Severe multiresistant Salmonella typhimurium systemic infections in Central Africa - clinical features and treatment in a paediatric department
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
- Vol. 14 (suppl B) , 153-159
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/14.suppl_b.153
Abstract
During a 21-month period, we observed an outbreak of severe systemic infections due to multiresistant Salmonella typhimurium among 66 children in the in-patient Department of Paediatrics of Kigali, Rwanda. These infections were more likely to occur in subjects who had stayed for a long time in the hospital for severe illness and/or malnutrition. The children usually presented first with mild to moderate diarrhoea and fever. Later, severe pulmonary involvement was often noted (rales: 58%; respiratory distress: 42%). Moreover, there were four cases of abscess, three arthritis and one meningitis. Of the 66 children, 48 were treated with cefotaxime. The fatality-rate among this group was 10.4%. The fatality-rate among the 18 other untreated patients was 77–9%, suggesting a high efficiency of cefotaxime against these strains of multiresistant Salm. typhimurium .Keywords
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