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NEONATOLOGY
Saturday, 5/3/2003
8:00am–10:00am
3100—Cellular
Basis of Ischemia–Reperfusion Injury in Children
PAS/ASPN
Topic Symposium
Chair: Sharon P. Andreoli,
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
and Mark Payne, Wake Forest University School of Medicine,
Winston-Salem, NC
The focus of this symposia is on ischemia–reperfusion
injury in children. There are many settings during infancy
and childhood where damage may occur from an ischemic, or
hypoxic, event and include birth asphyxia, cardiovascular
collapse or even organ transplantation. This
multidisciplinary symposium will examine the molecular and
cellular events underlying cell injury following such
events.
Ischemia–Reperfusion in the Developing Brain—Role
of Oxidative Stress
Donna M. Ferriero, University of
California, San Francisco, CA
The Cellular Biology of Renal Ischemia–Reperfusion
Injury
Bruce Molitoris, Indiana University
School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
Endogenous Inhibitors and Promoters of Cell Survival in
the Ischemic Heart
Michael T. Crow, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD
Inflammatory Mechanisms of Ischemia–Reperfusion
Injury in the Brain
Faye S. Silverstein, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Sponsored jointly with the American Society of
Pediatric Nephrology
8:30am–11:30am
3150—Handheld
Computing for the Pediatrician (Part I) PDA 101:
Introduction To Handheld Computing for the Pediatrician
PAS
Mini Course
Chairs: K. Johnson, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN and A. Meyers, Boston University
Medical Center, Boston, MA
The use of handheld computers in medicine has grown
dramatically. This session is intended for those who have
a handheld computer (Palm or Pocket PC), or are
considering purchasing one, but who have not yet learned
how to use it. The goal of the session is to help the
beginner achieve a working familiarity with handheld
computing such that they will leave the session ready,
able and eager to use their own device in their daily life
and clinical practice. Ideally, all participants should
bring their own handheld. The session will include an
overview of the devices and their desktop software;
mastery of the basic (built-in) functions: datebook/calendar,
address book, memo pad, to-do lists; and add-on
applications: where to find them, how to install them and
what applications are available specific to clinical
pediatrics. Participants should be familiar with the use
of personal computers and the Internet, but no prior
knowledge of handheld computing is assumed.
Introductions and Overview of Mini Course
Lecture (with Audience Participation)—PDA Basics,
Hardware and Software, the Palm OS and Its Functions
Palm OS Functions, Continued; PPC OS
Medical and Pediatric Applications for the PDA
8:30am–11:30am
3199c—Applying
for NIH Research Grants
Educational
Workshop
Pedro A. José, Professor of
Pediatrics and Physiology and Biophysics, Georgetown
University Medical Center, Washington, DC, Anshumali
Chaudhari, Scientific Review Administrator, Experimental
Cardiovascular Sciences Study Section, National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, MD, Terry Rogers Bishop, Training and
Careers Program Director and Erythroid Lineage Genomics (ELGAP),
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD and Linda L.
Wright, Deputy Director, Center for Research for Mothers
and Children, National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
In the current climate of funding opportunities, the
ability to successfully obtain extramural support involves
applying for grants that are appropriate for an
investigator's career stage and drafting a clear and
focused application. In this session, we will discuss
career-stage-appropriate funding opportunities from the
NIH. We will also address how to write a grant
application, focusing on strategies with proven success.
The working of NIH study sections will be reviewed along
with how to best address the concerns of review panels. We
will also focus on how to obtain funding for fellowship
postdoctoral training and early stages of an academic
career.
8:30am–11:30am
3201—Beyond
p Values—Inference in Clinical Research
Educational
Workshop
R. Wright and D. Shay, Department
of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA and
Centers for Disease Control
Background: Observational research studies have become
increasingly complex. The results of observational
research studies can be driven by properties other than
chance or causation. While these factors may drive the p
values of the results, they also change the appropriate
interpretation.
Workshop Methods: In the first half of this workshop,
we will formally define confounding, effect modification,
restriction vs. heterogeneity of exposure, intermediate
variables, selection bias and differential vs.
nondifferential information bias. In the second half, we
will use a case-based approach to illustrate examples of
studies in which the results are driven by these factors
and compare differences in the appropriate interpretation
in the presence and absence of these factors. Minimal math
skills will be needed, however, familiarity with basic
concepts of study design and data analysis (case control
vs. cohort study, interpretation of Ors, etc.) is
recommended. We will specifically illustrate examples of
effect modification vs. confounding, intermediate
variables vs. confounding, selection bias, underpowered
studies, and the role of measurement error in determining
effect estimates.
8:30am–11:30am
3252—Newborn
Nursery
Special
Interest Group
Chair: Linda D. Meloy, lmeloy@hsc.vcu.edu
Based upon our SIG meeting discussion, a number of
newborn nursery topics will be addressed. A response by
our group B streptococcous work group, headed by John
Olsson, to the CDC guidelines will challenge us to
prevention in our nurseries of sepsis and concepts for
studies. We will discuss jaundice guidelines, screening,
treatment and breastfeeding. Hypoglycemia detection and
treatment will be surveyed and presented. Current
screening with meconium and treatment of substance-exposed
infants will be described. We will explore pain control in
nurseries and circumcision.
During the session, Latha Chandran will distribute and
discuss the results of the survey of our members needs and
current practices. We will update our E-mail lists for our
members and discuss new teaching ideas.
