Academic literature on the topic 'Pediatric urology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pediatric urology":

1

Joseph, David B. "Section on Urology: Report of the Annual Meeting, San Francisco, California, 1995." Pediatrics 98, no. 1 (July 1, 1996): 108–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.98.1.108.

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The Section on Urology conducted its annual Scientific Meeting at the American Academy of Pediatrics Meeting in San Francisco, California, on October 14 through 18, 1995. Two-hundred eighty-three abstracts were submitted with 157 (55%) accepted for presentation. Eighty percent of the abstracts were contributed from the United States or Canada and 20% were received from other foreign institutions. Stuart B. Bauer, MD, from Boston, Massachusetts, presided over the meeting as chairperson of the Section on Urology. The annual John K. Lattimer Lecture was an update on pediatric renal transplantation presented by Oscar Salvatierra, Jr. MD, Professor of Surgery, Urology and Pediatrics; and Director of the Pediatric Renal Transplantation Program, Stanford University (Palo Alto, California). The American Urological Association lectureship was given by Robert L. Chevalier, MD, Professor and Vice Chairman, Chief, Division of Pediatric Nephrology of the University of Virginia (Charlottesville, Virginia). He discussed developmental renal physiology in the premature, low birth weight infant. The panel discussed urologic and gynecologic needs of the disabled female and was developed in cooperation with the North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology. The panel was chaired by Richard C. Rink, MD, from Indianapolis, Indiana and members included Dr Rink, S. Jean Emans, MD, and Mark R. Laufer, MD, from Boston, Massachusetts, and David Muram, MD, from Memphis, Tennessee. This article will summarize papers of interest to the general pediatrician. ANTENATAL HYDRONEPHROSIS Antenatal hydronephrosis continues to be a perplexing problem for the pediatric urologist. The role of fetal intervention for obstructive uropathy re mains controversial.
2

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 205, no. 6 (June 2021): 1810–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000001720.

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3

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 205, no. 5 (May 2021): 1502–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000001660.

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4

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 205, no. 4 (April 2021): 1212–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000001607.

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5

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 207, no. 3 (March 2022): 721–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000002357.

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6

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 206, no. 1 (July 2021): 146–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000001798.

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7

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 207, no. 1 (January 2022): 216–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000002267.

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8

Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 206, no. 3 (September 2021): 757–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000001905.

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9

Hamblin, Joan E., Dean G. Assimos, and R. Lawrence Kroovand. "Pediatric Urology." Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice 16, no. 4 (December 1989): 889–904. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0095-4543(21)01352-x.

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Canning, Douglas A. "Pediatric Urology." Journal of Urology 207, no. 5 (May 2022): 1140–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ju.0000000000002459.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pediatric urology":

1

Tan, Hock Lim. "The development of paediatric endoscopic surgery /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1999. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09MD/09mdt161.pdf.

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2

Roy, L. Paul. "Studies related to diseases affecting the kidney and urinary tract in children and their management." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1819.

