To enhance the detection of bacterial meningitis in an East Asian surveillance study, we employed cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) bacterial culture, latex agglutination (LA) and polymerase chain reaction-enzyme immunoassay (PCR-EIA) testing for Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp). The sensitivity and specificity of CSF PCR-EIA testing was compared to LA and culture. A meningitis case was defined by one positive result for any of the three tests. The sensitivity of H. influenzae CSF PCR-EIA, LA, and culture was 100%, 40% and 57.5% respectively; and for Sp CSF PCR-EIA, LA and culture, the sensitivity was 100%, 58.3% and 66.7%, respectively. Hib and Sp specificity was 100% by each method. CSF PCR-EIA was more sensitive than culture or LA for the detection of Hib and Sp meningitis cases increasing their incidence by 74% and 50% compared to culture respectively. CSF PCR-EIA should be included for the detection of bacterial meningitis in surveillance studies.
Acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI), primarily pneumonia, is the leading cause of death in children under the age of five. Bacterial ALRI is preceded by asymptomatic bacterial colonization. Bacterial colonization, therefore, may have an important role in the development of pneumonia in children. This case-control study was conducted in order to determine if intense bacterial colonization was increased in the nasopharynx of pediatric patients with ALRI. One hundred-sixty four pediatric patients with ALRI and 70 healthy children < 5 years of age were enrolled in Hanoi, Vietnam between 2001 and 2002. Bacterial pathogens were isolated from nasopharyngeal secretions and quantitatively cultured. Of 164 patients, 91 were diagnosed as having radiological pneumonia (PN group) and 73 as having acute bronchitis (AB group). Intense growth of any bacterial pathogen (>or= 10(6) colony-forming units/ml) was highest in the PN group (49.4%), followed by the AB group (28.8%), with healthy children having the lowest (17.1%). Patients with intense bacterial growth were more likely to develop pneumonia, but not acute bronchitis, than were patients with light or no bacterial growth. The results of this case-control study suggest that the vertical spread of intense bacterial pathogens colonized in the nasopharynx to the lower airway leads to bacterial pneumonia in children under the age of five.
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