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. 2012 Aug;89(8):250-7.

ROLE OF ABDOMINAL ULTRASOUND IN EVALUATION OF CHILDREN WITH SUSPECTED UPPER GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE

Affiliations
  • PMID: 26852455

ROLE OF ABDOMINAL ULTRASOUND IN EVALUATION OF CHILDREN WITH SUSPECTED UPPER GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE

G N Mwango et al. East Afr Med J. 2012 Aug.

Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate the sonographic abdominal findings in children with suspected upper gastrointestinal disease, establish indications for sonography and describe the gastrointestinal disease patterns that can be evaluated by ultrasound.

Design: Descriptive prospective study.

Setting: Kenyatta National Hospital and Department of Diagnostic Imaging and Radiation Medicine, University of Nairobi.

Subjects: Fifty-six children who presented with vomiting and suspected upper gastrointestinal disease. Age range was from six days to 12 years with mean age of one year five months. Seventy seven percent were two years and below.

Results: Of the 56. children, six were normal on sonography; 18 (32.1%) had intussusception, 16 (28.6%) gastroesophageal reflux, seven (12.5%) pyloric stenosis, four appendicitis, three jejunal/ileal atresia and two enteric duplication cysts. All the children with pyloric stenosis were male. The male: female ratio for intussusception and GER was 1.5:1 and 1.6:1 respectively. The most common clinical presentation in children found to have intussusception was palpable abdominal mass, and few of them presented with bloodstained stool. More than two thirds of the children with gastro-oesophageal reflux presented with complications of recurrent pneumonia and failure to thrive. The sonographic findings correlated with fluoroscopy for GER except in two children where sonography was found to be more sensitive. The sonographic findings correlated with surgical outcome for pyloric stenosis, intussusception,jejunal/ ileal atresia and enteric duplication cysts.

Conclusion: Trans-abdominal sonography has a definite role in investigating the child suspected to have upper gastrointestinal disease and should be considered as the initial imaging modality, instead of fluoroscopy, thereby avoiding or limiting the use of ionising radiation. Findings in this study confirm that ultrasound is an accurate, reliable and rapid screening method to evaluate the causes of upper gastrointestinal disease in children.

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