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acetaminophen and ibuprofen on store shelves

Acetaminophen does not aggravate young children’s asthma

Clinical, Research
Your toddler is screaming in pain. Her forehead is burning. You rush to your local drugstore. What do you get — Tylenol or Motrin? And by the way, she also has asthma. Recently, many parents have been under the impression that acetaminophen (Tylenol, etc.) may do more harm than good in young children with asthma. ... Read More about Acetaminophen does not aggravate young children’s asthma
Tagged: asthma, drug safety
girl with asthma inhaler with spacer

Can asthma be nipped in the bud?

Clinical, Research
Worldwide, asthma affects an estimated 300 million people, and is expected to surpass 400 million by 2025, according to the World Health Organization. About 1 in 10 U.S. children have asthma, and research shows that the vast majority of them also have allergy. Could that provide a clue to its prevention? Starting at 2 to ... Read More about Can asthma be nipped in the bud?
Tagged: asthma, clinical trials, immunology
medulloblastoma in a child

Beyond appearances: Molecular genetics revises brain tumor classification and care

Clinical, Research
Pomeroy Scott Pomeroy, MD, PhD, is Neurologist-in-Chief at Boston Children’s Hospital. He practices in the Brain Tumor Center and is a member of the F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center. For almost a century, brain tumors have been diagnosed based on their appearance under a microscope and classified by their resemblance to the brain cells from which ... Read More about Beyond appearances: Molecular genetics revises brain tumor classification and care
Tagged: brain tumor, cancer, medulloblastoma, precision medicine
Emily Coughlin during her neuroblastoma treatment

Double stem cell transplant and other tools are helping children survive neuroblastoma

Clinical, Research
When Emily Coughlin complained of a sore knee in May 2009, doctors initially suspected Lyme disease. After antibiotics failed to relieve the pain, Emily was diagnosed with neuroblastoma, a cancer that begins in nerve cells outside the brain, just shy of her fourth birthday. Though neuroblastomia is rare — about 700 new cases occur annually in the ... Read More about Double stem cell transplant and other tools are helping children survive neuroblastoma
Tagged: cancer, neuroblastoma, stem cell transplant
peanuts

20-week treatment makes life safer for kids with peanut allergy

Clinical, Research
A study last week in The New England Journal of Medicine suggests that exposing infants to peanuts can provide lasting protection against peanut allergy. But what about peanut-allergic children right now? They and their parents live a life of precautions — from pre-screening birthday party menus to segregation at the school lunch table — to ... Read More about 20-week treatment makes life safer for kids with peanut allergy
Tagged: allergy, feeding therapy, immunology, immunotherapy
lungs and stomach

Respiratory illness in children with gastroesophageal reflux: Are acid blockers part of the problem?

Clinical, Research
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), in which stomach acids back up into the esophagus, is increasingly diagnosed in children. One study based on insurance-claims data found that GERD diagnoses in infants more than tripled between 2000 and 2005 (from 3.4 to 12.3 percent). In addition to heartburn and chest pain, GERD has been implicated in cough, wheezing ... Read More about Respiratory illness in children with gastroesophageal reflux: Are acid blockers part of the problem?
Tagged: aerodigestive, gastroenterology, microbiome, reflux
c difficile

Frozen poop pill offers a less invasive treatment option for emerging infectious disease

Clinical, Research
The fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) movement is catching the attention of scientists, researchers and the media nationwide. Currently, fecal transplantation delivers pre-screened, healthy human donor stool to a patient via colonoscopy or by nasogastric tube. It’s prescribed as an effective alternative to long-term antibiotic use in treating debilitating infectious diseases such as Clostridium difficile, also known ... Read More about Frozen poop pill offers a less invasive treatment option for emerging infectious disease
Tagged: fecal transplant, gastroenterology, infectious diseases, microbiome
girl with abacus

Autism clinical trials are ripe for improvement

Clinical, Research
Walter Kaufmann, MD, is co-director of the Fragile X Syndrome Program and a member of the department of Neurology at Boston Children’s Hospital. He was site principal investigator for three arbaclofen trials sponsored by Seaside Therapeutics and currently advises the company on data analyses. This post is second in a two-part series on clinical trials in ... Read More about Autism clinical trials are ripe for improvement
Tagged: autism spectrum disorder, clinical trials
rett syndrome clinical trial

Rett syndrome sees glimmer of hope in Phase I trial

Clinical, Research
Part 1 of a two-part series. (Read part 2.) In the world of neurodevelopmental disorders, an exciting trend is the emergence of specific molecular targets and treatments through genetic research. A case in point is IGF-1 therapy for Rett syndrome, a devastating disorder in girls that affects their ability to speak, walk, eat and breathe. It ... Read More about Rett syndrome sees glimmer of hope in Phase I trial
Tagged: autism spectrum disorder, clinical trials, rett syndrome
clothing hangers - one size fits all concept

Pharmacogenomics: One size doesn’t fit all

Clinical, Research
In 2009, The New England Journal of Medicine reported the case of an otherwise healthy 2-year-old boy in Canada who died after surgery. He had received a codeine dose in the recommended range, but an autopsy revealed that morphine (a product of codeine metabolism) had built up to toxic levels in his blood and likely depressed his ... Read More about Pharmacogenomics: One size doesn’t fit all
Tagged: drug safety, genetics and genomics, precision medicine

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