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ABSTRACT: Background
Although malnutrition affects thousands of children throughout the Sahel each year and predisposes them to infections, there is little data on the etiology of infections in these populations. We present a clinical and biological characterization of infections in hospitalized children with complicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in Maradi, Niger.Methods
Children with complicated SAM hospitalized in the intensive care unit of a therapeutic feeding center, with no antibiotics in the previous 7 days, were included. A clinical examination, blood, urine and stool cultures, and chest radiography were performed systematically on admission.Results
Among the 311 children included in the study, gastroenteritis was the most frequent clinical diagnosis on admission, followed by respiratory tract infections and malaria. Blood or urine culture was positive in 17% and 16% of cases, respectively, and 36% had abnormal chest radiography. Enterobacteria were sensitive to most antibiotics, except amoxicillin and cotrimoxazole. Twenty-nine (9%) children died, most frequently from sepsis. Clinical signs were poor indicators of infection and initial diagnoses correlated poorly with biologically or radiography-confirmed diagnoses.Conclusions
These data confirm the high level of infections and poor correlation with clinical signs in children with complicated SAM, and provide antibiotic resistance profiles from an area with limited microbiological data. These results contribute unique data to the ongoing debate on the use and choice of broad-spectrum antibiotics as first-line treatment in children with complicated SAM and reinforce the call for an update of international guidelines on management of complicated SAM based on more recent data.
SUBMITTER: Page AL
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3714292 | biostudies-literature | 2013
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Page Anne-Laure AL de Rekeneire Nathalie N Sayadi Sani S Aberrane Said S Janssens Ann-Carole AC Rieux Claire C Djibo Ali A Manuguerra Jean-Claude JC Ducou-le-Pointe Hubert H Grais Rebecca F RF Schaefer Myrto M Guerin Philippe J PJ Baron Emmanuel E
PloS one 20130717 7
<h4>Background</h4>Although malnutrition affects thousands of children throughout the Sahel each year and predisposes them to infections, there is little data on the etiology of infections in these populations. We present a clinical and biological characterization of infections in hospitalized children with complicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in Maradi, Niger.<h4>Methods</h4>Children with complicated SAM hospitalized in the intensive care unit of a therapeutic feeding center, with no ant ...[more]