| Literature DB >> 25867910 |
Wen Da Guan1, Xiao Yan Gong2, Chris Ka Pun Mok3, Ting Ting Chen1, Shi Guan Wu1, Si Hua Pan1, Benjamin John Cowling4, Zi Feng Yang1, De Hui Chen5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09, A(H3N2) and B viruses have co-circulated in the human population since the swine-origin human H1N1 pandemic in 2009. While infections of these subtypes generally cause mild illnesses, lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) occurs in a portion of children and required hospitalization. The aim of our study was to estimate the prevalence of these three subtypes and compare the clinical manifestations in hospitalized children with LRTI in Guangzhou, China during the post-pandemic period.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25867910 PMCID: PMC4395028 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical presentation and laboratory findings of the children with influenza virus infection.
| Clinical Variables | A/H1N1(pdm09)(n = 26) | A/H3N2 (n = 131) | B(n = 59) | P | Clinical Variables | A/H1N1(pdm09)(n = 26) | A/H3N2(n = 131) | B(n = 59) | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 16 | 94 | 38 | 0.4304 |
| 7(26.9) | 34(26.0) | 16(27.1) | 0.9838 |
|
| 34.4±34.1 | 32.5±34.6 | 45.0±32.5 | 0.0046 |
| 1(3.9) | 3(2.3) | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 2(7.7) | 5(3.8) | 3(5.1) | 0.6784 |
| 1(3.9) | 5(3.9) | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 2(7.7) | 11(8.4) | 9(15.3) | 0.3179 |
| 10(38.5) | 53(40.5) | 22(37.3) | 0.9134 |
|
| 25(96.2) | 116(88.5) | 53(89.8) | 0.0522 |
| 15(57.7) | 59(45.0) | 21(35.6) | 0.1550 |
|
| 39.13±1.04 | 39.20±0.74 | 39.22±0.96 | ND |
| 1(3.9) | 2(1.5) | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 2(7.7) | 2(1.5) | 2(3.4) | 0.2053 |
| 4(15.4) | 39(29.8) | 21(35.6) | 0.1705 |
|
| 0 | 0 | 5(8.5) | ND |
| 14(53.9) | 60(45.8) | 36(61.0) | 0.1445 |
|
| 0 | 0 | 1(1.7) | ND |
| 1(3.9) | 2(1.5) | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 14(53.9) | 46(35.1) | 20(33.9) | 0.1647 |
| 0 | 6(4.6) | 2(3.4%) | ND |
|
| 14(53.9) | 71(54.2) | 27(45.8) | 0.5470 |
| 10(38.5) | 18(13.7) | 16(27.1) | 0.0054 |
|
| 0 | 10(7.6) | 5(8.5) | ND |
| 6(23.1) | 38(29.0) | 21(35.6) | 0.4653 |
|
| 0 | 2(1.5) | 1(1.7) | ND |
| 20(76.9) | 93(71.0) | 38(64.4) | 0.4653 |
|
| 26(100) | 129(98.5) | 55(93.2) | ND |
| 8.7±5.6 | 10.0±7.3 | 9.1±3.5 | 0.4645 |
|
| 5(19.2) | 35(26.7) | 19(32.2) | 0.4657 |
| 4(15.4) | 34(26.0) | 13(22.0) | 0.8221 |
|
| 6(23.1) | 37(28.2) | 8(13.6) | 0.0877 |
| 0 | 0 | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 2(7.7) | 15(11.5) | 4(6.8) | 0.5797 |
| 1(3.9) | 1(0.8) | 0 | ND |
|
| 4(15.4) | 21(16.0) | 12(20.3) | 0.7425 |
| 3765 | 3821 | 4254 | 0.4097 |
Data are shown as numbers (%) unless otherwise specified.
1) Comparisons were made among A(H1N1)pdm09, seasonal H3N2,and influenza B by using ANOVA for quantitative characteristics and Fisher’s exact or chi-square test for categorical variables, respectively.
2) Denotes the highest body temperature of feverish patients before and on admission to hospital.
ND: Not determined
Fig 1Number of influenza positive by subtype and by month of illness onset among the hospitalized children with lower respiratory tract infection (N = 3637), Guangzhou, China, January, 2010 to December, 2012.
Fig 2Estimated hospitalization rates (%) attributable to influenza infection by age group and by type/subtype in Guangzhou, China, January, 2010 to December, 2012.
Personal history of the studied patients with influenza virus infection.
| Factors | A/H1N1pdm09 (n = 26) | A/H3N2 (n = 131) | B (n = 59) | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 10(38.5) | 45(34.4) | 20(33.9) | 0.9912 |
|
| 12(46.2) | 58(44.3) | 26(44.1) | 0.9823 |
|
| 6(42.3) | 53(40.5) | 19(32.2) | 0.7917 |
|
| 1(3.8) | 8(6.1) | 7(11.9) | 0.2847 |
|
| 4(15.4) | 15(11.5) | 8(13.6) | 0.9722 |
|
| 1(3.8) | 3(2.3) | 1(1.7) | ND |
|
| 0(0) | 2(1.5) | 2(3.4) | ND |
|
| 1(3.8) | 1(0.8) | 0(0) | ND |
Data are shown as number (%)
1) Comparisons were made using Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables.
ND: Not determined