Category Archives: For Emergency Departments

Undescended testes

Undescended testes (cryptorchidism) with thanks to Dr Sara Waise

 Occasionally when you are examining a male infant, you may think that one or both of his testes has not yet descended into the scrotal sac.    Infant testes are actually quite retractile; ask parents if they are visible in the scrotum when the baby has a warm bath.  At 6 weeks some babies’ testes may still be palpable within the inguinal canal, especially if they were born a bit early.  Infants with a true undescended testis need to be referred to a paediatric surgeon any time from 6 months of age and definitely by 1 year of age.  Our local paediatric surgery service is at the Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel.

One of the junior doctors, Dr Sara Waise, has put together the following notes on undescended testes for Paediatric Pearls: 

Check whether testes are:

  • Present or absent
  • In the inguinal canal
  • High in the scrotum
  • Able to be brought down into the scrotum

 Identify any other congenital defects 

  • May be isolated
  • Can occur as part of genetic or endocrine disorders and for this reason, my colleague with an interest in endocrinology asked me to remind you that bilateral undescended testes need immediate referral.

 If the testis remains undescended at 1 year of age, referral to a urologist is needed.

 Early correction maximises future fertility potential

  • Outcome is poorer for bilateral undescended testes
  • Unclear whether surgical correction fully normalises this

 Surgical correction reduces malignancy risk

  • Facilitates self-examination
  • Risk remains 5-10 times greater than normal following orchidopexy

 

References

Kurpisz,. M., Havryluk, A., Nakonechnyj, A., Chopyak, V. & Kamieniczna, M. (2010). Cryptorchidism and its long-term consequences. Reproductive Biology 10 19-35

Hutson, J.M., Balic, A., Nation, T. & Southwell, B. (2010). Cryptorchidism. Seminars in Pediatric Surgery 19 215-234

http://www.patient.co.uk/health/Undescended-Testis.htm provides a useful, printable overview for parents of boys in whom you have found an undescended testis. 

http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/Undescended-and-Maldescended-Testes.htm has information for medical professionals and includes information about the ascending testis syndrome in the older child (around 8 to 10 years old).

Head injury

This month I have featured the 2007 NICE guideline on head injury.  This is because I was looking through it recently trying to find out how long we should be observing children with minor head injuries for in A and E ie. those who do not qualify for a CT.   I was also interested to find out whether we should treat babies, whose fontanelles are still open, differently.  Would it take longer for the signs of intracranial pressure to become obvious in them?  Anyway the guideline answers neither of those questions…

I found a couple of recent Canadian papers on the need for CT scanning in children with minor head injury.  I think many of us are concerned that we are doing too many CTs on children as a result of the NICE guideline.  The radiation dose is not insignificant and some of the children have to be sedated for the investigation which is an added risk too.  Maguire et al (Should a head injured child receive a head CT scan?  A systematic review of clinical prediction rules. Pediatrics 2009;124(1):e145 – e154) say in the introduction to their paper that up to 70% of children presenting to the ED in the USA or Canada with a head injury get a CT scan and 70% to 98% of them are normal.  A more recent attempt at a clinical decision tool for assessing the need for CT has been written up by the Canadian head injury study group: Osmond MH et al. CATCH: a clinical decision rule for the use of computed tomography in children with minor head injury. CMAJ 2010;182(4):341-348.  There is a nice summary of and comment on this paper at www.medscape.com/viewarticle/579598.

The Scottish intercollegiate network (SIGN) put together a very similar guideline on head injury in 2009.  Their patient information leaflet is, in my view, infinitely better than NICE’s.  Have a look at their documents and downloads at http://www.sign.ac.uk/guidelines/fulltext/110/index.html

Inhalers for asthma

Most families in the Emergency Department will talk about their child’s “blue” and “brown” inhaler.  Can we, or they, tell which is the reliever and which the preventer? 

 Click here for a printable table of some common inhalers listed by colour.  I have also found a very useful site put together by a pharmacist and a medical student with photos of lots of the inhalers so you can get your patient to identify which one they are on.  Take a look at http://www.rch.org.au/clinicalguide/asthmadevices/

 Device   Comments
Standard metered dose inhaler (MDI)
  • Children < 12 years old unlikely to be able to use it properly without a spacer
  • Small, conveniently pocket-sized
  • Requires shaking and priming
  • Not affected by humidity
MDI and spacer
  • Bulky
  • Better delivery of drug at all ages
  • NICE suggests < 5 years, all inhalers should be given with a spacer device and 5-15 years, at least the corticosteroids should be given with a spacer
Dry powder device
  • Children < 6 years old generally can not use it as it requires a fast, deep breath to activate it
  • Medicine can be blown away if child accidentally breathes out
  • Clearer when the medicine is running out than the MDI
  • Single dose models require loading of capsules for each use
  • Powder sticks together if high humidity

