Clinico- bacteriological profile of Community Acquired Pneumonia (CAP) in children aged 3-59 months: A cross sectional study

Background: Worldwide community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the major cause of high mortality among under five children in India. After introduction of Pneumococcal and H. influenzae vaccination there is paucity of data regarding etiological profile of pneumonia. Aims and Objective: To evaluate the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Asian Journal of Medical Sciences 2021-05, Vol.12 (5), p.53-57
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Manoj Kumar, Singh, Sheo Pratap, Kumar, Rajesh, Kumar, Pankaj, Suhail, Jafar, Dayal, Rajeshwar, Nayak, Madhu, Agarwal, Arti
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Worldwide community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the major cause of high mortality among under five children in India. After introduction of Pneumococcal and H. influenzae vaccination there is paucity of data regarding etiological profile of pneumonia. Aims and Objective: To evaluate the Clinico- epidemiological profile and etiology of community acquired pneumonia in children. Materials and Methods: We enrolled children aged 3-59 months with CAP (based on WHO criteria of tachypnea with cough or breathing difficulty) over 18 months and recorded presenting symptoms, clinical signs and chest radiography. We performed blood and nasopharyngeal swab (NPS) bacterial culture simultaneously to detect etiological agent of community acquired pneumonia in children. Results: Out of 150 cases of CAP, 90 % of caeses had cough and fever and nearly 80-90% cases had tachypnea and crackles on examination. Radiological findings suggestive of pneumonia was seen in 86% cases . Most common organism isolated was S aureus in both NPS culture (18.7 %) and blood culture (14.7 %). Other common organisms detected in NPS culture were S pneumoniae (6%), E Coli (4.7%), Klebsiella (4.7%), CONS (3.3%), and Pseudomonas (2.7%). In blood culture the common organism detected after S aureus was E coli (5.3%), S pneumoniae (3.3%), Klebsiella (3.3%), CONS( 3.8%), and Pseudomonas (2.5%). Conclusions: We observed that S aureus was the predominant etiological organism isolated in both blood and nasopharyngeal swab bacterial culture in patients suffering from community-acquired pneumonia.
ISSN:2467-9100
2091-0576
DOI:10.3126/ajms.v12i5.34173