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Publications 1-49 represent studies that I have undertaken myself or conjointly over a 34 year period to investigate a variety of issues relating to diseases of the kidney and urinary tract in children. The studies were carried out at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown when I was Clinical Superintendent from 1968 - 1970; The Department of Paediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA when I was Overseas Research Fellow of the Post Graduate Foundation in Medicine, University of Sydney, 1970 - 1972, then as Staff Physician in Nephrology at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown, 1972 - 1977, and then Head of that Department at the Hospital until 1995 and then as an Honorary Staff Specialist at that hospital. Some of the studies were done conjointly with members of the Renal Unit of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital where I hold an Honorary appointment and others conjointly with members of the Renal Unit of Prince Henry Hospital, Little Bay. I was appointed Clinical Associate Professor to the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Sydney in 1993. In 1966 paediatric nephrology was in the early phase of development as a medical subspecialty. There was no definitive textbook, the first was published in 1975 (Pediatric Nephrology, Ed. Mitchell I. Rubin. Williams and Wilkins.). In the preface to the 2nd edition of Renal Disease (Blackwell) in 1967 the editor D.A.K. Black noted that he had included a chapter on paediatric aspects which had been planned for the 1st edition in 1962 but ”it could not be arranged”. In the chapter on Renal Disease in Children the author, D.Macauly, comments that the mortality rate of acute renal failure in children was 50%. When I joined the resident staff of the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children in 1966, children with renal disease were managed by general paediatricians. There was no active program for the treatment of children with acute or chronic renal failure. A small number of kidney biopsies had been performed by Dr Trefor Morgan who, together with Dr Denis Wade, had taught me the technique while I was a resident medical officer at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in the preceding year. With the guidance and support of Dr S.E.J. Robertson and Dr C. Lee, Honorary Medical Officers, and Dr R.D.K. Reye, Head of the Department of Pathology, I began performing kidney biopsies on children at the request of the paediatrician in charge. In the same year, encouraged again by Doctors Robertson and Lee, and by J.C.M. Friend and J. Brown, I introduced peritoneal dialysis for the treatment of children with acute renal failure, a technique which I had also been taught by Dr Trefor Morgan whilst I was a resident at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Dr Robertson encouraged me to present my experience in percutaneous renal biopsy in children at the Annual Meeting of the Australian Paediatric Association in 1968 and this study became the first paper I published in relation to disease of the urinary tract in children (1). In 1970 I was granted an Overseas Research Fellowship by the Post Graduate Foundation in Medicine, University of Sydney, to enable me to undertake a fellowship in the Department of Paediatrics at the University of Minnesota. I had the great fortune in undertaking studies in the new discipline of paediatric nephrology and related research under the guidance of Dr A. F. Michael, Dr R.L.Vernier and Dr A. Fish. I acquired the techniques of immunopathology and electron microscopy. On my return to Australia I established a Department of Nephrology at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children. I introduced immunofluorescent and electron microscopic studies for the kidney biopsies that I continued to perform and, with the support of Dr R.D.K. Reye, I provided the official reports of these studies until 1990. As a result these studies became part of the histopathologic service provided by the hospital. I continue to be consulted concerning the interpretation of some electron microscopic findings in renal tissue. With the assistance of Dr J.D. Harley I set up a laboratory in the Children’s Medical Research Foundation to continue and expand the studies I had commenced during my Fellowship. Establishing a dialysis and transplant program for children with end stage renal disease (ESRD) was extremely time consuming. At that time most children with ESRD died. The program was initially established jointly with the Renal Unit at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in 1972 and eventually dialysis facilities were established at the Children’s Hospital using predominantly peritoneal dialysis. By 1978 the existence of the Unit was well known in the general community and articles appeared in the press. One prompted the late Sir Lorimer Dods, the first Professor of Paediatrics in Australia to write to me congratulating me on what I had achieved. He remarked “I have just read with special interest Shaun’s review in the SMH of some of your recent achievements in the field of renal failure in infancy and childhood and want to offer you my personal congratulations on all that you have achieved and are achieving in this area of paediatrics which, in my little world of yesterday, meant nothing more than progressive and unrelenting fatal illness”. Taking part in the development of a relatively new discipline led me to study a number of areas. I encouraged trainees to write reports concerning clinical observations and eventually I was joined by Fellows whom I encouraged and supported to study a number of different areas to ensure that children were being cared for in an environment of strong and open enquiry. This led to studies on investigations of chronic renal failure which Dr Elisabeth Hodson pursued and studies on urinary tract infection in small children for which Dr Jonathon Craig was awarded a PhD. As I had been a contributor and co-author in a number of these studies they have been included in my list of publications. As a result of this diversity I have listed the publications in 9 sections. The overall theme is to study diseases of the renal tract in children and treatments used to understand the processes and ensure the most effective treatment. Some published abstracts of papers presented at scientific meetings have been included to clarify invitations I received to prepare reviews and chapters on various subjects and my involvement in some conjoint studies. I was author or coauthor of several book chapters, reviews, editorials and certain published studies to which I was invited to contribute as a result of my primary studies and these I have included as “Derivative References”numbered 50-76.
3

Roy, L. Paul. "Studies related to diseases affecting the kidney and urinary tract in children and their management." University of Sydney, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1819.

