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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypoxaemia is a common complication of acute lower respiratory tract infections in children. In most developing countries, where the majority of deaths from
pneumonia
occur, facilities for early detection of hypoxaemia are lacking and oxygen is in short supply. This review examines the usefulness of different clinical signs and symptoms in the prediction of hypoxaemia associated with acute respiratory infections in children. Several respiratory signs were found to be associated with hypoxaemia. These include very fast breathing (with a respiratory rate of more than 60 or 70 breaths per minute),
cyanosis
, grunting, nasal flaring, chest retractions, head nodding and auscultatory signs, as well as signs of general depression of the child, such as inability to feed or lethargy. The sensitivity and specificity of these signs, as described in the reviewed studies, is presented, and combination rules are discussed. Through appropriate combination of several physical signs, which can be used by peripheral health workers and be taught to mothers, it is possible to predict hypoxaemia in children with acute respiratory tract infections with reasonable accuracy.
...
PMID:Clinical signs of hypoxaemia in children with acute lower respiratory infection: indicators of oxygen therapy. 1140 75
In this prospective study 37 children (ranging 2 months-15 years) with acute
pneumonia
were evaluated by Doppler echocardiography for the presence of pulmonary hypertension (PH). The goal of this study was to determine the frequency of PH in children with acute
pneumonia
because the diagnosis of PH influenced the treatment of
pneumonia
in these patients. The patients who had more than 35 mmHg of systolic pulmonary arterial pressure were considered to have PH. In our study PH was found in 15 (40.5%) of 37 patients. We did not find any significant difference for the parameters including the age, weight, height, clinical symptoms and signs (fever, cough, dyspnea, tachycardia and tachypnea etc.), and laboratory findings such as hemoglobin, PCO2, HCO3 and PO2 between the patients with and without PH (p>0.05). However, there was a significant difference in
cyanosis
, cardiac failure, blood pH level and O2 saturation measured by pulse oximetry between the patients with and without PH (p<0.05).
...
PMID:Doppler echocardiographic evaluation of pulmonary artery pressure in children with acute pneumonia. 1189 Feb 20
Pneumonia
is the leading cause of mortality and a common cause of morbidity in children below five years of age. Commonly,
pneumonia
is caused by bacterial agents. The diagnosis of
pneumonia
is usually made on clinical features. A child with tachypnea with no chest in-drawing or difficulty in feeding is labeled as
pneumonia
. Presence of chest in-drawing, difficulty in speech, feeding or
cyanosis
classifies a child as suffering from severe or very severe
pneumonia
. Factors that may help in selection of appropriate antibiotics include: knowledge of etiological agents, sensitivity of pathogens to antibiotics, severity of the disease, immune status, nutritional status, previous antimicrobial usages, history of hospitalization, duration of illness, associated complications and cost and safety of antibiotics. For selection of antibiotics
pneumonia
can be classified in two major categories (a) community acquired, without risk factors, and (b)
pneumonia
with risk factors. Both these can be further classified as non severe and severe illness. A community acquired pneumonia in a child between 2 months -60 months without risk factors for resistant or atypical organism may be treated with amoxicillin. The alternative to amoxicillin includes oral cephalosporins and cotrimoxazole. In
pneumonia
with presence of risk factors the antibiotics are decided on basis of individual patients characteristics. A child with non-severe
pneumonia
should be treated with oral cefuroxime or amoxicillin clavulinic acid for a period of 7-14 days.
...
PMID:Pneumonia. 1198 Apr 55
Health workers should assess all children with a cough or difficult breathing for
pneumonia
. They should refer any child with severe
pneumonia
to a hospital for admission. At the hospital, a distinction is usually made between severe or very severe
pneumonia
among children 2 months to 5 years old. Signs or symptoms unique to very severe
pneumonia
are
cyanosis
and inability to drink. If a child has these signs and has convulsions, hospital personnel should consider a lumbar puncture to check for meningitis. Chest indrawing may also be present in very severe
pneumonia
cases. Chest indrawing in children with no
cyanosis
who are able to drink constitutes severe
pneumonia
. Health workers need to look for a variety of nonspecific signs of severe or very severe
pneumonia
in babies younger than 2 months: not feeding well, convulsions, abnormally sleepy, fever (38 degrees Celsius), fast breathing (=or+ 60 breast/minute),
cyanosis
, grunting, or apnea. These signs are also signs for meningitis or sepsis in young infants. Treatment for all 3 conditions is benzylpenicillin plus gentamicin for at least 14 days. Oxygen treatment is also indicated for these young infants. Treatment for both severe and very severe
pneumonia
cases includes oxygen and an antibiotic (benzylpenicillin and chloramphenicol, respectively). Hospitals should have in stock at all times essential antibiotics (benzylpenicillin, cloxacillin, chloramphenicol, and gentamicin) and an oxygen supply (oxygen cylinder or oxygen concentrator). When the oxygen supply is limited, children with very severe
pneumonia
should be the priority. Oxygen needs to be delivered at a flow rate of 1-2 liters/minute via nasal prongs or a nasal catheter. Admitted
pneumonia
cases with fever (39 degrees Celsius) should receive paracetamol to treat the fever. Hospital workers need to keep the airway of
pneumonia
cases clear and to encourage them to drink and/or breast feed.
