| Literature DB >> 28320432 |
Adrienne G DePorre1,2, Paul L Aronson3, Russell J McCulloh4,5.
Abstract
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2017. Other selected articles can be found online at http://ccforum.com/series/annualupdate2017 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/8901 .Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28320432 PMCID: PMC5360075 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1646-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Common viral illnesses presenting as fever in young infants and association with bacterial illness. Data from references [21, 24, 25, 45–48]
| Virus | Recommended diagnostic test | Association with bacterial illness |
|---|---|---|
| Enterovirus (EV) | CSF EV PCR; EV serum PCR if EV sepsis is suspected | Low risk for concomitant bacterial meningitis and bacteremia. Decreased risk for UTI |
| Human parechovirus (HPeV) | CSF HPeV PCR | Insufficient data, but likely decreased risk of bacterial meningitis, bacteremia, and UTI |
| Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) | Nasopharyngeal RSV Ag detection or RSV RT‐PCR | Low risk for concomitant bacterial meningitis or bacteremia. Decreased risk for UTI |
| Influenza A/B | Nasopharyngeal Influenza A/B Ag detection or Influenza A/B RT‐PCR | Low risk for concomitant bacterial infection |
| Human rhinovirus (hRV) | Nasopharyngeal rhinovirus PCR | Unknown. Due to prolonged viral shedding, unable to solely attribute febrile illness to rhinovirus |
| Adenovirus (ADV) | Nasopharyngeal adenovirus RT‐PCR | Unknown. Due to prolonged viral shedding, unable to solely attribute febrile illness to adenovirus |
| Human parainfluenza virus (HPIV) 1,2,3,4 | Nasopharyngeal HPIV 1,2,3,4 RT‐PCR | Insufficient data, but likely low risk of concomitant bacterial infection |
| Rotavirus (ROTA) | Stool rotavirus Ag detection, stool rotavirus enzyme immunoassay or rotavirus PCR | Insufficient data, but likely low risk of concomitant bacterial infection |
| Herpes simplex virus (HSV) Types 1 and 2 | CSF HSV PCR, viral culture or PCR of vesicles | Insufficient data, but likely low risk of concomitant bacterial infection |
| Human herpes virus‐6 (HHV‐6) | Plasma HHV‐6 RT‐PCR; HHV‐6 serologic antibody titers | Insufficient data, but likely low risk of concomitant bacterial infection |
PCR polymerase chain reaction, RT‐PCR reverse‐transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, UTI urinary tract infection
Clinical and laboratory findings of common low‐risk criteria. Adapted from [12]
| Boston | Milwaukee | Philadelphia | Rochester | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age range | 28–89 days | 28–56 days | 29–60 days | ≤60 days |
| History | No immunizations or antimicrobials in prior 48 h | Not defined | Not defined | Term infant; no prior antibiotics; no underlying disease; no hospitalization longer than mother |
| Physical exam | Well appearing; no signs of focal infection | Well appearing; no signs of focal infection | Well appearing; no signs of focal infection | Well appearing; no signs of focal infection |
| Laboratory parameters | CSF < 10 WBC/mm3
| CSF < 10/mm3
| CSF < 8 WBC/mm3
| WBC > 5000 and < 15,000/mm3
|
| Management strategies for high risk | Hospitalize, empiric antibiotics | Not defined | Hospitalize, empiric antibiotics | Hospitalize, empiric antibiotics |
| Management strategy for low risk | Home/outpatient ok | Home/outpatient ok | Home/outpatient ok | Home/outpatient ok |
CXR chest X‐ray, UA urinalysis, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, WBC white blood cells, ABC absolute band count, hpf high power field, i.m. intramuscular
Diagnostic tests and their utility in the well‐appearing febrile young infant. Data from references [22, 25, 49, 50]
| Test | Indications | Potential role in management |
|---|---|---|
| RSV testing | Infants with respiratory symptoms | If positive, may safely avoid LPs, antibiotic exposure, and hospitalizations |
| EV testing | Infants undergoing LP and CSF studies | If positive, may consider discontinuing antibiotics, discharge home if bacterial cultures negative at 24–36 h |
| Influenza testing | Infants with respiratory symptoms, especially during high regional prevalence | If positive, may consider discontinuing antibiotics, discharge home if bacterial cultures negative at 24–36 h |
| Procalcitonin | Otherwise low‐risk infants with negative virological testing | If normal/minimal elevation: may consider initial inpatient observation off antibiotics, avoidance of LP, or outpatient management |
LP lumbar puncture, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, RSV respiratory syncytial virus, EV enterovirus