Prothrombin time prolongation was the most important indicator of severe bleeding in children with severe dengue viral infection

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Abstract

To determine the indicators of severe bleeding in children with severe dengue viral infection (DVI), the medical records of patients aged <15 years admitted to Songklanagarind Hospital in southern Thailand during 1989-2011 were reviewed. Severe-bleeding DVI was defined as needing blood products transfusion owing to DVI-caused bleeding. Of the 238 children with severe DVI according to the World Health Organization 2009 criteria, 44 (18.5%) had severe bleeding, of whom 28 (63.6%) died. The international normalized ratio (INR) had high correlations with both transaminase enzymes (Spearman correlation, rs = 0.67-0.69, p <0.01). Multivariate analysis found that patients who had dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) grade IV, platelets <20 000/mm3 and INR ≥ 1.5 had increased risk of severe bleeding with odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) of 3.4 (1.4, 8.6), 2.6 (1.1, 6.2) and 10.6 (4.0, 28.4), respectively. Blood products should be at hand in severe DHF children with high risk of severe bleeding.

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Laoprasopwattana, K., Binsaai, J., Pruekprasert, P., & Geater, A. (2017). Prothrombin time prolongation was the most important indicator of severe bleeding in children with severe dengue viral infection. Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 63(4), 314–320. https://doi.org/10.1093/tropej/fmw097

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