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1.
Revue Maghrebine de Pediatrie [La]. 2010; 20 (6): 297-301
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-133638

ABSTRACT

Osteoporosis has been described extensively in adult thalassemics. Fewer studies have been reported in thalassemic children. Study the frequency and outcome of osteoporosis in Tunisian major beta thalassemic children and to identify principal clinical risk factors and biological characteristics of its occurrence. It's a prospective study enrolled between 1 January and 31 December 2008. 64 thalassemic major patients were evaluated. The study of bone mineral density was provided by X-ray photon. Osteoporosis was defined by Z score beta -2SD at lumbar [L1-L4] sites. 30 of patients studied [46.87 per cent] had a Z score beta 2-SD. Compared with non-osteoporotic patients we have identified as risk factors: the age of the patient [p = 0.001]. The number of transfusion [p = 0.002] and the increased of the annual consumption of blood [p = 0.02]. We found a larger number of growth retardation [p =0.004]. Iron overload was greater in the group of osteoporotic patients [p = 0.04]. The sex, age at diagnosis, the average of hemoglobin, the status of viral hepatitis B and C, the incidence of allo or auto-immunization, and thyroid status seem to have no influence the occurrence of osteoporosis in our study. The onset of osteoporosis is associated directly to higher transfusion requirements and age > 12 years

2.
Maghreb Medical. 2008; 28 (387): 37-38
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-88653

ABSTRACT

Spinal epidural abscess is a rare affection in child. Bacteria gain access to the epidural space through contiguous spread or hematogenous dissemination. It is more common in thoracolumbar than cervical areas. The organisms most frequently encountered are Staphylococcus aureus. Back pain, fever and neurologic deficit are the three most common symptoms. MRI is the imaging method of choice in diagnosing spinal epidural abscess. Surgical drainage with systemic antibiotics is the treatment of choice. We report the case of a 8 years old children, without any pathological antecedent, hospitalized in the service of Pediatrics for back pain, fever and lameness. The clinical examination found a lumbar rachis painful to the palpation with limited mobility, there was no neurologic deficit. Laboratory investigations showed that inflammatory markers were uniformly elevated. MRI showed a spinal epidural abscess in L3-L4. No micro-organism was isolated in blood cultures. A diagnosis of spinal epidural abscess was suspected and a medical treatment was indicated for 3 months. The outcome was favorable. On the light of this observation, the authors make a review of literature


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Child , Back Pain , Fever , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Lumbar Vertebrae , Staphylococcus aureus
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