%0 Journal Article %J Acta Paediatr %D 2019 %T Administering analgesia sublingually is a suitable option for children with acute abdominal pain in the emergency department. %A Cozzi, Giorgio %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Chiaretti, Antonio %A Tipo, Vincenzo %A Cernich, Marta %A D'Anna, Carolina %A Fantacci, Claudia %A Conversano, Ester %A Zanon, Davide %A Ronfani, Luca %A Barbi, Egidio %X

AIM: Acute abdominal pain is a frequent complaint in children attending emergency departments. The aim of this study was to investigate the pain score reductions when children with acute abdominal pain received medication sublingually.

METHODS: We carried out a multicentre randomised controlled trial in three children's hospitals in Italy between March 2015 and June 2017. Children from four to 18 years of age with acute abdominal pain were recruited if their self-reported pain was at least six on a scale from 0-10. The children were randomised to receive ketorolac 0.5 mg/kg (n = 70) or tramadol 2 mg/kg (n = 70) sublingually or a melt in the mouth powder of 20 mg/kg paracetamol (n = 70). The main study outcome was the pain scores for the three drugs after two hours.

RESULTS: The 210 children (58.6% girls) had a median age of 12 years with an interquartile range of 9-14.3. The median pain scores at two hours were not significantly different between ketorolac 2.0 (interquartile ranges, IQR 0.0-4.3) and tramadol 3.0 (IQR 1.0-5.0) vs paracetamol 3.0 (IQR 0.8-5.0). The median pain reductions were all 5.0 points.

CONCLUSION: Delivering analgesia sublingually was a suitable option for pain relief in children with acute abdominal pain in the emergency department.

%B Acta Paediatr %V 108 %P 143-148 %8 2019 Jan %G eng %N 1 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30043434?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1111/apa.14514 %0 Journal Article %J Gastrointest Endosc %D 2018 %T Immunohistologic analysis of the duodenal bulb: a new method for celiac disease diagnosis in children. %A De Leo, Luigina %A Villanacci, Vincenzo %A Ziberna, Fabiana %A Vatta, Serena %A Martelossi, Stefano %A Di Leo, Grazia %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Bramuzzo, Matteo %A Giudici, Fabiola %A Ventura, Alessandro %A Not, Tarcisio %K Adolescent %K Autoantibodies %K Celiac Disease %K Child %K Child, Preschool %K Duodenum %K Female %K Humans %K Immunoglobulin A %K Immunohistochemistry %K Infant %K Male %K Prospective Studies %K Transglutaminases %X

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies (anti-tTG) have simplified celiac disease (CD) diagnosis. However, in atypical forms of CD, intestinal biopsy sampling is still required. This prospective study investigates whether histologic analysis of the duodenal bulb combined with intestinal IgA anti-tTG deposit immunoassay makes CD diagnosis possible in at-risk children with low concentrations of serum anti-tTG.

METHODS: Histologic and intestinal IgA anti-tTG deposit immunoassays were used.

RESULTS: Two hundred forty-five symptomatic children positive for serum anti-tTG (>7 U/mL) were enrolled and divided into 3 groups: extensive duodenal atrophy (n = 209), with IgA anti-tTG deposits throughout the duodenum and high serum anti-tTG concentrations (157 ± 178 U/mL); bulb duodenal atrophy (n = 22), with widespread IgA anti-tTG deposits in 9 and in the bulb alone in 13 and low serum anti-tTG concentrations (13.9 ± 8.7 U/mL); and normal duodenum (n = 14), with widespread IgA anti-tTG deposits in 8 and in the bulb alone in 6 and low serum anti-tTG concentrations (10.6 ± 6.2 U/mL). All patients in the first 2 groups were diagnosed with CD and 8 from the third group. All improved after 1 year of gluten-free diet. Bulb duodenal analysis led to a 12% (30/245) increase in CD diagnosis. No CD-related lesions were observed in the 30 control subjects.

CONCLUSIONS: In children at risk for CD, bulb duodenum biopsy sampling is essential to identify villous atrophy and detect IgA anti-tTG deposits even in absence of intestinal lesions. These mucosal autoantibodies could well represent a new standard for diagnosing CD.

