Letter to the Editor
Cost-effectiveness and clinical outcomes of artificial intelligence-enhanced screening for diabetic foot ulcers: A simulation study
Dear Editor,
Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are a serious complication of diabetes mellitus, with a lifetime risk estimated to be between 19% and 34%.1 Without timely prevention and management, DFUs can lead to lower extremity amputations (LEAs) and premature death.2,3 DFUs also impose significant healthcare and societal costs, especially in...
Editorial
Optimising paediatric urinary tract infection diagnosis
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is the most common cause of serious bacterial illness among children and infants.1 Up to 2% of boys and 8% of girls will develop at least 1 episode of UTI by the age of 7 years.1,2 Of these, it is estimated that 12% to 30%...
Editorial
Beyond survival: Addressing gaps in psychosocial support for survivors of childhood cancer
I read with great interest the study conducted by Fong et al. published in this issue of Annals, which evaluated psychological symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) among a cohort of 143 young adult survivors of childhood cancer in Singapore.1 Almost 1 in 4 survivors demonstrated significant psychological...
Original Article
Investigating urinary characteristics and optimal urine white blood cell threshold in paediatric urinary tract infection: A prospective observational study
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common diagnosis in the paediatric emergency department (ED). It accounts for an estimated 5–14% of paediatric ED visits yearly in the US.1-3 It is a common cause of serious bacterial infections in children, and the most common microorganism is Escherichia coli (65–75%), followed...
Original Article
Mental wellness and health-related quality of life of young adult survivors of childhood cancer in Singapore
Advancements in technology and cancer treatments have improved childhood cancer survival rates, with up to 85% surviving 5 years or more.1 The Malaysia-Singapore Leukaemia Study Group reported an improvement in overall 5-year survival for the past 20 years in Singapore, from 69% to 91% for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, which...
Review Article
Quality of life of family caregivers of children and young adults with Down syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis
The family caregiver is “any relative, partner, friend or neighbor who has a significant personal relationship with, and provides a broad range of assistance for a person with a chronic or disabling condition.”1 Family caregivers for children with chronic illnesses are commonly parents, who fulfil their children’s physical and...
Editorial
Living longer and stronger: Are children and young adults with Down syndrome experiencing healthier and better lives?
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability and is associated with multiple medical conditions affecting various organ systems, impacting the individual’s health, development and function.1 In Singapore, the life-birth prevalence of DS was 0.89 per 1000 births in the 1990s, a figure expected to...
Review Article
Quality of life of children and young adults with Down syndrome from caregivers’ perspective: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Down syndrome (DS), with an incidence of about 1/1000 to 1/1100 live births1 is the most common autosomal trisomy and genetic cause of intellectual disability. Individuals with DS may have multiple comorbidities including congenital cardiac and gastrointestinal anomalies, obesity, sleep disorders, and visual and hearing impairments.2,3 Despite the comorbidities,...
Editorial
Evaluating the effectiveness of cervical cancer screening and prevention in Singapore
Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women globally, with approximately 660,000 new cases and 350,000 deaths reported in 2022.1 In Singapore, it ranks as the 11th most common cancer among women and the 5th most frequent cancer among young women aged 15–44 years, with 309 new...
Original Article
Delayed presentation is associated with serious bacterial infections among febrile infants: A prospective cohort study
Young infants ≤90 days old are at risk of serious bacterial infections (SBIs) due to their immature immune systems and may develop severe complications resulting in neurocognitive deficits, hearing loss and even mortality.1,2 The diagnosis of SBIs remains challenging as fever may be the only symptom of SBIs in...
Original Article
Diagnostic performance of classification criteria for systemic lupus erythematosus: A validation study from Singapore
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multisystem autoimmune disease with a broad spectrum of clinical presentation.1 Clinical diagnosis by rheumatologists remains the gold standard, but the diagnosis is often challenging due to variability in disease expression mimicking other conditions.
As such, classification criteria have been developed to establish homogeneous groups...
Letter to the Editor
Screening of nasopharyngeal cancer in high-risk familial cohort: A practical approach using a screening algorithm
Dear Editor,
In Singapore, nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) is among the top 3 cancers afflicting middle-aged males (30–49 years old).1 Unfortunately, patients with early-stage NPC are often asymptomatic, and most patients (approx. 70%) are diagnosed with advanced disease with adversely reduced survival. First-degree relatives of NPC patients have about 4 to...
Editorial
Promoting evidence-based care for children and adolescents on the autism spectrum
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that has been increasing in worldwide prevalence,1 including Singapore. In this latest issue of the Annals, we share the latest Singapore Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) for Autism in Children and Adolescents, discussed by Wong et al.2 This is the culmination of...
Original Article
Caregiver reported long-term outcomes in children with major trauma and traumatic brain injuries: A single-centre retrospective study
Traumatic injuries in children are a significant cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide.1 Children with major trauma are at risk of poor outcomes.2-4 These include disabilities that require assistance with activities of daily living, intellectual disability and behavioural problems.5 In the US, it is estimated that more than 50...
Original Article
An augmented reality mobile application for weight estimation in paediatric patients: A prospective single-blinded cross-sectional study
Drug and defibrillation energy doses for children rely on accurate weight measurement, making it essential during emergencies.1,2 However, quickly weighing children in distress is often a challenging task.3,4 Conventionally, age-dependent formulas and length-based tapes like the Broselow tape (BT) and Paediatric Advanced Weight Prediction in the Emergency Room extra-long...
Letter to the Editor
How do current paediatrics residency selection criteria correlate with residency performance?
Dear Editor,
The selection process for potential residents needs to be reviewed regularly and assessed if effective in selecting the best-fit residents who can achieve academic and professional excellence. Objective measures must take precedence over subjective criteria to reduce selection bias while ensuring transparency and accountability. However, the predictors of...
Commentary
Singapore’s experience in managing the COVID-19 pandemic: Key lessons from the ground
In the early days of the pandemic when information on COVID-19 infection was lacking, all COVID-19 positive patients were admitted into acute hospitals for isolation and monitoring. With the exponential increase in the number of infections, COVID-19 Treatment Facilities (CTFs) were set up to help hospitals manage in-patient loads....
Original Article
Long COVID prevalence, risk factors and impact of vaccination in the paediatric population: A survey study in Singapore
On 5 May 2023, more than 3 years since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that COVID-19 no longer constituted a public health emergency. Despite high numbers of children and younger persons (CYPs) having acute COVID-19,1 information on the quality of health and...
Original Article
Fetal congenital heart diseases: Diagnosis by anatomical scans, echocardiography and genetic tests
Congenital heart diseases (CHDs) are the most common major congenital anomaly at up to 28%1 and are responsible for 5.7% of all infant mortality.2 While earlier studies in developed countries reported an overall CHD birth prevalence of 3.7–5.54 per 1000 live births,3,4 more recent studies report a global and...
Letter to the Editor
Improving neonatal counselling service for premature births
Dear Editor,
Despite the substantial advancement of neonatal care leading to increased survival of infants of periviable gestation, as young as 22 weeks,1 the anticipated birth of an extremely low gestational age infant remains challenging for both the parents and physician, with regard to decision-making in initiating resuscitation post-delivery. Ideally,...
Review Article
Consensus statement on Singapore integrated 24-hour activity guide for early childhood
Early childhood is a critical period for growth and development, setting the foundation for future and lifelong well-being.1 Adopting healthy lifestyle behaviours in early childhood can potentially influence and shape behaviours later in life.2 Frameworks have been developed, such as from the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard...
Editorial
Proactive steps to population health: Starting early, starting right
The global burden of non-communicable diseases is rising, with continued projected increases in the prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MetS) in the future. This epidemic, albeit of a metabolic nature, poses broad socioeconomic and healthcare burdens worldwide. Population health improvement and optimisation of healthcare are important to addressing these burdens....
Original Article
Clinical efficacy of primary human papillomavirus (HPV) screening with partial genotyping for HPV-16 and HPV-18 subtypes in women from 25 years old
The World Health Organization has launched a campaign to eliminate cervical cancer on the basis of effective vaccines against oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) subtypes, with mass screening and eradication of high-grade pre-malignant lesions, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade-2 (CIN2) and grade-3 (CIN3).1,2 HPV-based screening has been shown to be sensitive...
Letter to the Editor
Sublingual ondansetron for treatment of acute gastroenteritis in children in the children’s emergency
Dear Editor,
Acute gastroenteritis (GE) is a leading cause of death globally in children aged below 5 years and the third most common indication for hospital admission in some countries.1,2 Currently, norovirus is the most common cause of GE in children in developed countries.3 Rehydration, either orally or intravenously, is...
Letter to the Editor
Rash characteristics of paediatric patients with COVID-19 in Singapore
Dear Editor,
Children with COVID-19 infection can present with a variable spectrum of clinical manifestations, and sometimes mucocutaneous manifestations can be the only manifestation of COVID-19 infection in children.1,2,3 We report 4 cases of paediatric patients who had COVID-19 with mucocutaneous involvement, admitted to a tertiary children’s hospital in Singapore....
