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Miles Weinberger
Miles Weinberger
Visiting Clinical Professor of Pediatrics
Dr. Weinberger is Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics, University of Iowa and is currently Visiting Professor of Pediatrics at the University of California San Diego. He is Board Certified in both Allergy & Clinical Immunology and Pediatric Pulmonology. A graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, he received pediatric training at the University of California in San Francisco. Two years were spent at the National Institutes of Health in a research fellowship. He completed Fellowships in Pediatric Allergy and Clinical Immunology and Clinical Pharmacology at the National Jewish Hospital and University of Colorado. Dr. Weinberger started the Pediatric Allergy & Pulmonary Division at the University of Iowa in 1975 and chaired it for most of his 40 year tenure there. Dr. Weinberger has authored over 200 manuscript publications, 42 book chapters and monographs, and a book entitled Managing Asthma. He has been an invited speaker more than 500 times throughout the United States and in 21 foreign countries.
University of California San Diego

Public Documents 5
Commentary Addressing Concerns Raised by Dr. Slovarp and her Esteemed Colleagues
Miles Weinberger
Dennis Buettner

Miles Weinberger

and 1 more

April 25, 2024
A document by Miles Weinberger. Click on the document to view its contents.
The Habit Cough Syndrome
Miles Weinberger
Dennis Buettner

Miles Weinberger

and 1 more

September 29, 2023
A document by Miles Weinberger. Click on the document to view its contents.
Effect of C‐reactive protein on chest X‐ray interpretation: it’s more complicated.
Miles Weinberger

Miles Weinberger

February 25, 2021
A chest x-ray cannot diagnose pneumonia, it only shows shadows. Pneumonia then becomes a clinical diagnosis for which antibiotics should be considered primarily after careful clinical assessment of how sick the child appears, the presence of fever, an elevated CRP, an elevated procalcitonin, and a radiologic image of a distinct lobar or lobular infiltrate.
Determination of Etiology for Exercise-Induced Dyspnea
Mutasim Abu-Hasan
Rajeev Bhatia

Mutasim Abu-Hasan

and 2 more

March 08, 2021
Two recent publications in Pediatric Pulmonology had methodological limitations in evaluating exercise-induced dyspnea (EID). Testing that does not include concurrence of dyspnea with an abnormality may provide misleading information to the detriment of the patient. Reproducing the patient’s dyspnea during cardiopulmonary monitoring provides the etiology of at least 7 causes of EID, many of which may not otherwise be identified.
Exercise-induced Dyspnea
Miles Weinberger

Miles Weinberger

January 25, 2021
The evaluation of exercise-induced dyspnea (EID) in otherwise healthy children and adolescents is often limited to a specific cause such as exercise-induced asthma or vocal cord dysfunction. However, modest degrees of bronchospasm or vocal cord dysfunction may occur in the absence of dyspnea. Testing that does not include concurrence of dyspnea with an abnormality may provide misleading information to the detriment of the patient. This commentary describes the limitations of two recent publications in Pediatric Pulmonology. Reproducing the patient’s dyspnea during cardiopulmonary monitoring provides the etiology of at least 7 causes of EID.

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