Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
1.
Russian Journal of Infection and Immunity ; 13(1):174-182, 2023.
Article in Russian | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2318885

ABSTRACT

The pandemic of coronavirus infection is characterized by a low percentage of complications and severe forms in sick children compared to the adult population. However, there have been described cases of severe clinical course of COVID-19 in children with comorbidities among which is obesity. The aim of this study was to analyze the severe course of a new coronavirus infection paralleled with morbid obesity in a pediatric patient. Materials and methods. All accompanying patient medical documentation was examined. Results and discussion. From the anamnesis of life it is known that the patient was long time complained of intensively increased body weight, on which she repeatedly underwent examinations. In 2018, hypothalamic pubertal syndrome was diagnosed for the first time, for which the patient received hypoglycemic and antihypertensive drugs, hepatoprotectors on an ongoing basis. In the epidemiological anamnesis, the intrafamilial COVID-19 contact with mother was established. The main disease began acutely with a rise in body temperature up to 39-39.5degreeC, cough and weakness. During the first week of illness, the patient did not seek medical help and receive self-treatment, but the positive effect was not achieved. Saturation measurement showed low oxygen level (SpO2 71%). In this regard, the patient underwent chest computed tomography, which revealed a bilateral interstitial polysegmental lung lesion with signs of consolidation. After emergency hospitalization, the patient was prescribed empiric antibiotic therapy, anti-inflammatory and antithrombotic treatment, as well as respiratory support. A positive PCR result of a throat and nasal swab for SARS-CoV-2 was obtained in the hospital. Due to a poor response to therapy, the patient was transferred to a respiratory hospital. At the time of hospitalization, the condition was considered severe due to severe respiratory failure and premorbidity. The range of treatments included oxygenotherapy, antibacterial and anticoagulation therapy, as well as surfactant and the nucleoside analogue Remdesivir. During treatment, the clinical picture gained a positive trend, and after 6 days of hospitalization the patient no longer needed respiratory support. According to the results of repeated computed tomography, bilateral interstitial polysegmental pneumonia was diagnosed with damage to the lung tissue up to 95%. The patient remained stable and showed no signs of respiratory failure during the following days of hospitalization. On the 20th day of ilness, the patient was discharged from hospital with full clinical recovery. Conclusion. This clinical case demonstrates the role of premorbid background in aggravating the clinical picture of a new coronavirus infection in a child. Careful study of anamnestic characteristics is necessary in patients of any age, even with an uncomplicated disease course.Copyright © 2023 Saint Petersburg Pasteur Institute. All rights reserved.

2.
Farmacia Hospitalaria ; 47(1):20-25, 2023.
Article in English, Spanish | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2292560

ABSTRACT

Objective: Adverse drug reactions increase morbidity and mortality, prolong hospital stay and increase healthcare costs. The primary objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of emergency department visits for adverse drug reactions and to describe their characteristics. The secondary objective was to determine the predictor variables of hospitalization for adverse drug reactions associated with emergency department visits. Method(s): Observational and retrospective study of adverse drug reactions registered in an emergency department, carried out from November 15th to December 15th, 2021. The demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients, the drugs involved and the adverse drug reactions were described. Logistic regression was performed to identify factors related to hospitalization for adverse drug reactions. Result(s): 10,799 patients visited the emergency department and 216 (2%) patients with adverse drug reactions were included. The mean age was 70 +/- 17.5 (18-98) years and 47.7% of the patients were male. A total of 54.6% of patients required hospitalization and 1.6% died from adverse drug reactions. The total number of drugs involved was 315 with 149 different drugs. The pharmacological group corresponding to the nervous system constituted the most representative group (n = 81). High-risk medications, such as antithrombotic agents (n = 53), were the subgroup of medications that caused the most emergency department visits and hospitalization. Acenocumarol (n = 20) was the main drug involved. Gastrointestinal (n = 62) disorders were the most common. Diarrhea (n = 16) was the most frequent adverse drug reaction, while gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 13) caused the highest number of hospitalizations. Charlson comorbidity index behaved as an independent risk factor for hospitalization (aOR 3.24, 95% CI: 1.47-7.13, p = 0.003, in Charlson comorbidity index 4-6;and aOR 20.07, 95% CI: 6.87-58.64, p = 0.000, in Charlson comorbidity index >= 10). Conclusion(s): The prevalence of emergency department visits for adverse drug reactions continues to be a non-negligible health problem. High-risk drugs such as antithrombotic agents were the main therapeutic subgroup involved. Charlson comorbidity index was an independent factor in hospitalization, while gastrointestinal bleeding was the adverse drug reaction with the highest number of hospital admissions.Copyright © 2022 Sociedad Espanola de Farmacia Hospitalaria (S.E.F.H)

3.
Jurnal Infektologii ; 14(3):80-95, 2022.
Article in Russian | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2257452

