Acta paediatrica
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The present study aimed to determine the role of leucocyte count and C-reactive protein (CRP) measurements in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis in children. In particular, children with acute appendicitis but normal leucocyte count and CRP level were sought. The present study protocol was identical to those used in earlier studies on adult patients with suspected acute appendicitis. The mean preoperative leucocyte count and CRP value in 100 consecutive children with an uninflamed appendix at appendicectomy (group A) and in 100 consecutive patients with acute appendicitis (group B) were calculated. The numbers of patients with (i) both values normal, (ii) only leucocyte count raised, (iii) only CRP level raised, and (iv) both values raised were calculated in both groups A and B. Leucocyte count effectively (p < 0.001) separated children with uninflamed appendix (mean +/- SEM 10.2 +/- 0.4 x 10(9) l(-1)) from those with acute appendicitis (15.0 +/- 0.4 x 10(9) l(-1)), but the CRP value was of no use in this respect (p = 0.866; 31 +/- 4 mg l(-1) and 30 +/- 4 mg l(-1)). The most conspicuous finding was that in children with acute appendicitis, both values were normal in 7 out of 100 patients. ⋯ Contrary to adult patients, normal leucocyte count and CRP value do not effectively exclude acute appendicitis in children.
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Physicians often have to perform a lumbar puncture to ascertain the diagnosis in patients with meningeal signs, because of the serious consequences of missing bacterial meningitis. The aim of this study was to derive and validate a clinical rule to predict bacterial meningitis in children with meningeal signs, to guide decisions on the performance of lumbar punctures. Information was collected from records of patients (aged 1 mo to 15 y) consulting the emergency department of the Sophia Children's Hospital between 1988 and 1998 with meningeal signs. Bacterial meningitis was defined as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leucocyte count >5 cells microl(-1) with a positive bacterial culture of CSF or blood. The diagnostic value of predictors was judged using multivariate logistic modelling and area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC area). In the derivation set (286 patients, years 1988-1995) the duration of the main complaint, vomiting, meningeal irritation, cyanosis, petechiae and disturbed consciousness were independent clinical predictors of bacterial meningitis. The ROC area of this model was 0.92. The only independent predictor from subsequent laboratory tests was the serum C-reactive protein concentration, increasing the ROC area to 0.95. Without missing a single case, this final model identified 99 patients (35%) without bacterial meningitis. Validation on 74 consecutive patients in 3 subsequent years (1996-1998) yielded similar results. ⋯ This prediction rule identifies about 35% of the patients with meningeal signs in whom a lumbar puncture can be withheld without missing a single case of bacterial meningitis. For the individual patient this prediction rule is valuable in deciding whether or not to perform a lumbar puncture.
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This spring, Acta Paediatrica is publishing five original articles underlining the importance of recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) and illustrating the scientific and diagnostic difficulties involved in understanding it. Our knowledge of organic causes is increasing with improved instruments for investigation, including 24-h pH monitoring and endoscopy, but the difficulty in how to link findings of organic abnormalities conclusively to the symptom RAP has to be further elaborated and discussed. ⋯ Psychometric tests in past decades, however, have not supported this belief, but if the reaction primarily is one of negative stress, than we should be looking for negative stress reactions, not for psychopathology. RAP of psychosomatic origin is not just a matter of excluding organic disease, but a diagnosis that must be built on firm positive diagnostic criteria, criteria that have not yet been elaborated for a broader public.