Aetiology of Acute Lower Respiratory Infections among Children Under Five Years in Accra, Ghana
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Pathogens
Abstract
The study aimed to investigate the aetiological agents and clinical presentations
associated with acute lower respiratory infections (ALRI) among children under
five years old at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital in Ghana. This was a cross-sectional
study carried from February to December 2001. Nasopharyngeal aspirates and venous blood
specimens obtained from 108 children with features suggestive of ALRI, were cultured and
the isolated bacterial organisms were identified biochemically. Nasopharyngeal aspirates
were also tested for Respiratory Syncitial Virus (RSV) antigen using a commercial kit
(Becton Dickinson Directigen RSV test kit). A multiplex reverse transcription-PCR
(RT-PCR) was also used to detect and characterize RSV using extracted RNA.
Socio-demographic and clinical data were also obtained from the study subjects.
Bronchopneumonia (55.5%), bronchiolitis (25%), lobar pneumonia (10.2), non-specific ALRI (4.6%), TB, bronchitis and respiratory distress (0.67%) were diagnosed. The
prevalence of septicaemia was 10% and bacteria isolated were Staphylococcus aureus,
Streptococcus pneumoniae and enteric bacteria, including Salmonella spp., Enterobacter
spp and Klebsiella spp, were isolated. Out of the 108 cases, 18% tested positive for RSV,
with two cases having RSV as the only aetiological pathogen detected. The subtyping
analysis of RSV strains by a multiplex RT-PCR showed that subgroups A and B circulated
in the season of analysis.
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Research Article