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Prevalence and Management of Severe Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease in Xiangyang, China from 2008-2013.

Jian LiuJing Qi
Published in: Journal of medical virology (2020)
Therapeutic strategies for severe hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) are currently either inconsequent or deficient in evidence. We retrospectively surveyed HFMD outbreaks in Xiangyang from June 2008 to December 2013. HFMD is staged form I to V according to clinical severity and the case with central nervous system involvement is defined as a severe one. We analyzed risk factors for fatality of severe cases and compared the efficiency and outcome of some therapies by binary logistic regression. The overall HFMD cases included 637 (1.26%) severe cases, 38 fatalities (0.75‰). Analysis indicates that age (<3 y), enterovirus 71 (+), autonomic nervous system dysregulation, pulmonary edema/hemorrhage, CRP (>40 mg/L) and cardiac troponin I (>0.04 ng/mL) are risk factors for fatality (all P < 0.05). Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and mechanical ventilation applied only in early stage IV significantly improved HFMD progression (both P < 0.05) with odds ratios of 0.24 (95% CI: 0.10-0.57) and 0.01 (95% CI: 0.00-0.10), respectively. Neither methylprednisolone nor milrinone administered in any stage made any significant difference on mortality (all P > 0.05). Precise recognition of the severe HFMD cases in early stage IV and prompt IVIG and mechanical ventilation application may decrease mortality. Mechanical ventilation training programs and dispatching specialists to county-level or district hospitals when there is no chance of transfer critical HFMD cases to a superior hospital are two key successful administrative initiatives. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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