ObjectiveTo observe the clinical features of retinal arterial occlusion (RAO) in youth.MethodsThis is a retrospective case review. Nine patients (9 eyes) with RAO were enrolled in this study. There were 6 males (6 eyes) and 3 females (3 eyes). The average age was (14.22±3.93) years. The best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), indirect ophthalmoscopy, fundus color photography and fundus fluorescein angiography were performed. All patients underwent systemic evaluation including blood routine, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, blood lipids, vasculitis screening, homocysteine level, antiphospholipid antibody, blood coagulation, neck vascular ultrasound, and cardiac color ultrasound and electrocardiogram examination. All patients received oxygen therapy, blood medications and symptomatic treatment. Meanwhile, the patients with autoimmune diseases were received systemic glucocorticoid therapy. The follow-up was ranged from 6 to 12 months. The visual acuity and fundus change before and after treatment were compared.Resultsamong 9 patients, one patient had systemic lupus erythematosus, one patient had congenital heart disease, one patient had hypergammaglobulinemia, and carotid artery color ultrasonography showed that the internal carotid artery vessels faltered in 2 cases. The BCVA was 0.01 - 0.12. Among 9 eyes, there were 5 eyes (55.6%) with retinal branch artery occlusion (BRAO), 2 eyes (22.2%) with central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO), 2 eyes (22.2%) with ciliary retinal artery occlusion (CLAO). CRAO eyes showed positive RAPD (relative afferent pupillary defect), fine retinal artery and the corresponding vein, pale white retinal edema in posterior area and macular cherry-red spot. BRAO eyes manifested as inferior temporal artery occlusion and pale white retinal edema around them. CLAO eyes showed temporal ligulate grey-white retinal edema. At the last follow-up, BCVA improved and retinal vessels returned to normal in 7 eyes (77.8%); BCVA unchanged and no improvement in fundus in 2 eyes (22.2%).ConclusionAdolescent RAO is mostly partial occlusion, the prognosis is generally good after early active treatment.
ObjectiveTo observe the clinical efficacy of minimally invasive vitreous surgery (MIVS) for special rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD) in children and adolescents.MethodsA retrospective clinical comparative study. Fourteen eyes with special type of RRD in 14 children and adolescents who received the MIVS treatment from January 2014 to January 2019 in Ophthalmology Department of The First Affiliated Hospital Ophthalmology of Air Force Military Medical University, were included in this study. Among them, 8 eyes from 8 males and 6 eyes from 6 females. The age of them ranged from 5 to 17, with the mean age of 12.64±4.11 years. The course of disease was ranged from 1 d to 1 year, and the average of it was 30 d. All the eyes developed the special type RRD, including pseudophakic and aphakic retinal detachment, giant retinal tear with retinal detachment, choroidal detachment associated with retinal detachment, and RRD with ocular dysplasia. In the 14 eyes, there was 2 eyes with retinal detachment in 1 quadrant, 4 eyes in 2 quadrants, 1 eye in 3 quadrants and 7 eyes in total 4 quadrants. All the eyes were treated with 23G or 25G MIVS and filled with irrigation solution, air and silicone oil. In addition, 10.4 months' follow-up for average after surgery were taken to observe the occurrence of retinal reattachment, BCVA and related complications in the eyes.ResultsIn the 14 eyes, 13 (92.9%) of them attained retinal reattachment and 1 eye (7.1%) got a poor retinal reattachment after one operation. At the last follow-up, all the 14 eyes (100.0%) attained retinal reattachment and 5 of them at the filling state of silicone oil. The vision of 8 eyes (57.1%) were improved, 4 eyes (28.6%) have no notable changes and 2 eyes decreased (14.3%). During the operation, iatrogenic retinal breaks were occurred in 1 eye, and silicone oil entered underneath the retina in 1 eye. After the operation, 1 eye suffered a relapse of retinal detachment after the removal of silicone oil and then were filled with it again.ConclusionsMIVS is a safe and effective way to treat the special type RRD among the children and adolescents. The rate of retinal reattachment is 92.9% after one surgery and 100.0% at the last follow-up. Therefore, MIVS can help most of eyes with special type RRD to get a stable and improved vision.
