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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 1989, pediatricians followed 256 children 7 days to 36 months old with symptoms of respiratory infection at Kenyatta National Hospital (1670 m altitude) in Nairobi, Kenya. The symptoms were serious enough to warrant hospital admission for 209 of these children. The most common clinical diagnoses were pneumonia (53%) and bronchiolitis (33%). 59% of the children admitted to the hospital were hypoxemic (arterial oxygen saturation or + to 90%). 10% of all admitted children died. 90.4% of them were hypoxemic with arterial oxygen saturations ranging from 40-88%. Children with hypoxemia were 4.3 times more apt to die within 5 days than those with no hypoxemia (p = .02). On the other hand, children with radiographic pneumonia had a relative risk of short-term mortality of only 1.03. Hypoxemia on admission predicted short-term mortality with 90% sensitivity and 34% specificity. It predicted pneumonia with 71% sensitivity and 55% specificity (p .0001). Children who lived for at least 5 days had arterial oxygen saturations ranging from 41-98. Even though all of the children with clinically evident cyanosis were less than a year old, 89% of the hypoxemic infants less than 1 year old did not exhibit cyanosis. Mothers' reports of blueness in newborns and infants less than 2 months was the best predictor of hypoxemia (62% accuracy; p .05). For children 3-11 months old, the best predictors of hypoxemia, with an accuracy of 70%, were a respiratory rate of at least 70/minute (odds ratio [OR] 2.6; p .001). For children at least 12 months old, the sole best predictor was a respiratory rate of at least 60/minute (70% accuracy; OR 5.1; p .01). This study should be followed by well-designed studies of the clinical effectiveness of proper treatment with oxygen in preventing mortality in hypoxemic infants and children.
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PMID:Hypoxaemia in young Kenyan children with acute lower respiratory infection. 851 90

In a total of 1,003 children (805 inpatients and 198 outpatients) with acute lower respiratory infections (ALRI), clinical, social, and environmental data were analyzed. The major clinical entities were bronchiolitis, pneumonia, bronchitis, and laryngitis. The first two of these predominated in inpatients; pneumonia and bronchitis were more common in older children, while bronchiolitis was observed in infants. Respiratory rates of > 50/min. were more common in younger children and in cases with bronchiolitis and bronchitis. Retractions showed markedly less age-dependent variations and were present in all severe cases with different clinical diagnoses. Retractions alone or associated with cyanosis were the best indicators for severity of ALRI. Among outpatients, fever and wheezing were more common; inpatients were younger, more frequently malnourished, and from a lower socioeconomic level; family history of chronic bronchitis, crowding, and parental smoking also prevailed in this group. Family asthma and exposure to domestic aerosols was more common among outpatients. Prematurity rate (17 and 15%) of all ALRI cases was twice that of the general pediatric population and a significant difference existed between in- and outpatients under 6 months of age when perinatal respiratory pathologies predominated among inpatients. It is suggested to consider the need for assessing personal, family, and environmental risk factors in addition to clinical signs and symptoms when severe cases of ALRI are evaluated.
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PMID:Acute lower respiratory infection in Argentinian children: a 40 month clinical and epidemiological study. 841 34

In this hospital-based prospective study, a total of 222 children presenting with cough and/or breathlessness were screened for presence of lower respiratory infection. All clinically-detected cases of LRI and every fifth case of URI were investigated. Pneumonia was defined as presence of abnormal shadows on chest roentgenograms, against which the clinical symptoms and signs were assessed for their utility in the diagnosis of pneumonia. Fast breathing was found to be the most useful sign predicting pneumonia in all age groups. Cut-off points at 50 breaths/min for infants including neonates, 40 breaths/min for children aged 12-35 months, and 30 breaths/min for children aged 36-60 months indicated presence of pneumonia. Crepitations on auscultation of chest was found to have good correlation with presence of radiological pneumonia. Other signs like chest indrawing and cyanosis were found to be highly specific signs in detecting pneumonia, but had low sensitivity.
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PMID:Fast breathing in the diagnosis of pneumonia--a reassessment. 881 29