12:00pm–3:00pm
3501—Handheld
Computing for the Pediatrician (Part II) PDA 102:
Intermediate/Advanced Handheld Computing for the
Pediatrician
PAS
Mini Course
Chairs: K. Johnson, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN and A. Meyers, Boston University
Medical Center, Boston, MA
The field of medicine is replete with examples of ways
that handheld computers may be used to educate, organize
and inform clinicians. There are also examples of how
researchers may benefit from this technology. During this
more advanced session, we will discuss some of these uses
of handheld computers. We will provide examples of
software in a variety of domains and discuss their
historical, current and future use. We also will
demonstrate some future technology and discuss its
implications. At the conclusion of this session,
participants will have increased familiarity with
state-of-the-art applications, techniques to install them
and the future of handheld computers and wireless
networking.
Introductions and Overview of Mini Course
Lecture with Audience Participation: The Top 10 Novel
Uses of PDAs in Health Care
Exercises and Demonstrations
12:00pm–3:00pm
3556—Introductions
to Molecular Techniques in Pediatric Research Training:
Basic Principles of Gene Regulation and Expression
Analyses
Educational
Workshop
P. L. Ramsay, Departments of
Perinatal-Neonatal Medicine and Cellular and Molecular
Biology and H. Karpen, Departments of Perinatal-Neonatal
Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX
Cell and molecular biology have revolutionized our
understanding of the aberrant physiology underlying the
mechanisms of human disease. Subspecialty training in
pediatrics requires a comprehensive understanding of the
molecular methodologies involved in the current diagnosis
and treatment of human disease, as well as the future
design of therapeutic interventions. This workshop is
designed to provide the pediatric physician in training
with an overview of some basic molecular principles
relevant to understanding normal gene expression, as well
as an understanding of the methodologies utilized in
current diagnostic and experimental designs. Workshop
modules will focus on participant identification of
several common laboratory methodologies for DNA
sub-cloning, generation of reporter gene constructs and
reporter gene system analyses. Upon completion of this
workshop, participants will be able to (a) describe two
critical components for gene sub-cloning and analysis, (b)
design a tissue-specific reporter gene construct for both
in vitro and/or in vivo analysis and (c) identify two
methods for the analysis of genetically altered gene
expression in vitro and/or in vivo.
1:00pm–3:00pm
3677—Brain
Nutrients in Development and Disease
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Jane E. McGowan and
Sidhartha Tan
1:00pm–3:00pm
3678—Cytokines
and Signaling Molecules in Immunity and Inflammation
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Christopher B. Wilson
1:00pm–3:00pm
3681—Historical
Perspectives
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Stanford T. Shulman
and E. Richard Stiehm
1:00pm–3:00pm
3682—Neonatal
Epidemiology and Follow Up I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Virginia
Delaney-Black and Susan Hintz
1:00pm–3:00pm
3704c—So
You Want To Be an Author
Educational
Workshop
Catherine D. DeAngelis,
Editor-in-Chief, JAMA, Chicago, IL
This interactive session will provide the attendee with
basic information on publication of a manuscript, as
derived from the perspective of an editor. Issues (with
data provided when possible) to be discussed are:
A. View From the Inside
- Characters involved
- Manuscript flow
- Peer review process
- Working with the author
B. View From the Outside
- How to choose the right journal for your paper
- How to prepare the cover letter
- How to prepare the abstract
- How to prepare the body of the manuscript
- How to prepare the references
C. Conflict of Interest and Ethics
3:15pm–5:15pm
3804—Neonatal
Pulmonary Biology
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Candice D. Fike and
Sandra E. Juul
3:15pm–5:15pm
3805—Nephrology
I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Samir S. El-Dahr and
Kathy L. Jabs
3:15pm–5:15pm
3806—Neurovascular
Injury of the Newborn
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Gabrielle deVeber and
Sidney M. Gospe
3:15pm–5:15pm
3807—Pediatric
Nutrition and Metabolism
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Robert J. Shulman and
John N. Udall
3:15pm–5:15pm
3811—Unique
Perinatal/Neonatal Developments
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: F. Sessions Cole and
Heber C. Nielsen
3:15pm–5:15pm
3850c—An
Innovative Approach to Self-Directed Professional
Development and Lifelong Learning
Educational
Workshop
Henry H. Bernstein, Associate
Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
MA and Carol Carraccio, Professor of Pediatrics,
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
The 21st century heralds a paradigm shift in medical
education with a focus turned to competence and outcomes.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)
is spearheading a competency-based system of graduate
medical education coincident with the American Board of
Pediatrics’ (ABP) initiative to transition from periodic
"recertification" to "maintenance of
certification." Our greatest challenge as educators
lies in developing tools to evaluate competence during
training and to equip all trainees with the skills
necessary to achieve quality continuous professional
development in order to maintain their certification in
pediatrics.
The overarching goal of this workshop is to explore the
value of using technology as a tool for promoting
self-assessment and lifelong learning in continuous
professional development. We will demonstrate how
physicians can use an innovative web-centered tool to
document competence in practice-based learning and
improvement. Participants will discover how to create and
manage a personal list of educational needs based on their
professional experiences, develop individualized learning
plans to address these needs and then document the impact
of learning on their practice.
The outcome of implementing this web-based technology
will be the ability to demonstrate competence of our
trainees in the domain of practice-based learning and
improvement to the ACGME and the preparation of tomorrow’s
physicians to demonstrate evidence of continuous
professional development in maintaining their
certification.
3:15pm–5:15pm
3853c—Who
Decides? Bioethical Dilemmas in Pediatrics
Educational
Workshop
Susan Albersheim, Clinical
Professor, Department of Pediatrics, British Columbia's
Children's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada and Joel E.
