Prospective Outcomes of Standardized Non-Operative Management of Pancreatic Trauma with Ductal Injury in Children: Less Is More
Topic overview
This study demonstrates that standardized non-operative management of pancreatic ductal injuries in pediatric trauma patients, incorporating early feeding and conservative resource use, provides safe outcomes. The approach challenges traditional aggressive interventions, suggesting less invasive protocols may optimize recovery in children with complex pancreatic trauma.
Key takeaways
- Pancreatic ductal injury in pediatric trauma can be safely managed non-operatively with standardized protocols.
- Early feeding is feasible and safe in children with traumatic pancreatic ductal injuries under NOM protocols.
- Standardized non-operative management reduces resource utilization while maintaining safety in pediatric pancreatic trauma.
- Variable management approaches historically affected outcomes; protocol standardization improves consistency.
- Less invasive management (NOM) with early feeding challenges traditional aggressive surgical intervention paradigms.
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How to cite: GlobalCastMD. Prospective Outcomes of Standardized Non-Operative Management of Pancreatic Trauma with Ductal Injury in Children: Less Is More. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2024-10-09. https://dev.library.globalcastmd.com/article/9266?via_space=staycurrentmd
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