36 research outputs found

    Clinical variables as indicative factors for endoscopy in adolescents with esophageal atresia

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    Introduction: Gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD) occurs frequently in patients operated for esophageal atresia (EA). Longstanding esophagitis may lead to dysphagia, strictures, columnar metaplasia, and dysplasia with an increased risk of adenocarcinoma. Are clinical factors and non-invasive assessments reliable indicators for follow-up with endoscopy? Material and method: A follow-up study with inclusion of EA adolescents in Norway born between 1996 and 2002 was conducted. Clinical assessment with pH monitoring, endoscopy with biopsies, along with interviews and questionnaires regarding gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and dysphagia were performed. Results: We examined 68 EA adolescents. 62% reported GERD by interview, 22% by questionnaire. 85% reported dysphagia by interview, 71% by questionnaire. 24-hour pH monitoring detected pathological reflux index (RI) (&gt;7%) in 7/59 (12%). By endoscopy with biopsy 62 (92%) had histologic esophagitis, of whom 3 (4%) had severe esophagitis. Gastric metaplasia was diagnosed in twelve (18%) adolescents, intestinal metaplasia in only one (1.5%). None had dysplasia or carcinoma. Dysphagia and GERD were statistically correlated to esophagitis and metaplasia, but none of the questionnaires or interviews alone were good screening instruments with high combined sensitivity and specificity. A compound variable made by simply taking the mean of rescaled RI and dysphagia by interview showed to be the best predictor of metaplasia (85% sensitivity, 67% specificity). Conclusion: The questionnaires and interviews used in the present study were not good screening instruments alone. However, combining dysphagia score by interview and RI may be helpful in assessing which patients need endoscopy with biopsy at each individual follow-up examination.</p

    Standardized evaluation of the extent of resection in glioblastoma with automated early post-operative segmentation

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    Standard treatment of patients with glioblastoma includes surgical resection of the tumor. The extent of resection (EOR) achieved during surgery significantly impacts prognosis and is used to stratify patients in clinical trials. In this study, we developed a U-Net-based deep-learning model to segment contrast-enhancing tumor on post-operative MRI exams taken within 72 h of resection surgery and used these segmentations to classify the EOR as either maximal or submaximal. The model was trained on 122 multiparametric MRI scans from our institution and achieved a mean Dice score of 0.52 ± 0.03 on an external dataset (n = 248), a performance ­on par with the interrater agreement between expert annotators as reported in literature. We obtained an EOR classification precision/recall of 0.72/0.78 on the internal test dataset (n = 462) and 0.90/0.87 on the external dataset. Furthermore, Kaplan-Meier curves were used to compare the overall survival between patients with maximal and submaximal resection in the internal test dataset, as determined by either clinicians or the model. There was no significant difference between the survival predictions using the model's and clinical EOR classification. We find that the proposed segmentation model is capable of reliably classifying the EOR of glioblastoma tumors on early post-operative MRI scans. Moreover, we show that stratification of patients based on the model's predictions offers at least the same prognostic value as when done by clinicians

    The CoDiNOS trial protocol: an international randomised controlled trial of intravenous sildenafil versus inhaled nitric oxide for the treatment of pulmonary hypertension in neonates with congenital diaphragmatic hernia

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    INTRODUCTION: Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is a developmental defect of the diaphragm that impairs normal lung development, causing pulmonary hypertension (PH). PH in CDH newborns is the main determinant for morbidity and mortality. Different therapies are still mainly based on 'trial and error'. Inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) is often the drug of first choice. However, iNO does not seem to improve mortality. Intravenous sildenafil has reduced mortality in newborns with PH without CDH, but prospective data in CDH patients are lacking. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: In an open label, multicentre, international randomised controlled trial in Europe, Canada and Australia, 330 newborns with CDH and PH are recruited over a 4-year period (2018-2022). Patients are randomised for intravenous sildenafil or iNO. Sildenafil is given in a loading dose of 0.4 mg/kg in 3 hours; followed by continuous infusion of 1.6 mg/kg/day, iNO is dosed at 20 ppm. Primary outcome is absence of PH on day 14 without pulmonary vasodilator therapy and/or absence of death within the first 28 days of life. Secondary outcome measures include clinical and echocardiographic markers of PH in the first year of life. We hypothesise that sildenafil gives a 25% reduction in the primary outcome from 68% to 48% on day 14, for which a sample size of 330 patients is needed. An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed. A p-value (two-sided) <0.05 is considered significant in all analyses. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval has been granted by the ethics committee in Rotterdam (MEC-2017-324) and the central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (NL60229.078.17) in the Netherlands. The principles of the Declaration of Helsinki, the Medical Research Involving Human Subjects Act and the national rules and regulations on personal data protection will be used. Parental informed consent will be obtained. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NTR6982; Pre-results

    Lower urinary tract symptoms in children with anorectal malformations with rectoperineal fistulas.

