Duration of Protection From Pneumonia After Pneumococcal Vaccination in Hemodialysis Patients
CKD (Chronic Kidney Disease) Stage 5DPneumoniaThe investigators compare two strata of vaccinated patients: those recently vaccinated and those vaccinated more than two years ago. The primary objective is to compare pneumonia rates between the groups. As exploratory objectives, the investigators will describe the anti-pneumococcal antibody titers in hemodialysis patients as a function of time since vaccination, and determine factors influencing antibody kinetics. Further exploratory objectives investigate the relationship between antibody titers and the incidence of pneumonia in hemodialysis patients and extrapolate a possible cut-off for protection from pneumonia.
Intubation and Extubation Over 48 Hours Mechanical Ventilation
PneumoniaVentilator-Associated1 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine how often ventilator associated pneumonia happens in the current intensive care units, and how types of endotracheal tube affect its occurrence.
Functional Genomic Influences on Disease Progression and Outcome in Sepsis
PneumoniaPeritonitisThe proposal is aimed at identifying genetic factors that determine the incidence and severity of, and the outcome from life-threatening infections (severe sepsis/septic shock) in patients admitted to High Dependency Units (HDUs) or Intensive Care Units (ICUs) with pneumonia which developed outside the hospital (community acquired pneumonia - CAP) or contamination of the abdominal cavity with faeces due to a leak in the bowel (faecal peritonitis). This will require the acquisition of a large, high quality resource of genetic material (DNA), plasma, urine, white blood cells and clinical information from well characterized groups of similar patients with, or at risk for, severe sepsis/septic shock. The principal objective is to perform studies which are sufficiently large to establish beyond doubt the influence of a series of selected "candidate" genes on the development, progress and outcome of sepsis.
Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction in Postoperative Pneumonia After Thoracic Surgery
PneumoniaBacterial PneumoniaBackground: In thoracic surgery, postoperative pneumonia (POP) is the leading cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality. The clinical diagnosis of POP is difficult and conventional microbiological diagnostic tests perform poorly. The contribution of molecular diagnostic tests (multiplex PCR, mPCR) should be evaluated to optimize the diagnostic and therapeutic management of POP. Objectives: The main objective is to describe the microbiological relationship between the existence of pre- (if available) and intra-operative bronchial and pulmonary bacterial colonization and the occurrence of POP. The secondary objectives are to analyze the contribution of the mPCR for the diagnosis of POP and to validate the predictive factors of POP described in the literature Material and methods: A monocentric prospective non-interventional research with minimal risks and constraints. The study population is represented by all the consecutive adult patients hospitalized for lung surgical resection (except surgical resection indicated for infectious disease) during one year. The preoperative respiratory samples within the 3 preceding months (date and type, pathogen and threshold) are recorded, if available. Intra-operative bronchial aspirate is performed for direct examination and culture (pathogen and threshold) and mPCR (PCR1). A mPCR is optionally performed on the surgical specimen (PCR2). In case of postoperative clinical suspicion of POP, invasive or non invasive samples of respiratory tract secretions are obtained for direct examination and culture (pathogen, threshold) and mPCR (PCR3). A clinical pulmonary infection score (CPIS) is calculated by integrating the results of conventional tests (CPIS1) and mPCR (CPIS2). The pre / intra operative and postoperative microbiological relationship will be described qualitatively and quantitatively and analyzed using correlation tests. Concordances and discrepancies between conventional tests and mPCR will be studied to analyze the contribution of molecular tests in this context.
Accuracy of Clinical and Diagnostic Studies for Pneumonia in Children
PneumoniaPneumonia continues to be a leading cause of death in children under five years of age worldwide. Many studies have evaluated clinical signs and symptoms that may predict pneumonia. A recent meta-analysis found that no singular physical exam finding predicted pneumonia. The World Health Organization (WHO) Criteria diagnose pneumonia based on fast breathing; however, tachypnea has not been shown to strongly predict pneumonia. This study will evaluate accuracy of clinical history, physical exam and WHO criteria, laboratory findings, and lung ultrasound compared with chest radiograph for the diagnosis of pneumonia in children under five years of age in a resource limited setting. Determining diagnostic accuracy of these findings may help derive a clinical decision rule that may more accurately predict which children have pneumonia than current WHO guidelines.
