Abstract

Aim: It was a question of determining the epidemiological, diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of the digestive surgical emergencies of the child in our environment. Patients and Methods: This is a prospective and descriptive study carried out for 12 months in the pediatric surgery department. Results: During the study period, on 668 patients admitted we retained 87 cases of digestive surgical emergencies; representing a hospital frequency of 13%. The mean age was 7.6 ± 3.5 years (range 30 days and 16 years). We noted a male predominance with 61 boys (70.1%) for 26 girls (29.9%). The taxi was the most used form of transportation in 77 cases (88.5%). The average consultation time was 5.4 days ± 5.3 days (1 hour and 21-day extremes). Abdominal pain was the main reason for consultation with 66.7% of cases. Generalized acute peritonitis was the predominant diagnosis with 32 cases (39.1%), followed by strangulated parietal hernias with 17 cases (19.5%) and acute intestinal intussusception with 11 cases (12.6%). The postoperative course was complicated in 27 cases (33.7%). parietal suppurations were the most common complication with 77.8% of cases. Six patients (6.9%) died. Conclusion: Digestive surgical emergencies represent a frequent nosological entity in our practice. Abdominal pain is the first reason for consultation. Appendicular peritonitis are the first cause of digestive surgical emergency in children in our practice. They remain a worrying problem for pediatric surgeons.

Highlights

  • Surgical emergencies of children remain one of the major concerns of pediatric surgeons and anesthetists [1]

  • Digestive surgical emergencies in children remain a concern for pediatric surgeons worldwide, in sub-Saharan Africa

  • Abdominal pain is the first reason for consultation

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Summary

Introduction

Surgical emergencies of children remain one of the major concerns of pediatric surgeons and anesthetists [1]. Digestive surgical emergencies represent a vast pathological entity. It affects a large part of the population through the diversity of its symptoms and etiologies; because it cans be of infectious, congenital, traumatic causes, and vary from one region of the Manuscript no: ASJPCH-2-19-29. In developing countries in general, and sub-Saharan Africa in particular, these conditions are characterized by high morbidity and mortality due to the significant difficulties in diagnostic and therapeutic management; this being linked to several factors including the precarious clinical condition of patients at admission, the low level of equipment in hospitals, the absence of pediatric anesthesiologist [3,4]. We conducted this study to determine the epidemiological, diagnostic, therapeutic and progressive aspects of surgical emergencies in children in our practice

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