keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17201077/comparison-of-two-different-extracorporeal-circuits-on-cerebral-embolization-during-cardiopulmonary-bypass-in-children
#21
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Rosendo A Rodriguez, Dean Belway
OBJECTIVE: To compare the effect of two different extracorporeal circuits on the counts of high-intensity transient signals (HITS) during pediatric cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). METHODS: Transcranial Doppler was used to detect HITS associated with extracorporeal sources during the period of aortic crossclamping in the middle cerebral artery of children undergoing CPB. Based on body size, children were assigned one of two extracorporeal circuits (A or B). Circuit A included a D-705 oxygenator and associated reservoir, and circuit B included a Lilliput oxygenator and reservoir...
December 2006: Perfusion
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17163193/-osteonecrosis-underestimated-problem-of-children-oncology
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Małgorzata Sawicka-Zukowska, Maryna Krawczuk-Rybak, Katarzyna Muszyńska-Rosłan
Osteonecrosis (avascular necrosis, AVN, aseptic necrosis) is the consequence of the disturbance of blood supply to specific bone area. AVN occurs as a result of many different conditions such as fracture, thrombosis, mechanical vessel injury, fat embolism and many others. The most frequent location is the femoral head, but aseptic necrosis can also affect epiphysis of long bones and small bones of upper and lower limb. Avascular necrosis is also one of the serious long-term complications of antineoplastic treatment, including high dose steroids, specific cytostatics and radiotherapy...
September 2006: Polski Merkuriusz Lekarski: Organ Polskiego Towarzystwa Lekarskiego
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16575351/fatal-pulmonary-fat-embolism-following-spinal-fusion-surgery
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael H Stroud, Richard E McCarthy, David M Parham, Stephen M Schexnayder
OBJECTIVE: To report the case of a fatal pulmonary fat embolism as a complication of spinal fusion surgery. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Pediatric intensive care unit at a freestanding tertiary care children's hospital. PATIENT: An adolescent female with neuromuscular scoliosis who underwent spinal fusion surgery with instrumentation and suffered a fatal pulmonary fat embolism. CONCLUSION: Spinal fusion surgery for neuromuscular scoliosis is a common operative procedure...
May 2006: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16214648/the-acute-chest-syndrome
#24
REVIEW
Cage S Johnson
Recent large clinical studies of the acute chest syndrome (ACS) have improved our understanding of its pathophysiology and epidemiology. However, there is still a need for better methods of distinguishing vaso-occlusion from fibrin or fat embolism, for rapid diagnostic tests to make positive identifications of microbial infection, for adjunctive therapies that would affect prognosis, and for identification of factors that influence prognosis. The difference in clinical course and severity between children and adults supports the results of current studies indicating multiple causes for ACS...
October 2005: Hematology/oncology Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15635472/pulmonary-thromboembolism-in-children
#25
REVIEW
Paul S Babyn, Harpal K Gahunia, Patricia Massicotte
Pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) is uncommonly diagnosed in the pediatric patient, and indeed often only discovered on autopsy. The incidence of pediatric PTE depends upon the associated underlying disease, diagnostic tests used, and index of suspicion. Multiple risk factors can be found including: peripartum asphyxia, dyspnea, haemoptysis, chest pain, dehydration, septicemia, central venous lines (CVLs), trauma, surgery, ongoing hemolysis, vascular lesions, malignancy, renal disease, foreign bodies or, uncommonly, intracranial venous sinus thrombosis, burns, or nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis...
March 2005: Pediatric Radiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/14347732/-results-of-almost-exclusive-peroral-fluid-intake-through-the-gastric-catheter-in-the-treatment-of-burns-in-children
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
D FRANKE, H KOCH
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
November 17, 1964: Langenbecks Archiv Für Klinische Chirurgie ... Vereinigt mit Deutsche Zeitschrift Für Chirurgie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/12891209/vocal-cord-paralysis-after-transcatheter-coil-embolization-of-patent-ductus-arteriosus
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chi Di Liang, Sheung Fat Ko, Song Chei Huang, Chien Fu Huang, Chen Kuan Niu
BACKGROUND: In patients with patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) after Gianturco coil embolization, vocal cord paralysis (VCP) had not been previously described. This study investigates the risk factors of coil embolization associated with VCP. METHODS: We reviewed the medical records of all patients who had undergone transcatheter closure of PDA with a Gianturco coil between March 1998 and May 2001, and 75 patients (age range, 6 months to 55 years; mean age, 5.5 years) were identified...
August 2003: American Heart Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/11176241/medical-complications-in-scoliosis-surgery
#28
REVIEW
G Shapiro, D W Green, N S Fatica, O Boachie-Adjei
Several medical complications can occur after scoliosis surgery in children and adolescents. They include the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone; pancreatitis; cholelithiasis; superior mesenteric artery syndrome; ileus; pnemothorax; hemothorax; chylothorax; and fat embolism. This review focuses on the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of the various conditions that occur after correction of spinal deformity. Attention is given to recent literature specifically related to scoliosis surgery...
February 2001: Current Opinion in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/9570700/acute-chest-syndrome-and-sickle-cell-disease
#29
REVIEW
C Golden, L Styles, E Vichinsky
Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is the presence of a new pulmonary infiltrate in combination with fever or respiratory symptoms in a patient with sickle cell disease. ACS is the leading cause of death in sickle cell disease, and many patients suffer from multiple, severe episodes. Age has a striking effect on the clinical course and outcome of ACS, with children having milder disease that often is infectious. Adults often have severe disease, and pulmonary fat embolism is frequently a component of severe ACS. Rapid diagnosis and appropriate therapy including antibiotics for atypical infections, fluids, aerosolized beta agonists, and adequate pain control are necessary to reduce morbidity...
