Adolescents comprise a growing proportion of people diagnosed with HIV or AIDS. Navigating adolescence while infected with HIV presents specific challenges not only to the youth but to their families and caregivers. As children enter their teen years, they have medical, physiologic, and psychosocial issues that differ greatly from both younger children and young adults. These issues include the limited number of medications available, mental illness (especially depression), and psychosocial issues such as distorted body image, sexual awareness, and problems with family and peer relations. Many of these issues are heightened in this population and can be important factors that can influence adherence. Awareness of these issues is important for health care providers, for if they understand not just the illness itself, but the psychosocial issues of the patient they are treating, the clinician can optimize treatments and adherence, and help these young persons successfully transition into adulthood.
The first objective of this article was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and interleukin-8 (IL-8) in differentiating infected from noninfected neonates during the first 24 hours of suspected sepsis and to compare them to the currently used laboratory parameters: C-reactive protein (CRP), immature-to-total neutrophil ratio, and leukocyte and platelet count. The secondary objective was to compare the cytokine levels in subpopulations of neonates. Seventy-five premature and 30 term infants were enrolled. Blood samples for the "currently used laboratory tests" and the cytokine levels were obtained at the first suspicion of sepsis ("0-hour") and 18 to 30 hours later ("24-hours"). Patients were classified as septic (48) or nonseptic (57). Thirty-two septic patients had positive blood cultures and 16 showed clinical signs of sepsis. Twenty septic patients had early-onset and 28 had late-onset sepsis. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) were calculated for each test. Receiver-operating characteristic curves were analyzed to determine the optimal thresholds. A combination of CRP > 10 pg/mL plus IL-6 > 18 pg/mL (sensitivity = 89%, specificity = 73%, PPV = 70%, NPV = 90%) was the best "0-hour" test, and CRP (sensitivity = 78%, specificity = 94%) was the best "24-hours" test. Lower IL-6 at 0-hour (p = 0.018) and IL-8 at 24 hours (p = 0.023) were detected among the patients infected with coagulase-negative staphylococci then with other bacteria. In conclusion, a combination of CRP + IL-6 provided additional diagnostic accuracy for differentiation between septic and nonseptic patients during the first 24 hours of suspected sepsis.
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