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Doctor of Medicine
Publications 1-49 represent studies that I have undertaken myself or conjointly over a 34 year period to investigate a variety of issues relating to diseases of the kidney and urinary tract in children. The studies were carried out at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown when I was Clinical Superintendent from 1968 - 1970; The Department of Paediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA when I was Overseas Research Fellow of the Post Graduate Foundation in Medicine, University of Sydney, 1970 - 1972, then as Staff Physician in Nephrology at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown, 1972 - 1977, and then Head of that Department at the Hospital until 1995 and then as an Honorary Staff Specialist at that hospital. Some of the studies were done conjointly with members of the Renal Unit of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital where I hold an Honorary appointment and others conjointly with members of the Renal Unit of Prince Henry Hospital, Little Bay. I was appointed Clinical Associate Professor to the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Sydney in 1993. In 1966 paediatric nephrology was in the early phase of development as a medical subspecialty. There was no definitive textbook, the first was published in 1975 (Pediatric Nephrology, Ed. Mitchell I. Rubin. Williams and Wilkins.). In the preface to the 2nd edition of Renal Disease (Blackwell) in 1967 the editor D.A.K. Black noted that he had included a chapter on paediatric aspects which had been planned for the 1st edition in 1962 but ”it could not be arranged”. In the chapter on Renal Disease in Children the author, D.Macauly, comments that the mortality rate of acute renal failure in children was 50%. When I joined the resident staff of the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children in 1966, children with renal disease were managed by general paediatricians. There was no active program for the treatment of children with acute or chronic renal failure. A small number of kidney biopsies had been performed by Dr Trefor Morgan who, together with Dr Denis Wade, had taught me the technique while I was a resident medical officer at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in the preceding year. With the guidance and support of Dr S.E.J. Robertson and Dr C. Lee, Honorary Medical Officers, and Dr R.D.K. Reye, Head of the Department of Pathology, I began performing kidney biopsies on children at the request of the paediatrician in charge. In the same year, encouraged again by Doctors Robertson and Lee, and by J.C.M. Friend and J. Brown, I introduced peritoneal dialysis for the treatment of children with acute renal failure, a technique which I had also been taught by Dr Trefor Morgan whilst I was a resident at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Dr Robertson encouraged me to present my experience in percutaneous renal biopsy in children at the Annual Meeting of the Australian Paediatric Association in 1968 and this study became the first paper I published in relation to disease of the urinary tract in children (1). In 1970 I was granted an Overseas Research Fellowship by the Post Graduate Foundation in Medicine, University of Sydney, to enable me to undertake a fellowship in the Department of Paediatrics at the University of Minnesota. I had the great fortune in undertaking studies in the new discipline of paediatric nephrology and related research under the guidance of Dr A. F. Michael, Dr R.L.Vernier and Dr A. Fish. I acquired the techniques of immunopathology and electron microscopy. On my return to Australia I established a Department of Nephrology at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children. I introduced immunofluorescent and electron microscopic studies for the kidney biopsies that I continued to perform and, with the support of Dr R.D.K. Reye, I provided the official reports of these studies until 1990. As a result these studies became part of the histopathologic service provided by the hospital. I continue to be consulted concerning the interpretation of some electron microscopic findings in renal tissue. With the assistance of Dr J.D. Harley I set up a laboratory in the Children’s Medical Research Foundation to continue and expand the studies I had commenced during my Fellowship. Establishing a dialysis and transplant program for children with end stage renal disease (ESRD) was extremely time consuming. At that time most children with ESRD died. The program was initially established jointly with the Renal Unit at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in 1972 and eventually dialysis facilities were established at the Children’s Hospital using predominantly peritoneal dialysis. By 1978 the existence of the Unit was well known in the general community and articles appeared in the press. One prompted the late Sir Lorimer Dods, the first Professor of Paediatrics in Australia to write to me congratulating me on what I had achieved. He remarked “I have just read with special interest Shaun’s review in the SMH of some of your recent achievements in the field of renal failure in infancy and childhood and want to offer you my personal congratulations on all that you have achieved and are achieving in this area of paediatrics which, in my little world of yesterday, meant nothing more than progressive and unrelenting fatal illness”. Taking part in the development of a relatively new discipline led me to study a number of areas. I encouraged trainees to write reports concerning clinical observations and eventually I was joined by Fellows whom I encouraged and supported to study a number of different areas to ensure that children were being cared for in an environment of strong and open enquiry. This led to studies on investigations of chronic renal failure which Dr Elisabeth Hodson pursued and studies on urinary tract infection in small children for which Dr Jonathon Craig was awarded a PhD. As I had been a contributor and co-author in a number of these studies they have been included in my list of publications. As a result of this diversity I have listed the publications in 9 sections. The overall theme is to study diseases of the renal tract in children and treatments used to understand the processes and ensure the most effective treatment. Some published abstracts of papers presented at scientific meetings have been included to clarify invitations I received to prepare reviews and chapters on various subjects and my involvement in some conjoint studies. I was author or coauthor of several book chapters, reviews, editorials and certain published studies to which I was invited to contribute as a result of my primary studies and these I have included as “Derivative References”numbered 50-76.
4

