Etiology of acute respiratory infection in children under 5 years in the provinces Comunera and García Rovira of Santander
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Keywords

Viruses
respiratory tract infections
child
prevalence
multiplex polymerase chain reaction

How to Cite

García Corzo, J. R., Niederbacher Velasquez, J., González Rugéles, C. I., Rodríguez Villamizar, L. A., Machuca Pérez, M., Torres Prieto, A., Ortiz Rodríguez, G. C., & Romero Salazar, M. (2016). Etiology of acute respiratory infection in children under 5 years in the provinces Comunera and García Rovira of Santander. Salud UIS, 48(2). https://doi.org/10.18273/revsal.v48n2-2016009

Abstract

Introduction: Acute respiratory infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children under 5 years in Santander (Colombia). Viral etiology in municipalities from this department is not well known. Objective: To determine the viral etiology of acute respiratory infection in children under five years in the provinces Comunera and García Rovira (Santander) from December 2012 to December 2013. Methodology: Descriptive study in pediatric population who attended the emergency services studied. Nasopharyngeal swab samples were obtained and a polymerase chain reaction was performed with Seeplex® OneStep RV15 ACE Detection, which is a multiplex test for 15 virus. Results: 64 children were enrolled, 57,8% being boys. 26.6% of participants were under one year. Virus positivity was present in 37.5% of the samples and 75% of the positive samples were from the province Comunera. Besides, 8.3% from positive samples were co-infected with two viruses. The most common virus were Rhinovirus (29%), Parainfluenza 4 (20.8%) and influenza (12.5%). Coronavirus, Adenovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, Metapneumovirus and other Parainfluenza virus were also identified. Conclusions: There is a wide circulation of respiratory virus in children under five in these two provinces of Santander (Colombia). Rhinovirus was the most frequent. Human Metapneumovirus and Coronavirus were also found.

https://doi.org/10.18273/revsal.v48n2-2016009
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