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The Epidemiology of Osteomyelitis in Children
Walter, Nike
, Bärtl, Susanne, Alt, Volker
and Rupp, Markus
(2021)
The Epidemiology of Osteomyelitis in Children.
Children 8 (11), pp. 1-6.
Date of publication of this fulltext: 20 Jan 2022 16:56
Article
DOI to cite this document: 10.5283/epub.51468
Abstract
Pediatric osteomyelitis remains challenging to treat. Detailed epidemiological data are required to estimate future developments. Therefore, we aimed to analyze how the incidence has changed over the last decade depending on age, gender, osteomyelitis subtype, and anatomical localization. Cases were quantified for patients aged 20 years or younger, using yearly reported ICD-10 diagnosis codes ...
Pediatric osteomyelitis remains challenging to treat. Detailed epidemiological data are required to estimate future developments. Therefore, we aimed to analyze how the incidence has changed over the last decade depending on age, gender, osteomyelitis subtype, and anatomical localization. Cases were quantified for patients aged 20 years or younger, using yearly reported ICD-10 diagnosis codes from German medical institutions for the time period 2009 to 2019. Incidence rates of osteomyelitis increased by 11.7% from 8.2 cases per 100,000 children in 2009 to 9.2 cases per 100,000 children in 2019. The age-specific incidence rate revealed the highest occurrence of osteomyelitis in patients aged 10-15 years (15.3/100,000 children), which increased by 23% over the observation period, followed by the age group 5-10 years (9.7/100,000 children). In 2019, out of all diagnoses, 39.2% were classified as acute, 38.4% as chronic, and 22.4% were unspecified, whereby chronic cases increased by 38.7%. The lower extremity was mainly affected, with 58.9% of osteomyelitis diagnoses in 2019. In conclusion, pediatric osteomyelitis is a serious issue, even in a developed and industrialized country such as Germany. Considering the recent incidence increase, the permanent need for appropriate treatment should let pediatricians and orthopedic surgeons deal with diagnosis and treatment protocols.
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Details
| Item type | Article | ||||
| Journal or Publication Title | Children | ||||
| Publisher: | MDPI | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Place of Publication: | BASEL | ||||
| Volume: | 8 | ||||
| Number of Issue or Book Chapter: | 11 | ||||
| Page Range: | pp. 1-6 | ||||
| Date | 3 November 2021 | ||||
| Institutions | Medicine > Lehrstuhl für Unfallchirurgie Medicine > Abteilung für Psychosomatische Medizin | ||||
| Identification Number |
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| Keywords | HEMATOGENOUS OSTEOMYELITIS; PEDIATRIC BONE; osteomyelitis; bone infection; pediatrics; epidemiology | ||||
| Dewey Decimal Classification | 600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine | ||||
| Status | Published | ||||
| Refereed | Yes, this version has been refereed | ||||
| Created at the University of Regensburg | Yes | ||||
| URN of the UB Regensburg | urn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-514682 | ||||
| Item ID | 51468 |
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