been no systematic review of published chILD research. This study aimed to describe chILD classification systems, epidemiology, morbidity, treatments, outcomes, and the impact of chILD on families and the burden on health services. A systematic literature search for original studies on chILD was undertaken in the major biomedical databases to the end of December 2013. Epidemiological studies, case series and studies describing classification systems were included. Single case studies were excluded. The search yielded 37 publications that met study criteria. Four different chILD classification systems have been proposed in the past decade. The incidence of chILD has been estimated at 0.13-16.2 cases/100,000 children/year. One to five new cases presented to individual hospitals each year. In developed countries, the median mortality was 13% (6-19%). Morbidity a...
To describe the pattern of perinatal HIV exposure and outcomes among children born in Australia, ... more To describe the pattern of perinatal HIV exposure and outcomes among children born in Australia, 1982-2006. National surveillance for perinatal HIV exposure. Women with HIV infection and their perinatally exposed children. Trends in the age-standardised rate of perinatal exposure, uptake of interventions by women with an antenatal HIV diagnosis, and rate of mother-to-child transmission. Between 1982 and 2006, there were 354 reported cases of perinatal HIV exposure among children born in Australia. The age-standardised rate of perinatal exposure per 100,000 live births increased from 2.3 (1982-1986) to 5.1 (1991-1998), 9.9 (1999-2002) and 8.3 (2003-2006). Among children whose mother was diagnosed antenatally, the mother-to-child transmission rate declined significantly, from 25% (4/16; 95% CI, 7%-52%) in 1987-1990 to 5% (4/82; 95% CI, 1%-12%) in 2003-2006 (P < 0.001). The rate declined from 8% (4/51; 95% CI, 2%-19%) in 1987-1998 to 1% (2/151; 95% CI, 0.2%-5%) in 1999-2006 among ch...
Influenza contributes significantly to disease burden among children aged less than five years. E... more Influenza contributes significantly to disease burden among children aged less than five years. Existing influenza surveillance systems do not provide detailed data on clinical presentation, management, vaccination status, risk factors and complications in hospitalised children, or link such data with laboratory results. Following a number of child deaths due to influenza in 2007, the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing approached the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit (APSU) to examine the feasibility of enhancing APSU surveillance to identify children hospitalised with severe complications of influenza. Active, national, weekly surveillance was conducted during September 2007 with reporting by 1,256 Australian paediatricians working in hospitals and outpatient settings. The weekly report card return rate was 93%; detailed clinical data were provided on 88% of all notified cases and 15 children met the case criteria for severe complications of influenza. Admi...
Accurate data about Indigenous child health is vital to enable us to understand its current state... more Accurate data about Indigenous child health is vital to enable us to understand its current state, to acknowledge achievements, and to determine how to reduce inequalities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. We have identified a paucity of national, or nationally representative, data relating to Indigenous child health outcomes, and significant deficiencies in available data. A coordinated national approach will help address current data limitations, including lack of identification of Indigenous status, lack of currency, and lack of information about specific health disorders affecting Indigenous children. To ensure that health data collected are relevant and useful, Indigenous communities must have a role in data collection and management.
To examine the relationship between child weight and vehicle booster seat usage in the context of... more To examine the relationship between child weight and vehicle booster seat usage in the context of current Australasian booster seat standards. Questionnaire survey conducted between February and April 2005. A convenience sample of parents with children aged 4-11 years in New South Wales and Victoria completed a questionnaire, reporting on the height and weight of their children and the nature of restraint devices used in the family vehicle. Proportion of children meeting standard-specified weight and height criteria who are not restrained in booster seats; proportion of children who meet the specified height criteria but whose weight exceeds the specified weight. 699 of 3959 questionnaires were returned (response rate, 18%), of which seven lacked essential details. The remaining 692 responses provided information on 1500 children. Of these children, 633 aged 4-11 years fell within the recommended height range for using booster seats, but only 29% were typically restrained in booster...
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