Distinguishing clinical features for pseudocellulitis in pediatric inpatients: A retrospective study.
The clinical features of 588 pediatric inpatients admitted with a diagnosis of cellulitis were reviewed with attention to diagnostic accuracy of true cellulitis (95.1%) versus pseudocellulitis (4.9%) and utilization of specialist consultations (28.1% infectious disease, 6.1% dermatology). Laboratory abnormalities were unable to distinguish cellulitis from pseudocellulitis, supporting previous studies that routine laboratory evaluation may be unnecessary for this diagnosis. Higher rates of pseudocellulitis were identified in cases involving specialist consultation by both dermatology (44.8% pseudocellulitis, 4.1% true cellulitis, p < .001) and infectious disease (48.3% pseudocellulitis, 27.0% true cellulitis, p = .01). Thus, consultation may improve the diagnostic accuracy of suspected cellulitis among pediatric inpatients.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Retrospective Studies
- Referral and Consultation
- Inpatients
- Humans
- Hospitalization
- Dermatology & Venereal Diseases
- Child
- Cellulitis
- 3213 Paediatrics
- 3202 Clinical sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Retrospective Studies
- Referral and Consultation
- Inpatients
- Humans
- Hospitalization
- Dermatology & Venereal Diseases
- Child
- Cellulitis
- 3213 Paediatrics
- 3202 Clinical sciences