Objective To systematically review the rate of sleep deprivation in children and adolescents in China from 2004 to 2019. Methods PubMed, The Cochrane Library, EMbase, Web of Science, CBM, CNKI and WanFang Data databases were searched to collect cross-sectional studies on the sleep deprivation rate of children and adolescents in China from inception to July 15th, 2021. Two researchers independently screened literature, extracted data and evaluated the risk of bias of the included studies. Meta-analysis was then performed by using Stata 15.0 software. Results A total of 45 cross-sectional studies were included, with a total sample size of 769 918 participants, of whom 587 457 reported sleep deprivation. The results of meta-analysis showed that the sleep deprivation rate of Chinese children and adolescents was 61% (95%CI 55% to 68%). Subgroup analysis indicated that the sleep deprivation rates were 62% for female children and 59% for male children. The rate was 84% in junior high school, 80% in high school and 64% in primary school. The rates in south China, southwest China, northwest China, north China, east China and central China were 68%, 62%, 61%, 57%, 57% and 54%, respectively. The rate of sleep deficiency based on "health requirements for daily study time of primary and junior school students" was the highest at 74% (95% CI 70% to 79%). The cumulative meta-analysis by time showed that the sleep deprivation rate had gradually stabilized and approached 60% since 2011. Conclusion Current evidence shows that the sleep deprivation rate of Chinese children and adolescents is high. Due to the limited quality and quantity of included studies, more high-quality studies are needed to verify the above conclusion.
ObjectiveTo develop a smart orthosis personalized management system for the treatment of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) and to evaluate the feasibility and efficiency through clinical preliminary applications.MethodsThe smart orthosis personalized management system consists of a wireless force monitor, a WeChat Mini Program, a cloud-based storage system, and a website backstage management system. Twenty-two patients with AIS who underwent orthosis treatment and met the selection criteria between March 2020 and December 2020 were enrolled. The follow-up time was 4 months. The parameters used to evaluate patients’ compliance were as follows (back and lumbar): baseline force value, measured force value, force compliance (measured force value/baseline force value×100%), measured wearing time (wearing time of force value was more than 0 N), and time compliance (measured wearing time/prescribed wearing time×100%), in which the prescribed wearing time was 23 hours/day. The baseline force values were measured at initiation, while the measured force value, measured wearing time, force compliance, and time compliance were measured during follow-up. The differences of these parameters between back and lumbar, and the differences among these parameters at 1, 2, 3, and 4 months after orthosis wearing were analyzed.ResultsThe average measured force value of 22 patients (back and lumbar) was (0.83±0.34) N, the average force compliance was 68.5%±17.9%, the average measured wearing time was (15.4±1.7) hours, and the average time compliance was 66.9%±7.7%. The baseline force value and measured force value of back were significantly higher than those of lumbar (P<0.05); the measured wearing time, force compliance, and time compliance between back and lumbar showed no significant difference (P>0.05). The measured force value, measured wearing time, force compliance, and time compliance at 1 month after wearing were significantly lower than those at 2, 3, and 4 months after orthosis wearing (P<0.05), no significant difference was found among 2, 3, and 4 months after orthosis wearing (P>0.05). At different time points after wearing, the measured force value of back were significantly higher than that of lumbar (P<0.05), while there was no significant difference between back and lumbar on the other parameters (P>0.05).ConclusionThe smart orthosis personalized management system has high feasibility to treat AIS, and can improve the compliance of such patients with orthosis wearing.
ObjectiveTo systematically review the association between chronotype and depressive symptoms among adolescents. MethodsCNKI, VIP, WanFang Data, PubMed, ScienceDirect and Web of Science databases were electronically searched to collect studies on the association between adolescent chronotype and depressive symptoms from inception to January 17th, 2022. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data, and assessed the risk of bias of the included studies. Meta-analysis was then performed using Stata 16.0 software. ResultsA total of 12 studies were included. The results of meta-analysis showed that there was an association between chronotype and depressive symptoms (Fisher’s Z=?0.19, 95%CI ?0.21 to ?0.17, P<0.001). ConclusionCurrent evidence shows that evening-type chronotype may be a risk factor for depressive symptoms among adolescents. Due to the limited quality and quantity of the included studies, more high-quality studies are needed to verify the above conclusion.
