RESUMEN
With the appearance of new viruses and infectious diseases (ID) such as COVID-19 in 2019, as well as the lack of specific pharmacological tools for the management of patients with severe complications or comorbidities, it is important to search for adjuvant treatments that help improve the prognosis of infectious disease patients. It is also important that these treatments limit the oxidative and hyperinflammatory damage caused as a response to pathogenic agents, since, in some cases, an inflammatory syndrome may develop that worsens the patient's prognosis. The potential benefits of complementary nutrients and dietary interventions in the treatment of pathological processes in which oxidative stress and inflammation play a fundamental role have been widely evaluated. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is a supplement that has been shown to protect cells and be effective in cardiovascular diseases and obesity. Additionally, some studies have proposed it as a possible adjuvant treatment in viral infections. Preclinical and clinical studies have shown that CoQ10 has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects, and effects on mitochondrial dysfunction, which have been linked to the inflammatory response.
RESUMEN
PURPOSE: Evaluate the type and severity of potential drug-drug interactions and identify risk factors involved, in pediatric patients admitted in a hospital setting. METHODS: Transversal retrospective analytical study was carried out with hospitalized pediatric patients from a Hospital in the West of Mexico, second and third level. The patients included were ≤18 years old hospitalized in the children wards; those admitted at the emergency room, neonatal intermediate and intensive therapy units were not included. Medical prescriptions were reviewed taking into consideration anthropometric characteristics, diagnosis and number of drugs prescribed to identify potential drug-drug interactions using Micromedex 2.0 database. RESULTS: 88 patients were included, an average of 4.6 ± 2.8 of drugs were prescribed per patient. 37 subjects (42%) presented some degree of potential drug-drug interactions of which 25.5% were major and 27.7% moderate according to the software. Identified risk factors were: age ≥ 4 years (OR 1.917; 95% CI 1.081-3.399), BSA ≥ 0.8m2(OR 1.825; 95% CI 1.021-3.263), height ≥ 1 m (OR 2.556;95% CI 1.322 - 4.941), and number of prescribed medications ≥ 4 (OR 2.106;95% CI 1.248 - 3.556). CONCLUSION: Some of the interactions found were for the benefit of the patient, but others were considered undesirable because they altered the pharmacokinetics of some of the medications administered. Detecting in time the harmful interactions for a patient may favor the patient's safety.