RESUMEN
A newborn was referred due to clinical and radiological suspicion of esophageal atresia (EA) type III. Surgery revealed an esophagus without evident interruptions; however, intraoperative advancement of the nasogastric tube was unsuccessful, and the distal esophagus inflated with each ventilation, indicating the presence of a distal fistula. An intraoperative esophago-tracheobronchoscopy showed a proximal esophageal pouch with a tiny tracheoesophageal fistula and a large distal tracheoesophageal fistula. The esophageal ends were blind but overlapping, with no external discontinuity observed. With the diagnosis of Krediet type IIIc2 esophageal atresia, we performed a meticulous esophago-tracheal dissection, distal fistula closure, and end-to-end anastomosis. Due to hemodynamic instability, the proximal fistula was closed two weeks later via cervicotomy without incidents.
RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: We aimed to identify risk factors causing critical disease in hospitalized children with COVID-19 and to build a predictive model to anticipate the probability of need for critical care. METHODS: We conducted a multicenter, prospective study of children with SARS-CoV-2 infection in 52 Spanish hospitals. The primary outcome was the need for critical care. We used a multivariable Bayesian model to estimate the probability of needing critical care. RESULTS: The study enrolled 350 children from March 12, 2020, to July 1, 2020: 292 (83.4%) and 214 (73.7%) were considered to have relevant COVID-19, of whom 24.2% required critical care. Four major clinical syndromes of decreasing severity were identified: multi-inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) (17.3%), bronchopulmonary (51.4%), gastrointestinal (11.6%), and mild syndrome (19.6%). Main risk factors were high C-reactive protein and creatinine concentration, lymphopenia, low platelets, anemia, tachycardia, age, neutrophilia, leukocytosis, and low oxygen saturation. These risk factors increased the risk of critical disease depending on the syndrome: the more severe the syndrome, the more risk the factors conferred. Based on our findings, we developed an online risk prediction tool (https://rserver.h12o.es/pediatria/EPICOAPP/, username: user, password: 0000). CONCLUSIONS: Risk factors for severe COVID-19 include inflammation, cytopenia, age, comorbidities, and organ dysfunction. The more severe the syndrome, the more the risk factor increases the risk of critical illness. Risk of severe disease can be predicted with a Bayesian model.