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Dive into the research topics where Cody S. Olsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Cody S. Olsen.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011

Factors Associated With Cervical Spine Injury in Children After Blunt Trauma

Julie C. Leonard; Nathan Kuppermann; Cody S. Olsen; Lynn Babcock-Cimpello; Kathleen M. Brown; Prashant Mahajan; Kathleen Adelgais; Jennifer Anders; Dominic Borgialli; Aaron Donoghue; John D. Hoyle; Emily Kim; Jeffrey R. Leonard; Kathleen Lillis; Lise E. Nigrovic; Elizabeth C. Powell; Greg Rebella; Scott D. Reeves; Alexander J. Rogers; Curt Stankovic; Getachew Teshome; David M. Jaffe

STUDY OBJECTIVE Cervical spine injuries in children are rare. However, immobilization and imaging for potential cervical spine injury after trauma are common and are associated with adverse effects. Risk factors for cervical spine injury have been developed to safely limit immobilization and radiography in adults, but not in children. The purpose of our study is to identify risk factors associated with cervical spine injury in children after blunt trauma. METHODS We conducted a case-control study of children younger than 16 years, presenting after blunt trauma, and who received cervical spine radiographs at 17 hospitals in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) between January 2000 and December 2004. Cases were children with cervical spine injury. We created 3 control groups of children free of cervical spine injury: (1) random controls, (2) age and mechanism of injury-matched controls, and (3) for cases receiving out-of-hospital emergency medical services (EMS), age-matched controls who also received EMS care. We abstracted data from 3 sources: PECARN hospital, referring hospital, and out-of-hospital patient records. We performed multiple logistic regression analyses to identify predictors of cervical spine injury and calculated the models sensitivity and specificity. RESULTS We reviewed 540 records of children with cervical spine injury and 1,060, 1,012, and 702 random, mechanism of injury, and EMS controls, respectively. In the analysis using random controls, we identified 8 factors associated with cervical spine injury: altered mental status, focal neurologic findings, neck pain, torticollis, substantial torso injury, conditions predisposing to cervical spine injury, diving, and high-risk motor vehicle crash. Having 1 or more factors was 98% (95% confidence interval 96% to 99%) sensitive and 26% (95% confidence interval 23% to 29%) specific for cervical spine injury. We identified similar risk factors in the other analyses. CONCLUSION We identified an 8-variable model for cervical spine injury in children after blunt trauma that warrants prospective refinement and validation.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2016

Gut microbiota composition and relapse risk in pediatric MS: A pilot study.

Helen Tremlett; Douglas Fadrosh; Ali A. Faruqi; Janace Hart; Shelly Roalstad; Jennifer Graves; Susan V. Lynch; Emmanuelle Waubant; Greg Aaen; Anita Belman; Leslie Benson; Charlie Casper; Tanuja Chitnis; Mark Gorman; Yolanda Harris; Lauren B. Krupp; Tim Lotze; Sabina Lulu; Jayne Ness; Cody S. Olsen; Erik Roan; Moses Rodriguez; John Rose; Timothy Simmons; Jan Mendelt Tillema; Wendy Weber; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman

We explored the association between baseline gut microbiota (16S rRNA biomarker sequencing of stool samples) in 17 relapsing-remitting pediatric MS cases and risk of relapse over a mean 19.8 months follow-up. From the Kaplan-Meier curve, 25% relapsed within an estimated 166 days from baseline. A shorter time to relapse was associated with Fusobacteria depletion (p=0.001 log-rank test), expansion of the Firmicutes (p=0.003), and presence of the Archaea Euryarchaeota (p=0.037). After covariate adjustments for age and immunomodulatory drug exposure, only absence (vs. presence) of Fusobacteria was associated with relapse risk (hazard ratio=3.2 (95% CI: 1.2-9.0), p=0.024). Further investigation is warranted. Findings could offer new targets to alter the MS disease course.


Pediatrics | 2014

Cervical spine injury patterns in children

Jeffrey R. Leonard; David M. Jaffe; Nathan Kuppermann; Cody S. Olsen; Julie C. Leonard; Lise E. Nigrovic; Elizabeth C. Powell; Curt Stankovic; Prashant Mahajan; Aaron Donoghue; Kathleen M. Brown; Scott D. Reeves; John D. Hoyle; Dominic Borgialli; Jennifer Anders; Greg Rebella; Kathleen Adelgais; Kathleen Lillis; Emily Kim; Getachew Teshome; Alexander J. Rogers; Lynn Babcock; Richard Holubkov; J. Michael Dean

