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Dive into the research topics where Noah Cook is active.

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Featured researches published by Noah Cook.


Optics Express | 2009

Cerebral hemodynamics in preterm infants during positional intervention measured with diffuse correlation spectroscopy and transcranial Doppler ultrasound

Erin M. Buckley; Noah Cook; Turgut Durduran; Meeri N. Kim; Chao Zhou; Regine Choe; Guoqiang Yu; Susan M. Schultz; Chandra M. Sehgal; Daniel J. Licht; Peter H. Arger; Mary E. Putt; Hallam Hurt; Arjun G. Yodh

Four very low birth weight, very premature infants were monitored during a 12 degrees postural elevation using diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) to measure microvascular cerebral blood flow (CBF) and transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) to measure macrovascular blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery. DCS data correlated significantly with peak systolic, end diastolic, and mean velocities measured by TCD (p(A) =0.036, 0.036, 0.047). Moreover, population averaged TCD and DCS data yielded no significant hemodynamic response to this postural change (p>0.05). We thus demonstrate feasibility of DCS in this population, we show correlation between absolute measures of blood flow from DCS and blood flow velocity from TCD, and we do not detect significant changes in CBF associated with a small postural change (12 degrees ) in these patients.


Archives of Dermatology | 2010

Subcutaneous fat necrosis as a complication of whole-body cooling for birth asphyxia

Vikash Oza; James Treat; Noah Cook; Michael T. Tetzlaff; Albert C. Yan

BACKGROUND Subcutaneous fat necrosis (SCFN) of the newborn is a form of panniculitis that affects full-term neonates who often have suffered either birth asphyxia or hypothermia. The induction of hypothermia in newborns is becoming frequently used to reduce the neurologic sequelae associated with birth asphyxia. The risk of SCFN in neonates undergoing this therapy is unknown. Observation We describe a neonate who developed an abscess-like presentation of SCFN and subsequent asymptomatic hypercalcemia after undergoing whole-body cooling for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. CONCLUSIONS Hypothermia protocols may be placing newborns at increased risk for the development of SCFN. Clinicians should recognize this association, and newborns who undergo therapeutic cooling should have frequent dermatologic assessments.


Journal of Perinatology | 2015

Short-term outcomes after perinatal hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy: a report from the Children’s Hospitals Neonatal Consortium HIE focus group

An N. Massaro; Karna Murthy; Isabella Zaniletti; Noah Cook; Robert DiGeronimo; Maria L.V. Dizon; Shannon E. G. Hamrick; Victor J. McKay; Girija Natarajan; Rakesh Rao; Danielle Smith; R. Telesco; Rajan Wadhawan; Jeanette M. Asselin; David J. Durand; Jacquelyn Evans; Francine D. Dykes; Kristina M. Reber; Michael A. Padula; Eugenia K. Pallotto; Billie L. Short; Amit Mathur

Objective:To characterize infants affected with perinatal hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) who were referred to regional neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and their related short-term outcomes.Study Design:This is a descriptive study evaluating the data collected prospectively in the Children’s Hospital Neonatal Database, comprised of 27 regional NICUs within their associated children’s hospitals. A consecutive sample of 945 referred infants born ⩾36 weeks’ gestation with perinatal HIE in the first 3 days of life over approximately 3 years (2010–July 2013) were included. Maternal and infant characteristics are described. Short-term outcomes were evaluated including medical comorbidities, mortality and status of survivors at discharge.Result:High relative frequencies of maternal predisposing conditions, cesarean and operative vaginal deliveries were observed. Low Apgar scores, profound metabolic acidosis, extensive resuscitation in the delivery room, clinical and electroencephalographic (EEG) seizures, abnormal EEG background and brain imaging directly correlated with the severity of HIE. Therapeutic hypothermia was provided to 85% of infants, 15% of whom were classified as having mild HIE. Electrographic seizures were observed in 26% of the infants. Rates of complications and morbidities were similar to those reported in prior clinical trials and overall mortality was 15%.Conclusion:Within this large contemporary cohort of newborns with perinatal HIE, the application of therapeutic hypothermia and associated neurodiagnostic studies appear to have expanded relative to reported clinical trials. Although seizure incidence and mortality were lower compared with those reported in the trials, it is unclear whether this represented improved outcomes or therapeutic drift with the treatment of milder disease.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2003

Complex partial status epilepticus associated with anti-Hu paraneoplastic syndrome

Dina A. Jacobs; Kar Ming Fung; Noah Cook; William W. Schalepfer; Herbert I. Goldberg; Mark M. Stecker

Although seizures can be a manifestation of paraneoplastic disorders, there are few descriptions of the association between the anti-Hu paraneoplastic syndrome and epilepsia partialis continua. A new case of refractory complex partial status epilepticus in a patient with a paraneoplastic syndrome associated with a poorly differentiated mediastinal tumor that expressed Hu antigen is described clinically, pathologically, and electrographically. We discuss the presentation of focal seizures in a disease that is characterized by diffuse pathologic involvement of the brain. The progression of EEG, MRI, and clinical findings during the course of the illness is also discussed. To our knowledge, this is the first description of paraneoplastic epilepsia partialis continua associated with diffuse pathologic abnormalities.


