Acute viral bronchiolitis is a common respiratory infectious disease of
infancy. A prospective study was carried out with 175 infants aged up
to six months to evaluate their nutritional and breastfeeding status as
possible risk factors for unfavourable evolution of previously-healthy
infants from a care hospital. Immunofluorescence test for virus and
anthropometric assessment were performed. Outcomes were length of
oxygen-use, length of hospital stay, and type of hospital unit needed.
Seventy-three percent of the infants were well-nourished, 6%
undernourished, 8.6% at a nutritional risk, 10.9% overweight, and 1.7%
obese. Eighty-one percent of the undernourished and nutritionally
at-risk infants and 72% of the well-nourished, overweight, and obese
infants did not receive exclusive breastfeeding. The median length of
hospital stay was four days and of oxygen-use was 60 hours. The
nutritional status did not affect the clinical course of
previously-healthy infants with acute viral brochiolitis. The duration
of exclusive breastfeeding, but not type of breastfeeding, was
inversely related to the length of oxygen-use and the length of
hospital stay. Shorter exclusive breastfeeding was observed in infants
who were assigned to a paediatric ward or to an intensive care unit. In
conclusion, longer duration of breastfeeding was associated with better
clinical outcomes