17 results on '"Minesh Khashu"'
Search Results
2. Prenatal maternal mental health and resilience in the United Kingdom during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic: a cross- national comparison
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Swarali Datye, Marko Smiljanic, Rohan Shetti, Alison MacRae-Miller, Edwin van Teijlingen, Latha Vinayakarao, Eva M. J. Peters, Catherine Lebel, Lianne Tomfohr-Madsen, Gerald Giesbrecht, Minesh Khashu, and Melanie L. Conrad
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pregnancy ,maternal mental health ,depression ,anxiety ,resilience ,social support ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
IntroductionPrenatal mental health problems are associated with morbidity for the pregnant person, and their infants are at long-term risk for poor health outcomes. We aim to explore how the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic affected the mental health of pregnant people in the United Kingdom (UK), and to further identify resilience factors which may have contributed to varying mental health outcomes. We also aim to examine the quality of antenatal care provided during the pandemic in the UK and to identify potential inadequacies to enhance preparedness for future events.MethodsDuring June-November 2020, we recruited 3666 individuals in the UK for the EPPOCH pregnancy cohort (Maternal mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: Effect of the Pandemic on Pregnancy Outcomes and Childhood Health). Participants were assessed for depression, anxiety, anger and pregnancy-related anxiety using validated scales. Additionally, physical activity, social support, individualized support and personal coping ability of the respondents were assessed as potential resilience factors.ResultsParticipants reported high levels of depression (57.05%), anxiety (58.04%) and anger (58.05%). Higher levels of social and individualized support and personal coping ability were associated with lower mental health challenges. Additionally, pregnant individuals in the UK experienced higher depression during the pandemic than that reported in Canada. Finally, qualitative analysis revealed that restrictions for partners and support persons during medical appointments as well as poor public health communication led to increased mental health adversities and hindered ability to make medical decisions.DiscussionThis study revealed increased mental health challenges among pregnant individuals in the UK during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. These results highlight the need for reassessing the mental health support measures available to pregnant people in the UK, both during times of crisis and in general.
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- 2024
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3. Correction: Investigating Father or Partner Involvement in Family Integrated Care in Neonatal Units: Protocol for a Prospective, Multicenter, Multiphase Study
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Rupa Rubinstein, Katie Gallagher, John Ho, Julian Bose, Minesh Khashu, and Narendra Aladangady
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Published
- 2024
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4. Investigating Father or Partner Involvement in Family Integrated Care in Neonatal Units With TARGET (Fathers and Partners in Family Integrated Care): Protocol for a Prospective, Multicenter, Multiphase Study
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Rupa Rubinstein, Katie Gallagher, John Ho, Julian Bose, Minesh Khashu, and Narendra Aladangady
