113 results on '"Lande, Marc B."'
Search Results
102. Neurocognitive outcomes in children with chronic kidney disease: Current findings and contemporary endeavors
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Gerson, Arlene C., primary, Butler, Robert, additional, Moxey-Mims, Marva, additional, Wentz, Alicia, additional, Shinnar, Shlomo, additional, Lande, Marc B., additional, Mendley, Susan R., additional, Warady, Bradley A., additional, Furth, Susan L., additional, and Hooper, Stephen R., additional
- Published
- 2006
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103. Membranous nephropathy associated with chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura in childhood
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Lande, Marc B., primary, Thomas, Gregory A., additional, and Houghton, Donald C., additional
- Published
- 2001
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104. Effect of grapefruit juice on cyclosporin A pharmacokinetics in pediatric renal transplant patients
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Brunner, Lane J., primary, Pai, Ki-Soo, additional, Munar, Myrna Y., additional, Lande, Marc B., additional, Olyaei, Ali J., additional, and Mowry, Jeanne A., additional
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- 2000
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105. Phosphorylation of Aquaporin-2 Does Not Alter the Membrane Water Permeability of Rat Papillary Water Channel-containing Vesicles
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Lande, Marc B., primary, Jo, Inho, additional, Zeidel, Mark L., additional, Somers, Michael, additional, and Harris, H. William, additional
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- 1996
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106. THE ROLE OF SYPHILIS SEROLOGY IN THE EVALUATION OF SUSPECTED SEXUAL ABUSE
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Lande, Marc B., primary, Richardson, Amy C., additional, and White, Kathleen C., additional
- Published
- 1992
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107. Psychosocial adjustment in children with kidney disease.
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Soliday, Elizabeth, Kool, Elizabeth, Lande, Marc B., Soliday, E, Kool, E, and Lande, M B
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PEDIATRIC nephrology ,PARENTS of chronically ill children ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,NEPHROTIC syndrome in children ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,KIDNEY transplantation ,CHILD psychology - Abstract
Objective: To examine family environment, levels of parenting stress, and child behavior problems in children with one of three kidney diseases compared to healthy children and to examine predictors of psychological distress in the full sample.Method: Parents of children with steroid sensitive nephrotic syndrome, chronic renal insufficiency, or kidney transplant (n = 41) were compared to 34 healthy children of similar demographic characteristics.Results: Mean scores on family functioning, parenting stress, and child behavior were within normal limits. Family environment variables significantly predicted child behavior and parenting stress for parents of ill and healthy children. Qualitative responses provided insight into developmentally specific stressors and intervention needs in the illness groups.Conclusions: These data indicate that long-term survivors of kidney disease function similarly to demographically matched peers and that the family environment may buffer stress caused by illness. Specific concerns raised by parents in the kidney disease groups indicate the need to appropriately assess and intervene with this understudied population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
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108. Abstract MP42: Do Adult Ambulatory BP Cut-points Predict Target Organ Damage Better Than Pediatric ABP Percentiles?
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Urbina, Elaine M, Ferguson, Michael A, Lande, Marc B, Meyers, Kevin, Rosner, Bernard, Samuels, Joshua A, and Flynn, Joseph T
- Abstract
Ambulatory hypertension (HT) is more strongly related to cardiac target organ damage (TOD) than clinic BP. Therefore, correct classification of ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) phenotype is needed to determine which patients to refer for imaging. Pediatric ABPM interpretation is based on percentiles of ABP while adult ABPM interpretation is based on static cut-points. We sought to determine which ABP classification system was the best predictor of TOD in adolescents. We measured adiposity, LV mass index (LVMI), systolic and diastolic function (strain, E/e’ ratio) in 315 adolescents (15.9 + 1.4 years, 64% white, 59% male). BP phenotype was determined by mean of 6 casual aneroid SBPs, and 24-hour SBP on ABP (Spacelabs Inc., Snoqualmie, WA) 1) by age, sex and height specific pediatric cut-points and 2) by adult ABPM cut-points (day <130, night < 110, 24-hour < 125 mmHg). We evaluated concordance in classification and prevalence of TOD with Chi square and kappa statistic for agreement. For daytime SBP, 5% of all subjects (16 of 315) reclassified from normotensive (NT) to masked hypertension (MH) and 8% (24 of 315) reclassified from white coat (WC) to HT. Results were similar for night and 24-hour ABP. Fewer NT and WC subjects had any form of TOD by adult vs pediatric cut-point (NT 32 vs 36%, WC 8 vs 13%; chi square < 0.0001, kappa 0.73). The only significant differences in cardiac TOD by ABP phenotype were found using adult ABP cut-points (LVMI higher and strain lower HT vs NT, diastolic E/e’ higher HT and MH vs NT all p <=0.05). We conclude that classification of ABP by adult cut-points is superior in identifying adolescents at risk for cardiac TOD. These findings may inform future pediatric ABP guidelines.
