Journal of pediatric surgery
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Long-term ventricular cerebrospinal fluid shunting can prove difficult in the neonatal population, particularly in those neonates who have had previous abdominal and vascular procedures. This article presents a technique of providing vascular access for ventriculoatrial shunting via the azygos vein for patients with limited vascular access and in whom ventriculoperitoneal shunting is not feasible.
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Six children with a mean age of 10.6 years (range, 7 to 16 years) underwent thoracotomy for pulmonary and esophageal procedures. Postoperatively, continuous paravertebral block using an infusion of bupivacaine via an extrapleural catheter was used. ⋯ There were no pulmonary complications and no complications related to the continuous extrapleural infusion. We conclude that continuous paravertebral block is an effective and safe method for ++post-thoracotomy pain relief in children.
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Because of the special qualities of a PVC endotracheal tube (smooth, soft, pliable but still with a patent lumen), it serves very well for the intubation of the esophagus or the duodenum through an established gastrostomy. In this article the use of endotracheal tubes in different manipulations of the esophagus and gastroduodenum is described.
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The association between testicular tumors/nodules and congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) has been previously reported. From 1960 to 1989, three patients (13 to 18 years old) with long-standing CAH developed testicular masses. Two patients with 21-hydroxylase deficiency were diagnosed in the neonatal period while one other with 11-hydroxylase deficiency was diagnosed at 3 years of age when he presented with sexual precocity. ⋯ There has been no evidence of recurrence, distant metastases, or secondary malignancies during the time of follow-up. These findings suggest that testicular tumors may develop from chronic excessive ACTH stimulation of a putative pluripotential testicular cell, a Leydig cell, or an adrenal cortical rest. Unlike other testicular tumors these do not require orchiectomy as the initial form of therapy.
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Case Reports
Chest injuries in children: an analysis of 100 cases of blunt chest trauma from motor vehicle accidents.
One hundred twenty-eight cases of chest injury were seen in a Paediatric Trauma Unit over a 5 1/2-year period. One hundred patients sustained motor vehicle accident (MVA)-related blunt chest injuries, 91 of them as pedestrians. Nine children had blunt chest injuries from falls, 10 had stab wounds (3 assault, 7 accidental), and 9 had gunshot injuries (6 from birdshot used by police during civil disturbance). ⋯ Thirty-nine (69%) of 56 children with radiologically evident posttraumatic pleural effusion had intercostal chest drainage. Analysis suggests that lung injury is a central event in MVA-related blunt chest trauma. Primary lung injury, radiologically visible as contusion, is complicated by hematoma, posttraumatic effusion, and pneumothorax.