AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection affects children differently based on their age groups—specifically those under 6 months, between 6-12 months, and over 12 months.
  • Clinical data from 108 children was analyzed, revealing that each age group exhibited distinct clinical manifestations, such as differences in liver damage, jaundice, pneumonia, and other conditions.
  • The findings indicate that younger children are more likely to experience hepatic damage and pneumonia, while older children tend to show more hematological issues, suggesting that the age of the child significantly impacts the severity and type of symptoms from CMV infection.

Article Abstract

Objective: Newborns have been the focus group for most studies of cytomegalovirus infection. The objective of the study is to share some preliminary analysis on clinical manifestation differences resulting from cytomegalovirus infection in children of various age groups.

Methods: The clinical data of 108 children with cytomegalovirus infection were retrospectively reviewed. The children were classified into three age groups: <6 months, 6-12 months and >12 months. The differences in clinical manifestations from cytomegalovirus infection among the three age groups were identified.

Results: Each age group carried distinctive differences in the occurrence of hepatic damage, jaundice, pneumonia, and hematological manifestations, as well as incidence rate of malformation (p<0.05 or 0.01). The primary clinical manifestations of group<6 months old were hepatic damage(83%), pneumonia(47%) and jaundice (43%). There was a similar proportion of anicteric-hepatitis and icteric-hepatitis; however a low incidence rate of hematological disease (6%) was found in group<6 months old. The primary clinical manifestations of group 6-12 months old were hepatic damage (86%), mostly with no presence of jaundice, pneumonia (33%), and hematological disease (20%). Hepatic damage (52%) and hematological disease (33%) were leading clinical symptoms in group>12 months old where jaundice and pneumonia were rare events.

Conclusions: End-organ damage triggered by cytomegalovirus infection is related to the age of the affected children closely.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cytomegalovirus infection
20
clinical manifestations
8
manifestations cytomegalovirus
8
infection children
8
children age
8
three age
8
age groups
8
cytomegalovirus
5
infection
5
age
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!