Aksenov, Alexey V. [Verfasser]. "Extended salvage pelvic lymph nodes dissection in patients with recurrent prostate cancer. Data base of the Department of urology and pediatric urology, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel / Alexey V. Aksenov." Kiel : Universitätsbibliothek Kiel, 2015. http://d-nb.info/107184329X/34.

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5

Rodrigues, Léia Rossetto [UNESP]. "Avaliação da função tubular do prematuro na primeira semana da vida pela relação urinária sódio/creatina." Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/104684.

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Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:33:27Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2006-11-17Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T19:44:14Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 rodrigues_lr_dr_botfm_prot.pdf: 882835 bytes, checksum: 7757c6d40bd4c565d5a3c529c72d925d (MD5)
A função tubular dos prematuros é classicamente avaliada pela FeNa, que requer dosagens séricas e urinárias. Seu uso seriado acarreta espoliação sangüínea, assim o interesse em um método simplificado, realizado em uma amostra urinária (Na/CrU). Objetivos:determinar os valores da Na/CrU em prematuros na primeira semana de vida correlacionando-os com a FeNa; analisar NaJCrU em função da idade gestacional, pós-natal e do uso de aminoglicosídeos. Métodos: Estudo prospectivo com 58 prematuros nascidos na Maternidade do HC da FMB-UNESP no período de julho a dezembro de 2001, divididos em 2 grupos(G n=31 e G n=27). Foram dosados sódio (mEq/L) e creatinina (mg/dL) séricos e urinários (pmol/L) e calculadas a FeNa e Na/CrU, em quatro momentos:M M M e M Para análise estatística utilizou-se análise de variância univariada para medidas repetidas (ANOVA-RM), teste t ou Mann-Whitney, regressão linear múltipla e correlação de Pearson, com significância em 5%. Resultados: Os valores médios da FeNa em G situaram-se entre 1.52 e 1.86, sem diferença entre os momentos, e mantiveram-se abaixo de 1 em G A NaJCrU variou de 0,50 a 0,70 em G não diferindo entre os momentos, enquanto que em G variou entre 0,23 e 0,49. Em G o uso de aminoglicosídeo acarretou aumento da FeNa e da NaCrU a partir de 72h, enquanto que em G isso não ocorreu. Os coeficientes de correlação de Pearson variaram de 0,64 a 0,96 em G e entre 0,86 - 0,95 em G Conclusão: O comportamento da Na/CrU foi semelhante ao da FeNa. Nos prematuros menores que 34 semanas os valores mantiveram- se estáveis na primeira semana de vida e foram maiores com o uso de aminoglicosídeos. Na/CrU pode ser utilizada como método auxiliar para avaliação da função tubular em prematuros.
To determine the values of Na/CrU in premature infants in the first week of life and to correlate them with the values of FeNa and to investigate the influence of gestational age, postnatal age and the use of aminoglycosides on the values of NaJCrU. Methods: This prospective study included 58 preterm infants bom at the Matemity of Botucatu Medical School from July to December, 2001. The infants were divided into two groups according to gestational age: G (n=31) < 34 weeks and G (n=27) 34 weeks gestational age. Serum and urinary sodium and creatinine were determined in four moments: M (36h), M (72h), M (96h) and M (day 7). FeNa (%) and Na/CrU (mg/mg) were calculated in each moment for the infants. Statistical analysis were performed using chi-square test, analysis of variance (ANOVA) with repeated measurements and multiple comparisons, t-test or Mann Whitney, Multiple Linear Regression and Pearson's correlation test; p-values <0,05 were considered significant. Results: In G the FeNa ranged from 1.52 to 1.86 without difference between the moments and in G the values remained bellow of 1%. The Na/CrU ranged from 0,50 to 0,70 in G without difference between the moments, while in G the values ranged from 0,23 to... (Complete abstract, click electronic access below)
6

Лобода, Андрій Миколайович, Андрей Николаевич Лобода, Andrii Mykolaiovych Loboda, Т. О. Лобода, and В. Д. Ставчий. "Ефективність застосування лазеропунктури в комплексному лікуванні енурезу у дітей." Thesis, Видавництво СумДУ, 2004. http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/8973.