Frader, Professor of Pediatrics/Medical Ethics and
Humanities, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL
What should you do when parents want you to continue
burdensome treatments, which you think are futile? What
should you do when parents want you to stop intensive care
treatment, the continuation of which you think is in the
best interests of the child? Who ought to make decisions
for the not yet competent? Is it the parents, the doctors,
the ethics committee, society or some other disinterested
third party? The goal of this seminar is to consider the
complexity of these difficult decisions, looking at
factual and evaluative considerations. Through interactive
case discussion we will identify the problems and
potential pitfalls in decision-making for the pediatric
population.
3:45pm–5:15pm
3875A—Workshop
I—Adrenal
LWPES
Workshop
Chairs: Walter Miller, University
of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA and
Phyllis Speiser, New York University, Manhasset, NY
- Surgical Treatment for Ambiguous Genitalia— Who
Are We Treating and When?
- Prenatal Treatment of CAH—Should All Fetuses Be
Treated and By Whom?
7:15pm–9:15pm
3980A—Perinatal
Nutrition and Metabolism Club
Club
Early Programming: Effect of the Metabolic Milieu of
Embryo Culture on Gene Expression and Behavior
Richard Schultz, University of
Pennsylvania
Supported by an educational grant from Ross Pediatrics
Contact for information:
Rebecca Simmons, M.D.
Children’s Hospital, Philadelphia, Abramson Research
Center
Room 416, 34th & Civic Center Blvd.
Philadelphia, PA 19104-4318
Phone: (215)590-2895 Fax: (215)590-4267
Email: rsimmons@mail.med.upenn.edu
5:15pm–7:15pm
Poster
Session I
Original
Science Abstracts – Poster Session
- Neonatal Infectious
Diseases
- Multi-Organ
Ischemia-Reperfusion
- Hematology/Oncology
- Skin
- Bilirubin
- Neonatal Pulmonary
and Ventilation
- Epidemiology
- Breast Feeding/Well
Child
Sunday, 5/4/2003
7:00am–8:00am
4053—Neonatology
1
PAS
Meet the Professors Breakfast
While most of medicine must deal primarily with injury
and aging, neonatology deals with the newborn and
developing systems. The new biology is being applied to
how the infant develops and how injury can be avoided.
Wonderful research opportunities span the range from basic
research to translational studies to clinical research.
The challenge is to get the training necessary to answer
the multiple questions for which we need answers.
Neonatology—Where Clinical Care Meets Developmental
Biology
Alan H. Jobe, Children's Hospital
Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
Supported by an educational grant from the INO
Therapeutics, Inc.
7:00am–8:00am
4054—Neonatology
2
PAS
Meet the Professors Breakfast
An informal, friendly discussion on how to succeed in
academic neonatology.
Avroy A. Fanaroff, Case Western Reserve University
School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH
Supported by an educational grant from the INO
Therapeutics, Inc.
8:00am–10:00am
4100—Lung
Fluid and Ion Transport in the Perinatal Period
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: James J. Cummings, East
Carolina University, Greenville, NC
Pulmonary edema remains a significant problem in acute
and chronic lung diseases of the newborn. This session
will review our current understanding of the importance of
lung fluid balance and respiratory health and provide new
insights about this relationship. Dr. Jain will review the
role of Na reabsorption and fluid clearance across the
respiratory epithelium of the alveolar space with a focus
on molecular regulation. Dr. Barker will provide an
overview of our understanding of the importance of the
airway epithelium in regulating fluid and ion transport.
Dr. Bland will discuss new insights on lung fluid balance
in evolving and established bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Overview
James J. Cummings, East Carolina
University School of Medicine, Greenville, NC
Molecular Regulation of Na Transport in the Alveolar
Space
Lucky Jain, Emory University,
Atlanta, GA
Fluid and Ion Transport in the Neonatal Airway
Pierre M. Barker, University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Regulation of Lung Fluid Balance in Chronic Lung
Disease
Richard D. Bland, Stanford
University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA
Discussion
Supported by an educational grant from the INO
Therapeutics, Inc.
8:00am–10:00am
4102—Smallpox
and Bioterrorism Preparedness Planning
PAS/PIDS
Topic Symposium
Chair: John F. Modlin, Children's
Hospital at Dartmouth/Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon,
NH
This program will give a "pediatric
perspective" to smallpox bioterrorism preparedness
planning efforts now under way within federal, state and
local public health agencies. It will include a review of
smallpox epidemiology, clinical disease, smallpox (vaccinia)
vaccine and lessons learned from the WHO Smallpox
Eradication Program. The nature of the current threat and
responses to that threat will be discussed.
