Korean J Pediatr Infect Dis.  2009 Dec;16(2):167-174.

The Clinical Features of Pertussis in Infancy

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Korea. jh00mn@catholic.ac.kr
  • 2Division of Tuberculosis, Bacterial Respiratory Infections, Center for Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Health, Korea Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
Pertussis was very common in the past, but reported cases have dramatically decreased. The improvement of vaccination programs and unreadiness of laboratory confirmation seems to have developed this situation. This study investigated the frequency of pertussis among infants with a paroxysmal cough and compared the clinical characteristics between infants with and without pertussis.
METHODS
Between June and November 2006, 27 infants admitted to the hospital that were 15-90 days old with a history of a cough for more than seven days were enrolled. The cough was described as: paroxysmal, whooping, and post-tussive vomiting. PCR and cultures for Bordetella pertussis with nasopharyngeal aspirates were obtained. The patients were divided into two groups: (1) the pertussis group that had positive results by PCR or culture; (2) the control group that had negative results by PCR and culture. Clinical and laboratory characteristics were compared between the two groups.
RESULTS
Among the 27 cases, five (18.5%) were finally diagnosed with pertussis. Only one out of the five pertussis cases was initially diagnosed with a pertussis-like syndrome on admission. Compared to the group without pertussis, the pertussis group had a significantly higher frequency of: no fever (P=0.043), a paroxysmal cough (P=0.040), cyanosis (P=0.001), non-immunized status for DTaP (P=0.047), normal auscultation (P=0.028), normal chest X-ray findings (P=0.027), high absolute lymphocyte count (P=0.039), and low CRP (P=0.046). The patients with the diagnosis of pertussis had a significantly longer duration of coughing (27.2+/-10.6 vs. 12.6+/-5.6 days, P=0.039).
CONCLUSION
Pertussis should be suspected in any infant with typical symptoms of pertussis in addition to: a persistent cough without fever, accompanied by paroxysms or cyanosis prior to the age of DTaP immunization. Active laboratory confirmation should be carried out to confirm more cases with pertussis.

Keyword

Pertussis; Paroxysmal cough; Polymerase chain reaction; Culture

MeSH Terms

Auscultation
Bordetella pertussis
Cough
Cyanosis
Fever
Humans
Immunization
Infant
Lymphocyte Count
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Thorax
Vaccination
Vomiting
Whooping Cough
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