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Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency

Background: Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common contagious disease among children under 5 years, particularly in the Asia-Pacific-region. We report a localized outbreak of childhood HFMD for the first time from Bangladesh, diagnosed only based on clinical features due to lack in laborato...

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Autores principales: Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf, Anwar, Kazi Selim, Muraduzzaman, A. K. M., Hossain Mollah, Md. Abid, Akhter-ul-Alam, S. M., Munisul Islam, Kazi, Hoque, Sheikh Ariful, Nazrul Islam, Md., Ali, Md. Ahasan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6662677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31372207
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.15170.3
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author Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf
Anwar, Kazi Selim
Muraduzzaman, A. K. M.
Hossain Mollah, Md. Abid
Akhter-ul-Alam, S. M.
Munisul Islam, Kazi
Hoque, Sheikh Ariful
Nazrul Islam, Md.
Ali, Md. Ahasan
author_facet Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf
Anwar, Kazi Selim
Muraduzzaman, A. K. M.
Hossain Mollah, Md. Abid
Akhter-ul-Alam, S. M.
Munisul Islam, Kazi
Hoque, Sheikh Ariful
Nazrul Islam, Md.
Ali, Md. Ahasan
author_sort Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf
collection PubMed
description Background: Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common contagious disease among children under 5 years, particularly in the Asia-Pacific-region. We report a localized outbreak of childhood HFMD for the first time from Bangladesh, diagnosed only based on clinical features due to lack in laboratory-diagnostic facilities. Methods: Following the World Health Organization’s case-definition, we conducted a rapid-appraisal of HFMD among all of the 143 children attending Pabna Medical College and General Hospital with fever, mouth ulcers and extremity rash. Data were collected between September and November 2017 using a preset syndromic approach and stringent differential diagnostic-protocols. Results: The mean age of children was 2.9±2.3 years. There was a significant difference among the age and sex of children (P=0.98), first sibling being more belonging to middle-income families (62%). Younger children (<5 years) were more likely to suffer with moderate-to-high (38.5°C) fever (P<0.04), painful oral ulcers (P<0.03) and painful/itchy rash (P<0.01). Sex did not differ with other symptoms, but boys had less painful oral ulcers than girls (P<0.04). Fever (63%) and chicken-pox-like-rash (62%) was observed more in mid-October to mid-November than September to mid-October (P<0.01 and P<0.03, respectively). No differences in symptoms (fever, oral ulcers and extremity rash) were observed with precipitation, nor with ambient temperature. Children <5 years (85%) had quicker recovery (within 5 days) than those ≥5 years (69%), (P<0.04), with marginal differences in sex (P<0.05). Conclusions: Our findings highlight potential usefulness in diagnosing HFMD based on clinical parameters, although stringent differential diagnosis remains indispensable, which is particularly applicable for resource-constrained countries lacking appropriate virology/essential laboratories. Since no specific treatment or effective vaccination is available for HFMD, supportive therapy and preventive measures remain the primary methods to circumvent disease-transmission augmented by climate-related factors. Standardized virology laboratory warrants appropriate diagnosis and globally representative multivalent-vaccine deem essential towards preventing HFMD.
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spelling pubmed-66626772019-07-31 Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf Anwar, Kazi Selim Muraduzzaman, A. K. M. Hossain Mollah, Md. Abid Akhter-ul-Alam, S. M. Munisul Islam, Kazi Hoque, Sheikh Ariful Nazrul Islam, Md. Ali, Md. Ahasan F1000Res Research Article Background: Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is a common contagious disease among children under 5 years, particularly in the Asia-Pacific-region. We report a localized outbreak of childhood HFMD for the first time from Bangladesh, diagnosed only based on clinical features due to lack in laboratory-diagnostic facilities. Methods: Following the World Health Organization’s case-definition, we conducted a rapid-appraisal of HFMD among all of the 143 children attending Pabna Medical College and General Hospital with fever, mouth ulcers and extremity rash. Data were collected between September and November 2017 using a preset syndromic approach and stringent differential diagnostic-protocols. Results: The mean age of children was 2.9±2.3 years. There was a significant difference among the age and sex of children (P=0.98), first sibling being more belonging to middle-income families (62%). Younger children (<5 years) were more likely to suffer with moderate-to-high (38.5°C) fever (P<0.04), painful oral ulcers (P<0.03) and painful/itchy rash (P<0.01). Sex did not differ with other symptoms, but boys had less painful oral ulcers than girls (P<0.04). Fever (63%) and chicken-pox-like-rash (62%) was observed more in mid-October to mid-November than September to mid-October (P<0.01 and P<0.03, respectively). No differences in symptoms (fever, oral ulcers and extremity rash) were observed with precipitation, nor with ambient temperature. Children <5 years (85%) had quicker recovery (within 5 days) than those ≥5 years (69%), (P<0.04), with marginal differences in sex (P<0.05). Conclusions: Our findings highlight potential usefulness in diagnosing HFMD based on clinical parameters, although stringent differential diagnosis remains indispensable, which is particularly applicable for resource-constrained countries lacking appropriate virology/essential laboratories. Since no specific treatment or effective vaccination is available for HFMD, supportive therapy and preventive measures remain the primary methods to circumvent disease-transmission augmented by climate-related factors. Standardized virology laboratory warrants appropriate diagnosis and globally representative multivalent-vaccine deem essential towards preventing HFMD. F1000 Research Limited 2019-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6662677/ /pubmed/31372207 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.15170.3 Text en Copyright: © 2019 Hossain Khan MA et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hossain Khan, Md. Azraf
Anwar, Kazi Selim
Muraduzzaman, A. K. M.
Hossain Mollah, Md. Abid
Akhter-ul-Alam, S. M.
Munisul Islam, Kazi
Hoque, Sheikh Ariful
Nazrul Islam, Md.
Ali, Md. Ahasan
Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title_full Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title_fullStr Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title_full_unstemmed Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title_short Emerging Hand Foot Mouth Disease in Bangladeshi Children- First Report of Rapid Appraisal on Pocket Outbreak: Clinico-epidemiological Perspective Implicating Public Health Emergency
title_sort emerging hand foot mouth disease in bangladeshi children- first report of rapid appraisal on pocket outbreak: clinico-epidemiological perspective implicating public health emergency
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6662677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31372207
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.15170.3
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