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Journal Reading

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Title: Journal Reading


1
Journal Reading
  • Occult Pneumonias
  • ---Richard Bachyr, MD Holly Perry, MD Marvin
    B Harper, MD
  • ---Annals of Emergency Medicine

2
INTRODUCTION
  • Young children offer suboptimal examinations, and
    clinical signs and symptoms in infants and
    children are frequently too nonspecific to
    suggest, or disqualify , a diagnosis.
  • Diagnostic evaluations ten to be more extensive
    in young children with high fever and no
    identifiable infectious source.
  • WBC counts have been recommended in young
    children with high fever as part of a diagnostic
    screen.

3
INTRODUCTION
  • Study objective
  • To determine the incidence of radiographic
    findings of pneumonia in highly febrile children
    with leukocytosis and no clinical evidence of
    pneumonia or other major infectious source

4
Material and Methods
  • Clinical practice guidelines for obtaining chest
    radiographs in young febrile
  • children Division of Emergency
  • Medicine of Childrens Hospital in
  • Boston, Massachusetts

5
Material and Methods
  • These guidelines offered no recommendation as to
    whether WBC count should be determined in a
    particular patients these guidelines offered no
    specific recommendations for the use of chest
    radiography in children with WBC counts less than
    20,000/mm3

6
Material and Methods
  • To avoid seasonal variation, we colleted data for
    an entire year after adoption of the guidelines.
  • All records of ED patients with leukocytosis (
    WBC count 20,000/mm3), triage temperature
    39.0C or higher, and age 5 years or younger were
    reviewed daily for 12 consecutive months
    beginning December 15, 1994.
  • Physicians primarily involved in the ED
    evaluation of a patient with leukocytosis
    completed a questionnaire

7
Material and Methods
  • Questionnaire indicating
  • Diagnosis
  • generalappearance( well, ill, toxic),
  • presence of respiratory symptoms ( breathing
    difficulty, congestion, wheeze, occasional or
    slight cough, mafor complaint of cough),
  • presence of respiratory signs (congestion,
    observed
  • cough, tachypnea, grunting, nasal flaring,
    retractions,
  • rhonchi, wheezing, rales, focal area of
    decreased breath,
  • sounds),
  • the presence and duration of fever,
  • reason for chestradiography, if performed ,
  • the interpretation of the chest radiograph by
    the radiologist.

8
Material and Methods
  • The clinicians were expected to complete the
    questionnaire
  • during the ED evaluation. Missing questionnaire
    were
  • completed by means of telephone interview ( by
    one of the
  • authors) and review of the medical record. (
    within 24 hours of
  • the visit)
  • Patients were considered eligible for a chest
    radiograph if
  • 1. aged 5 years or younger, leukocytosis, a
    triage temperature
  • of 39.0ºC or higher
  • 2. no other major source of infection (eg,
    abscess, adenitis, appendicitis, bloody diarrhea,
    celulitis, aseptic or bacterial
  • meningitis, osteomyelitis, parotitis,
    pyelonephritis, septic
  • arthritis)
  • 3. no immunodeficiency (sickle cell disease,
    neoplasia, long-term stroid use, HIV infection)

9
Material and Methods
  • 4. no chronic lung disease ( asthma, cystic
    fibrosis,
  • bronchopulmonary dysplasia, congesstive heart
  • failure, chronic aspiration pneumonia)
  • 5. pt with minor infections such as otitis
    media,
  • sinusitis, and pharyngitis were still considered
  • 6. pt with identifiable viral illnesses such as
  • mononucleosis, stomatitis, varicella,
    bronchiolitis,
  • and croup were also considered
  • 7. pt with a preliminary diagnosis of UTI or
  • appendicitis who were proved not to have these
  • illnesses were considered

10
Material and Methods
  • Medical record was reviewed for age, initial
    temperature, triage respiratory rate, oxygen
    saturation, disposition, final diagnosis, culture
    results, and attending pediatric radiologists
    repost on the chest radiograph.
  • Tachypnea determined on the basis of respiratory
    rate
  • lt 6 m/o? 60/min
  • 612 m/o? 50/min
  • 1 3 y/o? 40/min
  • gt 3 y/o? 25/min
  • Temporature lt1 y/o rectal measurements
  • gt1y/o ---tympanic membrane

11
Material and Methods
  • On the questionnaire, the clinician had to select
    1 of 4
  • choices as the indication for chest radiography
  • fever and respiratory symptoms or signs
    suggestive of pneumonia
  • Fever and leukocytosis but no bacterial focus
  • Fever, leukocytosis, and only a minor bacterial
    source of
  • infection
  • inadvertent chest radiography (eg, pneumonia
    found on an abdominal radiograph)
  • 2, 3, 4 ? empiric chest radiographs , no-signs
    group
  • 1 ? signs group
  • Eligible for chest radiography but did not have
    one ? no-radiograph group

