Korean J Pediatr.  2004 Jun;47(6):628-633.

Etiologic Diagnosis and Clinical Characteristics of Chronic Recurrent Chest Pain in Children

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Wonkwang University School of Medicine, Iksan, Korea. yhs0520@wonkwang.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
To identify the causes and clinical characteristics, and the efficacy of various diagnostic approaches, we studied, prospectively, pediatric patients with chronic recurrent chest pain.
METHODS
A prospective study of 122 patients with chronic recurrent chest pain from June 1998 to June 2003 was performed. The male and female ratio was 81:41, age 9.3+/-3.1 year. A single chart including pain description(histoy) and pain questionaire, with associated symptoms, was used for systematic history taking. The patients were devided in two groups, Group A, before June 2001(n=70), Group B, after June 2001(n=52). Chest X-ray and ECG were checked in all patients. Allergy tests and echocardiography, 24 hour ECG monitoring, exercise tests, pulmonary function tests, and gastrointestinal fiberendoscopy were performed selectively.
RESULTS
Idiopathic origins were most common(32%). The remaining causes were psychogenic(23%) and exercise-induced asthma(20.5%), hyperventilation syndrome(9.1%), tachyarrhythmia(4.9%), cardiac (4.1%), pulmonary(3.3%), reflux esophagitis(2.5%), in order. The positive rate of allergy tests(24%) was higher than that of cardiac examinations(11-20%). Exercise-induced asthma was more common than psychogenic causes after June, 2001. Various abdominal symptoms accompanied idiopathic and psychogenic chest pains, and hyperventilation syndrome. Headaches were more commonly found in psychogenic pain, but chest tightness and dyspnea were common in hyperventilation syndrome. About half of exercise-induced asthma patients had symptoms of allergic rhinitis.
CONCLUSION
In the majority(72%) of exercise-induced asthma, the chest pain was induced or aggravated by exercise, and relieved by rest. Causative antigens were detected in 69.2% of group B patients with exercise-induced asthma. Exercise-induced chest pain might be a first manifestation in allergy patients. So, we recommand allergy tests for patients with recurrent chest pains induced or aggravated by exercise. Hence, cardiac examinations such as echocardiography or 24 hour ECG monitoring could be performed selectively, case by case.

Keyword

Recurrent chest pain; Exercise-induced asthma

MeSH Terms

Asthma, Exercise-Induced
Chest Pain*
Child*
Diagnosis*
Dyspnea
Echocardiography
Electrocardiography
Exercise Test
Female
Headache
Humans
Hypersensitivity
Hyperventilation
Male
Prospective Studies
Respiratory Function Tests
Rhinitis
Thorax*
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