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundNeonatal unit (NU) admissions for premature babies can last for months, which can significantly impact parental mental health (MH) with symptoms of depression, stress, and anxiety. Literature suggests fathers experience comparable MH symptoms to mothers. Family integrated care (FICare) is a culture where parents are collaborators and partners in caring for their hospitalized newborns. FICare improves infant outcomes and maternal MH. Similar reports on fathers are limited. ObjectiveThe primary aim of this study is to investigate the impact of supporting father or partner engagement in FICare of preterm infants on their MH up to 6 weeks postdischarge. The secondary aim is to investigate the impact on maternal MH. MethodsThis is a 2-phase study: phase 1 to gather baseline information and phase 2 to assess the impact of enhanced father or partner engagement in FICare on their MH, involving 2 NUs (tertiary and level 2). Enhanced FICare will be developed and introduced (eg, information booklet, workbook, classes, and a father peer-support group) alongside standard FICare practices. Father or partner MH will be assessed with semistructured qualitative interviews and validated questionnaires: Generalized Anxiety Disorder Assessment, Patient Health Questionnaire, and Parental Stressor Scale: Neonatal Intensive Care Unit from NU admission to 6 weeks postdischarge. Mothers will be assessed by focus groups and the same questionnaires. Descriptive statistics and appropriate comparative tests, such as the 2-tailed t test, will be used to analyze and compare phase 1 and 2 data. Qualitative data will be coded line by line with the use of NVivo (Lumivero) and thematically analyzed. Simultaneously, systematic reviews (SRs) of fathers’ experiences of FICare and their MH outcomes will be conducted. The study was approved by the National Research Ethics Committee (22/EM/0140) in August 2022. A parent advisory group was formed to advise on the study methodology, materials, involvement of participant parents, and dissemination of study findings. ResultsA recent SR demonstrated that data saturation is likely to be achieved by interviewing 9 to 17 participants. We will study a maximum of 20 parents of infants born at less than 33 weeks’ gestation in each phase. As of October 2023, the study was ongoing. The SR studies are registered with the PROSPERO database (324275 and 306760). The projected end date for data collection is July 2024; data analysis will be conducted in November 2024 and publication will occur in 2025. ConclusionsThe study aims to demonstrate the feasibility of using a father or partner-sensitive FICare model for parents of premature babies with a positive impact on their MH. It will demonstrate the feasibility of providing FICare to extremely premature babies receiving intensive care. This study may support the development of inclusive FICare guidelines for nonbirthing parents and their extremely premature infants. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT06022991; https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06022991 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/53160
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- 2024
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5. Editorial: Recent advances in our understanding of NEC pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment
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Misty Good and Minesh Khashu
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necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) ,artificial intelligence ,breast milk ,probiotics ,neonate ,intestine ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Published
- 2023
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6. It is high time we reduce 'routine' blood work in neonatal units
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Michael Narvey and Minesh Khashu
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neonatal ,NICU ,bloods ,bloodtests ,testing ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Published
- 2023
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7. Postnatal corticosteroid use for prevention or treatment of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in England and Wales 2012–2019: a retrospective population cohort study
