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Journal of Tropical Pediatrics 1997 43(1):10-12; doi:10.1093/tropej/43.1.10
© 1997 by Oxford University Press
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Spectrum of Haemophilus influenzae Type b Disease in Children at a University Hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Assad M. A. Abdullah, FRCP (Edin)*, Mohammed N. H. Chowdhury, FRCPath**,, Abdulrahman Al Mazrou, FRCPC*, Fahad Al Zamil, AB Peds* and Abdel Mageed Kambal, FRCPath**

*Departments of Paediatrics, College of Medicine, King Saud University Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
**Department of Microbiology, College of Medicine, King Saud University Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Address for correspondence: Professor M. N. H. Chowdhury, Department of Microbiology(32), College of Medicine, P.O. Box 2925, Riyadh 11461, Saudi Arabia

During a period of 5 years, 42 cases of invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease were studied. An outstanding finding in our patients was occult bacteraemia, which was detected in 13 (31 per cent) patients. Other clinical conditions encountered were nine (21 per cent) patients with pneumonia, nine (21 per cent) with meningitis, six (14 per cent) with cellulitis, three (7 per cent) with arthritis, one (2 per cent) with epiglottitis, and one (2 per cent) with urinary tract infection. The mean age of children was 21 months (range 1–156 months); the majority (62 per cent) belonged to the age group 7–18 months. There were 24 females and 18 males. Eighty-one per cent of these patients were Saudi nationals. Five isolates (12 per cent) of Hib were resistant to ampicillin and similar numbers were resistant to chlorampenicol. Twenty-five children (60 per cent) were treated with ampicillin, nine (21 per cent) with chlorampenicol and eight (19 per cent) with ceftriaxone. All patients made complete recovery.


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