Marom Tal, Alvarez-Fernandez Pedro E, Jennings Kristofer, Patel Janak A, McCormick David P, Chonmaitree Tasnee
From the *Department of Pediatrics; †Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health; and ‡Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2014 Aug;33(8):803-8. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000000278.
Acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS) is a common complication of viral upper respiratory tract infections (URI). Clinical characteristics of URIs complicated by ABS in young children have not been well studied.
We identified ABS episodes in a prospective, longitudinal cohort study of 294 children (6-35 months of age at enrollment), who were followed up for 1 year to capture all URI episodes and complications. At the initial URI visit seen by the study personnel (median day = 4 from symptoms onset), nasopharyngeal samples were obtained for bacterial cultures and viral studies.
Of 1295 documented URI episodes, 103 (8%) episodes (in 73 children) were complicated by ABS, 32 of which were concurrent with acute otitis media. The majority (72%) of ABS episodes were diagnosed based on persistent symptoms or a biphasic course. Average age at ABS diagnosis was 18.8 ± 7.2 months; White children were more likely to have ABS episodes than Blacks (P = 0.01). Hispanic/Latino ethnicity (P < 0.0001) was negatively associated, and adequate 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine immunization status (P = 0.001) appeared to increase the risk of ABS. Girls had more ABS episodes than boys (0.5 ± 0.8 vs. 0.3 ± 0.6 episodes/yr, respectively, P = 0.03). Viruses were detected in 63% during the initial URI visit; rhinovirus detection was positively correlated with ABS risk (P = 0.01). Bacterial cultures were positive in 82/83 (99%) available samples obtained at the initial URI visit; polymicrobial (56%), Moraxella catarrhalis (20%) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (10%) were the most common cultures. Presence of pathogenic bacteria overall and presence of M. catarrhalis during URI were positively correlated with the risk for ABS (P = 0.04 for both).
ABS complicates 8% of URI in young children. Girls have more frequent ABS episodes than boys. Presence of rhinovirus and M. catarrhalis during URI are positively correlated with the risk for ABS complication.
急性细菌性鼻窦炎(ABS)是病毒性上呼吸道感染(URI)的常见并发症。幼儿URI并发ABS的临床特征尚未得到充分研究。
在一项对294名儿童(入组时年龄为6 - 35个月)进行的前瞻性纵向队列研究中,我们确定了ABS发作情况,对这些儿童进行了1年的随访,以记录所有URI发作及并发症。在研究人员初次见到URI患儿时(症状出现后中位数第4天),采集鼻咽样本进行细菌培养和病毒研究。
在1295次记录的URI发作中,103次发作(73名儿童)并发ABS,其中32次与急性中耳炎同时发生。大多数(72%)ABS发作是基于持续症状或双相病程诊断的。ABS诊断时的平均年龄为18.8±7.2个月;白人儿童比黑人儿童更易发生ABS发作(P = 0.01)。西班牙裔/拉丁裔种族(P < 0.0001)与ABS呈负相关,而7价肺炎球菌结合疫苗充足免疫状态(P = 0.001)似乎增加了ABS风险。女孩的ABS发作次数多于男孩(分别为0.5±0.8次/年和0.3±0.6次/年,P = 0.03)。在初次URI就诊时,63%检测到病毒;鼻病毒检测与ABS风险呈正相关(P = 0.01)。在初次URI就诊时采集的83份可用样本中,82份(99%)细菌培养呈阳性;最常见的培养菌为混合菌(56%)、卡他莫拉菌(20%)和肺炎链球菌(10%)。总体病原菌的存在以及URI期间卡他莫拉菌的存在与ABS风险呈正相关(两者P均 = 0.04)。
ABS使8%的幼儿URI复杂化。女孩的ABS发作比男孩更频繁。URI期间鼻病毒和卡他莫拉菌的存在与ABS并发症风险呈正相关。