| Literature DB >> 27154197 |
Wei-Ching Lin1,2, Chien-Heng Lin3,4.
Abstract
The accurate diagnosis of pediatric acute abdominal pain is one of the most challenging tasks in the emergency department (ED) due to its unclear clinical presentation and non-specific findings in physical examinations, laboratory data, and plain radiographs. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of abdominal multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) performed in the ED on pediatric patients presenting with acute abdominal pain. A retrospective chart review of children aged <18 years with acute abdominal pain who visited the emergency department and underwent MDCT between September 2004 and June 2007 was conducted. Patients with a history of trauma were excluded. A total of 156 patients with acute abdominal pain (85 males and 71 females, age 1-17 years; mean age 10.9 ± 4.6 years) who underwent abdominal MDCT in the pediatric ED during this 3-year period were enrolled in the study. One hundred and eighteen patients with suspected appendicitis underwent abdominal MDCT. Sixty four (54.2%) of them had appendicitis, which was proven by histopathology. The sensitivity of abdominal MDCT for appendicitis was found to be 98.5% and the specificity was 84.9%. In this study, the other two common causes of nontraumatic abdominal emergencies were gastrointestinal tract (GI) infections and ovarian cysts. The most common etiology of abdominal pain in children that requires imaging with abdominal MDCT is appendicitis. MDCT has become a preferred and invaluable imaging modality in evaluating uncertain cases of pediatric acute abdominal pain in ED, in particular for suspected appendicitis, neoplasms, and gastrointestinal abnormalities.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal pain; Children; Multidetector computed tomography
Year: 2016 PMID: 27154197 PMCID: PMC4859315 DOI: 10.7603/s40681-016-0010-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicine (Taipei) ISSN: 2211-8020
Fig. 1Axial MDCT reveals grouped small bowel loops (white dot line) in the right abdomen. The descending colon (D) is visible over the left abdomen but the ascending colon (A) is displaced to left side. Furthermore, the SMA (a) and SMV (v) are in the free edge of the sac; the looping of venous branches (white arrows) is also noted.
Fig. 2MDCT with coronal reformation demonstrates encapsulation of all small bowel loops in the right abdomen (white dot line) with displacement of the ascending colon (A) to the left abdomen parallel with the course of the descending colon (D).
| Final diagnoses | Case number |
|---|---|
| Appendicitis | 64 |
| GI infection | 57 |
| Ovarian cyst | 8 |
| Bowel perforations | 7 |
| Neoplasma | 5 |
| Pelvic inflammation diseases | 3 |
| Diverticulitis | 2 |
| Ovarian torsion | 1 |
| Hydronephrosis with urethral stone | 1 |
| Renal cyst | 1 |
| Duplication cyst | 1 |
| Paraduodenal hernia | 1 |
| Non specific abdominal pain (abdominal pain of unknown origin) | 5 |