Letter to the Editor
Rapid exome sequencing to aid diagnostics in genetic disorders: Implementation and challenges in the Singapore context
Dear Editor,
There is a high burden of genetic disorders in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), ranging from 45–56%,1,2 and delayed definitive diagnoses with a long diagnostic odyssey often contribute to increased healthcare costs.3 The application of clinical exome sequencing in ICU has been gaining traction, where...
Original Article
Characteristics of anti-transcriptional intermediary factor 1 gamma autoantibody-positive dermatomyositis patients in Singapore
Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) are a heterogeneous group of acquired, systemic autoimmune conditions characterised by muscular and extramuscular manifestations. As a subset within the family of IIM, dermatomyositis is distinguished by cutaneous features and has twice the risk of associated malignancy than polymyositis.1-3
Various meta-analyses have shown that between 10%...
Editorial
Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: Not nearly the end of the road
The clinical spectrum of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) has broadened over the past half century from a simple disease characterised primarily by muscle and skin manifestations, to a potentially life-threatening complex condition of multiple organ involvement. In the recent decade, the discovery and addition of novel autoantibody profiles including...
Letter to the Editor
Implementation of an AI model to triage paediatric brain magnetic resonance imaging orders
Dear Editor,
Artificial intelligence (AI) is viewed as the most important recent advancement in radiology with the potential to achieve Singapore’s objective of delivering value-based patient-centric care.1
We have developed and implemented a deep-learning model using bidirectional long short-term memory (Bi-LSTM) neural network to enable automated triage of unstructured free-text...
Letter to the Editor
Early rehabilitation to improve functional outcomes in childhood cancer in Singapore
Dear Editor,
We conducted a prospective, single-centre cohort study to review the impact of a multidisciplinary rehabilitation programme in children with cancer in Singapore. The Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist was used to allow sufficient details for replication of the study (see Appendix in online Supplementary...
Original Article
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease screening in type 2 diabetes mellitus: A cost-effectiveness and price threshold analysis
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a growing epidemic and has become a major cause of liver-related mortality and indication for liver transplantations globally. It is estimated that nearly 25% of the world’s population and more than 60% of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients have NAFLD. A prior...
Original Article
Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children in Singapore
While children infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) resulting in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have milder manifestations compared to adults,1,2 a rare multisystem inflammatory syndrome leading to multiorgan failure and shock (multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children ) has been recognised to affect children with exposure to...
Editorial
Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children: A unique manifestation of COVID-19
During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, children have been relatively spared from the severe symptomatic infection affecting adults, particularly the elderly and those with comorbidities. One of the most challenging aspects of paediatric SARS-CoV-2 infection has been the discovery of a unique late manifestation of infection characterised by...
Letter to the Editor
Child passenger safety training for healthcare professionals in Singapore
Dear Editor,
Road traffic injuries are a preventable cause of childhood morbidity and mortality.1,2 Use of age-appropriate child car seats (CCS) lowers the risk of injury and death by about 82% and 28%, respectively.3-5 In Singapore, although the Road Traffic Act states that CCS use is mandatory,6 many children...
Letter to the Editor
Clinical characteristics of macrolide-resistant Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections among hospitalised children in Singapore
Dear Editor,
Mycoplasma pneumoniae has become the leading cause of paediatric community-acquired pneumonia in countries where pneumococcal vaccination is included in the national immunisation programme, including Singapore.1 M. pneumoniae is intrinsically resistant to beta-lactams due to the absence of cell walls. Macrolides, tetracyclines, and fluoroquinolones are used to treat M....
Letter to the Editor
Childhood interstitial lung disease: The end of a diagnostic odyssey
Dear Editor,
Childhood interstitial lung disease is a heterogeneous group of rare disorders featuring pulmonary interstitial remodelling and diffuse parenchymal infiltrates on imaging.1 Incidence is estimated at 0.13–16.2 cases/100,000 children per year.1 ABCA3 (ATP-Binding Cassette, Subfamily A, Member 3) (OMIM #601615) is expressed in alveolar type II cells involved...
Original Article
Validation and comparison of the PECARN rule, Step-by-Step approach and Lab-score for predicting serious and invasive bacterial infections in young febrile infants
The diagnostic approach and management of febrile infants <90 days of age remain a challenge, given that the majority of these infants have no localising signs and symptoms, and may appear clinically well at presentation.1 In addition, the majority of these infants have benign viral illnesses, for which hospitalisation...
Letter to the Editor
High burden of respiratory viral infection-associated mortality among critically ill children
Dear Editor,
Acute lower respiratory infections (ALRIs) are a leading cause of under-5 mortality globally—two-thirds could be attributable to respiratory viral infections (RVIs).1,2 The burden of paediatric RVIs in settings of tropical climate with year-long virus circulation is relatively underreported.3,4 Previous studies in these areas have estimated that around 8–11%...
Original Article
Non-motorised active mobility device use by children in Singapore: Injury patterns and risk factors for severe injury
The Active Mobility Act was introduced in Singapore in 2017 to promote the safe use of personal mobility devices. Non-motorised active mobility devices (AMDs) are popular among children and include tricycles, bicycles, scooters, inline skates, skateboards, longboards and waveboards. While the use of AMDs contributes towards an active lifestyle...
Letter to the Editor
Screening for somatisation in an Asian children’s hospital emergency setting
Dear Editor,
In recent years, self-harm is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among adolescents in Singapore.1,2 This is just the tip of the iceberg as youths with undiagnosed mental health disorders often present to the healthcare system with non-psychiatric symptoms.3 These psychosomatic symptoms do not have an organic...
Review Article
Barriers to breast cancer screening in Singapore: A literature review
Breast cancer is a major public health concern and a leading cause of cancer death among women worldwide, including Singapore.1 According to the 2018 Singapore Cancer Registry report, breast cancer has been consistently ranked as a leading cancer (29.3% of all cancers in Singapore) among women in Singapore for...
Letter to the Editor
Attitude towards screening for congenital cytomegalovirus infection in newborns in Singapore
Dear Editor,
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most common congenital infection.1 A systematic review that included 77 studies from 36 countries reported that the overall prevalence of CMV was 0.67% in their newborn population.1 Among newborns with CMV, it was estimated that 15–20% will suffer from potentially deleterious effects including...
Commentary
Congenital cytomegalovirus infection: Advocating for screening and education
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the leading non-genetic cause of congenital neurosensory hearing loss in children, accounting for 21% of cases of hearing loss at birth and 25% of deafness at age 4 years.1 It can also give rise to other serious sequelae such as cerebral palsy, cognitive impairment, seizures...
Original Article
Epidemiological trends and outcomes of children with aural foreign bodies in Singapore
Aural foreign bodies (FBs) commonly present to the emergency department (ED) worldwide. Children represent the majority of the population, believed to be due to their inquisitive minds and experimental nature.1 Aetiologies for aural FBs include accidental or intentional insertion of FBs into body orifices, ear irritation caused by rhinitis...
Review Article
Consensus statement on Singapore integrated 24-hour activity guide for children and adolescents
The World Health Organization’s Global action plan for the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases 2013–2020 provided guiding principles for national efforts in controlling and reducing non-communicable diseases (NCDs).1 The major NCDs include cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, and diabetes—they form a major public health challenge, and are...
Original Article
Prevalence, risk factors and parental perceptions of gastroesophageal reflux disease in Asian infants in Singapore
Functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorders, such as colic, gastroesophageal reflux (GER) and constipation, are common in infants under 1 year. They are a frequent cause of concern for parents and result in a significant healthcare burden1,2 due to their negative impact on feeding behaviours, caregivers’ mental wellbeing and quality of...
Editorial
Gastroesophageal reflux disease in Asian infants: Similar condition, different perceptions
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), a common problem in infancy, may lead to troublesome symptoms or complications such as oesophagitis or oesophageal stricturing in a small minority of infants.1 In the majority of cases, however, frequent regurgitations, the commonest symptoms of GERD, resolves with age spontaneously without any medical intervention.2,3...
Original Article
Glaucoma Pattern Amongst the Elderly Chinese in Singapore
Glaucoma is a major cause of world blindness in developing and developed nations. The WHO Global data on blindness show that over half of the blind due to glaucoma reside in Asia, the majority being Chinese.
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Original Article
Risk Factors for Predicting Mortality in a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit
Following the rapid advances in medical therapy and critical care technology over the past 30 years, coupled with the spiralling cost of medical care, outcome analysis including mortality risk prediction has become a challenge for the modern day intensivists. During the early 90s, the focus has shifted from the...
Review Article
Adenocarcinoma of the Cervix
It is clear from studies in Canada, Scandinavia, and more recently the United Kingdom, that routine Pap smear screening has not only reduced the incidence of squamous carcinoma of the cervix but indeed in the last 10 to 15 years has halved the mortality rate from this disease. In...
Original Article
Infections in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia
Children undergoing chemotherapy for cancer are especially vulnerable to infection because of immunosuppression related to their underlying illness, the effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Empiric antimicrobial chemotherapy is the mainstay of therapy for febrile neutropenic episodes pending the culture results.
