Bacterial diarrhea in hospitalized children
https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2019-18-4-12-18
Abstract
Objective: to study the clinical and laboratory manifestations of acute intestinal infections of bacterial etiology in hospitalized children, depending on the etiology, age, topic of the lesion, and complications.
A cohort clinical study of 570 children hospitalized from January to October 2019 in the infectious wards of Children's Clinical Hospital No.9 in Moscow was conducted. Studies included routine laboratory methods, bacteriological analysis of feces, Latex test, ELISA, PCR to detect pathogens, serological reactions to detect specific antibodies in blood serum. Two groups of patients were specially formed to compare the features of the course of bacterial diarrhea without hemorrhagic colitis (n = 111) and with hemorrhagic colitis (n = 125).
Among 33.2% of cases of deciphered etiology of bacterial diarrhea, Salmonella was isolated in 14.6%, Campylobacter — in 4.7%, Shigella — in 3%, in other cases — conditionally pathogenic flora. Salmonellosis and Сampylobacteriosis with the same frequency are recorded in children in the age groups of 1—3 and 3—7 years, in half of the patients proceed as enterocolitis (58 and 52%, respectively). Shigellosis is diagnosed in children older than 1 year of life with the same frequency in age groups 1—3, 3—7 and older than 7 years, a third of patients (35%) develop severe forms.
In most cases (83.2%), a complicated course of bacterial diarrhea was detected, more often dehydration 1 and 2 degrees (36.5%), acute respiratory viral infections (19.6%), mesadenitis (11.2%), community-acquired pneumonia (4.6%).
Enterocolitis is the topic of lesion in half of the children, and every 5th patient develops hemorrhagic colitis (21.9%). In 44% of cases of established etiology of hemorrhagic colitis, Salmonella was confirmed. Hemocolitis also develops more often with shigellosis, campylobacteriosis and clostridiosis. In the group of bacterial diarrhea with hemorrhagic colitis, significant differences were revealed compared with the group without hemocolitis: by the frequency of development in children under 3 years of age; by the duration of treatment in a hospital; by the frequency of mesadenitis; by the content of stab neutrophils in the hemogram, reflecting a more pronounced inflammation in hemorrhagic colitis.
Thus, bacterial diarrhea in children remains relevant due to the severity of inflammation, the incidence of complicated course and hemorrhagic colitis, which requires hospitalization.
About the Authors
O. V. MolochkovaRussian Federation
Oksana Molochkova, PhD, Associate Professor, the department of infectious diseases in children
Moscow
O. B. Kovalev
Russian Federation
Oleg Kovalev, MD, Professor of the Department of Infectious Diseases in Children
MoscowO. V. Shamsheva
Russian Federation
Olga Shamsheva, MD, Professor of the Department of Infectious Diseases in Children
MoscowN. V. Sokolova
Russian Federation
Nadegda Sokolova, PhD
A. A. Sakharova
Russian Federation
Alisa Sakharova
N. I. Krylatova
Russian Federation
E. V. Galeeva
Russian Federation
Elena Galeeva
A. A. Korsunskiy
Russian Federation
Anatoliy Korsunskiy, MD, Professor
O. A. Kashchenko
Russian Federation
Olga Kashenko
References
1. On the state of sanitary and epidemiological welfare of the population in the Russian Federation in 2018: State report. M.: Federal Service for Supervision of Consumer Rights Protection and Human Welfare, 2019:254. (In Russ.)
2. Infectious and parasitic morbidity in Moscow in 2018: Newsletter. Federal Service for Supervision of Consumer Rights Protection and Human Welfare. M., 2018: 63. (In Russ.)
3. https://www.who.int/ru/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/diar-rhoeal-disease
4. Klimova O.I., Gonchar N.V., Lobzin Y.V., Alekseeva L.A., Monakhova N.E. Features of the cytokine balance in infectious hemorrhagic colitis in children. Detskie Infektsii = Children's Infections. 2019; 18(3):11—16. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2019-18-3-11-16
5. Molochkova O.V., O.B. Kovalev, A.A. Novokshonov, E.V. Novosad, A.L. Rossina, O.V. Shamsheva. Clinical and epidemiological characteristics of campylobacteriosis in children. Pediatriya = Pediatrics. 2017; 96(6):53—56. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24110/0031-403X-2017-96-6-53-56
6. Hodges K., Gill R. Infectious diarrhea: Cellular and molecular mechanisms. Gut Microbes. 2010; 1(1):4—21.
7. Krasnova E.I., Khokhlova N.I., Provorova V.V., Kuznetsova V.G. Acute intestinal infections in children and the possibility of therapy using metabiotics. Lechashchiy Vrach. 2017; 2:13. (In Russ.)
8. Mazankova L.N., A.A. Korsunsky, A.P. Prodeus, M.D. Ardatsaya, S.G. Perlovskaya. Improving the tactics of biocenosis-saving therapy in the use of antibiotics in children with acute intestinal infections. Detskie Infektsii = Children's Infections. 2017. 16(3):41—49. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2017-16-3-41-49
9. Gunkova E.V., Zorin I.V., Vialkova A.A. Features of hemolytic-uremic syndrome in children of different ages. Pediatr. 2017; T.8, special edition: M103—M104. (In Russ.)
10. Blokhin B.M., Gavryutina I.V. Shock in pediatric infection diseases. Detskie Infektsii = Children's Infections. 2019; 18(2):5—11. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2019-18-2-5-11
11. Mazankova L.N., Ilina N.O. et al. Modern aspects of diagnosisand treatment of acute intestinal infections in children. Rossiyskiy Vestnik Perinatologii i Pediatrii = Russian Bulletin of Perinatology and Pediatrics. 2007. 52(2):4—10. (In Russ.)
12. Novokshonov A.A., Mazankova L.N., Uchaykin V.F. Clinical recommendations for the diagnosis and treatment of acute intestinal infections in children, depending on the type of diarrhea. Lecheniye i Profilaktika. 2013; 4(8):62—73. (In Russ.).
13. Kaftyreva L.A., Egorova S.A., Makarova M.A., Zabrovskaya A.V., Matveeva Z.N., Suzhaeva L.V., Voitenkova E.V. The variety of mechanisms of antibiotic resistance of salmonella. Infektsiya i Immunitet = Infection and Immunity. 2011; 1(4):303—310. (In Russ.)
14. Mazankova L.N., Gorbunov S.G. Diagnosis and treatment of acute intestinal infections in children: guidelines for doctors. M.: RMAPO, 2012:47. (In Russ.)
15. Kovalev O.B., Molochkova O.V., Konyaev K.S., Pylaeva E.Y., Anufrieva P.A., Kurmanova V.V., Korsunsky A.A., Kashchenko O.A., Galeeva E.V., Krylatova N.I. The etiology and clinical manifestations of acute intestinal infections in children, according to the Moscow hospital for 2016—2018. Detskie Infektsii = Children's Infections. 2019; 18(2):54—57. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2019-18-2-54-57
Review
For citations:
Molochkova O.V., Kovalev O.B., Shamsheva O.V., Sokolova N.V., Sakharova A.A., Krylatova N.I., Galeeva E.V., Korsunskiy A.A., Kashchenko O.A. Bacterial diarrhea in hospitalized children. CHILDREN INFECTIONS. 2019;18(4):12-18. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2019-18-4-12-18