ABSTRACT
No disponible
Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Child , Clavicle , Clavicle , Diagnostic Imaging , Myositis OssificansSubject(s)
Clavicle , Myositis Ossificans/diagnosis , Child , Clavicle/diagnostic imaging , Diagnostic Imaging , Female , Humans , Radiography , UltrasonographyABSTRACT
No disponible
Subject(s)
Female , Child , Humans , Male , Infant , Sepsis , Streptococcal Infections , Streptococcus agalactiae , Abdomen, Acute , Appendicitis , Diagnosis, Differential , Laparotomy , Tuberculosis, Gastrointestinal , Time Factors , Syndrome , Lymphadenitis , CelluliteSubject(s)
Hirschsprung Disease/diagnostic imaging , Intestinal Obstruction/etiology , Sigmoid Diseases/etiology , Barium Sulfate , Child, Preschool , Enema , Hirschsprung Disease/complications , Humans , Intestinal Obstruction/diagnostic imaging , Intestinal Obstruction/surgery , Male , Radiography , Sigmoid Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Sigmoid Diseases/surgerySubject(s)
Colonic Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Gastrointestinal Motility , Hirschsprung Disease/diagnostic imaging , Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction/diagnostic imaging , Colonic Diseases/etiology , Colonic Diseases/physiopathology , Female , Gastrointestinal Transit , Hirschsprung Disease/etiology , Hirschsprung Disease/physiopathology , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction/etiology , Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction/physiopathology , Male , Radiography , SyndromeABSTRACT
The authors present 4 children with stress bone fractures and review this entity. The most significant aspects in the mechanism of production of stress fractures are considered along with the appropriate steps for the diagnosis after careful history and physical examination, with special emphasis to the imaging diagnosis.
Subject(s)
Fractures, Stress/diagnostic imaging , Tibial Fractures/diagnostic imaging , Child , Fractures, Open/diagnostic imaging , Fractures, Open/therapy , Fractures, Stress/therapy , Humans , Radiography , Tibial Fractures/therapySubject(s)
Airway Obstruction/complications , Infectious Mononucleosis/complications , Respiratory Insufficiency/etiology , Acute Disease , Adenoids/pathology , Airway Obstruction/therapy , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infectious Mononucleosis/pathology , Intubation, Intratracheal , Laryngeal Edema/etiology , Male , Tonsillitis/etiologyABSTRACT
A case of intestinal intussusception (I.I.) is described in a newborn and 42 cases in the literature revised. I.I. is not a frequent entity in the neonate and has special clinical and radiological characteristics. Symptomatology of patients is unspecific and makes diagnosis difficult. The elevated incidence of necrosis and intestinal perforation, possibly related with the delay with which diagnosis is effected, is without doubt the determing factor in the high incidence of mortality in these patients. The finding of a conditioning organic lesion is much more frequent in the neonatal period than later ages.