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Original Article
Childhood Leukaemia: Towards an Integrated Psychosocial Intervention Programme in Singapore
In the last two decades there has been a surge of interest concerning the psychosocial correlates of life-threatening illnesses. Research in this area has focused especially on cancer and the possible link between immunology and psychological factors.
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Original Article
Caudal Morphine in Paediatric Patients: A Comparison of Two Different Doses in Children after Major Urogenital Surgery
The use of caudal preservative-free morphine for postoperative analgesia in children has gained popularity since it was first described by Jensen. Several studies have reviewed its use for inguinal and genital surgery in children.
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Original Article
A Retrospective Study of Infants with Severe Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension (PPHN) Managed without Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO)
Persistent pulmonary hypertension (PPHN) is an important cause of neonatal mortality amongst infants who are of term or post-term gestation. The most severely ill of these infants would meet the criteria for the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).
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Original Article
Five Paediatric Case Reports of the Use of Adenosine in Supraventricular Tachycardia
Adenosine has been shown to be effective in terminating supraventricular tachycardia in adults and children. However, the use of adenosine has not been previously studied in Singapore children; hence we report our experience with the use of adenosine for the treatment and diagnosis of supraventricular tachycardia in children over...
Original Article
Use of Central Venous Lines in Paediatrics—A Local Experience
Peripheral access by venous cut down, once popular in the 1950s and 1960s, has almost become obsolete with the introduction of the Seldinger technique for percutaneous insertion of central venous lines. In 1973, Shaw invented a technique of cannulating peripheral veins with silastic catheters, as an alternative approach to...
Original Article
Survey of Aerobic Bacterial Infections in Paediatric Surgical Intensive Care Unit Patients
Data on infections in paediatric surgical patients are few in the literature. Although there are many studies on infection in adult surgical and paediatric medical patients, paediatric surgical patients are a special group in their spectrum of diseases and treatment requirements.
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Original Article
Population-based Mammographic Screening in Singapore: What are Participants’ Views?
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in Singapore and has been increasing in incidence since 1968. This rise is particularly marked among younger women, suggesting that the increase will take place at an even faster rate in future.
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Original Article
Parainfluenza Type 3 Viral Outbreak in a Neonatal Nursery
Parainfluenza viruses are relatively large RNA paramyxoviruses. Four serologic types cause disease in humans.
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Others
T Wave Alternans and Acute Rheumatic Myocarditis: A Case Report
T wave alternans, an electrical cardiac alternans in which there is a beat-to-beat variation in the amplitude, shape or the polarity of the T wave during sinus rhythm without any changes in the QRS complex, is an uncommonly recorded rhythm. We report here an unusual case of T wave...
Others
The Future of Medicine from the Standpoint of the Practising Paediatrician
From the time of recorded history of medicine, the doctor whether he be the ancient healer or the modern medical practitioner, the doctor had practised the art and science, on the basis of curing the patient when he has an illness. The doctor is sought out when the patient...
Others
Hepatopulmonary Syndrome: A Rare Complication of Chronic Liver Disease in Children
Children with chronic liver disorders may present with dysfunction of other organ systems. Encephalopathy, gastrointestinal bleeding, failure to thrive and impaired renal function are some such findings in these children1 Mild to moderate hypoxaemia is also well described in children with chronic liver disease.
This article is available only as...
Original Article
Use of Ligase Chain Reaction and Polymerase Chain Reaction on Urine Specimens to Detect Chlamydia trachomatis Infections in a Sexually Transmitted Diseases Clinic in Singapore
Infections caused by Chlamydia trachomatis are amongst the most common bacterial sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in the world, causing substantial morbidity in young sexually-active people. C. trachomatis causes a variety of clinical syndromes in males (including urethritis and epididymitis), females (including cervicitis and pelvic inflammatory disease), and new-borns (including...
Original Article
Bidirectional Cavopulmonary Anastomosis
Children with complex congenital heart disease and a functional single ventricle may not be ideal candidates for a Fontan procedure. A staged approach to Fontan’s operation has been undertaken in an effort to reduce the volume load of a single ventricle as early as possible and to minimise the...
Original Article
Retinopathy of Prematurity in Very Low Birth Weight Infants
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), which could lead to visual impairment and blindness, is a recognised serious morbidity amongst surviving premature infants. The inverse relationship between the risk of this disease with birth weight and gestational age had been well-documented, in particular, in infants with birth weight ≤1500 g (very...
Others
Echocardiographic Features and Management of Neonatal Ductal Aneurysm
Previously thought to be a rare condition, aneurysms of the ductus arteriosus have been increasingly reported in the medical literature over the past few years. It has been noted as an incidental finding in autopsy, echocardiography and angiography, but can present with symptoms of cough, dyspnoea, hoarseness of voice...
Original Article
Transaminitis in Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy
Raised aminotransferase levels, especially that of alanine transaminase (ALT), have been traditionally attributed to liver pathology rather than to muscle disorders. However, raised alanine and aspartate transaminase (AST) levels have been found in patients with muscle diseases such as Duchenne’s and Becker’s muscular dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy and the inflammatory...
Others
Twenty-four hour, Non-invasive, Neonatal Chromosome Analysis—Application in a Case of Mixed Gonadal Dysgenesis
Chromosome analysis in neonates requires venisection and this is sometimes both difficult and distressing. In addition, results can at best take 3 days but longer if the initial 48-h culturing period proves unsuccessful.
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Others
Sandhoff Disease—A Case Report of 3 Siblings and a Review of Potential Therapies
Sandhoff disease is a rare inborn error of metabolism characterised by the absence of both β-hexosaminidase A and B, resulting in an accumulation of G<sub>M2</sub> gangliosides, particularly in the neuronal cells. The infantile form, similar to Tay Sach’s disease, may present in the first year of life with an...
Others
A Case Report on the Perinatal Management of a 30-week Preterm Baby with Congenital Complete Heart Block
The association between congenital complete heart block (CHB) and maternal autoimmune disorders has been described for many years. Maternal systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the commonest of these disorders, and a leading cause of heart block in newborns.
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Original Article
Spectrum of Abnormal Mammographic Findings and Their Predictive Value for Malignancy in Singaporean Women from a Population Screening Trial
While screening mammography can detect early breast cancers, a significant proportion of asymptomatic women are subject to unnecessary workup and surgery when biopsies for abnormal mammograms are proven to be benign on histology. An accurate correlation between abnormal mammographic features detected on screening and their corresponding histology or predictive...
Others
Minimal Change Nephrotic Syndrome—A Complex Genetic Disorder
Minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) is the most common cause of childhood nephrotic syndrome. It is characterised by the presence of gross proteinuria, hypoalbuminaemia, oedema and hyperlipidaemia.
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Others
Candida Arthritis in a Premature Infant Treated Successfully with Oral Fluconazole for Six Months
Candida arthritis in premature infants is regarded as a rare condition. The largest published series of 8 cases from one institution was from Bombay, India.
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Original Article
DNA Testing for Fragile X Syndrome in 255 Males from Special Schools in Singapore
Fragile X syndrome is the most common inherited cause of mental retardation, affecting approximately 1 in 1250 males and 1 in 2500 females. It is associated with a cytogenetically visible fragile site in Xq27.3, termed FRAXA, which results from the unstable expansion of a trinucleotide (CGG)n repeat sequence in...
Original Article
Initial Experience of Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation of Supraventricular Tachycardia in Paediatric Patients
Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) is well-recognised as one of the commonest rhythm disorders in children. There may be few symptoms, but many experience palpitations, or some other less specific complaints such as nausea, pallor and sweatiness.
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Letter to the Editor
Paediatric living-donor liver and kidney transplantation during COVID-19
Dear Editor,
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has impacted global healthcare including paediatric solid organ transplantation (SOT). We report our experience of resuming paediatric living-donor SOT during COVID-19, which took into account safety considerations for living donors, paediatric recipients and the transplant healthcare team. The US Centers for Disease...
Letter to the Editor
The evolution of severity of paediatric COVID-19 in Singapore: Vertical transmission and multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children
Dear Editor,
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) arrived in Singapore in January 2020 as imported cases, followed by local transmission predominantly involving dormitories, with later spread within the wider community. Children still represent the minority of cases in Singapore, with around 8,000 paediatric cases as of 6 November 2021 out of...
Letter to the Editor
Systemic antibiotic prophylaxis for recurrent infective flares in children and adolescents with atopic dermatitis
Dear Editor,
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease, affecting approximately 20% of children in Singapore.1 It is associated with skin barrier defects2 and increased skin colonisation with Staphylococcus aureus, which can trigger infective flares, especially in more severe disease. Strategies to reduce S. aureus colonisation and infection...
Others
Isolated Non-compaction of Ventricular Myocardium: A Report of Three Cases
Non-compaction of ventricular myocardium is a rare morphogenic arrest of compaction of the ventricular myocardial fibres during intrauterine life. Usually, the left ventricle is more compact and less trabeculated than the right ventricle.
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Original Article
Diagnosing and Prognosticating Acute Meningitis in Young Infants within 24 Hours of Admission
Meningitis is an important cause of fever in young infants (infants 90 days old or younger). Most cases of meningitis are acute meningitis which present with a short history of symptoms and are caused by either bacteria (acute bacterial meningitis, ABM) or viruses (acute aseptic meningitis, AAM).
