Pediatric emergency care
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2021
Quality of the Triage of Children With Anaphylaxis at the Emergency Department.
Early recognition of symptoms is essential in anaphylaxis management. The Canadian Paediatric Emergency Triage and Acuity Scale prioritizes anaphylaxis to level I or II (resuscitation or emergency). We analyzed the accuracy of pediatric anaphylaxis triage. ⋯ Current triage, based on severity perception, missed most of the cases. Anaphylaxis-defining symptoms were overlooked. Inaccurate triage delayed medical attention. Improving measures, such as emphasizing symptom recognition and defining anaphylaxis risk discriminators, is mandatory to improve their identification.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2021
Severe Fireworks-Related Injuries: Demographic Characteristics, Injury Patterns, and Firework Types in 294 Consecutive Patients.
The relationship between fireworks and patient characteristics is not known. Our objective was to examine how severe fireworks-related injuries in children and teens compare to adults. ⋯ Children, teens, and adults experience severe fireworks-related injuries differently, by demographic characteristics, injury patterns, and firework types. Tailored public health interventions could target safety messaging and injury prevention outreach efforts to reduce firework injuries among children and adolescents.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2021
Case ReportsBelly Dancer Syndrome: An Unusual Cause of Abdominal Pain.
Belly dancer syndrome is a rare condition consisting of involuntary, repetitive, often rhythmic contractions of the diaphragm, causing undulating movements of the abdomen that recall those of a belly dancer. It is frequently associated with pain or discomfort in the upper abdomen or lower chest, but clinical symptoms are highly variable often resulting in late diagnosis. Very few pediatric cases have been reported, all of which were secondary to other conditions, and to our knowledge, no idiopathic cases of Belly Dancer Syndrome have been reported in children. ⋯ Belly dancer syndrome is a rare condition often misdiagnosed owing to multiple presentations. Increased awareness is necessary to prevent late diagnosis and incorrect treatment.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2020
ReviewLocal and Topical Anesthetics for Pediatric Patients in the Emergency Department.
Painful diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are common in the emergency department. Adequately treating pain, including the pain of procedures is an essential component of the practice of emergency medicine. ⋯ Local and topical anesthetics when used appropriately, generally, have few, if any, systemic side effects, such as hypotension or respiratory depression, which is an advantage over procedural sedation. Use of local and topical anesthetics can do much toward alleviating the pain and anxiety of pediatric patients undergoing procedures in the emergency department.
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Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2020
Case ReportsA Case Report of Pediatric Paraneoplastic Dysautonomia.
We present the case of a 16-year-old girl who presented with severe refractory orthostatic hypotension secondary to pandysautonomia. Initially, she was treated for Guillain-Barré syndrome given clinical symptoms and increased protein on cerebrospinal fluid, but the severity of symptoms and lack of response to intravenous immunoglobulin prompted further evaluation for an autoimmune etiology. ⋯ Rapid progression of severe disabling symptoms should raise suspicion for an underlying malignancy. The patient had limited response to splanchnic vasoconstrictors in addition to α-agonists, anticholinergics, and mineralocorticoids until initiation of modified Hodgkin lymphoma directed chemotherapy plus rituximab.