Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center
Invasive salmonellosis is common in tropical areas. This study examines the performance of a clinical definition for its recognition among children ages 1 to 14 years admitting to a referral pediatric hospital in Tehran. 60 children were enrolled into the study during a period of 51 months. To facil...
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Tehran University of Medical Sciences
2001-07-01
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doaj-edd292f1503d47d29e3f813f9116d4392020-11-25T00:51:47ZfasTehran University of Medical SciencesTehran University Medical Journal1683-17641735-73222001-07-015921418Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical centerKhotaeei GhInvasive salmonellosis is common in tropical areas. This study examines the performance of a clinical definition for its recognition among children ages 1 to 14 years admitting to a referral pediatric hospital in Tehran. 60 children were enrolled into the study during a period of 51 months. To facilitate analysis, cases were divided into 5 categories according to the likelihood of invasive salmonellosis with category A representing microbiologically confirmed salmonella bacteremia 17 (28.3%) and 6 (10%) with positive bone marrow cultures. And category D representing those cases in which an alternative diagnosis was firmly established. Salmonella serology supported invasive salmonellosis as the diagnosis in 17 (28%) of the nonbacteremic children (category B and C). Salmonella serology suggested that invasive salmonellosis without detectable bacteremia was common. Blood culture proved and serologically diagnosed cases shows that the definition has a specificity of at least 60%.http://journals.tums.ac.ir/PdfMed.aspx?pdf_med=/upload_files/pdf/5617.pdf&manuscript_id=5617 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
fas |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Khotaeei Gh |
spellingShingle |
Khotaeei Gh Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center Tehran University Medical Journal |
author_facet |
Khotaeei Gh |
author_sort |
Khotaeei Gh |
title |
Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
title_short |
Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
title_full |
Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
title_fullStr |
Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
title_full_unstemmed |
Study of 163 children with invasive Salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
title_sort |
study of 163 children with invasive salmonella infection in pediatric medical center |
publisher |
Tehran University of Medical Sciences |
series |
Tehran University Medical Journal |
issn |
1683-1764 1735-7322 |
publishDate |
2001-07-01 |
description |
Invasive salmonellosis is common in tropical areas. This study examines the performance of a clinical definition for its recognition among children ages 1 to 14 years admitting to a referral pediatric hospital in Tehran. 60 children were enrolled into the study during a period of 51 months. To facilitate analysis, cases were divided into 5 categories according to the likelihood of invasive salmonellosis with category A representing microbiologically confirmed salmonella bacteremia 17 (28.3%) and 6 (10%) with positive bone marrow cultures. And category D representing those cases in which an alternative diagnosis was firmly established. Salmonella serology supported invasive salmonellosis as the diagnosis in 17 (28%) of the nonbacteremic children (category B and C). Salmonella serology suggested that invasive salmonellosis without detectable bacteremia was common. Blood culture proved and serologically diagnosed cases shows that the definition has a specificity of at least 60%. |
url |
http://journals.tums.ac.ir/PdfMed.aspx?pdf_med=/upload_files/pdf/5617.pdf&manuscript_id=5617 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT khotaeeigh studyof163childrenwithinvasivesalmonellainfectioninpediatricmedicalcenter |
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