Prevalence of viruses in acute asthma exacerbations in childhood in a hospital in west part of Turkey
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Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAttribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United Stateshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/Tarih
2022Yazar
Bölük, Selime ÖzenTaşkırdı, İlke
Akçal, Ömer
Kaya, Mehmet Şirin
Hacı, İdil Akay
Soyoz, Özgen
Çelik, Figen Çelebi
Can, Demet
Üst veri
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Acute asthma exacerbations (AAE) are episodes characterized by potentially life-threatening
and rapidly deteriorating asthma symptoms. Viral respiratory infections are one of the major
triggers in the pathophysiology of childhood asthma exacerbations. In this study, we aimed to
determine the distribution of viral agents among pediatric AAE patients.
One hundred and three AAE patients, aged 5 or older, hospitalized between from
February 2017 through February 2020 at Pediatric Immunology and Allergic Diseases Unit were
included in this study. Fifty patients (48.5%) were female, and the mean age of the patients was
108.2 months. Viruses were detected in 58 (%56.3) of the patients, in 5 of whom more than one
virus type was detected. The most commonly detected virus was human rhinovirus (n=43,
67.1%).
Other types included respiratory syncytial virus (n=8; 12.5%), influenza (n=6; 9.3%), human
metapneumovirus (n=4; 6.2%), adenovirus (n=1; 1.5%), enterovirus (n=1; 1.5%), and
parainfluenza (n=1; 1.5%). Viral agents were detected in 29 out of the 47 patients with allergic
asthma, with human rhinoviruses comprising the majority (18 patients). The mean length of
hospital stay was 7.89 days.
Human rhinovirus is the most common virus that triggers AAE, with similar distributions in
allergic and non-allergic asthma. We found no correlation between virus type and the length of
hospital stay.
Kaynak
Iranian Journal of Allergy, Asthma and ImmunologyCilt
21Sayı
2Koleksiyonlar
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