Lauren Retzloff
University of Michigan
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Featured researches published by Lauren Retzloff.
Pediatrics | 2016
Katharine Asta; Alison L. Miller; Lauren Retzloff; Katherine L. Rosenblum; Niko Kaciroti; Julie C. Lumeng
OBJECTIVE: To identify predictors of eating in the absence of hunger (EAH) in low-income toddlers, describe affect during EAH, test EAH as a predictor of body mass index (BMI), and examine the type of food eaten as a predictor of BMI. METHODS: EAH, indexed as kilocalories (sweet, salty, and total) of palatable foods consumed after a satiating meal, was measured (n = 209) at ages 21, 27, and 33 months. Child gender, age, race/ethnicity, and previous exposure to the foods; maternal education and depressive symptoms; and family chaos, food insecurity, and structure were obtained via questionnaire. Child and mother BMI were measured. Child affect was coded from videotape. Linear regression was used to examine predictors of EAH and the association of kilocalories consumed and affect with 33 month BMI z-score (BMIz). RESULTS: Predictors of greater total kilocalories included the child being a boy (P < .01), being older (P < .001), and greater maternal education (P < .01). Being in the the top quartile of sweet kilocalories consumed at 27 months and showing negative affect at food removal had higher BMIz (β = 0.29 [95% confidence interval 0.10 to 0.48] and β = 0.34 [95% confidence interval, 0.12 to 0.56], respectively).There was no association of salty kilocalories consumed or positive affect with BMIz. CONCLUSIONS: There was little evidence that maternal or family characteristics contribute to EAH. EAH for sweet food predicts higher BMIz in toddlerhood. Studies investigating the etiology of EAH and interventions to reduce EAH in early childhood are needed.
World Journal for Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery | 2018
Matthew Pizzuto; Mehul Patel; Jennifer C. Romano; Lauren Retzloff; Sunkyung Yu; Ray Lowery; Sarah Gelehrter
Background: Interstage outcomes for single ventricle infants following Norwood operation have been well studied, showing significant mortality. Other single ventricle infants require only an aortopulmonary shunt. The aim of the study was to describe the interstage outcomes of this group compared to Norwood patients and identify risk factors for mortality. Methods: A single-center retrospective cohort review was performed in patients who underwent a Norwood operation (Norwood) or aortopulmonary shunt (Shunt) during 2000 to 2011 and survived to discharge. Hybrid or pulmonary artery banding patients were excluded. Univariate comparison was made between Norwood and Shunt patients as well as a Shunt subgroup analysis. Results: A total of 486 patients (368 Norwood and 118 Shunt) were included. Norwood and Shunt patients were similar in terms of preterm birth, surgery weight, and stage 1 complications. Shunt patients were more likely to be female, have an extracardiac or genetic anomaly, and have a shorter hospital length of stay compared to the Norwood patients (all P < .0001). No significant difference in interstage mortality was seen between the Shunt and Norwood patients (6.8% vs 11.1%, respectively; P = .17). Stage 2 mortality was also similar (Shunt 4.6% vs Norwood 7.8%; P = .25). In the Shunt patients, those who died during interstage weighed less at surgery (2.7 [0.7] kg vs 3.3 [0.7] kg, P = .03) and were more likely to have arrhythmias (50% vs 12%, P = .01), compared to survivors. Conclusions: Shunt patients have an interstage mortality that is not significantly less than Norwood patients. Lower weight at surgery and arrhythmias are risk factors for interstage death in Shunt patients.
