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Chlamydia trachomatis and chronic respiratory disease in childhood
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1982
Year
AsthmaC. Trachomatis LriChronic IllnessPediatric EpidemiologyRespiratory DiseasesChlamydia TrachomatisClinical EpidemiologyPediatricsRespiratory InfectionPediatric Lung DiseaseInfectious Respiratory DiseasePulmonary MedicinePublic HealthMedicine
We diagnosed lower respiratory infection (LRI) due to Chlamydia trachomatis by retrospective serologic analysis in 10 of 47 (21%) study infants under 6 months of age hospitalized with bronchiolitis or pneumonia. These 47 infants represented all those on whom blood was available (76% of all 62 study infants under 6 months of age). Forty of these 47 infants had been followed from hospitalization for periods up to 5 years (mean, 26.3 months) for development of chronic illness. The patients with C. trachomatis LRI had significantly more reported chronic cough and abnormal lung function on follow-up than did those with LRI due to other agents or no agent found. C. trachomatis LRI patients also had more cough and wheeze than did a group of 71 age-matched normal infants. C. trachomatis LRI severe enough to require hospitalization may be associated with more chronic sequelae than is LRI due to other agents.