 

http://www.asthma.org.uk/health_professionals/materials_to_help_you_your_patients/index.html has a link to a comprehensive information leaflet for young people over the age of 12 who need to take control of their asthma management and understand their condition.

http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/11400/32073/32073.pdf  is the 2000 guideline on asthma management in the < 5 year olds

http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/index.jsp?action=byID&r=true&o=11450 is the 2002 guideline for 5-15 year olds

Blood test reference ranges

Click here for our agreed blood test reference ranges for children.  Ranges may vary from laboratory to laboratory so please check with your own service if you are unsure.  These ranges have been discussed with Whipps Cross Hospital and formally agreed by the paediatric Clinical Improvement Group at the hospital.

My colleague with an interest in haematology asked me to mention, as an addendum to the blood reference ranges, that the lower limit of normal of neutrophils for afrocaribbean children is 1.0 as long as all other parameters are OK.

December PDF for the ED

This month’s emergency department version of Paediatric Pearls has information on dehydration from the NICE guideline on gastroenteritis in the under 5s, a bit on seizures and the evidence behind our reluctance to let you request chest x-rays for children.  I’ve featured the NICE guideline on antibiotics for respiratory illness in primary care too as they are also relevant for the children we see in EUCC and the Emergency Department.  I hope you find it helpful; I think the average length of time for each infection is useful information to be able to hand on to parents.  Download December’s Paediatric Pearls here.

November 2010’s Paediatric Pearls for the ED

Have a look at the November 2010 Paediatric Pearls PDF digest for information on bronchiolitis, heart murmurs and burns.  The featured NICE guideline this month was Nocturnal Enuresis which, even with the best will in the world, has very little to do with Accident and Emergency!  Those of you who are interested in the topic could look at this month’s GP version.

Heart murmurs

 

With thanks to Dr Tom Waterfield for his work on this article as part of our series on the 6 week baby check…

The assessment of murmurs can be difficult and identification of the underlying pathology, if any, is best left to a specialist.  For the purpose of the 6 week screening test all murmurs should be referred for further assessment but it is important to identify those children that require urgent assessment from the vast majority that simply require re-assurance and routine referral to a general paediatrician or paediatric cardiologist.

A hypothetical model of heart murmurs in children aged 1 month to 18 years done by an NHS economic evaluation team (http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/CRDWeb/ShowRecord.asp?ID=22002001874) suggested that only approximately 2% of these murmurs would be due to an underlying structural anomaly.   I think the wide age range might undermine this statistic’s relevance to the 6 week check cohort of babies.  A more widely quoted reference from 1998 reports that of 50 healthy term babies with heart murmurs, in 64% the murmur had disappeared by 6 weeks of age.  None of the babies had clinically significant congenital heart disease  and had all disappeared by 6 months of age but one baby had developed a different innocent murmur!  Read the full text of this paper at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1720793/pdf/v078p0F166.pdf.

If a murmur is detected it is important to consider the likelihood of there being significant underlying disease before referring for further assessment and before discussing the murmur with the parents. 

Innocent murmurs are common in children and are associated with normal weight gain, normal feeding and an otherwise normal clinical examination. 

The key points of clinical assessment include:

1)      Assessment of the murmur

  1. Location on the precordium e.g. left sternal edge (Common site of innocent murmurs)
  2. Intensity (1/6 = almost inaudible, 3/6 = audible with a stethoscope, 6/6 easily audible without a stethoscope and associated with a palpable thrill).  Murmurs are more often described now as soft or loud, harsh or musical.
  3. Variability with position – a feature of innocent murmurs (but not something one necessarily notices at the 6/52 check)
  4. Diastolic Vs Systolic – diastolic murmurs should always be treated as pathological

2)      Assessment of perfusion

  1. A pink child with a capillary refill time <2 seconds and with good peripheral pulses (including femoral pulses) is less likely to have significant heart disease
  2. Absent femoral pulses may represent coarctation of the aorta
  3. Cyanotic heart lesions rarely present outside the immediate perinatal period 

3)      Assessment for signs of heart failure

  1. Failure to thrive and recurrent respiratory infections
  2. Respiratory distress with hepatomegaly.  Crackles are not really heard in heart failure in infants
  3. Peripheral oedema and a raised JVP are NOT features of heart failure in this age group and their absence is not reassuring

If a child has a soft systolic murmur at the 6 week check and is growing well and feeding normally with an otherwise normal examination the child can be referred routinely to paediatric outpatients and the parents reassured that the murmur is likely to be due to the normal flow of blood around the heart.  If there are any worrying features then the child should ideally be discussed with the paediatric registrar on call and the appropriate referral or admission discussed.

