Background and Aim:
Sepsis is a common cause of pediatric intensive care unit (ICU) admission. Sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) may occur owing to brain dysfunction in those patients and may be related to impaired cerebral microcirculation. Transcranial Doppler (TCD) can be used to detect this impairment. In this study, we aimed to assess the role of TCD in prediction of SAE and mortality in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock admitted to PICU.
Patients and Methods:
This prospective study included 75 children admitted to PICU owing to severe sepsis or septic shock. Upon admission, all patients were subjected to careful history taking, thorough clinical examination, and standard laboratory workup. Severity of clinical illness was assessed using the Pediatric Risk of Mortality (PRISM) III score. TCD was performed on the first day of admission after the normalization of systolic blood pressure with or without vasopressors. The primary study outcome was differences in the measurement of TCD in SAE, and the secondary outcome was discharge from ICU or mortality.
Results:
The study comprised 45 children with SAE and 30 age- and sex-matched children without SAE. In this study, SAE patients had significantly higher pulsatility index [PI; median interquartile range (IQR): 1.15 (0.98–1.48) vs. 1.0 (0.95–1.06),
p
= 0.002] and resistive index [RI; median (IQR): 0.68 (0.61–0.77) vs. 0.62 (0.59–0.64),
p
= 0.001] than had non-SAE patients. PI and RI showed good performance as predictors of subsequent SAE development [area under the curve (AUC): 0.72 and 0.73, respectively]. Non-survivors in SAE patients had significantly higher PRISM III. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis showed good performance of PI and RI as predictors of mortality at the end of follow-up.
Conclusions:
In children with SAE, cerebrovascular resistance is high and is associated with increased mortality.
Background: To determine the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and diagnostic accuracy of thoracic ultrasound (TUS) in patients with moderate to high clinical suspicion of pulmonary embolism (PE). Twenty-five patients with moderate or high clinical suspicion of PE were enrolled in a prospective study. The patients' ages were 20 to 50 years (mean age = 36 years). They were evaluated by TUS and standard contrast-enhanced CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA). Results: In comparison to and in correlation with CTPA, TUS was found true positive in 12 patients (48%), false positive in one patient (4%), true negative in eight patients (32%), and false negative in four patients (8%), with an overall sensitivity (75%), specificity (89%), positive predictive value (92%), negative predictive value (67%), and accuracy (80%). Conclusion: TUS with its high specificity and diagnostic accuracy is a noninvasive, widely available, cost-effective method which can be rapidly performed. A negative TUS study cannot rule out PE with certainty, but positive TUS findings with moderate/high suspicion for PE may prove a valuable bedside tool in the diagnosis of PE especially for critically ill and immobile patients, facilitating their immediate treatment.
Carotid ultrasound was a useful tool to detect subclinical atherosclerosis thorough CIMT evaluation in B-thalassemia major patients. B-thalassemia major children proved to have an increased CIMT regardless the state of iron overload.
Background
To describe the findings of the dynamic upper limb arterial and venous duplex in the assessment of vascular compression in cases of VTOS. This study was conducted on 58 patients with VTOS; they were evaluated by dynamic duplex examination.
Results
Vascular compression was subdivided into a venous compression that was detected in (84.4%, n = 49), arterial compression that was seen in (1.7%, n = 1), and combined arterial and venous compression that was present in (13.7%, n = 8); bilateral compression was existing in (94.4%, n = 55), compression at the scalene triangle was seen in (1.7%, n = 1), at the costo-clavicular space was seen in (91.3%, n = 53), and at the retro-pectoral space was depicted in (8.6%, n = 5).
Complicated arterial compression was detected in (1.7%, n = 1), whereas venous complications were seen in (6.8%, n = 4).
Conclusion
Dynamic duplex ultrasound offered a simple, noninvasive, and quick technique that can help in the evaluation of the vascular thoracic outlet syndrome without exposure to ionizing radiation or contrast media administration like that in CT; nevertheless, it is done with the patient in the upright position, thus avoiding the high false-negative results associated with the supine position that is used in the CT and MRI studies.
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