Underlying diseases, complications, clinical findings, and laboratory findings were evaluated in 158 cases of septicaemia admitted to Jikei University Hospital from 1975 to 1994, in order to conjectured factors that prescribe for the prognosis. 50% of the patients had underlying diseases. Malignancy including leukaemia (31 cases, 39.2%) was the most common underlying disease, followed by low birth weight infant (17 cases, 21.5%), aplastic anemia (9 case, 11.4%), and congenital heart disease (7 cases, 8.9%). The death rate for patients with underlying disease (27.8%) was significantly greater than the mortality for normal patients with septicaemia (8.9%) (p < 0.05). Meningitis (24.7%) was the most common complication, followed by DIC (19.6%), shock (15.2%), and pneumonia (10.8%). The mortality rate of septicaemia complicated by shock was 66.7% (p < 0.01), and that complicated by DIC was 45.2% (p < 0.01). The mortality rate for patients with the clinical findings of respiratory distress, cough, abdominal distention, cyanosis, splenomegaly, or peripheral coldness was more than 40% and significantly greater (p < 0.01). Mortality rate in patients with granulocyte counts of < 4.000/mm3, platelet counts of < 5 x 10(4)/ mm3, total protein of < 5.0 g/dl, or ESR of < 20 mm/hr were significantly greater (p < 0.01) than those in patients with normal laboratory findings. Coincidence rate of blood and stool cultures was 57.9% for E. coli, and 28.6% for Klebsiella sp., and that of blood and throat cultures was more than 30% for Pseudomonas sp., Haemophilus influenzae, and Staphylococcus aureus. In the study of antimicrobial susceptibility for microorganisms isolated, the number of drug resistant S. aureus had increased in the last 10 years.
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PMID:[Study on septicaemia in infants and children in the past 20 years. Part 2. An analysis of factors that prescribe for the prognosis]. 889 May 45

A female infant presented with cyanosis, respiratory distress and unique to-and-fro murmur which she had since the age of 1-month-old. Absent pulmonary valve syndrome was diagnosed by echocardiography. She developed seizure disorders with hypocalcemia and pneumonia at the age of 2-month-old. The patient died from sepsis, intractable respiratory and heart failure. The postmortem study confirmed the diagnosis of congenital absent pulmonary valve associated with DiGeorge syndrome.
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PMID:Absent pulmonary valve syndrome associated with DiGeorge syndrome: report of one case. 894 31

A 1-year study of 529 Yemeni children under 5 years of age hospitalized for severe pneumonia was undertaken to define their clinical characteristics and to identify risk factors associated with death from pneumonia. There were 354 (66.9%) boys, 270 of the 529 (51%) were under 6 months of age and 457 (86.4%) were aged < or = 12 months. The clinical characteristics of the group were as follows. Boys constituted 70% of the group and under-1-year-olds 86%, weight-for-age was under 60% in 23%, clinical rickets was present in 50% and anaemia in 30% (30.1%). On admission, cyanosis was detected in 56%, heart failure in 21% and isolated hepatomegaly in 14%. Fifty-two children died (CFR 9.8%), of whom 25 (48%) were under 6 months of age and 20 (38.5%) were aged between 6 and 12 months. Only seven children aged over 1 year died from pneumonia. Weight-for-age less than 60%, rickets, haemoglobin < 10 g/dl, cyanosis and heart failure were associated with an increased risk of dying from severe pneumonia.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics and outcome of children aged under 5 years hospitalized with severe pneumonia in Yemen. 957 91

Between 1991 and 1995, 2554 children under 5 years old hospitalized with severe acute lower respiratory tract infection in Al-Sabe'en, Sana'a, Yemen were studied. 47.7 per cent (1218) were under 6 months of age and 74.1 per cent (1893) were in their first 12 months. Sixty-four per cent (1633) were males. Of the 2554 cases, 221 died (overall, a case fatality rate of 8.7 per cent). 118 of the deaths (53.4 per cent) were in the under 6 months age group and 188 (85 per cent) were in the first 12 months age group. During 1995 the hospital started adopting the WHO standard case-management guidelines for treating severe acute lower respiratory tract infections. There were no significant reductions in case fatality rates in 1995 (CFR 9.8 per cent) compared with those of 1991 (CFR 7.9 per cent), 1992 (CFR 9.4 per cent), 1993 (CFR 7 per cent), or 1994 (CFR 8.5 per cent). Factors such as late hospital admission with cyanosis, malnutrition, rickets as well as increased resistance of the common causative organisms (pneumococci and H. influenzae) to antibiotics recommended by the WHO may have contributed to such a high case fatality rate remaining unchanged. In addition to reducing the risk of developing pneumonia and dying from pneumonia by improving maternal nutrition, health education, promoting breastfeeding, and preventing rickets and nutritional anaemia among the vulnerable age groups, vaccination against pneumococci and H. influenzae type b should be seriously considered as one of the strategies to reduce lower respiratory tract infection-related mortality.
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PMID:Outcome for children under 5 years hospitalized with severe acute lower respiratory tract infections in Yemen: a 5 year experience. 997 77

