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Premature birth and wheezing raise severe HMPV pneumonia risk

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Premature birth and wheezing raise severe HMPV pneumonia risk
Photo by Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa / Unsplash

A new study from Shanghai Children's Hospital looked at 878 children hospitalized with human metapneumovirus (HMPV) pneumonia. About 28% of them had severe disease. Researchers wanted to find out which children were most likely to become severely ill.

The study found that children born prematurely were more than twice as likely to develop severe pneumonia. Those who had wheezing were over three times as likely. Other risk factors included certain lab markers like high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), high procalcitonin (PCT), and high C-reactive protein (CRP). Co-infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae also raised the risk.

This was a retrospective study, meaning researchers looked back at medical records. It cannot prove that these factors cause severe disease, only that they are linked. The study was done at one hospital in China, so results may not apply to all children everywhere.

For parents and doctors, these findings can help identify children with HMPV pneumonia who may need closer monitoring. If a child was born early or has wheezing, they may be at higher risk for severe illness. But more research is needed to confirm these results in other settings.

What this means for you:
Premature birth and wheezing are linked to higher risk of severe HMPV pneumonia in children.
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