keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35123564/vasospasm-following-low-velocity-penetrating-pediatric-intracranial-trauma
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alysa Almojuela, Zul Kaderali, James McEachern, Colin Kazina, Demitre Serletis
BACKGROUND: BB guns or non-powder guns created in the modern era are able to reach exceedingly fast velocities as a result of advances in compressed-gas technology. While missile penetrating trauma has been well documented in neurosurgical literature, penetrating intracranial injury secondary to non-powder guns, along with their associated complications and treatments, is not well described, and even less so in the pediatric population. CASE PRESENTATION: Here, we describe an unusual case of a 6-year-old Indigenous child who was accidentally shot with a BB gun to the head...
February 6, 2022: Journal of Medical Case Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35100784/learning-pediatric-point-of-care-ultrasound-how-many-cases-does-mastery-of-image-interpretation-take
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charisse Kwan, Kirstin Weerdenburg, Martin Pusic, Erika Constantine, Aaron Chen, Rachel Rempell, Joshua E Herman, Kathy Boutis
OBJECTIVES: Using an education and assessment tool, we examined the number of cases necessary to achieve a performance benchmark in image interpretation of pediatric soft tissue, cardiac, lung, and focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST) point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) applications. We also determined interpretation difficulty scores to derive which cases provided the greatest diagnostic challenges. METHODS: Pediatric emergency physicians participated in web-based pediatric POCUS courses sponsored by their institution as a credentialing priority...
February 1, 2022: Pediatric Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35000360/in-hospital-mortality-in-the-emergency-department-clinical-and-etiological-differences-between-early-and-late-deaths-among-patients-awaiting-admission
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriele Valli, Elisabetta Galati, Francesca De Marco, Chiara Bucci, Paolo Fratini, Elisa Cennamo, Carlo Ancona, Nicola Volpe, Maria Pia Ruggieri
OBJECTIVE: Given that there are no studies on diseases that occur by waiting for hospitalization, we aimed to evaluate the main causes of death in the emergency room (ER) and their relationship with overcrowding. METHODS: Patients who died in the ER in the past 2 years (pediatrics and trauma victims excluded) were divided into two groups: patients who died within 6 hours of arrival (emergency department [ED] group) and patients who died later (LD group). We compared the causes of death, total vital signs, diagnostic tests performed, and therapy between the groups...
December 2021: Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34986584/computed-tomography-scans-in-children-with-hemophilia-after-minor-head-trauma
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alison Gardner, Thomas W McLean, James E Winslow
OBJECTIVES: Children with hemophilia have the usual childhood risk of falls and head trauma. Head computed tomographies (HCTs) are fast, detailed, and readily available, but increased radiation exposure in the pediatric population is now recognized as causing increased brain malignancy. By examining the incidence of intracranial cerebral hemorrhage in this population, we will be able to weigh risks and benefits of HCT use more accurately. METHODS: Using a retrospective chart review, we examined past medical records of pediatric patients, aged 0 to 15 years, with hemophilia presenting to 1 academic medical center...
January 1, 2022: Pediatric Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34908375/pediatric-blunt-abdominal-trauma-and-point-of-care-ultrasound
#45
REVIEW
Marci J Fornari, Simone L Lawson
Blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) accounts for most trauma in children. Although the focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST) is considered standard of care in the evaluation of adults with traumatic injuries, there is limited evidence to support its use as an isolated evaluation tool for intra-abdominal injury as a result of BAT in children. Although a positive FAST examination could obviate the need for a computed tomography scan before OR evaluation in a hemodynamically unstable patient, a negative FAST examination cannot exclude intra-abdominal injury as a result of BAT in isolation...