Academic Pediatrics | 2018
Alison L. Miller; Ashley N. Gearhardt; Lauren Retzloff; Julie Sturza; Niko Kaciroti; Julie C. Lumeng
OBJECTIVE To identify whether psychosocial stress exposure during early childhood predicts subsequent increased eating in the absence of hunger (EAH), emotional overeating, food responsiveness, and enjoyment of food. METHODS This was an observational longitudinal study. Among 207 low-income children (54.6% non-Hispanic white, 46.9% girls), early childhood stress exposure was measured by parent report and a stress exposure index calculated, with higher scores indicating more stress exposure. Eating behaviors were measured in early (mean, 4.3; standard deviation, 0.5 years) and middle (mean, 7.9; standard deviation, 0.7 years) childhood. Observed EAH was assessed by measuring kilocalories of palatable food the child consumed after a meal. Parents reported on child eating behaviors on the Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire. Child weight and height were measured and body mass index z score (BMIz) calculated. Multivariable linear regression, adjusting for child sex, race/ethnicity, and BMIz, was used to examine the association of stress exposure with rate of change per year in each child eating behavior. RESULTS Early childhood stress exposure predicted yearly increases in EAH (β = 0.14; 95% confidence interval, 0.002, 0.27) and Emotional Overeating (β = 0.14; 95% confidence interval, 0.008, 0.27). Stress exposure was not associated with Food Responsiveness (trend for decreased Enjoyment of Food; β = -0.13; 95% confidence interval, 0.002, -0.26). All child obesogenic eating behaviors increased with age (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS Early stress exposure predicted increases in child eating behaviors known to associate with overweight/obesity. Psychosocial stress may confer overweight/obesity risk through eating behavior pathways. Targeting eating behaviors may be an important prevention strategy for children exposed to stress.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2017
Marissa Brunetti; Lauren Retzloff; Jessica Lehrich; J. William Gaynor; Sara K. Pasquali; David Bailly; Susan H. Davis; Darren Klugman; Joshua Koch; Javier Lasa; Michael Gaies
Background: Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) is used to support pediatric patients with medical and surgical cardiac disease. We aimed to characterize ECMO use across a multicenter cohort. Methods: Retrospective analysis of the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium (PC4) clinical
Cardiology in The Young | 2016
Sara K. Pasquali; Chitra Ravishankar; Jennifer C. Romano; Kristin Kane; Suzanne Viers; Andrea T. Kennedy; Nancy Burnham; Ray Lowery; Karen Uzark; Lauren Retzloff; Jonathon Rome; Joseph W. Rossano; John R. Charpie; Thomas L. Spray; Michael Gaies; Richard G. Ohye; J. William Gaynor
BACKGROUND With improvements in early survival following congenital heart surgery, it has become increasingly important to understand longer-term outcomes; however, routine collection of these data is challenging and remains very limited. We describe the development and initial results of a collaborative programme incorporating standardised longitudinal follow-up into usual care at the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and University of Michigan (UM). METHODS We included children undergoing benchmark operations of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Considerations regarding personnel, patient/parent engagement, funding, regulatory issues, and annual data collection are described, and initial follow-up rates are reported. RESULTS The present analysis included 1737 eligible patients undergoing surgery at CHOP from January 2007 to December 2014 and 887 UM patients from January 2010 to December 2014. Overall, follow-up data, of any type, were obtained from 90.8% of patients at CHOP (median follow-up 4.3 years, 92.2% survival) and 98.3% at UM (median follow-up 2.8 years, 92.7% survival), with similar rates across operations and institutions. Most patients lost to follow-up at CHOP had undergone surgery before 2010. Standardised questionnaires assessing burden of disease/quality of life were completed by 80.2% (CHOP) and 78.4% (UM) via phone follow-up. In subsequent pilot testing of an automated e-mail system, 53.4% of eligible patients completed the follow-up questionnaire through this system. CONCLUSIONS Standardised follow-up data can be obtained on the majority of children undergoing benchmark operations. Ongoing efforts to support automated electronic systems and integration with registry data may reduce resource needs, facilitate expansion across centres, and support multi-centre efforts to understand and improve long-term outcomes in this population.
Appetite | 2016
Alison L. Miller; Katherine L. Rosenblum; Lauren Retzloff; Julie C. Lumeng
Appetite | 2017
Elizabeth Roach; Gail B. Viechnicki; Lauren Retzloff; Pamela E. Davis-Kean; Julie C. Lumeng; Alison L. Miller
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine | 2018
Michael Gaies; Nancy S. Ghanayem; Jeffrey A. Alten; Javier J. Lasa; Nikhil K. Chanani; Andrew Y. Shin; Lauren Retzloff; Wenying Zhang; Sara K. Pasquali; Mousumi Banerjee; Sarah Tabbutt
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine | 2018
Marissa A. Brunetti; J. William Gaynor; Lauren Retzloff; Jessica Lehrich; Mousumi Banerjee; Venugopal Amula; David K. Bailly; Darren Klugman; Josh Koch; Javier J. Lasa; Sara K. Pasquali; Michael Gaies
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018
Aaron G. DeWitt; Joseph W. Rossano; David K. Bailly; Priya Bhat; Nikhil K. Chanani; Brandon Kirkland; Michael-Alice Moga; Gabe E. Owens; Lauren Retzloff; Wenying Zhang; Mousumi Banerjee; Andrew T. Costarino; Geoffrey L. Bird; Sara K. Pasquali; Michael Gaies