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Dive into the research topics where Richard L. Bucciarelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard L. Bucciarelli.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1991

Decreased mortality rate among small premature infants treated at birth with a single dose of synthetic surfactant: A multicenter controlled trial

Anthony Corbet; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Steven L. Goldman; Mark C. Mammel; Diane Wold; Walker Long

To determine whether a single prophylactic dose of synthetic surfactant would reduce mortality and morbidity rates, we performed a randomized, controlled trial of Exosurf Neonatal at 19 hospitals in the United States. The Exosurf preparation (5 ml/kg) was instilled into the endotracheal tube of premature infants weighing 700 to 1100 gm during mechanical ventilation, as soon as practical after birth. Control infants were treated with air (5 ml/kg). Dose administration was performed in secrecy by clinicians who did not reveal for 2 years what they had instilled. A total of 222 infants received air and 224 received the synthetic surfactant; 36 infants with congenital pneumonia or malformations were excluded from the primary efficacy analysis. By the age of 28 days, there were 44 deaths in the air group and 27 deaths in the surfactant group (p = 0.022). By the age of 1 year after term there were 61 deaths in the air group and 35 deaths in the surfactant group (p = 0.002). Although there was no reduction in the incidence of respiratory distress syndrome, a significant reduction in the number of deaths attributed to respiratory distress syndrome, a significant reduction in the incidence of pulmonary air leaks, and significantly lower requirements for oxygen and mean airway pressure indicated that lung disease was less severe in the Exosurf-treated infants. There were no significant differences in the incidence of complications such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, necrotizing enterocolitis, and infection. The results indicate that a single prophylactic dose of Exosurf, in high-risk premature infants treated soon after birth, reduces the number of deaths from respiratory distress syndrome and the overall mortality rate.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1991

Multicenter controlled trial comparing high-frequency jet ventilation and conventional mechanical ventilation in newborn infants with pulmonary interstitial emphysema

Martin Keszler; Steven M. Donn; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Dale C. Alverson; Montgomery C. Hart; Victor Lunyong; Houchang D. Modanlou; Akihiko Noguchi; Stephen A. Pearlman; Asha Puri; David W. Smith; Robert Stavis; Margaret Watkins; Thomas R. Harris

One hundred forty-four newborn infants with pulmonary interstitial emphysema were stratified by weight and severity of illness, and randomly assigned to receive treatment with high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) or rapid-rate conventional mechanical ventilation (CV) with short inspiratory time. If criteria for treatment failure were met, crossover to the alternate ventilatory mode was permitted. Overall, 45 (61%) of 74 infants met treatment success criteria with HFJV compared with 26 (37%) of 70 treated with CV (p less than 0.01). Eighty-four percent of patients who crossed over from CV to HFJV initially responded to the new treatment, and 45% ultimately met success criteria on HFJV. In contrast, only 9% of those who crossed over from HFJV to CV responded well to CV (p less than 0.01), and the same 9% ultimately met success criteria (p less than 0.05). Therapy with HFJV resulted in improved ventilation at lower peak and mean airway pressures, as well as more rapid radiographic improvement of pulmonary interstitial emphysema, in comparison with rapid-rate CV. Survival by original assignment was identical. When survival resulting from rescue by the alternate therapy in crossover patients was excluded, the survival rate was 64.9% for HFJV, compared with 47.1% for CV (p less than 0.05). The incidence of chronic lung disease, intraventricular hemorrhage, patent ductus arteriosus, airway obstruction, and new air leak was similar in both groups. We conclude that HFJV, as used in this study, is safe and is more effective than rapid-rate CV in the treatment of newborn infants with pulmonary interstitial emphysema.


Pediatric Infectious Disease | 1986

Lack of effect of Lactobacillus on gastrointestinal bacterial colonization in premature infants.

Peter D. Reuman; Donna H. Duckworth; Kenneth L. Smith; Rhoda Kagan; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Elia M. Ayoub

Studies were carried out on premature infants in the neonatal intensive care unit to determine the effect of feeding of lactobacilli on colonization of the gastrointestinal tract by antibiotic-resistant gram-negative enteric organisms. Thirty premature infants were matched by birth weight and gestational age, randomized and fed double blind either lactobacilli-containing formula or non-lactobacilli-containing formula within 72 hours of delivery. The two study groups were screened weekly by culture for stool lactobacilli, for gram-negative bacteria and for antibiotic resistance of these bacteria. Lactobacilli were cultured from the stools of 13 of 15 patients receiving lactobacilli and from 3 of 15 patients not receiving lactobacilli (P < 0.001). Gram-negative enteric organisms were isolated during 40 of the 86 weeks (47%) of hospitalization for patients receiving lactobacilli and during 28 of 57 weeks (49%) for patients not receiving lactobacilli. There was no significant difference between the study groups in the number of resistant organisms or in the proportion of resistant organisms per gram-negative enteric isolates (4 of 40 vs. 0 of 28). These results suggest that facultative gram-negative enteric bacterial colonization, with either total or aminoglycoside-resistant strains, is not decreased by oral feedings of Lactobacillus acidophilus in premature infants.