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    AIM:The aim was to describe the frequency of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in children with anorectal malformations with rectoperineal fistulas (ARM-P), as compared with healthy controls based on gender.METHOD:LUTS were defined using the 2014 definitions of the International Children's Continence Society. Data were collected at 2 tertiary pediatric surgery centers in 2 countries from all children aged 4-12years who had undergone an operation for ARM-P.RESULTS:A total of 24 girls and 33 boys, with a median age of 8 (4-12)years, were eligible and compared with 165 controls. Of the patient group, 4 (17%) girls had 8 urinary tract anomalies (UTA), and 8 (24%) boys had 13 UTA. There were no gender differences in LUTS among the patients. The frequency of urinary tract infections was higher among the patients (5/24 girls and 7/55 boys) than the controls (1/55 and 4/110) (p=0.009). More patients (5/24 girls and 5/33 boys) than controls (1/55 and 2/110) used daily urinary medications (p=0.009 and p=0.007, respectively). Patients with UTA reported urinary infections more frequently (3/4 girls and 4/8 boys) than those without UTA (2/20 girls and 0/25 boys) (p=0.018 and p=0.002, respectively).CONCLUSION:Children with ARM-P had more LUTS than controls, and patients with concomitant UTA had more LUTS than patients without UTA. Therefore, children with ARM-P are suggested to have routine follow-up for both UTA and LUTS

    Kateterrelatert infeksjon i blodbanen hos nyfødtkirurgiske barn

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    Bakgrunn: Kateterrelaterte infeksjoner i blodbanen (KRIBB) er en fryktet komplikasjon hos nyfødtkirurgiske barn med sentralt venekateter. Infeksjoner kan medføre en påkjenning for barnet og de pårørende i form av smerter, ubehag, komplikasjoner, forsinket tilknytning og utvikling og i verste fall død. Å registrere behandlingsrelaterte infeksjoner er en viktig del av kvalitetsarbeidet, og det er gjort få studier som omhandler sykepleiedokumentasjon av symptomer og tegn på KRIBB. Hensikt: Hensikten med studien var å kartlegge dokumentasjonspraksisen og se på hvilke symptomer og tegn sykepleiere dokumenterer hos en gruppe nyfødtkirurgiske pasienter med og uten KRIBB. Målet med studien er å kartlegge og evaluere sykepleiedokumentasjonen, noe som kan bidra til økt kunnskap om, forebygging og bedre behandling av KRIBB. Studien har følgende forskningsspørsmål: Hvordan dokumenterer sykepleiere kliniske observasjoner som gir mistanke om kateterrelatert infeksjon i blodbanen hos et nyfødtkirurgisk barn? Metode: Vi utførte en pilotstudie med retrospektiv case-kontrolldesign gjennomført med deskriptive analyser. Vi benyttet et selvutviklet kartleggingsskjema til å samle inn data fra skriftlige og elektroniske observasjonsskjemaer, kurveark og sykepleiejournaler i pasientdokumentasjonssystemet DIPS og Metavision. Utvalget hadde fem barn i KRIBB gruppen og ti barn i kontrollgruppen. Resultater: Puls og temperatur var hyppigst dokumentert i begge gruppene. Tre av fem barn i KRIBB-gruppen hadde dokumentert feber. Det var ikke dokumentert feber i kontrollgruppen. Kliniske infeksjonstegn var hyppigst dokumentert i KRIBB-gruppen. Observasjoner av innstikkssted for sentralt venekateter ved bandasjeskift og barnets atferd var hyppigst dokumentert i kontrollgruppen. Konklusjon: Dokumentasjon av feber er symptomet som tydeligst skiller KRIBB-gruppen fra kontrollgruppen. Det totale antallet dokumenterte registreringer på kliniske infeksjonstegn er høyere i KRIBB-gruppen enn kontrollgruppen. Det kan indikere at feber er utslagsgivende for hvilke kliniske infeksjonstegn som blir observert og dokumentert i det videre pasientforløpet. En rekke observasjoner var ikke dokumentert i noen av gruppene, og det som ble dokumentert, kan virke tilfeldig og usystematisk

    Catheter-related bloodstream infections in infants who have undergone neonatal surgery

