A prospective audit of 225 children was conducted to evaluate current pain management strategies both in-hospital and at home following day surgery at British Columbia Children's Hospital (Vancouver, British Columbia). Anesthetic, postanesthetic care unit and surgical day care unit records were collected to generate in-hospital data. A telephone questionnaire was administered 48 h postdischarge for at home data. Pain reports and scores were significantly higher (P<0.01) at home compared with in-hospital. Children undergoing certain procedures were more likely to experience significant pain. Although good pain control was commonly achieved after surgery, improvements may be possible by increasing the use of multimodal analgesia, providing standardized written discharge instructions and using surgery-specific pediatric analgesia guidelines.
Objective: Sudden arrhythmia death syndrome (SADS) accounts for about 30% of causes of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in young people. In Hong Kong, there are scarce data on SADS and a lack of experience in molecular autopsy. We aimed to investigate the value of molecular autopsy techniques for detecting SADS in an East Asian population. Methods:This was a two-part study. First, we conducted a retrospective 5-year review of autopsies performed in public mortuaries on young SCD victims. Second, we conducted a prospective 2-year study combining conventional autopsy investigations, molecular autopsy, and cardiac evaluation of the first-degree relatives of SCD victims. A panel of 35 genes implicated in SADS was analysed by next-generation sequencing.Results: There were 289 SCD victims included in the 5-year review. Coronary artery disease was the major cause of death (35%); 40% were structural heart diseases and 25% were unexplained. These unexplained cases could include SADS-related conditions. In the 2-year prospective study, 21 SCD victims were examined: 10% had arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, 5% had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and 85% had negative autopsy. Genetic analysis showed 29% with positive heterozygous genetic variants; six variants were novel. One third of victims had history of syncope, and 14% had family history of SCD. More than half of the 11 first-degree relatives who underwent genetic testing carried related genetic variants, and 10% had SADS-related clinical features. Conclusion: This pilot feasibility study shows the value of incorporating cardiac evaluation of Sudden arrhythmia death syndrome in young victims: a five-year retrospective review and twoyear prospective molecular autopsy study by nextgeneration sequencing and clinical evaluation of their first-degree relativesNew knowledge added by this study • This study provides important data on the prevalence and types of sudden arrhythmia death syndrome (SADS) among young victims of sudden cardiac death in an East Asian population. • This is the first local feasibility study on the service model incorporating cardiac evaluation of surviving relatives and molecular autopsy by next-generation sequencing into the conventional forensic investigations. Implications for clinical practice or policy • Genomic testing should be conducted on patients with cardiomyopathies and channelopathies.• Clinical assessment should be provided for at-risk family members irrespective of genetic findings.• Molecular autopsy together with conventional autopsy conducted by qualified pathologists should be applied to victims of SADS, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, or sudden infant death syndrome.
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