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Neena Modi, Chris Gale, Iyad Al-Muzaffar, Jonathan Cusack, Victoria Nesbitt, Sanjay Salgia, Matthew Babirecki, Aashish Gupta, L M Wong, Anita Mittal, Ahmed Hassan, Karin Schwarz, Graham Whincup, Abdul Hasib, Mehdi Garbash, David Gibson, Pauline Adiotomre, Abby Deketelaere, Stanley Zengeya, Cath Seagrave, Hilary Dixon, Narendra Aladangady, Hassan Gaili, Matthew James, M Lal, Lawrence Miall, Venkatesh Kairamkonda, J Kefas, Jennifer Birch, Gail Whitehead, I Misra, Subodh Gupta, Steven Wardle, Eleri Adams, Minesh Khashu, Charlotte Groves, Christos Zipitis, Peter De Halpert, Joanne Fedee, Stephen Jones, Kirsten Mack, Charlotte Huddy, Salim Yasin, Ngozi Edi-osagie, Carrie Heal, Jacqeline Birch, Hari Kumar, Chris Rawlingson, Delyth Webb, Sankara Narayanan, Elizabeth Eyre, Caroline Sullivan, Wynne Leith, Vimal Vasu, Katia Vamvakiti, Megan Eaton, Ambalika Das, Katharine Mcdevitt, Anna Gregory, Shu-Ling Chuang, Sabita Uthaya, Cheryl Battersby, Imran Ahmed, Chris Warren, Tristan Bate, Mark Johnson, Sunil Reddy, Rashmi Gandhi, Nitin Goel, Richard Hearn, Cheentan Singh, Faith Emery, Vineet Gupta, Yee Aung, Vennila Ponnusamy, Pinki Surana, Anand Kamalanathan, Kavi Aucharaz, Lindsay Halpern, Matt Nash, Alex Allwood, Nigel Brooke, Jennifer Holman, Geraint Lee, Sobia Balal, Poornima Pandey, Ravindra Bhat, Simon Rhodes, Savi Sivashankar, Michael Grosdenier, Ajay Reddy, Prakash Thiagarajan, Chinnappa Reddy, Lidia Tyszcuzk, Glynis Rewitzky, Bushra Abdul-Malik, Dominic Muogbo, Angela D'Amore, John McIntyre, Lucinda Winckworth, Jim Baird, Akinsola Ogundiya, Pamela Cairns, Porus Bastani, Marice Theron, Siba Paul, Giles Kendall, Puneet Nath, Ros Garr, Sundeep Sandhu, Michael Cronin, Alison Bedford Russell, Ruchika Gupta, Archana Mishra, Oluseun Tayo, Priya Muthukumar, Brendan Harrington, Victoria Sharp, Nicola Johnson, Sam Wallis, Prashanth Bhat, Lee Abbott, Raju Narasimhan, Kate Creese, Divyen Shah, Clare Cane, Ghada Ramadan, Sijia Yao, Alistair Ewing, Penelope Young, Ramona Onita, Joanne Dangerfield, Jocelyn Morris, Toria Klutse, Sonia Spathis, Sathish Krishnan, Samar Sen, Jez Jones, Geedi Farah, Prem Pitchaikani, Jonathan Filkin, Ashok Karupaiah, Richard Heaver, Mohammad Alam, Tiziana Fragapane, Jess Reynolds, Khadija Ben-Sasi, Patricia Cowley, Shilpa Ramesh, Julia Croft, Soma Sengupta, Nagendra Venkata, Anitha Vayalakkad, Ben Obi, Anjali Petkar, Arun Ramachandran, Se-Yeon Park, Sue Bird, Jageer Mohammed, and Sanjay Jaisal
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective Describe the population of babies who do and do not receive postnatal corticosteroids for prevention or treatment of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD).Design Retrospective cohort study using data held in the National Neonatal Research Database.Setting National Health Service neonatal units in England and Wales.Patients Babies born less than 32 weeks gestation and admitted to neonatal units from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2019.Main outcomes Proportion of babies given postnatal corticosteroid; type of corticosteroid; age at initiation and duration, trends over time.Secondary outcomes Survival to discharge, treatment for retinopathy of prematurity, BPD, brain injury, severe necrotising enterocolitis, gastrointestinal perforation.Results 8% (4713/62019) of babies born
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- 2022
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8. Increase in the use of inhaled nitric oxide in neonatal intensive care units in England: a retrospective population study
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Chris Gale, Jonathan Cusack, Sanjay Salgia, Peter Martin, Matthew Babirecki, Liza Harry, Tim Wickham, Aashish Gupta, L M Wong, Anita Mittal, Sunita Seal, Ahmed Hassan, Karin Schwarz, Graham Whincup, Stephen Brearey, John Chang, Abdul Hasib, Mehdi Garbash, David Gibson, Pauline Adiotomre, Abby Deketelaere, Ruth Shephard, Mukta Jain, Stanley Zengeya, Cath Seagrave, Hilary Dixon, Narendra Aladangady, Hassan Gaili, Matthew James, M Lal, Ambadkar, Khalid Mannan, Lawrence Miall, Venkatesh Kairamkonda, J Kefas, Jennifer Birch, Gail Whitehead, I Misra, Imdad Ali, Mark Dyke, Michael Selter, Subodh Gupta, Richard Nicholl, Steven Wardle, Eleri Adams, Minesh Khashu, P Amess, Charlotte Groves, Shameel Mattara, Christos Zipitis, Peter De Halpert, Paul Settle, Paul Munyard, Joanne Fedee, Natasha Maddock, Richa