AIM: To describe the chickenpox complications in children in Italy. METHODS: Hospital discharge data from 1 January 2002 to 15 June 2006 were queried for patients less than 18 years of age in three Italian paediatric university hospitals. RESULTS: During the study period, 349 children (189 males, 160 females) were admitted. Thirteen out of 349 (3.7%) of them had serious underlying diseases. Two hundred and sixty-one (74.8%) children (median age: 41 months, range: 6 days -to 200 months) had complicated chickenpox. Among complications, neurological disorders were the most common (100/261 = 38.3%), followed by skin and soft tissue infections (63/261 = 24.1%), lower respiratory tract infections (57/261 = 21.8%) and haematological disorders (24/261 = 9.2%). Children with neurological complications were significantly older and had a longer hospital stay than those with other complications. Three children with encephalitis and cerebellitis had developed long-term sequelae by the 6-month follow-up. The mortality rate was 0.4% (1/261 children with complicated chickenpox). CONCLUSION: Chickenpox is a disease that can provoke serious complications and long hospital stays, even in healthy children. Our findings may be useful as background to evaluate the impact of a tetravalent measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine (MMRV) which is going to be introduced in Italy

Epidemiology of hospital admissions for chickenpox in children: An Italian multicentre study in the pre-vaccine era / MARCHETTO S; DE BENEDICTIS FM; DE MARTINO M; VERSACE A; CHIAPPINI E; BERTAINE C; OSIMANI P; CORDIALI R; GABIANO C; GALLI L.. - In: ACTA PAEDIATRICA. - ISSN 0803-5253. - STAMPA. - 96:(2007), pp. 1490-1493. [10.1111/j.1651-2227.2007.00465.x]

Epidemiology of hospital admissions for chickenpox in children: An Italian multicentre study in the pre-vaccine era

DE MARTINO, MAURIZIO;CHIAPPINI, ELENA;GALLI, LUISA
2007

Abstract

AIM: To describe the chickenpox complications in children in Italy. METHODS: Hospital discharge data from 1 January 2002 to 15 June 2006 were queried for patients less than 18 years of age in three Italian paediatric university hospitals. RESULTS: During the study period, 349 children (189 males, 160 females) were admitted. Thirteen out of 349 (3.7%) of them had serious underlying diseases. Two hundred and sixty-one (74.8%) children (median age: 41 months, range: 6 days -to 200 months) had complicated chickenpox. Among complications, neurological disorders were the most common (100/261 = 38.3%), followed by skin and soft tissue infections (63/261 = 24.1%), lower respiratory tract infections (57/261 = 21.8%) and haematological disorders (24/261 = 9.2%). Children with neurological complications were significantly older and had a longer hospital stay than those with other complications. Three children with encephalitis and cerebellitis had developed long-term sequelae by the 6-month follow-up. The mortality rate was 0.4% (1/261 children with complicated chickenpox). CONCLUSION: Chickenpox is a disease that can provoke serious complications and long hospital stays, even in healthy children. Our findings may be useful as background to evaluate the impact of a tetravalent measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine (MMRV) which is going to be introduced in Italy
2007
96
1490
1493
MARCHETTO S; DE BENEDICTIS FM; DE MARTINO M; VERSACE A; CHIAPPINI E; BERTAINE C; OSIMANI P; CORDIALI R; GABIANO C; GALLI L.
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/386425
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