Intensive care course and outcome of patients infected with respiratory syncytial virus

Abstract
PICU admissions of 97 children positive for respiratory syncytial virus on fluorescent antibody screening were reviewed; 68% of 44 patients without history of preceding disease (Group I) and 79% of 53 patients with preceding pulmonary, cardiac, or other disease (Group II) required ventilation. In Group I ventilated children weighed significantly less (P = 0.001) and were of lower chronological (P = 0.02) and post-conceptional ages (P = 0.02) than those not ventilated. Eighteen infants ventilated for apnea weighed significantly less (P = 0.003), were more often born at ≦37 weeks gestation (P = 0.001) and were at lower post-conceptional age than 11 infants ventilated for progressive respiratory deterioration. There was no significant difference in mean weight, chronological age, post-conceptional age, CO2, or pH between 12 admissions with BPD who required ventilation for RSV infection and 5 who did not require ventilation. Ribavirin administration to five ventilated patients with BPD did not significantly alter the duration of intubation or PICU stay. Six patients with cardiac disease required longer periods of ventilation than others (Group I, P = 0.001; all others in Group II, P = 0.04). No deaths occurred in Group I, while 6 of 53 (11%) patients in Group II died. In this series immuno compromise placed patients at greatest risk of dying. Mechanical ventilation can be safely managed in previously healthy, RSV infected infants and should be initiated before significant cardiorespiratory compromise arises.