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Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway

Very few reports describe all hospitalized patients with campylobacteriosis in the setting of a single waterborne outbreak. This study describes the demographics, comorbidities, clinical features, microbiology, treatment and complications of 67 hospitalized children and adults during a large waterbo...

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Autores principales: Mortensen, Nicolay, Jonasson, Solveig Aalstad, Lavesson, Ingrid Viola, Emberland, Knut Erik, Litleskare, Sverre, Wensaas, Knut-Arne, Rortveit, Guri, Langeland, Nina, Hanevik, Kurt
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7987138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33755697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248464
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author Mortensen, Nicolay
Jonasson, Solveig Aalstad
Lavesson, Ingrid Viola
Emberland, Knut Erik
Litleskare, Sverre
Wensaas, Knut-Arne
Rortveit, Guri
Langeland, Nina
Hanevik, Kurt
author_facet Mortensen, Nicolay
Jonasson, Solveig Aalstad
Lavesson, Ingrid Viola
Emberland, Knut Erik
Litleskare, Sverre
Wensaas, Knut-Arne
Rortveit, Guri
Langeland, Nina
Hanevik, Kurt
author_sort Mortensen, Nicolay
collection PubMed
description Very few reports describe all hospitalized patients with campylobacteriosis in the setting of a single waterborne outbreak. This study describes the demographics, comorbidities, clinical features, microbiology, treatment and complications of 67 hospitalized children and adults during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Askoy, Norway in 2019, where more than 2000 people in a community became ill. We investigated factors that contributed to hospitalization and treatment choices. Data were collected from electronic patient records during and after the outbreak. Fifty adults and seventeen children were included with a biphasic age distribution peaking in toddlers and middle-aged adults. Most children, 14 out of 17, were below 4 years of age. Diarrhea was the most commonly reported symptom (99%), whereas few patients (9%) reported bloody stools. Comorbidities were frequent in adults (63%) and included cardiovascular disease, pre-existing gastrointestinal disease or chronic renal failure. Comorbidities in children (47%) were dominated by pulmonary and gastrointestinal diseases. Adult patients appeared more severely ill than children with longer duration of stay, higher levels of serum creatinine and CRP and rehydration therapy. Ninety-two percent of adult patients were treated with intravenous fluid as compared with 12% of children. Almost half of the admitted children received antibiotics. Two patients died, including a toddler. Both had significant complicating factors. The demographic and clinical findings presented may be useful for health care planning and patient management in Campylobacter outbreaks both in primary health care and in hospitals.
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spelling pubmed-79871382021-04-02 Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway Mortensen, Nicolay Jonasson, Solveig Aalstad Lavesson, Ingrid Viola Emberland, Knut Erik Litleskare, Sverre Wensaas, Knut-Arne Rortveit, Guri Langeland, Nina Hanevik, Kurt PLoS One Research Article Very few reports describe all hospitalized patients with campylobacteriosis in the setting of a single waterborne outbreak. This study describes the demographics, comorbidities, clinical features, microbiology, treatment and complications of 67 hospitalized children and adults during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Askoy, Norway in 2019, where more than 2000 people in a community became ill. We investigated factors that contributed to hospitalization and treatment choices. Data were collected from electronic patient records during and after the outbreak. Fifty adults and seventeen children were included with a biphasic age distribution peaking in toddlers and middle-aged adults. Most children, 14 out of 17, were below 4 years of age. Diarrhea was the most commonly reported symptom (99%), whereas few patients (9%) reported bloody stools. Comorbidities were frequent in adults (63%) and included cardiovascular disease, pre-existing gastrointestinal disease or chronic renal failure. Comorbidities in children (47%) were dominated by pulmonary and gastrointestinal diseases. Adult patients appeared more severely ill than children with longer duration of stay, higher levels of serum creatinine and CRP and rehydration therapy. Ninety-two percent of adult patients were treated with intravenous fluid as compared with 12% of children. Almost half of the admitted children received antibiotics. Two patients died, including a toddler. Both had significant complicating factors. The demographic and clinical findings presented may be useful for health care planning and patient management in Campylobacter outbreaks both in primary health care and in hospitals. Public Library of Science 2021-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7987138/ /pubmed/33755697 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248464 Text en © 2021 Mortensen 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mortensen, Nicolay
Jonasson, Solveig Aalstad
Lavesson, Ingrid Viola
Emberland, Knut Erik
Litleskare, Sverre
Wensaas, Knut-Arne
Rortveit, Guri
Langeland, Nina
Hanevik, Kurt
Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title_full Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title_fullStr Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title_short Characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni in Norway
title_sort characteristics of hospitalized patients during a large waterborne outbreak of campylobacter jejuni in norway
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7987138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33755697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248464
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