Clinical pediatrics
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The goals of this study were to describe the pattern of voiding disorders in children in our community, to describe clinical criteria for making the specific diagnoses, and to comment on management. The medical records of 226 children referred because of voiding dysfunction or urinary tract infections (UTI) were evaluated. Children with normal voiding patterns when uninfected, with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis, and with known neurologic or anatomic abnormalities were excluded. ⋯ It is concluded that children with detrusor instability who use posturing maneuvers to avoid incontinence are at high risk for recurrent UTIs. Constipation is 1 cause of detrusor instability. Dysfunctional voiding, the form of voiding dysfunction most likely to result in renal damage, was present in only 2 of 226 children seen for voiding disorders.
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Clinical pediatrics · Jan 2003
Comparative StudyMeasures of cardiac repolarization and body position in infants.
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is the most common cause of death in children between 1 and 6 months of age. Recent data suggest that a prolonged QTc interval on the 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) is associated with SIDS. Prone body position during sleep is also known to be a risk factor for SIDS; this has prompted the American Academy of Pediatrics to promote the "Back to Sleep" campaign. ⋯ The EGG of this patient revealed a QTc interval of 382 msec in the supine position and 407 msec in the prone position; the QT dispersion was 34 msec in the supine position and 34 msec in the prone position. We found no difference in QTc interval or QT dispersion as a function of body position in healthy infants resting quietly. Prolongation of the QTc interval is unlikely to explain the increased risk for SIDS associated with prone body position in the general population of healthy infants, unless patients with long QT syndrome are somehow more influenced by body position than normal patients are.