Title: ClinicoPathological Conference
1ClinicoPathological Conference
- 93-03-24
- ??? / ?????
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2Chief complaints
- A 4-day-old girl had suffered from fever since
two days ago
3Present illness (1)
- The 4-day-old female newborn was a fullterm and
was delivered vaginally through thick meconium,
with Apgar score of 9 at 1 minute and 9 at 5
minute. - She developed a fever of 38.6 C at 2 days of
age, but was relatively well without
cardiopulmonary compromise. - She was sent to hospital for help where septic
workup was done including lumbar puncture. Viral
cultures were submitted because of several
papulovesicular lesions noted on her back. - Ampicillin gentamicine therapy was started at 2
days of age and acyclovir was added at 4 days of
age. - All cultures including viral culture were
negative.
4Present illness (2)
- Then she was transferred to another hospital for
further evaluation. - In addition, the mother had mild fever at the
time of delivery, and was treated with
antibiotics briefly before discharge. - By telephone interview, the mother said that she
was still febrile 1 week after delivery with the
main symptoms of malaise, abdominal pain and
headache. - She denied respiratory symptoms, vomiting,
diarrhea and skin rash. The father believed that
she was jaundiced.
5Present illness (3)
- The baby continued to appear pale, ill and
febrile. On the babys 10th day of life, the
mother visited the nursery. - With ill appearance, she told us that she had
headache and neck pain. - The father stated that she was having personality
changes that began the week before delivery. - The mother was then admitted to our hospital and
evaluations revealed the diagnosis.
6Past, personal and family histories
- Fullterm with gestational age of 38 weeks via
vaginal delivery. - Apgar scores 9 9 at 1st 5th minutes,
respectively BBW 3100 g - Mother history a 24-year-old gravida 3, para 1
to 2 mother. - Contact history unknown
- Traveling history unknown
- Family history unknown
7Physical examinations(4 days of life)
- Vital signs HR 130 /min RR 40 /min BT
38.6 C - General appearance pale and ill-looking, fussy
but consolable - Skin several scabbing lesions on her scalp.
- Chest clear and symmetric breathing sound
tachypnea (-) retraction (-) - Abdomen palpable liver edge, 4 cm below the
right costal margin in the midclavicular line
palpable spleen tip, 3 cm below the left costal
margin. - Genitalia bilateral inguinal lymph nodes 0.5 cm
in diameter
8Laboratory findings (1)
- At 3 days of age WBC 13400 /mm3Platelet
96000 /mm3Neutrophil 48Lymphocytes 17
Band form 29 (lt15 ) - ALT 20 U/L (6-50 U/L)
- CSF study WBC 4 /mm3 (all mononuclear
cells)Protein 91 mg/dl (84 45 mg/dL)Glucose
49 mg/dl (46 10 mg/dL)
9Laboratory findings (2)
- At 6 days of lifeCBC essentially
unchangedAST 66 U/L (35-140 U/L)ALT 54
U/L (6-50 U/L)r- GT 555 U/L (13-147 U/L)
10Problems of neonate
- Major problems
- Fever
- Skin lesions (papulovesicular) over the back
scabbing lesions on the scalp - Hepatosplenomegaly
- Lymphadenopathy over inguinal regions
- Minor problems
- Predominant band form of WBC
- Thrombocytopenia
- Heavy meconium stain
11Problems of mother
- Major problems
- Personality changes
- Fever when delivery s/p antibiotic therapy
- Still fever, malaise, abdominal pain and headache
- Headache and neck pain.
12Questions ??
- Neonate 1. any other abnormal physical findings
?2. head circumference ?3. ophthalmoscopic
examination ?4. other laboratory findings (Hg,
bilirubin etc..)5. CxR ?6. CNS image studies ?
13Question ??
- Mother 1. PROM ? Amnionitis ?2. Liver
function ? Bilirubin levels ?3. fever source ?
Genital cultures ?4. culture results ?5.
physical findings ? Neurologic findings ? 6.
Lumbar puncture ? CSF studies results? 7. past
personal histories ? VDRL ?8. travel contact
histories ?9. Image study (CxR, brain CT)? 10.
What kind of antibiotics were used when
delivery ? Drug history ?
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18Possible Consequences of Infection of a Mother
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20Possible organisms
- Bacteria Trepnema pallidum, Mycobacterium
tuberculosis - Virus Rubella, CMV, HSV, HIV, Enterovirus
- Protozoa Toxoplasma gondii, Plasmodium
21Clinical Features of Prenatal TORCH Infection
22Relative Clinical Features of TORCH Infection
23Congenital Rubella Syndrome
- Affect virtually all organ systems
- Manifestations 1.IUGR (most common)2.cataracts,
frequently associated with microphthalmia
3.myocarditis and structural cardiac defects
(PDA or pulmonary artery stenosis)4.blueberry
muffin skin lesions5.hearing loss from
sensorineural deafness6.meningoencephalitis7.pne
umonia, hepatitis, bone lucencies,
thrombocytopenia purpura, and anemia.8.motor
and mental retardation - Diagnosis 1.anti-rubella IgM Ab in neonatal
serum2.culturing rubella virus from the infant
(nasopharynx, urine, or tissue)
24Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease
- Congenital CMV infection
- Only 5 of all congenitally infected infants have
severe cytomegalic inclusion disease, another 5
have mild involvement, and 90 are born with
subclinical, but still chronic, CMV infection. - Characteristic manifestations IUGR,
prematurity, hepatosplenomegaly and jaundice,
thrombocytopenia and purpura, and microcephaly
and intracranial calcifications. - Other neurologic problems chorioretinitis,
sensorineural hearing loss, and mild increases in
CSF protein - Most symptomatic congenital infections and those
resulting in sequelae are caused by primary
rather than reactivated infections in pregnant
women - Re-infection with a different strain of CMV can
lead to symptomatic congenital infection. - Asymptomatic congenital CMV infection is likely a
leading cause of sensorineural hearing loss,
which occurs in approximately 7 of infected
infants.
