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CMAJ • June 26, 2001; 164 (13)
© 2001 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors


Research
Recherche

Lower respiratory tract infections in Inuit infants on Baffin Island

Anna Banerji*, Alison Bell{dagger}, Elaine L. Mills{ddagger}, Jane McDonald§, Kanta Subbarao, Greg Stark**, Nicola Eynon{dagger}{dagger} and Vivian G. Loo{ddagger}{ddagger}

From the *Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; the {dagger}Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Anchorage, Ala.; the {ddagger}Vaccine Division, Aventis Pasteur, Toronto, Ont.; the §Department of Microbiology and Immunology, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Que.; the ¶Influenza Division, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga.; **TB Control, the BC Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, BC; {dagger}{dagger}Baffin Regional Health Board, Iqaluit, Nunavut; and the {ddagger}{ddagger}Department of Medicine and Microbiology, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Que.

Background: It has long been suspected that Canadian Inuit children suffer from frequent severe lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), but the causes and risk factors have not been documented. This study assessed the infectious causes and other epidemiologic factors that may contribute to the severity of LRTI in young Inuit children on Baffin Island.

Methods: A prospective case study was carried out at the Baffin Regional Hospital in Iqaluit, Nunavut, of infants less than 6 months of age, who were admitted to hospital between October 1997 and June 1998 with a diagnosis of LRTI. Immunofluorescent antibody testing was used to identify respiratory viruses, and enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were used to test for Chlamydia trachomatis. Demographic and risk factor data were obtained through a questionnaire.

Results: The annualized incidence rate of admission to hospital for bronchiolitis at Baffin Regional Hospital was 484 per 1000 infants who were less than 6 months of age; 12% of the infants were intubated. Probable pathogens were identified for 18 of the 27 cases considered in our study. A single agent was identified for 14 infants: 8 had respiratory syncytial virus, 2 adenovirus, 1 rhinovirus, 1 influenza A, 1 parainfluenza 3 and 1 had cytomegalovirus. For 4 infants, 2 infectious agents were identified: these were enterovirus and Bordetella pertussis, adenovirus and enterovirus, cytomegalovirus and respiratory syncytial virus, and respiratory syncytial virus and adenovirus. C. trachomatis was not identified by either EIA or PCR. All infants were exposed to maternal smoking in utero, second-hand smoke at home and generally lived in crowded conditions.

Interpretation: Inuit infants in the Baffin Region suffer from an extremely high rate of hospital admissions for LRTI. The high frequency and severity of these infections calls for serious public health attention.





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