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Short and long-term outcomes of children born with abdominal wall defectsLong, Anna-May January 2017 (has links)
Background: Very occasionally, when a fetus is developing in the womb, problems occur with the normal processes controlling closure of the muscles of the abdominal wall and, as a result, some of the abdominal contents develop outside of the body. This is known as an abdominal wall defect. If the pregnancy continues to term, the newborn infant will need specialised surgical care. This situation occurs so infrequently that even a dedicated surgical centre will care for very few of these women and their babies in a year. Many centres have shared their experiences of managing these babies in the published literature but the majority of reports have included only a few infants. The focus of most previous studies has been to describe what happens to these newborn infants between birth and first discharge from hospital from a purely clinical perspective. Aim: To explore methodologies to holistically understand the short and longer-term outcomes of children born with abdominal wall defects and to use the information to improve the care of future affected infants. Methods: The quality of the published literature on short-term outcomes of children born with gastroschisis was scrutinised in a systematic review. The accompanying meta-analysis used published data as a means of identifying population outcome estimates. Two national population-based cohort studies were undertaken, exploring the short-term outcomes of children born with exomphalos and the outcomes at seven to ten years of children born with gastroschisis. The latter study included an assessment of childhood outcomes from the point of view of the children themselves, along with their parents. Further parental perspectives on experiences of care were explored in a qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with parents of children born with exomphalos. Findings: Short-term outcomes of children born with gastroschisis have been published in a large number of small studies. Pooling the published data, where possible allowed the production of population estimates but heterogeneity between studies was marked. One in fourteen children born with gastroschisis died before their first birthday when managed in developed countries. Those who developed bowel complications in utero, had an increased risk of dying before one-year. The assessment of childhood outcomes for this latter group of children, who made up 11% of the population cohort, revealed a bleak outlook for many, of with one in three either dying or requiring complex surgery to gain allow them to be able to be fed via their gut, before their ninth birthday. Due to methodological limitations, the extent of neurological and gastrointestinal morbidity among survivors in the cohort is unclear, but the findings of both the highly selected responses from the parent report and those of the clinical study provide enough concern to suggest that alternative methodologies need to be explored to identify the extent of ongoing sequelae as children grow older. The live-born population of children with exomphalos is highly varied and a large burden of comorbidity was identified, however, two-thirds of infants were able to be have their abdominal wall defect surgically closed with a low-rate of early complications. A variety of techniques are employed by UK surgeons when the defect cannot be easily closed and evidence to guide management choice will be difficult to obtain using standard techniques due to the small number of these infants born annually in the UK. Parental experiences echoed the variability in management approach and in some cases highlighted a lack of respect for parental perspectives on management choice. Conclusion: Children born with abdominal wall defects represent a spectrum from those with severe comorbidity who will need ongoing care, to those who have a straightforward course and a relatively short stay in hospital. Methods of risk-stratifying infants for the purposes of outcome assessment have been explored. This approach is crucial to contextualising the progress of an individual infant and counselling their parents about their likely prognosis.
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L'approche mini-invasive en chirurgie pédiatrique : de la révolution à l'évolution d'une nouvelle approche chirurgicale / The minimally invasive approach in pediatric surgery : from revolution to evolution of a new surgical approachLopez, Manuel 06 July 2015 (has links)
Dans ce travail, le concept d'approche mini-invasive est décrit dans sa globalité. Pour les chirurgiens pédiatres le concept a été analysé de manière systématique en répondant aux problématiques cliniques des patients dans tous les champs d'application. La somme de ce travail a le tour de force de répondre à toutes les grandes questions qui ont été posées lors des premiers temps de la coelioscopie pédiatrique, mais aussi de répondre, pour les plus récents, à des interrogations concernant les perspectives. Cette Thèse a donc pour objectif de développer l'évolution de la vidéochirurgie chez l'enfant et de mettre en valeur certaines applications que nous avons travaillées dans les différents domaines de la coelioscopie pédiatrique : tout d'abord dans la tolérance et la sécurité de la vidéochirurgie; puis ses applications en Chirurgie Digestive et Thoracique, en Rétropéritonéoscopie, en Oncologie et en Urologie ; mais aussi ses applications dans des techniques avancées de chirurgie néonatale ainsi que l'introduction de techniques encore moins invasives comme la chirurgie assistée par aimant ou des techniques non opératoires utilisées dans le traitement de certaines malformations de la paroi thoracique, en démontrant leurs bénéfices et leur efficacité / In this work, the concept of minimal invasive approach is described in its entirety. For pediatric surgeons, the concept was analyzed systematically meeting the clinical problems of patients in all fields of application. The result of this work is to answer all the big questions that were asked during the early days of the pediatric laparoscopy but also to respond to the latest questions about the perspectives. The goal of this thesis is to describe the evolution of laparoscopy in pediatric, and to report some applications. We have worked in several fields such as: Tolerance and safety of laparoscopy in advanced neonatal surgery, and its applications in Digestive Surgery, Thoracic, Retroperitoneoscopy, Oncology and Urology. This also introduces the use of less invasive techniques, such as magnet-assisted surgery of non-operative techniques in the correction on chest wall deformities, demonstrating their efficacity and efficiency
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