Objective To analyze the cl inical results of different surgical approaches in treating hallux valgus deformity in children and adolescents. Methods From April 2000 to April 2007, 18 cases of hallux valgus deformity (30 feet) were treated. According to different ages, they were divided into children group ( 10 years) and adolescent group (11-18 years). In children group, 4 female patients included 2 bilateral and 2 unilateral hallux valgus deformity (2 left feet, 4 right feet). Each patient underwent a combination of Austin osteotomy and McBride procedure. The American Orthopaedic Foot and AnkleSociety-Hallux Metatarsophalangeal Interphalangeal (AOFAS-HMI) score was 55.0 ± 15.0, and the visual analogue scale (VAS) score was 6.0 ± 2.0. The hallux valgus angle (HVA) and 1st-2nd intermetatarso-phalangeal angle (IMA) were (35.0 ± 4.0)° and (14.4 ± 2.0)°. In adolescent group, 14 patients included 3 males (4 feet) and 11 females (20 feet), 10 bilateral and 4 unilateral hallux valgus deformity (10 left feet, 14 right feet). Each patient underwent the modified Mitchell osteotomy. The AOFAS-HMI score was 55.6 ± 14.0, and the VAS score was 7.0 ± 1.0. The HVA and IMA were (38.5 ± 5.0)° and (15.0 ± 3.0)°. Results All incisions healed primarily. The patients of two groups were followed up 12-32 months (21 months on average). In adolescent group, pain of metatarsophalangeal joint occurred in 1 case and the symptom disappeared after 3-month physical therapy; 1 case recurred after 21 months of operation and achieved satisfactory results after Lapidus operation. In children group, the AOFASHMI score was 92.1 ± 5.0, the VAS score was 1.0 ± 0.6, HVA was (14.7 ± 3.0)°, and IMA was (5.5 ± 2.0)°; showing significant differences (P lt; 0.05) when compared with those before operation. In adolescent group, the AOFAS-HMI score was 90.0 ± 6.0, the VAS score was 1.0 ± 0.6, HVA was (13.7 ± 3.0)°, and IMA was (6.8 ± 2.0)°; showing significant differences (P lt; 0.05) when compared with those before operation. Conclusion It has the advantages of rapid bone heal ing, short course of treatment, and less compl ication to treat hallux valgus deformity in children with a combination of Austin osteotomy and McBride procedure and in adolescent with the modified Mitchell osteotomy.
ObjectiveTo systematically review the relationship between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and emotion and behaviors in children and adolescents. MethodsThe PubMed, EBSCO, Web of Science, CBM, VIP, WanFang Data, OVFT, Proquest Psychological database and CNKI databases were electronically searched to collect studies on the relationship between PAHs and emotion and behaviors in children and adolescents from inception to October 20, 2022. Two reviewers independently screened the literature, extracted data and assessed the risk of bias of the included studies. A qualitative systematic review was then performed. ResultsA total of six cohort studies were included, five studies involving maternal exposure during pregnancy, found that maternal exposure to PAHs during pregnancy was associated with an increase in childhood anxiety/depression syndrome, attention problems, social withdrawal, social competence, social problems, orientation/regulation, withdrawal behaviors, and autism-related behaviors. Another study of exposure in school-age children found that PAHs exposure was associated with poorer attention performance in school. Results of other emotional behaviors were inconsistent, or no association was found. ConclusionCurrent evidence shows that PAHs have certain effects on emotional behaviors of children and adolescents. Due to the limited quality and quantity of the included studies, more high-quality cohort studies are required to verify above conclusion.
ObjectiveThis article aims to comprehensively retrieve and summarize the best evidence for the self-management of epilepsy in adolescents, so as to provide a reference for clinical medical staff and relevant decision makers. MethodsWe systematically searched Cochrane, Global Guidelines Collaboration (GIN), Scottish Interhospital Guidelines Network (SIGN), Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI), NICE, RANO (Nurses' Association of Ontario, Canada), UpToDate, BMJ, Medical Maitong, PubMed, International League Against Epilepsy, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Database and other databases and websites. All kinds of literature related to the self-management of epilepsy in adolescents were collected from the establishment of the database to April 18, 2023, including clinical decision-making, clinical guidelines,. Evidence summary, expert consensus, systematic review, etc. Four researchers were invited to evaluate the quality of the retrieved guidelines, and two researchers independently screened and evaluated the quality of the remaining literature. According to the opinions of professionals, data extraction and analysis were performed on the literature that met the inclusion criteria. ResultsA total of 9 articles were included, including 3 clinical guidelines, 3 expert consensus and 3 systematic reviews. We summarized the evidence in the literature in the following 8 aspects: Self-management initiation timing, monitoring management, psychological management, innovative self-management mode, information and support, medication management, daily life management and follow-up management. We identified 34 best pieces of evidence. ConclusionsThis article provides health care providers with the best evidence for the self-management of adolescents with epilepsy, guiding them to provide self-management education and counseling for adolescents with epilepsy through evidence-based methods, helping them to improve self-management ability, reduce seizures, reduce health services and healthcare costs, and improve quality of life.