4 results match your criteria: "Leeds Children's Hospital at The Leeds General Infirmary[Affiliation]"
Pediatr Radiol
May 2022
Clarendon Wing Radiology Department, Leeds Children's Hospital at The Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds, LS2 9NS, UK.
Pediatr Radiol
August 2021
Clarendon Wing Radiology Department, Leeds Children's Hospital at the Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds, LS2 9NS, UK.
Background: Despite the publication of a national patient safety alert in 2016, inadvertent feeding through misplaced nasogastric tubes continues to occur, either through failure to review the radiograph, misinterpretation of it, or failure to communicate the results.
Objective: The objectives were to determine whether training in a new pathway introduced to avoid these "never events" was followed and whether radiographer comments and prompt communication of results could reduce risk and improve patient safety in relation to nasogastric tube placement in children.
Materials And Methods: Following radiographer training in interpretation of nasogastric tube position and use of a commenting proforma and communication pathway, we reviewed all radiographs obtained to check nasogastric tubes performed over a 13-month period in children 0-16 years of age.
Rheumatology (Oxford)
October 2020
School of Clinical Sciences, Department of Paediatric Rheumatology, Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, UHB Education Centre, Bristol.
Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) is an auto-inflammatory disorder affecting the skeleton of children and adolescents. Whole-body MRI (WBMRI) is key in the diagnosis and follow-up of CRMO. Imaging protocols should include sagittal short Tau inversion recovery of the spine, imaging of the hands and feet, and T1 images for distinguishing normal bone marrow.
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May 2016
Clarendon Wing Radiology Department, Leeds Children's Hospital at The Leeds General Infirmary, Belmont Grove, Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK, LS2 9NS.
Primary hypertrophic osteoarthropathy is a rare genetic disorder related to failures in prostaglandin metabolism. Patients present with joint pain, limb enlargement, skin thickening and finger clubbing. Radiographs show characteristic periosteal reaction and thickening along the long bones.
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