Annals of emergency medicine
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Radial head subluxation is a frequent upper-extremity injury in children. Through a prospective study of patients seen in the emergency department, the epidemiology and treatment were reviewed, and two methods of reduction were compared. During a nine-month period, there were 87 episodes of radial head subluxation in 83 children with six cases in infants 6 months old or younger. ⋯ The presence of a click during a reduction attempt had a positive predictive value of 92% and a negative predictive value of 76%. Most children (76.8%) had return of arm use in less than ten minutes. Slow return of arm use (more than ten minutes) was not associated with delay in reduction but was associated with age of less than 2 years (P less than .001).
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effect of oral midazolam on anxiety of preschool children during laceration repair.
Preschool age children often experience marked anxiety and physical pain during laceration repair. Locally infiltrated anesthetics or topical tetracaine, adrenaline, and cocaine (TAC) usually control the physical pain but have little or no effect on anxiety. Midazolam is a short-acting benzodiazepine with anxiolytic, hypnotic, and antegrade amnestic effects. ⋯ In the midazolam group (30), 70% of the children had a two-point or more decrease in anxiety level compared with 12% in the placebo group (25) (P less than .0001). No respiratory depression or other complications were noted in the midazolam group. We conclude that a single oral dose of midazolam (0.2 mg/kg) is a safe and effective treatment for alleviating anxiety in children less than 6 years old during laceration repair in the ED.
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We prospectively studied the management and outcome of 2,834 children, aged 1 month to 18 years, who presented to the emergency department of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for laceration repair. Patients with bite wounds were excluded from the study. Eight percent (239) of all patients had complications on initial evaluation; the most common was the presence of a foreign body (55). ⋯ The majority of injuries were repaired by ED personnel without surgical consultation. Postrepair infection rates were not influenced by the specialty of the physician managing the case. Although our study was not designed to specifically test the issue, prophylactic antibiotics were of no proven benefit in reducing infection rates in any group of patients analyzed.
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A retrospective study was undertaken to define objective radiologic parameters in diagnosing epiglottitis on soft-tissue lateral neck radiographic studies. Ratios of soft-tissue structures in 31 patients aged 7 months to 61 years with epiglottitis were compared with those of age- and sex-matched controls with croup, pharyngitis, and dysphagia. ⋯ In children, EW/C3W, AEW/C3W, and EW/EH ratios of more than 0.5, of more than 0.35, and of 0.6 or more, respectively, were found to be 100% sensitive in detecting epiglottitis with specificities of 87%, 96%, and 87% respectively. These preliminary results suggest that EW/C3W, EW/EH, and AEW/C3W ratios of more than 0.5, of 0.6 or more, and of more than 0.35, respectively, may be useful in the radiologic diagnosis of epiglottitis in patients of all ages.
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The relief of pain is one of the most common reasons for seeking care in an emergency department. We conducted a retrospective chart review to see whether children received analgesic treatment similar to that of adults with the same acute, painful conditions. Charts of 112 pediatric patients from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia ED and 156 patients from the Medical College of Pennsylvania ED were reviewed. ⋯ On discharge from the ED, 55% of all patients had no pain medications prescribed; and children were less likely than adults to receive analgesics at discharge (P less than .001). Pediatricians and emergency physicians are reluctant to use analgesics for children in pain. The data suggest that these physicians need additional education about management of acute pain.