Literature DB >> 3735040

Drainage of pediatric lung abscess by cough, catheter, or complete resection.

A M Kosloske, W S Ball, C Butler, C A Musemeche.   

Abstract

We treated eight children, aged 7 weeks to 17 years, for lung abscess. Each abscess followed an episode of aspiration or a bacterial pneumonia. Associated conditions were leukemia, congenital immune deficiency, endocarditis, cerebral palsy, and prematurity. Seven of the 8 children had polymicrobial infections, usually containing both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. The success of medical treatment by antibiotics and chest physiotherapy was age related; 3 of the 8 children, aged 10 to 17 years, recovered on this regimen, whereas five children, aged 7 weeks to 7 years, required catheter drainage or resection for cure. Drainage by catheter pneumonostomy was performed for solitary peripheral bacterial abscesses. A large intercostal catheter was inserted into the cavity, either operatively or percutaneously. Wedge resection was performed for multiple, central, or fungal abscesses. Pneumonostomy was curative in 3 of 4 children. One chronic abscess recurred after pneumonostomy and required resection. Wedge resection was curative in the two children who came to thoracotomy; lobectomy was not necessary. Although all eight children recovered from their lung abscesses, three of them died within a year of sepsis. Lung abscess today occurs in immunocompromised children who are vulnerable to fatal infections. Chest physiotherapy is unlikely to achieve good drainage in children under 7 years of age. Medical failures can be identified within the first week of treatment. Early and aggressive surgical treatment is indicated in such children, and may be lifesaving.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3735040     DOI: 10.1016/s0022-3468(86)80413-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Surg        ISSN: 0022-3468            Impact factor:   2.545


  8 in total

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3.  Lung resection in children for infectious pulmonary diseases.

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4.  Surgical treatment of pediatric lung abscess.

Authors:  M H Wu; Y L Tseng; M Y Lin; W W Lai
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5.  Computed tomography-guided percutaneous needle aspiration of lung abscesses in neonates and children.

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6.  An update on the drainage of pyogenic lung abscesses.

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7.  A 10-year retrospective review of pediatric lung abscesses from a single center.

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8.  The value of chest magnetic resonance imaging compared to chest radiographs with and without additional lung ultrasound in children with complicated pneumonia.

Authors:  Philip Konietzke; Jan Mueller; Felix Wuennemann; Willi L Wagner; Jens-Peter Schenk; Abdulsattar Alrajab; Hans-Ulrich Kauczor; Mirjam Stahl; Marcus A Mall; Mark O Wielpütz; Olaf Sommerburg
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-03-19       Impact factor: 3.240

  8 in total

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