Sökning: "Infants Young Children"
Visar resultat 16 - 20 av 49 avhandlingar innehållade orden Infants Young Children.
16. Chronic hepatitis : morbidity and mortality in patients and their children
Sammanfattning : Chronic hepatitis, morbidity and mortality of the patients and their children The spread of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infection started in Sweden in the end of the 1960s with a culmination in the 1970s, most likely due to increased injection drug use. Mandatory notification of acute and chronic HCV infection in Sweden started in 1990. LÄS MER
17. Maternal milk feedings and cytomegalovirus infection in preterm infants in Sweden
Sammanfattning : In Sweden, preterm infants are preferably fed human milk. Very preterm infants (< 32 weeks), who are unable to breastfeed, are fed with expressed maternal milk via a nasogastric tube. Mothers of these infants often experience difficulties in establishing and maintaining lactation. LÄS MER
18. Intravenous induction of anaesthesia in children : aspects on propofol and etomidate
Sammanfattning : Propofol is today the most commonly used drug for induction of anaesthesia and for short-term sedation. However, one specific problem is that intravenous injection of propofol often results in quite severe injection pain, which in the paediatric population is a serious clinical dilemma. LÄS MER
19. Children with congenital unilateral sensorineural hearing loss : etiology, newborn diagnostics, and hearing aid amplification
Sammanfattning : Congenital unilateral sensorineural hearing loss (uSNHL) comprises about 25% of the sensorineural hearing losses (SNHLs) found through newborn hearing screening (NHS) programs. Even if children with congenital uSNHL struggle in school and everyday listening situations, studies on etiology, hearing aid (HA) outcomes and intervention are few, so it is still unknown when and how intervention is optimally provided. LÄS MER
20. Microbiota of the alimentary tract of children - implications for allergy and inflammatory bowel disease
Sammanfattning : Allergy, which is the most common chronic disease in Swedish children and adolescents, is associated with a high standard of living and Western lifestyle. According to the hygiene hypothesis, allergy is due to inadequate stimulation of the immune system by microbes during early childhood, leading to failed maturation of the immune system. LÄS MER