Cirugía pediátrica : organo oficial de la Sociedad Española de Cirugía Pediátrica
-
Soft tissue sarcomas are rare mesenchymal neoplasms that constitute less than 10% of all pediatric malignancies. Half of these are rhabdomyosarcomas, the remaining 50% have a varied and heterogenous histologic and clinical patterns (fibrosarcoma, synovial cell sarcoma, extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma, angiosarcoma, liposarcoma, leiomyosarcoma, ...). The purpose of this work is to evaluate our clinical experience with soft tissue sarcomas in uncommon sites over the past 10 years in order to delimitate the prognostic factors in survival and modalities of treatment. ⋯ The impact of surgical resectability on outcome in these tumors has been clearly demonstrated over other factors like histologic appearance. Distant metastasis are infrequent but local recurrence are a constant in all cases with incomplete surgical resection. Based on those facts we could advanced an adequate approach to this kind of neoplasms: 1) wide complete surgical resection is mandatory; 2) radiotherapy will only be necessary if margins of resection cannot control the local disease, and 3) chemotherapy have not clearly demonstrated his benefits as adjuvant therapy in clinical group I lesions but his employ is recommended in all cases because of the poor prognosis due to local recurrence.
-
Abdominal injuries are frequent in children, and the early assessment is the best guaranty for an accurate management. Although computed tomography (TAC) has been considered the diagnostic modality of choice for children with blunt abdominal trauma, is a costly radiological test that requires the patients be stable and sedated. The aim of this study is to evaluate the usefulness of abdominal ultrasonography, a quick, non-invasive technique, of low cost, and repeatable, during the initial assessment of these patients, arguing about the possibility of replace TAC in the detection of intra-abdominal posttraumatic injury. ⋯ The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the TAC were 92.85%, 100%, 100%, and 66% respectively. We conclude that TAC is the imaging modality of choice in children with severe abdominal trauma but ultrasonography is a reasonable technique to arouse diagnostic suspicion, that can avoid additional tomographic studies. Abdominal computed tomography must be reserved for the hemodynamically stable children with anormal ultrasonographic findings or with suspected injuries by a clinical evolution that gone unnoticed in the previous study.