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Benha Medical Journal. 2008; 25 (2): 89-101
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-112116

ABSTRACT

Diagnosis of retropharyngeal abscess [RPA] in children is based on clinical suspicioun with supportive imaging studies RPA is frequently described as acute airway emergency. There is nowadays a change in the clinical presentation and management that has been explored in this study. The study included cases identified by a diagnosis of RPA including infectious and traumatic cases with confirmatory computed Tomography [CT] scan findings. Patients were treated with conservative antibiotics, CT-guided needle aspiration or open transoral drainage under general endotracheal anesthesia. Seventeen patients were identified. The mean age was 5.5 years. The symptoms were in the following order of frequency; posterolateral neck pain in 70.5%, odynophagia and drooling 47%, fever 29.4%, lateral neck mass 23.5%, and lastly respiratory distress in 1 patient [5.8%]. The commonest sign was limitation of neck movement 88.2%; of those, 10 patients [58.8%] had limitation of neck extension, 3 [17.6%] had torticollis, 2 [11.7%] had limitation on flexion. Following signs were, fever 53%, enlarged tender upper cervical lymph nodes 47%, tachypnea 35%, posterior pharyngeal bulge 11.7%, inspiratory stridor 5.8%, posterior pharyngeal wall congestion 5.8%. Conservative medical treatment with IV antibiotics alone was successful in 4 [23.5%], transoral incision drainage done for 5 patients [29.4%] patients, external neck drainage in 2 [11.7%] patients, transoral needle aspiration of pus plus IV antibiotics successful in 6 [35%]. Airway related side effects were self-limited and none of the patients needed tracheostomy. Children with RPA present with manifestations other than respiratory distress or stridor. CT scan is useful in confirming the diagnosis. IV antibiotics alone can be effective in clinically stable patients; transoral needle aspiration of pus covered by IV antibiotics be helpful while transpharyngeal incision drainage can be reserved for clinically unstable or difficult to aspirate patients


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Child , Signs and Symptoms , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Retropharyngeal Abscess/therapy , Palliative Care , Drainage
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