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Epidemiological, Clinical, and Laboratory Features of Children with SARS-CoV-2 in Ukraine Cover

Epidemiological, Clinical, and Laboratory Features of Children with SARS-CoV-2 in Ukraine

Open Access
|Aug 2023

Abstract

Introduction

In December 2019, the Chinese city of Wuhan reported the first cases of pneumonia from a new type of beta coronavirus named SARS-CoV-2. In the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak, paediatric patients were thought to be immune to the new virus; however, further studies have shown people of all ages to be susceptible to the virus.

Objective

Identify and describe the clinical and epidemiological features of COVID-19 among hospitalized children in Ukraine.

Materials and Methods

Retrospective study of 171 children aged 2 months to 18 years who were hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2.

Results

Most patients in the study had a moderate progression of the disease (77.78%, or n=133), whereas a severe course was noted in 22.22% (n=38). Across age groups, children aged 6–12 was the predominant age group affected (35.67%, or n=61). The most common symptoms were fever in 88.2% of patients, sore throat in 69.2% and cough in 60.9%. Symptoms associated with dyspnoea and cyanosis were significantly more common in children with the severe course (p<0.05). Almost half of children had at least one comorbidity, the most prevalent being chronic tonsillitis (11.8% of patients) and anemia (6.5% of patients). A positive correlation (r=0.7 p<0.05) was found between CRP levels and COVID-19 severity. X-ray changes in the lungs were present in 76.61% of examined children and ground-glass opacity symptom was registered in 50.88%.

Conclusions

COVID-19 among hospitalized children in Ukraine usually has a moderate course of illness and a good prognosis.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.34763/jmotherandchild.20232701.d-23-00012 | Journal eISSN: 2719-535X | Journal ISSN: 2719-6488
Language: English
Page range: 33 - 41
Submitted on: Jan 24, 2023
Accepted on: Feb 9, 2023
Published on: Aug 7, 2023
Published by: Institute of Mother and Child
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2023 Tetiana Harashchenko, Tetiana Umanets, Volodymyr Podolskiy, Tetiana Kaminska, Yuriy Marushko, Vasily Podolskiy, Volodymyr Lapshyn, Yurii Antypkin, published by Institute of Mother and Child
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.