This article is...
Others
Book Review
The above is a textbook of medicine written by Singapore doctors and published in Singapore. It is difficult not to be over-enthusiastic about it as there are so few books of medicine written and published in Singapore.
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Review Article
Enteral Nutrition of the Very Low Birth Weight (VLBW) Infant
Optimal nutrition is critical in the management of the preterm infant. The fetus in utero receives continuous intravenous nutrition that is interrupted when prematurely delivered.
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Original Article
A Case Series of Six Children with Primary Pulmonary Hypertension
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an uncommon but serious and debilitating disorder seen in children and adults. By definition, it is an elevation of the pressure in the pulmonary artery to above a mean of 25 mmHg at rest, or 30 mmHg during exercise.
This article is available only as...
Others
2nd Chapter of Paediatricians Lecture: The Future of Paediatrics in Singapore
When I was first invited to give this 2nd Chapter of Paediatricians Lecture by the Chapter, my obvious answer was no. I could think of quite a few other paediatricians more qualified and appropriate as speakers and hoped that my emphatic no would work.
This article is available only as...
Others
Liver Transplantation in a Child With Severe Hypercholesterolaemia in Alagille Syndrome
Alagille syndrome (AS) or arteriohepatic dysplasia is a genetic disorder transmitted in an autosomal dominant inheritance. The chromosomal abnormality has been identified to the short arm of chromosome 20.
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Original Article
The Use of Vigabatrin in Infantile Spasms in Asian Children
Infantile spasms are a form of age-dependent myoclonic epilepsy that is difficult to control. Agents such as adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and prednisolone have been used as first-line therapy, but are associated with major side effects.
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Review Article
Current Understanding of Pre-eclampsia
Pre-eclampsia is a major cause of adverse obstetric outcome. It remains one of the leading causes of maternal mortality1 and continues to contribute significantly to perinatal morbidity and mortality.
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Original Article
Paediatric Extracranial Germ Cell Tumours: A Retrospective Review
Germ cell tumours (GCTs) in children account for 2% to 3% of childhood malignancies. They arise from primordial germ cells and constitute a heterogeneous group of tumours.
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Original Article
Two-year Outcome of Normal-birth-weight Infants Admitted to a Singapore Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
With the rapid advances in the field of neonatal intensive care, the focus of interest has been on the very-low-birthweight (VLBW) infant in recent years. The outcome of these infants has been extensively studied and widely reported. On the other hand, data on the incidence, risk prediction and outcome...
Others
Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia and Chronic Lung Disease of Infancy: Strategies for Prevention and Management
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and chronic lung disease of infancy (CLD) are two chronic pulmonary conditions which are the result of incomplete resolution or abnormal repair of lung injury in the neonatal period. Although BPD and CLD are closely related, they have differing diagnostic criteria and the spectrum of severity...
Original Article
Intussusception: A Three-Year Review
Intussusception is the most common cause of intestinal obstruction in infants and young children. It occurs when one segment of the intestines telescopes into another.
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Review Article
Osteoporosis Risk Factor Assessment and Bone Densitometry—Current Status and Future Trends
Osteoporosis affects predominantly elderly women; although younger women and men may also be affected. Demographically, the number and proportion of the elderly (aged 65 years and above) in many countries is increasing rapidly, and the problem of osteoporosis will increase concomitantly.
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Others
Severe Newborn Encephalopathy Unrelated to Intrapartum Hypoxic Events: 3 Case Reports
Since Little’s article of 1862, it was popularly believed that brain damage in the majority of cases of cerebral palsy occurs during labour and delivery. However, the growing evidence in literature has refuted this belief.
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Others
A Case Series of Pre-Viable Severe Twin-Twin Transfusion Syndrome
Monozygotic twinning has an incidence of approximately 3.5 per 1000 pregnancies. Only 25% of monozygotic twins have a dichorionic placenta.
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Others
Idiopathic Chronic Fetomaternal Haemorrhage Resulting in Hydrops – A Case Report
Small amounts (<0.1 mL) of fetal blood are commonly found in maternal circulation. Massive fetomaternal haemorrhage (FMH) involves fetal blood loss into the maternal circulation of greater than 150 mL or more than half the fetal blood volume.
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Others
Imaging of Paediatric Mediastinal Masses
A review of mediastinal masses in children, emphasising imaging features, is important for several reasons. Firstly, the mediastinum is the most common location for thoracic masses in children.
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Others
The Relationship Between Scoring Systems and Cytokine Levels in Neonatal Sepsis
In newborn infants, the early diagnosis of sepsis is an important problem because the early signs and symptoms of septicaemia in term or preterm infants are usually nonspecific. Many clinical and haematological scoring systems have been developed in the early diagnosis of neonatal sepsis.
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Original Article
Clinical Characteristics of an Outbreak of Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease in Singapore
The enterovirus family causes a wide array of illnesses, some easily recognised clinically and others diagnosed as non-specific viral illnesses. This large family of viruses, composed of more than 70 serotypes, accounts for at least 10 to 15 millions of asymptomatic infection per year in the United States.
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Review Article
Perinatal Care at the Threshold of Viability—From Principles to Practice
One of the major challenges in neonatal-perinatal medicine in the new century is the optimal management of the mother and infant when delivery is imminent or at the threshold of viability. Considerable debate has arisen regarding the appropriate approach and strongly polarised viewpoints are held with and without supporting...
Original Article
Eight-year Outcome of Very-low-birth-weight Infants Born in KK Hospital
The outcome of very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) premature babies with birth weights of <1500 g has remained an area of great concern for both parents and medical personnel.
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Review Article
Long-term Follow-up and Outcome of Extremely-low-birth-weight (ELBW) Infants
With the progressive improvement in the survival of premature neonates, including those born at the extreme edge of viability, there has been a great degree of interest focused on the functioning of these high-risk survivors and their outcome into childhood and recently up to adolescence and early adulthood. Prospective...
Review Article
Exogenous Surfactant Therapy in Newborn Infants
Exogenous surfactant therapy is widely used in the management of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) and may have a role in the management of other neonatal respiratory disorders as well. Numerous randomised controlled trials have been conducted in neonatology to study different aspects of surfactant therapy.
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Others
The Use and Abuse of Steroids in Perinatal Medicine
Preterm birth, delivery prior to 37 weeks of gestational age, accounts for a major and disproportionate amount of infant and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Despite advances in medical technology, the prevalence of preterm birth in Singapore has increased, secondary to an increase in multiple gestations and obstetric interventions.
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Review Article
Mass Newborn Screening in Singapore—Position and Projections
Mass newborn screening is an essential preventative public health programme which aims to diagnose, in the presymptomatic phase, diseases that have a better outcome with early intervention. The development in 1960 by the late Dr Robert Guthrie of a simple test, the GuthrieTest, that enabled the detection of phenylketonuria...
Others
Neonatology In Singapore: The Way We Were, The Way Forward
Over a span of 35 years of my working life, I have witnessed the growth of, and also grown together with, neonatology in Singapore. As I look at the present-day status of neonatology, it gives me a sense of achievement and accomplishment.
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Original Article
Chorioamnionitis and Outcome in Extremely Preterm Infants
Preterm delivery is associated with considerable morbidity and mortality, especially among the 1% to 2% infants delivered at less than 32 weeks. Chorioamnionitis is a major predisposing factor for preterm delivery.
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Editorial
Challenges in Perinatal Medicine
One of the significant milestones in the perinatal care in Singapore is the birth of the Perinatal Society of Singapore in March 1989. This signaled the beginning of increased collaboration between the obstetricians and neonatologists in the management of high-risk pregnancies through multidisciplinary birth defect clinics and high-risk perinatal...
Others
Predicting Significant Hyperbilirubinaemia and Early Discharge for Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficient Newborns
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency occurs in 2.5% of Singapore’s population, and affected newborns are at risk for severe neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia and kernicterus. In the past four decades, neonatology units in local restructured hospitals have hospitalised all affected newborns for at least 14 days after birth because of this risk.
This...
Others
Autoimmune Liver Disease in Children
Autoimmune liver disorders are inflammatory liver diseases characterised histologically by a dense mononuclear cell infiltrate, including plasma cells, in the portal tract (Fig. 1) and serologically by the presence of non-organ and liver-specific autoantibodies and increased levels of immunoglobulin G (IgG), in the absence of a known aetiology. They...
Others
HIV/AIDS in Children
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) epidemic in Asia has grown from a handful of cases to a major public health threat with wide-ranging medical, social and economic consequences. First gaining foothold among intravenous drug users and commercial sex workers, HIV quickly spreads to...
Review Article
Adolescent Health Education Programmes: Theoretical Principles in Design and Delivery
Over the past three decades, the patterns of health need in youth have changed. Psychosocial problems such as depression, substance abuse, eating disorders, sexually transmitted infections and unplanned pregnancy, accidental and intentional injury, including suicide, affect youth disproportionately and appear to be increasing.