December 1, 2021: Pediatric Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34741469/development-and-validation-of-a-deep-learning-strategy-for-automated-view-classification-of-pediatric-focused-assessment-with-sonography-for-trauma
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aaron E Kornblith, Newton Addo, Ruolei Dong, Robert Rogers, Jacqueline Grupp-Phelan, Atul Butte, Pavan Gupta, Rachael A Callcut, Rima Arnaout
OBJECTIVE: Pediatric focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST) is a sequence of ultrasound views rapidly performed by clinicians to diagnose hemorrhage. A technical limitation of FAST is the lack of expertise to consistently acquire all required views. We sought to develop an accurate deep learning view classifier using a large heterogeneous dataset of clinician-performed pediatric FAST. METHODS: We developed and conducted a retrospective cohort analysis of a deep learning view classifier on real-world FAST studies performed on injured children less than 18 years old in two pediatric emergency departments by 30 different clinicians...
August 2022: Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine: Official Journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34664081/-volatile-anesthetics-for-prehospital-analgesia-by-paramedics-an-overview
#47
REVIEW
Helmut Trimmel, Alexander Egger, Reinhard Doppler, Christoph Beywinkler, Wolfgang G Voelckel, Janett Kreutziger
Treatment of acute pain is a central task in emergency medicine. Yet, prehospital pain relief is often insufficient or delayed since the administration of potent intravenous analgesic drugs (such as opioids) is mostly limited to physicians due to legal restrictions or training deficiencies in Germany and Austria. Frequently, prehospitally operating emergency physicians have to be demanded later for anguished patients limiting disposability of physicians for patients who are in a potentially life-threatening condition...
March 2022: Der Anaesthesist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34660126/clinicoradiological-predictors-of-severity-of-traumatic-intra-abdominal-injury-in-pediatric-patients-a-retrospective-study
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Garima Sharma, Navojit Chatterjee, Ashish Kaushik, Sudhir Saxena
Background Adequate assessment of traumatic injury in patients of all age groups is essential for timely intervention and prevention of mortality and morbidity. This study aimed to assess the value of certain clinical as well as radiological factors as predictors of severity of the intra-abdominal injury as detected on computed tomography (CT) and to review the guidelines, protocols, and practices followed in imaging of abdominal trauma in patients of pediatric age group. Methods This retrospective observational study included 263 pediatric patients (18 years of age or younger) who presented to the emergency department (ED) with a history of trauma to the abdomen...
September 2021: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34570082/focused-assessment-with-sonography-for-trauma-including-gastric-assessment-e-fast-ing
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oksan Derinoz Guleryuz, Ayla Akca Caglar
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
October 1, 2021: Pediatric Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34538826/not-as-simple-as-abc-tools-to-trigger-massive-transfusion-in-pediatric-trauma
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan Phillips, Niti Shahi, Shannon N Acker, Maxene Meier, Gabrielle Shirek, Jenny Stevens, John Recicar, Steven Moulton, Denis Bensard
BACKGROUND: Early and accurate identification of pediatric trauma patients who will receive massive transfusion (MT) is not well established. We developed the ABCD (defined as penetrating mechanism, positive focused assessment with sonography for trauma, shock index, pediatric age-adjusted [SIPA], lactate, and base deficit [BD]) and BIS scores (defined as a combination of BD, international normalized ratio [INR], and SIPA) and hypothesized that the BIS score would perform best in the ability to predict the need for MT in children...
February 1, 2022: Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34338342/ultrasonographic-evaluation-of-physiologic-free-intraperitoneal-fluid-in-healthy-children-a-prospective-observational-study
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony R Arredondo, Matthew Wilkinson, Richard B Barber, Thomas Gilmartin, Marla C Levine
OBJECTIVES: The detection of intraperitoneal free fluid (FF) is an important finding in the sonographic evaluation of the pediatric abdomen, especially in the context of blunt abdominal trauma. One specific challenge is differentiating physiologic from pathologic FF. The purpose of this study was to determine with ultrasound the prevalence, location, and volume of intraperitoneal FF in healthy pediatric patients and its relation to pubertal status and gender. METHODS: Healthy children between the ages of 1 and 17 years who presented to the emergency department with non-abdominal complaints were evaluated for physiologic intra-abdominal fluid...
