Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

immunology and microbiology

Comparison of the clinical and radiographic diagnosis of paediatric pneumonia

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Volume 88, No. 3, Year 1994

Pneumonia causes 3·2 million deaths per year in children under 5 years old according to the World HealthOrganization. In spite of the number of deaths, no single clinical or radiological definition for the diagnosis of pneumoniais widely accepted. To determine the extent of agreement between clinical and radiographic diagnoses of pneumonia, we compared the clinical diagnoses made by an experienced paediatrician with diagnoses based on a paediatric radiologist‘s interpretation of chest radiographs. In 226 children with respiratory illness brought to a hospital outpatientdepartment in Lesotho, pneumonia was the clinical diagnosis for 39 and the radiographic diagnosis for 40; however, for only 19 children did the 2 diagnoses concur. Children with a radiographic diagnosis of pneumonia tended to have been ill longer, to be older, and to be more likely to have a technically adequate radiograph than children with negative radiographs, independent of the clinical diagnosis. In this comparison, radiographic and clinical diagnoses for pneumonia differed substantially. Some of this discrepancy may be explained by misinterpretation of suboptimal films and different ratesof evolution of radiographic and clinical manifestations of pneumonia. Radiographic studies and clinical evaluations produced complementary data in this evaluation: Of the 60 children with clinical or radiographic evidence of pneumonia, 14 would nothave been treated with an antimicrobial drug without radiography. Wider availability of radiography is neededtosupplement clinical examination for the diagnosis of pneumonia, and may be particularly valuable in children more than 18 months old, those who have been ill for more than 6 d, and those with fever. © 1994 Oxford University Press.
Statistics
Citations: 40
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Research Areas
Health System And Policy
Maternal And Child Health
Study Locations
Lesotho