Double-blinded evaluation confirmed high assay performance in febrile children. Assay was significantly more accurate than CRP, procalcitonin, and routine laboratory parameters. Additional studies are warranted to support its potential to improve antimicrobial treatment decisions.
BackgroundPrimary headaches and Learning difficulties are both common in the pediatric population. The goal of our study was to assess the prevalence of learning disabilities and attention deficit disorder in children and adolescents with migraine and tension type headaches.MethodsRetrospective review of medical records of children and adolescents who presented with headache to the outpatient pediatric neurology clinics of Bnai-Zion Medical Center and Meyer Children’s Hospital, Haifa, during the years 2009–2010. Demographics, Headache type, attention deficit disorder (ADHD), learning disabilities and academic achievements were assessed.Results243 patients met the inclusion criteria and were assessed: 135 (55.6%) females and 108 (44.4%) males. 44% were diagnosed with migraine (35.8% of the males, 64.2% of the females, p = 0.04), 47.7% were diagnosed with tension type headache (50.4% of the males, 49.6% of the females). Among patients presenting with headache for the first time, 24% were formerly diagnosed with learning disabilities and 28% were diagnosed with attention deficit disorder (ADHD). ADHD was more prevalent among patients with tension type headache when compared with patients with migraine (36.5% vs. 19.8%, p = 0.006). Poor to average school academic performance was more prevalent among children with tension type headache, whereas good to excellent academic performance was more prevalent among those with migraine.ConclusionsLearning disabilities and ADHD are more common in children and adolescents who are referred for neurological assessment due to primary headaches than is described in the general pediatric population. There is an association between headache diagnosis and school achievements.
Background: Headache is the most common cause for chronic or recurrent pain in childhood and adolescence. Chronic pain may have a long-term effect on adolescents. It might contribute to functional limitations, such as poor school attendance, and it may adversely affect development of healthy social relationships. The aim of our study was to examine the cross-ethnic variation in the prevalence of headache in a non-clinical sample of adolescents in Northern Israel and to learn about its association to other somatic complaints. Methods: A self-administered, anonymous questionnaire was presented to 2,088 tenth grade students attending 19 high-schools in Northern Israel (all the public high schools within two districts). Participants were Jews and Arabs, the latter including Muslim, Christians, and Druze, aged 15 to 16. Parental and student consent was obtained from all participants. The study was approved by the IRB of our institution.
An EI intervention led to an overall increase in EI scores, with a significant improvement in patient satisfaction. These findings suggest important potential benefits for both staff and their patients.
Mild respiratory acidosis is common in adolescents with recently diagnosed AN, hospitalized for medical stabilization. Respiratory acidosis improves with bed rest and refeeding. The clinical significance of these findings should be further evaluated.
Adolescents with recent onset AN, admitted for medical stabilization, demonstrate hypercapnia despite normal PFTs, except for decreased PEFRs. These could result from decreased respiratory muscle strength and/or abnormal control of breathing.
Objective: Among obese subjects, acanthosis nigricans in both males and females is not as uncommon as previously thought. Whereas this finding was extensively evaluated in females, mostly in the context of polycystic ovaries syndrome, little attention has been paid to obese males with acanthosis nigricans. As acanthosis seems to be a marker for insulin resistance, the present study was designed to evaluate the hypothesis that the clinical syndrome of obesity and acanthosis would take a different clinical course than that of simple obesity. Methods: To characterize the course of acanthosis nigricans and obesity in males, we examined 22 children and adolescents with this complex, together with their parents and grandparents and found them to follow a detrimental sequence of the metabolic syndrome. We compared the findings to 13 age-matched males with obesity but no clinical apparent acanthosis nigricans. We analyzed the clinical course, fat distribution, glucose, insulin and C-peptide and lipoproteins. Results: Onset of obesity in the metabolic syndrome group was at a mean age of 6.4 years, as compared to 2.3 years in the controls. The metabolic syndrome patients had a truncal (android) distribution of fat and their fasting blood glucose was significantly higher. HDL/total cholesterol was lower. Examination of the pedigrees suggested autosomal dominant inheritance of the obesity and acanthosis nigricans complex, extending to hypertension and ischemic heart disease in the parents’ generation, and further extending to include diabetes type 2 in the grandparents’ generation. Conclusions: This metabolic syndrome is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, with onset of truncal obesity at age 6–7 years, acanthosis nigricans during childhood or adolescence, extending to hypertension and ischemic heart disease during young adulthood, and further extending to include diabetes type 2 in late adulthood. It is recommended that such children should be followed up as an ‘at-risk’ group, and would probably benefit from intensive weight reduction, which may prevent the later manifestations of the syndrome.
Introduction: The International Headache Society criteria were written in order to help physicians establish a headache diagnosis. However, sometimes children with headache do not seem to fit any diagnosis. The purpose of our study was to assess the application of the criteria in a clinical setting. Methods: Medical records of children referred for primary headache to the pediatric neurology clinic at Bnai Zion Medical Center from 2008 to 2017 were assessed. Results: A total of 989 patients (range 6-18 years; 53% female) were assessed at our neurology clinic. Twenty-four percent (n = 241) were diagnosed with tension-type headache, 26% (n = 256) with migraine, and 4.5% (45) with mixed headache. In 41.5% (410), we were unable to reach a specific diagnosis. No differences in gender or age were found between the groups. Children in the migraine group used more analgesic treatments to stop the headache attacks compared with the tension-type headache group (50% vs 38%, P = .001). Patients diagnosed with tension-type headache reported having more emotional difficulties ( P = .001). No significant differences were found in headache characteristics (ie, location, sidedness, character), frequency, or intensity between the younger children (ages 6-11) and the adolescents (ages 12-18) within either the tension-type headache or migraine groups. Conclusions: Retrospective application of International Headache Society criteria in a large cohort of children with headaches failed to diagnose a specific type of headache in 41.5% of children. Migraine and tension-type headache were equally prevalent, and both constituted a major burden on our patients’ everyday lives. We found no major differences in frequency, intensity, and characteristics of pain between younger children and adolescents.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.