Parents felt wet wraps were harder to use. The authors do note that there may be clinical situations (they mention short term treatment of acute erythrodermic eczema) where wet wraps are a useful option. There appear to be no advantages in the group studied over a four-week period and the disadvantages likely include parental perception of difficulty of use and a possibility of increased skin infections.—JCD
A Study of Dehydrated Peds
Mallory MD, Kadish H, Zebrack M, Nelson D. Use of a pediatric observation unit for treatment of children with dehydration caused by gastroenteritis. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2006 Jan;22(1):1-6.
A case-control study was performed to examine 467 admissions to an observation unit in patients with dehydration from vomiting or diarrhea from presumed gastroenteritis. Patients were presumably admitted to the observation unit (staffed by emergency department personnel) if they were believed to require more rehydration than could be reasonably offered in the emergency department itself.
Controls were defined as those patients able to be discharged home from the observation unit within 24 hours and cases as those patients that required subsequent inpatient admission. Nineteen percent of the patients studied required inpatient admission.
One of the goals of the study was to determine variables useful in distinguishing patients who would require subsequent inpatient admission from those who would be discharged home from the observation unit. No such variables were found.
Variables studied included oral intake prior to presentation, urine output at presentation, symptoms at presentation (vomiting versus diarrhea versus both), predominant symptoms (vomiting versus diarrhea versus no predominance), duration of symptoms, abdomen tender to palpation (yes/no), previous visit within five days (yes/no), age, vital signs, bicarbonate levels, and mean sodium levels.—JCD
Routine Neuroimaging: Little Value When Evaluating Febrile Seizures
By Stevie Wilson, RN, CPNP
Teng D, Dayan P, Tyler S, et al. Risk of intracranial pathologic conditions requiring emergency intervention after a first complex febrile seizure episode among children. Pediatrics. 2006;117(2):304-308.
Febrile seizures occur in up to 5% of all children. One-third of febrile seizures are classified as complex (i.e., having multiple seizures, prolonged duration, or focal seizures). Complex febrile seizures have been associated with an increased risk of recurrent febrile seizures and epilepsy. However, they have not been associated with pathologic intracranial lesions that require emergency surgical intervention.
Previous studies suggest that intracranial abnormalities are rare among simple febrile seizures. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends against the use of neuroimaging with simple seizures, however, practice guidelines for emergency neuroimaging for complex seizures do not exist. The objective of this study was to determine the likelihood of a significant intracranial condition requiring emergency intervention in children with the first complex febrile seizure.
A retrospective review of prospectively collected data was performed for 71 children who presented to the pediatric emergency department after a first complex febrile seizure. None of the 71 patients had a pathologic intracranial lesion that required emergency intervention. The authors therefore concluded that the risk of pathologic intracranial conditions requiring emergency intervention is low, suggesting that routine emergency neuroimaging for this population is unnecessary.
Managing Bronchiolitis above Sea Level
Choudhuri JA, Ogden LG, Ruttenber JA, et al. Effect of altitude on hospitalizations for respiratory syncytial virus infection. Pediatrics. 2006;117(2):349-356.