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Review Article
Art and “the Language of Well-Being” in Adolescent Health Care
Creative processes involve imagining, making unexpected connections, maintaining discipline while letting go of controlling the outcome, opening oneself to pleasure, and moving beyond frustration. Creative activity parallels important strategies for mental and spiritual health—people who participate in well-designed creative processes report that it is powerfully restorative.
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Review Article
From Recreation to Creative Expression: The Essential Features of an Adolescent Inpatient Psychosocial Support Programme
In 1984, the Royal Children’s Hospital (RCH) in Melbourne, Australia opened a new ward specifically for adolescent inpatients. This initiative was the result of many years of observation, patient survey, discussion and debate about the possibility of allowing teenagers to stay in a children’s hospital.
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Original Article
Adolescent Admissions to a Tertiary Paediatric Hospital: A Dynamic Pattern
The nature of paediatric practice is changing worldwide. In developing countries, infant mortality from infectious diseases continues to fall with improved immunisation, medical care and pharmaceutical advances. This has resulted in a corresponding rise in the number of adolescents, who now constitute 30% of the world’s population.
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Review Article
Clinical Assessment, Management and Outcomes of a Group of Adolescents Presenting with Complex Medico-psychosocial Conditions
Increased sensitivity to biological change can make adolescents particularly vulnerable to non-organic symptomatic disorders. A variety of pains, headaches, dizziness and fatigue may remain unexplained after medical assessment.
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Original Article
Adolescent Chronic Illness: A Qualitative Study of Psychosocial Adjustment
Chronic illness during adolescence can have significant psychological and social consequences within many life domains. Growing up with a chronic medical condition presents many challenges including dealing with the symptoms of illness, side effects of medications, altered body image, unpredictable disease progression, depression and anxiety.
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Review Article
Strategies to Promote Better Outcomes in Young People with Chronic Illnesses
The epidemiology of child health in the developed world is changing. Mortality from infectious diseases has fallen sharply over the past century due to public health measures, such as sanitation and immunisation, better housing and sweeping improvements in health care.
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Review Article
Adolescent Alcohol and Other Substance Use: Sharing the Australian Experience
The most common causes of morbidity in adolescence often have behavioural or social determinants, and can have enormous social and economic consequences for adolescent and future adult health and well being. Adolescent substance use and abuse is an example of this.
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Review Article
Sexually Transmitted Infections in Singapore Teenagers
Adolescence can be a difficult period for many individuals who have to navigate their way through complicated emotional, psychological, physical and social demands and changes. The transition from childhood to adulthood includes the formation of successful intimate relationships and avoidance of the pitfalls of sexually transmitted infections (STI), including...
Review Article
Eating Disorders in Singapore: A Review
Anorexia nervosa, bulimia and binge-eating disorder are the three best described ‘eating disorders’. All three are predominantly disorders of women with the core symptoms of shape/weight dissatisfaction and eating abnormalities. Anorexia nervosa is characterised by significant self-induced weight loss secondary to fear of fatness, amenorrhoea (cessation of menstruation for...
Review Article
Youth Suicide and Parasuicide in Singapore
The World Health Organization defines suicide as an act with a fatal outcome that is deliberately initiated and performed by the person himself or herself in the knowledge, or expectation, of its fatal outcome. Parasuicide or attempted suicide is distinguished from suicide by the non-fatal outcome.
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Original Article
Five-Year Review of Adolescent Mental Health Usage in Singapore
The past 20 years have seen much growth in the knowledge of child and adolescent psychiatric practice. Research has provided an improved understanding in almost every area, including epidemiology, classification and treatment.
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Others
The Perils of Puberty
Adolescence is a biopsychosocial maturational process, with the biological changes including completion of linear growth and sexual maturation (puberty), maturation of enzyme systems such as cytochrome P450 systems, accretion of peak bone mass, and the development of sexually dimorphic adult patterns in blood lipids, blood pressure, haemoglobin and red...
Editorial
Adolescent Health—A New Perspective in Singapore
In the past five decades, there have been significant advances in the fields of Paediatrics and Adult Medicine in Singapore. However, the bridging field of Adolescent Health has only recently been recognised to be an important specialty which has not received due emphasis in the medical curriculum for undergraduates,...
Others
MELAS: A Case Report
A 6-year-old Chinese boy presented at the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery clinic with gingival bleeding due to poor oral hygiene, odontogenic pain due to multiple dental caries, phenytoin-induced gingival hyperplasia and severely worn-down and eroded dentition. He is under regular follow-up by the Paediatrics Department of the National University...
Original Article
Oropharyngeal Carriage and Penicillin Resistance of Neisseria meningitidis in Primary School Children in Manisa, Turkey
Infections by Neisseria meningitidis are significant causes of mortality and morbidity in young children and adolescents. The epidemiology of serious meningococcal disease is an area of considerable interest, and many unanswered questions surround this organism and the types of diseases it causes.
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Letter to the Editor
A Fatal Turkish Case of Campomelic Dysplasia
Paediatric Medicine (CD) is a rare form of congenital short-limbed dwarfism, classically characterised by campomelia (bowing of the long bones of the lower extremities) in association with a posterior cleft palate, flattened facies and hypoplastic scapulae. It was first fully and originally described by Spranger et al and Maroteaux...
Original Article
Familial Risk of Allergic Rhinitis and Atopic Dermatitis among Chinese Families in Singapore
Family history has been shown to be a risk factor for the development of allergic rhinitis (AR) and atopic dermatitis (AD). However, the increase in prevalence has also been attributed to the changes in lifestyle and urbanisation in developed countries.
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Others
Clinical Report: A Case of Williams Syndrome and Klinefelter Syndrome
Williams syndrome (WS) is a rare but well recognised neurodevelopmental disease affecting the connective tissue and the central nervous system. The syndrome was first described in 1961 and the phenotype was subsequently expanded in 1972.
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Others
Skin Manifestation of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Infection – A Case Report and Review Article
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an aerobic gram-negative bacillus that is found in aquatic environments. It is a frequent coloniser of fluids used in the hospital setting, such as nebulisers, water baths, dialysis machines and intravenous fluids.
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Original Article
Gender Disparity in Paediatric Hospital Admissions
Gender difference in the incidence of childhood diseases has long been recognised. but the magnitude of this effect and consistency across many disease categories appears not to attract much attention or research interest. Gissler and colleagues, in a longitudinal follow-up of all children born in Finland in 1987, reported...
Original Article
Study of Inherited Metabolic Disorders in Singapore – 13 Years Experience
Inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs) described in the early 1900s by Garrod were due to a block in a metabolic pathway, arising from an enzyme deficiency which led directly to the disruption of cellular metabolism. However 40 years later, it was discovered that many inherited diseases were not due...
Original Article
Does Visual Turbidity Correlate With Serum Triglyceride Levels in Babies on Total Parenteral Nutrition?
Intravenous lipid infusion is commonly used as part of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in newborn babies. Upon infusion, it forms an emulsion that resembles endogenously produced chylomicrons.
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Original Article
Corticosteroids are not Present in a Traditional Chinese Medicine Formulation for Atopic Dermatitis in Children
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common, chronic inflammatory skin disease. It has been estimated that 15% of schoolchildren aged 13 to 14 years have a history of AD.
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Original Article
Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Paediatric Oncology Patients in Singapore
Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has been gaining acceptance throughout the world. The efficacy of CAM is unproven, yet it remains popular with the general public, with many of them utilising it for a whole spectrum of ailments.
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Original Article
The Epidemiology of Paediatric Intussusception in Singapore: 1997 to 2004
Intussusception (IS) is the most common cause of intestinal obstruction in infants and young children. The peak age of presentation is 4 to 8 months.
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Others
A Report of Two Families with Sarcosinaemia in Hong Kong and Revisiting the Pathogenetic Potential of Hypersarcosinaemia
Sarcosinaemia (OMIN 268900) is an autosomal recessive condition due to the deficiency of sarcosine dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.5.99.1). It is a rare condition with an estimated incidence of 1 in 350,000 in a newborn screening programme.
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Original Article
Diabetic Retinopathy in Type II Diabetics Detected by Targeted Screening Versus Newly Diagnosed in General Practice
The epidemic of type II diabetes mellitus is now recognised worldwide. In India, it has been estimated that the population with type II diabetes would increase by 150% in 2025. As the population with type II diabetes increases, so does the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy and other microvascular complications.
This...
Others
Neonatal Priapism Associated With Spontaneous Bilateral Pyocavernositis
Priapism is a pathological state of prolonged, generally painful erection, unassociated with sexual desire and not ending in ejaculation. Rare before the 1980s, this entity became more frequent after the introduction of vasoactive drugs for intracavernosal injections.
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Editorial
Paediatrics to Geriatrics: The Continuum
In many parts of Asia today, paediatricians are still grappling with the childhood problems of infectious diseases, diarrhoeal diseases and malnutrition. In Singapore, it was no different up to the mid 1980s.
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Original Article
Radiographic Features of SARS in Paediatric Patients: A Review of Cases in Singapore
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a newly emerged atypical pneumonia caused by the SARS-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV). It is easily transmitted via droplet infection from close contact.