References

The British Heart Foundation has a factfile sheet for GPs on heart murmurs in children but it is not downloadable from http://www.bhf.org.uk because it is over 5 years old and they worry that their old factsheets may go out of date.  BHF have however very kindly sent it to me and allowed me to upload it on to this site as an educational resource.  Download it here.

http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/Heart-Murmurs-in-Children.htm would be a good resource except that it still talks about antibiotics for children with heart defects when they have dental treatment and we gave up doing that in 2008 after NICE said it wasn’t necessary (http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/11938/40014/40014.pdf).

http://www.tinytickers.org is a parental support website concerned primarily with antenatal diagnosis and screening.

http://kidshealth.org/parent/medical/heart/murmurs.html# is one of the top American sites on children’s health aimed at the general public.  It provides balanced information in clear English about heart murmurs for parents who are worried that their GP has picked up a heart murmur incidentally on examining their child.  Our outreach cardiologist has written a few words on innocent heart murmurs too at http://www.kidscardiologist.com/conditions/innocent-murmur.html.

If your patient does turn out to have congenital heart disease, http://www.rch.org.au/cardiology/defects.cfm?doc_id=3011 is a fantastic site from Melbourne’s Royal Children Hospital with lovely clear diagrams and explanations of different morphological anomalies.

Bronchiolitis season

 

With thanks to Amutha for this article….

As winter approaches, most of us are very well aware that the bronchiolitis season is in full swing. Bronchiolitis is a lower respiratory tract infection – in the under 1s predominantly – that can cause fever, dry cough, nasal discharge and bilateral fine inspiratory creps ± wheeze.  Most cases of bronchiolitis occur from November to March, when the viruses that can cause bronchiolitis are more common. It is also possible to get bronchiolitis more than once during the same winter season (1).

Treatment is largely supportive and many infants are managed at home if they are feeding adequately and do not have significant respiratory difficulty.  Patients at high risk are ex-premature babies, those with congenital cardiac or respiratory diseases, immunodeficiency and babies < 3months of age (2).  When seeing a child, we should focus our history and examination on risk factors, signs of dehydration and respiratory distress.  This podcast provides an example of respiratory distress:

 http://empem.org/2010/09/bronchiolitis-part-1-of-2/comment-page-1/#comment-294

 3% of children will present with severe illness and require admission (2).  Map of Medicine (http://healthguides.mapofmedicine.com/choices/map/bronchiolitis1.html)  defines “severe” as those with:

  • poor feeding – less than half normal intake
  • lethargy
  • history of apnoea
  • respiratory rate above 70breaths/minute
  • presence of nasal flare and/or grunting
  • severe chest wall recession
  • cyanosis
  • marked use of accessory muscles
  • marked intercostal and subcostal recession
  • oxygen saturation (SaO2) 94% or less

 There have been no therapies that have been consistently effective enough to change the current supportive management of bronchiolitis. The majority of trials show that bronchodilators do not provide benefit and their routine use is not recommended (3). 

 1.http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/Bronchiolitis/Pages/Introduction.aspx

 2. Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN). Bronchiolitis in children. A national clinical guideline. Edinburgh: SIGN; 2006. http://www.sign.ac.uk/pdf/sign91.pdf

3. Petruzella FDGorelick MH. Current therapies in bronchiolitis. Pediatr Emerg Care 2010 Apr;26(4):302-7

Paediatric ECGs

Paediatric ECGs take a bit of getting used to. They change with age and I always have a crib sheet with me if looking at them formally. Well, can any non-cardiologists remember off the top of their head how many little squares are allowed to make up the R wave in V1 in a 1 week old compared to what is normal in a 15 year old? I like the crib sheet from the university of Chicago available at http://learnpediatrics.com/body-systems/cardiology/approach-to-pediatric-ecg/ although the first test is to fill in the lead numbers on the last 2 pages as they seem to have been left off! I also use “How to read Paediatric ECGs” by Park and Guntheroth (Mosby Elsevier) although it probably has more detail than is necessary for non-paediatricians. October’s ED version of Paediatric Pearls provides this same link to the Chicago crib sheet and also refers the reader to a recent paper on cardiac arrythmias which has some nice illustrative ECG strips. For those of you interested in such things, there is a course on paediatric ECGs run by cardiology registrars in central London twice a year. Their website is www.paeds.co.uk/ecg and the next course is early November 2010.