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Featured researches published by Cydni N. Williams.


Children today | 2017

If You Build It, They Will Come: Initial Experience with a Multi-Disciplinary Pediatric Neurocritical Care Follow-Up Clinic

Cydni N. Williams; Aileen Kirby; Juan Piantino

Pediatric Neurocritical Care diagnoses account for a large proportion of intensive care admissions. Critical care survivors suffer high rates of long-term morbidity, including physical disability, cognitive impairment, and psychosocial dysfunction. To address these morbidities in Pediatric Neurocritical Care survivors, collaboration between Pediatric Neurology and Pediatric Critical Care created a multidisciplinary follow-up clinic providing specialized evaluations after discharge. Clinic referrals apply to all Pediatric Neurocritical Care patients regardless of admission severity of illness. Here, we report an initial case series, which revealed a population that is heterogenous in age, ranging from 1 month to 18 years, and in diagnoses. Traumatic brain injuries of varying severity as well as neuroinfectious and inflammatory diseases accounted for the majority of referrals. Most patients (87%) seen in the clinic had morbidities identified, requiring ongoing evaluation and expansion of the clinic. Cognitive and psychological disturbance were seen in over half of patients at the initial clinic follow-up. Sleep disturbances, daytime fatigue, headache or chronic pain, and vision or hearing concerns were also common at initial follow-up. Data from this initial population of clinic patients reiterates the need for specialized follow-up care, but also highlights the difficulties related to providing this comprehensive care and evaluating interventions to improve outcomes.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2015

Hyponatremia and poor cognitive outcome following pediatric brain tumor surgery

Cydni N. Williams; Jay Riva-Cambrin; Angela P. Presson; Susan L. Bratton

OBJECT Pediatric intracranial neoplasms are common and cause substantial neurological morbidity. Postoperative hyponatremia is also common and may exacerbate neurological injury. The authors performed an exploratory analysis to evaluate an exposure-response relationship between hyponatremia severity and cognitive function at discharge. METHODS A retrospective cohort of patients 0-19 years old who underwent a first intracranial neoplasm surgery at a pediatric tertiary care hospital was reviewed. Outcome was assessed by Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category (PCPC) score of 1-6 at hospital discharge. Poor outcome was defined as PCPC score 3-6, corresponding to moderate or worse disability. RESULTS Of 319 total children, 80 (25%) had poor outcomes. One hundred thirty-seven children (43%) had serum sodium concentrations ≤ 131-135 mEq/L and 39 (12%) had serum sodium concentrations ≤ 130 mEq/L. Lower nadir sodium concentration and longer duration of hyponatremia were significantly associated with worsening PCPC score (p < 0.001). Rapid sodium decreases and more hyponatremic episodes were also significantly associated with worsening PCPC score (p < 0.001). After adjustment for patient factors, tumor characteristics, and measures of sodium disruption, multivariable analysis revealed noncortical tumor locations and lower nadir sodium concentration (adjusted odds ratio 0.86, 95% confidence interval 0.78-0.95) were important independent risk factors for poor cognitive outcome. CONCLUSIONS Neurocognitive disability and hyponatremia are common in children undergoing surgery for intracranial neoplasms. This study found a significant association between severity of hyponatremia and worsened cognitive outcome, with an apparent exposure-response relationship. These data support the need for careful postoperative monitoring of serum sodium. Further research is needed to determine if prevention and treatment of hyponatremia can improve outcomes in these children.


Children today | 2017

Pediatric Hypothermic Submersion Injury and Protective Factors Associated with Optimal Outcome: A Case Report and Literature Review