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- 2020
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109. EFFECT OF HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE AND ANTIHYPERTENSIVE TREATMENT ON BRAIN FUNCTIONING IN CHILDREN.
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Lande, Marc B.
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HYPERTENSION ,ANTIHYPERTENSIVE agents ,BRAIN ,JUVENILE diseases - Abstract
The article offers information on the study, "Effect of High Blood Pressure and Antihypertensive Treatment on Brain Functioning in Children." The study is sponsored by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the University of Rochester. The aim of the study is to determine whether hypertension in children and adolescents has subtle effects on learning, attention, and concentration.
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- 2008
110. Chapter 439 - Systemic Hypertension
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Lande, Marc B.
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111. Contributors
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Abramson, Jon S., Abzug, Mark J., Aiken, John J., A-kader, H. Hesham, Akdis, Cezmi A., Alderman, Harold, Alemzadeh, Ramin, Alessandrini, Evaline A., Ali, Omar, Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Anderson, Karl E., Anderson, Peter M., Anthony, Kelly K., Antoon, Alia Y., Ardoin, Stacy P., Arndt, Carola A.S., Arnon, Stephen S., Aronoff, Stephen C., Asher, David M., Asselin, Barbara L., Ater, Joann L., Atkins, Dan, Augustine, Erika F., Augustyn, Marilyn, Avner, Ellis D., Azimi, Parvin H., Bacino, Carlos A., Baldassano, Robert N., Bales, Christina, Balistreri, William F., Baltimore, Robert S., Balwani, Manisha, Baqar, Shahida, Barron, Christine E., Bass, Dorsey M., Batshaw, Mark L., Behrman, Richard E., Bell, Michael J., Belmont, John W., Benjamin, Daniel K., Jr., Bennett, Michael J., Bernstein, Daniel, Bhatia, Jatinder, Bhutta, Zulfiqar Ahmed, Biesecker, Leslie G., Birmingham, James, Blanchard, Samra S., Blanton, Ronald, Bleyer, Archie, Boamah, C.D.R. Lynelle M., Boas, Steven R., Boat, Thomas F., Bockting, Walter, Boguniewicz, Mark, Bonthius, Daniel J., Boxer, Laurence A., Brandow, Amanda M., Branski, David, Breault, David T., Buckley, Rebecca H., Budek, Cynthia Etzler, Buescher, E. Stephen, Burstein, Gale R., Bustinduy, Amaya Lopez, Cairo, Mitchell S., Camitta, Bruce M., Campbell, Angela Jean Peck, Carey, Rebecca G., Carlo, Waldemar A., Carrigan, Robert B., Caserta, Mary T., Chadwick, Ellen Gould, Chamberlain, Lisa J., Chapman, Jennifer I., Cheifetz, Ira M., Chemaitilly, Wassim, Chen, Sharon F., Chen, Yuan-Tsong, Chesney, Russell W., Chiriboga, Jennifer A., Christensen, Robert D., Chu, Andrew, Chusid, Michael J., Cieslak, Theodore J., Clark, Jeff A., Cleary, Thomas G., Clemens, John David, Cohen, Joanna S., Cohen, Mitchell B., Cohen, Pinchas, Cohen-Wolkowiez, Michael, Colbert, Robert A., Cole, F. Sessions, Cole, Joanna C.M., Colombo, John L., Cooper, Amber R., Covar, Ronina A., Cromer, Barbara, Crowe, James E., Jr., Cunningham, Natoshia Raishevich, Czinn, Steven J., Darville, Toni, Daum, Robert S., Davidson, Richard S., Davies, H. Dele, Dayan, Peter S., DeBaun, Michael R., Degaffe, Guenet H., DeMaso, David R., Denison, Mark R., Dent, Arlene E., DeSilva, Nirupama K., Desnick, Robert J., deVeber, Gabrielle, DeWitt, Esi Morgan, Dhamne, Chetan Anil, Dhawan, Anil, Dietz, Harry, III, Donoghue, Lydia J., Donohoue, Patricia A., Donovan, Mary K., Dormans, John P., Doyle, Daniel A., Doyle, Jefferson, Dreskin, Stephen C., Drummond, Denis S., Dubowitz, Howard, Dumler, J. Stephen, Duncan, Janet, Duncan, Paula M., Dyner, LauraLe, Earing, Michael G., Edgerton, Elizabeth A., Egan, Marie, Elder, Jack