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THE PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF SOME INITIAL CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS AND BIOCHEMICAL PARAMETERS FOR EVALUATING THE OUTCOME IN CORROSIVES POISONED CHILDREN

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Corrosive products ingestions in children pose potentially devastating presentations and lifelong complications which remain one of the most challenging concerns encountered in medical practice. Prompt diagnosis and management are of outmost importance in decreasing mortality and achieving optimal long-term outcomes. Aim of the work: to investigate the predictability of the severity of corrosive poisoning outcome from some clinical findings and laboratory data at presentation. Patients and Methods: The study enrolled children with corrosive substances poisoning admitted to Poison Control Center-Ain Shams University during the period from January 2015 till September 2016. Demographic variables, on admission clinical findings, routine laboratory data and the outcome variables (length of hospital stay, development of stricture and mortality rate) were recorded. Patients were classified into two groups; the non-complicated group and the complicated group. Results: 106 patients, 56 males (52.8%) with median age (3.06±2.57 years) met inclusion criteria. Signs and symptoms as (vomiting, dysphagia, drooling, hematemesis and respiratory distress) were found to be significantly higher in the complicated group as compared to the non-complicated group, while oral lesions and stridor showed insignificant difference between the two groups. Initial vomiting, drooling, dysphagia and hematemesis, but not respiratory distress, exhibited significant correlation with poor outcome (longer hospital stay, developing stricture/stenosis and increased mortality rate) together with high sensitivity and specificity prediction of stricture/stenosis formation 21 days post-ingestion (95.65%-70%, 91.49%-55.56%, 95.35%-45.5%, 92.86%- 42.86% respectively). Lower pH and Hb levels were more evident in the complicated group and were correlated with poor outcome. While, higher WBCs were only correlated with longer hospital stay time. Acidosis and anemia had significant sensitivity (91.30%- 90.91% respectively) and specificity (44.43%- 41.67% respectively) prediction of stricture/stenosis formation.
Conclusion: In children corrosive ingestion, some clinical manifestations as vomiting, drooling, dysphagia and hematemesis together with laboratory data as decreased pH and Hb levels and increased WBCs count on admission, were more obvious in the complicated cases and were found to be reliable predictors of outcome severity. Recommendations: It is recommended to carefully monitor initial signs and symptoms together with laboratory data to predict the outcome severity and avoid complications early enough.

DOI

10.21608/zjfm.2017.4773

Keywords

corrosives, children, Outcome, stricture

Authors

First Name

Eglal

Last Name

Elawady

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Departments of Forensic Medicine &Clinical Toxicology,Faculty of Medicine- Ain Shams University

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Orcid

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First Name

Rabab

Last Name

Hafiz

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Affiliation

Departments of Forensic Medicine &Clinical Toxicology,Faculty of Medicine- Ain Shams University

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Orcid

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First Name

Merhan

Last Name

Nasr

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Departments of Radiology Faculty of Medicine- Ain Shams University

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Volume

15

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

793

Issue Date

2017-01-01

Receive Date

2017-12-28

Publish Date

2017-01-01

Page Start

14

Page End

28

Print ISSN

1687-160X

Online ISSN

2536-9849

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https://zjfm.journals.ekb.eg/article_4773.html

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https://zjfm.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=4773

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2

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Original Article

Type Code

402

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Zagazig Journal of Forensic Medicine

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https://zjfm.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023