Abstract | INTRODUCTION: CASE: Our patient is a 12-month-old previously healthy female infant who presented to the emergency department with a history of vomiting and acute onset respiratory distress. Her SaO(2) was 94% to 98% on room air, her respiratory rate was in the 80s breaths per minute, and she was noted to have severe retractions. Her chest examination revealed absent breath sounds on the left side. Her abdominal examination was unremarkable. The acute presentation of respiratory distress was initially concerning for a foreign body aspiration, but a chest radiograph demonstrated left-sided opacification and mediastinal shift to the right. The patient required intubation for respiratory decompensation and a subsequent computed tomographic scan showed diaphragmatic hernia with gastric volvulus. CONCLUSIONS: This patient's presentation highlights one of the complications that may occur owing to congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Computed tomographic scan is the confirmatory test for diaphragmatic hernia and, in this case, also uncovered a concomitant gastric volvulus. Treatment includes early resuscitation, a definitive airway, and emergent surgery to prevent ischemic necrosis of the stomach owing to strangulation, gastric perforation, and serious cardiorespiratory decompensation.
|
Authors | Traci E Ito, Rubab Hasnie, Dana L Crosby, Joseph C Milbrandt, Sandra Ettema, Myto Duong |
Journal | Pediatric emergency care
(Pediatr Emerg Care)
Vol. 28
Issue 10
Pg. 1078-80
(Oct 2012)
ISSN: 1535-1815 [Electronic] United States |
PMID | 23034498
(Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
|
Topics |
- Acute Disease
- Diagnosis, Differential
- Diagnostic Errors
- Dyspnea
(diagnosis, etiology)
- Female
- Hernia, Diaphragmatic
(complications, diagnosis)
- Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital
- Humans
- Infant
- Radiography, Thoracic
- Stomach Volvulus
(complications, diagnosis)
- Tomography, X-Ray Computed
|