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Lisa A. Wrage

Researcher at Research Triangle Park

Publications -  19
Citations -  3995

Lisa A. Wrage is an academic researcher from Research Triangle Park. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low birth weight & Birth weight. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 19 publications receiving 3573 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa A. Wrage include RTI International & University of California, San Diego.

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Growth in the neonatal intensive care unit influences neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes of extremely low birth weight infants.

TL;DR: It is suggested that growth velocity during an ELBW infant’s NICU hospitalization exerts a significant, and possibly independent, effect on neurodevelopmental and growth outcomes at 18 to 22 months’ corrected age.
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Validation of the National Institutes of Health consensus definition of bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

TL;DR: As the severity of BPD identified by the consensus definition worsened, the incidence of those outcomes and of selected adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes increased in the infants who were seen at follow-up, and the consensus BPD definition was identified more accurately than other definitions.
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Role of human milk in extremely low birth weight infants’ risk of necrotizing enterocolitis or death

TL;DR: Data suggest a dose-related association of HM feeding with a reduction of risk of NEC or death after the first 2 weeks of life among extremely low birth weight infants.
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Extremely low birthweight neonates with protracted ventilation: mortality and 18-month neurodevelopmental outcomes.

TL;DR: The prognosis for ELBW with protracted ventilation remains grim, and the cohort who remain intubated have diminished survival and high rates of impairment.
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Early nutrition mediates the influence of severity of illness on extremely LBW infants.

TL;DR: Adjusted analyses using general linear and logistic regression modeling and a formal mediation framework demonstrated that the influence of critical illness on the risk of adverse outcomes was mediated by total daily energy intake during the first week of life.