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%) that the broth method failed to detect. Pneumococcal Bacteremia and Focal Infection in Young Children Stephen J. Teach, MD, MPH1 Diane M. Dryja, MT, CLS2 Debra Tristram, MD2 Summary: We reviewed a consecutive case ...
of infection ; and to compare the predictive abilities of objective criteria in identification of children with occult pneumococcal bacteremia from those at risk.DesignAll children seen from 1993 through 1996, 3 ...
, NY 11040 (lrubin@lij.edu). ARTICLE Incidence of Occult Bacteremia Among Highly Febrile Young Children in the Era of the Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine A Study From a Children’s Hospital Emergency ...
features of IPD have changed since pneumococcal conjugate vaccines were introduced, with a shift toward more focal infections requiring hospitalization. Although overall IPD cases have declined, disease ...
of susceptibility to infection . Lancet 1978;2:963-965.Crossref 9. McGowan JE, Bratton L, Klein JO, et al: Bacteremia in febrile children seen in a 'walk-in' pediatric clinic . N Engl J Med 1973;288:1309-1312 ...
serious focal infections , persistent bacteremia , and subsequent hospital admissions than patients with S pneumoniae. Patients with H influenzae bacteremia had a 21.1-fold increase in risk of meningitis (95 ...
Scholar PubMed 52. Kuppermann N , Bank DE , Walton EA , et al. Risks for bacteremia and urinary tract infections in young febrile children with bronchiolitis . Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997 ; 151 : 1207 ...
in young children after introduction of the conjugate pneumococcal vaccine.Pediatr Infect Dis J20042372673115295222SBlackHShinefieldRBaxterPostlicensure surveillance for pneumococcal invasive disease after ...
not routinely help to distinguish young febrile children with respiratory viral infections from children with UTI and bacteremia after taking into account readily available clinical information (age, temperature ...
chances of severe outcomes.THE TREATMENT of the young febrile child without obvious focal infection remains controversial. Recent studies document a 3% risk of occult pneumococcal bacteremia in children ...
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