Smallpox Epidemiology and Clinical Disease
Walter A. Orenstein, National
Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA
Surveillance/Control Methods
J. Michael Lane, Formerly Director,
Smallpox Eradication Program, CDC, Atlanta, GA
Smallpox (Vaccinia) Vaccine: Efficacy and Complications
John M. Neff, Children’s Hospital
and Regional Medical Center, Seattle, WA
Smallpox Bioterrorism Preparedness Planning
John F. Modlin, Children's Hospital
at Dartmouth/Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, NH
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
8:00am–10:00am
4151—Brain
Imaging
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Terrie E. Inder and
Steve Miller
8:00am–10:00am
4152—Cellular
and Molecular Biology of Oxidants and Antioxidants
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Ikechukwu I. Ekekezie
and Ilene R. S. Sosenko
8:00am–10:00am
4153—Clinical
Bioethics
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: William L. Meadow and
David E. Woodrum
8:00am–10:00am
4154—Clinical
Trials in Perinatal and Neonatal Medicine I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Roger G. Faix and
Neil N. Finer
8:00am–10:00am
4157—Outcomes
of Prenatal Exposures
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Mark L. Batshaw and
Bruce K. Shapiro
11:45am–1:45pm
Poster
Session I I
Original
Science Abstracts – Poster Session
- Adolescent
Follow Up
- Respiratory
- Infection
- Infectious Diseases
- Gastroenterology
- Resuscitation
- Inflammation
Markers
- Metabolism
- Population-Based
Issues
- Respiratory
2:00pm–4:00pm
4600—Pediatric
Solid Organ Transplantation in the 21st Century
PAS/ASPN/AST/LWPES/NASPGHAN
Topic Symposium
Chairs: Ellis D. Avner,
President, ASPN, Mitchell B. Cohen, President, NASPGHAN
and Mark A. Sperling, President, LWPES
Organ transplantation remains the final therapeutic
option for many patients with chronic diseases of many
organ systems. Extraordinary advances in molecular and
cellular biology have led to new immunological approaches
which should make the holy grail of immune tolerance a
reality for the 21st century. This symposium will focus on
the exciting advances in four areas of pediatric solid
organ transplantation: pancreatic organ and islet
transplantation as a cure for diabetes, hepatic
transplantation for chronic hepatic and metabolic disease,
renal transplantation for end stage renal disease and
small bowel transplantation for previously untreatable
catastrophic bowel injury. This symposium is proudly
sponsored by the American Society of Pediatric Nephrology
(ASPN), the North American Society of Pediatric
Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (NASPGHAN), and
the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric , and supported by funding
from the American Society of Transplantation and the
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International
Evolving Therapeutic Role of Transplant Therapies for
T1DM
David M. Harlan, National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, MD
Hepatic Transplantation—Controversies and Challenges
Sue V. McDiarmid, University of
California, Los Angeles, CA
Renal Transplantation—Approaching the Holy Grail
William E. Harmon, Harvard Medical
School, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA
Small Bowel Transplantation—Ready for Prime Time
Simon P. Horslen, University of
Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE
Sponsored jointly with the American Society of
Pediatric Nephrology, American Society of Transplantation,
North American Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology,
Hepatology and Nutrition and Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
Supported by an educational grant from the American
Society of Transplantation and Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation International
2:00pm–4:00pm
4631c—The
Art of Lecturing
Educational
Workshop
Beverly Wood, Professor of
Radiology & Pediatrics, Keck School of Medicine,
University of Southern California
Receive helpful pointers to make your talks memorable
and useful. This session will introduce methods of
planning and organizing presentations, preparing and
designing visual aids, handouts and clear delivery.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4668—Terrorism
and Children
Educational
Workshop
R. Leggiadro, A. Fine, S. Shelov
and G. Foltin, Hackensack University Medical Center,
Hackensack, NJ, New York City Dept of Health, New York,
NY, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY and NYU School
of Medicine, New York, NY
The 2001 World Trade Center and anthrax attacks
established terrorism as a reality in this country. In
addition to anthrax, critical biological agents include
smallpox, plague, tularemia, botulinum toxin, and viral
hemorrhagic fever. Release of sarin nerve gas in the Tokyo
subway system by the Aum Shinrikyo cult in 1995 resulted
in some 5,000 casualties, including 12 deaths, and the
threat of a radiation incident perpetrated by terrorists
is also real. Pediatricians have a key role in the
management of illness after a terrorist incident,
including biological, chemical or nuclear releases.
Effective preparedness requires an increased index of
suspicion for unusual diseases or clusters of illness,
with prompt reporting to public health authorities to
facilitate recognition of an outbreak and subsequent
intervention. Psychological effects of a domestic
terrorist disaster on children will also need to be
managed appropriately. This workshop will address the
epidemiologic, clinical, preparedness and response issues
relevant to biological, chemical and nuclear threats to
children, who are especially vulnerable. Specific and
detailed diagnostic and management information will be
provided, as well as emergency contact and educational
resource information.
2:30pm–4:00pm
4730—Advances
in Neonatal Nutrition
PAS
State of the Art
Chair: William Hay, Jr.,
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, CO
Increasingly, extremely and very low birth weight
preterm infants appear to have marked nutritional
deficiencies that are associated with abnormal
development. This symposium will focus on three nutrients—amino
acids/protein, PUFAs, and iron—reviewing evidence for
deficiencies in preterm infants, roles and requirements,
and the potential for improving outcome by a more
aggressive approach to feeding preterm infants with
greater amounts of these nutrients. Scott Denne will
discuss the important benefits and potential risks of more
aggressive IV amino acid and enteral protein nutrition in
preterm infants, focusing on studies of protein and
nitrogen balance and growth. Shelia Innis will discuss the
role of polyunsaturated essential fatty acids in neural
development and neurodevelopmental outcome. Michael
Georgieff will discuss the role of iron nutrition in brain
development and present results of studies that have
addressed neurodevelopmental and cognitive outcome.
Benefits of Aggressive Amino Acid and Protein Intake in
Preterm Infants
Scott C. Denne, Indiana University
School of Medicine, James Whitcomb Riley Hospital,
Indianapolis, IN
Functional Role of Polyunsaturated FAtty Acids in Fetal
and Neonatal Brain Development.
Sheila M. Innis, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Role of Iron in Neonatal Brain Development
Michael K. Georgieff, University of
Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, MN
2:30pm–4:00pm
4731—Neonatal
Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) Infections: Current
Controversies
PAS/PIDS
State of the Art
Chair: Richard J. Whitley,
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Children's Hospital,
Birmingham, AL
This state of the art symposium will be of interest to
practitioners, generalists, neonatologists and infectious
diseases specialists and will explore current
controversies in the diagnosis and management of neonatal
HSV infection. Speakers will present maternal factors that
may allow interruption of maternal–fetal transmission of
the virus, the latest strategies for diagnosis and
treatment of newborns and the potential prevention of
neonatal HSV by use of pre-emptive antiviral therapy and
vaccines.