March 1998: Current Opinion in Hematology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8963632/fatal-fat-embolism-syndrome-in-a-child-with-undiagnosed-hemoglobin-s-beta-thalassemia-a-complication-of-acute-parvovirus-b19-infection
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
K A Kolquist, C L Vnencak-Jones, L Swift, D L Page, J E Johnson, M R Denison
Anemia, mental status changes, and fatal respiratory failure complicated a febrile illness in a previously healthy 14-year-old black female. At autopsy, widespread fat emboli and bone marrow necrosis were found. Hemoglobin electrophoresis on an antemortem, pretransfusion specimen revealed hemoglobin S/beta+ thalassemia. Acute parvovirus B19 (PV B19) infection was suspected. Postmortem serum and a variety of paraffin-embedded tissues were assayed for PV B19 DNA using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The expected PCR product was identified in the serum specimen and in paraffin-embedded sections of bone marrow, kidney, spleen, parathyroid, thyroid, adrenal, and gastrointestinal tract: lung, liver, ovary, fallopian tube, uterus, brain, heart, and pancreas were negative...
January 1996: Pediatric Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8179309/neurological-complications-from-fat-emulsion-therapy
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P E Schulz, S P Weiner, L M Haber, D D Armstrong, M A Fishman
Fat emulsion therapy is convenient for parenterally administering calories and essential fats. We report 2 children with neurological complications of fat emulsion therapy that arose before any systemic findings. The complications included focal and generalized seizures, weakness, and altered mental status. Biopsy and autopsy findings included cerebral endothelial and intravascular lipid deposition. Early recognition of fat emulsion therapy complications is essential as the neurological complications are potentially reversible with alteration of the parenteral diet...
May 1994: Annals of Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/6888897/-traumatic-fat-embolism-in-children
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A P Tiazhelkov
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 1983: Ortopediia Travmatologiia i Protezirovanie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/6877164/extradural-haematoma-in-children-primary-and-secondary-lucid-intervals
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P E Oatey, T A Dinning, D A Simpson
Twenty-six cases of extradural haematoma in children were reviewed over a 10-year period. The incidence of extradural haematoma was 3.3/1000 patients admitted to hospital with head injuries. Of 26 patients, 23% had no skull fracture and, in a further 8%, the fracture was not radiographically detectable. Twenty-three per cent of patients showed papilloedema, and 50% exhibited a fixed dilated ipsilateral pupil. In 62% of patients, there was no initial loss of consciousness; in a further 19%, impairment of consciousness was brief or doubtful...
August 20, 1983: Medical Journal of Australia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/5811700/fat-embolism-in-children-its-frequency-and-relationships-to-collagen-disease
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
D S Drummond, R B Salter, J Boone
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 23, 1969: Canadian Medical Association Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/4825788/fat-embolism-in-children-tests-for-its-early-detection
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G M Weisz, A Schramek, J Abrahamson, A Barzilai
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 1974: Journal of Pediatric Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/4711285/posttraumatic-fat-embolism-in-children-review-of-the-literature-and-of-experience-in-the-hospital-for-sick-children-toronto
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G M Weisz, M Rang, R B Salter
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 1973: Journal of Trauma
https://read.qxmd.com/read/4461158/-fatal-traffic-injuries-in-children-and-adolescent-during-the-last-10-years-with-reference-to-fat-embolism
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L Srp, S V Loyka
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
November 1974: Ceskoslovenská Patologie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/3481002/-aseptic-bone-necroses-as-a-late-complication-following-successful-treatment-of-leukemias-and-severe-aplastic-anemia
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I Slavc, C Urban, J Schwingshandl, G Ritter, R Trauner
Aseptic bone necrosis is a well known complication after corticosteroid treatment in adults and several hundred cases have been reported. Alterations in fat metabolism with vascular occlusion due to fat embolization, as well as microtraumata and osteoporosis are discussed as etiologic factors. In contrast, aseptic bone necrosis in relation to corticosteroid treatment is rare in children and adolescents. We therefore report 3 patients, aged from 10 to 18 years, suffering from severe aplastic anemia, meningeal relapse after acute lymphocytic leukemia and acute myelocytic leukemia respectively, who developed aseptic bone necrosis 6, 11, and 20 months following the onset of corticoid therapy...
November 1987: Klinische Pädiatrie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/2818488/-lung-fat-embolism-in-a-newborn-infant
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Missliwetz
Lungs of 20 newborns were investigated microscopically after staining for fat substances. All lungs contained positive particles like small droplets of fat in vessels or aspirated fat in alveoli and fat in cells. Only in two cases of the group of living children were fat globuli observed in blood vessels which resembled morphologically a fat embolism of mild degree. It is discussed if these findings could be interpreted as a real traumatic fat embolism caused by birth injuries, a fat embolism that also is proving that a living child was born...
1989: Beiträge Zur Gerichtlichen Medizin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/2802282/the-safety-of-intraosseous-infusions-risks-of-fat-and-bone-marrow-emboli-to-the-lungs
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J P Orlowski, C J Julius, R E Petras, D T Porembka, J M Gallagher
The technique of intraosseous infusion is a life-saving emergency alternative when IV access is impossible or will be critically delayed. Concerns about its safety remain, especially concerning the risk of bone marrow and fat emboli to the lungs. We examined autopsy pulmonary specimens on two children who had received intraosseous infusions during resuscitation attempts and found an average of 0.23 to 0.71 bone marrow and fat emboli per mm2 of lung. We studied normotensive dogs with intraosseous infusions of emergency drugs and solutions into the distal femur...
October 1989: Annals of Emergency Medicine
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