S., Eleoff, Sara B., Elfenbein, Dianne S., Eppes, Stephen C., Ewald, Michele Burns, Fairley, Jessica K., Feigelman, Susan, Felice, Marianne E., Felner, Eric I., Fels, Edward, Ferkol, Thomas, Finder, Jonathan D., Fiorino, Kristin N., Fleece, David M., Flynn, Patricia M., Forman, Joel A., Frank, Michael M., Freedman, Melvin H., Frei-Jones, Melissa, Friedman, Jared E., Gahagan, Sheila, Gardiner, Paula, Garibaldi, Luigi, Gauthier, Gregory M., Gedalia, Abraham, Gelmini, Matthew J., Gerber, Michael A., Gibson, K. Michael, Gibson, Mark, Gigliotti, Francis, Gilliam, Walter S., Gilsdorf, Janet R., Ginsburg, Charles M., Glascoe, Frances P., Goldmann, Donald A., Goodman, Denise M., Gorelick, Marc H., Gosselin, Gary J., Gould, Jane M., Goulet, Olivier, Granoff, Dan M., Green, Michael, Green, Thomas P., Greenbaum, Larry A., Grino, Marie Michelle, Grossman, Andrew B., Grossman, David C., Guarino, Alfredo, Hackney, Lisa R., Haddad, Gabriel G., Haddad, Joseph, Jr., Hagan, Joseph F., Jr., Halstead, Scott B., Hammerschlag, Margaret R., Hamvas, Aaron, Harris, James C., Hartman, Mary E., Haslam, David B., Hauck, Fern R., Hayden, Gregory F., Hecht, Jacqueline T., Heidemann, Sabrina M., Hendley, J. Owen, Henretig, Fred M., Heresi, Gloria P., Hershey, Andrew D., Herzog, Cynthia E., Hochberg, Jessica, Holinger, Lauren D., Hord, Jeffrey D., Horn, B. David, Horton, William A., Hosalkar, Harish S., Hosono, Hidekazu, Hotez, Peter J., Howenstine, Michelle S., Huddleston, Heather G., Huff, Vicki, Hug, Denise, Huh, Winston W., Hunt, Carl E., Hunter, Anna Klaudia, Ibeziako, Patricia, Jacobs, Richard F., Jensen, Peter, Jenson, Hal B., John, Chandy C., Johnston, Michael V., Johnston, Richard B., Jr., Jones, Bridgette L., Jones, James F., Joselow, Marsha, Kalaskar, Anupama, Kaljee, Linda, Kamat, Deepak, Kansra, Alvina R., Kaplan, Sheldon L., Katz, Emily R., Kazura, James W., Keane, Virginia, Kearns, Gregory L., Kelly, Desmond P., Kelsen, Judith, Kemper, Kathi J., Kennedy, Melissa, Kerem, Eitan, Kerschner, Joseph E., Khan, Seema, Kim, Young-Jee, King, Charles H., Kinsman, Stephen L., Kirton, Adam, Kishnani, Priya S., Kizer, Nora T., Kleiman, Martin B., Klein, Bruce L., Klein, Bruce S., Klein, Michael D., Kliegman, Robert M., Koch, William C., Kochanek, Patrick M., Kodish, Eric, Kohlhoff, Stephan A., Krane, Elliot J., Krause, Peter J., Kreipe, Richard E., Krug, Steven E., Kuttesch, John F., Jr., Kwon, Jennifer M., Lachenauer, Catherine S., Ladisch, Stephan, LaFranchi, Stephen, Lakser, Oren, Lande, Marc B., Landrigan, Philip J., Landry, Gregory L., Lane, Wendy G., LaRussa, Philip S., Lee, Brendan, Lee, Chul, Lee, K. Jane, Leeder, J. Steven, Lehman, Rebecca K., Lentze, Michael J., Lerner, Norma B., Lestrud, Steven, Leung, Donald Y.M., Liacouras, Chris A., Liewer, Susanne, Liu, Andrew H., Lo, Stanley F., Locatelli, Franco, Long, Sarah S., Lopez, Anna Lena, Lossef, Steven V., Lowry, Jennifer A., Lucco, Kerith, Lyon, G. Reid, Mahajan, Prashant V., Maheshwari, Akhil, Majzoub, Joseph A., Maqbool, Asim, Maranich, Ashley M., Marin, Mona, Marini, Joan C., Markowitz, Morri, Marks, Kevin P., Maroushek, Stacene R., Mason, Wilbert H., Mastropietro, Christopher, Matalon, Kimberlee M., Matalon, Reuben K., Mazor, Robert, McColley, Susanna A., McGovern, Margaret M., McLean, Heather S., McLeod, Rima, Melby, Peter C., Melvin, Joseph John, Merritt, Diane F., Mezoff, Ethan A., Michaels, Marian G., Miethke, Alexander G., Mikati, Mohamad A., Milgrom, Henry, Miller, E. Kathryn, Mink, Jonathan W., Mitchell, Grant A., Montgomery, Robert R., Morelli, Joseph G., Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, Moser, Hugo W., Moyer, Kathryn D., Murphy, James R., Murphy, Timothy F., Murray, Thomas S., Natale, Mindo J., Neal, William A., Ness, Jayne, Neville, Kathleen A., Nevin, Mary