Gupta, Stephen Jones, Kirsten Mack, Charlotte Huddy, Ngozi Edi-osagie, Nick Brennan, Carrie Heal, Majd Abu-harb, Jacqeline Birch, Chris Knight, Hamudi Kisat, Hari Kumar, Chris Rawlingson, Delyth Webb, Bird, Sankara Narayanan, Ian Evans, Rekha Sanghavi, Caroline Sullivan, Wynne Leith, Vimal Vasu, Katia Vamvakiti, Megan Eaton, Vadivelam Murthy, Aiwyne Foo, Katharine Mcdevitt, Shu-Ling Chuang, Cheryl Battersby, Nimish V Subhedar, Sena Jawad, Tristan Bate, Mark Johnson, Neeraj Jain, Faith Emery, Vineet Gupta, Yee Aung, Pinki Surana, Kayleigh Oughham, Anand Kamalanathan, Kavi Aucharaz, Nicola Paul, Lindsay Halpern, Matt Nash, Jo Anderson, Alex Allwood, Nigel Brooke, K Abdul Khader, Sanghavi Rekha, Anas Olabi, Jennifer Holman, Geraint Lee, Sobia Balal, Poornima Pandey, Ravindra Bhat, Simon Rhodes, Vinay Pai, Savi Sivashankar, Michael Grosdenier, Ajay Reddy, Christopher Dewhurst, Ghada Ramadan Krishnamurthy, Rob Negrine, Prakash Thiagarajan, P Kamath, Laura Winder, Andreea Bontea, Chinnappa Reddy, Elizabeth Sleight Deshpande, Lidia Tyszcuzk, Anne Dale, Glynis Rewitzky, Olutoyin Banjoko, Bushra Abdul-Malik, Dominic Muogbo, Angela D'Amore, John McIntyre, Chrissie Oliver, Lucinda Winckworth, Jyoti Kapur, P Amess Ben Obi, Naveen Athiraman, Chandan Gupta, Jim Baird, Ralf Hartung, Akinsola Ogundiya, Pamela Cairns, Porus Bastani, Marice Theron, Siba Paul, Giles Kendall, Puneet Nath, Ozioma Obi, Yee Mon Aung, Eleanor Hulse, Ros Garr, and Sundeep Sandhu
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Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Objective To describe temporal changes in inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) use in English neonatal units between 2010 and 2015.Design Retrospective analysis using data extracted from the National Neonatal Research Database.Setting All National Health Service neonatal units in England.Patients Infants of all gestational ages born 2010–2015 admitted to a neonatal unit and received intensive care.Main outcome measures Proportion of infants who received iNO; age at initiation and duration of iNO use.Results 4.9% (6346/129 883) of infants received iNO; 31% (1959/6346) were born 34 weeks of gestation. Between epoch 1 (2010–2011) and epoch 3 (2014–2015), there was (1) an increase in the proportion of infants receiving iNO: 34 weeks (4.5% vs 5.0%), (2) increase in postnatal age at iNO initiation:
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- 2021
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9. Racial Disparities in Necrotizing Enterocolitis
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Alain Cuna, Venkatesh Sampath, and Minesh Khashu
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newborn ,prematurity ,race ,genetics ,necrotizing enterocolitis ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a serious disease of the intestinal tract affecting 5–10% of pre-term infants with up to 50% mortality in those that require surgery. There is wide variation in the rates and outcomes of NEC by race and ethnicity, and the reasons for this disparity are poorly understood. In this article, we review the epidemiology and discuss possible explanations for racial and ethnic differences in NEC. Most of the current evidence investigating the role of race in NEC comes from North America and suggests that Hispanic ethnicity and non-Hispanic Black race are associated with higher risk of NEC compared to non-Hispanic White populations. Differences in pre-term births, breastfeeding rates, and various sociodemographic factors does not fully account for the observed disparities in NEC incidence and outcomes. While genetic studies are beginning to identify candidate genes that may increase or decrease risk for NEC among racial populations, current data remain limited by small sample sizes and lack of validation. Complex interactions between social and biological determinants likely underly the differences in NEC outcomes among racial groups. Larger datasets with detailed social, phenotypic, and genotypic information, coupled with advanced bioinformatics techniques are needed to comprehensively understand racial disparities in NEC.
