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      Analysis of factors that influence the occurrence of otitis media with effusion in pediatric patients with adenoid hypertrophy

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          Abstract

          Objective

          Adenoid hypertrophy (AH) and otitis media with effusion (OME) are common pediatric otolaryngological diseases and often occur concurrently. The purpose of this study was to comprehensively analyze the factors that influence the occurrence of OME pediatric patients with AH.

          Methods

          Patients younger than 12 years with AH, who were hospitalized for treatment at Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital in Beijing, China, between March 2018 and February 2022 were enrolled. The patients were divided into an AH group and an AH + OME group based on the presence of OME. The authors collected the following clinical data for univariable analysis: sex; age; body mass index (BMI); comorbid nasal congestion/rhinorrhea, recurrent tonsillitis, or allergic rhinitis (AR); adenoid and tonsil grade; tonsillar hypertrophy; food/drug allergy; history of adenoidectomy and congenital diseases; breastfeeding status; preterm birth; exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS); family history of adenotonsillectomy, otitis media, and AR; main data of polysomnography and oropharyngeal conditional pathogen culture data of some patients. Univariate analysis was performed as a basis for logistic regression analysis.

          Results

          A total of 511 children (329 boys and 182 girls) were included, their mean age was 5.37 ± 2.10 years. Of them, 407 (79.6%) were in the AH group and 104 (20.4%) in the AH + OME group. Univariate analysis revealed statistically significant differences in age, BMI, adenoid grade, AR, breastfeeding status, and ETS exposure between the two groups. Multivariate stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that age, adenoid grade, AR, breastfeeding status, and ETS influenced the occurrence of OME in pediatric patients with AH. The risk of OME decreased with increasing age. High adenoid grade, ETS exposure, and comorbid AR were risk factors for OME in pediatric patients with AH, but breastfeeding was a protective factor. The final analytical results of the oropharyngeal conditional pathogen culture data showed that Streptococcus pneumoniae positivity was associated with OME in AH.

          Conclusion

          The pathogenesis of AH with OME is complex. Young age, high adenoid grade, ETS exposure, non-breastfed status, comorbid AR, and the presence of S. pneumoniae in the oropharynx are risk factors for OME in pediatric patients with AH.

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          Most cited references67

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          Breastfeeding in the 21st century: epidemiology, mechanisms, and lifelong effect.

          The importance of breastfeeding in low-income and middle-income countries is well recognised, but less consensus exists about its importance in high-income countries. In low-income and middle-income countries, only 37% of children younger than 6 months of age are exclusively breastfed. With few exceptions, breastfeeding duration is shorter in high-income countries than in those that are resource-poor. Our meta-analyses indicate protection against child infections and malocclusion, increases in intelligence, and probable reductions in overweight and diabetes. We did not find associations with allergic disorders such as asthma or with blood pressure or cholesterol, and we noted an increase in tooth decay with longer periods of breastfeeding. For nursing women, breastfeeding gave protection against breast cancer and it improved birth spacing, and it might also protect against ovarian cancer and type 2 diabetes. The scaling up of breastfeeding to a near universal level could prevent 823,000 annual deaths in children younger than 5 years and 20,000 annual deaths from breast cancer. Recent epidemiological and biological findings from during the past decade expand on the known benefits of breastfeeding for women and children, whether they are rich or poor.
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            Clinical predictors of obstructive sleep apnea.

            To identify physical findings that can be standardized to predict the presence and the severity of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). One hundred seventy-two patients who answered questionnaires with responses that suggested they might have OSA were included in this prospective study. All patients underwent a physical examination and polysomnography. The physical examination included the measurement of four parameters used by anesthesiologists to identify patients likely to have difficult intubation to determine if these same parameters predict OSA. We recorded modified Mallampati grade (MMP), tonsil size, and body mass index (BMI) and measured thyroid-mental distance (TMD) and hyoid-mental distance (HMD) in the study population. When the physical findings were correlated singly with the respiratory disturbance index (RDI), we found that MMP (P < .001), tonsil size grading (P = .008), and BMI (P = .003) were reliable predictors of OSA. A greater correlation with OSA emerged when an "OSA score" was formulated by factoring the MMP, tonsil grade, and BMI grade (RDI = 7.816 x MMP + 3.988 x Tonsil Size + 4.675 x BMI - 7.544). A high score was not only predictive of OSA but also correlated well with OSA severity. Neither HMD nor TMD correlated with the severity of RDI. An OSA score may help identify those patients who should have a full sleep evaluation.
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              Disordered Microbial Communities in the Upper Respiratory Tract of Cigarette Smokers

