Pediatric emergency care
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021
Pediatric Exposures Reported to the Toxicology Investigators Consortium, 2010-2015.
Poisoning is the leading cause of injury death in pediatric patients. Hospital and provider readiness, including pharmacy stocking, depends on reliable surveillance data describing local patterns of age-specific clinically significant exposures and the therapeutic modalities employed in their treatment. We aimed to characterize trends in clinically significant toxic exposures and their management. ⋯ Toxicology consultations for pediatric exposures increased from 2010 to 2015. Understanding which pediatric exposures require toxicologist management, the therapies most frequently employed, and geographical patterns is paramount to facility-level planning, pharmacy stocking, and provider education.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021
Multicenter StudyDeep Neck Abscesses in Children: An Italian Retrospective Study.
Retropharyngeal and parapharyngeal abscesses (RPAs, PPAs) usually affect young children. Surgical drainage and/or antibiotic therapy are treatment of choice, but no specific guidelines exist. In order to reduce the risk of severe complications, appropriate diagnosis and therapy are necessary. The aims of the study were to review diagnosis and management of children with RPAs/PPAs and to compare surgical versus medical approach. ⋯ Deep neck abscesses mostly affect patients in early childhood, with a combination of nonspecific signs and symptoms, and it still emerges as a heterogeneous approach in diagnosis and management of these infections. Thus, common shared protocols represent an essential tool in order to standardize care and improve patients' outcomes.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021
Multicenter StudyVariability in Point-of-Care Lung Ultrasound Findings in Pediatric COVID-19 Patients: A Multicenter Case Series.
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has been described as a useful tool for identification of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in adults and children. Although several case reports describe POCUS findings in children with COVID-19, to our knowledge, there have been no published multicenter case series describing the large heterogeneity in lung POCUS findings in pediatric COVID-19. ⋯ The findings were variable, ranging from no findings to the appearance of B-lines, pleural abnormalities, consolidations, and a pleural effusion. Further studies are needed to improve our understanding, characterization, and prognostic correlation of POCUS findings in this novel disease in children.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021
ReviewPediatric Blunt Abdominal Trauma and Point-of-Care Ultrasound.
Blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) accounts for most trauma in children. Although the focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST) is considered standard of care in the evaluation of adults with traumatic injuries, there is limited evidence to support its use as an isolated evaluation tool for intra-abdominal injury as a result of BAT in children. Although a positive FAST examination could obviate the need for a computed tomography scan before OR evaluation in a hemodynamically unstable patient, a negative FAST examination cannot exclude intra-abdominal injury as a result of BAT in isolation. In this article, we review the evaluation of BAT in children, describe the evaluation for free intraperitoneal fluid and pericardial fluid using the FAST examination, and discuss the limitations of the FAST examination in pediatric patients.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021
Case ReportsFacial Nerve Hematoma After Penetrating Middle Ear Trauma: A Cause of Delayed Facial Palsy.
Penetrating middle ear injury may cause hearing loss, vertigo, or facial nerve injury, although facial nerve paralysis followed by head trauma is a rare condition. In this study, we report a case of a 3-year-old patient with delayed facial palsy on the left side that developed 4 days after an accidental tympanic membrane perforation caused by a cotton-tipped swab. ⋯ Pre- and postcontrast T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated high signal intensity along the tympanic portion of the fallopian canal, which suggested that hemorrhage within the facial canal may be a cause of delayed facial palsy. It can be assumed that traumatic injury at the dehiscent facial nerve in the tympanic portion caused hematoma within the fallopian canal, resulting in delayed facial nerve palsy.