Pediatrics | 1998

Educational Disabilities of Neonatal Intensive Care Graduates

Michael B. Resnick; Shanti V. Gomatam; Randy L. Carter; Mario Ariet; Jeffrey Roth; Karen L. Kilgore; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Charles S. Mahan; John S. Curran; Donald V. Eitzman

Objective. To determine the relationship between perinatal and sociodemographic factors in low birth weight and sick infants hospitalized at regional neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and subsequent educational disabilities. Method. NICU graduates born between 1980 and 1987 at nine statewide regionalized level III centers were located in Florida elementary schools (kindergarten through third grade) during academic year 1992–1993 (n = 9943). Educational disability was operationalized as placement into eight mutually exclusive types of special education (SE) classifications determined by statewide standardized eligibility criteria: physically impaired, sensory impaired (SI), profoundly mentally handicapped, trainable mentally handicapped, educable mentally handicapped, specific learning disabilities, emotionally handicapped, and speech and language impaired (SLI). Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds of placement in SE for selected perinatal and sociodemographic variables. Results. Placement into SE ranged from .8% for SI to 9.9% for SLI. Placement was related to four perinatal factors (birth weight, transport, medical conditions [congenital anomalies, seizures or intraventricular hemorrhage] and ventilation), and five sociodemographic factors (childs sex, mothers marital status, mothers race, mothers educational level, and family income). Perinatal factors primarily were associated with placement in physically impaired, SI, profoundly mentally handicapped, and trainable mentally handicapped. Perinatal and sociodemographic factors both were associated with placement in educable mentally handicapped and specific learning disabilities whereas sociodemographic factors primarily were associated with placement in emotionally handicapped and SLI. Conclusions. Educational disabilities of NICU graduates are influenced differently by perinatal and sociodemographic variables. Researchers must take into account both sets of these variables to ascertain the long-term risk of educational disability for NICU graduates. Birth weight alone should not be used to assess NICU morbidity outcomes.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1980

Ischemic papillary muscle necrosis in stressed newborn infants.

William H. Donnelly; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Robert M. Nelson

The recent association of transient tricuspid insufficiency in newborn infants with ischemic papillary muscle necrosis prompted a detailed retrospective clinical and histologic analysis of autopsied infants who died within seven days of birth between 1973 and 1977. Infants with congenital heart disease, erythroblastosis fetalis, and known congenital viral infections were excluded. Thirty-one of 82 infants had at least one site of ischemic myocardial necrosis: 11 had lesions only in the right ventricle, 13 had lesions only in the left ventricle, and seven had bilateral lesions. The apical region of an anterior papillary muscle was the most common site. IMN occurred more commonly in older, larger infants. Asphyxia at birth, a murmur of atrioventricular valve insufficiency, and signs of congestive heart failure correlated well with the presence of IMN, but few other perinatal events predicted its occurrence. This report suggests that IMN is a common event in stressed infants who die early in life and probably is related to episodic hypoperfusion of the myocardium.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1978

Serum creatine phosphokinase MB fraction in newborns with transient tricuspid insufficiency.

Robert M. Nelson; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Donald V. Eitzman; Edmund A. Egan; Ira H. Gessner

RECENTLY, we reported 14 term newborn infants affected by severe perinatal stress who subsequently manifested cyanosis, congestive heart failure and transient murmurs of tricuspid insufficiency.1 T...


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1990

Effects of birth weight and sociodemographic variables on mental development of neonatal intensive care unit survivors

Michael B. Resnick; Kathleen Stralka; Randy L. Carter; Mario Ariet; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Robert R. Furlough; Janet H. Evans; John S. Curran; William W. Ausbon

Neonatal intensive care unit survivors (N = 494) from 10 tertiary care centers were evaluated over the first 4 to 5 years of life to determine the relative contributions of birth weight and sociodemographic factors to mental development. Six sociodemographic factors were studied: sex, race, family income, and mothers marital status, age, and educational level; the last five factors also are known to be associated with premature birth. Mental development was measured with the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (12 to 24 months) and the Stanford Binet Intelligence Test (4 to 5 years). Each factors influence was assessed by multivariate analysis. Birth weight had limited long-term implications; at 4 to 5 years, only infants with birth weights less than 1000 gm had significantly lower scores than those in other birth weight categories. Sociodemographic variables had a greater impact on mental development, with age-dependent differences found between nonwhite and white children and between children with mothers of low, medium, and high educational levels.


Pediatric Research | 1979

Cerebral Blood Flow during Acute Acidosis in Perinatal Goats

Richard L. Bucciarelli; Donald V. Eitzman

Summary: Changes in cerebral blood flow in response to three states of acute acidosis, posthypoxic, lactic acid, and respiratory, were estimated by the microsphere technique. In all three states, the fraction of the systemic blood flow reaching the brain and the rate (ml/min) of blood flow to it increased. The increase in flow was linearly related both to the PaCO2 and to H+. Others have shown the flow rate to increase with hypercapnia, but the increase associated with an increase in hydrogen ion concentration while the PaCO2 was maintained at control levels does not appear to have been observed in mature animals.Speculation: The significant increase in cerebral blood flow seen in perinatal goats during acute acidosis seems to be a result of a decrease in cerebral vascular resistance in an attempt by the cerebral vascular bed to preserve flow to the brain during stress.


Health Services Research | 2008

The effect of premium changes on SCHIP enrollment duration.

Jill Boylston Herndon; W. Bruce Vogel; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Elizabeth Shenkman

RESEARCH OBJECTIVE To examine the impact of premium changes in Floridas State Childrens Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) on enrollment duration. DATA SOURCES Administrative records, containing enrollment and demographic data, were used to identify 173,330 enrollment spells for 153,768 children in Floridas SCHIP from July 2002 through June 2004. Health care claims data were used to classify the childrens health status. STUDY DESIGN Accelerated failure time models were used to examine the immediate and longer term effects on enrollment length of a temporary premium increase of


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989

Effect of birth weight, race, and sex on survival of low-birth-weight infants in neonatal intensive care

Michael B. Resnick; Randy L. Carter; Mario Ariet; Richard L. Bucciarelli; Janet H. Evans; Robert R. Furlough; William W. Ausbon; John S. Curran

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John S. Curran

University of South Florida

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