European journal of pediatric surgery : official journal of Austrian Association of Pediatric Surgery ... [et al] = Zeitschrift für Kinderchirurgie
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Cancrum oris, noma or gangrenous stomatitis is a disease which affects primarily undernourished and immunosuppressed young children. Frequent in underdeveloped countries, it also is seen in rare cases of patients with AIDS and leukemia in America and in Europe. ⋯ In an already advanced stage of this illness with severe sequelae, she presented with partial amputation of the lips (upper and lower), right cheek, right side of the nose and maxilla. The choice of treatment of the infected area and eventual reconstruction is discussed.
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Report of chronic headache amongst children with shunted hydrocephalus is frequent, and often leads to investigation for raised intra-cranial pressure and shunt malfunction, and much debate has appeared in the literature concerning possible cause. However headache is a common neurological symptom amongst children, and studies of prevalence indicate incidence of frequent non-migrainous headache to be 6.8%, and migrainous headache 4% in the general child population. A relationship between stress and anxiety and headache is recognised, and the hydrocephalic child has many reasons above those of his/her peers to be subject to stress. ⋯ Headache was not found to be related to diagnosis associated with hydrocephalus, to presence of seizure disorder, or to the sex of the child, although in common with other studies, there was a strong trend towards girls being statistically more likely to experience headache than boys. There was a relationship however between report of chronic headache, and the sort of school a child was likely to attend; children who attended mainstream school without the support of a Statement of Special Educational Need were more likely to report headache than their peers, and it is hypothesised that these children may be suffering sufficient stress to contribute to maintenance of headache. The importance of the multi-disciplinary team in assessment of children's physical, intellectual and emotional status is stressed, in order that medical interventions have the greatest chance of success.
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Malignant Hyperthermia (MH) remains a life-threatening event in anaesthetic practice. In paediatric patients, triggering agents such as volatile anaesthetics and other succinylcholine are widely used. For children with a positive family history or previous clinical signs of MH, muscle biopsy for the halothane and caffeine in vitro muscle contracture tests is the only reliable procedure for diagnosis of MH susceptibility. ⋯ Twenty-one children were evaluated postoperatively. Minor side effects of wound healing occurred, but none of the patients showed any abnormalities of muscle contracture or movement performance. Considering the high risk of fatal complications in the presence of MH-susceptibility, muscle biopsy of the upper leg for in-vitro diagnosis is a justified procedure that is acceptable to children and their parents.
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Microsurgery has grown to be an essential technique in pediatric surgery. Thus, there is an increasing need for basic training and skills maintenance, which require a continuous laboratory training. ⋯ Its potentials and limits in the training of microsurgical dissection, anastomosis and quality control are being compared to experiments on anesthetized animals. Although a few exercises on living animals are mandatory to close the gap between the laboratory and the patient, a synthetic model is a valuable tool in microsurgical training and helps to reduce animal experiments.
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Postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) are common and unpleasant complications. The aim of this study was to evaluate possible aetiologies of PONV in children and to formulate measures to reduce its incidence. During four months 780 patients requiring anaesthesia were studied prospectively. ⋯ The majority of the patients perceived PONV as a very unpleasant experience. Possible measures to reduce its incidence include: administration of prophylactic antiemetic drugs for high-risk patients (3-13 years, girls > 13 years, history of motion sickness and or previous PONV) who are undergoing surgical procedures with a high incidence of PONV. Adjustment of anaesthetic technique as wider use of propofol, NSAIDs or regional analgesia instead of opioids for postoperative pain relief and avoidance of neuromuscular reversal agents if possible.