Maternal–Fetal Transmission: Risks and Opportunities
Ann M. Arvin, Stanford University
School of Medicine, Stanford, CA
Diagnosis and Treatment of Neonatal HSV
Richard J. Whitley, University of
Alabama at Birmingham, Children's Hospital, Birmingham, AL
Prevention of Neonatal HSV Infection: Are Vaccines the
Answer?
Lawrence R. Stanberry, University of
Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX
Discussion
Questions from the Audience and Answers from the
Experts
Audience Moderators: Gail J. Demmler,
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
Larry Givner, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
2:30pm–4:30pm
4760—The
Changing Spectrum of Pediatric Specialty Care: Implication
for Pediatric Generalist and Specialist
PAS
State of the Art
Chair: Russell Chesney,
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN
In the face of dramatic alterations in health care
delivery during the 1990s, the roles of pediatric
generalists and subspecialists have changed. This has led
to national debate as to how general pediatricians and
subspecialists should be trained, how they should interact
and what final product or solution is desired. Both the
United States and Canada are affected by these changes. In
this session three experts will cover important aspects of
this emerging problem.
Overview
Russell W. Chesney, University of
Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN
Distribution of Generalist and Subspecialist Care for
Children: A Moving Target
Julia A. McMillan, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
Subspecialty Pediatrics in Canada
Robert H.A. Haslam, University of
Toronto, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada
Who Cares for Children with Chronic Conditions?
James M. Perrin, Mass General
Hospital for Children, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Public Policy Council of the
APS, AMSPDC, SPR and the Public Policy Committee of the
APA
2:45pm–4:15pm
4780—Sex
and the Pediatrician
PAS/LWPES
State of the Art
Chair: David Geller, UCLA School
of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
The processes of gonadal differentiation,
X-inactivation and the proper imprinting of selected genes
are all required for the correct development of gonadal
and phenotypic sex. Recent advances in these three areas
will be presented.
Sexual Differentiation: Battle of the Sexes
J. Larry Jameson, Northwestern
University Medical School, Chicago, IL
X-Inactivation in Pediatric Endocrinology
Huntington F. Willard, Institute for
Genome Sciences and Policy, Duke University, Durham, NC
Imprinted Genes and the Role of Parental Sex
J. Richard Chaillet, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
3:45pm–6:15pm
4849—Current
Research Issues in STDs and Adolescents: Chlamydia,
Genital Herpes and Human Papillomavirus Infection
PAS/PIDS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Donald E. Greydanus,
Michigan State University Kalamazoo Center for Medical
Studies, Kalamazoo, MI
This session reviews current research principles in
selected sexually transmitted diseases. First, clinical
epidemiology and prevention issues for Chlamydia
trachomatis are considered, emphasizing rescreening
(delayed retesting of infected persons), novel strategies
for ensuring partner treatment, and the role of male
screening in disease control. Then, new directions in
public health and prevention aspects of genital herpes are
outlined. An update of the HSV vaccine is presented.
Finally, human papillomavirus (HPV) is considered,
including new recommendations in human papillomavirus
testing, triage of abnormal Pap smears and the current
status of HPV vaccines. Questions are encouraged from the
audience.
Chlamydia Prevention in Teens: New Directions
H. Hunter Handsfield, University of
Washington and Public Health - Seattle & King County,
Seattle, WA
Genital Herpes
Anna Wald, University of Washington
Virology Research Clinic, Seattle, WA
Human Papillomavirus Infection
Anna-Barbara Moscicki, Glaser
Pediatric Research Network, University of California, San
Francisco, CA
Epidemiology of STDs in Children and Adolescents:
Perspectives from the World Health Organization
Sibongile Dludlu, World Health
Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
4:15pm–6:15pm
4850—Animal
Models of Human Cardiopulmonary Development
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Marlene Rabinovitch,
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA and
Scott Baldwin, Vanderbilt University Medical Center,
Nashville, TN
This symposium highlights how a variety of approaches
have led to understanding how mutations in specific genes
cause abnormalities in cardiopulmonary development. Our
focus is on reproducing, in a transgenic animal, a
genotype relevant to human disease, observing the fidelity
of the phenotype and then establishing the downstream
pathobiology. For example, in the case of a transcription
factor mutation, the pathobiology should be evident based
upon the target genes involved. When an extracellular
matrix component is mutated, strategies are designed to
define how this alters cellular events that cause disease.
Introduction
Marlene Rabinovitch, Stanford
University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA
Scott H. Baldwin, Vanderbilt University Medical Center,
Nashville, TN
Molecular Building Blocks of the Heart: Implications
for Congenital Hearth Disease
Deepak Srivastava, The University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
Genes That Alter Vascular Development and Gene Therapy
Harry C. Dietz, Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD
Lung and Lung Vascular Development
John M. Shannon, Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
From Hop to Jump in Cardiac Development and the
Genetics of Congenital Heart Disease
Jon Epstein, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
4:15pm–6:15pm
4851—Developmental
Neurogenetics
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: William Dobyns, The
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
This 2-hour symposium will review two current topics in
developmental neurogenetics using both mouse and human
malformations to elucidate the molecular basis of normal
and abnormal brain development. The two areas covered will
be midbrain–hindbrain (brainstem and cerebellum)
development and nonradial migration in the forebrain. For
both topics, speakers will review existing mouse models
and genes known to be involved in key developmental steps,
review relevant human malformations and present the
results of ongoing research.
