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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Physicians analyzed December 1982-November 1989 data on 48 2-60 month old children with empyema thoracis at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital in southeastern Nigeria to determine the incidence and etiology of empyema thoracis in this region. The incidence rate stood at 2/1000 pediatric admissions. 3 children died (6.3%), all of heart failure. 47 children suffered from fever, cough, and breathlessness, the symptoms for pneumonia. Even though bronchopneumonia is a common complication of measles which occurs frequently in Calabar, only 3 children (6.25%) also had measles. The most frequent complication of this accumulation of pus in the thoracic cavity was congestive heart failure (16 cases). 47 patients suffered from anemia (hemoglobin levels 11 gm/dl). Hemoglobin levels of 54% of all patients decreased over time to 8 gm/dl. In fact, 2 children had hemoglobin levels of 4.4 gm/dl and they experienced cardiac failure. Laboratory personnel were only able to examine pleural aspirates from 37 patients. They did not detect any organisms in 27% of these aspirates. This may have been due to parent's widespread practice of giving medication to all the children before coming to the hospital. 45.9% of the aspirates only grew Staphylococcus aureus while another 8.1% grew it and other pathogens. About 90% of the pathogens were resistant to ampicillin and penicillin and almost 90% were sensitive to cloxacillin, gentamicin, and erythromycin. Cloxacillin was very expensive and parenteral erythromycin was unavailable. Nevertheless the pediatricians used parenteral gentamicin and cloxacillin. The parents were responsible for buying the antibiotics which tended to be costly. All the patients required emergency closed tube thoracostomy drainage within 24 hours of admission. 83.3% remained in the hospital for 2 weeks and 33.3% for 1 month. Despite the rarity of empyema, long hospitalization and expensive drugs make it an important disease in Calabar.
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PMID:Clinical and bacteriological study on childhood empyema in south eastern Nigeria. 150 92

Community acquired pneumonia is the leading killer of children under the age of 5 years. In ER, a diagnosis of pneumonia may be made and the severity graded on basis of WHO's classification for pneumonia in children up to 5 years of age. It relies on age-specific respiratory rate, presence of lower chest indrawing and signs of severe illness. A diagnosis of pneumonia is made if a febrile child has history of cough and difficult or rapid breathing and a respiratory rate above age specific threshold; however, signs of airway obstruction should be ruled out. Severe pneumonia is diagnosed if with the above features lower chest wall retraction is present; nonetheless, all infants below 2 months and children with moderate to severe malnutrition with pneumonia are categorized as having severe pneumonia. A chest radiograph is indicated only if the diagnosis is in doubt; complications are suspected and there is severe/very severe or recurrent pneumonia. Non-severe pneumonia is treated at home with oral amoxicillin for 3-5 days. If there is no improvement in 48 h it is changed to amoxicillin-clavulanate. Azithromycin is added for atypical pneumonia. Indications for hospitalization include age <2 months, treatment failure on oral antibiotics, severe/very severe or recurrent pneumonia, shock, hypoxemia, severe malnutrition, immunocompromised state. Severe pneumonia is treated with injectable ampicillin; Cloxacillin is added if clinical/radiographic features suggest Staphylococcal infection. On review after 48 h, if improved, the child may be sent home on oral amoxicillin for 5 more days; if not, it is treated as very severe pneumonia. Very severe pneumonia is treated with injectable Ampicillin plus gentamicin. If improved after 48 h, oral amoxicillin and gentamicin are continued for 10 days. If not, respiratory support is enhanced, antibiotics are changed to intravenous ceftriaxone and amikacin and further work up is planned. Children with chronic diseases and recurrent pneumonia require specific antibiotics depending on the underlying cause.
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PMID:Acute community acquired pneumonia in emergency room. 2154 48