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Heart problems resolve in majority of kids with COVID inflammatory syndrome

 E-Mail NEW YORK, NY (July 15, 2021) Heart problems in children hospitalized with multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) an inflammatory condition triggered by COVID were mostly gone within a few months, a new study by researchers at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and NewYork-Presbyterian has found. The study published in Pediatrics about 45 MIS-C patients is the first in North America to report on longitudinal cardiac and immunologic outcomes in children hospitalized with MIS-C. We ve learned that COVID causes a spectrum of illness in children. Some are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic and a small number of kids who develop MIS-C become critically ill, requiring admission to the ICU, says Kanwal M. Farooqi, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and first author of the study. It is a relief that this study shows that most of the severe heart and immunologic manifestations w

La Jolla News Nuggets: Fox rescue, Innovation Center, Windansea cleanup, graffiti, more

La Jolla residents have spotted some not so sly foxes in and around their yards recently, with some people taking to social media to post photos and videos of the creatures, both solo and in groups called skulks. The Humane Society rescued the fox, which was taken to the Bahde Wildlife Center in San Diego. She had an abnormal gait, using both hind legs in unison and effectively bunny-hopping, said spokeswoman Nina Thompson. Wildlife veterinarians were worried the animal was suffering from hip dysplasia or neosporosis, but results from lab work and radiographs came back normal. The fox was transferred to the Ramona Wildlife Center for more space in a larger enclosure and additional observation.

Prenatal exposure to air pollution associated with poor academic skills in childhood

Prenatal exposure to air pollution associated with poor academic skills in childhood Children exposed to elevated levels of air pollution may be more likely to have poor inhibitory control during late childhood and poor academic skills in early adolescence, including spelling, reading comprehension, and math skills. Difficulty with inhibition in late childhood was found to be a precursor to later air pollution-related academic problems. Interventions that target inhibitory control might improve outcomes. Results of the study by researchers at the Columbia Center for Children s Environmental Health (CCCEH) at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Columbia University Irving Medical Center are published in the journal

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