1. Serum chymase levels correlate with severe dengue warning signs and clinical fluid accumulation in hospitalized pediatric patients.
- Author
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Rathore APS, Senanayake M, Athapathu AS, Gunasena S, Karunaratna I, Leong WY, Lim T, Mantri CK, Wilder-Smith A, and St John AL
- Subjects
- Biomarkers blood, Child, Child, Preschool, Dengue Virus genetics, Dengue Virus isolation & purification, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Hypovolemia blood, Hypovolemia pathology, Hypovolemia virology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Pleural Effusion blood, Pleural Effusion pathology, Pleural Effusion virology, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Severe Dengue blood, Severe Dengue pathology, Severe Dengue virology, Severity of Illness Index, Sri Lanka, Thrombocytopenia blood, Thrombocytopenia pathology, Thrombocytopenia virology, Viral Load, Chymases blood, Dengue Virus pathogenicity, Hypovolemia diagnosis, Pleural Effusion diagnosis, RNA, Viral blood, Severe Dengue diagnosis, Thrombocytopenia diagnosis
- Abstract
Dengue induces a spectrum of severity in humans from the milder dengue fever to severe disease, or dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Chymase is a candidate biomarker that may aid dengue prognosis. This prospective study aimed to identify whether warning signs of severe dengue, including hypovolemia and fluid accumulation, were associated with elevated chymase. Serum chymase levels were quantified prospectively and longitudinally in hospitalized pediatric dengue patients in Sri Lanka. Warning signs were determined based on daily clinical assessments, laboratory tests and ultrasound findings. Chymase was significantly elevated during the acute phase of disease in DHF or Severe dengue, defined by either the 1997 or 2009 WHO diagnosis guidelines, and persisted longer in the most severe patients. Chymase levels were higher in patients with narrow pulse pressure and clinical warning signs such as severe leakage, fluid accumulation, pleural effusion, gall-bladder wall thickening and rapid haematocrit rise concurrent with thrombocytopenia. No association between chymase and liver enlargement was observed. This study confirms that serum chymase levels are associated with DHF/Severe dengue disease in hospitalized pediatric patients. Chymase levels correlate with warning signs of vascular dysfunction highlighting the possible functional role of chymase in vascular leakage during dengue.
- Published
- 2020
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