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Review Article
A Rotavirus Vaccine for Infants: The Asian Experience
Of all the enteric pathogens that infect young children, rotavirus is recognised as the leading cause of severe gastroenteritis worldwide. Rotavirus accounts for 20% of all diarrhoea-related deaths and global mortality among children less than 5 years of age is estimated at nearly half a million.
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Editorial
Therapeutic Hypothermia for Neonatal Hypoxic-Ischaemic Encephalopathy
Hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) is an important cause of death and later neurological disability in full-term neonates worldwide. Perinatal asphyxia causes about 19% of the over 5 million neonatal deaths worldwide annually.
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Others
Outcome of Organic Acidurias in China
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Others
Organising Services for IMD in Thailand: Twenty Years Experience
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Others
Newborn Screening in Pakistan – Lessons from a Hospital-based Congenital Hypothyroidism Screening Programme
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Others
Newborn Screening in Bangladesh
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Others
Newborn Screening in China: Phenylketonuria, Congenital Hypothyroidism and Expanded Screening
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Others
Minimising Harm from Newborn Screening Programmes
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Others
Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip: Universal or Selective Ultrasound Screening?
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Others
Inborn Errors of Metabolism Presenting as Neonatal Encephalopathy: Practical Tips for Clinicians
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Others
Legal Issues in Neonatal Screening
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Others
Neuroblastoma Screening in Japan: Population-based Cohort Study and Future Aspects of Screening
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Others
External Quality Assurance Programme for Newborn Screening of Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency
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Others
Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency: Correlation between the Genotype, Biochemistry and Phenotype
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Others
Disorders of Vitamin B12 Metabolism Presenting Through Newborn Screening
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Others
Diagnosis of Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) Responsive Mild Phenylketonuria in Japan over the Past 10 Years
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Others
Fatty Acid Oxidation Defects
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Others
Disorders of the Carnitine Cycle and Detection by Newborn Screening
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Others
Spectrum of Inherited Metabolic Disorders in Malaysia
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Others
Establishing a Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Programme
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Others
Current Understanding of Auditory Neuropathy
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Others
A Multidisciplinary Approach to Paediatric Hearing Loss: Programme at the Centre for Hearing Intervention and Language Development, National University Hospital, Singapore
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Others
Early Intervention For Hearing Impairment: Appropriate, Accessible and Affordable
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Others
Impact of the National Hearing Screening Programme in China
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Others
Outcome of Early Cochlear Implantation
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Others
Eliminating Iodine Deficiency: Obstacles and Their Removal
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Others
Neuro-developmental Deficits in Early-treated Congenital Hypothyroidism
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Others
Issues on Universal Screening for Galactosemia
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Others
Newborn Screening for all Identifiable Disorders with Tandem Mass Spectrometry is Cost Effective: The Negative Case
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Others
Newborn Screening for all Identifiable Disorders with Tandem Mass Spectrometry is Cost Effective: Supporting Arguments
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Others
My Early Experiences in Establishing Neonatal Screening and the Reason for Regional Meetings of the International Society for Neonatal Screening
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Others
Diagnosis and Management Support for an Expanded Newborn Screening Programme
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Others
Considerations in Choosing Screening Conditions: One (US) Approach
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Others
Clinical Applications of Molecular Genetics: The Model of Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
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Others
Newborn Screening in Japan: Restructuring for the New Era
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Others
Improved Health and Development of Children who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing Following Early Intervention
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Others
Towards Universal Newborn Screening in Developing Countries: Obstacles and the Way Forward
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Others
Improving Child Health – Newborn Screening for All?
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Editorial
Neonatal Screening – A Global Perspective
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Proceedings
Proceedings of the 6th Asia-Pacific Regional Meeting of the International Society for Neonatal Screening 2007
Lectures from the Proceedings of the 6th Asia-Pacific Regional Meeting of the International Society for Neonatal Screening on “Improving Child Health Through Universal Neonatal Screening”, held on 29 August-1 September 2007 in Singapore.
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Original Article
Prevalence of Refractive Error in Malay Primary School Children in Suburban Area of Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia
Refractive error remains one of the primary causes of visual impairment in children worldwide. Prevalence of visual impairment in children, is defined as uncorrected vision equal to or worse than 20/40, and it varies from as low as 2.72% in South Africa to as high as 15.8% in Chile.
This...
Letter to the Editor
Assessment of Medical Graduates Competencies
Medical professional proficiency comprises a set of skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to efficiently accomplish the practice of medicine. The major aim of undergraduate medical education in the region is to produce doctors who are competent and able to meet the health needs of the community while also being...
Commentary
When Words Really Matter
I think a lot these days about doctors giving advice. Nobody taught me, back in medical school, how to give advice.
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Original Article
Diabetic Retinopathy in Diabetics Referred to a Tertiary Centre from a Nationwide Screening Programme
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of vision loss in Asia. Singapore has one of the highest prevalence rates of diabetes mellitus (DM) worldwide, with 8.2% of Singapore adults between the ages of 18 and 69 having diabetes and there is little data on the prevalence of diabetic...
Review Article
Behavioural Sleep Disorders in Children and Adolescents
Overall, children spend one-third to one-half of their life sleeping. Although sleep comprises such a significant portion of a child’s day, sleep disturbances are often overlooked by healthcare practitioners.
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Review Article
Cardiovascular Changes in Children with Snoring and Obstructive Sleep Apnoea
Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a spectrum of diseases ranging from primary snoring to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). A recent review suggested that the prevalence of childhood OSA diagnosed by varying criteria was 1% to 4%.
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Review Article
Obesity and Obstructive Sleep Apnoea Hypopnoea Syndrome in Singapore Children
Obesity is becoming a problem of epidemic proportions and is perhaps, the most pervasive medical problem faced by medical providers today. It is a problem affecting about 10% to 15% of our school-going population in Singapore, affecting disease burden in virtually every medical subspecialty.
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Review Article
Sleep Disorders in Children: The Singapore Perspective
Sleep problems are common in children. For example, snoring occurs in more than 25% of Singapore children1 and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) occurs in 1% to 3% of children.
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Review Article
Diagnosis and Evaluation of Obstructive Sleep Apnoea in Children
Children with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) may present with nocturnal and/or diurnal symptoms. The history is best obtained from parents, or siblings who share a bedroom, since the child is often unaware of what happens when he or she is asleep.
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Review Article
The Scope of Paediatric Sleep Medicine
Despite apparent similarities to adult sleep medicine, the disorders of paediatric sleep medicine have a distinct epidemiology and pathophysiology. During childhood, the physiology of sleep develops and matures, resulting in changing patterns of normal behaviours and of sleep disorders.
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Original Article
Sleep Disturbances in Singaporean Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common childhood psychiatric disorder with various studies reporting prevalence rates of between 1.7% and 16%. The most current version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Diseases (DSM), fourth edition, has 2 lists of behavioural symptoms grouped under “inattentive” and “hyperactive-impulsive” symptoms,...
Original Article
Inflammatory Cytokines and Childhood Obstructive Sleep Apnoea
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is characterised by repeated episodes of upper airway occlusion during sleep that are associated with daytime behavioural changes and abnormalities in cardiovascular function. In adults, it has been shown that OSA is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases.
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Original Article
Nasal Obstruction in Children with Sleep-disordered Breathing
Nasal breathing is critical in infants and children; for example, neonatal choanal atresia often leads to respiratory distress and may require urgent intervention in the newborn nursery. Later, during development in the first years of life, abnormal nasal breathing has important consequences for facial growth.
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Original Article
Immunogenicity, Reactogenicity and Safety of a Diphtheria-Tetanus-Acellular Pertussis-Inactivated Polio and Haemophilus Influenzae Type b Combination Vaccine in a Placebo-controlled Rotavirus Vaccine Study
Singapore’s national immunisation programme for the 6 traditional Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) vaccines (i.e. BCG, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio and measles) and hepatitis B has been in place for many years and its success has been dramatic. Despite being previously endemic to Singapore in the 1950s, diphtheria has...
Images in Medicine
Transfusion-dependent Microcytic Anaemia in a 10-year-old Girl
A 10-year-girl from Bangladesh presented with a moderately severe anaemia (lowest recorded haemoglobin level of 5.6 g/dL) and a mild jaundice (latest serum bilirubin, 31 μmol/L) 3 years ago (Figs. 1 and 2). Test for haemoglobin electrophoresis on agarose gel did not reveal any abnormal bands.
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Images in Medicine
Caudal Regression Syndrome
A white female with an uncomplicated history of birth delivery and a familial history of diabetes mellitus presented to the orthopaedic clinic at the age of 16 months old with bowel dysfunction, inability to walk, one kidney, and a gibbus noted at T12. A “frog-like” appearance was noted of...
Others
3rd College of Paediatrics and Child Health Lecture – The Past, the Present and the Shape of Things to Come…
In the post-war days of the 1950s, Singapore children were faced with problems of malnutrition and infectious diseases. There was poverty, overcrowded housing and lack of hygiene, and the social conditions were apparently appalling.