Pediatric Research | 2017

Neonatal outcomes of moderately preterm infants compared to extremely preterm infants

Michele C. Walsh; Edward F. Bell; Sarah Kandefer; Shampa Saha; Waldemar A. Carlo; Carl T. D'Angio; Abbot R. Laptook; Pablo J. Sánchez; Barbara J. Stoll; Seetha Shankaran; Krisa P. Van Meurs; Noah Cook; Rosemary D. Higgins; Abhik Das; Nancy S. Newman; Kurt Schibler; Barbara Schmidt; C. Michael Cotten; Brenda B. Poindexter; Kristi L. Watterberg; William E. Truog

BackgroundExtremely preterm infants (EPT, <29 weeks’ gestation) represent only 0.9% of births in the United States; yet these infants are the focus of most published research. Moderately preterm neonates (MPT, 29–336/7 weeks) are an understudied group of high-risk infants.MethodsTo determine the neonatal outcomes of MPT infants across the gestational age spectrum, and to compare these with EPT infants. A prospective observational cohort was formed in 18 level 3–4 neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in the Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD Neonatal Research Network. Participants included all MPT infants admitted to NICUs and all EPT infants born at sites between January 2012 and November 2013. Antenatal characteristics and neonatal morbidities were abstracted from records using pre-specified definitions by trained neonatal research nurses.ResultsMPT infants experienced morbidities similar to, although at lower rates than, those of EPT infants. The main cause of mortality was congenital malformation, accounting for 43% of deaths. Central Nervous System injury occurred, including intraventricular hemorrhage. Most MPT infants required respiratory support, but sequelae such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia were rare. The primary contributors to hospitalization beyond 36 weeks’ gestation were inability to achieve adequate oral intake and persistent apnea.ConclusionsMPT infants experience morbidity and prolonged hospitalization. Such morbidity deserves focused research to improve therapeutic and prevention strategies.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2016

Intercenter Cost Variation for Perinatal Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy in the Era of Therapeutic Hypothermia.

An N. Massaro; Karna Murthy; Isabella Zaniletti; Noah Cook; Robert DiGeronimo; Maria L.V. Dizon; Shannon E. G. Hamrick; Victor J. McKay; Girija Natarajan; Rakesh Rao; Troy Richardson; Danielle Smith; Amit Mathur; Francine D. Dykes; Anthony J. Piazza; Gregory Sysyn; Carl Coghill; Ramasubbareddy Dhanireddy; Anne Hansen; Tanzeema Hossain; Kristina M. Reber; Rashmin C. Savani; Luc P. Brion; Theresa R. Grover; Annie Chi; Yvette R. Johnson; Gautham Suresh; Eugenia K. Pallotto; Becky Rodgers; Robert Lyle

OBJECTIVE To quantify intercenter cost variation for perinatal hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) treated with therapeutic hypothermia across childrens hospitals. STUDY DESIGN Prospectively collected data from the Childrens Hospitals Neonatal Database and Pediatric Health Information Systems were linked to evaluate intercenter cost variation in total hospitalization costs after adjusting for HIE severity, mortality, length of stay, use of extracorporeal support or nitric oxide, and ventilator days. Secondarily, costs for intensive care unit bed, electroencephalography (EEG), and laboratory and neuroimaging testing were also evaluated. Costs were contextualized by frequency of favorable (survival with normal magnetic resonance imaging) and adverse (death or need for gastric tube feedings at discharge) outcomes to identify centers with relative low costs and favorable outcomes. RESULTS Of the 822 infants with HIE treated with therapeutic hypothermia at 19 regional neonatal intensive care units, 704 (86%) survived to discharge. The median cost/case for survivors was


IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 2008

Monitoring Hemodynamic Changes in Preterm Infants Using Optical Spectroscopies and Doppler Ultrasound

Erin M. Buckley; Meeri N. Kim; Turgut Durduran; Guoqiang Yu; Regine Choe; Chao Zhou; Susan Shultz; Chandra M. Sehgal; Daniel J. Licht; Peter H. Arger; Hallam Hurt; Noah Cook; Arjun G. Yodh

58 552 (IQR


/data/revues/00223476/unassign/S0022347616001979/ | 2016

Intercenter Cost Variation for Perinatal Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy in the Era of Therapeutic Hypothermia

An N. Massaro; Karna Murthy; Isabella Zaniletti; Noah Cook; Robert DiGeronimo; Maria L.V. Dizon; Shannon E. G. Hamrick; Victor J. McKay; Girija Natarajan; Rakesh Rao; Troy Richardson; Danielle Smith; Amit Mathur

32 476-


Neoreviews | 2015

Bioethical and Regulatory Issues in Newborn Medical Research

Noah Cook

130 203) and nonsurvivors


Archive | 2003

Short communication Complex partial status epilepticus associated with anti-Hu paraneoplastic syndrome

Dina A. Jacobs; Kar-Ming Fung; Noah Cook; William W. Schalepfer; Herbert I. Goldberg; Mark M. Stecker

29 760 (IQR

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Amit Mathur

Washington University in St. Louis

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An N. Massaro

George Washington University

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Danielle Smith

University of Colorado Denver

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Karna Murthy

Northwestern University

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Rakesh Rao

Washington University in St. Louis

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