The Long and Winding Road: The Role of Gene Discovery
in Human Brain Malformations
William B. Dobyns, The University of
Chicago, Chicago, IL
Getting to the Roof of the Problem: Development and
Malformations of the Mid-Hindbrain in Mice
Kathleen J. Millen, The University
of Chicago, Chicago, IL
Getting to the Roof of Our Problem: Human Malformations
of the Mid-Hindbrain
Melissa A. Parisi, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA
Where Has All the GABA Gone? ARX, Malformations,
Epilepsy, Mental Retardation and Pleiotropy
William B. Dobyns, The University of
Chicago, Chicago, IL
Discussion
4:15pm–6:15pm
4860—Cytokines
and Signaling Molecules in Necrotizing Enterocolitis
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Victoria N.O.
Camerini and Mitchell B. Cohen
4:15pm–6:15pm
4863—Neonatal
and Fetal Nutrition and Metabolism I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Scott C. Denne and
Rebecca A. Simmons
4:15pm–6:15pm
4864—Neonatal
Potpourri
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Richard J. Martin and
Patti J. Thureen
4:15pm –
6:15pm
4870
Late Breakers: Neonatal Clinical Studies
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Richard Krueger, Jr.
and Ashima Madan
Monday, 5/5/2003
8:00am–10:00am
5100—Birth
Defects in the Developing Countries
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Michael Katz, March of
Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, White Plains, NY
In low- and middle-income countries where more than 80%
of the world’s population lives, birth defects and other
perinatal problems cause more loss of healthy years of
life to early mortality and disability than almost any
other condition. Yet, development of strategies for the
prevention and care of birth defects has received
insufficient international attention to date. The reasons
for this include: a general lack of knowledge of the
problem and of the considerable social and economic toll
it imposes; a lack of awareness of the potential for
prevention; and, as important, the absence of an
international framework of mechanisms for promoting
cooperative actions and solutions.
This session will present statistics on the global toll
of birth defects and discuss a recent report of the U.S.
Institute of Medicine commissioned to identify
cost-effective opportunities for care and prevention of
birth defects in developing countries. Specific
recommendations for priority research, capacity building
and institutional efforts to reduce adverse birth outcomes
will also be discussed. The session will explore the
applicability of the report’s findings to developing
countries. It will also suggest what actions are required
to implement appropriate public health strategies. It will
conclude with a presentation on research directions for
care and prevention.
Introduction
Michael Katz, March of Dimes Birth
Defects Foundation, White Plains, NY
The Origin of the IOM Report: Increasing Toll of Birth
Defects Worldwide: A Neglected Public Health Priority
Christopher P. Howson, March of
Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, White Plains, NY
The IOM Report
Barbara J. Stoll, Emory University
School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA
Perspective from a Developing Country
Arnold Christianson, National Health
Laboratory Service and University of Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, South Africa
Perspective from the United States
Jeffrey C. Murray, University of
Iowa Hospitals & Clinics, Iowa City, IA
Perspective from the CDC
Jose' F. Cordero, National Center on
Birth Defects & Developmental Disabilities
Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the March of Dimes Birth Defects
Foundation
8:00am–10:00am
5101—The
Genetic Basis of Gastrointestinal Disease
PAS/NASPGHAN/AAP
Topic Symposium
Chairs: William Berquist,
NASPGHAN, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo
Alto, CA and Michael Narkewicz, AAP, University of
Colorado Health Science Center, Denver, CO
Attendees of this topic symposium will learn of the
exciting new advancements in understanding the genetic
contributions to a variety of gastrointestinal diseases
such as intractable diarrhea, Hirschsprung’s Disease and
inflammatory bowel disease.
The Genetics of Intractable Diarrhea and Intestinal
Failure in Infants
Martin G. Martin, University of
California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA
Genetic Basis of Hirschsprung’s Disease: Implications
in Clinical Practice
Cheryl E. Gariepy, University of
Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, MI
The Genetics of IBD: Diagnostic and Therapeutic
Implications
Carmen Cuffari, Johns Hopkins
Hospital, Baltimore, MD
Sponsored jointly with the North American Society of
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition,
American Academy of Pediatrics
8:00am–10:00am
5102—Intrauterine
Environment and Neonatal Health
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: David P. Carlton,
University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
New information is emerging that attests to the
importance of the intrauterine environment on subsequent
neonatal and child health. Although premature labor is one
of the most acute outcomes that result from alterations in
the normal intrauterine environment, more subtle outcomes
include those affecting the respiratory and central
nervous systems. Dr. Alan Jobe will discuss the exciting
new insights that he and his colleagues have made
concerning lung function and intrauterine inflammation.
Dr. Van Marter will examine the epidemiological
information available that highlights the role of
intrauterine inflammation and subsequent neurological
development.
Overview
David P. Carlton, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, WI
Intrauterine Inflammation and Neonatal Respiratory
Function
Alan H. Jobe, Children's Hospital
Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH
Neurological Impact of Intrauterine Inflammation
Linda J. Van Marter, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA
Discussion
8:00am–10:00am
5154—Necrotizing
Enterocolitis—Bench to Bedside
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Bohuslav Dvorak and
Josef Neu
8:00am–10:00am
5155—Neonatal
and Fetal Nutrition and Metabolism II
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: David W. Boyle and
Morey W. Haymond
8:00am–10:00am
5156—Neonatal
Infectious Diseases
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Laurence B. Givner
and Kwang Sik Kim
8:00am–10:00am
5157—Neonatal—Patient-Oriented
Research I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Ronald L. Poland and
Michele C. Walsh-Sukys
8:00am–10:00am
5158—Neuroprotection
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Marianne Thoresen and
Jerome Y. Yager
9:00am–12:00pm
5203—Family
Presence for Procedures—Trying To Please Everyone
Educational
Workshop
S. Selbst, K. Bradford, A. Pratt,
S. Kost and A. Renwick, A.I. duPont Hospital for Children,
Wilmington, DE and Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia, PA
Family presence for procedures is a relatively new
concept in pediatric medicine. Studies have shown that
many parents prefer to be with their children when they
undergo painful or invasive procedures. Some physicians
are reluctant to accept this break with tradition and
refuse to allow parents in the room. The purpose of this
workshop is to develop an approach to successful
procedures with parental presence. Workshop leaders
(including physicians, social work, housestaff) will
address critical issues such as:
- Review of the literature—what do parents/families
want?
