Researchers,
including an Indian-origin scientist, have shown that infants under 90 days
of age who tested positive for Covid-19 tend to be well, with little or no
respiratory symptoms.
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Washington(Agencies): Researchers,
including an Indian-origin scientist, have shown that infants under 90 days of
age who tested positive for Covid-19 tend to be well, with little or no
respiratory symptoms.
According to the study, published in The Journal of
Pediatrics, fever was often found to be the primary or only symptom in new born
babies infected with the novel coronavirus.
“While there is
limited data on infants with Covid-19 from the US, our findings suggest that
these babies mostly have mild illness and may not be at higher risk of severe
disease as initially reported from China,” said study lead author Leena Mithal
from the Northwestern University in the US.
“Most of the infants
in our study had fever, which suggests that for young infants being evaluated
because of fever, Covid-19 may be an important cause, particularly in a region
with widespread community activity,” Mithal said. However, she added that
evaluation for bacterial infection in young infants with fever remains
important.
In the study, the researchers assessed 18 infants, none with
a significant medical history.
Of the 50 percent of these infants who were admitted to the
hospital’s general inpatient service, none required oxygen, respiratory
support, or intensive care.
According to the study, indications for admission were
mainly clinical observation, monitoring of feeding tolerance, and ruling-out
bacterial infection with empiric intravenous antibiotics in infants younger
than 60 days.
Of the infants admitted to the hospital, six out of nine had
gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms such as poor feeding, vomiting, and diarrhea.
The scientists said upper respiratory tract symptoms of
cough and congestion preceded onset of GI symptoms. They said young infants
also had notably high viral loads in their nasal specimens despite mild
clinical illness.
“It is unclear
whether young infants with fever and a positive test for SARS-CoV-2 require
hospital admission,” Mithal said.
“The decision to
admit to the hospital is based on age, need for preemptive treatment of bacterial
infection, clinical assessment, feeding tolerance, and adequacy of follow-up,”
she added.
Mithal believes there may be opportunities to utilise rapid
SARS-CoV-2 testing to determine disposition of clinically well infants with
fever.
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