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Pediatric cervical spine injuries (CSIs) are rare and differ from adult CSIs. Our objective was to describe CSIs in a large, representative cohort of children. METHODS: We conducted a 5-year retrospective review of children <16 years old with CSIs at 17 Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network hospitals. Investigators reviewed imaging reports and consultations to assign CSI type. We described cohort characteristics using means and frequencies and used Fisher’s exact test to compare differences between 3 age groups: <2 years, 2 to 7 years, and 8 to 15 years. We used logistic regression to explore the relationship between injury level and age and mechanism of injury and between neurologic outcome and cord involvement, injury level, age, and comorbid injuries. RESULTS: A total of 540 children with CSIs were included in the study. CSI level was associated with both age and mechanism of injury. For children <2 and 2 to 7 years old, motor vehicle crash (MVC) was the most common injury mechanism (56%, 37%). Children in these age groups more commonly injured the axial (occiput–C2) region (74%, 78%). In children 8 to 15 years old, sports accounted for as many injuries as MVCs (23%, 23%), and 53% of injuries were subaxial (C3–7). CSIs often necessitated surgical intervention (axial, 39%; subaxial, 30%) and often resulted in neurologic deficits (21%) and death (7%). Neurologic outcome was associated with cord involvement, injury level, age, and comorbid injuries. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated a high degree of variability of CSI patterns, treatments and outcomes in children. The rarity, variation, and morbidity of pediatric CSIs make prompt recognition and treatment critical.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2013

Spinal cord injury without radiologic abnormality in children imaged with magnetic resonance imaging

Prashant Mahajan; David M. Jaffe; Cody S. Olsen; Jeffrey R. Leonard; Lise E. Nigrovic; Alexander J. Rogers; Nathan Kuppermann; Julie C. Leonard

BACKGROUND This study aimed to compare children diagnosed with cervical spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality (SCIWORA) relative to whether there is evidence of cervical spinal cord abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS We conducted a planned subanalysis of a cohort of children younger than 16 years with blunt cervical spine injury presenting to Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network centers from January 2000 to December 2004 who underwent cervical MRI and did not have bony or ligamentous injury identified on neuroimaging. We defined SCIWORA with normal MRI finding as children with clinical evidence of cervical cord injury and a normal MRI finding and compared them with children with SCIWORA who had cervical cord signal changes on MRI (abnormal MRI finding). RESULTS Of the children diagnosed with cervical spine injury, 55% (297 of 540) were imaged with MRI; 69 had no bony or ligamentous injuries and were diagnosed with SCIWORA by clinical evaluation; 54 (78%) had normal MRI finding, and 15 (22%) had cervical cord signal changes on MRI (abnormal MRI finding). Children with abnormal MRI findings were more likely to receive operative stabilization (0% normal MRI finding vs. 20% abnormal MRI finding) and have persistent neurologic deficits at initial hospital discharge (6% normal MRI finding vs. 67% abnormal MRI finding). CONCLUSION Children diagnosed with SCIWORA but with normal MRI finding in our cohort presented differently and had substantially more favorable clinical outcomes than those with cervical cord abnormalities on MRI. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Epidemiologic study, level III.


Neurology | 2016

Clinical features of neuromyelitis optica in children US Network of Pediatric MS Centers report

Tanuja Chitnis; Jayne Ness; Lauren Krupp; Emmanuelle Waubant; Tyler Hunt; Cody S. Olsen; Moses Rodriguez; Tim Lotze; Mark Gorman; Leslie Benson; Anita Belman; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; Greg Aaen; Jennifer Graves; Marc C. Patterson; John Rose; T. Charles Casper

Objective: To compare clinical features of pediatric neuromyelitis optica (NMO) to other pediatric demyelinating diseases. Methods: Review of a prospective multicenter database on children with demyelinating diseases. Case summaries documenting clinical and laboratory features were reviewed by an adjudication panel. Diagnoses were assigned in the following categories: multiple sclerosis (MS), acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, NMO, and recurrent demyelinating disease not otherwise specified. Results: Thirty-eight cases of NMO were identified by review panel, 97% of which met the revised International Panel on NMO Diagnosis NMO-SD 2014 criteria, but only 49% met 2006 Wingerchuk criteria. Serum or CSF NMO immunoglobulin G (IgG) was positive in 65% of NMO cases that were tested; however, some patients became seropositive more than 3 years after onset despite serial testing. No patient had positive CSF NMO IgG and negative serum NMO IgG in contemporaneous samples. Other than race (p = 0.02) and borderline findings for sex (p = 0.07), NMO IgG seropositive patients did not differ in demographic, clinical, or laboratory features from seronegatives. Visual, motor, and constitutional symptoms (including vomiting, fever, and seizures) were the most common presenting features of NMO. Initiation of disease-modifying treatment was delayed in NMO vs MS. Two years after onset, patients with NMO had higher attack rates, greater disability accrual measured by overall Expanded Disability Status Scale score, and visual scores than did patients with MS. Conclusion: The new criteria for NMO spectrum disorders apply well to the pediatric setting, and given significant delay in treatment of NMO compared to pediatric MS and worse short-term outcomes, it is imperative to apply these to improve access to treatment.


