Background: In the last few years, there have been many reports of the rising incidence of late appendicitis and perforated appendicitis. The rise of managed care medicine has been blamed for this, because the health maintenance organizations (HMO) and gatekeepers allegedly want to keep the child away from the surgeon and hospital to save costs.
Methods: The authors were in a unique position a number of years ago because they had only a single HMO in their area of practice (New Brunswick, NJ) employing 14 pediatricians, and 86 pediatricians were in private practice or on the medical school staff.
Background/purpose: Most historical reports have described gastric perforation in the neonatal population as "spontaneous." More recently, several variables, including prematurity and nasal ventilation, have been implicated as contributing factors. The authors sought to analyze the etiology, course, and outcome of newborns with spontaneous gastric perforation from one institution over a 16-year period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFailure of a small premature newborn to adequately evacuate meconium for days or weeks has been attributed to "probable necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC)" or "microcolon of prematurity." The authors present an unusual type of "meconium plug syndrome" with the same clinical picture, seen in tiny premature babies (500 to 1,500 g), which required a contrast enema or Gastrografin upper gastrointestinal (UGI) series to evacuate the plugs. The obstruction resolved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBefore the introduction of the "silo" for gastroschisis, the main goal of surgery was to cover the defect with skin. Since the silo has been used, the goals have been (1) to cover the defect with SILASTIC sheets and return the extraabdominal contents to the abdominal cavity by progressive plication of the silo and (2) to eventually close the defect by fascia-to-fascia approximation, before 1 month of age. In many series, early definitive abdominal wall closure resulted in mortality rates of 10% to 30%, usually because of bowel necrosis and resulting sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was undertaken to evaluate if allopurinol administration protects mice from bowel necrosis caused by temporary intestinal ischemia followed by indomethacin (INDO). We have previously reported that ischemia (15-minute occlusion of superior mesenteric vessels) followed by intravenous (i.v.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
November 1992
Although girls with Turner's syndrome (45,X) are not at risk for malignancy, patients with feminizing testicular syndrome with XY chromosome composition and patients with "mixed gonadal dysgenesis" are at risk for malignancy, and bilateral gonadectomy is performed. We have treated seven girls with "Turner-like" syndrome, who we believe are also "at risk" for development of malignancy and in whom gonadectomy should be performed. We present seven cases of phenotypically typical females, without sexual ambiguity, who presented with primary amenorrhea and short stature (5) and/or minor dysmorphic features (2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
October 1992
A 5-month-old boy presented with bilateral hydroceles since birth and right leg edema. An ultrasound of the pelvis showed a 4-cm cystic mass that was diagnosed as a teratoma or cystic hygroma. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed, which showed a dumbbell shaped contiguous, fluid filled mass extending intraabdominally through the inguinal canal from the scrotum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Surg
July 1992
Several reports have suggested indomethacin administration causes necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in infants. Few experimental studies have addressed this relationship. We studied the effects of indomethacin after temporary intestinal ischemia in CD-1 mice, using a previously reported method of simulating NEC in mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe majority of life-threatening injuries secondary to the placement of central venous catheters, such as bleeding and pneumothorax, occur at the time of initial insertion. When a catheter extravasates in the neck, edema of the neck wall or chest is usually seen, and the pump indicates occlusion. We present four cases in which an uneventful, successful placement of four central lines (three superior vena cava, one inferior vena cava) were followed at greater than 48 hours by either hydrothorax or hydroperitoneum, which resulted in either cardiorespiratory collapse or intraabdominal sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present our experiences with 41 consecutive cases of intussusception. Most cases had a preliminary barium enema performed that successfully reduced the intussusception in 12 cases. Twenty-nine patients were explored surgically; bowel resection was carried out in 6 patients, and surgical reduction was carried out in 23 cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report 11 cases of esophageal perforation in the neonate, in whom no surgery was performed for repair of the perforation, nor was any cervical or mediastinal drainage carried out. The perforation was in the cervical esophagus in all cases where an esophagram was performed. Nine were in premature babies (580 to 1,350 g), and two were full-term babies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbdominal wall herniae following blunt trauma are rare. Two cases of acute traumatic rectus abdominis muscle and anterior rectus sheath hernia, an apparently unreported entity, are described. Early recognition of the injury by physical examination and sometimes ultrasonography or CT is important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA mouse model for the study of necrotizing enterocolitis is presented. It is a model of temporary intestinal ischemia and consists of occluding both superior mesenteric vessels with a bulldog clamp for varying periods of time. The resultant lesions resemble the intestinal lesions seen in necrotizing enterocolitis in respect to the gradual development of the necrotizing lesions and their patchy distribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren with "pure" gonadal dysgenesis do not require abdominal explorations to remove their gonads, because the risk of development of malignancy is minimal. Children with "mixed" gonadal dysgenesis, who usually present with sexual ambiguity, need to have gonadectomy because of the high incidence of malignancy in these gonads. We present four children (three adolescents and one two year old) who presented with minimal somatic anomalies, who did not have sexual ambiguity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough splenic autotransplantation is successful in mice and rats, with regeneration occurring in any location, no extensive study had been performed on dogs. We transplanted the spleen into subcutaneous and intraperitoneal locations on 40 dogs. Four to six months later, splenic scanning and reexploration was carried out.
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