Daniel Kriz; Juan Piantino; Devin Fields; Cydni N. Williams

Drowning is the 3rd leading cause of unintentional injury death worldwide, with the highest rates of fatality among young children. Submersion injuries with cardiac arrest can lead to long-term neurologic morbidity. Severe hypothermic submersion injuries have complex treatment courses and survivors have variable neurocognitive outcomes. We describe the course of a hypothermic submersion injury in a 6-year-old previously healthy boy. The description includes premorbid and post-injury neurocognitive functioning. A review of the literature of pediatric cold-water submersion injury was performed. Despite prolonged cardiopulmonary resuscitation (>100 min) and water temperature well above freezing, our patient had an optimal neurocognitive outcome following hypothermic submersion injury. Available literature is limited but suggests that increased submersion time, increased duration of resuscitation, and higher water temperatures are associated with worse outcomes. Care guidelines have been created, but outcomes related to these guidelines have not been studied. Our case highlights potential important determinants of outcome after drowning. Incident specific characteristics and therapeutic interventions should be considered when evaluating this population. Treatment guidelines based on currently available literature may fail to incorporate all potential variables, and consideration should be given to prolonged resuscitative efforts based on individual case characteristics until further data is available.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2016

Etiology of postoperative hyponatremia following pediatric intracranial tumor surgery

Cydni N. Williams; Jay Riva-Cambrin; Susan L. Bratton

OBJECT Cerebral salt wasting (CSW) and the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) cause postoperative hyponatremia in neurosurgery patients, can be difficult to distinguish clinically, and are associated with increased morbidity. The authors aimed to determine risk factors associated with CSW and SIADH among children undergoing surgery for intracranial tumors. METHODS This retrospective cohort study included children 0-19 years of age who underwent a first intracranial tumor surgery with postoperative hyponatremia (sodium ≤ 130 mEq/L). CSW was differentiated from SIADH by urine output and fluid balance, exclusive of other causes of hyponatremia. The CSW and SIADH groups were compared with basic bivariate analysis and recursive partitioning. RESULTS Of 39 hyponatremic patients, 17 (44%) had CSW and 10 (26%) had SIADH. Patients with CSW had significantly greater natriuresis compared with those with SIADH (median urine sodium 211 vs 28 mEq/L, p = 0.01). Age ≤ 7 years and female sex were significant risk factors for CSW (p = 0.03 and 0.04, respectively). Both patient groups had hyponatremia onset within the first postoperative week. Children with CSW had trends toward increased sodium variability and symptomatic hyponatremia compared with those with SIADH. Most received treatment, but inappropriate treatment was noted to worsen hyponatremia. CONCLUSIONS The authors found that CSW was more common following intracranial tumor surgery and was associated with younger age and female sex. Careful assessment of fluid balance and urine output can separate patients with CSW from those who have SIADH, and high urine sodium concentrations (> 100 mEq/L) support a CSW diagnosis. Patients with CSW and SIADH had similar clinical courses, but responded to different interventions, making appropriate diagnosis and treatment imperative to prevent morbidity.


Pediatric Neurology | 2018

Optimizing Neurocritical Care Follow-up through the Integration of Neuropsychology

Jonathan Dodd; Trevor A. Hall; Kristin Guilliams; Réjean M. Guerriero; Amanda Wagner; Sara Malone; Cydni N. Williams; Mary E. Hartman; Juan Piantino

BACKGROUND Pediatric critical care survivors often suffer persisting multisystem health problems and are left with treatment needs that go unmet due to limits in current care models. We proposed that integration of neuropsychology into neurocritical care follow-up provides incremental benefit to the identification and treatment of persisting complications and reduction in co-morbidities. BASIC PROCEDURES The aims of this study were three-fold. First, we described pilot programs at two pediatric hospitals as models for implementing systematic follow-up care with interdisciplinary clinic teams consisting of critical care, neurology, and neuropsychology. Second, we described working models specific to neuropsychological service delivery in these programs. Third, we presented preliminary data from the first six months of one of the pilot programs in order to examine incremental benefit of neuropsychology in improving patient care and parent satisfaction. MAIN FINDINGS A total of 16 patients (age range three to 17 years) were seen by neuropsychology within the first six months of the program. Results showed that integration of neuropsychology into follow-up care resulted in recommendations being made for services or concerns not already addressed in 81% of cases. Parents reported high satisfaction, endorsing the highest possible rating on 96% of all items. Parents reported that neuropsychological consultation improved their understanding and communication with their child, and helped them know what to expect from their child during postacute recovery. CONCLUSIONS The results of this pilot study suggest that integration of neuropsychology into neurocritical care follow-up programs contributes to parent satisfaction and may provide incremental benefit to patient care.


