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The Risk Factors of Acquiring Severe Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease: A Meta-Analysis.

Authors :
Bai Jun Sun
Hui Jie Chen
Ye Chen
Xiang Dong An
Bao Sen Zhou
Source :
Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases & Medical Microbiology. 6/26/2018, p1-12. 12p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objectives. The incidence of severe hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is not low, especially in mainland China in almost every year recently. In this study, we conducted a meta-analysis to generate large-scale evidence on the risk factors of severe HFMD to provide suggestions on prevention and controlling. Methods. PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), and Wanfang (Chinese) were searched to identify relevant articles. All analyses were performed using Stata 14.0. Results. We conducted a meta-analysis of 11 separate studies. Fever (odds ratio (OR) 7.396, 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.565-15.342), fever for more than 3 days (OR 5.773, 95% CI 4.199-7.939), vomiting (OR 6.023, 95% CI 2.598-13.963), limb trembling (OR 42.348, 95% CI 11.765-152.437), dyspnea (OR 12.869, 95% CI 1.948-85.017), contact with HFMD children (OR 5.326, 95% CI 1.263-22.466), rashes on the hips (OR 1.650, 95% CI 1.303-2.090), pathologic reflexes (OR 3057.064, 95% CI 494.409-19000), Lethargy (OR 31.791, 95% CI 3.369-300.020), convulsions (OR 23.652, 95% CI 1.973-283.592), and EV71 infection (OR 9.056, 95% CI 4.102-19.996) were significantly related to the risk of severe HFMD. We did not find an association between female sex (OR 0.918, 95% CI 0.738-1.142), scatter-lived children (OR 1.347, 95% CI 0.245-7.397), floating population (OR 0.847, 95% CI 0.202-3.549), rash on the hands (OR 0.740, 95% CI 0.292-1.874), rash on the foot (OR 0.905, 95% CI 0.645-1.272), the level of the clinic visited first (below the country level) (OR 5.276, 95% CI 0.781-35.630), breast feeding (OR 0.523, 95% CI 0.167-1.643), and the risk of severe HFMD. Conclusions. Fever, fever for more than 3 days, vomiting, limb trembling, dyspnea, contact with HFMD children, rashes on the hips, pathologic reflexes, lethargy, convulsions, and EV71 infection are risk factors for severe HFMD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17129532
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases & Medical Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
130816777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/2751457