Evidence before this study: Acute appendicitis is the most common general surgical emergency in children. Its diagnosis remains challenging and children presenting with acute right iliac fossa (RIF) pain may be admitted for clinical observation or undergo normal appendicectomy (removal of a histologically normal appendix). A search for external validation studies of risk prediction models for acute appendicitis in children was performed on MEDLINE and Web of Science on 12 January 2017 using the search terms ["appendicitis" OR "appendectomy" OR "appendicectomy"] AND ["score" OR "model" OR "nomogram" OR "scoring"]. Studies validating prediction models aimed at differentiating acute appendicitis from all other causes of RIF pain were included. No date restrictions were applied. Validation studies were most commonly performed for the Alvarado, Appendicitis Inflammatory Response Score (AIRS), and Paediatric Appendicitis Score (PAS) models. Most validation studies were based on retrospective, single centre, or small cohorts, and findings regarding model performance were inconsistent. There was no high quality evidence to guide selection of the optimum model and threshold cutoff for identification of low-risk children in the UK and Ireland. Added value of this study: Most children admitted to hospital with RIF pain do not undergo surgery. When children do undergo appendicectomy, removal of a normal appendix (normal appendicectomy) is common, occurring in around 1 in 6 children. The Shera score is able to identify a large low-risk group of children who present with acute RIF pain but do not have acute appendicitis (specificity 44%). This low-risk group has an overall 1 in 30 risk of acute appendicitis and a 1 in 270 risk of perforated appendicitis. The Shera score is unable to achieve a sufficiently high positive predictive value to select a high-risk group who should proceed directly to surgery. Current diagnostic performance of ultrasound is also too poor to select children for surgery. Implications of all the available evidence: Routine pre-operative risk scoring could inform shared decision making by doctors, children, and parents by supporting safe selection of lowrisk patients for ambulatory management, reducing unnecessary admissions and normal appendicectomy. Hospitals should ensure seven-day-a-week availability of ultrasound for medium and high-risk patients. Ultrasound should be performed by operators trained to assess for acute appendicitis in children. For children in whom diagnostic uncertainty remains following ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or low-dose computed tomography (CT) are second-line investigations.
This paper presents a retrospective review of 38 patients with intrapancreatic bile duct strictures secondary to chronic alcoholic pancreatitis. The strictures were identified by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). All patients with pancreatic cancer and gallstone pancreatitis were excluded. The mean alkaline phosphatase and total bilirubin values were 344 +/- 57 IU/dl and 4.4 +/- 0.7 mg/dl, respectively. The mean stricture length was 3.9 +/- 0.5 cm, and the mean common bile duct (CBD) diameter was 1.8 +/- 0.2 cm. The degree of bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase elevation did not correlate with stricture length or the severity of bile duct dilatation. Eighteen of the 38 patients received surgical biliary drainage (BD) as part of their initial therapy, and 20 patients did not. Liver function tests, intrapancreatic stricture length, and the degree of proximal CBD dilation were comparable in these two groups. Patients not undergoing BD did well clinically as only one patient required BD over an average follow-up period of 3.8 years. In conclusion, bypass of these strictures is usually unnecessary, and most patients may be safely treated without operation.
Traditional therapy for giant gastric ulcers (greater than 3 cm) has been gastric resection because of a presumed high risk of hemorrhage and recurrence. To determine the validity of this approach and decide whether the need for resection has been altered by the introduction of H2-blockers, the records of 10,054 gastroduodenal endoscopies performed between 1971 and 1984 were reviewed. Forty-nine patients with giant gastric ulcers were identified. Five patients had malignant ulcers. Ten patients underwent gastric resection as initial therapy. Thirty-four patients were initially treated without surgery and were divided into Group I (no H2-blockers; 9 patients) and Group II (H2-blockers; 25 patients). Medical therapy was successful in three of nine patients (33%) in Group I and in 20 of 25 patients (80%) in Group II. Of 11 patients who failed medical therapy (7 intractability, 3 recurrence, and 1 fatal hemorrhage), 10 underwent subsequent gastric resection. Of the 20 patients treated surgically (10 initial and 10 medical failures), none were readmitted for recurrent ulcer disease. These data suggest that medical therapy of benign giant gastric ulcers is often effective and not associated with an excessive incidence of complications, as believed. Successful healing of these ulcers is greatly enhanced when H2-blockers are employed. Thus, the presence of an uncomplicated benign giant gastric ulcer is not an absolute indication for gastric resection.
We describe a simple and reliable technique for labeling Pseudomonas aeruginosa with a readily available commercial preparation of indium-111 (111In) oxine. Labeling of a heavy bacterial suspension with 500 mu Ci of commercially prepared 111In-oxine resulted in a yield of 0.0004 mu Ci of cell-associated 111In per 10(6) colony-forming units (CFU). The label was 88% bacterially associated and did not effect viability of the organism. Radiolabeling a gram-negative organism with 111In-oxine provides a non-toxic, stable gamma-emitting bacterial tracer.
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