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the short-term effectiveness of Hyprocure subtalar stabilization for adolescent flexible flatfoot. MethodsBetween December 2013 and September 2015, 14 cases (26 feet) of adolescent flexible flatfoot were treated with Hyprocure subtalar stabilization. There were 10 males (18 feet) and 4 females (8 feet) with the average age of 14.5 years (range, 12-18 years). There were 12 cases (24 feet) of congenital flatfoot and 2 cases (2 feet) of flatfoot caused by neurological diseases. The preoperative pain visual analogue scale (VAS) was 4.2±0.4; the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) ankle and foot function score was 72.2±12.3. Simple Hyprocure subtalar stabilization was used in 8 feet, and a combination of minimally invasive percutaneous Achilles tendon lengthening or gastrocnemius lysis, preposing of posterior tibial tendon and spring ligament tightening surgery, or open dorsal medial cuneiform osteotomy and bone graft in 18 feet. The VAS score and AOFAS ankle and foot function score were used to evaluate the effectiveness. The talus-the first metatarsal angle (T1MT), the talus-the second metatarsal angle (T2MT), and talonavicular coverage angle (TCA) were measured on the anteroposterior X-ray film; the Meary's angle, calcaneal inclination angle (CI), and the talar declination (TD) were measured on the lateral X-ray film. ResultsAll incisions healed well. Two cases (2 feet) had tarsal sinus pain, which was cured after symptomatic treatment. All patients were followed up 5-24 months (mean, 14.5 months). Pain was obviously relieved. At last follow-up, VAS score was significantly decreased to 1.4±0.3 (t=27.676, P=0.000). AOFAS ankle and foot function score was significantly increased to 94.5±10.8 (t=7.765, P=0.000). The postoperative X-ray film showed that medial arch was elevated after the Hyprocure subtalar stabilization was placed in tarsal sinus. At last follow-up, the T1MT, T2MT, TCA, Meary's angle, and TD were significantly improved when compared with preoperative ones (P < 0.05); CI has no significant improvement (t=0.109, P=0.598). ConclusionHyprocure subtalar stabilization is simple, effective for adolescent flexible flatfoot, the short-term effectiveness is good. But the indications should be strictly controlled, treatment should be individualized, corresponding auxiliary soft tissue and bone surgery is needed. The long-term effectiveness needs further follow-up.
Objective To analyze the cl inical features of scol iosis associated with Chiari I malformation in adolescent patients, and to explore the val idity and safety of one-stage posterior approach and vertebral column resection for the correction of severe scol iosis. Methods Between October 2004 and August 2008, 17 adolescent patients with scol iosis associated with Chiari I malformation were treated with surgical correction through posterior approach and pedicle instrumentation. There were 9 males and 8 females with an average age of 15.1 years (range, 12-19 years). The MRI scanning showed that 16 of 17 patients had syringomyel ia in cervical or thoracic spinal cord. Apex vertebra of scol iosis were located atT7-12. One-stage posterior vertebral column resection and instrumental correction were performed on 9 patients whose Cobb angle of scol iosis or kyphosis was more than 90°, or who was associated with apparent neurological deficits (total spondylectomy group). Other 8 patients underwent posterior instrumental correction alone (simple correction group). All patients’ fixation and fusion segment ranged from upper thoracic spine to lumbar spine. Results The operative time and the blood loss were (384 ± 65) minutes and (4 160 ± 336) mL in total spondylectomy group, and were (246 ± 47) minutes and (1 450 ± 213) mL in simple correction group; showing significant differences (P lt; 0.05). In total spondylectomy group, coagulation disorder occurred in 1 case, pleural perforation in 4 cases, and lung infection in 1 case. In simple correcction group, pleural perforation occurred in 1 case. These patients were improved after symptomatic treatment. All patients were followed up 24-36 months (32.5 months on average). Bony heal ing was achieved at 6-12 months in total spondylectomy group. No breakage or pull ingout of internal fixator occurred. The angles of kyphosis and scol iosis were significantly improved at 1 week after operation (P lt; 0.01) when compared with those before operation. The correction rates of scol iosis and kyphosis (63.4% ± 4.6% and 72.1% ± 5.8%) in total spondylectomy group were better than those (69.4% ± 17.6% and 48.8% ± 19.3%) in simple correction group. Conclusion Suboccipital decompression before spine deformity correction may not always be necessary in adolescent scol iosis patients associated with Chiari I malformation. In patients with severe and rigid curve or apparente neurological deficits, posterior vertebral column resection would provide the opportunity of satisfied deformity correction and decrease the risk of neurological injury connected with surgical correction.