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Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT06583317

Recurrent Pneumonia in Children

Recurrent Pneumonia in Children at Assiut University Children's Hospital

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
53 (estimated)
Sponsor
Assiut University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Days – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aimed to analyses the clinical characteristics, risk factors and underlying causes as predictors of recurrent pneumonia in children attending AUCH

Detailed description

Pneumonia is defined as inflammation of lung parenchyma due to various pathogenic organisms including bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites. The key symptom to suspect childhood pneumonia is tachypnea. The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined tachypnea as respiratory rate \>60 breaths/min in infants less than 2 months, \>50 in infants 2 -12 months and \>40 in children 1 to 5 years and \>20 in children \>5 years of age \[1\]. WHO has categorized pneumonia in children under-five years of age into two categories, pneumonia and severe pneumonia. Tachypnea with or without chest retraction is categorized as pneumonia while tachypnea with any danger signs (unable to feed or drink, hypothermia, unconsciousness, convulsion, signs of hypoxia including cyanosis, grunting, groaning, head nodding) as severe pneumonia \[1\]. Pneumonia is a common and described as the overlooked killer of children\[2\] as killing 1.1-1.4 million children every year. It accounts for 17%-19% of all deaths amongst children under 5 years of age; the majority of them are in developing countries \[3,4\] .In Egypt, children under 5 years approximate 13.4% of the total population\[4\] and pneumonia constitutes 19% of under-five mortality\[5\]. Recurrent pneumonia (RP) is defined as at least two episodes of pneumonia in one year or three episodes ever, with intercritical radiographic clearing of densities \[6\]. Incidence data indicate that RP occurs in 7.7%-9% of all children with CAP \[7,8,9,10,11,12\]. As a result, RP represents a frequent presenting manifestation in the general pediatric practice and is a very common reason for referral to pediatric chest physicians \[7\]. Factors linked to these infections could be recurrent aspirations, congenital structural anomalies of pulmonary and cardiovascular systems, defects in the clearance of airway secretions and immunodeficiency \[13\]

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2025-01-01
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2026-01-01
First posted
2024-09-04
Last updated
2024-09-04

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06583317. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.