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Title in English LIVER INJURY IN CHILDREN
Authors

PLÁNKA Ladislav BIBROVÁ Štěpánka TEYSCHL Otakar HNILIČKA Jan SÁDOVSKÝ Andrej GÁL Petr

Year of publication 2011
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Úrazová chirurgie
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Field Other medical specializations
Keywords liver injury; post-traumatic pseu-docyst; child; surgical procedures
Description The presented retrospective clinical study gives an overview of liver injury in children over a period of 11 years (2000-2010) at the Clinic of Pediatric Surgery, Orthopedics and Traumato-logy, Faculty Hospital Brno. The authors moni-tored the incidence of complications in the conser-vative treatment of liver injury and present complex information about this injured children. METHODOLOGY: The input data in the study provided the hospital information system, inclu-ding X-ray records and sonographic documenta-tion. Subsequently, the study group has been split by gender, age range and defined the precise diagnosis (degree of liver injury). Other moni-tored parameters were length of hospitalization, need for artificial ventilation, mechanism of in-jury, associated diagnosis and frequency of post-traumatic complications. RESULTS: Final group included 43 children with evidence of liver injury. There were 27 boys with an average age of 10.1 and 16 girls with an ave-rage age of 11.1. Most often it was a liver contusion, most risk age group of children was 6-10 years (17 cases -19, 3%). The main mechanism of injury was a car crash (25.6%) and falls from bicycles (20.9%). The average length of hospita-lization was 14.8, by 12 children (27.9%) the artificial ventilation with an average length of 5.3 days was required. In the study group, there were many associated diagnosis, but nothing significant dominated. In the study group, there were no complications in terms adhesion with ileus or abscess formation, the vast majority of them were represented by only post-traumatic pseudocyst. CONCLUSION: The presented study confirmed the low incidence of liver injury in children. The treatment scheme clearly dominated by a conser-vative approach that has absolutely minimal clinically significant complications.

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