Journal of pediatric surgery
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Multicenter Study
Base deficit correlates with mortality in pediatric abusive head trauma.
Children suffering from abusive head trauma (AHT) have worse outcomes compared to non-AHT, but the reasons for this are unclear. We hypothesized that delayed medical care associated with AHT causes prolonged pre-hospital hypotension and hypoxia as measured by admission base deficit (BD), and that this would correlate with outcome. ⋯ BD correlates with mortality in children suffering severe AHT. Non-survivors are also more likely to be intubated pre-hospital and require CPR, with no difference in pattern of brain injury, suggesting that secondary injury is a major determinant of outcome in severe AHT.
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Multicenter Study
Using the Pediatric Health Information System to study rare congenital pediatric surgical diseases: development of a cohort of esophageal atresia patients.
Administrative databases include large multi-institutional cohorts of patients with rare congenital anomalies that can potentially be used to characterize these diseases and study variations in practice and outcomes. The purpose of this study was to develop a methodology to accurately identify a cohort of patients with a rare disease (esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula, EA/TEF) in the Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS) database. ⋯ Administrative databases such as PHIS can be utilized to identify cohorts of patients with rare congenital anomalies; however, cohort development requires a systematic search strategy and validation process to ensure correct identification of patients.
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Multicenter Study
Outcomes following neonatal patent ductus arteriosus ligation done by pediatric surgeons: a retrospective cohort analysis.
Patent Ductus Arteriosus (PDA) ligation in premature infants is an urgent procedure performed by some but not all pediatric surgeons. Proficiency in PDA ligation is not a requirement of Canadian pediatric surgery training. Our purpose was to determine the outcomes of neonatal PDA ligation done by pediatric surgeons. ⋯ This study documents that a significant number of preterm infant PDA ligations are safely done by pediatric surgeons. To meet the Canadian needs for this service by pediatric surgeons, proficiency in PDA ligation should be considered important in pediatric surgery training programs.
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Multicenter Study
American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric: a beta phase report.
The American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric (NSQIP-P) expanded to beta phase testing with the enrollment of 29 institutions. Data collection and analysis were aimed at program refinement and development of risk-adjusted models for inter-institutional comparisons. ⋯ This report represents the first risk-adjusted hospital-level comparison of surgical outcomes in infants and children using NSQIP-P data. Programmatic and analytic modifications will improve the impact of this program as it moves into full implementation. These results indicate that NSQIP-P has the potential to serve as a model for determining risk-adjusted outcomes in the neonatal and pediatric population with the goal of developing quality improvement initiatives for the surgical care of children.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Management of pediatric occult pneumothorax in blunt trauma: a subgroup analysis of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma multicenter prospective observational study.
Occult pneumothorax (OPTX) represents air within the pleural space not visible on conventional chest radiographs. Increased use of computed tomography has led to a rise in the detection of OPTX. Optimal management remains undefined. ⋯ No pediatric OPTX initially observed developed a tension pneumothorax or adverse event related to observation. Pediatric patients with OPTX less than 16 mm may be safely observed. Neither the presence of rib fractures nor need for PPV alone necessitates intervention.