A 77-year-old man hospitalized in a bedridden state for cerebral infarction and left hemiparesis experienced the sudden onset of dyspnea and cyanosis. Chest X-ray films detected a foreign object in the hilum of the left lung. Emergency bronchoscopy revealed a dental crown lodged in the second carina. It was not possible to remove the crown with bronchoscopy forceps. The patient suffered severe respiratory failure the following day. Bronchoscopy again was performed, and the foreign object was removed with basket-type forceps. It was the patient's first molar, covered with a crown. The patient's respiratory failure was caused by atelectasis of the left lower lobe and overinflation, of the right lung, both of which resulted from postoperative edema of bronchial mucous membrane. Dental foreign objects do not cause pulmonary atelectasis or pneumonia as easily as other types of bronchial foreign objects. Therefore, there is usually enough time for thorough examination prior to removal procedures. It is important to accurately identify the shape of the foreign object, choose appropriate forceps, and successfully remove the object in the first operation. Moreover, adequate dental treatment of caries and loose teeth is important as a means of preventing dental foreign objects, especially in elderly people and bedridden patients.
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PMID:[Severe respiratory distress caused by dental foreign object]. 1006 55

A prospective study of 75 cases of neonatal tetanus was carried out with a view to developing a prognostic scoring system which can be used to assess the severity of the disease and to serve as a basis for comparing results of different therapeutic interventions from various centres. The case fatality rate was 77.3%. A table was designed containing 6 parameters and a rating of 1 to 4 was given to each parameter in decreasing order of severity. The minimum total score attainable was 6 and the maximum 24 (the severity of the disease was inversely proportional to the score). The differences between the means of each of the parameters among patients who died and the survivors were significant (P < 0.005). Regression analysis showed that each of the parameters independently had a significant effect on the total score (P < 0.005). Using the percentage mortality at each score, a pattern emerged such that total scores of 6-11 indicated severe tetanus (mortality rate 100%); 12-17, moderate disease (mortality rate 68%), and total scores of > 17 indicated mild neonatal tetanus (mortality rate 18%). Associated poor prognostic factors identified included pneumonia, recurrent apnoea, cyanosis, and opisthotonus.
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PMID:A new prognostic scoring system in neonatal tetanus. 1045 53

The management of a critical airway in infants and toddlers with congenital tracheal stenosis (CTS) continues to be an enormous challenge to the surgeon. Until recently, this condition often proved fatal. Improvements in surgical techniques, anesthetic management, and postoperative critical care have resulted in successful outcomes in children not long ago considered untreatable. However, issues such as the best operative approach and the optimal perioperative management are still unresolved. The diagnosis of CTS, often delayed, must be considered in any infant with stridor, wheezing, cyanosis, or recurrent episodes of pneumonia. Associated anomalies are the rule, including frequently vascular rings and rarely pulmonary agenesis. These defects can be repaired with conventional ventilatory support under cardiopulmonary bypass, or using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). We report our experience in which ECMO was used to support two patients with CTS during the perioperative period. ECMO proved to be both safe and practical, allowing unrushed, precise repair of the tracheal stenosis and providing brief postoperative support. Perioperative outcomes were excellent, although one of our patients died months after the repair. A review of the literature and our experience in which ECMO was used to provide cardiopulmonary support during repair of CTS showed uniformly successful perioperative outcomes.
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PMID:Perioperative extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for tracheal reconstruction in congenital tracheal stenosis. 1066 50


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