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Clinical Trial Summary

To evaluate the role of MDCT in diagnosis of non traumatic causes of acute abdomen in pediatric patients with clinical and surgical correlation.


Clinical Trial Description

Acute abdominal pain is a common presenting symptom to the pediatric emergency department (1). The causes of the acute abdomen in pediatric patients are numerous, and diagnosis is often delayed due to misleading signs and symptoms.

Conditions that can be manifested by acute abdominal pain vary in incidence with age and sex. Classification of acute abdominal pain based on age is one adapted approach to narrow the differential diagnosis, which can guide selection of appropriate diagnostic tests, imaging, and definitive treatment.

While most of the emergency visits presenting with acute abdominal pain are self-limited and benign medical diagnoses, a surgical etiology may be present in up to 20%.(7) In nontraumatic cases of an acute abdomen below 1 year of age, the most common surgical etiology was reported to be incarcerated inguinal hernia (45.1%), followed by intussusception (41.9%). These etiologies were uncommon in school-age and adolescent children. In children above 1 year of age, the most common causes of acute surgical diagnoses have been reported to be acute appendicitis , incarcerated hernia, intussusception, intestinal obstruction, and ovarian torsion.

CT scanning provides very detailed images of many types of tissue as well as the lungs, bones, and blood vessels.CT scanning is painless, non invasive and accurate. CT has been shown to be a cost-effective imaging tool for a wide range of clinical problems. CT is less sensitive to patient movement than MRI.

The use of pediatric CT, which is a valuable imaging tool, has been increasing rapidly. However, because of the potential for increased radiation exposure to children undergoing these scans, pediatric CT is a public health concern CT can be a life saving tool for diagnosing illness and injury in children. For an individual child, the risks of CT are small and the individual risk-benefit balance favors the benefit when used appropriately.

Despite the many benefits of CT, a disadvantage is the inevitable radiation exposure.

Radiologists should continually think about reducing exposure as low as reasonably achievable by using exposure settings customized for children. (8,9) There has been revolutionary development in multidetector CT (MDCT) technology that has contributed to a substantial increase in its diagnostic applications and accuracy, even in children. However, a major drawback of MDCT is the use of ionizing radiation and, consequently, the risks of radiation-induced side effects.

It is generally believed that there is a linear-no threshold risk relationship. We should act as if low-dose radiation may well cause secondary cancer and reduce the medical radiation exposure to children as much as possible, the "as low as reasonably achievable" (ALARA) concept. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04480983
Study type Observational
Source Assiut University
Contact Amal Fathy
Phone 002/1069363096
Email amalfathy1406@yahoo.com
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date December 1, 2021
Completion date January 1, 2023