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1.
Korean Journal of Pediatrics ; : 557-560, 2005.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-109129

ABSTRACT

Congenital laryngeal atresia is a rare cause of airway obstruction that is almost always lethal within a few minutes after birth. Therefore congenital laryngeal atresia should be diagnosed in the prenatal period. If not, it should be considered in newborn infant with life-threatening symptoms at birth such as cyanosis and dyspnea that need emergent procedures like a tracheotomy. We report a case of congenital laryngeal atresia with single umbilical artery diagnosed in a one-day-old neonate who required a tracheotomy and ventilator care after intubation failure.


Subject(s)
Humans , Infant, Newborn , Airway Obstruction , Cyanosis , Dyspnea , Intubation , Parturition , Single Umbilical Artery , Tracheotomy , Ventilators, Mechanical
2.
Korean Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition ; : 163-169, 2004.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-127806

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Many diagnostic modalities have been used for diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). Feeding materials during esophageal pH monitoring may interfere the result of examination and esophageal pH monitoring can not diagnose GER in case of alkaline reflux. The purpose of our study is to evaluate whether scintigraphy can substitiute 24 hr pH monitoring in children with GERD. METHODS: From March 2002 to June 2003, 23 patients (12 boys and 11 girls, mean age 27 months) who have been admitted to Hanyang University Hospital presented with GER symptoms (recurrent vomiting, cough, chest pain, irritability) were included in the study. Scintigraphy and 24 hr pH monitoring were performed in all patients. RESULTS: Six out of the 23 patients (26.1%) had evidence of GER on 24 hr pH monitoring, whereas nine of 23 patients (39.2%) exhibited GER by scintigraphy. Two out of the 23 patients could not be tested because of irritability. Three (14.3%) patients had evidence of GER on both 24 hr pH monitoring and scintigraphy, three (14.3%) patients on only 24 hr pH monitoring, six (28.6%) patients on only scintigraphy, and nine (42.9%) patients had no evidence of GER on both methods. No correlation was observed between 24 hr pH monitoring and scintigraphic results by Fisher's exact test (p=0.523) or Kendal's tau (t=0.678). CONCLUSION: The results of this study demonstrated that there was no correlation between 24 hr pH monitoring and scintigraphy. Therefore these modalities could be used as complementary tests to diagnose GERD.


Subject(s)
Child , Female , Humans , Chest Pain , Cough , Diagnosis , Esophageal pH Monitoring , Gastroesophageal Reflux , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Radionuclide Imaging , Vomiting
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