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- 2021
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10. Experiences of fathers with babies admitted to neonatal care units: A review of the literature
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Ireland, Jillian, Minesh Khashu, Cescutti-Butler, Luisa, van Teijlingen, Edwin, and Hewitt-Taylor, Jacqui
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- 2016
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11. Effects of storage practices on long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids and lipid peroxidation of preterm formula milk
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Minesh Khashu, Isabell Nessel, and Simon C. Dyall
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Milk, Human ,Thiobarbituric acid ,business.industry ,Fatty Acids ,Infant, Newborn ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Nutritional quality ,Malondialdehyde ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,In utero ,Docosahexaenoic acid ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,Humans ,Medicine ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Food science ,Child ,business ,Long chain ,Infant, Premature ,Polyunsaturated fatty acid - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preterm formula milk (FM) is often prepared in advance, potentially affecting nutritional quality. Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFAs), important for brain and immune system function, are prone to lipid peroxidation, which correlates with comorbidities of prematurity. The effects of clinical storage practices on LCPUFA content and lipid peroxidation of preterm FM were investigated. METHODS: UK liquid and powder preterm FM (2017) (from two manufacturers) were subjected to routine storage conditions (liquid: refrigeration ≤10 h; powder: weekly preparation in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions and refrigeration ≤24 h for 4 weeks). LCPUFA content, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) content were analysed. RESULTS: Storage did not significantly decrease LCPUFA content. The European Society for Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition recommended LCPUFA intake, whereas in utero accretion rates could not be achieved with both FM brands (liquid and powder). Lipid peroxidation was evident on opening, with 6× higher levels in powder. No effect of ≤10-h refrigeration on peroxidation was seen in liquid FM. In powder FM, it increased over refrigeration (HNE opening: 6.5-9.7 µg mL-1 versus day 28, 24 h: 16.6-36.5 µg mL-1 ) with a significant interaction between storage time and refrigeration (P = 0.015), with higher HNE at 4 h on days 0, 7, 14 and 21 (all P
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- 2021
12. Implementation of bowel ultrasound practice for the diagnosis and management of necrotising enterocolitis
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Erin K Opfer, Minesh Khashu, Alain Cuna, Shazia P. Sharif, Jason D. Fraser, Sherwin S Chan, and Karen M Alexander
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medicine.medical_specialty ,gastroenterology ,Review ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Infant, Newborn, Diseases ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Necrotising enterocolitis ,multidisciplinary team-care ,Enterocolitis, Necrotizing ,030225 pediatrics ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,intensive care ,Paediatric surgery ,Case volume ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Infant, Newborn ,imaging ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Ultrasonography, Doppler ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Clinical Practice ,Early Diagnosis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,paediatric surgery ,business ,human activities - Abstract
Necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) is a serious inflammatory bowel disease of prematurity with potentially devastating complications and remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among premature infants. In recent years, there has been accumulating data regarding benefits of using bowel ultrasound (BUS) in the diagnosis and management of NEC. Despite this, adoption of robust BUS programmes into clinical practice has been slow. As BUS is a relatively new technique, many barriers to implementation exist, namely lack of education and training for sonographers and radiologists, low case volume and unfamiliarity by clinicians regarding how to use the information provided. The aim of this manuscript is to provide a framework and a roadmap for units to implement BUS in day-to-day practice for NEC diagnosis and management.
