Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend 21st World Congress on Clinical Pediatrics London, UK.

Day 1 :

  • Pediatric infectious disease, Perinatology, Neonatology, Pediatric Endocrinology

Session Introduction

Peter Averkiou

Florida Atlantic University, USA

Title: Early Clinical Exposure in Medical Education: The Newborn Nursery Clinical Experience

Time : 12:30-13:00

Speaker
Biography:

Dr. Peter Averkiou is a pediatrician and an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University. He is the Co-Director of the four Foundations of Medicine Courses, the Director of the Service Learning Projects, the Director of the Newborn Nursery Clinical Rotation and the Director of the Synthesis and Transition Course at the medical school.

 

Abstract:

The Newborn Nursery Clinical Experience is an innovative, early exposure for medical students to the hospital setting and family medicine. Early in their second year, our medical students are immersed into the Newborn Nursery, while also experiencing the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and attending obstetrical deliveries. They witness, first hand, the interprofessional and interdisciplinary workings of pediatricians, obstetricians, neonatologists, anesthesiologists, nurses and other professionals. The medical students are also instructed on how to read a medical chart and on proper medical documentation and its importance. They also interact with the mother of the patient, as well as other family members that are in attendance, and long-term continuity of integrated care and the focus on the personal patient/patient’s guardian(s) - physician relationship is stressed. This experience is always well-received and highly evaluated by our medical students. It also helps to prepare them for their third-year clinical rotations in family medicine, pediatrics and Ob/Gyn.

 

Francesca Maraschin

University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Title: AN UNUSUAL CASE OF ANAPHYLAXIS IN A CHILD WITH PULMONARY ECHINOCOCCOSIS

Time : 10:30-11:00

Speaker
Biography:

Dr Francesca Maraschin is a South African medical doctor who spent 4 years working in public hospitals in Johannesburg before deciding to pursue a masters at the University of Oxford where she studied International Health and Tropical Medicine. Her interests are in global child health and improving the wellbeing of children in low- and middle-income countries. In her most recent position as a research assistant with Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Medicine, she has been working on two scoping reviews outlining specific topics on the needs of neonates in low-resource settings.

Abstract:

Echinococcus is a tapeworm that causes hydatid disease. Cystic echinococcosis, caused by Echinococcus granulosus, is a condition endemic to South Africa, particularly in sheep-farming areas such as the Eastern Cape. Patients may present with a variety of symptoms and complications, including spontaneous cyst rupture and subsequent anaphylaxis which may prove to be fatal. Treatment methods may be medical or surgical. We report the case of an 11-year-old boy who was treated medically for pulmonary hydatid disease and subsequently presented with spontaneous cyst rupture and anaphylaxis, resulting in the need for surgical resection of the cyst.

Speaker
Biography:

Mamuka Kotetishvili’s main expertise lies in the areas of molecular epidemiology and evolution of infectious agents including foodborne and zoonotic pathogens. Currently, his primary occupation is a leading of the biomedical research, working in a capacity of Deputy Director of Science and Foreign Relations, at the G. Natadze Scientific-Research Institute of Sanitary, Hygiene, and Medical Ecology (GNHI), Tbilisi, Georgia. Mamuka Kotetishvili has pioneered his research on the molecular typing of some important foodborne and other pathogens, including, but not limited to, Salmonella enteritidis, Listeria monocytogenes, Vibrio Cholerae, and the species of Yersinia. His most recent studies have provided some important insights into the evolution of bacteriophages and antimicrobial resistance. Mamuka Kotetishvili has served as an Editorial Board Member and/or an Ad-hoc Reviewer for various internationally well-respected scientific journals including Journal of Clinical Microbiology, Journal of Bacteriology, and Journal of Virology.

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: The deciphering of new genomic features of Clostridium tetani causing tetanus is critical to our better understanding of this disease molecular epidemiology, threatening especially neonates and children. Here, we report on a unique C. tetani strain isolated from a retail fish market in India, carrying in its genome the eukaryotic DNA. Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: This strain genome sequence (GenBank ID: CP027782.1) was available in the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) nucleotide database. Using the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST), in the same database, we searched for eukaryotic homologs of the genetic loci of the above strain. SplitsTree and RDP4 were applied respectively for recombination and phylogenetic analyses. Findings: We could identify the 1176-bp genomic region of the C. tetani strain that shared 99.83 % of the DNA identity with those of several eukaryotic organisms of plant origin (Fig. 1), being associated with 18S ribosomal RNA, or long non-coding RNAs, or hypothetical proteins.

Fig. 1. The Neighbor-joining tree, showing the genetic relationships between the BLAST-identified organisms, and DNA identity statistics for their homologs in respect to the 1176-bp genomic region of the C. tetani strain.

As shown, no respective DNA homology of the above region could be found in the bacterial species genomes, with a very few exceptions represented by a single strain.  The splits decomposition analysis could identify genetic recombination events displayed by a single parallelogram (Fit: 100; bootstrap values: 62.7-64.3 for the nodes), being shared by C. tetani and several eukaryotes such as P. pretense, S. bicolor, S. officinarum, P. hallii, and P. pretense. The RDP4 PHI test-generated p value was 0.00001.