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7

Rodrigues, Léia Rossetto. "Avaliação da função tubular do prematuro na primeira semana da vida pela relação urinária sódio/creatina /." Botucatu : [s.n.], 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/104684.

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Orientador: Ligia Maria Suppo de Souza Rugolo
Banca: Ligia Maria Suppo de Souza Rugolo
Banca: Dinah Borges de Almeida
Banca: Márcia Camegaçava Riyuzo
Banca: João Tomas de Abreu Carvalhaes
Banca: Sérgio Tadeu Martins Marba
Resumo: A função tubular dos prematuros é classicamente avaliada pela FeNa, que requer dosagens séricas e urinárias. Seu uso seriado acarreta espoliação sangüínea, assim o interesse em um método simplificado, realizado em uma amostra urinária (Na/CrU). Objetivos:determinar os valores da Na/CrU em prematuros na primeira semana de vida correlacionando-os com a FeNa; analisar NaJCrU em função da idade gestacional, pós-natal e do uso de aminoglicosídeos. Métodos: Estudo prospectivo com 58 prematuros nascidos na Maternidade do HC da FMB-UNESP no período de julho a dezembro de 2001, divididos em 2 grupos(G n=31 e G n=27). Foram dosados sódio (mEq/L) e creatinina (mg/dL) séricos e urinários (pmol/L) e calculadas a FeNa e Na/CrU, em quatro momentos:M M M e M Para análise estatística utilizou-se análise de variância univariada para medidas repetidas (ANOVA-RM), teste t ou Mann-Whitney, regressão linear múltipla e correlação de Pearson, com significância em 5%. Resultados: Os valores médios da FeNa em G situaram-se entre 1.52 e 1.86, sem diferença entre os momentos, e mantiveram-se abaixo de 1 em G A NaJCrU variou de 0,50 a 0,70 em G não diferindo entre os momentos, enquanto que em G variou entre 0,23 e 0,49. Em G o uso de aminoglicosídeo acarretou aumento da FeNa e da NaCrU a partir de 72h, enquanto que em G isso não ocorreu. Os coeficientes de correlação de Pearson variaram de 0,64 a 0,96 em G e entre 0,86 - 0,95 em G Conclusão: O comportamento da Na/CrU foi semelhante ao da FeNa. Nos prematuros menores que 34 semanas os valores mantiveram- se estáveis na primeira semana de vida e foram maiores com o uso de aminoglicosídeos. Na/CrU pode ser utilizada como método auxiliar para avaliação da função tubular em prematuros.
Abstract: To determine the values of Na/CrU in premature infants in the first week of life and to correlate them with the values of FeNa and to investigate the influence of gestational age, postnatal age and the use of aminoglycosides on the values of NaJCrU. Methods: This prospective study included 58 preterm infants bom at the Matemity of Botucatu Medical School from July to December, 2001. The infants were divided into two groups according to gestational age: G (n=31) < 34 weeks and G (n=27) 34 weeks gestational age. Serum and urinary sodium and creatinine were determined in four moments: M (36h), M (72h), M (96h) and M (day 7). FeNa (%) and Na/CrU (mg/mg) were calculated in each moment for the infants. Statistical analysis were performed using chi-square test, analysis of variance (ANOVA) with repeated measurements and multiple comparisons, t-test or Mann Whitney, Multiple Linear Regression and Pearson's correlation test; p-values <0,05 were considered significant. Results: In G the FeNa ranged from 1.52 to 1.86 without difference between the moments and in G the values remained bellow of 1%. The Na/CrU ranged from 0,50 to 0,70 in G without difference between the moments, while in G the values ranged from 0,23 to... (Complete abstract, click electronic access below)
Doutor
8

Simas, Ana Luísa Oliveira de. "Training report : clinical studies coordination in oncology." Master's thesis, Universidade de Aveiro, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10773/12966.