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- 2021
13. Long‐Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Lipid Peroxidation Products in Donor Human Milk in the United Kingdom: Results From the LIMIT 2‐Centre Cross‐Sectional Study
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Minesh Khashu, Simon C. Dyall, Laura De Rooy, Isabell Nessel, and Jane Murphy
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Docosahexaenoic Acids ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,Cross-sectional study ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Hexanal ,Lipid peroxidation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,fluids and secretions ,Humans ,Medicine ,Food science ,Child ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Milk, Human ,business.industry ,Fatty Acids ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Fatty acid ,food and beverages ,Malondialdehyde ,United Kingdom ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,chemistry ,In utero ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Composition (visual arts) ,Lipid Peroxidation ,business ,Infant, Premature ,Polyunsaturated fatty acid - Abstract
Background: Donor human milk is increasingly used as alternative to mother’s own milk to feed preterm infants, however, it may provide less long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (LCPUFA), and more oxidised lipids, which may be detrimental for preterm infant health and development. Levels have not been reported for donor human milk in the U.K.\ud Methods: Donor human milk (n=19) from two neonatal units, milk from preterm mothers from a neonatal unit (n=10), and term mothers from the community (n=11) were analysed for fatty acid, malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal, and hexanal content. Study registration: NCT03573531\ud Results: Donor human milk had significantly lower absolute LCPUFA content compared to term milk (P
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- 2020
14. The effects of storage conditions on long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, lipid mediators, and antioxidants in donor human milk - A review
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Minesh Khashu, Simon C. Dyall, and Isabell Nessel
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0301 basic medicine ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pasteurization ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Ascorbic Acid ,Antioxidants ,law.invention ,Lipid peroxidation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Humans ,Vitamin E ,Food science ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Vitamin C ,Milk, Human ,Chemistry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Cell Biology ,Lipid signaling ,Ascorbic acid ,Endocannabinoid system ,Food Storage ,Milk Banks ,Docosahexaenoic acid ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,Female ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Infant, Premature ,Polyunsaturated fatty acid ,Endocannabinoids - Abstract
Donor human milk (DHM) is the recommended alternative, if maternal milk is unavailable. However, current human milk banking practices may negatively affect the nutritional quality of DHM. This review summarises the effects of these practices on polyunsaturated fatty acids, lipid mediators and antioxidants of human milk. Overall, there is considerable variation in the reported effects, and further research is needed, particularly with lipid mediators and antioxidants. However, to preserve nutritional quality, DHM should be protected from light exposure and storage at 4 °C minimised, to prevent decreases in vitamin C and endocannabinoids and increases in free fatty acids and lipid peroxidation products. Storage at -20 °C prior to pasteurisation should also be minimised, to prevent free fatty increases and total fat and endocannabinoid decreases. Storage ≤-70 °C is preferable wherever possible, although post-pasteurisation storage at -20 °C for three months appears safe for free fatty acids, lipid peroxidation products, and total fat content.
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- 2019
15. A Proposed Machine Learning Based Collective Disease Model to Enable Predictive Diagnostics in Necrotising Enterocolitis
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Mhd Saeed Sharif, Minesh Khashu, Hassan Abdalla, and Jacqueline van Druten
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Necrotising enterocolitis ,Clinical decision making ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Aggregate data ,Artificial intelligence ,Disease ,business ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,computer ,Field (computer science) - Abstract
© 2018 IEEE. Despite 60 years of research into necrotising enterocolitis (NEC), our understanding of the disease has not improved enough to achieve better outcomes. Even though NEC has remained the leading cause of death and poor outcomes in preterm infants, there remain vital questions on how to define, differentiate and detect the condition. Numerous international groups have recently highlighted NEC as a research priority and called for broader engagement of the scientific community to move the field forward. The three foremost barriers at present are lack of suitable definition(s), lack of clean datasets and consequently a lack of scope to gain sufficient insights from data. This research paper proposes a new direction of travel to advance neonatal gastro-intestinal monitoring and strengthen our efforts to gain better insights from global databases. An integrated machine learning based model is recommended to produce a comprehensive disease model to manage the complexity of this multi-variate disease. This intelligent disease model would be used in the daily neonatal settings to help aggregate data to support clinical decision making, better capture the complexity of each patient to enrich global datasets to create bigger and better data. This paper reviews current machine learning and CAD technologies in neonatology and suggests an innovative approach for an NEC disease model.
