Epidemiological and clinical characteristics of children who died from hand, foot and mouth disease in Vietnam, 2011
Autor: | Hau V Pham, Hung C Phan, Cuong Q. Hoang, Tien M Nguyen, Nguyen N Tran Minh, Lan T. Phan, Long N Vu, Ngoc T B Nguyen, Long T. Nguyen |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Male
Pediatrics medicine.medical_specialty Databases Factual Hand foot and mouth disease Clinical manifestation medicine.disease_cause Disease Outbreaks Medical microbiology Epidemiology Enterovirus Infections medicine Humans Leukocytosis Child Enterovirus Foot-and-mouth disease business.industry Medical record Infant Outbreak medicine.disease Surgery Hospitalization Infectious Diseases Vietnam Child Preschool Vomiting Female medicine.symptom Hand Foot and Mouth Disease business Research Article |
Zdroj: | BMC Infectious Diseases |
ISSN: | 1471-2334 |
Popis: | Background In 2011, a large outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) in Vietnam resulted in 113,121 children seeking medical attention, of whom170 died. Understanding the epidemiology of fatal HFMD may improve treatment and help targeting prevention activities for vulnerable populations. We describe epidemiological and clinical characteristics of children who died from HFMD in Vietnam in 2011. Methods Clinical data were obtained through reviewing medical records of the deaths occurring from January through December 2011 in all hospitals in Vietnam. Hospitals reported any deaths among patients with laboratory-confirmed enterovirus (EV) infection to the Ministry of Health. Data were extracted from the national database. Results Of the 169 deaths reviewed for whom records were available, 87% were 3-year-old or younger, 69% were male, 18% attended daycare, 89% lived in Southern Vietnam, and 85% of the deaths occurred between May-October 2011. One hundred thirty (77%) cases sought treatment in a hospital within three days of onset of illness. Symptoms at admission included fever (98%), myoclonus (66%), vomiting (53%), oral ulcers (50%) and vesicular erythema (50%). One hundred six (75%) cases had leukocytosis and 91 (54%) had hyperglycemia. One hundred three (61%) tested positive for EV, of which 84 (82%) were positive for EV71. Conclusions Deaths associated with HFMD occurred throughout 2011 among males three years or younger who were cared for at home. The HFMD control program should focus on interventions at the household level. Clinicians should be alerted to symptoms suggestive of severe HFMD including fever, myoclonus, vomiting, oral ulcers and vesicles with high white blood cell count especially in young children. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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