May 2022: Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine: Official Journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34321148/dental-reshaping-using-the-composite-resin-injection-technique-after-dental-trauma-and-orthodontic-treatment
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Georgios Maroulakos, Michael P Maroulakos, Efthymia Tsoukala, Matina V Angelopoulou
Severe dental trauma can often result in tooth loss at an early age. Orthodontic space closure and reshaping of the teeth are a conservative treatment approach. The purpose of this paper is to present a fast and predictable way to reshape teeth using the composite resin injection technique. A 10-year-old female presented for orthodontic treatment with a Class II malocclusion, lateral open bite and loss of the permanent maxillary left central incisor due to trauma. The treatment plan involved mesialization of the maxillary left teeth and reshaping of the maxillary left canine and lateral incisor to the shape of the lateral and the central incisor, respectively...
May 15, 2021: Journal of Dentistry for Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34213001/endoscopic-pilonidal-sinus-treatment-epsit-in-the-pediatric-age-group-short-term-results
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zeynep Merve Gökbuget, Rahşan Özcan, Ayşe Karagöz, Ayşe Çiğdem Tütüncü, Gonca Topuzlu Tekant
BACKGROUND: This study aims to evaluate the short term outcomes of the Endoscopic pilonidal sinus treatment (EPSiT) in the pediatric age group. METHODS: In this study, between June 2018 and July 2019, pediatric patients with pilonidal sinus (PS) who were treated with the EPSiT method were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS: Of the twenty-nine patients (20 males, nine females), the average age was 15.5±2.8 years, and the average body mass index (BMI) was 25...
July 2021: Turkish Journal of Trauma & Emergency Surgery: TJTES
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34060257/the-use-of-point-of-care-ultrasound-in-emergency-medical-centers-in-korea-a-national-cross-sectional-survey
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonghoon Yoo, Soo Yeon Kang, Ik Joon Jo, Taerim Kim, Guntak Lee, Jong Eun Park, Sung Yeon Hwang, Won Chul Cha, Tae Gun Shin, Hee Yoon
BACKGROUND: Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is an essential tool in emergency medicine (EM). We aimed to investigate the current status and perception of POCUS use in emergency medical centers in Korea. METHODS: A cross-sectional, nationwide survey was conducted using a mobile survey of physicians at emergency medical centers in Korea. The first message was sent on November 27, 2020, and the second message was sent on December 3, 2020 to the non-responders. The questionnaire comprised 6 categories and 24 questionnaires on demographics, current practice, education, perception, and barriers to the use of POCUS...
May 31, 2021: Journal of Korean Medical Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33871226/point-of-care-ultrasound-findings-in-multisystem-inflammatory-syndrome-in-children-a-cross-sectional-study
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas M Kennedy, Almaz Dessie, David O Kessler, Laurie Malia, Joni E Rabiner, Maytal T Firnberg, Lorraine Ng
OBJECTIVES: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) associated with coronavirus disease 2019 is a novel pediatric condition with significant morbidity and mortality. The primary objective of this investigation was to describe the point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) findings in patients evaluated in the emergency department (ED) who were diagnosed with MIS-C. METHODS: A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted including patients <21-years-old who had POCUS performed for clinical care in a pediatric ED and were diagnosed with MIS-C...
June 1, 2021: Pediatric Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33655972/assessment-of-blood-consumption-score-for-pediatrics-predicts-transfusion-requirements-for-children-with-trauma
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Akira Komori, Hiroki Iriyama, Makoto Aoki, Gautam A Deshpande, Daizoh Saitoh, Toshio Naito, Toshikazu Abe
Although transfusion is a primary life-saving technique, the assessment of transfusion requirements in children with trauma at an early stage is challenging. We aimed to develop a scoring system for predicting transfusion requirements in children with trauma.This was a case-control study that employed a nationwide registry of patients with trauma (Japan Trauma Data Bank) and included patients aged <16 years with blunt trauma between 2004 and 2015. An assessment of blood consumption score for pediatrics (ped-ABC score) was developed based on previous literatures and clinical relevance...
