Journal of pediatric surgery
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A 6-year retrospective review of burn victims hospitalized at a major burn center was conducted to determine the etiology and outcome of pediatric burns. Four hundred forty-nine patients under age 16 years were identified and stratified by age, sex, burn size, presence or absence of inhalation injury, cause of burn, and county of residence. The mean patient age was 4.3 +/- 0.2 years, and the male:female ratio was 1.9:1. ⋯ Large burn size was the strongest predictor of mortality, followed by (in order) age less than 4 and the presence of inhalation injury. Infants and young children have the highest risk of death from burn injury. Burns smaller than 30% TBSA without an inhalation injury (such as small scald injuries) occasionally are lethal in infants and small children, despite modern therapy.
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Biliary atresia (BA) is characterized by luminal obstruction of the extrahepatic bile duct with fibrous remnants. The authors reviewed ultrasonographic examinations of the fibrous tissue in the bifurcation of the portal vein at the porta hepatis and identified the triangular- or tubular-shaped echogenic density, the so-called "triangular cord" (TC), in the vicinity of the portal vein on a transverse or longitudinal scan. In this prospective study, the authors investigated whether TC was useful in the noninvasive diagnosis of biliary atresia in 18 infants who had persistent neonatal jaundice. ⋯ The patient underwent a Kasai hepatoportoenterostomy. On the basis of these results, the authors conclude that TC is a very specific ultrasonographic finding, representing the fibrous cone at the porta hepatis, and is a useful tool in the noninvasive diagnosis of BA. However, early exploration or close US follow-up is recommended for any patient suspected of having BA clinically, even if a liver biopsy confirms the NH.
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It has been shown that pulmonary vasodilation is sustained after discontinuation of inhaled nitric oxide (INO) during moderate hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (HPH) in swine. The present investigations demonstrated how INO dose, hypoxia duration, and endogenous NO production influence this important phenomenon. Fifteen adolescent Yorkshire swine were randomly assigned to three groups (n = 5 each) and underwent the following phasic experimental protocol: (I) Baseline ventilation (FIO2 = .3); (II) Initiating HPH (FIO2 = .16 to .18, PaO2 = 45 to 55 mm Hg); (III) INO at 10 ppm; (IV) Posttreatment observation; (V) INO of 80 ppm; and (VI) Posttreatment observation. ⋯ High dose results in stronger vasodilation than low dose during and after INO for moderate HPH of short duration. Long hypoxia blunts this high-dose advantage. Endogenous NO inhibition augments HPH but does not decrease pulmonary vasodilation during or after INO.
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Review Case Reports
Conn syndrome in a child, caused by adrenal adenoma.
Hyperaldosteronism owing to aldosterone-producing adenoma (Conn syndrome) is a rare but potentially curable form of pediatric hypertension. The authors report on a 5-year-old girl who had symptoms of polyuria, polydipsia, and fatigue, and for whom the diagnosis of hyperaldosteronemia was suggested by a low serum potassium level and persistent hypertension. ⋯ The left adrenal gland was excised, and pathological assessment showed an adenoma. Only 14 other pediatric cases (< 16 years of age) have been reported in the English-language literature.