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- 2019
16. Necrotizing Enterocolitis: Using Regulatory Science and Drug Development to Improve Outcomes
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Michael S. Caplan, Mark A. Underwood, Neena Modi, Ravi Patel, Phillip V. Gordon, Karl G. Sylvester, Steven McElroy, Paolo Manzoni, Sheila Gephart, Walter J. Chwals, Mark A. Turner, Jonathan M. Davis, Marilee Allen, Gerri Baer, Gail Besner, Jennifer Canvasser, Hala Chaaban, Robert Clay, Eamonn Connolly, Jennifer Duchon, Wakako Eklund, Joanne Ferguson, Misty Good, Cristal Grogan, Lynn Hudson, Minesh Khashu, Jae Kim, Andrea Lotze, Alexandra Mangili, Troy Markel, Laura Martin, Tokuo Miyazawa, Josef Neu, Gary Noel, Ron Portman, Simone Rosito, Ann Schwartz, Brian Scottoline, Suna Seo, Staffan Stromberg, William Treem, Erin Umberger, Tracy Warren, and Alicia West
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Enterocolitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Probiotics ,Treatment outcome ,MEDLINE ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Drug development ,Drug Development ,Enterocolitis, Necrotizing ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Necrotizing enterocolitis ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,medicine ,Humans ,Regulatory science ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Child ,Biomarkers - Published
- 2019
17. Fathers in neonatal units: Improving infant health by supporting the baby-father bond and mother-father coparenting
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Esther Abena Adama, Frances Thomson-Salo, Duncan Fisher, Minesh Khashu, Livio Provenzi, Craig F. Garfield, Flora Koliouli, Jillian Ireland, Birgitta Lindberg, Edwin van Teijlingen, Betty Nørgaard, Nancy Feeley, Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires (LISST), and École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-École Nationale Supérieure de Formation de l'Enseignement Agricole de Toulouse-Auzeville (ENSFEA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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Coparenting ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Dads ,Breastfeeding ,[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology ,Co-parenting ,Audit ,Pediatrics ,Developmental psychology ,Fathers ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Gratitude ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neonatal care ,media_common ,Service (business) ,Bonding ,Skin-to-skin ,[SHS.STAT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Methods and statistics ,Bond ,Flexibility (personality) ,3. Good health ,Happiness ,Psychology - Abstract
The Family Initiative's International Neonatal Fathers Working Group, whose members are the authors of this paper, has reviewed the literature on engaging fathers in neonatal units, with the aim of making recommendations for improving experience of fathers as well as health outcomes in neonatal practice. We believe that supporting the father-baby bond and supporting co-parenting between the mother and the father benefits the health of the baby, for example, through improved weight gain and oxygen saturation and enhanced rates of breastfeeding. We find, however, that despite much interest in engaging with parents as full partners in the care of their baby, engaging fathers remains sub-optimal. Fathers typically describe the opportunity to bond with their babies, particularly skin-to-skin care, in glowing terms of gratitude, happiness and love. These sensations are underpinned by hormonal and neurobiological changes that take place in fathers when they care for their babies, as also happens with mothers. Fathers, however, are subject to different social expectations from mothers and this shapes how they respond to the situation and how neonatal staff treats them. Fathers are more likely to be considered responsible for earning, they are often considered to be less competent at caring than mothers and they are expected to be “the strong one”, providing support to mothers but not expecting it in return. Our review ends with 12 practical recommendations for neonatal teams to focus on: (1) assess the needs of mother and father individually, (2) consider individual needs and wants in family care plans, (3) ensure complete flexibility of access to the neonatal unit for fathers, (4) gear parenting education towards co-parenting, (5) actively promote father-baby bonding, (6) be attentive to fathers hiding their stress, (7) inform fathers directly not just via the mother, (8) facilitate peer-to-peer communication for fathers, (9) differentiate and analyse by gender in service evaluations, (10) train staff to work with fathers and to support co-parenting, (11) develop a father-friendly audit tool for neonatal units, and (12) organise an international consultation to update guidelines for neonatal care, including those of UNICEF.
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- 2018
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