...
PMID:Managing pneumonia. 1229 68
Aspiration of meconium causes considerable perinatal morbidity and mortality. Meconium-stained amniotic fluid (MSAF) is present in 7-22% of all deliveries. Gastrointestinal secretions, bile, bile acids, mucus, pancreatic juice, cellular debris, amniotic fluid, swallowed vernix caseosa, lanuge, and blood comprise meconium. Passage of meconium occurs most often in deliveries after 42 weeks gestation (30%) because of high levels of the hormone motilin. This hormone is responsible for bowel peristalsis, defecation, and maturation of the innervation of the intestinal tract associated with vagal stimulation. It tends to be a marker of pre/intrapartum asphyxia. MSAF is also a sign of fetal hypoxia or acidosis. It appears that meconium aspiration is predominantly an intrauterine event. The definition of meconium aspiration syndrome (MAS) is respiratory distress in a meconium-stained newborn, compatible radiographic findings (e.g., coarse, irregular pattern of increased density throughout the lung), and symptoms that can not otherwise be explained. MAS occurs in 1-4% of infants with MSAF and up to 10% of those with thick meconium. Mortality ranges from 6% to 40%. Initially, meconium particles mechanically obstruct the small airways. Later, chemical
pneumonitis
and interstitial edema are responsible for small airway obstruction. As many as 66% of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn cases are associated with MAS. Clinical signs and symptoms of MAS include frothy, yellow-green secretions from the mouth; very rapid breathing; intercostal retractions;
cyanosis
; overinflated chest due to air trapping; rales; and rattling in the throat. Transcervical amnio-infusion of warmed normal saline may be an obstetric intervention in cases of MSAF. Intrapartum oropharyngeal suctioning and postpartum intratracheal suctioning has reduced the incidence of MAS. Routine care of MAS infants includes monitoring and correcting of the thermal environment and blood glucose and calcium levels. Chest physiotherapy, saline lavage, management of hypoxemia, surfactant therapy, and systemic steroid treatment are MAS therapies.
...
PMID:Meconium aspiration syndrome: current concepts. 1232 Mar 76
In a health facility-based study to determine the knowledge of mothers regarding recognition of
pneumonia
in their pre-school children, 400 women were interviewed using a pre-tested structured questionnaire. Sixty-one per cent of them would recognise
pneumonia
by difficult breathing, 42% by fast breathing and 26.5% by severe cough. Few of the mothers mentioned signs suggestive of 'chest indrawing' (8.5%) and 'central
cyanosis
' (1%). The maternal knowledge score on
pneumonia
signs increased significantly with educational status and social class (p < 0.05). While a substantial number of mothers (51%) perceived fast breathing to be an indication of severe
pneumonia
, a sizeable number (87.5%) were unsure if late signs such as chest indrawing and central
cyanosis
suggested severe disease. On the basis of the WHO criteria, it is concluded that maternal recognition of
pneumonia
in children is at best modest while knowledge of signs indicating severe disease is poor. These findings underscore the need to modify the WHO criteria to include difficult breathing and to highlight during local ARI health education campaigns that late signs such as chest indrawing and central
cyanosis
indicate severe and potentially fatal
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Maternal perception of pneumonia in children: a health facility survey in Enugu, eastern Nigeria. 1236 95
Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR) is a rare congenital pathology. Early diagnosis and urgent surgery are life-saving, especially in newborns with pulmonary venous obstruction, which is most commonly seen with infracardiac type. A three-day-old baby boy presented to another clinic with tachypnea and
cyanosis
. Initial work-up aimed at ruling out persistant pulmonary hypertension, respiratory distress syndrome and
pneumonia
. Acute pulmonary edema then developed, and on echocardiography obstructive type infracardiac TAPVR was suspected. Cardiac catheterization was done for definitive diagnosis. Urgent surgery was undertaken and pulmonary veins were anastomozed to left atrium with posterior approach. Patient was extubated at 10th day and discharged after three weeks. During one-year follow-up the patient was free of symptoms. Infracardiac type TAPVR is a rare pathology in which early diagnosis and urgent surgery with special postoperative case are mandatory for survival.
