Nilesh M. Mehta
Boston Children's Hospital
158 Papers
562 Citations
Nilesh M. Mehta is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pediatric intensive care unit. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 143 publications. Previous affiliations of Nilesh M. Mehta include State University of New York Upstate Medical University & Harvard University.
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Papers
Forty-Third ASPEN Presidential Address: "Our Time Is Now-Challenges and Strategies for the Field of Nutrition".
TL;DR: The ASPEN community and the international colleagues gathered at the ASPEN 2019 Nutrition Science and Practice Meeting are addressed, with a revisit of the historical beginnings of the field and organization, and some of the lessons learned.
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Nutritional Support in the Pediatric ICU
Kimberly I. Mills,Nilesh M. Mehta +1 more
- 01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: Recent data should guide the timing of supplemental parenteral nutrition when enteral nutrition is not feasible or insufficient, and future studies designed to assess the efficacy of immunonutrition are desired before this practice can be recommended.
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Long-Term Functional Outcomes at 1-Year After Hospital Discharge in Critically Ill Neonates With Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia.
Jill O’Hara,Terry L. Buchmiller,Lori J. Bechard,Alireza Akhondi-Asl,G. Visner,Catherine A. Sheils,Ronald E. Becker,Mollie Studley,Lindsay Lemire,Mary P. Mullen,Sally H. Vitali,Nilesh M. Mehta,Belinda H. Dickie,Jill M. Zalieckas,Ben D. Albert +14 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined longitudinal change in Functional Status Scale (FSS) after hospital discharge in CDH survivors and observed unchanged or improving functional status longitudinally over 1-year follow-up.
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478: protein delivery during the first week of pediatric ecmo
Katelyn Ariagno,Lindsey B. Armstrong,Craig D Smallwood,Mary Arbuthnot,Charles R. Hong,Tom Jaksic,Nilesh M. Mehta +6 more
TL;DR: Adoption of CBIIA in Saint Luke’s health system ICUs didn’t result in reduction of length of stay for hyperglycemia or DKA patients, and lack of benefit might be related to optimal glucose management before the intervention since the authors' ICUs are either closed or monitored by eICU.
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Risk Factors for Fractures in Children Hospitalized in Intensive and Intermediate Care Units
Ian S. Zenlea,Patrice Melvin,Susanna Y. Huh,Nilesh M. Mehta,Suzanne Reidy,Erinn T. Rhodes,Nina S. Ma +6 more
TL;DR: Children prone to fracture in the hospital are young, medically complex patients who require extended periods of intensive level medical care and potentially life-sustaining treatment modalities, who would benefit most from fracture reduction efforts.
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