
The State of the Intestinal Microflora in Hospitalized Children with Acute Intestinal Infections
Author(s) -
Z.M. Kuliyeva,
Л. И. Рустамова,
S. M. Faradzheva,
М. Г. Алиев,
И. Б. Исрафилбекова,
М. Н. Мамедова,
S. F. Suleymanova,
F. V. Gylyndzhova
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
detskie infekcii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2618-8139
pISSN - 2072-8107
DOI - 10.22627/2072-8107-2018-17-4-62-64
Subject(s) - medicine , flora (microbiology) , staphylococcus aureus , breast feeding , microbiology and biotechnology , gastroenterology , biology , pediatrics , bacteria , genetics
The purpose of this study was to study the state of the intestinal microflora in young children who received inpatient treatment for acute intestinal infections. A study of the microflora in 183 children aged 0 months. up to 3 years of life. At the same time, 43 (23.5%) children received breast milk, 53 (29.0%) were artificially fed and 87 (47.5%) mixed-fed children. All children were examined by bacteriological method. Conditionally pathogenic flora among hospitalized patients was detected in 114 (62.3%), Candida was mainly detected in 67.5% of cases, in 57 patients (50.0%) in association with other opportunistic microorganisms — Candida + St. aureus — in 32 (28.1%), Candida + P. vulgaris — in 9 (7.9%), Candida + + P. vulgaris + St. aureus — in 12 (10.5%), Candida + St. aureus + Ps. aeroginosa — in 4 (3.5%). As a result of studying the composition of the intestinal microflora in patients hospitalized with intestinal infection, a decrease in the number of E. coli and B. bifidum was found, 43.7% and 63.4%, respectively.