Impact of diurnal temperature variations on sputum bacterial detection in hospitalized patients with acute COPD exacerbation: a retrospective study from Fuzhou, China
Hong Xue, Qing Xue, Chunhui Wang, Qianshun Chen, Daxuan Wang, Zhen Li, Baosong Xie, Wei Zheng

TL;DR
This study found that larger temperature changes three days before hospital admission are linked to higher chances of bacterial growth in sputum of COPD patients.
Contribution
The study identifies diurnal temperature variation as a novel environmental factor influencing sputum pathogen detection in AECOPD patients.
Findings
A greater diurnal temperature difference three days before admission increased the risk of positive sputum cultures.
The effect was more pronounced in patients without respiratory failure.
Findings were consistent across different admission periods.
Abstract
To investigate the association between meteorological data three days before admission and the status of sputum pathogens culture in hospitalized patients with Acute exacerbation of Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) and respiratory infections. Data from 1,370 AECOPD patients (80.66% males, approximately 80% age > 70) with respiratory infections hospitalized in Fujian Provincial Hospital between December 2013 and December 2019 were collected. This cohort comprised, along with concurrent meteorological data from Fuzhou. Group differences were analyzed to compare the meteorological data three days prior to admission between patients with positive sputum pathogen cultures and those without. Logistic regression models were employed to investigate the association between meteorological parameters and the status of sputum pathogen cultures in patients with AECOPD and respiratory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Climate Change and Health Impacts · Respiratory Support and Mechanisms
