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AAAAI: Frequent Infections May Be A Sign Of Immunodeficiency
Children who get frequent 
infections, such as ear infections, sinusitis or pneumonia, may have a more 
severe condition called immunodeficiency, according to the American Academy   
of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI).
  
Patients who have immunodeficiency have infections that usually do not 
go away without using antibiotics and often recur within one or two weeks  
after antibiotic treatment is completed. These patients frequently need 
many courses of antibiotics each year to stay healthy. There are several 
forms of immunodeficiency and while some are very severe and 
life-threatening, many are milder but still important enough to cause 
recurrent or severe infections.
 
    
"People with immunodeficiency get the same kinds of infections that 
other people get-ear infections, sinusitis and pneumonia," said Jordan 
Orange, MD, PhD, FAAAAI, Chair of the AAAAI's Primary Immunodeficiency   
Diseases Committee. "The difference is that their infections occur more 
frequently, and are often more severe, and have a greater risk of 
complications."
 
    
Allergist/immunologists often use the frequency of the use of 
antibiotics to mark the frequency of significant infections. General 
guidelines for determining if a patient may be experiencing too many  
infections are:
 
    -- The need for more than four courses of antibiotic treatment per year in 
       children or more than two times per year in adults.
 
    -- The occurrence of more than four new ear infections in one year after 
       four years of age.
 
    -- The development of pneumonia twice over any time.
 
    -- The occurrence of more than three episodes of bacterial sinusitis in 
       one year or the occurrence of chronic sinusitis.
 
    -- The need for preventive antibiotics to decrease the number of 
       infections. 
    -- Any unusually severe infection or infections caused by bacteria that do 
       not usually cause problems in most people at the patient's age.
 
    
When to see an allergy/asthma specialist
    
If your child has any of these conditions, consult with an 
allergist/immunologist for more information on recurrent infections,  
immunodeficiency, proper diagnosis and treatments.
  
    
The AAAAI's How the Allergist/Immunologist Can Help: Consultation and 
Referral Guidelines Citing the Evidence provide information to assist 
patients and health care professionals in determining when a patient may 
need consultation or ongoing specialty care by the allergist/immunologist. 
Patients should see an allergist/immunologist if they:
 
    -- Have chronic or recurrent infectious rhinosinusitis.
 
    -- Have any of the following warning signs:
 
        -- Eight or more new infections within one year.
 
        -- Two or more serious sinus infections within one year.
 
        -- Two or more months on antibiotic with little or no effect.
 
        -- Two or more pneumonias within 1 year.
 
        -- Failure of an infant to gain weight or grow normally.
 
        -- Recurrent deep skin or organ abscesses.
 
        -- Persistent thrush in mouth or elsewhere on skin after age 1 year.
 
        -- Need for intravenous antibiotics to clear infections.
 
        -- Two or more deep seated infections.
 
        -- A family history of immune deficiency.
 
    
    
The AAAAI is the largest professional medical specialty organization in 
the United States representing allergists, asthma specialists, clinical 
immunologists, allied health professionals and others with a special 
interest in the research and treatment of allergic disease.  
Allergy/immunology specialists are pediatric or internal medicine 
physicians who have elected an additional two years of training to become  
specialized in the treatment of asthma, allergy and immunologic disease.  
Established in 1943, the AAAAI has more than 6,000 members in the United 
States, Canada and 60 other countries. The AAAAI serves as an advocate to 
the public by providing educational information through its Web site at 
http://www.aaaai.org.
 
American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
http://www.aaaai.org
		
AAAAI: frecvente infecþii poate fi un semn de imunodeficienþei - AAAAI: Frequent Infections May Be A Sign Of Immunodeficiency - articole medicale engleza - startsanatate