Acute pancreatitis in children: a 15-year review.
Märksõnad
Abstraktne
OBJECTIVE
To review the aetiology, presentation, diagnosis, management, and sequelae of acute pancreatitis (AP) in children and to assess the relevance of prognostic criteria used to assess severity in adult AP.
METHODS
A retrospective review (1978 through 1992) of childhood AP managed in three Scottish paediatric centres.
RESULTS
Forty-nine cases of AP (34 male, 15 female) were reviewed (mean age, 7.1 years). The presenting features were abdominal pain and vomiting (80%), abdominal tenderness (73%), and parotid enlargement (22%); back pain was rare (8%). Ultrasound scan (US) findings were abnormal for 24 of 34 patients. Forty-one (82%) were managed conservatively. Six (12%) underwent early laparotomy; three (6%) underwent laparotomy after trauma. Five required subsequent definitive surgery. One patient died. Thirty-five (70%) suffered no sequelae, and five (10%) had further acute pancreatitis. Only half of the eight Imrie prognostic criteria had been recorded in these patients; only three were judged to have severe AP by the criteria. Other "clinically severe" cases were not identified.
CONCLUSIONS
The most common causes of AP were mumps (39%) and trauma (14%); in 12, no cause was identified. US was the most useful imaging tool. The Imrie criteria were of doubtful value but warrant further prospective analysis and possible modification for children.