Author: Wishaupt, JO; van den Berg, EAN; van Wijk, T; van der Ploeg, T; Versteegh, FGA; Hartwig, NG
Title: Paediatric apnoeas are not related to a specific respiratory virus, and parental reports predict hospitalisation Cord-id: q2lp4zsm Document date: 2016_3_17
ID: q2lp4zsm
Snippet: AIM: The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of apnoeas in previously healthy young infants with acute respiratory tract infection (ARI) and correlate their occurrence with isolated microâ€organisms, clinical findings, disease severity and outcome. METHODS: We performed reverse transcriptase realâ€time polymerase chain reaction (RTâ€PCR) on the nasal wash specimens of a prospective cohort study of 582 children with ARI. Clinical data on a subgroup of 241 infants under three month
Document: AIM: The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of apnoeas in previously healthy young infants with acute respiratory tract infection (ARI) and correlate their occurrence with isolated microâ€organisms, clinical findings, disease severity and outcome. METHODS: We performed reverse transcriptase realâ€time polymerase chain reaction (RTâ€PCR) on the nasal wash specimens of a prospective cohort study of 582 children with ARI. Clinical data on a subgroup of 241 infants under three months of age, with and without apnoeas, were compared. RESULTS: Our study found that 19 (7.9%) of the 241 infants under three months old had a history of apnoeas: eight had a respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), five had a different virus than RSV and seven RTâ€PCR results were negative. Infants with apnoeas were more likely to have cyanosis, had longer hospital stays and required extra oxygen for a longer period. Most patients with parental reported apnoeas also experienced apnoeas during hospitalisation. CONCLUSION: This study observed apnoeas irrespective of the isolated microâ€organism, and we hypothesise that they were related to the pathophysiology of the respiratory infection and not to the microâ€organism itself. Parental reported apnoeas were a major warning sign and predicted that apnoeas would occur in hospital.
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