...
PMID:Acute pulmonary edema in a newborn with infracardiac type total anomalous pulmonary venous return and surgical repair. 1521 52
Limitation of a bioterrorist anthrax attack will require rapid and accurate recognition of the earliest victims. To identify clinical characteristics of inhalational anthrax, we compared 47 historical cases (including 11 cases of bioterrorism-related anthrax) with 376 controls with community-acquired
pneumonia
or influenza-like illness. Nausea, vomiting, pallor or
cyanosis
, diaphoresis, altered mental status, and raised haematocrit were more frequently recorded in the inhalational anthrax cases than in either the community-acquired
pneumonia
or influenza-like illness controls. The most accurate predictor of anthrax was mediastinal widening or pleural effusion on a chest radiograph. This finding was 100% sensitive (95% CI 84.6-100.0) for inhalational anthrax, 71.8% specific (64.8-78.1) compared with community-acquired
pneumonia
, and 95.6% specific (90.0-98.5) compared with influenza-like illness. Our findings represent preliminary efforts toward identifying clinical predictors of inhalational anthrax.
...
PMID:Clinical predictors of bioterrorism-related inhalational anthrax. 1565
The clinical presentations of laboratory-confirmed Bordetella pertussis infection in Chang Gung Children's Hospital during 1997 and 2001 were analyzed. Of the 46 cases, 25 (54.3%) were male. The patients ages ranged from 24 days to 37 years, with a mean and median of 4.3 years and 10.5 years, respectively. Forty four patients had vaccination records, among them 23 patients (52.2%) had received > or = 3 doses of pertussis vaccine. Of the patients who were partially vaccinated (received 1 or 2 doses vaccine) or unvaccinated, 16 (69.6%) presented with whooping cough, 5 (22.2%) with post-tussive vomiting, and 13 (59.1%) with
cyanosis
. Leukocytosis (white blood cells > or = 15,000 cells/microL) and lymphocytosis (lymphocytes > or = 10,000 cells/microL) were observed in 17 (47.2%) and 16 (44.4%) of the patients, respectively. Fourteen patients (30.4%) developed complications, among which
pneumonia
was the most common (92.3%). Among infants < or = 1 year of age, 95.2% were partially vaccinated (20/21), compared with 5% (1/20) of the patients > 1 year of age (p<0.05). The overall complication rate was 37.5%, compared with 18.2% for patients > 1 year of age (p<0.05). One 2-month-old patient required ventilatory support after the development of cardiopulmonary failure. There was no mortality in this study. In summary, pertussis most commonly occurred in infants who were unvaccinated or partially vaccinated. These patients usually presented with atypical symptoms such as
cyanosis
or apnea. The importance of vaccination still cannot be overemphasized because immunized patients usually present with milder disease than those who are not immunized.
...
PMID:Bordetella pertussis infection in northern Taiwan, 1997-2001. 1549 10
Accidental ingestion and aspiration of hydrocarbons in children are common. Among the various clinical and pathological manifestations of hydrocarbon (HC) poisoning,
pneumonitis
is the most significant and occurs in up to 40% of children, whereas formation of pneumatoceles is believed to be a rare event. We report two children with HC
pneumonitis
and pneumatoceles as a reversible complication after ingestion and aspiration of lamp oil with very low viscosity. Patient 1, a 21-month-old boy, started to cough and developed tachypnea, sternal retractions and mild
cyanosis
immediately after aspiration. Patient 2, a 24-month-old girl, was asymptomatic during the first days after the accident; subsequently, she started to cough and developed fever, dyspnea and chest pain. Chest x-ray and computed tomography revealed multiple patchy infiltrates in both cases; after several days, these confluent infiltrates developed into pneumatoceles. Both children were treated with antibiotics and steroids. They recovered within three and four weeks, respectively, with complete remission of the radiologic abnormalities and had an uneventful follow-up after discharge.
...
PMID:Pneumonitis and pneumatoceles following accidental hydrocarbon aspiration in children. 1584 96
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