Pediatric emergency care
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Pediatric emergency care · May 2021
Case ReportsHard as Iron: A Case of Delayed Presentation of Severe Iron Toxicity With Diagnostic and Treatment Dilemmas.
Cases of severe iron toxicity have become increasingly rare; most cases are intentional ingestions by late adolescents and adults who present within 12 hours of ingestion. We present a case of an adolescent girl with metabolic acidosis, hypoglycemia, obtundation, and liver and renal failure of undifferentiated etiology who was eventually discovered to have overdosed on ferrous sulfate tablets 4 days before arrival. The diagnosis was made because the patient had an elevated transferrin concentration in the setting of a minimally elevated serum iron concentration and faint radio-opacities on abdominal plain film imaging. This case presents many diagnostic challenges and treatment dilemmas and is a rare report of survival in delayed presentation of severe toxicity.
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Pediatric emergency care · Apr 2021
Missed Diagnosis of Anaphylaxis in Patients With Pediatric Urticaria in Emergency Department.
This study was to determine the characteristics of missed diagnosis of pediatric anaphylaxis that were registered as urticaria only at the emergency department (ED) by comparing those who had only urticaria symptoms with those who had both anaphylaxis and urticaria symptoms. ⋯ Of all pediatric urticaria patients, 3.5% of patients were not registered as anaphylaxis although they had anaphylaxis symptoms. Missed diagnosis of anaphylaxis in pediatric urticaria patients at ED was associated with a history of past food allergy, milk, egg, and seafood as causes of allergy, treated with fluid administration, steroid, and epinephrine.