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1.
Medicina (Kaunas) ; 59(12)2023 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38138278

ABSTRACT

Background and objectives: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) poses challenges to the healthcare system, especially with frequent heart involvement. The current retrospective observational study aims to summarize the type and degree of cardiovascular involvement in children with MISC and to find possible associations between laboratory, inflammatory, and imaging abnormalities and the predominant clinical phenotype using a cluster analysis. Material and methods: We present a retrospective observational single-center study including 51 children meeting the MIS-C criteria. Results: Fifty-three percent of subjects presented with at least one sign of cardiovascular involvement (i.e., arterial hypotension, heart failure, pericardial effusion, myocardial dysfunction, pericarditis without effusion, myocarditis, coronaritis, palpitations, and ECG abnormalities). Acute pericarditis was found in 30/41 of the children (73%) assessed using imaging: 14/30 (46.7%) with small pericardial effusion and 16/30 (53.3%) without pericardial effusion. The levels of CRP were significantly elevated in the children with pericarditis (21.6 ± 13 mg/dL vs. 13.9 ± 11 mg/dL, p = 0.035), and the serum levels of IL-6 were higher in the children with small pericardial effusion compared to those without (191 ± 53 ng/L vs. 88 ± 27 ng/L, p = 0.041). Pericarditis with detectable pericardial effusion was significantly more frequent in the female vs. male subjects, 72% vs. 30% (p = 0.007). The hierarchical clustering analysis showed two clusters: Cluster 1 includes the children without cardiovascular symptoms, and Cluster 2 generalizes the MIS-C children with mild and severe cardiovascular involvement, combining pericarditis, myocarditis, heart failure, and low blood pressure. Also, subjects from Cluster 2 displayed significantly elevated levels of fibrinogen (5.7 ± 0.3 vs. 4.6 ± 0.3, p = 0.03) and IL-6 (158 ± 36 ng/mL vs. 66 ± 22 ng/mL, p = 0.032), inflammatory markers suggestive of a cytokine storm. Conclusions: Our results confirm that children with oligosymptomatic MIS-C or those suspected of long COVID-19 should be screened for possible cardiological involvement.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure , Myocarditis , Pericardial Effusion , Pericarditis , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Myocarditis/complications , Bulgaria , Interleukin-6 , Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome , Retrospective Studies , Pericarditis/complications , Pericarditis/epidemiology
2.
World J Exp Med ; 13(3): 28-46, 2023 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37396885

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic affects all aspects of our lives, including children. With the advancement of the pandemic, children under five years old are at increased risk of hospitalization relative to other age groups. This makes it paramount that we develop tools to address the two critical aspects of preserving children's health - new treatment protocols and new predictive models. For those purposes, we need to understand better the effects of COVID-19 on children, and we need to be able to predict the number of affected children as a proportion of the number of infected children. This is why our research focuses on clinical and epidemiological pictures of children with heart damage post-COVID, as a part of the general picture of post-COVID among this age group. AIM: To demonstrate the role of children in the COVID-19 spread in Bulgaria and to test the hypothesis that there are no secondary transmissions in schools and from children to adults. METHODS: Our modeling and data show with high probability that in Bulgaria, with our current measures, vaccination strategy and contact structure, the pandemic is driven by the children and their contacts in school. RESULTS: This makes it paramount that we develop tools to address the two critical aspects of preserving children's health - new treatment protocols and new predictive models. For those purposes, we need to understand better the effects of COVID-19 on children, and we need to be able to predict the number of affected children as a proportion of the number of infected children. This is why our research focuses on clinical and epidemiological pictures of children with heart damage post-COVID, as a part of the general picture of post-Covid among this age group. CONCLUSION: Our modeling rejects that hypothesis, and the epidemiological data supports that. We used epidemiological data to support the validity of our modeling. The first summer wave in 2020 from the listed here school proms endorse the idea of transmissions from students to teachers.

3.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(6)2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36991644

ABSTRACT

The popularity of smart sensors and the Internet of Things (IoT) is growing in various fields and applications. Both collect and transfer data to networks. However, due to limited resources, deploying IoT in real-world applications can be challenging. Most of the algorithmic solutions proposed so far to address these challenges were based on linear interval approximations and were developed for resource-constrained microcontroller architectures, i.e., they need buffering of the sensor data and either have a runtime dependency on the segment length or require the sensor inverse response to be analytically known in advance. Our present work proposed a new algorithm for the piecewise-linear approximation of differentiable sensor characteristics with varying algebraic curvature, maintaining the low fixed computational complexity as well as reduced memory requirements, as demonstrated in a test concerning the linearization of the inverse sensor characteristic of type K thermocouple. As before, our error-minimization approach solved the two problems of finding the inverse sensor characteristic and its linearization simultaneously while minimizing the number of points needed to support the characteristic.

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