%B Gastrointest Endosc %V 88 %P 521-526 %8 2018 Sep %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29807020?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.gie.2018.05.014 %0 Journal Article %J Pediatr Emerg Care %D 2018 %T Pain Intensity and Risk of Bone Fracture in Children With Minor Extremity Injuries. %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Giangreco, Manuela %A Ronfani, Luca %A Germani, Claudio %A Giorgi, Rita %A Calligaris, Lorenzo %A Norbedo, Stefania %A Liccari, Giulio %A Cozzi, Giorgio %A Barbi, Egidio %X

OBJECTIVES: Injuries are one of the most common causes of pediatric emergency department (ED) visit. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the intensity of pain at the ED visit of children presenting with an extremity injury and the risk of fracture.

METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study, considering all patients presenting to the ED of a children's hospital in Italy, with an accidental extremity injury, between May and December 2015. We selected all children aged 8 to 17 years who underwent an x-ray. Children with major, multiple, or nonextremity injuries were excluded. Age, sex, spontaneous and palpation pain, local swelling, time between injury, and medical evaluation were recorded. Sensibility and specificity of spontaneous and palpation pain in detecting a fracture were calculated.

RESULTS: We reviewed 994 medical records; of these, 344 (34.6%) reported a fracture. Children's median age was 12 years (interquartile range [IQR], 10-14). Median spontaneous pain at the ED visit was not significantly different between children with and without a fracture: 4.0 (1.0-6.0) and 5 (1.0-6.0), respectively (P = 0.129). Children with mild palpation pain and children without an increase of pain of at least 2 points between spontaneous and palpation pain were fractured in 3.2% and 0.97% of cases, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: In this series, pain intensity in children with a minor extremity injury was not a good marker of fracture. Nevertheless, children with mild palpation pain or with a mild increase of pain between spontaneous and palpation pain had a low risk of fracture.

%B Pediatr Emerg Care %8 2018 Jan 23 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29369266?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1097/PEC.0000000000001418 %0 Journal Article %J Arch Dis Child %D 2015 %T Normal saline flushes performed once daily maintain peripheral intravenous catheter patency: a randomised controlled trial. %A Schreiber, Silvana %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Ronfani, Luca %A Delise, Anna %A Corbelli, Alessandra %A Bortoluzzi, Rosamaria %A Taddio, Andrea %A Barbi, Egidio %K Adolescent %K Catheterization, Peripheral %K Catheters, Indwelling %K Child %K Child, Preschool %K Equipment Failure %K Female %K Humans %K Infant %K Male %K Outcome Assessment (Health Care) %K Risk Assessment %K Sodium Chloride %K Therapeutic Irrigation %X

OBJECTIVE: Recent evidence supports the use of normal saline flushes in place of heparin to maintain the patency of peripheral intravenous locks (IVLs); however, there are no data regarding the recommended flush frequency.

STUDY DESIGN: This was an open, non-inferiority, randomised controlled trial. Children with IVLs, aged 1-17 years, were randomly assigned to receive saline flushing every 12 h (group A) or every 24 h (group B). The main outcome was the maintenance of catheter patency.

RESULTS: Four hundred patients were randomised; 198 subjects were analysed in the 12 h group and 199 in the 24 h group (three patients were lost at follow-up). Occlusion occurred in 15 children (7.6%) in group A versus 9 (4.5%) in group B (p=0.21). The difference in catheter patency was +3.1% in favour of the 24 h group (95% CI -1.6% to 7.7%), showing the non-inferiority of the 24 h procedure (the non-inferiority margin was set at -4%). Catheter-related complications were not different between the two groups (12.1% in group A vs 9.5% in group B; p=0.42).

CONCLUSIONS: A flushing procedure with one flush per day allows maintenance of catheter patency without an increase in catheter-related complications. We propose a simplification of the flushing procedure with only one flush per day, thereby reducing costs (materials use and nursing time), labour and unnecessary manipulation of the catheters which can cause distress in younger children and their parents.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: The study is registered in the international database ClinicalTrial.gov under registration number NCT02221024.

