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Öğe Gastric perforation in neonates(Acta Medical Belgica, 2003) Öztürk, H; Önen, A; Otçu, S; Dokucu, AI; Gedik, SThe aetiology of neonatal gastric perforation (NGP) remains unknown and the mortality rate is still very high. We have treated five cases of gastric perforation over the past 17 years, and analysed them retrospectively to present our experience. Clinical data included age, sex, weight, maternal complication, fetal complication, gestational age, type of delivery, admission time, associated pathologies, localization of perforation, perforation age, operative procedures and outcome. There were four boys and one girl. Three of the infants were full-term, while two were premature. All of the infants were septic prior to rupture. Two infants had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); one due to prematurity and low gestational weight, and one due to meconium aspiration. Perforation was located at major curvature and anterior wall of the stomach in four patients, while it was located in minor curvature and anterior wall in one. The rupture was closed in two layers. Histopathology revealed local chronic inflammation and ischemia. Mortality rate was 60%. In conclusions, gastric perforation is a life-threatening complication in neonates. In our limited series, sepsis, prematurity and corticosteroid treatment were likely to be predictive for development of NGP. Early diagnosis and prompt management before clinical deterioration of the metabolic status may improve the outcome of such infants with NGP.Öğe Genital trauma in children(Elsevier Science Inc, 2005) Onen, A; Öztürk, H; Yayla, M; Basuguy, E; Gedik, SObjectives. To determine the severity and, accordingly, the treatment of genital trauma in a pediatric population. Methods. A total of 116 children with genital trauma and anorectal injury were retrospectively reviewed. The severity of trauma was graded according to the genital injury score (GIS), which we developed as a genital trauma scoring system. Results. The median age was 8 years. Of the 116 children, 80 were girls and 36 were boys. The etiology of the trauma was traffic road accident (53 patients), fall, sexual abuse, and gunshot wound. Sixty-one patients had additional organ injuries. The GIS was I for 25 children, 11 for 19, 111 for 32, IV for 23, and V for 17. In addition to the primary repair, colostomy was performed in 22 patients. The most frequent postoperative complication was wound infection. The postoperative complication rate was significantly greater in patients with an injury severity score greater than 15, severe contamination, prolonged delay (longer than 8 hours), and a GIS of IV or V. Conclusions. The clarification of the mechanism and severity of the genital injury and associated organ injuries under general anesthesia may help in the appropriate classification. Primary repair should be the standard approach in genital trauma patients with a GIS of IV or less. Those with a GIS of V associated with severe contamination and prolonged delay require colostomy for improved outcome. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc.Öğe Non-operative management of isolated solid organ injuries due to blunt abdominal trauma in children(Georg Thieme Verlag Kg, 2004) Ozturk, H; Dokucu, AI; Onen, A; Otçu, S; Gedik, S; Azal, OFThe purpose of this study was to evaluate essential prerequisites for a selective non-operative approach in children with solid organ injuries due to blunt abdominal trauma, and to determine the predictive value of two different trauma scoring systems: the Injury Severity Score (ISS) and the Paediatric Trauma Score (PTS). A retrospective review of children who were admitted with blunt abdominal solid organ injuries to a paediatric trauma Centre between January 1986 and September 2001 was performed. Hepatic, splenic, and renal injuries were graded, based on the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) Organ Injury Scale (ranged from grade I to IV). The patients were treated non-operatively or operatively and the two groups were compared for variables such as age, blood transfusion, ISS, PTS, length of hospitalisation, morbidity and mortality rate. Two hundred and five patients (147 boys and 58 girls) entered in this study. Median age was 7 years (1 - 15 yrs). The most common cause of trauma was falls (50%). Abdominal organ injuries were present in all patients with the spleen as the most commonly injured organ (111 patients). Fifty-one patients (32%) had additional extra-abdominal organ injuries. Thirty-five (17%) patients were treated operatively, while 170 (83%) were treated non-operatively. Post-traumatic complications developed in 10 patients treated operatively versus 4 patients treated non-operatively. Four patients died due to multiple organ failure (2 non-operative, 2 operative). When compared to the non-operative group, higher transfusion requirements (p < 0.05), a higher ISS (p < 0.01), lower PTS values (p = 0.0001), a longer hospitalisation period (p = 0.0001), and a higher complication rate (p < 0.05) were observed in the operative group. in addition, the non-operative treatment approach was more common in the last five years compared to the previous ten years (p = 0.002). In conclusion, the appropriate non-operative management of injured children reduces the risks of blood transfusion and decreases the length of hospital stay compared with a surgical approach. The use of physiological parameters and radiological findings may be sufficient criteria for observing haemodynamically stable patients with isolated abdominal organ injuries, and thus intensive care unit costs may be avoided. In addition, a careful and close follow-up is essential in injured patients with a low PTS or high ISS.