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Wilms Tumor: Eva poses for the camera after recovering from aggressive treatment

Eva rides out the side effects of aggressive Wilms tumor treatment

Clinical, Patient Stories
Eva Quiroz loves horses. The 10 year old takes riding lessons, and this activity puts a smile on her face. Anyone watching her contentedly guiding a horse around the ring would just assume she has always been a healthy child, says her mom Carla. They would see no hint of what Eva has been through ... Read More about Eva rides out the side effects of aggressive Wilms tumor treatment
Tagged: cancer, wilms tumor
Pie plate covered with flour with gluten spelled out

New research sheds light on risk of gluten exposure in the kitchen and classroom

Clinical, Research
Parents and teachers typically go to great lengths in the kitchen and in the classroom to ensure children with Celiac disease avoid gluten contact. But up until recently, little data has existed to quantify the risk that exists in a variety of scenarios. Now, new research suggests that while vigilance is key, people may be ... Read More about New research sheds light on risk of gluten exposure in the kitchen and classroom
Tagged: celiac disease, gastroenterology
Matthew Harris studies a variety of skeletal disorders in fish

Diving deep: Understanding skeletal conditions with fish models

Basic/Translational, Research
From fragile ice fish deep in the Antarctic Ocean to flying fish gliding above the Caribbean sea, fish have evolved a fascinating variety of skeletal traits. These traits not only help them adapt to their environments, they are also providing genetic insights into rare human skeletal disorders. Fish are not as genetically different from us ... Read More about Diving deep: Understanding skeletal conditions with fish models
Tagged: craniofacial, genetics and genomics, hand and upper extremity, orthopedics, plastic surgery, rare disease, zebrafish
gene therapy

Good early results with gene therapy for rare immune deficiency

Clinical, Research
Brenden Whittaker, a college student in Ohio, has been caught off guard by his good health. Since he was young, a rare immune deficiency known as chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) had left him vulnerable to life-threatening infections. He was used to going in and out of the hospital, and then hooking up to an IV ... Read More about Good early results with gene therapy for rare immune deficiency
Tagged: blood, gene therapy, immune disorders, rare disease

Evidence-based guideline reduces G-tube placement in young patients

Research
Gastrostomy tubes (G-tubes) are commonly used to deliver nutrition directly to the stomach in patients who cannot eat by mouth, require supplemental nutrients, or have swallowing difficulties, including oropharyngeal dysphagia with aspiration. While the placement of G-tubes is on the rise nationally, data suggests that children with G-tubes have two to three times the number ... Read More about Evidence-based guideline reduces G-tube placement in young patients
Tagged: aerodigestive, g tube, research
Asimenia Angelidou pipetting BCG vaccine

100 years after the advent of TB vaccines, formulations vary widely

Research, Therapeutics/Diagnostics/Devices
Each year, more than 100 million newborns around the world receive vaccinations against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, or TB, which infects about one-quarter of the world’s population. Facilities across the world produce several different formulations of these vaccines, known as Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccines. These are given interchangeably, yet new research from the Precision Vaccines Program at ... Read More about 100 years after the advent of TB vaccines, formulations vary widely
Tagged: global health, public health, tuberculosis, vaccines

Bone marrow-on-a-chip provides new research directions for Shwachman-Diamond syndrome

Basic/Translational, Research
A new research tool that mimics the behavior of diseased bone marrow provides a new strategy for understanding the bone marrow disease, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome (SDS), and hopefully, developing new treatments. With SDS, bone marrow fails to produce blood cells normally, leading to bone marrow failure and an increased risk of leukemia. In a research paper ... Read More about Bone marrow-on-a-chip provides new research directions for Shwachman-Diamond syndrome
Tagged: blood, gene therapy, laboratory tools, leukemia, rare disease

Poverty associated with suicide risk in children and adolescents

Data Science, Research
Suicide in children under age 20 has been increasing in the U.S., with rates almost doubling over the last decade. Between 2007 to 2016, nearly 21,000 children ages 5-19 years old died by suicide. While the reasons for the increase are not well understood, new research from Boston Children’s Hospital shows a link between poverty ... Read More about Poverty associated with suicide risk in children and adolescents
Tagged: adolescent medicine, community health, emergency medicine, public health, suicide
child with motility disorder holding her throat

Dysmotility may play a major role in respiratory symptoms

Research
Clinicians whose patients exhibit respiratory symptoms frequently assume that gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is responsible. However, esophageal and gastric dysmotility may be more significant factors in respiratory disease than GERD alone, according to a recent review by Rachel Rosen, MD, MPH, and Samuel Nurko, MD, MPH. The paper, published in Current Treatment Options in Pediatrics, ... Read More about Dysmotility may play a major role in respiratory symptoms
Tagged: aerodigestive, motility, research
Lamarcus, who has sickle cell, talks with his doctor in an exam room

Decoding sickle cell disease offers new outlook for Lamarcus

Clinical, Research
When Lamarcus Jean visits the Hematology Clinic at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, he makes himself right at home. The 6-year-old, whom his mom, Stephanie, describes as “wise beyond his years,” has been a patient here since he was born. Lamarcus has sickle cell disease, an inherited blood disorder caused by a mutation ... Read More about Decoding sickle cell disease offers new outlook for Lamarcus
Tagged: blood, rare disease, research, sickle cell disease

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