
The spectrum of sonographic findings in enteric fever cases of paediatrics age group in Gurugram region of Haryana, India
Author(s) -
Shashi Sharma,
Lakshay Rana,
Natasha Nargotra,
Priyanka Kadian,
Abhivind Bhutani,
Surbhi Lathwal,
Aman Arora,
Bharat Bhushan Sharma
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
nepal medical college journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2676-1424
DOI - 10.3126/nmcj.v24i1.44143
Subject(s) - medicine , enteric fever , mesenteric lymph nodes , lymph , ultrasonography , salmonella typhi , widal test , typhoid fever , blood culture , surgery , radiology , gastroenterology , pediatrics , pathology , antibiotics , spleen , biochemistry , chemistry , escherichia coli , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene
There is always need for the earliest diagnosis of enteric fever to start the appropriate treatment for this life threatening illness. The diagnosis becomes difficult because of inherent limitation due to the long standing vague complaints. Some findings like acalculus cholecystitis, hepato-splenomegaly, enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and free fluid can easily be picked up by ultrasonography (USG). USG is easily available, without any ionizing radiation, non-invasive and economical. Hemoculture and Widal tests are time consuming and the cost is quite high. The study was conducted with 100 paediatric patients aged 1-year to 15-year. All were having enteric fever based on typhi dot-IgM presented to the paediatric department of the hospital. USG was conducted for the evaluation of the various relevant findings. Blood samples for CBC, LFT and blood culture were taken on the same day as that of USG evaluation. USG evaluation of confirmed enteric fever cases revealed that 25% had gall bladder findings, 23% had hepato-splenomegaly, 11% had hepatomegaly, 1% had enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and 3% had thickened caecum wall and ileocaecal junction. USG can diagnose many findings which are related to enteric fever and are helpful in starting the early management. Hemoculture and other investigations may delay the treatment which can lead to various complications.