Objective: To analyze the causes of childhood pneumonia Streptococcus pneumoniae resistance and clinical characteristics, and provide a basis for better and timely clinical therapy, and medication to reduce blind-ness...Objective: To analyze the causes of childhood pneumonia Streptococcus pneumoniae resistance and clinical characteristics, and provide a basis for better and timely clinical therapy, and medication to reduce blind-ness. Methods: MIC method in our hospital 114 under 2020 pediatric pneumococcal respiratory infection in children with lower respiratory tract specimens were isolated antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and analyzed retrospectively. Results: 84 male children, 30 female children, the largest of which 9 years old, the youngest two months, infants less than 1 year old, 90 people;suffering from bronchial pneumonia, 90 cases, 21 cases of pneumonia, wheezing, 3 cases of bronchitis, the average length of stay for about a week;improved in 79 cases, 33 cases were cured, 2 cases transferred to higher level hospitals. All children with throat congestion, swollen tonsils, lung breath sounds rough, smell and moist rales. 114 penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae was 64.9%, erythromycin 97.4%, clindamycin 86.8%, tetracycline 87.7%, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 82.5%, amoxicillin 21.9%, cefotaxime 49.1%, chloramphenicol 10.5%, was not found to levofloxacin and van-comycin. Conclusion: Penicillin, erythromycin, and clindamycin are not as pneumococcal pneumonia in children experience preferred medi-cation in children less than one year old child could easily cause lung chain Streptococcus pneumoniae. Therefore, the antimicrobial resistance of Streptococcus pneumoniae analysis provides a reference for experi-enced clinicians to adjust medication.展开更多
文摘Objective: To analyze the causes of childhood pneumonia Streptococcus pneumoniae resistance and clinical characteristics, and provide a basis for better and timely clinical therapy, and medication to reduce blind-ness. Methods: MIC method in our hospital 114 under 2020 pediatric pneumococcal respiratory infection in children with lower respiratory tract specimens were isolated antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and analyzed retrospectively. Results: 84 male children, 30 female children, the largest of which 9 years old, the youngest two months, infants less than 1 year old, 90 people;suffering from bronchial pneumonia, 90 cases, 21 cases of pneumonia, wheezing, 3 cases of bronchitis, the average length of stay for about a week;improved in 79 cases, 33 cases were cured, 2 cases transferred to higher level hospitals. All children with throat congestion, swollen tonsils, lung breath sounds rough, smell and moist rales. 114 penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae was 64.9%, erythromycin 97.4%, clindamycin 86.8%, tetracycline 87.7%, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 82.5%, amoxicillin 21.9%, cefotaxime 49.1%, chloramphenicol 10.5%, was not found to levofloxacin and van-comycin. Conclusion: Penicillin, erythromycin, and clindamycin are not as pneumococcal pneumonia in children experience preferred medi-cation in children less than one year old child could easily cause lung chain Streptococcus pneumoniae. Therefore, the antimicrobial resistance of Streptococcus pneumoniae analysis provides a reference for experi-enced clinicians to adjust medication.