Objective: It demonstrates the correlation of the viral hemorrhagic fever with kidney failure and the treatment as well as the outcome. Method: A PubMed search of the English literature from 1999 to 2019 was performed...Objective: It demonstrates the correlation of the viral hemorrhagic fever with kidney failure and the treatment as well as the outcome. Method: A PubMed search of the English literature from 1999 to 2019 was performed using “viral hemorrhagic fever, Case Report, Renal Failure” as the subject. The inclusion criteria were the following: 1) case report and case series of two or more patients;2) the report detailed the clinical presentation and reported the status of the renal system;3) the report described the management of renal failure if any;and 4) the etiology of the infection is known and is one of the known agents of viral hemorrhagic fever, listed on the centers of disease control website. We excluded infections related to vaccination related to viral hemorrhagic fever. Result: We found the mean age of these patients was 41.5. The male to female ratio was about 3.5:1. Dengue and Hantaviruses constituted 70.5% of patients. The overall mortality of the study cohort was 32.2%. Half of the patients had acute kidney injury and required renal replacement therapy. The chi-square statistic is 0.41;The p-value is 0.51;The chi-square statistic is 6.4254. Overall mortality was 32.3% in one cohort of 78 patients. The illness goes through several stages [1] [2] of clinical features and some viruses in the group have a high case fatality rate. Conclusions: Early diagnosis with aggressive supportive care is critical for improving clinical outcomes. Renal involvement is common. Amongst the cohort reviewed, of patients who had acute kidney injury, half of the patients required renal replacement support. However, some viruses cause greater kidney injury than others, for instance, kidney injury is more severe in Dengue hemorrhagic fevers when compared to Hantaviruses. Simultaneous management of public health by prevention and control of outbreaks is particularly important.展开更多
Background: In the last 6 months, cases of acute hemorrhagic fever (AHF) have been recorded in Sao Tome and Principe (STP). Objective: To identify the clinical, epidemiological and laboratory parameters associated wit...Background: In the last 6 months, cases of acute hemorrhagic fever (AHF) have been recorded in Sao Tome and Principe (STP). Objective: To identify the clinical, epidemiological and laboratory parameters associated with AHF cases found in patients hospitalized in STP. Methods: Descriptive and quantitative analysis of AHF cases hospitalized in STP in the period December 2021 to May 19, 2022 through the variables: demographic data;clinical data;laboratory data and clinical outcome. Results: Analyzed 18 of 22 AHF cases, 50% of them male, mean age 33.7 years, 85.7% residing in the 2 largest districts of the country, 66.7% rural workers, administrative near maritime areas, sailors and domestics. 66.7% were healthy individuals. ≥50% had a fever, asthenia/weakness, myalgia, headache, lethargy, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. 22.2% to 33.3% had retro-orbital pain, abdominal pain, decreased consciousness, dyspnea/hypoxia, and cough. In a smaller register (5.6% - 11.1%), exanthema, convulsion, arthralgia, low back pain, chills, and chest pain. Bleeding from the digestive tract was found in 72.2%, followed by vaginal (33.3%), urethral (27.8%), nasal (22.2%), and oral (16.7%). 50% had laboratory confirmation for dengue, and another 50% with suspected clinical diagnosis without laboratory confirmation of the etiologic agent. Despite hemorrhage, 66.7% of confirmed cases were hemodynamically non-severe, and 88.9% of suspected cases were severe. Coinfection with malaria is evidenced in 11.1% of cases. 72.2% recovered and 27.8% died (deaths in 55.5% of suspected cases). Case deaths were male (100%), resident foreigners (40%), tool store employees, sailors and students, healthy (80%), and residing in the largest district in the country (60%). All deaths were hospitalized in serious condition, 80% were hospitalized for hemorrhage and shock, with bleeding arising between day 4 - 5 of illness in 60% and hospitalization on day 5 of illness. 60% died within ≤24 hours of hospitalization. 80% died from shock and multi-organ dysfunction and 20% from respiratory failure. Deaths had thrombocytopenia (100%), renal dysfunction (100%) and significantly increased transaminases (100%), anemia (75%) and leukocytosis (66.7%). 20% had a radiological change of pulmonary infiltrates. Conclusion: Our data reveal the complexity of the pathogens causing AHF and suggest the possible presence of other human pathogens usually unknown in the Santomean geographical territory.展开更多
