Acute infectious diarrhea in children.
INTRODUCTION Acute infectious diarrhea is a global health problem especially in infants and children, and is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. The ethiology of acute infectious diarrhea and also biochemical, epidemiological and clinical characteristics of children dying with infectious diarrhea are investigated in this study. METHODS 201 children, aged from 6 months to 14 years, with acute infectious diarrhea admitted to the Infectious Diseases Clinic in Tuzla in the period from 21st December 1999 to 21st December 2000 were included in the study. RESULTS Enteropathogens were identified in stool samples in 103 (51.3%) of 201 examined children. Viruses were identified in 51 (25.4%) cases, bacteria in 44 (21.9%), fungi in 3 (1.5%), and parasites in 2 (1%). Rotavirus, a frequent pathogen, was detected in 48 cases (23.9%), followed by Salmonella species in 20 (10%), EPEC in 10 (4.9%), and Shigella species in 9 (4.5%) cases. In this study the authors noticed that the highest morbidity was recorded in children in the first 2 years of life (70.5%), and among rural community (68.4%). The detection of rotavirus decreased with increasing age of cases and peaked in winter and autumn. Blood in stool was most common in children with shigellosis (22.2%). CONCLUSIONS High percentage of infants and children dying with acute infectious diarrhea presents a serious socio-economic and medical problem in Tuzla region of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Rotavirus is the single most common pathogen in children with infectious diarrhea.