Literature DB >> 11676518

Acute diarrhoea in children treated in an outpatient setting in Athens, Greece.

H C Maltezou1, A Zafiropoulou, M Mavrikou, E Bozavoutoglou, G Liapi, M Foustoukou, D A Kafetzis.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the epidemiology and aetiology of acute diarrhoea among children treated exclusively in an outpatient setting in Greece.
METHODS: During 1999, children with acute diarrhoea who attended the emergency department of our hospital were prospectively studied. Patients requiring hospitalization were excluded. Stool specimens were tested microscopically, for bacterial enteropathogens by standard and selective medium cultures and for rotavirus and adenovirus by latex agglutination test.
RESULTS: One hundred and thirty-two children (median age: 2 years) were included in the study; an enteropathogen was detected in 63 (48%) of them. Isolates included rotavirus (19 patients), Salmonella sp (12), Campylobacter sp (10), Aeromonas sp (9), enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (6), adenovirus (6), Giardia lamblia (4), Yersinia enterocolitica (2) and Shigella sp (1). Half of the bacterial cases occurred from August to October, and two rotavirus-associated peaks occurred during February and August. Acute diarrhoea caused by viruses affected exclusively children under six years of age, mainly those attending day care centres. Macroscopic blood in stools was reported only among patients with a bacterial infection. Socioeconomic characteristics were not helpful in differentiating disease due to specific enteropathogens.
CONCLUSIONS: Bacterial enteropathogens account for a significant proportion of acute diarrhoea in children treated in the outpatient setting in Greece. Rotavirus is also a frequent cause affecting mostly younger children and those attending day care centers. The presence of blood in stools and the seasonality of bacterial infections may enable their presumptive diagnosis. Copyright 2001 The British Infection Society.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11676518     DOI: 10.1053/jinf.2001.0844

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Infect        ISSN: 0163-4453            Impact factor:   6.072


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