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Mestrado em Biomedicina Farmacêutica
This report describes a curricular training experience in Study Coordination, developed at Unidade de Investigação Clínica (Clinical Research Unit) of Instituto Português de Oncologia do Porto Francisco Gentil, E.P.E. (Portuguese Oncology Institute-Porto), in the ambit of the Master in Pharmaceutical Medicine at University of Aveiro. This report describes the State of the Art in Pharmaceutical R&D Process in Europe, especially in Oncology, emphasising its current trends and stressing specificities of special and vulnerable populations, in the scope of the traineeship. The study coordination activities were essentially performed in the Pathology Clinics of Lung, Urology, Gynaecology, Paediatrics, and the Intensive Care Service. The activities developed had the main goal of acquiring experience in oncology clinical trials, while reinforcing the knowledge from my academic background. These activities included screening and randomisation of patients, preparation and processing of study visits, data entry and query resolution, and documents management, among other activities transversal to the 15 clinical trials, accompanied in the traineeship. Globally, the traineeship allowed a good overview of the activities involved in the conduction of clinical trials in a hospital, and a worthy introduction to the marketplace. I strengthened the knowledge acquired from my academic background. I developed competences and skills at the professional and personal level, such as dealing with unforeseen situations, and developed strategies to overcome challenges. I sharpened my vision of careers in clinical research, and hope to continue addressing new challenges in this area.
9

Lopez, Manuel. "L'approche mini-invasive en chirurgie pédiatrique : de la révolution à l'évolution d'une nouvelle approche chirurgicale." Thesis, Saint-Etienne, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015STET017T/document.

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Dans ce travail, le concept d'approche mini-invasive est décrit dans sa globalité. Pour les chirurgiens pédiatres le concept a été analysé de manière systématique en répondant aux problématiques cliniques des patients dans tous les champs d'application. La somme de ce travail a le tour de force de répondre à toutes les grandes questions qui ont été posées lors des premiers temps de la coelioscopie pédiatrique, mais aussi de répondre, pour les plus récents, à des interrogations concernant les perspectives. Cette Thèse a donc pour objectif de développer l'évolution de la vidéochirurgie chez l'enfant et de mettre en valeur certaines applications que nous avons travaillées dans les différents domaines de la coelioscopie pédiatrique : tout d'abord dans la tolérance et la sécurité de la vidéochirurgie; puis ses applications en Chirurgie Digestive et Thoracique, en Rétropéritonéoscopie, en Oncologie et en Urologie ; mais aussi ses applications dans des techniques avancées de chirurgie néonatale ainsi que l'introduction de techniques encore moins invasives comme la chirurgie assistée par aimant ou des techniques non opératoires utilisées dans le traitement de certaines malformations de la paroi thoracique, en démontrant leurs bénéfices et leur efficacité
In this work, the concept of minimal invasive approach is described in its entirety. For pediatric surgeons, the concept was analyzed systematically meeting the clinical problems of patients in all fields of application. The result of this work is to answer all the big questions that were asked during the early days of the pediatric laparoscopy but also to respond to the latest questions about the perspectives. The goal of this thesis is to describe the evolution of laparoscopy in pediatric, and to report some applications. We have worked in several fields such as: Tolerance and safety of laparoscopy in advanced neonatal surgery, and its applications in Digestive Surgery, Thoracic, Retroperitoneoscopy, Oncology and Urology. This also introduces the use of less invasive techniques, such as magnet-assisted surgery of non-operative techniques in the correction on chest wall deformities, demonstrating their efficacity and efficiency
10

Dewan, P. A. (Patrick Arthur). "Studies in paediatric urology." 2000. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09MSM/09msmd515.pdf.

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Includes list of publications and presentations by the author. Bibliography: leaves 166-194. A collection of laboratory and clinical studies in paediatric urology, including prospective and retrospective patient series, case reports of rare conditions. Also, technical innovations are documented and reviewed in light of international experience.

Books on the topic "Pediatric urology":

1

Mouriquand, Pierre D. E., John P. Gearhart, and Richard C. Rink. Pediatric urology. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co., 2001.

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2

P, Gearhart John, ed. Pediatric urology. Totowa, N.J: Humana Press, 2003.

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3

Gearhart, John P. Pediatric Urology. New Jersey: Humana Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1385/1592594212.

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Poppas, Dix P., and Alan B. Retik, eds. Pediatric Urology. London: Current Medicine Group, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1089-1.

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Snodgrass, Warren T., ed. Pediatric Urology. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6910-0.

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Godbole, Prasad P., Martin A. Koyle, and Duncan T. Wilcox, eds. Pediatric Urology. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118473382.