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Original Article
Auricular Anthropometry of Newborns at the Singapore General Hospital
Abnormalities of the external ear are described in many syndromes and genetic conditions. Melnick et al reported an incidence of 1 in 90 births for external ear malformations and branchial sinuses and tags, with about 1 in 670 births having malformations of the pinna.
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Others
Treatment of Cardiogenic Pulmonary Oedema by Helmet-delivered Non-invasive Pressure Support Ventilation in Children With Scorpion Sting Envenomation
Scorpion stings represent an important and serious public health problem worldwide due to their high incidence and potentially severe and often fatal clinical manifestations, especially among children. The severity of the envenomation is related to haemodynamic and cardiorespiratory alterations, with cardiac failure and cardiogenic pulmonary oedema being the major...
Original Article
Screening Tools for Bacteraemia in a Selected Population of Febrile Children
Bacteraemia refers to the presence of bacteria in the bloodstream. The presence or absence of toxicity differentiates occult bacteraemia, which is relatively asymptomatic, from bacteraemia and sepsis, which is accompanied by findings of serious systemic illness.
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Original Article
Review of the Management Outcome of Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis and the Role of Prophylactic Contra-lateral Pinning Re-examined
Slipped capital femoral epiphysis is the commonest hip problem in the adolescent age group. The goals of treatment are aimed at avoiding the complications of osteonecrosis and chondrolysis, preventing further slips, and promoting physeal closure.
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Images in Medicine
Paediatric perineal skin pit: More than skin deep?
A 2.5-year-old boy was referred to our clinic for abnormal genitalia and a febrile urinary tract infection (Escherichia coli >105 colony-forming units/mL). At birth, his parents were informed that he had a “bilobed scrotum and a deep perineal skin pit” that may pose hygiene and cosmetic issues. They had...
Original Article
Prevalence of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis among Female School Children in Singapore
Scoliosis screening in schools is still widely practised worldwide despite some countries abandoning the practise in recent years. Screening usually consists of visual inspection of the back, Forward Bending Test (FBT) and measurement of the angle of trunk rotation (ATR) using a scoliometer.
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Letter to the Editor
Recurrent Group B Streptococcal Septicemia in a Very Low Birth Weight Infant with Infective Endocarditis and Submandibular Cellulitis
Maternal Group B streptococcal colonisation can lead to neonatal pneumonia, meningitis or sepsis. Neonatal Group B Streptococcal (GBS) sepsis is common, but infective endocarditis is rare.
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Original Article
Morbidity of Parainfluenza 3 Outbreak in Preterm Infants in a Neonatal Unit
Parainfluenza type 3 virus (PIV-3) is an important nosocomial pathogen. It closely mimics respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in its clinical presentations, and in infants. It is the second commonest cause of pneumonia and bronchiolitis after RSV.
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Letter to the Editor
An Unexpected Outcome following Radial Head Excision for Jeffrey Type II Fracture-Dislocation of the Proximal Radius in a Child
We present a case of a 10-year-old child who sustained a traumatic fracture-dislocation of his proximal radius and subsequently underwent surgical removal of the radial head. At 3 years of follow-up, he had regained full painless flexion and extension with loss of pronosupination.
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Letter to the Editor
Temporary Tattoo Associated Type IV Delayed Hypersensitivity Dermatitis in a Child – A Case Report and Call for Parental Caution in Singapore
A 5-year-old, previously healthy French Caucasian boy was seen at a Paediatric Emergency Department for a skin rash over his left forearm.
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A Case of Congenital Haemolytic Anaemia and Thrombocytopenia
A 20-month-old boy came from Bangladesh to Singapore for medical consultation. He presented with progressive pallor, easy bruising, intermittent dark-coloured urine, and failure to thrive since birth.
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An Exanthem with An Annular Pattern in a 2-year-old Girl
A 2-year-old Chinese girl was seen in clinic with an erythematous annular itchy rash which began on the thighs and had spread to the trunk and hands. The parent’s concern was the rash’s duration and association with 2 episodes of fever.
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Original Article
Clinical Features Differentiating Biliary Atresia from Other Causes of Neonatal Cholestasis
Causes of neonatal cholestasis (NC) are long and diverse but the responses of newborn liver, either physiological or anatomical, are limited. This is because the ability of a developing liver of responding in the face of a variety of insults are limited.
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Original Article
Comparison of Clinical Outcomes and Cost Between Surgical and Transcatheter Device Closure of Atrial Septal Defects in Singapore Children
Congenital heart defects (CHD), with an incidence of approximately 1 in 100 live births, are the most important and frequent congenital malformations. It can cause significant morbidity and mortality in children as well as adults.
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Letter to the Editor
Bannayan Riley Ruvalcaba Syndrome
Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome (BRRS) classically presents with macrocephaly, subcutaneous and visceral lipomata, haemangiomata, hamartomatous intestinal polyps and pigmented macules involving the genitalia. This autosomal dominant disorder is linked to germline mutations of the phosphatase and tensine homologue gene (PTEN), a tumour suppressor gene which has a significant role in the...
Images in Medicine
Dyke-Davidoff-Masson Syndrome
An 8-year-old boy presented with uncontrolled seizures. He was born as the second child to non-consanguineous parents. He had significant perinatal asphyxia in the newborn period. He had developmental delay since infancy and was noticed to have right-sided tonic clonic seizures since the age of 3 years, which was...
Review Article
Childhood Food Allergy: A Singaporean Perspective
Food allergy is defined as reaction to a food which has an immunologic mechanism. If immunoglobulin E (IgE) is involved in the reaction, the term IgE-mediated food allergy is appropriate.
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Original Article
Transcatheter Closure of Atrial Septal Defects – Is Balloon Sizing Still Necessary?
Device closure of atrial septal defects through the transcatheter approach has now been well accepted as an option to surgical treatment. A range of devices has been developed for use over the years, with significant advances achieved in terms of profile and safety.
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Original Article
Survey of Healthcare Workers’ Attitudes, Beliefs and Willingness to Receive the 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) Vaccine and the Impact of Educational Campaigns
Since the first positive 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) case was reported in Singapore on 26 May 2009, the country saw an exponential rise in numbers of infected cases despite initial containment followed by mitigation efforts. Local incidence for acute upper respiratory infections (which was a reasonable surrogate for...
Letter to the Editor
Reply from Author: Is It Time to Revise the Definition of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder?
We would like to thank the author for suggesting that the definition of ADHD should be revised. This is an important consideration in the light of some of the points raised such as frequent comorbidities that occur with ADHD as is the case of Autistic disorder and other conditions...
Letter to the Editor
Is It Time to Revise the Definition of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder?
I read with interest the article published in the Annals entitled “Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Coping or Curing?”, which concluded that coping rather than curing for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is taking place. There are some evidence-based points that should be noted.
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Original Article
Dedicated Cytogenetics Factor is Critical for Improving Karyotyping Results for Childhood Leukaemias – Experience in the National University Hospital, Singapore 1989-2006
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) make up the bulk of childhood leukaemia cases. With risk stratified therapy being one of the cornerstones of the treatment of childhood leukaemia, it is important to determine the prognostic factors on which risk stratified therapy depends.
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Original Article
Epidemiological Surveillance and Control of Rubella in Singapore, 1991-2007
Rubella is a mild febrile viral exanthematous disease transmitted through droplets or direct contact with the nasopharyngeal secretion of an infected person. It is of public health importance because of the teratogenic effects of the virus on the developing fetus.
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Original Article
Emerging Trends in Breastfeeding Practices in Singaporean Chinese Women: Findings from a Population-based Study
The health benefits of breast milk have been well documented, with positive implications for infants’ metabolic, immunologic, respiratory and digestive health. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommend exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months and partial breastfeeding thereafter for at least 12 or 24 months....
Images in Medicine
A Missed Bilateral Choanal Atresia
What do you see in the image?
a) Deviated posterior nasal septum
b) Nasopharyngeal tumour
c) Rhinolith with mucous plug
d) Bilateral choanal atresia
e) Nasal pyriform aperture stenosis
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Original Article
Health-related Quality of Life in Children with Cancer Undergoing Treatment: A First Look at the Singapore Experience
Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) has been progressively acknowledged as an essential health outcome measure in clinical trials and health services research and evaluation. HRQOL, compared to QOL, is a more defined conceptual term which encompasses only health-related aspects of life directly amenable to healthcare services and medical products.
This...
Original Article
Normative Data for Quantitative Calcaneal Ultrasound in Asian Children
Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) is currently the gold standard for the assessment of bone mineral density (BMD). It is the commonest tool used to predict fracture risk in patients at risk of osteoporosis. The limitation of DEXA is that it only measures bone density in two dimensions, and...
Review Article
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) in Pregnancy: A Review of the Guidelines for Preventing Mother-to-Child Transmission in Malaysia
Pregnancy, whether actual or anticipated, has been a critical driver for the diagnosis, treatment and care of women with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Unlike other viral infections during pregnancy, maternal HIV infection is not associated with congenital abnormalities, adverse effects on the miscarriage rate or pregnancy outcome. Transmission of...
