One-third of young children with healing abusive fractures had previous medical visits where the diagnosis of abuse was not recognized. These children most commonly had signs of trauma on physical examination at the previous visits.
Although there are no documented cases of serotonin syndrome (SS) following bupropion ingestion alone in the literature, the ability of bupropion to potentiate serotonin levels and lead to SS is known. A 15-year-old boy was found at home hallucinating. He then developed tonic-clonic activity. Upon arrival in the emergency department, he was confused and restless. On exam, he had tachycardia, hypertension, dilated pupils and dry oral mucosa, normal tone and reflexes in his arms, but rigidity and +4 reflexes in his legs with sustained clonus at his ankles. He was admitted and treated with intravenous fluids and lorazepam for his agitation. A urine drug screen (via gas chromatography/mass spectrometry) was positive only for naproxen and bupropion. Serum bupropion and hydroxybupropion levels drawn 17 h after his reported ingestion were 280 (therapeutic range 50-100) and 3,100 ng/mL (therapeutic range <485), respectively. Within 24 h of his admission, the patient was awake with normal vital signs and neurologic exam. To our knowledge, there are only three reported cases demonstrating SS in conjunction with bupropion toxicity; however, none of these were secondary to bupropion alone.
Cervical spine injury in the pediatric athlete is an uncommon but potentially devastating condition that can require a heightened index of suspicion to correctly diagnose. Although some cervical spine injuries present overtly with paraplegia due to cord transection, others can present more subtly with symptoms suggestive of bilateral peripheral neuropathy. Patients with traumatic brachial neuropraxia or "stinger" physiology can present similarly, but symptoms are exclusively unilateral. We present 4 patients with bilateral upper extremity hyperesthesias and absence of tenderness over the cervical vertebral landmarks who were subsequently diagnosed with cervical spine injuries.
Bedside emergency ultrasound can be a useful initial test in children who present with abdominal pain. Our case describes a teenager who presented to the emergency department with back pain and right lower quadrant pain, suspicious for nephrolithiasis. The use of bedside ultrasound enabled timely diagnosis and management of an unanticipated condition.
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