Conţinutul numărului revistei |
Articolul precedent |
Articolul urmator |
524 13 |
Ultima descărcare din IBN: 2024-03-31 16:55 |
Căutarea după subiecte similare conform CZU |
616.98-036.22-053.3-07:578.834 (1) |
Boli transmisibile. Boli infecţionase şi contagioase, stări febrile (585) |
Virologie (442) |
SM ISO690:2012 HORGA, Adeline Larisa, NEAMŢU, Mihai-Leonida, NEAMȚU, Bogdan Mihai, DOBROTĂ, Luminiţa, OPREA, Dana. Aspecte epidemiologice și tabloul clinic in Covid-19 la sugar. In: Buletin de Perinatologie, 2020, nr. 4(89), pp. 21-24. ISSN 1810-5289. |
EXPORT metadate: Google Scholar Crossref CERIF DataCite Dublin Core |
Buletin de Perinatologie | ||||||
Numărul 4(89) / 2020 / ISSN 1810-5289 | ||||||
|
||||||
CZU: 616.98-036.22-053.3-07:578.834 | ||||||
Pag. 21-24 | ||||||
|
||||||
Descarcă PDF | ||||||
Rezumat | ||||||
The viral infection with SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) is still a public health issue which aff ect the entire world population. Since December 2019, a type of pneumonia of unknown etiology has appeared in central of China. Th e fi rst case of COVID-19 was reported in December in Wuhan, Hubei Province, aft er which it spread rapidly around the world. In mid-March, the World Health Organization declared a COVID-19 pandemic. At the onset of this infectious outbreak there were few pediatric patients, at that time it was thought that they were not susceptible to infection. The cases of infection in children gradually appeared with the family aggregation. Affecting newborns and infants has caused concern, as they represent an age group with a developing immune system. Initially, a small number of cases was reported in infants, and the clinical manifestations were less severe compared to the clinical manifestations that were found in adulthood. The most common symptoms were fever and cough. In most of the cases, the clinical evolution in infants was favorable, the complications were developed in infants who presented with other associated conditions. |
||||||
Cuvinte-cheie COVID-19 pandemic, infant, pandemie COVID-19, sugar |
||||||
|