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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38715374

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Malrotation and volvulus classically present with bilious vomiting. It is more common earlier in life, but there are other causes of bile-stained vomiting. This leads some clinicians to 'watch and wait'. In the presence of a volvulus, this is potentially a fatal decision. It is not clear from the literature if there is a safe time window in which children can be observed in the hope of avoiding transfers or radiological investigations. AIM: To determine whether time to identification and management of midgut volvulus correlated with morbidity and mortality; and whether there were patterns to transition of care. METHODS: Multicentre, retrospective review of all children with malrotation ± volvulus at two tertiary children's hospitals in Brisbane from 2000 to 2012. Data collected included age at presentation, timing between symptom onset and presentation, radiological findings, and definitive surgical management. Outcomes included patient length of stay (LOS), total parenteral nutrition (TPN) duration, re-operations and death. RESULTS: There were 96 cases of malrotation identified, with 23 excluded (elective operation, insufficient data). Neonates made up 66% of included cases. Only 14% of cases were over 12 months old. Bilious vomiting or bile-stained aspirates were the presenting symptoms in 71% (52). Overall mortality was 5.56%. Time from symptom onset to presentation or management was not significantly associated with morbidity or mortality. More than half (53%, 39/73) of patients received total parenteral nutrition; 20/39 for more than 10 days. Neonates and infants had a significantly higher rate of TPN compared with older children (P < 0.001). Those requiring TPN post-operatively had a significantly higher mortality compared with those who did not (P = 0.02). Time from symptom onset to presentation or definitive management was not significantly associated with LOS, TPN duration, or need for re-operation. CONCLUSION: Malrotation remains a time-critical diagnosis to secure and treat. Even a short duration of symptoms can be associated with high morbidity or mortality. There is no place for 'watch and wait' for such patients, and malrotation/volvulus should be emergently actively excluded with contrast studies.

2.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ; 8(4): 432-7, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22317745

ABSTRACT

The ability to infer other people's mental states such as desires, emotions, intentions and beliefs is essential for successful social interactions, and it is usually referred to as theory of mind (ToM). In particular, the ability to detect and understand that people have beliefs about reality that may be false is considered an important hallmark of ToM. This experiment reports on the results of 18 participants who viewed photographic sequences of an actress performing actions as a consequence of true and false beliefs. Consistent with prior work, results from the passive viewing of stimuli depicting true belief indicated an increased response over frontal, central and parietal regions when compared with the amplitude for the false belief condition. These results show that (i) frontal activity is required for processing false belief tasks and (ii) parietal effects reported in previous studies to reflect specific cognitive process of monitoring others' beliefs can be elicited in the absence of an explicit instruction for mentalizing.


Subject(s)
Concept Formation/physiology , Culture , Mental Processes/physiology , Theory of Mind/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Brain/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Reality Testing , Young Adult
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