- What is best for the children?
- What rights do the parents have? How about the
physicians?
- Are some situations/procedures (i.e.,
resuscitations) "off-limits"?
- How can we instill confidence in trainees when the
family is watching?
- Can we preserve teaching opportunities?
- Are there safety risks? Legal issues?
- Enlisting the help of others: the role of liaisons,
social workers, therapists
Using case scenarios and role-playing, workshop leaders
will address the pros and cons of family presence for
procedures. Participants will be expected to share their
experiences and ideas to move forward with this
"unconventional" approach to medical care. It is
expected that through discussion and debate we will
implement a system for success.
9:00am–12:00pm
5206—Navigating
the Legal Waters in Clinical Medicine: A Primer for
Pediatricians
Educational
Workshop
J. Klig, M. Flomenbaum, L.
Arnold, C. Baum, K. Bechtel, K. Santucci and M. D. Baker,
Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Yale-New Haven
Children’s Hospital, New Haven, CT and Office of Chief
Medical Examiner, New York, NY
The incidence of lawsuits in the United States
continues to rise. Within this environment, pediatricians
are vulnerable to litigation yet often have limited
experience and information about the legal process and
relevant principles of law. Legal dilemmas are
particularly common in acute care settings and frequently
are managed without the immediate advice of counsel. In
this workshop, participants will explore basic legal
issues that impact on medical practitioners, gain
familiarity with the litigation process and examine
strategies for testifying in court. A team of specialists
in pediatric emergency medicine, malpractice issues, court
testimony and forensic medicine will begin the workshop
with an interactive presentation of case scenarios that
highlight common statutory dilemmas, malpractice issues
and the litigation process (civil and criminal).
Participants will then view videotapes of court testimony
and discuss strategies for testifying as a fact or expert
witness. Workshop leaders and participants will conclude
the session with small group discussions of individual
experiences with civil or criminal proceedings and legal
testimony. A complete syllabus will be provided for the
workshop that is designed for use as a teaching manual.
10:15am–12:15pm
5350—Bone
Health
PAS/LWPES
Topic Symposium
Chair: Catherine Gordon,
Children's Hospital, Boston, MA
Healthy bones in childhood are of vital importance, for
they determine future bone health or disease in adulthood.
In this symposium, recent advances in the understanding of
the biology of bone formation and turnover will be
discussed. Clinical disorders affecting pediatric bone
health, and the assessment of their impact, will be
presented. The controversial issue of whether breast-fed
babies should be given supplemental vitamin D will be
considered next. Finally, recent advances in the use of
new anti-resorptive agents in the treatment of metabolic
bone diseases of children will be presented.
Basic Biology of Bone
Gerard Karsenty, Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, TX
Disorders Affecting Pediatric Bone Health and Their
Assessment
Laura K. Bachrach, Stanford
University Medical Center, Stanford, CA
Is Vitamin D Supplementation Indicated in Breast–fed
Infants?
Thomas O. Carpenter, Yale University
School of Medicine, New Haven, CT
Bisphosphonates in the Treatment of Metabolic Bone
Disease
Frank Rauch, Shriners Hospital for
Children, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
11:45am–12:45am
5450A—20th
Annual Audrey K. Brown Kernicterus Symposium
Club
Chairs: William J. Cashore,
Womens and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island, Providence,
RI and David K. Stevenson, Stanford University School of
Medicine, Palo Alto, CA
How To Establish Accuracy in Bilirubin Measurements in
the Newborn
Basil Doumas
Imaging Kernicterus
William S. Ball
Contact for information:
David K. Stevenson, M.D.
Neonatal & Developmental Medicine
Stanford University School of Medicine
750 Welch Road, Suite 315, Palo Alto, CA 94305
Phone: (650)723-5711 Fax: (650)725-8351
EMail: dstevenson@stanford.edu
Supported by an educational grant from the Natus
Medical, Inc.
12:15pm–1:00pm
5525—2003
Special Presentation: Responding to the Quality Crisis
PAS
Special Presentation
Chair: Carden Johnston,
President-elect, American Academy of Pediatrics
Overview
Carden Johnston, The Children's
Hospital, Birmingham, AL
Al Aynsley-Green, National Clinical Director for
Children, Department of Health, Her Majesty's Government,
Nuffield Professor of Child Health, The Institute of Child
Health, University College London
University of London, Director of Clinical Research &
Development, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children and
The Institute of Child Health, London
Discussion
What happens when there is a public national concern
about excessive poor outcomes at a Children's Medical
Center? This was the scenario in Bristol, England, where a
crisis in the outcome of children after cardiac surgery
developed even when well–trained, committed, concerned
clinicians and subspecialists were intimately involved.
Because of this, Professor Al Aynsley-Green, President of
the Academic Paediatricians, was appointed to the new post
of National Clinical Director for Children by Parliament
and to Chair a Children's Taskforce to answer the question
of how can such a negative experience like this be turned
into positive outcomes for children? He is charged to
secure the health and well-being of all children
throughout childhood into adult life by developing a
National Service Framework for children's services across
health, social care and education.