              Cigarette smokers have an increased risk of infectious diseases involving the respiratory tract. Some effects of smoking on specific respiratory tract bacteria have been described, but the consequences for global airway microbial community composition have not been determined. Here, we used culture-independent high-density sequencing to analyze the microbiota from the right and left nasopharynx and oropharynx of 29 smoking and 33 nonsmoking healthy asymptomatic adults to assess microbial composition and effects of cigarette smoking. Bacterial communities were profiled using 454 pyrosequencing of 16S sequence tags (803,391 total reads), aligned to 16S rRNA databases, and communities compared using the UniFrac distance metric. A Random Forest machine-learning algorithm was used to predict smoking status and identify taxa that best distinguished between smokers and nonsmokers. Community composition was primarily determined by airway site, with individuals exhibiting minimal side-of-body or temporal variation. Within airway habitats, microbiota from smokers were significantly more diverse than nonsmokers and clustered separately. The distributions of several genera were systematically altered by smoking in both the oro- and nasopharynx, and there was an enrichment of anaerobic lineages associated with periodontal disease in the oropharynx. These results indicate that distinct regions of the human upper respiratory tract contain characteristic microbial communities that exhibit disordered patterns in cigarette smokers, both in individual components and global structure, which may contribute to the prevalence of respiratory tract complications in this population.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Pediatr
                Front Pediatr
                Front. Pediatr.
                Frontiers in Pediatrics
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                2296-2360
                22 February 2023
                2023
                : 11
                : 1098067
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital, School of Clinical Medicine, Tsinghua University , Beijing, China
                [ 2 ]Department of Clinical Laboratory, Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital, School of Clinical Medicine, Tsinghua University , Beijing, China
                Author notes

                Edited by: Yanwei Dang, Zhengzhou Central Hospital Affiliated to Zhengzhou University, China

                Reviewed by: Kate C Chan, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China Vasile Valeriu Lupu, Grigore T. Popa University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania

                [* ] Correspondence: Jingying Ye yejingying@ 123456mail.tsinghua.edu.cn

                Specialty Section: This article was submitted to Pediatric Otolaryngology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Pediatrics

                Abbreviations AH, adenoid hypertrophy; OME, otitis media with effusion; BMI, body mass index; AR, allergic rhinitis; ETS, environmental tobacco smoke; OSA, obstructive sleep apnea; ETD, eustachian tube dysfunction; ET, eustachian tube; PSG, polysomnography; OAI, obstructive apnea index; AHI, apnea hypopnea index; S. pneumoniae, Streptococcus pneumoniae; H. influenzae, Haemophilus influenzae; S. aureus, Staphylococcus aureus; M. catarrhalis, Moraxella catarrhalis.

                Article
                10.3389/fped.2023.1098067
                9992982
                36911018
                4516271c-ca20-4366-8d21-b6a6db886815
                © 2023 Chen, Yin, Chen, Wang, Wang, Zhao, Wang and Ye.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 14 November 2022
                : 07 February 2023
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 4, Equations: 0, References: 67, Pages: 0, Words: 0
                Funding
                Funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China, doi 10.13039/501100001809;
                Award ID: 81873696
                Funded by: Tsinghua University Spring Breeze Fund
                Award ID: 20211080045
                Funded by: Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals, doi 10.13039/501100009601;
                Award ID: PX2022040
                This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China [No. 81873696], Tsinghua University Spring Breeze Fund [No. 20211080045], and the Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals Incubating Program [NO. PX2022040]
                Categories
                Pediatrics
                Original Research

                adenoid hypertrophy,otitis media with effusion,influencing factor,obstructive sleep apnea,conditional pathogen

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