Etiology and Complications of Central Nervous System Infections in Children Treated in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Poland

被引:4
作者
Kuchar, Ernest [1 ]
Nitsch-Osuch, Aneta [2 ]
Rorat, Marta [1 ]
Namani, Sadia [3 ]
Pabianek, Dorota [4 ]
Topczewska-Cabanek, Agnieszka [2 ]
Zycinska, Katarzyna [2 ]
Wardyn, Kazimierz [2 ]
Szenborn, Leszek [1 ]
机构
[1] Wroclaw Med Univ, Dept Pediat Infect Dis, PL-50345 Wroclaw, Poland
[2] Med Univ Warsaw, Dept Family Med, Warsaw, Poland
[3] Univ Clin Ctr Kosovo, Clin Infect Dis, Kosovo, Serbia
[4] Acad Humanities & Econ, Lodz, Poland
关键词
sequelae; meningitis; seizures; infection; prophylaxis; encephalitis; BACTERIAL-MENINGITIS; SEQUELAE; CHILDHOOD; SEIZURES; ENCEPHALITIS; MANAGEMENT; DIAGNOSIS; OUTCOMES; KOSOVO;
D O I
10.1177/0883073813477689
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Central nervous system infections are significant causes of mortality and long-term neurologic complications in children. Survivors often require an extended period of rehabilitation. The authors carried out a retrospective analysis of 1158 children (aged 1 month to 16 years; 31 boys) treated in one pediatric intensive care unit in Warsaw between 2002 and 2010. Forty-three of 1158 (3.7%) children presented with neuroinfections. Nearly two-thirds of the children were younger than age 5 years. The majority of cases (62.8%) were vaccine-preventable bacterial infections. The most frequent complications were brain edema (30.2%), brain hemorrhage (27.9%), and secondary nosocomial pneumonia (25.6%). One-fifth of children developed late, long-term neurologic complications. The mortality rate was 20.9%. The study showed that central nervous system infections are significant causes of hospitalization in the pediatric intensive care unit and often result in death or long-term complications. These infections mainly affect children younger than age 5 years. The majority could be prevented with immunizations.
引用
收藏
页码:483 / 486
页数:4
相关论文
共 24 条
[1]   Acute Bacterial Meningitis in Infants and Children Epidemiology and Management [J].
Agrawal, Shruti ;
Nadel, Simon .
PEDIATRIC DRUGS, 2011, 13 (06) :385-400
[2]   THE RISK OF UNPROVOKED SEIZURES AFTER ENCEPHALITIS AND MENINGITIS [J].
ANNEGERS, JF ;
HAUSER, WA ;
BEGHI, E ;
NICOLOSI, A ;
KURLAND, LT .
NEUROLOGY, 1988, 38 (09) :1407-1410
[3]  
[Anonymous], WORLD EC OUTL DAT OC
[4]   OUTCOMES OF BACTERIAL-MENINGITIS IN CHILDREN - A METAANALYSIS [J].
BARAFF, LJ ;
LEE, SI ;
SCHRIGER, DL .
PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 1993, 12 (05) :389-394
[5]  
Central Statistical Office, POV POL 2011
[6]  
Central Statistical Office, NAT CENS POP HOUS 20
[7]   Long-term Sequelae of Childhood Bacterial Meningitis An Underappreciated Problem [J].
Chandran, Aruna ;
Herbert, Hadley ;
Misurski, Derek ;
Santosham, Mathuram .
PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 2011, 30 (01) :3-6
[8]   Clinical characteristics and prognostic factors of postencephalitic epilepsy in children [J].
Chen, Yung-Jung ;
Fang, Peng-Cheng ;
Chow, Julie Chin .
JOURNAL OF CHILD NEUROLOGY, 2006, 21 (12) :1047-1051
[9]   Predicting sequelae and death after bacterial meningitis in childhood: A systematic review of prognostic studies [J].
de Jonge, Rogier C. J. ;
van Furth, A. Marceline ;
Wassenaar, Merel ;
Gemke, Reinoud J. B. J. ;
Terwee, Caroline B. .
BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2010, 10
[10]   DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF MENINGITIS [J].
FEIGIN, RD ;
MCCRACKEN, GH ;
KLEIN, JO .
PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 1992, 11 (09) :785-814