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Wilcox, Duncan T., Prasad P. Godbole, and Martin A. Koyle, eds. Pediatric Urology. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444304183.

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Lima, Mario, and Gianantonio Manzoni, eds. Pediatric Urology. Milano: Springer Milan, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-88-470-5693-0.

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Palmer, Jeffrey S., ed. Pediatric Urology. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-420-3.

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Barry, O'Donnell, and Koff Stephen A, eds. Pediatric urology. 3rd ed. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pediatric urology":

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Sofer, Laurel, and Emilie K. Johnson. "Pediatric urology." In Sanfilippo's Textbook of Pediatric and Adolescent GynecologySecond Edition, 122–36. Second edition. | Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, [2019] | Preceded by Clinical pediatric and adolescent gynecology /edited by Joseph S. Sanfilippo ... [et al.]. c2009.: CRC Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315147659-11.

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Lee, Richard S., and David A. Diamond. "Perinatal Urology." In Pediatric Nephrology, 95–106. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76341-3_4.

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Woodhouse, Christopher. "Adolescent Urology." In Pediatric Urology, 309–24. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-420-3_17.

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Kaplan, George W., and Irene M. McAleer. "Office Urology." In Pediatric Urology, 1–10. London: Current Medicine Group, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1089-1_1.

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Nguyen, Hiep T., and Barry A. Kogan. "Prenatal Urology." In Pediatric Urology, 11–22. London: Current Medicine Group, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-1089-1_2.

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Chen, Catherine J., and Micah A. Jacobs. "Urology." In Pediatric Board Study Guide, 841–53. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-21267-4_25.

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Shergill, Iqbal S., Manit Arya, and Imran Mushtaq. "Robotic Pediatric Urology." In Urologic Robotic Surgery in Clinical Practice, 149–57. London: Springer London, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84800-243-2_7.

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Ross, Jonathan H. "Pediatric Potpourri." In Essential Urology, 17–32. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-59259-737-6_2.

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Ross, Jonathan H. "Pediatric Potpourri." In Essential Urology, 1–14. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-62703-092-2_1.

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Kaefer, Martin. "Antenatal Urology." In Practical Pediatric Urology, 39–54. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54020-3_5.

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Reports on the topic "Pediatric urology":

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Travis, Amanda, Margaret Harvey, and Michelle Rickard. Adverse Childhood Experiences and Urinary Incontinence in Elementary School Aged Children. University of Tennessee Health Science Center, October 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21007/con.dnp.2021.0012.

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Abstract:
Purpose/Background: Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) have an impact on health throughout the lifespan (Filletti et al., 1999; Hughes et al., 2017). These experiences range from physical and mental abuse, substance abuse in the home, parental separation or loss, financial instability, acute illness or injury, witnessing violence in the home or community, and incarceration of family members (Hughes et al., 2017). Understanding and screening for ACEs in children with urinary incontinence can help practitioners identify psychological stress as a potentially modifiable risk factor. Methods: A 5-month chart review was performed identifying English speaking patients ages 6-11 years presenting to the outpatient urology office for an initial visit with a primary diagnosis of urinary incontinence. Charts were reviewed for documentation of individual or family risk factors for ACEs exposure, community risk factors for ACEs exposures, and records where no related documentation was included. Results: For the thirty-nine patients identified, no community risk factors were noted in the charts. Seventy-nine percent of patients had one or more individual or family risk factors documented. Implications for Nursing Practice This chart review indicates that a significant percentage of pediatric, school-aged patients presenting with urinary incontinence have exposure to ACEs. A formal assessment for ACEs at the time of initial presentation would be helpful to identify those at highest risk. References: Felitti VJ, Anda RF, Nordenberg D, Williamson DF, Spitz AM, Edwards V, Koss MP, Marks JS. Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults: the adverse childhood experiences (ACE) study. Am J Prev Med. 1998;14:245–258 Hughes, K., Bellis, M.A., Hardcastle, K.A., Sethi, D., Butchart, D., Mikton, C., Jones, L., Dunne, M.P. (2017) The effect of multiple adverse childhood experiences on health: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Public Health, 2(8): e356–e366. Published online 2017 Jul 31.doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(17)30118-4 Lai, H., Gardner, V., Vetter, J., & Andriole, G. L. (2015). Correlation between psychological stress levels and the severity of overactive bladder symptoms. BMC urology, 15, 14. doi:10.1186/s12894-015-0009-6

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