Copyright
©The Author(s) 2025.
World J Methodol. Sep 20, 2025; 15(3): 100903
Published online Sep 20, 2025. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v15.i3.100903
Published online Sep 20, 2025. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v15.i3.100903
Table 1 The 24 distinct real diagnoses of the tested group (as established by the medical doctor)
| The real diagnoses of the tested group (as established by the medical doctor) | The number of tested cases per each real diagnosis (also in percents from the n = 34 patients in total) (%) | The indexed cases tested for each diagnosis in part |
| Viral diarrhea (rotavirus, norovirus, SARS-CoV2, adenovirus) | 7 (21) | Cases No. 4, 5, 6, 14, 17, 19, 25 |
| Bacterial diarrhea (Clostridium, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Shigella) | 5 (15) | Cases No. 1, 5, 7, 14, 15, 18 |
| Infectious mononucleosis (Epstein-Barr virus and/or citomegalovirus) | 4 (12) | Cases No. 2, 23, 27, 34 |
| Pyelonephritis (ESBL-neg./pos. E. coli) | 4 (12) | Cases No. 4, 24, 29, 30 |
| Viral URTI (adenovirus) | 3 (9) | Cases No. 8, 25, 30 |
| Iron-deficiency anemia | 3 (9) | Cases No. 8, 15, 29 |
| COVID-19 (both respiratory and digestive forms of COVID-19) | 3 (9%) | Cases No. 10, 16, 19 |
| Streptococcal pharyngitis/tonsillitis | 2 (6) | Cases No. 3, 33 |
| Viral encephalitis (varicella-zoster virus) | 2 (6) | Cases No. 12, 22 |
| Minor poststreptococcal inflammatory syndrome | 1 (3) | Case No. 4 |
| Viral pneumonia | 1 (3) | Case No. 6 |
| Hand-foot-and-mouth disease | 1 (3) | Case No. 8 |
| Type-A influenza | 1 (3) | Case No. 9 |
| Viral tracheobronchitis | 1 (3) | Case No. 11 |
| Bacterial acute otitis media | 1 (3) | Case No. 11 |
| Varicella | 1 (3) | Case No. 12 |
| Giardiasis (Giardia lamblia) | 1 (3) | Case No. 13 |
| Hepatitis A | 1 (3) | Case No. 20 |
| Floor-of-mouth abscess (sublingual gland abscess) | 1 (3) | Case No. 21 |
| Scarlet fever | 1 (3) | Case No. 26 |
| Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) | 1 (3) | Case No. 28 |
| Vulvovaginal (Vv.) candidiasis | 1 (3) | Case No. 30 |
| Marshall syndrome (PFAPA) | 1 (3) | Case No. 31 |
| Mediterranean spotted fever (Rickettsia conorii) (confirmed by pos. IgM anti-Rickettsia conorri) | 1 (3) | Case No. 32 |
Table 2 A simulation applied on a respiratory clinical and paraclinical picture example
| A respiratory CPP example | The possible clusters that may partially or integrally explain the given respiratory CPP (%) | The possible diseases that may explain the possible clusters found by EPed |
| This CPP example contains these 7 listed signs (which are simultaneously processed as a single CPP | EPed has found many possible clusters that may partially explain the given respiratory CPP (the percent in parentheses represents the degree by which that specific cluster theoretically/potentially explains the given CPP | EPed has found many possible diseases that may explain the possible clusters found by EPed |
| Cough (“tuse”) | Systemic (biological) inflammatory syndrome (57%) | Tuberculosis (CSD = 1.1) |
| Fever (“febra”) | Systemic dissemination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (42%) | Viral pneumonia (CSD = 1.1) |
| Wheezing (“wheezing”) | Broncho-esophageal fistula (42%) | Bacterial pneumonia (CSD = 1) |
| Increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (“VSH crescut”) | Tracheo-esophageal fistula (42%) | COVID-19 (CSD = 0.9) |
| Thrombocytopenia (“trombocitopenie”) | Bronchiolitis (a cluster defined by EPed as an inflammation of bronchioli) (28%) | Scarlet fever (CSD = 0.9) |
| Neutrophilia (“neutrofilie”) | Bronchiolitis obliterans (28%) | Acute viral diarrhea (CSD = 0.8) |
| Monocytosis (“monocitoza”) | Respiratory failure (28%) | Viral URTI (CSD = 0.8) |
| Pericarditis (28%) | Bronchiolitis (CSD = 0.6) | |
| Functional respiratory syndrome of obstructive type (28%) | Measles (CSD = 0.5) | |
| Dehydration (28%) | Influenza (CSD = 0.5) | |
| Pleurisy (28%) | Congenital broncho-esophageal fistula (disease) (CSD = 0.5) | |
| Alveolar pneumonia (28%) | Congenital tracheo-esophageal fistula (disease) (CSD = 0.5) | |
| Interstitial pneumonia (28%) | Bacterial URTI (CSD = 0.4) | |
| Bronchitis (14%) | Infectious mononucleosis with EBV or/and CMV (CSD = 0.4) | |
| Carditis (pancarditis) (14%) | Cystic fibrosis (CSD = 0.4) | |
| Gastroesophageal reflux disease (14%) | Bacterial epiglottitis (CSD = 0.3) | |
| Rhinitis (a cluster defined by EPed as an inflammation of the nasal mucosa) (14%) | Viral laryngeal tracheitis (CSD = 0.2) | |
| Adenoiditis (a cluster defined by EPed as an inflammation of the nasal adenoids) (14%) | Periamygdalian abscess (phlegmon) (CSD = 0.2) | |
| Bacteremia (14%) | Cervical adenoflegmon (CSD = 0.2) | |
| Cholangitis (14%) | Asthma (CSD = 0.2) | |
| Endocarditis (14%) | Gastroesophageal reflux disease (CSD = 0.1) | |
| […] | Hiatal hernia (CSD = 0.1) | |
| Pyelonephritis (14%) | etc. | |
| Sepsis (14%) | ||
| Toxic bacterial syndrome (14%) | ||
| SIRS (14%) | ||
| CNS tuberculoma (14%) | ||
| Viremia (14%) | ||
| Hypersplenism (14%) | ||
| Vasculitis (14%) | ||
| etc. |
- Citation: Drăgoi AL, Nemeș RM. “Electronic Pediatrician”, a non-machine learning prototype artificial intelligence software for pediatric computer-assisted pathophysiologic diagnosis ― general presentation. World J Methodol 2025; 15(3): 100903
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2222-0682/full/v15/i3/100903.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5662/wjm.v15.i3.100903
