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Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen SPR 2017 Richard I. Markowitz, MD, FACR Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania
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Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Feb 22, 2022

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Page 1: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and

Abdomen SPR 2017

Richard I. Markowitz, MD, FACR Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

Perelman School of Medicine

University of Pennsylvania

Page 2: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

No Disclosures

Page 3: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Errors in Diagnostic Radiology based on Taylor, et. al. Pediatr Rad 2011

Cognitive

Faulty information processing

Faulty interpretation

Premature conclusion

Over interpretation

Faulty context

Failure to order follow-up

Faulty data accumulation

Faulty knowledge

Perceptual

Systemic

Unavoidable

JPS - just plain stupid* (my addition)

Page 4: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

“Principles and Pitfalls in Pediatric

Chest and Abdomen”

by

Harry J. Potter, MD. PhD.

A “lost” masterpiece…

Page 5: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Agenda

10 (+) cases:

• Imaging findings

• Diagnosis and discussion of pitfall

• Potter’s Principle

Page 6: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case 1: Full term newborn (day 1) with tachypnea

Page 7: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Possible diagnoses

Pneumonia

Congestive heart failure

Surfactant deficiency

Pulmonary hemorrhage

Retained fetal lung liquid

Page 8: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

What would you do next?

1. CT scan

2. MRI

3. US

4. Lateral decubitus

5. Repeat CXR in 24

hours

Page 9: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

24 hours later…

Diagnosis: Congenital lobar hyperinflation Pitfall: Retained fetal lung liquid mimics RDS/pneumonia/etc

Page 10: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 1 Everything changes with time. Sometimes you just have to wait and see.

Page 11: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case 2:

Newborn with

respiratory distress

and abdominal

distension s/p

resuscitation in D.R.

Page 12: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Possible diagnoses

Perforated hollow viscus

Cystic pulmonary malformation

Post-mortem radiograph

Right sided diaphragmatic hernia

Page 13: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Diagnosis: Right congenital diaphragmatic hernia Pitfall:

pulmonary hypoplasia

pneumothorax

pneumoperitoneum

NOT bowel perforation

Page 14: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

More examples of “air” pitfalls

Left antero-medial pneumothorax

Page 15: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Anterior junction line

sign of bilateral pneumothorax in infants

Thoracic “football” sign

Page 16: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Fatal air embolism to heart NOT mediastinal or pericardial air

Page 17: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 2

Air is an excellent contrast medium.

…ubiquitous, non-toxic (sometimes), cost efficient!

Page 18: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case # 3: 4 month old with noisy breathing

Page 19: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

What’s your diagnosis?

1. Adenopathy

2. Azygous vein

3. Lymphoma

4. Vascular ring

5. Normal

Next step…?

Page 20: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Esophogram

Page 21: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Diagnosis: Double aortic arch

Page 22: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 3

The trachea is an important key to the diagnosis of pediatric chest disease.

Page 23: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case # 4: 2 month female routine follow-up 6 weeks s/p truncus repair

Something wrong?

What do you want to see next?

Page 24: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

2 weeks post surgery 6 weeks post surgery

Review old studies

Page 25: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Truncus arteriosus type 1

CTA - before surgery

Page 26: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Diagnosis: Pseudo-aneurysm of right ventricular outflow tract with dehiscence of repair (not good!)

CTA - after surgery

Page 27: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Principle # 4

Prior examinations (especially pre-op) are valuable and may significantly alter your interpretation.

Page 28: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case # 5: 13 y.o. female, weight loss and decreased appetite

Achalasia What’s missing?

Erect

No gastric air bubble - why?

Page 29: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 5 It’s not so easy to recgnize what’s missng.

Page 30: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Cases # 6 and 7: Common look alikes

Pneumoperitoneum Retroperitoneal fat

Page 31: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Cases # 8 and 9: More look alikes

Meconium peritonitis Wet diaper artifact (urine, NOT poop)

Page 32: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 6

Normal can be just as confusing as abnormal.

Page 33: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case # 10: 5 month old with abdominal distension

US for intussuception? Neuroblastoma

Page 34: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Case # 11: 6 y.o. with abdominal pain and fever

Diagnosis: Left lower lobe pneumonia Pitfall: Tunnel vision

Page 35: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 7

Abdominal symptoms may be due to pathology in the chest – look everywhere.

Page 36: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Final case

Neonate with many problems

Next day – what’s new?

“The bones and soft tissues are normal.” Are they really normal?

Page 37: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

MRI

Diagnosis: Fracture/dislocation C 5/6 with spinal cord injury (distraction injury - probably birth trauma)

Outcome: poor prognosis Pt died.

Pitfall: What do we learn from this case? Make no assumptions until you’ve carefully looked at everything.

Page 38: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Potter’s Principle # 8

Suspect the unexpected.

Page 39: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Last Principle

More is not always better.

Page 40: Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and Abdomen

Pitfalls of the Pediatric Chest and

Abdomen

Thank you