Perioperative Management for Emergency Surgery in Pediatric Patients with COVID-19: Retrospective Observational Study.

Open Access Emergency Medicine : OAEM Pub Date : 2022-09-20 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.2147/OAEM.S377201
Gezy Giwangkancana, Ezra Oktaliansah, Andi Ade W Ramlan, Arie Utariani, Putu Kurniyanta, Hasanul Arifin, Yunita Widyastuti, Astrid Pratiwi, Rusmin Syukur
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Abstract

Background: The first wave of COVID-19 in 2020 created massive challenges in providing safe surgery for pediatric patients with COVID-19. Inevitably, emergency surgery and the unknown nature of the disease place a burden on the heavily challenged surgical services for pediatrics in a developing country. Lessons from the pandemic are important for future disaster planning.

Aim: To describe the characteristics of pediatric surgical patients with COVID-19 undergoing emergency surgery during the first wave and its perioperative narrative in a developing country.

Methods: The study was a multicenter retrospective descriptive study in eight Indonesian government-owned referral and teaching hospitals. The authors reviewed confirmed COVID-19 pediatric patients (≤18 years old) who underwent surgery. Institutional review board clearances were acquired, and data were evaluated in proportion and percentages. The writing of this paper follows the STROBE guidelines.

Results: About 7791 pediatric surgical cases were collected, 73 matched the study criteria and 24 confirmed cases were found. Cases were more common in females (58.3%), who were above 12 years old (37.5%) and who were asymptomatic (62.5%). Laparotomy (33.3%), general anesthesia (90.4%) and intubation (80.8%) were common, while use of video laryngoscopy (40%) and rapid sequence intubation (28.8%) were rare. The mean length of stay was 12 ±13.3 days, and in-hospital mortality was 8.3%.

Discussions: Lockdown and school closure were successful in protecting children, hence the low incidence of pediatric surgical cases with COVID-19 during the first wave. Many hospitals were unprepared to perform surgery for a droplet or airborne infectious disease, and COVID-19 testing was not available nationally in the early pandemic, hence the use of protective protection equipment  during these early pandemic times are often not efficient.

Conclusion: The incidence of COVID-19 in pediatric surgical patients is low. The rapidity and availability of preoperative testing for a new emerging disease are essential in a pandemic.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

小儿COVID-19急诊手术患者围手术期管理:回顾性观察研究
背景:2020年的第一波COVID-19疫情给儿童COVID-19患者提供安全手术带来了巨大挑战。急诊手术和疾病的未知性质不可避免地给发展中国家面临严重挑战的儿科外科服务带来负担。这次大流行的教训对未来的灾害规划很重要。目的:了解发展中国家小儿外科新冠肺炎患者在第一波急诊手术中的特点及其围手术期叙事。方法:采用多中心回顾性描述性研究,对印尼8家公立转诊医院和教学医院进行调查。作者回顾了接受手术的确诊COVID-19儿科患者(≤18岁)。获得机构审查委员会的许可,并按比例和百分比评估数据。本文的写作遵循了STROBE指南。结果:共收集小儿外科病例7791例,符合研究标准73例,发现确诊病例24例。以女性(58.3%)、12岁以上(37.5%)、无症状者(62.5%)多见。剖腹手术(33.3%)、全身麻醉(90.4%)和插管(80.8%)最为常见,而使用视频喉镜(40%)和快速顺序插管(28.8%)较为少见。平均住院时间为12±13.3天,住院死亡率为8.3%。讨论:封锁和学校关闭在保护儿童方面取得了成功,因此在第一波疫情期间,小儿外科病例的发病率很低。许多医院没有准备好对飞沫或空气传播的传染病进行手术,而且在大流行早期,全国没有COVID-19检测,因此在大流行早期使用防护设备往往效率不高。结论:小儿外科患者中COVID-19的发病率较低。在大流行中,对新出现的疾病进行快速和可获得的术前检测至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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