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In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses

BACKGROUND: RT amplification reaction has revealed that various single viruses or viral co-infections caused acute bronchiolitis in infants, and RV appeared to have a growing involvement in early respiratory diseases. Because remaining controversial, the objective was to determine prospectively the...

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Autores principales: Marguet, Christophe, Lubrano, Marc, Gueudin, Marie, Le Roux, Pascal, Deschildre, Antoine, Forget, Chantal, Couderc, Laure, Siret, Daniel, Donnou, Marie-Dominique, Bubenheim, Michael, Vabret, Astrid, Freymuth, François
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2644758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19240806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004596
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author Marguet, Christophe
Lubrano, Marc
Gueudin, Marie
Le Roux, Pascal
Deschildre, Antoine
Forget, Chantal
Couderc, Laure
Siret, Daniel
Donnou, Marie-Dominique
Bubenheim, Michael
Vabret, Astrid
Freymuth, François
author_facet Marguet, Christophe
Lubrano, Marc
Gueudin, Marie
Le Roux, Pascal
Deschildre, Antoine
Forget, Chantal
Couderc, Laure
Siret, Daniel
Donnou, Marie-Dominique
Bubenheim, Michael
Vabret, Astrid
Freymuth, François
author_sort Marguet, Christophe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: RT amplification reaction has revealed that various single viruses or viral co-infections caused acute bronchiolitis in infants, and RV appeared to have a growing involvement in early respiratory diseases. Because remaining controversial, the objective was to determine prospectively the respective role of RSV, RV, hMPV and co-infections on the severity of acute bronchiolitis in very young infants. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: 209 infants (median age: 2.4 months) were enrolled in a prospective study of infants <1 year old, hospitalized for a first episode of bronchiolitis during the winter epidemic season and with no high risk for severe disease. The severity was assessed by recording SaO(2)% at admission, a daily clinical score (scale 0–18), the duration of oxygen supplementation and the length of hospitalization. Viruses were identified in 94.7% by RT amplification reaction: RSV only (45.8%), RV only (7.2%), hMPV only (3.8%), dual RSV/RV (14.3%), and other virus only (2%) or coinfections (9%). RV compared respectively with RSV and dual RSV/RV infection caused a significant less severe disease with a lower clinical score (5[3.2–6] vs. 6[4–8], p = 0.01 and 5.5[5–7], p = 0.04), a shorter time in oxygen supplementation (0[0–1] days vs. 2[0–3] days, p = 0.02 and 2[0–3] days, p = 0.03) and a shorter hospital stay (3[3–4.7] days vs.6 [5–8] days, p = 0.001 and 5[4–6] days, p = 0.04). Conversely, RSV infants had also longer duration of hospitalization in comparison with RSV/RV (p = 0.01) and hMPV (p = 0.04). The multivariate analyses showed that the type of virus carried was independently associated with the duration of hospitalization. CONCLUSION: This study underlined the role of RV in early respiratory diseases, as frequently carried by young infants with a first acute bronchiolitis. RSV caused the more severe disease and conversely RV the lesser severity. No additional effect of dual RSV/RV infection was observed on the severity.
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spelling pubmed-26447582009-02-25 In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses Marguet, Christophe Lubrano, Marc Gueudin, Marie Le Roux, Pascal Deschildre, Antoine Forget, Chantal Couderc, Laure Siret, Daniel Donnou, Marie-Dominique Bubenheim, Michael Vabret, Astrid Freymuth, François PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: RT amplification reaction has revealed that various single viruses or viral co-infections caused acute bronchiolitis in infants, and RV appeared to have a growing involvement in early respiratory diseases. Because remaining controversial, the objective was to determine prospectively the respective role of RSV, RV, hMPV and co-infections on the severity of acute bronchiolitis in very young infants. METHODS AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: 209 infants (median age: 2.4 months) were enrolled in a prospective study of infants <1 year old, hospitalized for a first episode of bronchiolitis during the winter epidemic season and with no high risk for severe disease. The severity was assessed by recording SaO(2)% at admission, a daily clinical score (scale 0–18), the duration of oxygen supplementation and the length of hospitalization. Viruses were identified in 94.7% by RT amplification reaction: RSV only (45.8%), RV only (7.2%), hMPV only (3.8%), dual RSV/RV (14.3%), and other virus only (2%) or coinfections (9%). RV compared respectively with RSV and dual RSV/RV infection caused a significant less severe disease with a lower clinical score (5[3.2–6] vs. 6[4–8], p = 0.01 and 5.5[5–7], p = 0.04), a shorter time in oxygen supplementation (0[0–1] days vs. 2[0–3] days, p = 0.02 and 2[0–3] days, p = 0.03) and a shorter hospital stay (3[3–4.7] days vs.6 [5–8] days, p = 0.001 and 5[4–6] days, p = 0.04). Conversely, RSV infants had also longer duration of hospitalization in comparison with RSV/RV (p = 0.01) and hMPV (p = 0.04). The multivariate analyses showed that the type of virus carried was independently associated with the duration of hospitalization. CONCLUSION: This study underlined the role of RV in early respiratory diseases, as frequently carried by young infants with a first acute bronchiolitis. RSV caused the more severe disease and conversely RV the lesser severity. No additional effect of dual RSV/RV infection was observed on the severity. Public Library of Science 2009-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC2644758/ /pubmed/19240806 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004596 Text en Marguet et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Marguet, Christophe
Lubrano, Marc
Gueudin, Marie
Le Roux, Pascal
Deschildre, Antoine
Forget, Chantal
Couderc, Laure
Siret, Daniel
Donnou, Marie-Dominique
Bubenheim, Michael
Vabret, Astrid
Freymuth, François
In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title_full In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title_fullStr In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title_full_unstemmed In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title_short In Very Young Infants Severity of Acute Bronchiolitis Depends On Carried Viruses
title_sort in very young infants severity of acute bronchiolitis depends on carried viruses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2644758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19240806
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004596
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