Division of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2013 Mar;56(3):290-6. doi: 10.1097/MPG.0b013e3182769796.
Consultations for chronic abdominal pain are frequent in adults and children. A seasonal pattern of abdominal pain consultations with winter predominance was shown in previous pediatric studies; however, no studies have investigated whether such a pattern exists in adult patients. Understanding the differences in seasonal patterns of abdominal pain consultations among adults and children may indicate that either different mechanisms exist for common chronic pain conditions or triggering factors may vary by age. The aim of the study was to investigate whether a seasonal variation in abdominal pain consultation patterns exists among adults and children.
The number of outpatient consultations among children (5-17 years) and adults (18 years or older) with a diagnosis of abdominal pain of nonspecified origin (International Classification of Diseases-9 code 789.0) from May 2000 to December 2008 was identified in an administrative claims database. The primary outcome measure was the rate of abdominal pain consultations (total number of abdominal pain consultations/total number of distinct patients by month×1000) by season in children and adults. Seasons were defined as follows: winter (December-February), spring (March-May), summer (June-August), and fall (September-November). A trend test was conducted to determine the degree of linearity in the patterns between the 2 groups. Among children, subanalyses by age 5 to 11 years and 12 to 17 years and sex were conducted.
A total of 172.4 million distinct patients (13.4% children, 87.6% adults) were identified in the database between May 2000 and December 2008. During the same time period, 15.6 million patient consultations for abdominal pain were identified (10.1% children, 89.9% adults). Children demonstrated a seasonal pattern in abdominal pain consultations, which best fit a quadratic regression curve, with consultations less common during the summer months. Abdominal pain consultations in adults were linear with no seasonal predominance. The trend in seasonal variation of abdominal pain consultations among children stratified by age and sex remained consistent with the overall child population.
Abdominal pain consultations in children are less common during summer months, whereas no evidence of seasonal pattern of consultation was found in adults. Factors involved in the pathogenesis of abdominal pain in adults and children may differ.
慢性腹痛在成人和儿童中都很常见。先前的儿科研究表明,腹痛就诊有季节性模式,冬季居多;然而,尚无研究调查这种模式是否存在于成年患者中。了解成人和儿童腹痛就诊的季节性模式差异,可能表明常见慢性疼痛疾病的发病机制不同,或者触发因素可能因年龄而异。本研究旨在调查成人和儿童腹痛就诊是否存在季节性变化。
在一个行政索赔数据库中,我们确定了 2000 年 5 月至 2008 年 12 月期间,诊断为非特定来源腹痛(国际疾病分类第 9 版代码 789.0)的儿童(5-17 岁)和成人(18 岁或以上)的门诊就诊次数。主要观察指标是儿童和成人各季节腹痛就诊率(腹痛就诊总次数/各月就诊的不同患者总数×1000)。季节定义如下:冬季(12 月至 2 月)、春季(3 月至 5 月)、夏季(6 月至 8 月)和秋季(9 月至 11 月)。进行趋势检验以确定两组之间模式的线性程度。在儿童中,还进行了年龄为 5 至 11 岁和 12 至 17 岁以及性别亚组分析。
在 2000 年 5 月至 2008 年 12 月期间,数据库中确定了 1.724 亿个不同患者(13.4%为儿童,87.6%为成人)。同期,确定了 1560 万例腹痛就诊患者(10.1%为儿童,89.9%为成人)。儿童腹痛就诊存在季节性模式,最符合二次回归曲线,夏季就诊较少。成人腹痛就诊呈线性,无季节性优势。按年龄和性别分层的儿童腹痛就诊季节性变化趋势与整体儿童人群一致。
儿童夏季腹痛就诊较少,而成年患者则无季节性就诊模式。成人和儿童腹痛发病机制中可能存在不同的因素。