Improving Paediatric Pneumonia Diagnosis Using Digital Auscultation
Childhood PneumoniaThis study aims to evaluate an automated interpretation algorithm of recorded lung sound by a digital stethoscope, name the Smartscope, among rural Bangladeshi children receiving community care in order to improve the diagnosis of childhood pneumonia at first level facility in low- and middle-income countries. A mixed-methods study will be conducted for a period of twelve months in rural Sylhet, Bangladesh. A total of 12 community health workers (CHWs) and 12 community healthcare providers (CHCPs) will be recruited and trained for this study. CHWs will conduct household surveillance to identify children with cough and difficult breathing and refer to nearby community clinic (CC). The CHCPs will screen the children at the CCs as per protocol and enroll the suspected cases with couth or difficult breathing. A total of 1003 children will be enrolled in this study. Enrolled children will be assessed for signs and symptoms of pneumonia including oxygen saturation. The children will have their lung sounds recorded by the Smartscope at four sequential locations. A listening panel comprises by pediatricians will generate one summary patient classification of normal, crackle, wheeze, crackle and wheeze, or uninterpretable. The Respiratory detector automated algorithm will be applied to the lung recording to generate an interpretation. The study hypothesis is more than 50% of patients will have quality lung sound recordings and the agreement between the automated computerized analysis by Respiratory Detector and an expert listening panel will be high (kappa >0.5).
A Survey of Psychological Status of Medical Workers and Residents in the Context of 2019 Novel Coronavirus...
Virus; PneumoniaDue to the outbreak of 2019 Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia in Wuhan, Hubei province, medical staff and residents are facing great psychological pressure, the investigator plan to use electronic questionnaire to carry out investigation research.
Epidemiology of Resistant Microbial Strains Among Different Groups of People (Healthy, Infected...
ESBL Producing E.ColiESBL Producing K.Pneumoniae4 moreThis study investigates carriage rate and risk factors for acquiring multiresistant bacteria (ESBL producing E.coli and K.pneumoniae, carbapenem-resistant and multidrug resistant P.aeruginosa, MRSA and VRE) in hospitalised patients and healthy volunteers.
Treatment of Ventilator Associated Pneumonia in Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
Ventilator Associated Pneumoniatreatment of ventilator associated pneumonia in pediatric intensive care unit according to the American guidelines
Characterization Immunology, Biochemical and Lung Microbiome, Correlated With the Ventilation Associated...
Covid19SARS-CoV InfectionSARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is currently a global public health problem, declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization, which today has more than one million deaths in the world, of which , 30,000 approximately belong to Colombia, being the country number 11 with the highest number of deaths. The most common symptoms related to this disease are fever, cough, dyspnea, myalgia, headache, diarrhea and rhinorrhea. COVID-19 is characterized by immune system dysfunction and hyperinflammation causing acute respiratory distress syndrome, macrophage activation, and coagulopathy. The clinical course for SARS-CoV-2 in most cases is mild, but approximately 14% of cases can be severe. In pneumonia caused by SARS-CoV-2, the lung lining is known to alter the composition of the lung microbiome, in addition to lymphocyte damage that can promote the growth of bacteria to initiate bacterial pneumonia, and it is estimated that the prevalence of coinfection / superinfection reaches 50% among deaths from COVID-19. Coinfection between different microorganisms and SARS-CoV-2 is a serious problem in the COVID-19 pandemic, and there is still little information on this. It is for this reason that the researchs propose to develop this research project that will allow to understand the possible mechanisms associated with the development of bacterial coinfection / superinfection in patients diagnosed with COVID-19, which will allow expanding the panorama of knowledge towards a better and adequate treatment in these patients, as well as detection of biomarkers or clinical phenotypics that may be useful in the diagnosis, based on evidence. It is important to note that these results are of clinical importance since we will try to identify biomarkers or changes in the lung microbiome that allow doctors to early identify patients at risk of developing coinfection and thus initiate early treatments or preventive measures, which allow the improvement of clinical outcomes in patients. Results will be presented in a timely manner at national and international conferences and in peer-reviewed, indexed, high-impact journals.