Video recording is more effective than medical record review in detecting management errors in pediatric trauma resuscitation. Management errors in pediatric trauma resuscitation are common and often involve basic resuscitation principles. Resuscitation of the most seriously injured children was associated with fewer errors. Video recording is a useful adjunct to trauma resuscitation auditing.
The hypothesis was tested that oral antibiotic treatment in children with acute pyelonephritis and scintigraphy-documented lesions is equally as efficacious as sequential intravenous/oral therapy with respect to the incidence of renal scarring. A randomised multi-centre trial was conducted in 365 children aged 6 months to 16 years with bacterial growth in cultures from urine collected by catheter. The children were assigned to receive either oral ceftibuten (9 mg/kg once daily) for 14 days or intravenous ceftriaxone (50 mg/kg once daily) for 3 days followed by oral ceftibuten for 11 days. Only patients with lesions detected on acute-phase dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy underwent follow-up scintigraphy. Efficacy was evaluated by the rate of renal scarring after 6 months on follow-up scintigraphy. Of 219 children with lesions on acute-phase scintigraphy, 152 completed the study; 80 (72 females, median age 2.2 years) were given ceftibuten and 72 (62 females, median age 1.6 years) were given ceftriaxone/ Eur J Pediatr (2008) ceftibuten. Patients in the intravenous/oral group had significantly higher C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations at baseline and larger lesion(s) on acute-phase scintigraphy. Follow-up scintigraphy showed renal scarring in 21/80 children treated with ceftibuten and 33/72 with ceftriaxone/ ceftibuten (p=0.01). However, after adjustment for the confounding variables (CRP and size of acute-phase lesion), no significant difference was observed for renal scarring between the two groups (p=0.2). Renal scarring correlated with the extent of the acute-phase lesion (r=0.60, p<0.0001) and the grade of vesico-ureteric reflux (r=0.31, p=0.03), and was more frequent in refluxing renal units (p=0.04). The majority of patients, i.e. 44 in the oral group and 47 in the intravenous/oral group, were managed as out-patients. Side effects were not observed. From this study, we can conclude that once-daily oral ceftibuten for 14 days yielded comparable results to sequential ceftriaxone/ceftibuten treatment in children aged 6 months to 16 years with DMSA-documented acute pyelonephritis and it allowed out-patient management in the majority of these children.
Abstract. Harsch IA, Stocker S, Radespiel-Tröger M, Hahn EG, Konturek PC, Ficker JH, Lohmann T (Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Ulmenweg, Erlangen; and Klinikum Fü rth, Fü rth, Germany). Traffic hypoglycaemias and accidents in patients with diabetes mellitus treated with different antidiabetic regimens. J Intern Med 2002; 252: 352-360.Objectives. Insulin-treated patients with diabetes are at a higher risk than the general population in causing traffic accidents due to hypoglycaemias. Preceeding investigations focused on insulin-treated patients and hypoglycaemia-induced accidents as Ôend-pointsÕ. We studied the incidence of symptomatic hypoglycaemia and hypoglycaemia-induced accidents during driving and put it in relation to the different treatment modes of insulin therapy (Conventional Insulin Treatment ¼ CT, Intensified Conventional Insulin Treatment ¼ ICT, Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion ¼ CSII) as well as to patients treated with oral hypoglycaemia-inducing agents and the two main types of diabetes mellitus. Design. Subjects and setting: We investigated 450 patients (122 treated with sulphonylureas, 151 with CT, 143 with ICT and 34 with CSII) by an anonymous questionnaire at different locations to avoid bias. A total of 176 persons had type 1 diabetes, 243 persons had type 2 diabetes, 31 subjects could not be classified.Results. Symptomatic hypoglycaemias during driving were rare events with an occurrence of 0.19-8.26 (minimal and maximal mean, depending on the mode of treatment), if given as hypoglycaemias per 100 000 km on one treatment regimen, or 0.02-0.63, if given as events per year driven. Their incidence increased significantly with the degree of ÔstrictnessÕ between the treatment groups, except between the patients treated with ICT and CSII. Hypoglycaemia-induced accidents are rare with 0.01-0.49, if given as events per 100 000 km and 0.007-0.01, if given as events per year driven. These differences were not significant. Significant confounders influencing the traffic safety of the patients were age, duration of diabetes and concomitant antihypertensive medication. Analysing the data in accordance with the type of diabetes revealed a significantly higher rate of hypoglycaemic events in patients with type 1 diabetes. The number of hypoglycaemia-induced accidents was considerably higher in this group, but failed slightly to reach statistical significance. Conclusions. Hypoglycaemias during driving are rare events, their occurrence is significantly influenced by the treatment regimen and type of diabetes. Hypoglycaemia-induced accidents are extremely rare, presumably as a positive effect of patient education in our group.
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