12
Material and Methods
  • Pneumonia was defined as radiology findings of
    consolidation
  • or infiltrates reported in definite terms by the
    report of an attending
  • pediatric radiologist.
  • Any findings labeled as less than definite (eg.
    atelectasis
  • versus infiltrate, equivocal pneumonia, or
    possible
  • pneumonia were considered equivocal pneumonia.
  • ?negative chest radiogrphs.
  • A negative chest radiograph as defined as a
    radiologists
  • reading of negative or normal
  • Pneumonias detected on empiric chest radiographs
    (ie, in the
  • no-signs group) are termed occult pneumonias
  • Pneumonias detected in the signs group are termed
  • nonoccult pneumonias)

13
RESULTS
  • For the study period
  • 3549 patients aged 5 y/o or younger with a triage
    temperature
  • of 39.0C or greater
  • 389 (11) had a WBC count of 20000 cells/mm3 or
    greater
  • 111 patients was excluded for immunodeficiency,
    other infection source than pneumonia, chronic
    lung dz
  • 278 patients constitutes the study group, all
    considered eligible for chest radiography.
  • All patients with a discharge diagnosis of
    pneumonia underwent chest radiography.
  • Questionnaires were completed for 100 of the
    eligible patients.

14
RESULTS
  • 93 of forms were complete by physicians
    concurrent with pt care, 7 were completed later
    by telephone interview, clinician review of
    medical records , or both

15
RESULTS
16
RESULTS
17
RESULTS
18
RESULTS
  • In the study group
  • 63 were febrile 1 day
  • 78 2 days
  • 88 3 days
  • Among patients with pneumonia
  • 36 were febrile 1 day
  • 57 2 days
  • 71 3 days
  • Occult pneumonia patients
  • 45 were febrile 1 day
  • Pneumonia pts in signs group
  • 25 were febrile 1 day

19
RESULTS
20
RESULTS
  • 275 of the 278 pts obtained blood cultures, 6.5
    bacteremia
  • WBC 20000-24900 5.0, 25000-29900 8.2,
    WBC3000010.5
  • All isolates were S pneumoniae.
  • No difference in the rates of bacteremia among
    patients with and without pneumonia
  • 3 of 38 pts with occult pneumonia were baceremic
  • 53 of 70 pneumonia patients (76)?single
    infiltrates 12 with round pneumonias, 11 with
    more than 1 infiltrate, 6 with lobar
    consolidation
  • 29 of 38 (76) occult pneumonia patients with
    single infiltrates, 4 (10) had 2 or more
    infiltrates, and 5 (13) had evidence of lobar
    pneumonia.

21
DISCUSSION
  • The prevalence of occult pneumonia in patients
    with high fever and leukocytosis but no
    respiratory findings suggestive of pneumonia was
    26 (95 CI, 19-34)
  • The minimum estimate of occult pneumonia n this
    population was 19 (95 CI, 14 to 25)
  • No individual sign or constellation of findings
    was a sensitive predictor of pneumonia.
  • Signs of respiratory distress (eg. Tachypnea,
    grunting, flaring, retracting )or lower
    respiratory tract signs (eg, rales, rhonchi,
    wheeze, focal decreased breath sounds) had high
    specificity.

22
DISCUSSION
  • The low sensitivity of respiratory findings
    reflects the large number of occult pneumonias
    detected in this select population.
  • The guidelines will remain unchanged after this
    study.
  • In practice, a chest radiograph may not be
    necessary to diagnose pneumonia, and we are not
    recommending chest radiography in patients in
    whom a clinical diagnosis can be made.

23
DISCUSSION
  • Limitations of this study
  • 1. patients were identified by WBC count, but
    the indications for obtaining( or not obtaining)
    a CVC were not studied
  • 2. questionnaires were completed by physicians
    at many levels of training, and the questionnaire
    did not record whether the patient had multiple
    examiners. (56 Residents , 17 fellows, 27
    attendings)
  • 3. the prevalence of pneumonia may have been
    underestimatd by considering all the patients
    with equivocal pneumonias and those who did not
    have a radiograph as no-pneumonia patients
  • 4. the radiologists were not aware of the
    guidelines or the study, but they were not
    blinded to the information available on the
    radiology requisition, which influences their
    interpretations.

24
Conclusion
  • Chest radiography should be performed in young,
    febrile children with leukocytosis and no other
    treatable source of infection.
  • Administering empiric antibiotics to children
    with leukocytosis should be done only after a
    consideration of what foci of infection may be
    missed on examination alone.
  • For febrile infants aged 3 months or less,
    without leukocytosis or clinical evidence of
    upper or lower respiratory tract infection, a
    chest radiograph should not be obtained.
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