1,241 research outputs found
Guideline on management of the acute asthma attack in children by Italian Society of Pediatrics.
BACKGROUND: Acute asthma attack is a frequent condition in children. It is one of the most common reasons for emergency department (ED) visit and hospitalization. Appropriate care is fundamental, considering both the high prevalence of asthma in children, and its life-threatening risks. Italian Society of Pediatrics recently issued a guideline on the management of acute asthma attack in children over age 2, in ambulatory and emergency department settings. METHODS: The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology was adopted. A literature search was performed using the Cochrane Library and Medline/PubMed databases, retrieving studies in English or Italian and including children over age 2 year. RESULTS: Inhaled ß2 agonists are the first line drugs for acute asthma attack in children. Ipratropium bromide should be added in moderate/severe attacks. Early use of systemic steroids is associated with reduced risk of ED visits and hospitalization. High doses of inhaled steroids should not replace systemic steroids. Aminophylline use should be avoided in mild/moderate attacks. Weak evidence supports its use in life-threatening attacks. Epinephrine should not be used in the treatment of acute asthma for its lower cost / benefit ratio, compared to β2 agonists. Intravenous magnesium solphate could be used in children with severe attacks and/or forced expiratory volume1 (FEV1) lower than 60% predicted, unresponsive to initial inhaled therapy. Heliox could be administered in life-threatening attacks. Leukotriene receptor antagonists are not recommended. CONCLUSIONS: This Guideline is expected to be a useful resource in managing acute asthma attacks in children over age 2
probiotics and vaccination in children
Immunisation is one of the most beneficial and cost-effective disease prevention measures. However several immunisations are associated with suboptimal seroconversion rates and so the protective effect is not optimal. In the last two decades the concept about the use of probiotic bacteria as novel mucosal adjuvants has engendered a lot of interest due to our increased immunological understanding and the availability of various techniques to enhance existing vaccine specific-immune responses. Mostly in developing countries, many people still die every year from vaccine-preventable diseases such as pneumonia and diarrhea. To date, emphasis has been placed on identifying novel vaccine antigens and adjuvants that induce stronger protective immune responses, as well as developing mucosally-administered vaccines. We would have enormous benefits in allowing safe administration of vaccines in remote areas and we may overcome the necessity for multiple doses. The precise mechanism of action of probiotics is not fully understood, but several animal and human studies have proven immunomodulatory effects involving both the humoral and cellular components of the host's immune system. This review discusses whether dietary supplementation with oral probiotics enhances the immune response of infants after routine vaccinations and also evaluates clinical effects of probiotics in adults. Further well designed, randomized, placebo-controlled studies are needed to understand fully the immunomodulatory properties of probiotics, whether the effects exerted are strain and age-dependent, and their clinical relevance in enhancing protection following vaccination
Chromosome 16p11.2 deletions: another piece in the genetic puzzle of childhood obesity
Ipercaloric diet and reduced physical activity have driven the rise in the prevalence of childhood obesity over a relatively short time interval. Family and twin studies have led to the conclusion that the strong predicitve value of parental body mass index (BMI) mainly stems from genetic rather than environmental factors. Whereas the common polygenic obesity arises when an individual genetic make-up is susceptible to an environment that promotes energy consumption over energy expenditure, monogenic obesity, on the contrary, is the obesity associated with a single gene mutation, which is sufficient by itself to cause weight gain in a food abundant context. Genes involved in the leptin-melanocortin pathway are often mutated in these cases. The cumulative prevalence of monogenic obesity among children with severe obesity is about 5%
Recurrent respiratory infections between immunity and atopy
Recurrent respiratory infections (RRIs) are frequent in children and are characterized by more than 6 airway infections in 1 year or more than 1 upper airway infection per month in the period between September and April or more than 3 lower airway infections in 1 year. Often pediatric RRIs are related to predisposing factors, such as reduced airway size, poor tussive reflex, and immaturity of the immune system. RRIs due to immature immune system are a transient condition, with spontaneous resolution in the school age. However, some RRIs are expression of more complex diseases. Red flags are the onset of symptoms in the first year of life, the involvement of other systems, unusual pathogens, slowing of growth, severe infections of the lower airways, and recurrence of the infection site. To help the pediatrician in the RRI differential diagnosis, we have created a roadmap based on scientific literature data and clinical practice that identifies 6 macro areas: immunodeficiencies, simple minimal genetic immunodeficiency, atopy, obesity, nutritional deficiencies, autoinflammatory diseases, and complex diseases
Corticosteroid-Sparing Effect of Chromoglycate Sodium and Nedocromil
The most appropiate management for bronchial asthma is the control
of airway inflammation. Corticosteroids are the most effective
anti-inflammatory drugs available, but they have a number of side
effects; most of these are dose-dependent. In children, asthma
control should be accomplished with low steroid doses possibly given
by inhalation. In a double-bind placebo-controlled crossover study a
group of children with mild to moderate asthma received NED 16
mg/day or BDP 400 μg/day. Values for FEV1, PEF, symptoms use
ofbronchodilators overlapped, whereas bronchial hyper-responsiveness
assessed by histamine bronchoprovocation challenge was better with
BDP than NED. In another case, one boy with high bronchial
hyper-reactivity assessed by provocation test with hypertonic
solution, experienced a significant improvement only after 2 weeks
of therapy with Deflazacort (2 mg/Kg/day) followed by 4 months on
combined treatment with NED (16 mg/day) and BDP (300 μ/day). Authors
conclude that NED could have a steroidsparing effect over long-term use
Covid-19 and spirometry in this age
In the last year, many countries adopted a plan to contain hospital infections by Sars-Cov-2 also limiting pulmonary function tests (PFTs), exclusively to indispensable cases. All the recommendations of the major scientific societies regarding the use of PFTs, in particular spirometry, in the Covid era were formulated in the initial period of the pandemic. Currently, the new scientific knowledge about Sars-Cov-2 and the vaccination among healthcare workers, shown new insight to start doing PFTs again to help the investigation and monitoring of patients with respiratory pathology. In this article, we sum up the recommendations of major International Respiratory Societies, and we shared our experience about PFTs in a Pediatric Respiratory Disease Unit during the pandemic
NeumonÃa por COVID-19 en niños: De su etiologÃa a su manejo
El COVID-19 es menos serio en niños que en adultos. Sin embargo, las afecciones respiratorias dominan el cuadro clÃnico de pacientes hospitalizados por COVID-19, aun en niños. En algunas series de casos, el deterioro del estado clÃnico, donde la disnea, la cianosis y el inicio del sÃndrome de dificultad respiratoria aguda (SDRA) emergieron ∼8–10 dÃas después del inicio de la infección por SARS-CoV-2, pudo progresar rápidamente hasta la falla multiorgánica y la muerte. Esta revisión tiene como objetivo evaluar las caracterÃsticas de la neumonÃa por COVID-19 en poblaciones pediátricas, comenzando con su etiologÃa y sus mecanismos patológicos, para cerrar con su manejo clÃnico
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