Pediatric Neurology | 2018

The Burden of Pediatric Neurocritical Care in the United States

Cydni N. Williams; Juan Piantino; Cindy McEvoy; Nora Fino; Carl O. Eriksson

BACKGROUND Disorders requiring pediatric neurocritical care (PNCC) affect thousands of children annually. We aimed to quantify the burden of PNCC through generation of national estimates of disease incidence, utilization of critical care interventions (CCI), and hospital outcomes. METHODS We performed a retrospective cohort analysis of the Kids Inpatient Database over three years to evaluate pediatric traumatic brain injury, neuro-infection or inflammatory diseases, status epilepticus, stroke, hypoxic ischemic injury after cardiac arrest, and spinal cord injury. We evaluated use of CCI, death, length of stay, hospital charges, and poor functional outcome defined as receipt of tracheostomy or gastrostomy or discharge to a medical care facility. RESULTS At least one CCI was recorded in 67,058 (23%) children with a primary neurological diagnosis, and considered a PNCC admission. Over half of PNCC admissions had at least one chronic condition, and 23% were treated in childrens hospitals. Mechanical ventilation was the most common CCI, but utilization of CCIs varied significantly by diagnosis. Among PNCC admissions, 8110 (12%) children died during hospitalization and 14,067 (21%) children had poor functional outcomes. PNCC admissions cumulatively accounted for over 1.5 million hospital days and over


American Journal of Critical Care | 2018

Mobilization Therapy in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit: A Multidisciplinary Quality Improvement Initiative

Blair Colwell; Cydni N. Williams; Serena Phromsivarak Kelly; Laura M. Ibsen

4 billion in hospital costs in the study years. Most PNCC admissions, across all diagnoses, had prolonged hospitalizations (more than one week) with an average cost of


Pediatric Neurology | 2017

Endovascular Therapy in Pediatric Stroke: Utilization, Patient Characteristics, and Outcomes

Jenny Wilson; Carl O. Eriksson; Cydni N. Williams

39.9 thousand per admission. CONCLUSIONS This large, nationally representative study shows PNCC diseases are a significant public health burden with substantial risk to childrens health. More research is needed to improve outcomes in these vulnerable children.


Journal of Pediatric Intensive Care | 2018

Long-term Sequelae of Pediatric Neurocritical Care: The Parent Perspective

Cydni N. Williams; Carl O. Eriksson; Juan Piantino; Trevor A. Hall; Danielle Moyer; Aileen Kirby; Cindy McEvoy

Background Mobilization is safe and associated with improved outcomes in critically ill adults, but little is known about mobilization of critically ill children. Objective To implement a standardized mobilization therapy protocol in a pediatric intensive care unit and improve mobilization of patients. Methods A goal‐directed mobilization protocol was instituted as a quality improvement project in a 20‐bed cardiac and medical‐surgical pediatric intensive care unit within an academic tertiary care center. The mobilization goal was based on age and severity of illness. Data on severity of illness, ordered activity limitations, baseline functioning, mobilization level, complications of mobilization, and mobilization barriers were collected. Goal mobilization was defined as a ratio of mobilization level to severity of illness of 1 or greater. Results In 9 months, 567 patient encounters were analyzed, 294 (52%) of which achieved goal mobilization. The mean ratio of mobilization level to severity of illness improved slightly but nonsignificantly. Encounters that met mobilization goals were in younger (P = .04) and more ill (P < .001) patients and were less likely to have barriers (P < .001) than encounters not meeting the goals. Complication rate was 2.5%, with no difference between groups (P = .18). No serious adverse events occurred. Conclusions A multidisciplinary, multiprofessional, goaldirected mobilization protocol achieved goal mobilization in more than 50% of patients in this pediatric intensive care unit. Undermobilized patients were older, less ill, and more likely to have mobilization barriers at the patient and provider level.


Pediatrics | 2016

Early Mobilization in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Blair Colwell; Cydni N. Williams; Laura M. Ibsen

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