As in larger patients, use of large stents for treatment of CoA in small children is effective and safe in the short term. In these patients, stent redilations will be required, and follow-up is ongoing.
Objectives
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a life-threatening genetic cardiovascular disease that often goes undetected in young athletes. Neither history nor physical examination are reliable to identify those at risk. The objective of this study is to determine whether minimally trained medical student volunteers can use ultrasound to screen for HCM.
Methods
This was a prospective enrollment of young athletes performed at 12 area high schools and three area colleges, between May 2012 and August 2013. All participants underwent point-of-care ultrasound performed screening for HCM by trained medical students and reviewed by a pediatric cardiologist. An interventricular septum to left ventricular posterior wall ratio greater than 1.25 was considered to be abnormal (positive screen).
Results
A total of 2332 participants were enrolled. There were 137 (5.8%) with a positive screening for HCM, of which 7 (5.1%) were confirmed to have HCM by a pediatric cardiologist. In a small cohort with positive screen for HCM, there was a 100% sensitivity (95% confidence interval, 59.04 to 100%) and 4.86% (95% confidence interval, 1.98 to 9.76%) positive predictive value of for having HCM.
Conclusions
Volunteer medical students, using point-of-care ultrasound, were able to effectively screen for HCM in young athletes.
This study was performed to evaluate the hemodynamic status of children admitted to the intensive care unit, using suprasternal and transesophageal Doppler ultrasound, and to establish a suitable noninvasive technique to monitor trends in cardiac output in critically ill children. Twenty children were studied over a period of 6 months. The median age was 32.5 months and weight 14.5 kg. Minute distance (MD), which is a linear cardiac output parameter, was assessed. Seven simultaneous pairs of measurements of MD were made using transesophageal Doppler (TED) and suprasternal Doppler (SSD) by the same operator. Following a fluid challenge, seven repeat pairs of measurements were made. The mean percentage changes for MD by TED and SSD were 21.84 (SD 9.97) and 5.75 (SD 7.32). The average coefficients of variation for measurements of MD by TED and SSD were 2.34% and 15.98%, respectively. The mean difference in percentage change between MD, measured by TED and SSD, was 27.59 with a 95% confidence interval and wide limits of agreement. The repeatability of TED measurements was good, but the measurements by SSD were wide and erratic with poor reproducibility. Our study shows that TED is easy to use, reliable, and very useful for monitoring hemodynamic changes in critically ill children.
Although nephrotoxicity is a common and well-recognized side effect of amphotericin B, hepatotoxicity is rare. We report on a 9-year-old girl with cystic fibrosis who developed fulminant renal and hepatic dysfunction following a short course of intravenous amphotericin B for a suspected aspergillus infection, although she did not have clinical evidence of invasive aspergillosis. The toxicity became apparent after changing to liposomal amphotericin. This association of renal and hepatotoxicity with liposomal amphotericin B has not previously been reported in children.
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