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Clinical Implications of the Obstructive Pattern on Chest Radiography in Children Aged 3–59 Months With Severe Lower Respiratory Tract Infections

Authors
Shim, MK  | Park, JE | Jeon, H | Park, B  | Kim, JH
Citation
Pediatric pulmonology, 60(1). : e27458-e27458, 2025
Journal Title
Pediatric pulmonology
ISSN
8755-68631099-0496
Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the clinical implications of the obstructive pattern on plain chest radiography, defined as peribronchial cuffing or hyperinflation, in young children with severe lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs). Methods: We reviewed all children aged 3‒59 months with LRTIs who underwent radiography and polymerase chain reaction in a Korean emergency department from 2016 through 2020. The radiographs were read as consolidation, peribronchial cuffing, or hyperinflation, with each interrater reliability computed. As per the obstructive pattern, we compared their clinical features, therapeutic interventions, outcomes, and microbiology. Results: Among 599 children with LRTIs, 465 were enrolled, of whom 98 (21.1%) had consolidation (κ = 0.60; 95% confidence interval, 0.50‒0.70), and 367 (78.9%) had peribronchial cuffing (0.55; 0.46‒0.65) or hyperinflation (0.59; 0.52‒0.67). The obstructive pattern was significantly associated with more frequent wheezing (obstructive, 28.6% vs. consolidation, 10.2%) and the use of inhaled albuterol or systemic steroids (39.0% vs. 23.5%), and lower median values or frequencies of age (22.0 vs. 35.0 months), crackle or diminished breath sound (42.0% vs. 61.2%), C-reactive protein (1.4 vs. 2.9 mg/dL), antibiotic therapy (72.2% vs. 93.9%), length of hospital stay (4.0 vs 5.0 days), fever lasting 3 days or longer (7.9% vs. 29.6%), and complications (0.5% vs. 9.2%). Microbiologically, viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus, were more frequently detected in children with the obstructive pattern or at a younger age. Conclusions: This study confirms an association of the obstructive pattern on radiography with viral infection and inflammatory airway obstruction-relieving therapy in young children with severe LRTIs.
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MeSH

DOI
10.1002/ppul.27458
PMID
39714080
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Emergency Medicine
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Biomedical Informatics
Ajou Authors
김, 중헌  |  박, 범희  |  심, 문기
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