ABSTRACT

Objective: To describe the burden of COVID-19 in a children's multidisciplinary hospital for two years of the pandemic, taking into account of age, severity of the disease, the spectrum of underlying conditions and the intensive care need. Method(s): An assessment of 6048 cases of COVID-19 in patients under 18 years of age hospitalized from March 26, 2020 to December 31, 2021 was carried out. The diagnosis was confirmed by PCR on an outpatient basis or after hospitalization with the help of diagnostic kits registered in the Russian Federation. The features of the work of a children's multidisciplinary hospital in new conditions, the dynamics of hospitalization, age characteristics and new coronavirus (CV) infection severity in the pandemic development process are presented. The analysis of the underlying condition's structure depending on the severity of the disease, as well as the need and volume of therapy in the intensive care unit. The frequency and main characteristics of children's multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) in hospital conditions, long-term PCR positivity and its effect on the duration of inpatient treatment of children have been established. Result(s): The spread of SARS-COV-2 in St. Petersburg required a radical change in the work of the children's multidisciplinary hospital. During the two years of the pandemic, four waves of hospitalization of children with new CV were revealed, differing in duration, intensity, and frequency of lung damage, but having no significant differences in the proportion of severe forms of the disease (1.7-2.8% of cases). Intensive therapy was required in 3.6% of cases, of which only 1/3 was due to the severe course of COVID-19 with a lung lesion volume of up to 100%. In 1/3 of cases, patients had risks of developing severe forms and in 1/3 - other pathology. Severe course of new CV was significantly more often accompanied by the need for respiratory support, anticoagulants and anti-inflammatory therapy. Contributing factors of severe forms and unfavorable outcomes were: pathology of the central nervous system, genetic diseases and malformations, obesity, as well as chronic bronchopulmonary pathology. Mortality in the hospital was recorded only among children with severe underlying conditions (0.1% of cases). D-MVS was registered significantly more often in boys (7 out of every 10 patients), accounting for 1.2% of cases of hospitalization of children with new CV over the entire period. Convalescent PCR-positivity in the outcome of COVID-19 was detected in 1/3 of children, significantly more often during the autumn-winter waves of the pandemic and among patients of high school age. Conclusion(s): New CV is gradually strengthening its position in the structure of acute respiratory pathology in children. Some of SARS-COV-2 infection cases is accompanied by extensive lung damage, as well as severe systemic inflammation independently or in the other infectious diseases structure, induction of the debut of various somatic pathology is not excluded. The presented data confirm the need for increased attention at high risk of adverse respiratory diseases outcomes children. All severe cases of COVID-19 in children require a personalized approach, taking into account the existing background diseases and possible options for the progression of the process. MIS-C should be considered as a systemic inflammatory response syndrome within the framework of an infectious disease of various etiologies, differentiated with Kawasaki disease and the debut of systemic diseases. The long-term PCR-positivity in the outcome of COVID-19 requires further study to address the need and nature of therapy in order to prevent further spread of infection in the population.Copyright © 2022 Interregional public organization Association of infectious disease specialists of Saint-Petersburg and Leningrad region (IPO AIDSSPbR). All rights reserved.

4.
Archives of Pediatric Infectious Diseases ; 11(1) (no pagination), 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2288216

ABSTRACT

Background: The large proportion of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients has been associated with a large number of neu-ropsychiatric manifestations. Despite the high prevalence of COVID-19, few studies have examined such manifestations, especially in children and adolescents. Objective(s): This study investigated neuropsychiatric manifestations in hospitalized children and adolescents admitted for COVID-19 infection in Iran. Method(s): This prospective observational study included admitted children and adolescents (4-18 years old) diagnosed with COVID-19 infection, pediatric neurologists, child and adolescent psychiatrists, and infectious disease specialists, and assessed 375 infected patients during August and December 2021. Result(s): Of the 375 patients, 176 (47%) were female, with a mean age of 9.0 +/- 3.39 years. Psychiatric and neurological manifestations were reported in 58 (15.5%) and 58 (15.5%) patients, respectively. The most prevalent psychiatric disorders were separation anxiety disorder (SAD) (5.1%), major depressive disorder (MDD) (3.5%), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) (2.7%), insomnia (2.4%), and op-positional defiant disorder (ODD) (2.4%). Regarding neurological complications, seizures were the most prevalent (13.1%), followed by encephalitis (1.9%), transverse myelitis (0.3%), acute ischemic stroke (0.3%), and Guillain-Barre syndrome (0.3%). There was no significant relationship between the duration of COVID-19 infection (P = 0.54) and ICU admission (P = 0.44) with the emergence of psychiatric symptoms. Conclusion(s): The most prevalent neurologic and psychiatric complications among children and adolescents with COVID-19 infection were seizures and the symptoms of anxiety/mood disorders, respectively.Copyright © 2023, Author(s).

5.
Advances in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery ; 7 (no pagination), 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2287971

ABSTRACT

Ranula is a mucous retention cyst caused by the extravasation of mucus from the sublingual gland. We present a case of sublingual ranula that was successfully treated with micro-marsupialisation under COVID-19 infection. The patient was a 17-year-old Japanese male suffering from a sublingual ranula that did not improve after several rounds of puncture-aspiration therapy. The patient underwent OK-432 injection therapy under hospitalisation. However, the swelling worsened. Thus, micro-marsupialisation was subsequently performed. After micro-marsupialisation, the lesions flattened out, but 14 days after treatment, the patient was found to have asymptomatic COVID-19 infection when he underwent polymerase chain reaction testing as a close contact person. Simultaneously, the lesion re-swelled and became painful, so non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were prescribed. The next day, the sutures spontaneously detached, viscous saliva and blood overflowed, and the ranula disappeared. Micro-marsupialisation is effective and useful even if the patient has a COVID-19 infection.Copyright © 2022 The Authors

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL