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Elina Vuori, Heikki Peltola, Markku J. T. Kallio, Maija Leinonen, Klaus Hedman, SE-TU Study Group, Etiology of Pneumonia and Other Common Childhood Infections Requiring Hospitalization and Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy, Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 27, Issue 3, September 1998, Pages 566–572, https://doi.org/10.1086/514697
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Abstract
The etiology of acute lower respiratory tract infections (mostly pneumonia) in children is well characterized, but these are only some of the community-acquired infections warranting parenteral antimicrobial therapy. We prospectively evaluated all such infections among children aged 3 months to 15 years by use of blood cultures, examination of nasopharyngeal aspirates, and serologies for 15 viral, 7 bacterial, and 1 protozoal agent. Immunocompromised patients and those with urinary tract infection, meningitis, or osteoarticular infections were excluded. In all, 170 children were included. The pathogenic agent was identified in 62% of the cases. Bacteria were detected in 54%, and a pneumococcus was found in 59% of the cases identified. Viruses were found in 15% overall. Sole bacterial or viral infections were detected in 47.1% and 8.1%, respectively. Since thorough screening established the etiology in less than two-thirds of patients ill enough to be hospitalized and treated parenterally, better diagnostics are needed, especially to identify those who would truly benefit from antimicrobial therapy.
Author notes
SE-TU Study Group members are listed at end of text.
- meningitis
- urinary tract infections
- child
- community-acquired infections
- immunocompromised host
- pneumonia
- serologic tests
- streptococcus pneumoniae
- virus diseases
- infections
- bacteria
- diagnosis
- nasopharynx
- viruses
- respiratory tract infection, lower, acute
- antimicrobials
- blood culture
- causality
- pediatric infectious diseases
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