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Human Parechovirus Infection in Children in Taiwan: a Retrospective, Single-Hospital Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study of 112 Taiwanese children diagnosed with human parechovirus (HPeV) infections revealed that HPeV1 was the most common type, affecting 94 children.
  • Infants under 3 months showed less frequent respiratory symptoms but had higher rates of fever, ICU admissions, and longer hospital stays compared to older children.
  • A concerning finding was that nearly one-third of the infections were suspected to be hospital-acquired, particularly affecting younger infants, highlighting the need for improved infection control in medical settings.

Article Abstract

To understand human parechovirus (HPeV) infections in Taiwanese children, we analyzed data for 112 children (age≤10 years) with HPeV infection diagnosed between July 2007 and June 2016 in a medical center in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan. The patients were infected with HPeV1 (n=94), HPeV3 (n=3), HPeV4 (n=3), HPeV6 (n=1) and non-typeable HPeV (n=11). We compared the clinical implications for children younger than 3 months (n=56) and 3 months and older (n=31), excluding 25 children with concomitant infections. Fever was noted in almost half of the children younger than 3 months but was more frequent in older than in younger children (83.9% vs 46.4%). As compared with older children, children younger than 3 months had a lower incidence of respiratory symptoms (30.1% vs 83.9%), more frequently required intensive care unit admission (28.6% vs 3.2%), and had longer hospital stays (mean 10.95 vs 5.13 days). Importantly, about one-third of the children were suspected to have hospital-acquired or cluster infections in the environment of medical institutions, with a significantly high proportion of 42.9% (24/56) in younger infants. Hospital-acquired infections might play a key role in the spread of HPeV, especially in children younger than 3 months.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.7883/yoken.JJID.2018.019DOI Listing

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