Conclusion & Significance: C. tetani appears to have the ability to acquire certain eukaryotic DNA of plant origin. It is highly imperative to determine whether in the above C. tetani strain genome, the 1176-bp genomic region serves as a functional domain associated with its virulence, pathogenicity, and/or environmental persistence.

Donna Mendez

Director The University of Texas Health Science Center, USA

Title: Total and Ionized Plasma Magnesium Concentrations in Children after Traumatic Brain Injury

Time : 11:30-12:00

Speaker
Biography:

Dr. Donna Mendez is a board certified Pediatrician and Pediatric Emergency Medicine physician. She completed her pediatric residency at University of Texas Health Science Center (UTHSC) in San Antonio, and a fellowship in Pediatric Emergency Medicine at University of Texas Southwestern in Dallas. She is currently an attending at McGovern Medical School in Houston. She is the director of the pediatric emergency fellowship established in 2014. She has received her Doctorate in Professional Leadership with an Emphasis in Health Science Education from The University of Houston in 2016. She has published more than 20 papers in journals and online resources.

Abstract:

This study examined 1) whether plasma total Mg (TMg) and ionized Mg (IMg) concentrations in children are reduced by traumatic brain injury (TBI) and 2) whether the extent of reduction correlates with severity of trauma assessed by the Glasgow Coma Scale (GSC) score. This was a prospective cohort study of 98 pediatric patients who had TBI and were admitted through the emergency department. A GCS score was assigned and blood was obtained upon presentation and 24 h later. Plasma was analyzed for TMg and IMg. Patients were grouped into three categories-GCS scores 13-15, 8-12, and <8-to designate mild (n=21), moderate (n=37), and severe (n=40) TBI, respectively. Blood was obtained from 50 healthy children before elective surgery as controls. Control subjects had a TMg and an IMg of 0.94 +/- 0.08 and 0.550 +/- 0.06 mM. TBI patients had an initial TMg and IMg of 0.83 +/- 0.09 and 0.520 +/- 0.05 mM, respectively. Initial TMg for mild, moderate, and severe TBI subgroups (0.87 +/- 0.16, 0.81 +/- 0.15, and 0.83 +/- 0.14 mM, respectively) was reduced from control subjects (p <0.01). IMg was reduced only in the severe TBI subgroup (0.516 +/- 0.07 mM; p=0.016). Twenty-four hours later, TMg remained lower than in control subjects for all subgroups of TBI; however, IMg normalized. TBI in children is associated with a reduction in TMg, whereas IMg decreased only with severe TBI. IMg returned to control values by 24 h despite a continued lower TMg, suggesting mechanisms to maintain IMg. Changes in plasma IMg may serve as a marker for TBI but only over a limited time interval.

Speaker
Biography:

I have completed my MD training in Sackler school of Medicine in Tel Aviv University in 2014, and started my residency in Pediatric medicine on 2015. During my training I have completed a comprehensive point of care ultrasound course in Soroka University Medical Center affiliated to Ben Gurion University, which focused on FAST exam, cardiac, lung and vascular POCUS. As a future fellow in Pediatric emergency medicine, with the aim to improve and perfect this art of ER subspecialty, I designed with other experts in the field this short termed simulation based training in POCUS, which proved extremely efficient and productive. I truly believe this work will demonstrate the tremendous effect of POCUS training on the professional skills of residents in Pediatric medicine, and will encourage other hospitals around the world to initiate such programs.

Abstract:

A short-term, simulation based FAST (focused abdominal sonography in trauma) training for pediatric residents

 

Speaker
Biography:

I completed my degree in Medicine at Athens University Medical School and have specialized in Pediatrics since 1997. From 1992 until December 2018, I worked and specialized concurrently in the Growth-Endocrine-Diabetes Center of the Pediatric Clinic at Children's Hospital "P. and A. Kyriakou." I have a specialization in children and adolescent diabetes from the Ministry of Health since April 2022.

Since 1997, I have worked simultaneously at my private clinic as a pediatrician-pediatric endocrinologist and at the Public Health Center in N. Ionia, Athens. I have conducted extensive research work in pediatrics/pediatric endocrinology and published numerous articles in Greek and foreign literature.

I have participated in over 200 scientific symposia in Greece and worldwide, as a speaker or an observer. Currently, I work in my private pediatric-pediatric endocrinology office, along with a Public Health Clinic.

Abstract:

Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser Syndrome (MRKH) is a very rare congenital syndrome that affects the female reproductive system. It is an autosomal dominant inherited disease, characterized by an abnormal development of vagina and uterus. Due to this underdevelopment or absence of uterus, females express Uterus Factor Infertility. MRKH syndrome manifests clinically with endometriosis, amenorrhea and urinary tract infections. Occasionally the MRKH syndrome can be associated   with other syndromes such as Turner, Vacterl, TAR and Silver Russell. In this particular presentation, we present a rare incident case in which the MRKH syndrome coexists with growth hormone deficiency and hypothyroidism. The coexistence of those 3 morbidities has not been reported so far in current literature.

  • Pediatric Surgery, Pediatric Nutrition and Breast Feeding