Background: The severity of childhood gastroenteritis is generally believed to be age-related rather than aetiology-related. Rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis is more severe than gastroenteritis caused by other enteric pathogens and is also age-related. We thus addressed the question of whether the increased severity of rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis is related to age or to features intrinsic to the agent. Study design: In this multicentre, hospital-based, prospective survey, we evaluated the severity of diarrhoea in rotavirus-positive and rotavirus-negative children up to 4 years of age. Severity was assessed with a score in four groups of age-matched children. Results: Rotavirus was detected in 381 of 911 children. Disease severity was evaluated in 589 cases for which clinical data were complete. The rotavirus-positive and rotavirus-negative groups differed with regards to diarrhoea duration, hospital stay, degree of dehydration and the number of episodes of vomiting. Gastroenteritis was more severe in rotavirus-positive than in rotavirus-negative children. In contrast, none of the main severity parameters differed in the four age groups, irrespective of the presence of rotavirus. Conclusions: These data provide the evidence that aetiology and not age determines diarrhoeal severity. The demonstration that diarrhoea was more severe in rotavirus-positive children supports the need for a rotavirus vaccine and for studies that address the duration of vaccine protection.

Rotavirus and not age determines gastroenteritis severity in children : a hospital-based study / F. Albano, E. Bruzzese, A. Bella, A. Cascio, L. Titone, S. Arista, G. Izzi, R. Virdis, P. Pecco, N. Principi, M. Fontana, A. Guarino. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0340-6199. - 166:3(2007), pp. 241-247.

Rotavirus and not age determines gastroenteritis severity in children : a hospital-based study

N. Principi;
2007

Abstract

Background: The severity of childhood gastroenteritis is generally believed to be age-related rather than aetiology-related. Rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis is more severe than gastroenteritis caused by other enteric pathogens and is also age-related. We thus addressed the question of whether the increased severity of rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis is related to age or to features intrinsic to the agent. Study design: In this multicentre, hospital-based, prospective survey, we evaluated the severity of diarrhoea in rotavirus-positive and rotavirus-negative children up to 4 years of age. Severity was assessed with a score in four groups of age-matched children. Results: Rotavirus was detected in 381 of 911 children. Disease severity was evaluated in 589 cases for which clinical data were complete. The rotavirus-positive and rotavirus-negative groups differed with regards to diarrhoea duration, hospital stay, degree of dehydration and the number of episodes of vomiting. Gastroenteritis was more severe in rotavirus-positive than in rotavirus-negative children. In contrast, none of the main severity parameters differed in the four age groups, irrespective of the presence of rotavirus. Conclusions: These data provide the evidence that aetiology and not age determines diarrhoeal severity. The demonstration that diarrhoea was more severe in rotavirus-positive children supports the need for a rotavirus vaccine and for studies that address the duration of vaccine protection.
English
Settore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale e Specialistica
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
2007
Springer International
166
3
241
247
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Rotavirus and not age determines gastroenteritis severity in children : a hospital-based study / F. Albano, E. Bruzzese, A. Bella, A. Cascio, L. Titone, S. Arista, G. Izzi, R. Virdis, P. Pecco, N. Principi, M. Fontana, A. Guarino. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0340-6199. - 166:3(2007), pp. 241-247.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
12
262
Article (author)
si
F. Albano, E. Bruzzese, A. Bella, A. Cascio, L. Titone, S. Arista, G. Izzi, R. Virdis, P. Pecco, N. Principi, M. Fontana, A. Guarino
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/37908
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