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    Background: Catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSI) represent a feared complication in neonates with surgically placed central venous catheters. Infections can be a tough experience for the infant and family in terms of pain, discomfort, complications, delayed infant-parent attachment and development and at worst, death. Registering treatment-related infections is an important part of quality assurance efforts, and few studies have dealt with nursing documentation of symptoms and signs of CRBSI. Objective: The objective of the study was to identify documentation practices and examine what symptoms and clinical signs registered nurses document in a group of patients with and without CRBSI who have undergone neonatal surgery. The aim was to identify and evaluate nursing documentation, thus contributing to greater knowledge about CRBSI and its prevention, and better treatment. The study focuses on the following research question: How do registered nurses document clinical observations that raise suspicion of catheter-related bloodstream infections in infants who have undergone neonatal surgery? Method: We conducted a pilot study with a retrospective case control design using descriptive analyses. We used a self-developed assessment chart in order to gather data from written and electronic observation forms, charts and nursing documentation in the patient documentation systems DIPS and Metavision. The sample included five infants in the CRBSI group and ten in the control group. Results: Pulse and temperature were most frequently documented in both groups. Fever was documented in the case of three of the five infants in the CRBSI group while in the control group, fever was not documented. Clinical signs of infection were most frequently documented in the CRBSI group. Observations of the insertion site of the central venous catheter when changing dressings, and the child’s behaviour were most frequently documented in the control group. Conclusion: The documentation of fever is the symptom that most clearly distinguishes the CRBSI group from the control group. The total number of documented registrations of clinical signs of infection is higher in the CRBSI group than in the control group. This may indicate that fever is the factor that determines which clinical signs of infection are observed and documented in the ensuing patient care pathway. A number of observations were not documented in either of the groups and what was documented can appear to be random and unsystematic

    New insights in the prevalence of scoliosis and musculoskeletal asymmetries in adolescents with esophageal atresia

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    Background: Increased risk of scoliosis and musculoskeletal abnormalities in adolescents with esophageal atresia (EA) is reported, but the impact of these abnormalities on physical fitness and motor skills are not known. Methods: Scoliosis was assessed radiographically and shoulder and chest abnormalities by a standardized protocol. Physical fitness was evaluated with Grippit, Six-minute walk test, and International Physical Activity Questionnaire and motor skills by Motor Assessment Battery for Children. Results: Sixty-seven EA adolescents median 16 (13–20) years participated. The prevalence of significant scoliosis (≥ 20º) was 12% (8/67) whereas 22% (15/67) had mild scoliosis (10–19º). Vertebral anomalies occurred in 18/67 (27%), eight of them (44%) had scoliosis. The majority of adolescents (15/23) with scoliosis did not have vertebral anomalies. Musculoskeletal abnormalities were detected in 22–78%. Balance problems occurred three times more frequently than expected (44% vs. 15%, p = 0.004). Submaximal exercise capacity was significantly reduced compared to reference values (p < 0.001). Scoliosis ≥ 20º was related to reduced physical activity (p = 0.008), and musculoskeletal abnormalities to reduced physical activity and impaired motor skills (p = 0.042 and p < 0.038, respectively). Conclusions: Significant scoliosis was diagnosed in 12% of the EA adolescents and related to reduced physical activity. Musculoskeletal abnormalities identified in more than half of the patients, were related to reduced physical activity and impaired motor skills, and exercise capacity was significantly below reference group. EA patients with and without vertebral anomalies need health-promoting guidance to prevent impaired motor skills and consequences of reduced physical activity

    Bowel symptoms in children with anorectal malformation : A follow-up with a gender and age perspective.

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    Abstract Background Gender specific outcome for children with anorectal malformations (ARM) is rarely reported although it is important for medical care and in parent counseling. Purpose To assess bowel function according to the Krickenbeck system in relation to ARM-subtype, gender and age. Method All children born with ARM in 1998–2008 and referred to two centers in two different countries were followed up. The bowel function in 50 girls and 71 boys, median age 8years, was analyzed. Results Among those with a perineal fistula, incontinence occurred in 42% of the females and in 10% of the males (p=0.005) whereas constipation occurred in 62% of the females and 35% of the males (p0.3 for every symptom). Sacral malformations were associated with incontinence only in males with rectourethral fistulas. Constipation among the males differed between the age groups: 58% versus 26% (p=0.013). Bowel symptoms did not change with age among the females. Conclusion Gender differences in outcome for children with ARM must be considered. Males with perineal fistulas had less incontinence and constipation than the females with perineal fistulas. The females with perineal and vestibular fistulas had similar outcomes
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