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  • 1
    ISSN: 1437-9813
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) was used to treat five pediatric trauma patients (ages 1 to 17 years) with respiratory failure unresponsive to conventional mechanical ventilation. Diagnoses in these patients that resulted in respiratory failure included hydrocarbon aspiration (one patient), multiple trauma with pulmonary contusion (two patients), bronchopleural fistula (one patient), and neardrowning (one patient). Time on ECLS bypass averaged 328 h (range 140–527 h). Physiologic complications included bleeding, cardiac arrest, cardiac tamponade, hypoxemia, and hypotension. Mechanical complications involving the bypass circuit included roller-pump raceway rupture, roller-pump failure, and membrane oxygenator failure. All complications were managed without mortality. Three of the five patients were decannulated from ECLS and survived. Support was terminated in the remaining two due to irreversibility of the pulmonary injury. ECLS may provide life-saving support to pediatric patients with respiratory failure after trauma when conventional means of ventilatory support have failed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pediatric surgery international 3 (1988), S. 184-186 
    ISSN: 1437-9813
    Keywords: Gastric infarction ; Gastric necrosis ; Gastric gangrene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The case of a 6-year-old female with gastric infarction is presented. Despite a careful evaluation, no etiology could be determined in this child or, retrospectively, in several similar children described by other authors in the past. Vascular compromise was present although it is not possible to know whether this was a primary or a secondary event. It is important to recognize that gastric infarction can occur in children without obvious explanation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pediatric surgery international 5 (1990), S. 22-26 
    ISSN: 1437-9813
    Keywords: Choledochocele ; Choledochal cyst (type III) ; Duodenal duplication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Choledochocele, or type III choledochal cyst, is a rare anomaly. Two children with choledochocele, both younger than any previously reported patient, were recently cared for at the University of Michigan Medical Center and prompted a literature review of this subject. Since 1974, 40 cases of choledochocele have been reported with enough clinical information for critical review. Ten of these patients were 21 years of age or younger. Presenting symptoms were not specific for choledochocele; they were generally interpreted to result from other biliary or gastrointestinal disorders that are more common for each age group. In pediatric patients the most frequent signs and symptoms of choledochocele were abdominal pain (70%), nausea and/or vomiting (60%), jaundice (30%), and acute pancreatitis (30%). While two-thirds of adult patients with choledochocele had undergone prior cholecystectomy (with stones rarely found), this was observed only once in children. Obstructive symptoms led to evaluation of the stomach and duodenum with either barium upper GI series or endoscopy in all children. These demonstrated an extrinsic mass effect in 90% of the patients. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography identified a choledochocele in all cases in which the study was successfully executed. Intravenous cholangiography was sensitive in children, but less so in the adult patients reviewed. Other imaging efforts (computerized tomography, ultrasound, radionuclide scanning) were less dependable. Transduodenal marsupialization is the treatment of choice for patients of all ages and was provided in both of these newly reported children.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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