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Acute diplopia in the pediatric Emergency 'Department. A cohort multicenter Italian study

Authors :
Valentina Ferro
Raffaele Falsaperla
Agnese Suppiej
Maria Pia Villa
Umberto Raucci
Duccio Maria Cordelli
Lucia Calistri
Pasquale Parisi
Antonino Reale
Stefano Masi
Nicola Vanacore
Giulia Carbonari
Gabriella Bottone
Francesco La Penna
Italo Trenta
Sabrina Becciani
Ramona Tallone
Alberto Verrotti
Antonella Palmieri
Fabio Midulla
Sonia Aguzzi
Filippo Greco
Federica Pelizza
Mario Mastrangelo
Claudia Bondone
Raucci, Umberto
Parisi, Pasquale
Vanacore, Nicola
La Penna, Francesco
Ferro, Valentina
Calistri, Lucia
Bondone, Claudia
Midulla, Fabio
Suppiej, Agnese
Falsaperla, Raffaele
Cordelli, Duccio Maria
Palmieri, Antonella
Verrotti, Alberto
Becciani, Sabrina
Aguzzi, Sonia
Mastrangelo, Mario
Pelizza, Federica
Greco, Filippo
Carbonari, Giulia
Tallone, Ramona
Bottone, Gabriella
Trenta, Italo
Masi, Stefano
Villa, Maria Pia
Reale, Antonino
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background Acute diplopia (AD) is an uncommon and distressing symptom of numerous ocular and neurological conditions, with potentially serious sequelaes. No data are present in pediatrics on the presentation and management of AD. Aim This study investigated characteristics, etiology and health care utilization of the pediatric population with AD accessed to pediatric Emergency Departments (ED), trying to identify “red flags” associated with potentially life -threatening (LT) conditions. Methods We conducted a cohort multicenter study on children with AD in ten Italian hospitals. Patients were classified into diagnostic categories, comparing children with and without LT disease. Results 621 children presented AD at a rate of 3.6 per 10.000. The most frequent diagnosis among no-LT conditions (81.2%) were headache, ocular disorders and minor post-traumatic disease, while LT conditions (18.8%) were represented by brain tumors, demyelinating conditions, idiopathic intracranial hypertension and major post-traumatic diseases. The LT group showed a significantly higher age, with the odds increased by 1% for each month of age. Monocular diplopia occurred in 16.1%, but unlike adult one-fifth presented LT conditions. Binocular diplopia, associated ocular manifestations or extraocular neurological signs were significantly more common in the LT group. At regression logistic analysis strabismus and ptosis were associated with LT conditions. Conclusion The majority of children presented no-LT conditions and more than one-fourth of patients had headache. Monocular diplopia in the LT group was never isolated but associated with other signs or symptoms. Our study was able to identify some specific ocular disturbances or neurologic signs potentially useful for ED physician to recognize patients with serious pathologies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0633fcb46dbe2aa629d136fba0fdf18