Complicated community-acquired pneumonia (CACP) results from localized complications - pleural effusion and/or empyema, necrotizing pneumonia or lung abscess - or systemic complications. A British report states that 3% of pneumonias in children progress to CACP. Diagnosis requires imaging tests - chest X-ray (X-ray), chest ultrasound (USG) and chest tomography (CT). Treatment is based on empirical antibiotic therapy, with Streptococcus pneumoniae (SP) as the most frequent agent. The objective of the study is to identify patients treated at the Pediatric Emergency Room of the Taguatinga Regional Hospital (HRT), Federal District, diagnosed with CACP between March 1, 2022 and March 1, 2024. The total sample consisted of 51 patients with CACP. It can be inferred that the profile of patients is healthy, male children under five years of age. The characteristic symptoms - cough, tachypnea and fever - were present in most cases at admission. Persistent fever beyond 48-72h after the start of treatment or its reappearance after an afebrile period, persistent and/or onset of tachypnea and/or cough, decreased and/or abolished breath soun ds on auscultation and hypoxemia provided the most frequent clinical pattern of evolution. Chest X-ray was the most frequently performed imaging exam, with the predominant radiological presentation being isolated consolidation and radiological signs of the complications presented. Two cases with PS as the etiological agent were identified. The therapeutic definition was variable and the outcome was favorable in all cases. The clinical and radiological profile of the patients was compatible with the data in the literature. However, there is a lack of strategies regarding uniform management of the institution for the care of patients with CCAP.
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