A., Newburger, Jane W., Newburger, Peter E., Nield, Linda S., Noah, Zehava, Nogee, Lawrence M., Norris, Robert L., Obaro, Stephen K., Obeid, Makram, Ochoa, Theresa J., O'Donnell, Katherine A., Ohls, Robin K., Okwo-Bele, Jean-Marie, Oldham, Keith T., Olitsky, Scott E., Olsson, John, Orenstein, Susan R., Orenstein, Walter A., Owens, Judith A., Packman, Charles H., Painter, Michael J., Pais, Priya, Pan, Cynthia G., Pannikar, Vijay, Pappas, Diane E., Parish, Anjali, Parks, John S., Parks, Laura A., Patterson, Maria Jevitz, Patwari, Pallavi P., Peters, Timothy R., Pickering, Larry K., Pless, Misha L., Plummer, Laura S., Porter, Craig C., Powell, Dwight A., Price, David T., Prober, Charles G., Quan, Linda, Quint, Elisabeth H., Rabinovich, C. Egla, Raffini, Leslie J., Ramirez-Montealegre, Denia, Raviola, Giuseppe, Reed, Ann M., Rekate, Harold L., Reller, Megan E., Remafedi, Gary, Reyes, Jorge D., Rezvani, Geoffrey, Rezvani, Iraj, Ritchey, A. Kim, Rivara, Frederick P., Robinson, Angela Byun, Rogg, Luise E., Roosevelt, Genie E., Rosenberg, David R., Rosenberg, Melissa Beth, Rosenblatt, David S., Roskind, Cindy Ganis, Rotar, Mary M., Rozenfeld, Ranna A., Rush, Sarah Zieber, Ryan, Colleen A., Sachdev, H.P.S., Sachdeva, Ramesh C., Sahin, Mustafa, Salata, Robert A., Salerno, Denise A., Salvana, Edsel Maurice T., Sampson, Hugh A., Sandora, Thomas J., Sandritter, Tracy, Sankar, Wudbhav N., Sarnaik, Ajit Ashok, Sarnaik, Ashok P., Sarnat, Harvey B., Sarwal, Minnie M., Saunders, Mary, Schanberg, Laura E., Schleiss, Mark R., Schor, Nina F., Schroeder, Bill J., Schum, Robert L., Schutze, Gordon E., Scott, Daryl A., Scott, J. Paul, Sectish, Theodore C., Segel, George B., Sehgal, Kriti, Seidman, Ernest G., Serwint, Janet R., Shah, Dheeraj, Shamir, Raanan, Shapiro, Bruce K., Shaw, Richard J., Shaywitz, Bennett A., Shaywitz, Sally E., Shekar, Meera, Shephard, Elena, Sherman, Philip M., Shneider, Benjamin L., Sicherer, Scott H., Sills, Richard, Simms, Mark D., Simões, Eric A.F., Slovis, Thomas L., Smith, P. Brian, Son, Mary Beth F., Sosinsky, Laura Stout, Spahn, Joseph D., Sperling, Mark A., Spicer, Robert, Spiegel, David A., Spoudeas, Helen, Spranger, Jürgen, Sreedharan, Rajasree, Sreedharan, Raman, Stafford, Shawn J., Stager, Margaret M., Stagno, Sergio, Stallings, Virginia A., Stanberry, Lawrence R., Stanley, Charles A., Stanton, Bonita F., Starke, Jeffrey R., Stass-Isern, Merrill, Stechenberg, Barbara W., Stein, Leonard D., Steinbach, William J., Stettler, Nicolas, Stoll, Barbara J., Storch, Gregory A., Strauss, Ronald G., Suchy, Frederick J., Summar, Karen, Szilagyi, Moira, Tinanoff, Norman, Todd, James K., Tompkins, Lucy S., Tower, Richard L., II, Troncone, Riccardo, Trott, Amanda A., Tubergen, David G., Turner, David A., Turner, Ronald B., Ullrich, Christina, Van Hare, George F., van Ingen, Jakko, Van Mater, Heather A., van Soolingen, Dick, Van Why, Scott K., Vandana, Pankhuree, Vanderbilt, Douglas, Vanderhoof, Jon A., Velardi, Andrea, Vichinsky, Elliott, Waggoner-Fountain, Linda A., Waguespack, Steven G., Walker, David M., Walter, Heather J., Ware, Stephanie, Watts, Kimberly Danieli, Waxman, Ian M., Weese-Mayer, Debra E., Weise, Kathryn, Weisse, Martin E., Wells, Lawrence, Wen, Jessica, Werlin, Steven L., Wessels, Michael R., Wetmore, Ralph F., Wetzel, Randall C., Wexler, Isaiah D., White, Perrin C., Williams, John V., Willoughby, Rodney E., Jr., Wilson, Samantha L., Winnie, Glenna B., Wise, Paul H., Woc-Colburn, Laila, Wolfe, Joanne, Wong, Cynthia J., Worth, Laura L., Wright, Joseph L., Wright, Peter F., Wright, Terry W., Wu, Eveline Y., Wynshaw-Boris, Anthony, Yazigi, Nada, Yogev, Ram, Yudkoff, Marc, Zage, Peter E., Zaidi, Anita K.M., Zeltzer, Lonnie K., Zile, Maija H., Zimmer, Peter, and Zuckerman, Barry
