Title of article :
Adverse drug reactions causing admission to a Pediatric Hospital in Hamedan – Iran: a 2 years study
Author/Authors :
SAFARI, MOJGAN Department of Pediatrics - Divisions of immunology and allergy - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran , ZANDIAN, ZAHRA Department of Pediatrics - Divisions of immunology and allergy - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran , VAKILI, SIMA Department of Pediatrics - Divisions of immunology and allergy - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran , RASULI, BAHMAN Department of Pediatrics - Divisions of immunology and allergy - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Hamadan, Iran
Abstract :
Severe adverse drug reactions are an important cause of childhood morbidity and mortality. Despite this,
few reports in the literature describe it. This study was designed to evaluate the admitted pediatric
patients due to adverse drug reactions. This retrospective study was conducted at Pediatric ward of
Besat Hospital. The records of hospitalized patients that admitted with diagnosis of adverse drug
reactions enrolled in study over a 2 years period. The data collected on a data collection form using the
records of the patients and included the patient demographic features (age, gender, allergy history,
primary cause for drug administration) and drug information (name, duration of use, description of drug
reaction, duration of drug reaction and concomitant use of drugs). Thirty-five patients were enrolled in
study. Of them, 24 (68.6%) were male and 11 (31.4%) were female. Ages were under 1 years old in 5
(14%), between 1 to 5 years old in 22 (63%) and beyond 5 years old in 8 (23%) patients. Most patients
(88.5%) had no known drug allergies. The primary cause for drug administration was upper respiratory
tract infections (43%), diarrhea (26%), seizure (14%), gastroenteritis (8.5%) and vomiting (8.5%). Drugs
most frequently cited included: Furazolidone (n = 9), Penicillin (n = 8), Amoxicillin (n = 7), Co-Trimoxazole
(n = 4) and Phenobarbital (n = 4). Most frequent reactions were: skin rashes (83%), arthralgia (37%),
fever (34%), pruritus (23%) and edema (11.5%). Understanding causality and preventability of adverse
drug reactions will significantly aid in better therapeutic monitoring for children receiving the same therapy
in future.
Keywords :
Adverse drug reactions , Hospitalization , Pediatric , Antibiotic
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics