Journal of pediatric surgery
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This study was designed to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of abdominal ultrasonography as a diagnostic modality in a large series of children who presented with possible appendicitis. From August 1990 to July 1994, 452 children (203 boys, 249 girls) with an average age of 11 years (range, 1 to 20 years) underwent graded compression ultrasonography of the right lower quadrant of the abdomen for the evaluation of possible appendicitis. In the first 18 months of the study all patients with the possible diagnosis of appendicitis (group I; 180 patients) had abdominal ultrasonography after members of the surgical team evaluated and documented their findings in the medical record. ⋯ There were 11 false-positive results; 10 of these patients had a negative laparotomy result (negative laparatomy rate, 8.9%). For the two groups, the sensitivity and specificity of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of appendicitis were equivalent (group 1: 88% sensitivity, 96% specificity; group 2: 92% sensitivity, 97% specificity). On the basis of the high sensitivity and specificity rates, ultrasonography of the appendix can be a useful adjunct to standard examination in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
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The purpose of this study is to describe the occurrence and management of bowel obstruction caused by Ascaris lumbricoides, a common parasite in warm climates that affects children with limited socioeconomic means. ⋯ These observations suggest that physicians should have a high index of suspicion for parasitic infestation in warm climates where economically deprived children present with symptoms of intestinal obstruction. Ascaris lumbricoides may be the cause of these events in endemic areas. Oral piperazine and racine oil can successfully resolve most subacute cases; however, aggressive resuscitation and prompt surgical intervention in patients with intestinal obstruction result in a satisfactory outcome.
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In newborns, inhaled nitric oxide (NO) has been shown to ameliorate increased pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) precipitated by hypoxia. The role of endogenous NO production in this response is not clear. The contribution of endogenous NO to resting PVR in normoxic newborns also has not been well studied. The authors used an isolated, in situ, neonatal piglet lung-perfusion model, devoid of systemic detractors in which endogenous NO could be selectively inhibited, to determine whether (1) endogenous NO plays a role in the maintenance of PVR with normoxia, (2) endogenous NO plays a role in the response to hypoxia, and (c) inhaled NO can reverse changes induced by inhibition of endogenous NO. ⋯ In this piglet model, endogenous NO is important in the regulation of pulmonary vascular tone during both normoxia and hypoxia. Inhaled NO completely reversed the elevations in PVR caused by inhibition of endogenous NO and may normalize PVR in diseases in which the production of endogenous NO is compromised.
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Recently it has become possible to identify persons who have multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) syndrome types 2A and 2B based on the presence of missense mutations in the RET protooncogene. Kindred members who have inherited these syndromes can be identified before clinical or biochemical evidence of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) develops, the malignancy that occurs in all affected patients. It is not known whether prophylactic removal of the thyroid gland early in childhood, based on a positive genetic test result, has a better clinical outcome than that associated with thyroidectomy after MTC is diagnosed clinically or biochemically. ⋯ The authors conclude that a significant number of patients with MEN 2A or 2B who undergo thyroidectomy in childhood for MTC have persistent or recurrent disease long-term. The genetic diagnosis of patients with these syndromes may allow for prophylactic surgery before the development of biochemical or clinical evidence of MTC. This approach is safe, but longer clinical follow-up will be necessary to confirm that MTC has been cured.
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This study compares outcome from pelvic fractures in children with that of adults. Data for 23,700 children registered in the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR) were compared with those of 10,720 adults recorded over 5 years in the registry of our level I trauma center. Patients were categorized by open versus closed fracture and by fracture type as defined by a modification of the Key and Conwell system. ⋯ Patients with initial hemodynamic instability were more likely to die, although children less so than adults. The authors conclude that children do not die of pelvic fracture-associated hemorrhage as often as adults. Massive blood loss in the child occurs most commonly from solid visceral injury rather than from pelvic vascular disruption.