Lessons he has learned and experiences he has lived
will be shared to help pediatricians around the world with
our quest to improve the lives and health of children. The
goals, activities and experiences of the Children's
Taskforce, as well as six external working groups, are
exportable, practical and logical. Strategies used for
developing opportunities not only to improve child health
at a local level but also at a national level will be
discussed.
Opportunities for questions and discussion will be
provided so attendees can share effective techniques to
improve child life and health.
Sponsored jointly with the American Academy of
Pediatrics
3:00pm–5:00pm
5652—Newborn
Screening: Challenges and Controversies
PAS/LWPES
Topic Symposium
Chair: Edward R. B. McCabe, David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's
Hospital, Los Angeles, CA
Newborn screening programs, which have been in place
for more than 40 years, are facing major challenges.
Technological advances permit the addition of an
increasing number of diseases, including many for which
the benefits are not as clear-cut as for PKU, congenital
hyperthyroidism or sickle cell disease. As pilot projects
evaluate the addition of new tests, the importance of
involving parents in decision-making is being actively
discussed. Originally established with a "public
health imperative," the predominant state model has
been one of "informed dissent." Various models
for informing and involving parents will be discussed, as
well as their feasibility and cost. There are a number of
legislative developments under consideration locally and
nationally, and these will be presented and analyzed. As
new diseases are considered for addition to screening
batteries, it is possible to screen for disorders that
have no effective interventions defined. It is clear that
if we do not screen for these diseases, no improvements in
care will advance. We will discuss whether such arguments
justify screening. In summary, technological advances are
forcing policy decisions. We will discuss the impacts of
these challenges.
Overview of Newborn Screening in 2003
Edward R. B. McCabe, David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's Hospital,
Los Angeles, CA
Parental Consent: Necessary or Sufficient?
Edward R. B. McCabe, David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's Hospital,
Los Angeles, CA
Legislative Impacts in the Nursery
Michele Puryear, Maternal and Child
Health Bureau, Health Resources & Services
Administration, Rockville, MD
Should We Screen for Conditions We Can't Treat?
R. Rodney Howell, University of
Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL
Roundtable Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
3:00pm–5:00pm
5653—Nutrient
Signaling
PAS/LWPES
Topic Symposium
Chair: Philip A. Gruppuso, Rhode
Island Hospital and Brown University, Providence, RI
In the past several years, considerable progress has
been made in understanding the mechanisms by which
nutrient availability controls cell growth and
proliferation. While hormonal mechanisms have been
carefully studied and are well established, the signal
transduction mechanisms that account for nutrient
responsiveness at the cellular level have only recently
come under intense scrutiny. This symposium will focus on
these cellular mechanisms. Topics will include the
nutrient regulation of cell proliferation, nutritional
control of mRNA translation and the developmental
modulation of nutrient signaling. In particular, speakers
will focus on the molecular nature and regulation of cell
signaling mechanisms that are nutrient-responsive, the
integration of these signaling pathways and their
developmental modulation. A goal of the symposium is to
provide a physiological context for these signaling
mechanisms, thereby establishing their relationship to a
critical area in pediatrics, the nutritional control of
growth.
An Overview of Nutritional Signaling
Philip A. Gruppuso, Rhode Island
Hospital and Brown University, Providence, RI
The Nutritional Control of Cell Proliferation
Philip A. Gruppuso, Rhode Island
Hospital and Brown University, Providence, RI
Nutritional Control of mRNA Translation
Scot R. Kimball, Pennsylvania State
University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA
Developmental Changes in Nutrient Signaling Impact
Muscle Protein Synthesis in Neonatal Pigs
Teresa A. Davis, Children's
Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, TX
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
3:00pm–5:00pm
5654—Vaccines–2003
PAS/PIDS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Stanley A. Plotkin,
Aventis Pasteur and the University of Pennsylvania,
Doylestown, PA
This symposium covers four issues in vaccination. The
American Academy of Pediatrics and CDC currently are
moving toward a recommendation for universal annual
vaccination of infants with killed or live influenza
vaccine. Why is this? Now that Rotashield is off the
market, a new rotavirus vaccine is needed and may be on
the way. Despite good protection of children by
vaccination, pertussis infections are rising in
adolescents and adults. Can they be controlled? Recent
disruptions in vaccine supply have caused pediatricians
significant problems. What are the causes and solutions?
Universal Influenza Vaccination in Children
W. Paul Glezen, Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, TX
New Rotavirus Vaccines: After Rotashield
Paul A. Offit, Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
Adolescent and Adult Pertussis Vaccination
Kathryn M. Edwards, Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN
Vaccine Shortages: Causes and Effects
Walter A. Orenstein, National
Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
3:00pm–5:00pm
5703—Genetics/Inborn
Errors of Metabolism
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Gregory M. Enns and
Adam J. Jonas
3:00pm–5:00pm
5704—Hyperbilirubinemia
and Kernicterus: Epidemiology, Etiology and Therapy
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Vinod K. Bhutani and
M. Jeffrey Maisels
Supported by an educational grant from the Natus
Medical, Inc.
3:00pm–5:00pm
5705—Neonatal
Disease-Oriented Research: Lung Inflammation
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Alan H. Jobe and Rita
M. Ryan
3:00pm–5:00pm
5706—Neonatal—Patient-Oriented
Research II
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Edward F. Donovan and
Jayant P. Shenai
3:00pm–5:00pm
5707—Novel
Mechanisms in Brain Injury
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Henrik Hagberg and
Frances J. Northington
5:00pm–6:30pm
Poster
Session I II | |