Emergency Medicine Journal | 2013

Reported medication events in a paediatric emergency research network: sharing to improve patient safety

Kathy N. Shaw; Kathleen Lillis; Richard M. Ruddy; Prashant Mahajan; Richard Lichenstein; Cody S. Olsen; James M. Chamberlain

Objective Medication errors are an important cause of preventable morbidity, especially in children in emergency department (ED) settings. Internal use of voluntary incident reporting (IR) is common within hospitals, with little external reporting or sharing of this information across institutions. We describe the analysis of paediatric medication events (ME) reported in 18 EDs in a paediatric research network in 2007–2008. Methods Confidential, deidentified incident reports (IRs) were collected, and MEs were independently categorised by two investigators. Discordant responses were resolved by consensus. Results MEs (597) accounted for 19% of all IRs, with reporting rates varying 25-fold across sites. Anti-infective agents were the most commonly reported, followed by analgesics, intravenous fluids and respiratory medicines. Of the 597 MEs, 94% were medication errors and 6% adverse reactions; further analyses are reported for medication errors. Incorrect medication doses were related to incorrect weight (20%), duplicate doses (21%), and miscalculation (22%). Look-alike/sound-alike MEs were 36% of incorrect medications. Human factors contributed in 85% of reports: failure to follow established procedures (41%), calculation (13%) or judgment (12%) errors, and communication failures (20%). Outcomes were: no deaths or permanent disability, 13% patient harm, 47% reached patient (no harm), 30% near miss or unsafe conditions, and 9% unknown. Conclusions ME reporting by the system revealed valuable data across sites on medication categories and potential human factors. Harm was infrequently reported. Our analyses identify trends and latent systems issues, suggesting areas for future interventions to reduce paediatric ED medication errors.


Pediatrics | 2016

Characteristics of Children and Adolescents With Multiple Sclerosis.

Anita Belman; Lauren B. Krupp; Cody S. Olsen; John Rose; Greg Aaen; Leslie Benson; Tanuja Chitnis; Mark P. Gorman; Jennifer Graves; Yolander Harris; Tim Lotze; Jayne Ness; Moses Rodriguez; Jan-Mendelt Tillema; Emmanuelle Waubant; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; T. Charles Casper

OBJECTIVES: To describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS) in the United States. METHODS: This prospective observational study included children and adolescents with MS. Cases were evaluated across 9 geographically diverse sites as part of the US Network of Pediatric MS Centers. RESULTS: A total of 490 children and adolescents (324 girls, 166 boys) were enrolled; 28% developed symptoms before 12 years of age. The proportion of girls increased with age from 58% (<12 years) to 70% (≥12 years). Race and ethnicity as self-identified were: white, 67%; African American, 21%; and non-Hispanic, 70%. Most (94%) of the cases were born in the United States, and 39% had 1 or both foreign-born parents. Fifty-five percent of cases had a monofocal presentation; 31% had a prodrome (most frequently infectious), most often among those aged <12 years (P < .001). Children aged <12 years presented more commonly with encephalopathy and coordination problems (P < .001). Sensory symptoms were more frequently reported by older children (ie, those aged ≥12 years) (P < .001); 78% of girls had MS onset postmenarche. The initial Expanded Disability Status Scale score for the group was <3.0, and the annualized relapse rate was 0.647 for the first 2 years. Interval from symptom onset to diagnosis and from diagnosis to initiation of disease-modifying therapy was longer among those <12 years of age. CONCLUSIONS: Pediatric MS in the United States is characterized by racial and ethnic diversity, a high proportion of children with foreign-born parents, and differences in clinical features and timing of treatment among those <12 years of age compared with older children.


