What are the symptoms of pediatric gastric sinusitis?

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

The stomach function of infants is not yet perfect, if it is stimulated seriously, it may lead to the onset of gastric sinusitis. At this time, parents will have a great psychological burden, coupled with not much understanding of the disease, will become more worried. Next, I will explain the symptoms of children's gastric sinusitis in detail?, Hope to bring some help to parents.

What are the symptoms of pediatric gastric sinusitis?

The clinical manifestations of children with gastric sinusitis are not specific, and the younger the age is, the less typical the symptoms are. Most of them have recurrent epigastric or periumbilical pain. Some of them are not fixed. They often appear in the process of eating or after meals. The mild ones are intermittent dull pain or dull pain, and the severe ones are severe colic, often accompanied by vomiting.

Other symptoms include upper abdominal fullness, nausea, anorexia with acid reflux, heating, etc. hematemesis and melena are rare. Often because of cold food, hard food, spicy or other irritating food cause symptoms or make symptoms worse. Bleeding is also one of its symptoms, especially with erosion, can be repeated small amount of bleeding, can also be massive bleeding.

In the treatment of gastric sinusitis, we should first remove the etiology, actively treat the primary disease, stop the food and drugs that stimulate the gastric mucosa, stay in bed, eat a light liquid or semi liquid diet, and temporarily fast for those with severe abdominal pain and vomiting; If there is dehydration, the disorder of water and electrolyte should be corrected. If there is severe bleeding, it should be treated as upper gastrointestinal bleeding. After that, drug therapy should be used, including mucosal protective agents, H2 receptor blockers or proton pump inhibitors for patients with severe bleeding, hemostatic agents for patients with bleeding, and blood transfusion for patients with hemorrhagic anemia to prevent and treat shock; Patients with bacterial infection should be treated with antibiotics. Patients with severe abdominal pain should be given analgesia and sedation. Patients with severe vomiting should be given infusion to stop vomiting.

matters needing attention

In the future, we should pay attention to observe whether children have similar abnormal symptoms. Once found, we should go to the hospital at the first time to take measures for treatment.