Necrotizing pneumonia in children
pdf (Español (España))

Keywords

Necrotizing pneumonia, Pneumococcal pneumonia, Community-acquired infections, Child

How to Cite

Machado, K., Badía, F., Assandri, E., Gutiérrez, C., Motta, I., Varela, A., … Pírez, C. (2020). Necrotizing pneumonia in children: 10 years of experience in a Pediatric Reference Hospital. Archivos De Pediatría Del Uruguay, 91(5), 294–302. Retrieved from https://adp.sup.org.uy/index.php/adp/article/view/143

Abstract

Introduction: necrotizing pneumonia (NP) is a complication of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in hospitalized children, with significantly high morbidity. A case definition was devised in 2009, which enabled physicians to unify criteria and rationalize resources for the assistance of children with NP.

Objective: describe clinical characteristics and evolution of children who developed NP.

Methodology: descriptive study, NP hospitalized children between 1/1/2009 and 12/31/2018. Case definition: pneumatoceles and one or more of the following criteria: malaise, persistent/recurrent fever, white blood cell count over 30,000 or less than 5.000/mm3, C-reactive protein over 120 mg/dL, lactic dehydrogenase in pleural fluid over 2,500UI/L and/or bronchopleural fistula (BPF). Clinical, epidemiological, etiological and evolutionary characteristics were described.

Results: NP was diagnosed in 197 children (7.92% of CAP hospitalizations), with variable annual cases and annual rate/10,000 discharges. Children had a median age of 25 months; 89.8% were previously healthy. They presented fever prior to diagnosis, median 5 days, multilobar pneumonia 58%, respiratory failure 62%, sepsis 19%, empyema 80% and BPF 51%, persistent fever median 7 days. 46% required intensive care and 18% required assisted mechanical ventilation. Acute phase reactants on admission were high. An etiological agent was identified in 102 cases, S.pneumoniae in 92. Two children died.

Conclusions: NP was a frequent complication in CAP hospitalized children. Clinical presentation and evolution were severe. The etiological identification was high, most of them corresponded to S. pnuemoniae. Mortality was low.

pdf (Español (España))

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.es