Aims: The objective of the study was to assess the performance of lung ultrasonography (LUS) as compared to chest radiography and the clinical criteria for the diagnosis of pneumonia in children.Materials and methods: This was a retrospective study in which data were collected from medical files of 81 children admitted with a clinical suspicion of pneumonia in which both an LUS and a chest radiograph during the hospitalization were performed. Reference standard used for the diagnosis of pneumonia were chest radiographs (consolidation, parenchymal infiltrates, and interstitial infiltrate) and clinical criteria. LUSfindings were reported as normal, parenchymal consolidations and pleural effusions. Results: Radiological pneumonia was reported in 72 of the 81 patients (88.9%). LUS identified parenchymal consolidations in 62 cases. LUS correctly identified radiological pneumonia with a sensitivity of 79.2% and a specificity of 44.4%. The positive predictive value (PPV) was 91.9% and the negative predictive value (NPV) was 21.0%. When clinical criteria were used as reference standard, the sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV of correctly identifying clinical pneumonia cases by LUS (only consolidations) were 80.0%, 66.7%, 96.8% and 21.0%. When indicative for the presence of pneumonia either the ultrasound consolidation or the ultrasound detected pleural effusion were considered when the sensitivity, PPV and NPV increased to 96.0% (95%CI: 88.8-99.2), 97.3% (95%CI: 92.0-99.1), and 57.1% (95%CI: 27.7-82.2), respectively.Conclusions: In our opinion, our findings together withprevious ones available in the literature recommend LUS as a valuable investigation for the diagnosis of community-acquiredpneumonia in children.
Background and aimsCommunity-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a both common and serious childhood infection. Antibiotic treatment guidelines help to reduce inadequate antibiotics prescriptions.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective study at the Clinical Emergency Hospital for Children, 3rd Pediatric Clinic, Cluj-Napoca and Dr. Gavril Curteanu Clinical City Hospital, in Oradea. All patients discharged with a diagnosis of CAP between December 1, 2014 and February 28, 2015, were included in the study.ResultsThere were 146 cases discharged with pneumonia in Cluj-Napoca center (mean age 4 years; range: 1 month – 16 years), and 212 cases in Oradea center (mean age 0.9 years; range: 2 weeks – 8 years). All cases were analyzed. The analysis made in Clinical Emergency Hospital for Children, 3rd Pediatric Clinic, Cluj-Napoca, showed that the antibiotics used in children hospitalized with community-acquired CAP are cefuroxime (43%), ceftriaxone (23%), macrolides (16%), ampicillin in association with an aminoglycoside (6%) and other antibiotics. The same antibiotics were used in Dr. Gavril Curteanu Clinical City Hospital of Oradea, where ampicillin in association with aminoglycoside was utilized in younger children (mean age 1.3 years), while ceftriaxone in older children (5.7 years) and children with high inflammation markers (ESR, CRP). From 11 pleurisy cases, 9 received cefuroxime or ceftriaxone.ConclusionsThere was a wide variability in CAP antibiotic treatment across university hospitals, regarding antibiotic choice and dosing. Antibiotic selection was not always related to the clinical and laboratory characteristics of the patient. The national guideline was not followed, especially in children aged one to three months.
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