文摘Objective: It demonstrates the correlation of the viral hemorrhagic fever with kidney failure and the treatment as well as the outcome. Method: A PubMed search of the English literature from 1999 to 2019 was performed using “viral hemorrhagic fever, Case Report, Renal Failure” as the subject. The inclusion criteria were the following: 1) case report and case series of two or more patients;2) the report detailed the clinical presentation and reported the status of the renal system;3) the report described the management of renal failure if any;and 4) the etiology of the infection is known and is one of the known agents of viral hemorrhagic fever, listed on the centers of disease control website. We excluded infections related to vaccination related to viral hemorrhagic fever. Result: We found the mean age of these patients was 41.5. The male to female ratio was about 3.5:1. Dengue and Hantaviruses constituted 70.5% of patients. The overall mortality of the study cohort was 32.2%. Half of the patients had acute kidney injury and required renal replacement therapy. The chi-square statistic is 0.41;The p-value is 0.51;The chi-square statistic is 6.4254. Overall mortality was 32.3% in one cohort of 78 patients. The illness goes through several stages [1] [2] of clinical features and some viruses in the group have a high case fatality rate. Conclusions: Early diagnosis with aggressive supportive care is critical for improving clinical outcomes. Renal involvement is common. Amongst the cohort reviewed, of patients who had acute kidney injury, half of the patients required renal replacement support. However, some viruses cause greater kidney injury than others, for instance, kidney injury is more severe in Dengue hemorrhagic fevers when compared to Hantaviruses. Simultaneous management of public health by prevention and control of outbreaks is particularly important.
文摘Background: In the last 6 months, cases of acute hemorrhagic fever (AHF) have been recorded in Sao Tome and Principe (STP). Objective: To identify the clinical, epidemiological and laboratory parameters associated with AHF cases found in patients hospitalized in STP. Methods: Descriptive and quantitative analysis of AHF cases hospitalized in STP in the period December 2021 to May 19, 2022 through the variables: demographic data;clinical data;laboratory data and clinical outcome. Results: Analyzed 18 of 22 AHF cases, 50% of them male, mean age 33.7 years, 85.7% residing in the 2 largest districts of the country, 66.7% rural workers, administrative near maritime areas, sailors and domestics. 66.7% were healthy individuals. ≥50% had a fever, asthenia/weakness, myalgia, headache, lethargy, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. 22.2% to 33.3% had retro-orbital pain, abdominal pain, decreased consciousness, dyspnea/hypoxia, and cough. In a smaller register (5.6% - 11.1%), exanthema, convulsion, arthralgia, low back pain, chills, and chest pain. Bleeding from the digestive tract was found in 72.2%, followed by vaginal (33.3%), urethral (27.8%), nasal (22.2%), and oral (16.7%). 50% had laboratory confirmation for dengue, and another 50% with suspected clinical diagnosis without laboratory confirmation of the etiologic agent. Despite hemorrhage, 66.7% of confirmed cases were hemodynamically non-severe, and 88.9% of suspected cases were severe. Coinfection with malaria is evidenced in 11.1% of cases. 72.2% recovered and 27.8% died (deaths in 55.5% of suspected cases). Case deaths were male (100%), resident foreigners (40%), tool store employees, sailors and students, healthy (80%), and residing in the largest district in the country (60%). All deaths were hospitalized in serious condition, 80% were hospitalized for hemorrhage and shock, with bleeding arising between day 4 - 5 of illness in 60% and hospitalization on day 5 of illness. 60% died within ≤24 hours of hospitalization. 80% died from shock and multi-organ dysfunction and 20% from respiratory failure. Deaths had thrombocytopenia (100%), renal dysfunction (100%) and significantly increased transaminases (100%), anemia (75%) and leukocytosis (66.7%). 20% had a radiological change of pulmonary infiltrates. Conclusion: Our data reveal the complexity of the pathogens causing AHF and suggest the possible presence of other human pathogens usually unknown in the Santomean geographical territory.