Original Article
Supplementary Breast Ultrasound Screening in Asian Women with Negative But Dense Mammograms—A Pilot Study
Mammogram has been the gold standard for breast cancer screening and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) has been advocated for screening of high- risk individuals. However, there is currently no recommendation for supplementary ultrasound scan in breast cancer screening. Moreover, it is known that dense breasts, which are common in...
Original Article
National Health Survey on the Prevalence of Urinary Abnormalities in the Population: then and now (1975 to 2012)
In the planning of a tuberculosis prevalence survey in Singapore in 1975, it was decided to include a urine examination of the respondents using Labstix (Ames Company, Elkhart, Indiana, USA). Respondents found to have proteinuria, haematuria or both in the examination centres were then referred to the Department of...
Original Article
Hearing Loss in Newborns with Cleft Lip and/or Palate
Cleft lip and/or palate (CL/P) is one of the commonest congenital malformations. A recent update collating data from international organisations for the years 2002 to 2006 reported an overall international rate of 7.94 in 10,000 live births with the highest prevalence of 10.2 occurring in the Asian continent. In...
Original Article
Prevalence of Overweight and Obesity in Chinese Preschoolers in Singapore
The increasing prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity and its associated adverse health outcomes have become an important health issue. Childhood obesity can persist into adulthood and increases the risk of cardiovascular metabolic diseases, giving rise to an increased healthcare burden. In Singapore, the prevalence of obesity for adults...
Original Article
Short- and Long-Term Outcomes at 2, 5 and 8 Years Old for Neonates at Borderline Viability—An 11-Year Experience
Singapore was listed consistently among the top 3 countries in the world with the lowest infant mortality rate. In particular, Asia had seen its infant mortality rate improve dramatically with time. Advances in perinatal care had however, failed to improve the survival of extremely low birth weight infants of...
Original Article
Neonatal Outcome of the Late Preterm Infant (34 to 36 Weeks): The Singapore Story
Neonatologists were caught looking the other way in the early part of the millennium. While they were keenly following the progress of extreme preterms and their travails, preterms born at the other end of the spectrum were being quietly ignored as “well babies”. In July 2005, the National Institute...
Letter to the Editor
Severe Vitamin B12 Deficiency in a 7-Month-Old Boy
Infantile vitamin B12 deficiency often affects children born to mothers whose nutritional intake is inadequate. We describe a 7-month-old boy with a 2-month history of recurrent vomiting, neurodevelopmental regression, failure to thrive (FTT) and macrocytic anaemia, who was diagnosed to have vitamin B12 deficiency.
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Original Article
Risk Factors for Severe Adenovirus Infection in Children during an Outbreak in Singapore
Human adenoviruses (HAdVs) are well known pathogens that cause a variety of human illnesses. They are non-enveloped, linear double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) viruses. More than 50 distinct serotypes have been identified since the early 1950s. The wide spectrum of symptoms includes upper respiratory tract illness, pneumonia, conjunctivitis, cystitis and...
Letter to the Editor
Treatment of Ewing sarcoma in children: Results from a single centre
Dear Editor,
Ewing sarcoma is a malignant mesenchymal tumour that presents as a bone or soft-tissue sarcoma. Translocations involving the EWS gene on chromosome 22q12 are unique molecular signatures.1,2 Compared with the West where the annual incidence is 1–3 per million, incidence has been reported to be lower among Asians1...
Original Article
Immunomodulator use in paediatric severe sepsis and septic shock
Paediatric sepsis is one of the main causes of childhood mortality.1 Globally, paediatric severe sepsis and septic shock accounts for 6.2% to 23.1% of paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions, and mortality rates can be as high as 21.3% in North America and Europe to 50.0% in Asia.2-4 Of...
Images in Medicine
A rare case of thigh asymmetry in an infant
A 6-month-old baby boy presented with asymmetry of thighs since birth. On clinical examination, anteromedial aspect of the left thigh was bulky with pale yellow discolouration of the skin and no tenderness. The child was referred for high-resolution ultrasonography. On ultrasonography, there was evidence of a well-defined isoechoic soft...
Letter to the Editor
Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in Malaysian infants
Vitamin D deficiency, a worldwide health problem, is also prevalent in tropical countries. It is estimated that 15% of the world’s population are either vitamin D deficient or insufficient. In a study on the state of Kelantan in Malaysia (2010–2012), 60% of pregnant women were vitamin D deficient. Maternal...
Letter to the Editor
Impact of true fetal mosaicism on prenatal screening and diagnosis
Over the past decade, the non-invasive prenatal test (NIPT) has increasingly been used as a method for prenatal screening for trisomy 21 (T21) and other aneuploidies, complementing the traditional approach of first trimester screening (FTS). FTS comprises ultrasound of the nuchal thickness and blood test to measure the levels...
Original Article
A review of child sexual abuse cases presenting to a paediatric emergency department
Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a global public health issue with adverse short- and long-term repercussions. Formal definitions of CSA and the age for defining children differ around the world. In Singapore, CSA refers to any act where a child or young person below 16 years old is used...
Original Article
Prevalence of thyroid malignancy and hormonal dysfunction following radiation exposure in childhood
The incidence of thyroid cancer has been steadily increasing worldwide. Childhood radiation exposure is a known risk factor for thyroid malignancy. However, data on the incidence of thyroid cancer in this high-risk cohort in Singapore are limited. Thus, we assessed data from patients treated in our institution with a...
Commentary
Autism Spectrum Disorder and COVID-19: Helping Caregivers Navigate the Pandemic
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has disrupted societies globally. As of 11 May 2020, 53 children have been infected with COVID-19 in Singapore (Ministry of Health, Singapore, unpublished data). Children generally have mild disease, although there is emerging literature on paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with COVID-19....
Original Article
Comparative Analysis of Symptomatic and Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Children
Singapore confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on 23 January 2020 in a Chinese national from Wuhan, and its first paediatric case on February 4, 2020. As of 24 July 2020, Singapore has reported 49,071 cases of COVID-19. Singapore initiated a comprehensive surveillance, testing and contact tracing strategy as...
Letter to the Editor
Importance of antenatal blood group typing and antibody screening in non-ABO/Rh haemolytic disease of the newborn
Haemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN) is a severe, potentially fatal alloimmune condition where maternal antibodies are produced, transported across the placenta and react against fetal red blood cell (RBC) antigens, resulting in varying degrees of haemolytic anaemia. Although ABO and Rhesus D (RhD) incompatibility is responsible...
Letter to the Editor
Decrease in emergency department attendances during COVID-19 especially in school-going children
Health-seeking behaviour varies during a pandemic. Early reports have suggested reduced attendances at emergency departments (EDs), especially in paediatric patients and in patients with minor ailments, but these observations have yet to be evaluated in Singapore. We investigated ED attendances during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Singapore.
This...
Letter to the Editor
Alternating hemiplegia of childhood presenting as recurrent apnoea in a term newborn infant
Recurrent apnoea in a term infant is usually pathologic, warranting a thorough aetiologic evaluation. An accurate diagnosis is essential in guiding subsequent management and understanding long-term prognosis.
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Original Article
Paediatric emergency department attendances during COVID-19 and SARS in Singapore
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020, with over 110 million cumulative cases worldwide to date and a case fatality rate of approximately 1%. In comparison, the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) had 8,422 cumulative...
Original Article
Epidemiology and risk stratification of minor head injuries in school-going children
Head injuries are common childhood injuries that present to paediatric emergency departments. Falls are the most common cause in young children, while contact sports and road traffic injuries are common causes in school-going children. Majority of paediatric head injury cases are mild traumatic brain injuries, defined as a Glasgow...
Editorial
The Singapore Cerebral Palsy Registry: An important new resource for cerebral palsy research
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a common, lifelong disorder of movement and posture resulting from an insult or maldevelopment of the developing brain. The movement disorders of CP are often accompanied by other associated sensory and cognitive impairments. For the majority of children (about 95% in high income countries), the...
Original Article
Causes, functional outcomes and healthcare utilisation of people with cerebral palsy in Singapore
Cerebral palsy (CP) describes a group of permanent, but often changing, disorders that affect movement and posture, causing activity limitation, attributed to nonprogressive disturbances that occurred in the developing fetal or infant brain. The birth prevalence of CP is estimated to be 1.4–2.2 per 1,000 in high-income countries. It...
Original Article
Cost of inpatient rehabilitation for children with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury
The cost of rehabilitation for children post-traumatic brain injury (TBI) is significant. The annual total healthcare cost of TBI had been estimated to range from USD5.9 billion–76.5 billion. Studies performed in the adult population reported that the direct cost of acute rehabilitation had been relatively similar over a 10-year...
Original Article
Epidemiology and Control of Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease in Singapore, 2001-2007
Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common childhood viral infection, which is typically mild and self-limiting. It is characterised by a brief prodromal fever, followed by pharyngitis, mouth ulcers and rash on the hands and feet. The disease is caused by numerous members of the Enterovirus genus...
Original Article
Perinatal Drug Abuse in KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital
In recent years, perinatal drug abuse has been emerging as an area of major concern for the perinatologists. Chasnoff found the prevalence of substance abuse in a pregnant population to be approximately 11% (range 0.4% to 27%) in a survey of 35 perinatal centres in the United States.
This article...