The irrational use of antibiotics is incriminated for the escalating antimicrobial resistance problem worldwide. This cross-sectional survey was conducted to describe patterns of antibiotic use in community-based pediatric outpatients in the southern region of Brazil. A sample of children (29 days to 18 years of age) was selected from each community-based outpatient clinic. Information related to antibiotic use in the child was obtained by interview with their parents using a structured questionnaire. Of 489 children, 201 (41.1 per cent) had received at least one antimicrobial course in the previous 2 months. The most commonly prescribed antibiotic was amoxicillin (54.0 per cent) and broad-spectrum agents were used in 15.3 per cent of antimirobial courses. Acute respiratory infections were the most frequent diagnosis for antibiotic prescribing (91.2 per cent), but at least 39.5 per cent were conditions of presumed viral etiology. Antibiotic use in the previous 2 months was more likely in children younger than 2 years (PR 1.36, 95 per cent CI 1.10-1.69); with chronic diseases (PR 1.38, 95 per cent CI 1.10-1.75); with higher paternal education level (PR 1.38, 95 per cent CI 1.11-1.72); with parents' pressure on physician for antibiotics (PR 1.66, 95 per cent CI 1.05-2.64) and with parental self-prescribing habit (PR 1.47, 95 per cent CI 1.06-2.04). Antibiotic use in children increased with mother's age (p=0.03 for linear trend). In conclusion, antibiotic prescribing is very common in community-based pediatric outpatients in the southern region of Brazil and inappropriate use is frequent. The independent risk factors for antibiotic use are child's age under 2 years, the presence of chronic diseases in the child, older mother, higher paternal education level, parents' pressure on physician and parental self-prescribing habit.
Elevated IgE levels in the atopic triad of asthma, allergic rhinitis and atopic dermatitis is a multifactorial condition whose genetic component involves interaction of several gene loci. One hundred and two matched pairs of allergic and nonallergic individuals were phenotyped for total serum IgE level using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Atopic status was defined by serum IgE concentration ≥100 IU mL(-1) . SNPs genotyped include the IL4 -590C>T (rs2243250), FCER1B E237G (rs569108), CD14 -159C>T (rs2569190), IL4RA Q551R (rs1801275) and ADRB2 R16G (rs1042713). Gene-gene interaction was analysed using multifactor-dimensionality reduction (MDR). Significant association between atopic allergy and the IL4 -590C>T polymorphism was confirmed in three genetic models. Interaction among the 5 gene variants was validated by MDR. The five-locus model was chosen as the best to describe the interaction of the SNPs within the context of atopy. The strongest interaction was between IL4 -590C>T and IL4RA Q551R and between FCER1B E237G and ADRB2 R16G. The IL4 variant also interacts synergistically with the FCER1B and ADRB2 coding variants. CD14 -159C>T, in general, interacts antagonistically with the rest of the SNPs. In conclusion, a five-locus interaction exists among IL4 -590C>T, FCER1B E237G, CD14 -159C>T, IL4RA Q551R and ADRB2 R16G in Filipino cases of atopic allergy.
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