Pediatric emergency care
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2022
Permanent Unilateral Vision Loss From Allergic Fungal Sinusitis.
In the absence of trauma, sudden unilateral painless visual loss is an uncommon condition in the pediatric population requiring emergent medical evaluation. In the acute care setting, clinicians face the challenge of accurately assessing the patient and determining the initial diagnostic workup. ⋯ Simple eye examination techniques have crucial diagnostic value in helping localize the disease process, determining the level of urgency, and need for timely intervention. Here we present an adolescent patient with nontraumatic, acute unilateral visual loss who had concerning ophthalmological examination findings and was subsequently diagnosed with optic neuropathy secondary to allergic fungal sinusitis.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2022
Characteristics of Upper Limb Osteoarticular Infections at the Emergency Department of a Tertiary University Hospital in Spain.
Osteoarticular infections are infrequent in pediatric patients, although their incidence seems to be increasing. They usually affect children younger than 5 years and tend to localize in the lower limbs. Because of their nonspecific symptoms, especially at onset, a timely diagnosis is difficult to achieve, with the subsequent risk of a delay in treatment. We hereby report the management of osteoarticular infections in our pediatric emergency department. ⋯ One third of patients were misdiagnosed at the first consultation, which stresses the importance of a high clinical suspicion to avoid delays in diagnosis and treatment of osteoarticular infections. This study also shows a lower mean age of children with upper limb infection as compared with those with lower limb infection. All patients recovered fully with oral antibiotics.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2022
Group A Streptococcal Pharyngitis Testing Appropriateness in Pediatric Acute Care Settings.
Acute pharyngitis is one of the most common causes of ambulatory clinic visits; however, group A Streptococcus accounts for less than a third. National guidelines recommend against streptococcal testing in patients with viral features. This study aims to assess the rate of inappropriate streptococcal rapid antigen detection tests (RADT)s in children evaluated in urgent care clinics (UCC)s and emergency department (ED)s at a children's hospital. ⋯ Quality improvement initiatives are needed to decrease the rate of inappropriate RADTs in pediatric UCC and ED settings.
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Intermittent claudication is very uncommon in children and adolescents. We describe the case of a 14-year-old adolescent girl experiencing left calf pain for a year that occurs during running and becomes unbearable after around 2 km. She was ultimately diagnosed with extrinsic compression of the popliteal artery caused by an osteocartilaginous exostosis (osteochondroma) originating from the fibula.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2022
Hypoglycemia in a Pediatric Emergency Department: Single-Center Experience on 402 Children.
This study aimed to establish the rate, etiology, and short-term outcome of hypoglycemia in infants and children accessing an emergency department of a tertiary care pediatric hospital. ⋯ In a nonnegligible number of critically ill children, hypoglycemia can be detected. In a minority of cases, hypoglycemia was due to metabolic disorders that should be suspected on the basis of the severity of hypoglycemia, and the recent onset and the presence of neuroglycopenic symptoms.