%B Arch Dis Child %V 100 %P 700-3 %8 2015 Jul %G eng %N 7 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25589559?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1136/archdischild-2014-307478 %0 Journal Article %J Arch Dis Child %D 2014 %T Diagnostic accuracy of ultrasonography for hand bony fractures in paediatric patients. %A Neri, Elena %A Barbi, Egidio %A Rabach, Ingrid %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Norbedo, Stefania %A Ronfani, Luca %A Guastalla, Veronica %A Ventura, Alessandro %A Guastalla, Pierpaolo %K Adolescent %K Child %K Child, Preschool %K Cross-Sectional Studies %K Double-Blind Method %K Emergency Service, Hospital %K Female %K Fractures, Bone %K Hand Bones %K Humans %K Italy %K Male %K Sensitivity and Specificity %X

OBJECTIVE: Hand fractures are common in childhood, and radiography is the standard diagnostic procedure. US has been used to evaluate bone injuries, mainly in adults for long-bone trauma; there are only a few studies about hand fractures in children. The purpose of this study was to evaluate and confirm the safety and applicability of the US diagnostic procedure in comparison to X-ray diagnosis.

STUDY DESIGN: This cross-sectional study involved a convenience sample of young patients (between 2 and 17 years old) who were taken to the emergency department due to hand trauma. After clinical assessment, patients with a suspected hand fracture first underwent X-ray, and subsequently US examination by two different operators; a radiologist experienced in US and a trained emergency physician in "double-blind" fashion. US and radiographic findings were then compared, and sensitivity as well as specificity was calculated.

RESULTS: A total of 204 patients were enrolled in the study. Seventy-nine fractures of phalanges or metacarpals were detected by standard radiography. When US imaging was performed by an expert radiologist, 72 fractures were detected with sensitivity and a specificity of 91.1% and 97.6%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity were found to be (respectively) 91.5% and 96.8% when US was performed by the ED physicians.

CONCLUSIONS: US imaging showed excellent sensitivity and specificity results in the diagnosis of hand fractures in children. The study also showed a great agreement between the results of the US carried out by the senior radiologist and those carried out by the paediatric emergency physician, suggesting that US can be performed by an ED physician, allowing a rapid and accurate evaluation in ED and could become the first diagnostic approach whenever a hand fracture is suspected.

%B Arch Dis Child %V 99 %P 1087-90 %8 2014 Dec %G eng %N 12 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24951462?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1136/archdischild-2013-305678 %0 Journal Article %J Gastroenterology %D 2012 %T Recurrent fever and fitful abdominal pain in a child. %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Paloni, Giulia %A Marchetti, Federico %K Abdominal Pain %K Child %K Female %K Fever %K Giant Lymph Node Hyperplasia %K Humans %K Recurrence %B Gastroenterology %V 143 %P e11-2 %8 2012 Aug %G eng %N 2 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22727856?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1053/j.gastro.2012.01.050 %0 Journal Article %J J Pediatr %D 2011 %T Compliance with the gluten-free diet: the role of locus of control in celiac disease. %A Bellini, Anna %A Zanchi, Chiara %A Martelossi, Stefano %A Di Leo, Grazia %A Not, Tarcisio %A Ventura, Alessandro %K Adolescent %K Age Factors %K Case-Control Studies %K Celiac Disease %K Child %K Diet, Gluten-Free %K Female %K Humans %K Internal-External Control %K Italy %K Male %K Patient Compliance %K Quality of Life %X

OBJECTIVES: To verify whether subjects with celiac disease (CD) have a different locus of control (LoC) compared with healthy subjects, and to evaluate the relationship between LoC and compliance with a prescribed gluten-free diet (GFD) and quality of life (QoL).

STUDY DESIGN: We studied 156 subjects on a GFD (mean age, 10 years) and 353 healthy controls (mean age, 12 years). All subjects completed tests on the Nowicki-Strickland Locus of Control Scale; the subjects with CD also completed a questionnaire to measure compliance with dietary treatment and the disease's impact on QoL.

RESULTS: There was no difference in LoC values between patients with CD and controls. Subjects with CD with good dietary compliance had a more internal LoC compared with those who were not compliant (P = .01). Patients who reported a satisfactory QoL had a more internal LoC compared with those who reported negative affects on QoL due to CD (P = .01).

CONCLUSIONS: Our study confirms the usefulness of the LoC concept for identifying those patients who might be at risk for dietary transgression. Given the enhanced, psychological, and social well being that can result from adherence to a GFD, educational and psychological support can help internalize the LoC in those patients at risk for dietary transgression.

%B J Pediatr %V 158 %P 463-466.e5 %8 2011 Mar %G eng %N 3 %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20870245?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1016/j.jpeds.2010.08.034