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2012

Utility of Plain Radiographs in Detecting Traumatic Injuries of the Cervical Spine in Children

Lise E. Nigrovic; Alexander J. Rogers; Kathleen Adelgais; Cody S. Olsen; Jeffrey R. Leonard; David M. Jaffe; Julie C. Leonard

Objective The objective of this study was to estimate the sensitivity of plain radiographs in identifying bony or ligamentous cervical spine injury in children. Methods We identified a retrospective cohort of children younger than 16 years with blunt trauma–related bony or ligamentous cervical spine injury evaluated between 2000 and 2004 at 1 of 17 hospitals participating in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network. We excluded children who had a single or undocumented number of radiographic views or one of the following injuries types: isolated spinal cord injury, spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormalities, or atlantoaxial rotary subluxation. Using consensus methods, study investigators reviewed the radiology reports and assigned a classification (definite, possible, or no cervical spine injury) as well as film adequacy. A pediatric neurosurgeon, blinded to the classification of the radiology reports, reviewed complete case histories and assigned final cervical spine injury type. Results We identified 206 children who met inclusion criteria, of which 127 had definite and 41 had possible cervical spine injury identified by plain radiograph. Of the 186 children with adequate cervical spine radiographs, 168 had definite or possible cervical spine injury identified by plain radiograph for a sensitivity of 90% (95% confidence interval, 85%–94%). Cervical spine radiographs did not identify the following cervical spine injuries: fracture (15 children) and ligamentous injury alone (3 children). Nine children with normal cervical spine radiographs presented with 1 or more of the following: endotracheal intubation (4 children), altered mental status (5 children), or focal neurologic findings (5 children). Conclusions Plain radiographs had a high sensitivity for cervical spine injury in our pediatric cohort.


Annals of clinical and translational neurology | 2016

Distinct effects of obesity and puberty on risk and age at onset of pediatric MS

Tanuja Chitnis; Jennifer Graves; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; Anita Belman; Cody S. Olsen; Madhusmita Misra; Gregory Aaen; Leslie Benson; Meghan Candee; Mark P. Gorman; Benjamin Greenberg; Lauren Krupp; Timothy Lotze; Soe Mar; Jayne Ness; John Rose; Jennifer Rubin; Teri Schreiner; Jan Mendelt Tillema; Amy Waldman; Moses Rodriguez; Charlie Casper; Emmanuelle Waubant

The aim of this study was to examine the relative contributions of body mass index (BMI) and pubertal measures for risk and age of onset of pediatric MS.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2014

Association Between the Seat Belt Sign and Intra-abdominal Injuries in Children With Blunt Torso Trauma in Motor Vehicle Collisions

Dominic Borgialli; Angela M. Ellison; Peter F. Ehrlich; Bema K. Bonsu; Jay Menaker; David H. Wisner; Shireen M. Atabaki; Cody S. Olsen; Peter E. Sokolove; Kathy Lillis; Nathan Kuppermann; James F. Holmes

OBJECTIVES The objective was to determine the association between the abdominal seat belt sign and intra-abdominal injuries (IAIs) in children presenting to emergency departments with blunt torso trauma after motor vehicle collisions (MVCs). METHODS This was a planned subgroup analysis of prospective data from a multicenter cohort study of children with blunt torso trauma after MVCs. Patient history and physical examination findings were documented before abdominal computed tomography (CT) or laparotomy. Seat belt sign was defined as a continuous area of erythema, ecchymosis, or abrasion across the abdomen secondary to a seat belt restraint. The relative risk (RR) of IAI with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) was calculated for children with seat belt signs compared to those without. The risk of IAI in those patients with seat belt sign who were without abdominal pain or tenderness, and with Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of 14 or 15, was also calculated. RESULTS A total of 3,740 children with seat belt sign documentation after blunt torso trauma in MVCs were enrolled; 585 (16%) had seat belt signs. Among the 1,864 children undergoing definitive abdominal testing (CT, laparotomy/laparoscopy, or autopsy), IAIs were more common in patients with seat belt signs than those without (19% vs. 12%; RR = 1.6, 95% CI = 1.3 to 2.1). This difference was primarily due to a greater risk of gastrointestinal injuries (hollow viscous or associated mesentery) in those with seat belt signs (11% vs. 1%; RR = 9.4, 95% CI = 5.4 to 16.4). IAI was diagnosed in 11 of 194 patients (5.7%; 95% CI = 2.9% to 9.9%) with seat belt signs who did not have initial complaints of abdominal pain or tenderness and had GCS scores of 14 or 15. CONCLUSIONS Patients with seat belt signs after MVCs are at greater risk of IAI than those without seat belt signs, predominately due to gastrointestinal injuries. Although IAIs are less common in alert patients with seat belt signs who do not have initial complaints of abdominal pain or tenderness, the risk of IAI is sufficient that additional evaluation such as observation, laboratory studies, and potentially abdominal CT scanning is generally necessary.

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David M. Jaffe

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jayne Ness

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Leslie Benson

Boston Children's Hospital

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