The role of abdominal ultrasound in the management of excessive crying in infants.

Pan Afr Med J

Paediatric Medical Emergency Department, Children's Hospital, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, University Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive or persistent crying in infants is a common issue in pediatric emergency departments, presenting diagnostic challenges for physicians.
  • A study at Rabat Children’s Hospital involved 39 infants, averaging 5.7 months old, identifying various causes of crying through abdominal ultrasounds.
  • Abdominal ultrasound was crucial for diagnosing issues like intestinal intussusception in some cases, highlighting its importance in managing infants with excessive crying, despite normal results in the majority of cases.

Article Abstract

Excessive or persistent crying is a common presentation to the pediatric emergency department, and often poses a diagnostic dilemma to emergency physicians. There are several reasons for excessive or persistent crying in children, ranging from benign causes like hunger, to life-threatening causes such as intussusception. The objective of this work is to specify the place of abdominal ultrasound in the diagnosis and management of incessant cries in the infant. A cross sectional investigation for 3 months about cases of infants admitted for excessive or persistent crying to the paediatric emergency medical department of the Rabat Children's Hospital. Thirty-nine cases of excessive crying. The average age of our patients was 5.7 months with a male predominance. The incessant cries constituted the main reason for consultation in all our patients. The abdominal ultrasound performed in all the patients and revealed six cases of "Intestinal intussusception, eight cases of colic with distention gas, one case of uretero-hydronephrosis, one case with lymphadenitis mesenteric whereas it was normal in twenty-three cases. Children presenting with excess or persistent crying with no clear historical and physical examination clues, pose a diagnostic challenge to emergency physicians. This survey illustrates that despite the fact that abdominal ultrasound was normal in 58% of the cases, it made possible to make an early diagnosis of 15% of acute intestinal intussusception and it has become the gold standard in management of excessive crying in infants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6191276PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2018.30.68.12058DOI Listing

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