March 5, 2021: Medicine (Baltimore)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33632778/american-society-of-regional-anesthesia-and-pain-medicine-expert-panel-recommendations-on-point-of-care-ultrasound-education-and-training-for-regional-anesthesiologists-and-pain-physicians-part-i-clinical-indications
#57
REVIEW
Stephen C Haskins, Yuriy Bronshteyn, Anahi Perlas, Kariem El-Boghdadly, Joshua Zimmerman, Marcos Silva, Karen Boretsky, Vincent Chan, Richelle Kruisselbrink, Melissa Byrne, Nadia Hernandez, Jan Boublik, William Clark Manson, Rosemary Hogg, Jonathan N Wilkinson, Hari Kalagara, Jemiel Nejim, Davinder Ramsingh, Hariharan Shankar, Antoun Nader, Dmitri Souza, Samer Narouze
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is a critical skill for all regional anesthesiologists and pain physicians to help diagnose relevant complications related to routine practice and guide perioperative management. In an effort to inform the regional anesthesia and pain community as well as address a need for structured education and training, the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) commissioned this narrative review to provide recommendations for POCUS. The guidelines were written by content and educational experts and approved by the Guidelines Committee and the Board of Directors of the ASRA...
December 2021: Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33545669/utility-of-a-pediatric-fast-magnetic-resonance-imaging-protocol-as-surveillance-scanning-for-traumatic-brain-injury
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chelsea Shope, Mohammed Alshareef, Thomas Larrew, Christopher Bolling, Justin Reagan, Milad Yazdani, Maria Spampinato, Ramin Eskandari
OBJECTIVE: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a prevalent pediatric pathology in the modern emergency department. Computed tomography (CT) is utilized for detection of TBI and can result in cumulatively high radiation exposure. Recently, a fast brain magnetic resonance imaging (fbMRI) protocol has been employed for rapid imaging of hydrocephalus in pediatric patients. The authors investigate the utility of a modified trauma-focused fbMRI (t-fbMRI) protocol as an alternative to surveillance CT in the setting of acute TBI in pediatric patients, thus reducing radiation exposure while improving diagnostic yield...
February 5, 2021: Journal of Neurosurgery. Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33473038/evaluation-of-pediatric-high-energy-trauma-patients-with-whole-body-computed-tomography
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Z B Aydin
Objectives: We aimed to evaluate the findings of whole-body computed tomography (WBCT) in pediatric high-energy trauma patients and to determine the distribution of injuries. Materials and Methods: The WBCT images of 1132 pediatric patients who were admitted to emergency department between 2013 and 2018 for high-energy trauma were evaluated retrospectively. Six hundred and twenty patients with abdominal, chest, head, and skeletal injuries were included. Results: Using the WBCT images, we detected skeletal injuries in 557 pediatric patients; spinal, rib, extremity, and pelvic fractures were detected in 113, 57, 51, and 37 patients, respectively...
January 2021: Nigerian Journal of Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33460973/predictors-for-direct-to-operating-room-admission-in-severe-trauma
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thaddeus J Puzio, Joseph D Love, Michelle K McNutt, Christopher T Stephens, John A Harvin, Rudy Cabrera, Lillian S Kao, Bryan A Cotton, Charles E Wade, David E Meyer
BACKGROUND: Protocols for expediting critical trauma patients directly from the helipad to the operating room tend to vary by center, rely heavily on physician gestalt, and lack supporting evidence. We evaluated a population of severely injured trauma patients with the aim of determining objective factors associated with the need for immediate surgical intervention. METHODS: All highest-activation trauma patients transported by air ambulance between 1/1/16 and 12/31/17 were enrolled retrospectively...
May 2021: Journal of Surgical Research
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