An epidemiological investigation of a sustained high rate of pediatric parapneumonic empyema: Risk factors and microbiological associations

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Abstract

We investigated the increasing incidence of pediatric empyema during the 1990s at Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake City. Of 540 children hospitalized with community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CAP) who were discharged from 1 July 1993 through 1 July 1999, 153 (28.3%) had empyema. The annual population incidence of empyema increased during the study period from 1 to 5 cases per 100,000 population aged <19 years. Streptococcus pneumoniae was identified as the most common cause of CAP with or without empyema; serotype 1 accounted for 50% of the cases of pneumococcal empyema. Patients with empyema were more likely to be >3 years old, to have ≥7 days of fever, to have varicella, and to have received antibiotics and ibuprofen before admission to the hospital, compared with patients without empyema (P

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Byington, C. L., Spencer, L. S. Y., Johnson, T. A., Pavia, A. T., Allen, D., Mason, E. O., … Samore, M. H. (2002). An epidemiological investigation of a sustained high rate of pediatric parapneumonic empyema: Risk factors and microbiological associations. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 34(4), 434–440. https://doi.org/10.1086/338460

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