Clinical Features and Factors Affecting Success Rate of Air Reduction for Pediatric Intussusception.
- Author:
Il tae SON
1
;
Kyuwhan JUNG
;
Taejin PARK
;
Hyun Young KIM
;
Kwi Won PARK
;
Sung Eun JUNG
Author Information
1. Department of Pediatric Surgery, Seoul National University Children's Hospital Seoul, Korea. sejung@snu.ac.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Intussusception;
Air reduction;
Success rate
- MeSH:
Abdominal Pain;
Fever;
Hospitalization;
Humans;
Intussusception;
Lethargy;
Logistic Models;
Lymph Nodes;
Male;
Mesentery;
Multivariate Analysis;
Recurrence;
Seasons
- From:Journal of the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons
2010;16(2):108-116
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Air reduction is a safe, effective, and fast initial treatment for pediatric intussusception. There is low dose radiation exposure. Factors affecting outcomes of air reduction were analyzed by reviewing the clinical features and results of treatment. A total of 399 out of 485 patients with pediatric intussusceptions were treated at the Seoul National University Children's Hospital from 1996 to 2009. All of the patients received air reduction as the first line of treatment. Clinical features such as gender, age, seasonal variation, symptoms, signs, types, pathologic leading point, and treatment results including success rate, complication, recurrence, NPO time, and duration of hospitalization were reviewed. The Pearson chi-square, student T-, and logistic regression tests were used for statistical analysis. P-value less than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. The prevalent clinical features were: male (65.4%), under one-year of age (40.3%), ileocolic type (71.9%), abdominal pain (85.4%), and accompanying mesentery lymph node enlargement (2.2%). The overall success rate for air reduction was 78.4% (313 of 399 patients), and the perforation rate during reduction was 1.5%. There were 23 recurrent cases over 21.6 months. All were successfully treated with re-do air reduction. Reduction failures had longer overall NPO times (27.067hrs vs. 43.0588hrs; p=0.000) and hospitalization durations (1.738d vs. 6.975d; p=0.000) compared to the successful cases. The factors affecting success rates were fever (p=0.002), abdominal distension (p=0.000), lethargy (p=0.000) and symptom duration (p=0.000) on univariate analysis. Failure rates were higher in patients with symptom durations greater than 24 hours (p=0.023), and lethargy (p=0.003) on multivariate analysis. Air reduction showed high success rates and excellent treatment outcomes as the initial treatment for pediatric intussusception in this study. Symptom duration and lethargy were significantly associated with reduced success rates.