Diagnostic potential of neutrophil elastase inhibitor complex in the routine care of critically ill newborn infants.


Autoria(s): Fischer J.E.; Brunner A.; Janousek M.; Nadal D.; Blau N.; Fanconi S.
Data(s)

2000

Resumo

It has been suggested that determination of the neutrophil elastase alpha1-proteinase inhibitor complex (E-alpha1PI) improves the diagnosis of bacterial infection in newborns. We evaluated the use of E-alpha1PI measurements in 143 newborns, consecutively admitted to a tertiary intensive care unit, employing a new random access assay and a sampling procedure that minimises post-collection artefacts. The 95% range for noninfected newborns was 20-110 microg/l up to the 5th day of life and 20-85 microg/l thereafter. The sensitivity as to the diagnosis of culture-proven bloodstream infection was 80% for E-alpha1PI, 86% for the immature to total neutrophil ratio, 64% for C-reactive protein and 37% for the total white blood cell count. The corresponding specificity amounted to 97%, 85%, 85% and 86%, respectively. E-alpha1PI increases preceded elevations of C-reactive protein by 18 h. Like C-reactive protein, E-alpha1PI levels did not distinguish between bloodstream infection and non-bacterial inflammatory responses. Results of E-alpha1PI became available within 1 h of collection and usually 2-3 h before manual leucocyte counts. CONCLUSION: Determination of neutrophil elastase alpha1-proteinase inhibitor levels yields diagnostic advantages comparable to those of manual differential counts but provide faster turnaround times.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_D943284E3ACD

isbn:0340-6199

pmid:11014464

doi:10.1007/PL00008402

isiid:000088937600005

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

European journal of pediatrics, vol. 159, no. 9, pp. 659-62

Palavras-Chave #Cohort Studies; Critical Illness; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Leukocyte Elastase; Prospective Studies; Sensitivity and Specificity; Sepsis; alpha 1-Antitrypsin
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article