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Human parainfluenza virus (HPIV) is a major cause of respiratory illnesses in children under five years, with clinical manifestations ranging from mild upper respiratory tract infections to severe lower respiratory tract diseases. This multi-center, cross-sectional study investigated the burden, clinical features, and predictors of respiratory viral infections in hospitalized children across four sites in Jordan. Nasopharyngeal specimens from 1000 eligible children were analyzed. In this article, we focused on HPIV infections. The overall HPIV positivity rate was 22.6%, with HPIV-3 accounting for 90.3% of cases. Significant geographic variability was observed, with higher positivity rates in the southern region. HPIV-positive cases frequently presented with symptoms like nasal congestion, tachypnea, and poor feeding. Co-infections with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) or influenza were associated with worse outcomes, including an increased need for invasive ventilation. The logistic regression identified male gender, asthma, and respiratory acidosis as predictors of complications. Geographic differences in HPIV prevalence and severity were notable, emphasizing the influence of environmental and socioeconomic factors. These findings underscore the urgent need for enhanced HPIV surveillance, targeted public health interventions, and vaccine development to mitigate the disease burden. This study provides critical insights that guide healthcare strategies and improve outcomes in young children at risk of severe HPIV infections.

Original publication

DOI

10.3390/v17020170

Type

Journal

Viruses

Publisher

MDPI AG

Publication Date

25/01/2025

Volume

17

Pages

170 - 170