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112. Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Number of Subclinical Target Organ Injury Markers in Youth: The SHIP AHOY Study.
- Author
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Hamdani G, Urbina EM, Daniels SR, Falkner BE, Ferguson MA, Flynn JT, Hanevold CD, Ingelfinger JR, Khoury PR, Lande MB, Meyers KE, Samuels J, and Mitsnefes M
- Abstract
Background: Hypertension in adolescence is associated with subclinical target organ injury (TOI). We aimed to determine whether different blood pressure (BP) thresholds were associated with increasing number of TOI markers in healthy adolescents., Methods: 244 participants (mean age 15.5±1.8 years, 60.1% male) were studied. Participants were divided based on both systolic clinic and ambulatory BP (ABP), into low- (<75
th percentile), mid- (75th -90th percentile) and high-risk (>90th percentile) groups. TOI assessments included left ventricular mass, systolic and diastolic function, and vascular stiffness. The number of TOI markers for each participant was calculated. A multivariable general linear model was constructed to evaluate the association of different participant characteristics with higher numbers of TOI markers., Results: 47.5% of participants had at least one TOI marker: 31.2% had one, 11.9% two, 3.7% three, and 0.8% four. The number of TOI markers increased according to the BP risk groups: the percentage of participants with more than one TOI in the low-, mid-, and high groups based on clinic BP was 6.7%, 19.1%, and 21.8% (p=0.02), and based on ABP was 9.6%, 15.8%, and 32.2% (p<0.001). In a multivariable regression analysis, both clinic BP percentile and ambulatory SBP index were independently associated with the number of TOI markers. When both clinic and ABP were included in the model, only the ambulatory SBP index was significantly associated with the number of markers., Conclusion: High SBP, especially when assessed by ABPM, was associated with an increasing number of subclinical cardiovascular injury markers in adolescents.- Published
- 2024
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113. Family structure and the course of steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome.
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Soliday E and Lande MB
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Behavior, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Nephrotic Syndrome epidemiology, Parents, Recurrence, Risk Factors, Family, Nephrotic Syndrome drug therapy, Nephrotic Syndrome physiopathology, Steroids therapeutic use
- Abstract
The number of children in nontraditional families is growing. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of family structure on the course of childhood steroid-sensitive idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (SSNS). Sixteen children, 2-15 years of age, with SSNS were enrolled in the study. The effects of family structure (traditional versus nontraditional) on the number of hospitalizations and outpatient visits for the previous 2 years and disease relapses for the preceding year were evaluated. Behavior differences were assessed using the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). Of the 16 families, 9 were traditional and 7 nontraditional. Hospitalizations, outpatient visits, and behavior were not different between family groups. However, children from nontraditional homes relapsed 3 times more than children from traditional homes (P=0.003). We conclude that children with SSNS from nontraditional homes may be at risk for more relapses compared with children from traditional families. Heightened support and monitoring is necessary for these children.
- Published
- 2002
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