Journal of pediatric urology
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Spinal anesthesia (SA) is an established anesthetic technique for short outpatient pediatric urological cases. To avoid general anesthesia (GA) and expand regional anesthetics to longer and more complex pediatric surgeries, the authors began a program using a combined spinal/caudal catheter (SCC) technique. ⋯ SCC allows for more complex surgeries to be performed exclusively under regional anesthesia, thus obviating the need for airway intervention, minimizing or eliminating the use of opioids, and thus avoiding known and potential risks associated with GA. The latter is of particular importance given current concerns regarding hypothetical neurocognitive effects of GA on children aged below 3 years.
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Testicular volume (TV) can be obtained by either scrotal ultrasound (SU) or orchidometer. Scrotal ultrasound allows for a more objective measurement; however, the interobserver and intra-observer variability of TV measurements has not been rigorously studied. ⋯ Variability exists in both interobserver and intra-observer measurements of TV by dedicated urologic ultrasonographers, and greater than 20% of differences in measured TV in same testicles occurred in over 25% of cases. Caution should be exercised in basing operative decisions and scientific studies on limited measurements of TV.
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Children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk progressing to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). The majority of CKD causes in children are related to congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, which may be treated by urologic care. ⋯ Within the CKiD cohort, children with non-glomerular causes of CKD often received urologic care. Urology referral with surgery was associated with lower risk of ESKD compared to no prior urologic care but depended on specific underlying diagnoses.