COVID-19 grave em pacientes pediátricos com Síndrome de Down

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Isadora Carvalho Medeiros Francescantonio
Braian Lucas Aguiar Sousa
Alexandre Archanjo Ferraro
Ana Paula Beltran Moschione Castro

Resumo

Objetivo: Descrever o perfil da população pediátrica com Síndrome de Down (SD) internados com síndrome respiratória aguda grave (SRAG) pela COVID-19 nos primeiros 3 anos da pandemia no Brasil. Métodos: Estudo retrospectivo documental de vigilância epidemiológica, realizado com dados provenientes da rede de vigilância da Influenza e outros vírus respiratórios (SIVEP-GRIPE) entre fevereiro de 2020 e dezembro de 2022. As variáveis incluídas foram: dados demográficos, comorbidades, sintomas apresentados, tempo de internação, internação em Unidade de Terapia Intensiva (UTI), dias de permanência na UTI, uso de suporte ventilatório e desfechos dos casos. Resultados: Foram avaliados os registros de 1.570.446 casos hospitalizados por SRAG, com teste positivo para COVID-19 e desfechos conhecidos. Desses, 658 pacientes (0,04%) eram pacientes pediátricos com SD. Ao longo dos 3 anos, a maioria dos indivíduos avaliados eram de etnia branca e residiam na região sudeste, sem predomínio entre os sexos. Não houve variação ao longo dos anos quanto as comorbidades apresentadas pelos pacientes e os sintomas a admissão. Conclusão: Ao longo dos primeiros 3 anos da pandemia o quadro clínico apresentado pelos pacientes hospitalizados por SRAG por SARS-CoV-2 foi semelhante.

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Como Citar
FrancescantonioI. C. M., SousaB. L. A., FerraroA. A., & CastroA. P. B. M. (2025). COVID-19 grave em pacientes pediátricos com Síndrome de Down. Revista Eletrônica Acervo Saúde, 25(6), e20067. https://doi.org/10.25248/reas.e20067.2025
Seção
Artigos Originais

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