Low plasma sodium concentration as a predictor of perforated Acute Appendicitis in children: A retrospective study in a low-middle income country setting
Topic overview
This retrospective study examines whether low plasma sodium levels can predict appendiceal perforation in children with acute appendicitis in resource-limited settings. The research addresses whether a diagnostic marker validated in high-income countries remains clinically useful in low-middle income healthcare environments.
Key takeaways
- Low plasma sodium (p-Na) is a potential biomarker for predicting appendiceal perforation in pediatric acute appendicitis cases.
- Previous evidence from middle-high income settings suggests p-Na has clinical utility in risk stratification for complicated appendicitis.
- This study evaluates whether p-Na retains predictive value in low-middle income countries where resource constraints affect care pathways.
- Identifying perforation risk early could guide surgical timing and antibiotic escalation in resource-limited pediatric surgery settings.
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How to cite: GlobalCastMD. Low plasma sodium concentration as a predictor of perforated Acute Appendicitis in children: A retrospective study in a low-middle income country setting. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2025-06-09. https://dev.library.globalcastmd.com/article/10542?via_space=staycurrentmd
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