25Human Immunodeficiency Virus (1)
- Currently, gt95 of children with HIV infection
acquire the infection from their mother (vertical
transmission) transfusion of contaminated blood
or clotting factor concentrates is now rarely
observed in the USA - Breastfeeding remains a possible risk for
transmission. - Infants born to HIV-infected mothers 1. Risk of
infection is 13-39 if no antiretroviral therapy
delivered to mother and infant2. With
appropriate therapy, risk is lt 53. Risk factors
for vertical transmission include maternal
viral load and degree of immunodeficiency and
PROM.
26Human Immunodeficiency Virus (2)
- Clinical manifestations 1. generally
asymptomatic for first few months of life
mean age of onset of symptoms is 1 year2. Common
manifestations include failure to thrive,
hepatosplenomegaly, oral candidiasis, recurrent
diarrhea, recurrent bacterial infections, and
PCP between 3-6 months of age.3. Anemia,
neutropenia, and thrombocytopenia are common
27Possible organisms
- Bacteria Trepnema pallidum, Mycobacterium
tuberculosis - Virus Rubella, CMV, HSV, HIV, Enterovirus
- Protozoa Toxoplasma gondii, Plasmodium
28Enterovirus---NEONATAL INFECTIONS (1)
- Enterovirus infection frequently is with
coxsackieviruses B2B5 and echoviruses 6, 9, 11,
and 19. - Transmission via 1. vertically before, during,
or after delivery2. horizontally from other
infected family members or by transmission in
hospital nurseries (sporadic or epidemic). - Infection in utero may be associated with
placentitis, fetal demise, neonatal illness, and,
possibly, congenital anomalies. - Neonatal infection is associated with a range of
clinical manifestations --- asymptomatic (the
majority) --- benign febrile illness --- severe
multi-system diseases - Most affected newborns are full-term and
previously well - Maternal history often reveals a recent viral
illness, including fever and, frequently,
abdominal pain.
29Enterovirus---NEONATAL INFECTIONS (2)
- Symptoms in the neonate may occur throughout the
newborn period, with some beginning as early as
day 1 of life severe disease generally has an
onset within the first 2 wk of life. - Clinical manifestations --- fever or
hypothermia, irritability, lethargy,
anorexia,--- rash (maculopapular, occasionally
petechial or papulovesicular),
jaundice,--- respiratory symptoms, apnea,
hepatomegaly, abdominal distention, emesis,
diarrhea, and decreased perfusion. - Most symptomatic neonates have benign courses,
with resolution of fever in an average of 3 days
and of other symptoms in about 1 wk.
Occasionally, a biphasic course may occur. - Laboratory findings --- leukocytosis,
thrombocytopenia, pleocytosis, --- elevated
transaminases and bilirubin, coagulopathy,---
pulmonary infiltrates,--- EKG changes.
30Enterovirus---NEONATAL INFECTIONS (3)
- Complications include --- CNS necrosis and
generalized or focal neurologic compromise---
arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, myocardial
infarction, and pericarditis --- hepatic
necrosis and failure intracranial or other
bleeding--- adrenal necrosis and hemorrhage
and rapidly progressive pneumonitis. ---
Myositis, NEC, SIADH, hemophagocytic syndrome,
and sudden death are rare events. - Mortality in those with severe disease is
significant and is most often associated with
hepatitis and associated bleeding complications,
myocarditis, or pneumonitis. - Risk factors for severe disease include ---
illness onset in the first few days of life, ---
maternal illness just prior to or at delivery,
prematurity, male sex,--- infection by echovirus
11 or a coxsackie B virus, --- positive serum
viral culture, --- absence of neutralizing
antibody to the infecting virus, --- evidence of
severe hepatitis and/or multi-system disease.
31Congenital syphilis (1)
- Transplacental transmission of Treponema pallidum
(spirochetes) - Transmission can occur at any stage of pregnancy
transmission rate approaching 100. - Fetal and perinatal death occurs in 40 of
affected infants. - Clinical manifestations 1.early signs (during
the first 2 yr of life) ---hepatosplenomegaly,
jaundice, elevated liver enzymes bile stasis
---diffuse lymphadenopathy ---Coombs negative
hemolytic anemia thrombocytopenia
---osteochondritis (wrist, elbow,ankle knee)
and periostitis (long bone) ---mucocutaneous
rash maculopapular or bullous lesions, followed
by desquamation involving hands and feet
---CNS abnormalities, failure to thrive,
chorioretinitis, nephritis2.late signs (appear
gradually during the first 2 decades) ---result
primarily from chronic inflammation of bone,
teeth and CNS. ---olympian brow, Higoumenakis
sign, saber shins, Hutchinson teeth, mulberry
molars, saddle nose---Juvenile paresis, Juvenile
tabes, Clutton joint
32Congenital syphilis (2)
- Diagnosis 1. nontreponemal tests ---VDRL,
RPR ---detect Ab against a cardiolipin-cholester
ol-lecithin complex ---helpful in
screening ---titers elevate when active and
decline when treatment is adequate2.
treponemal tests ---TPI, FTA-ABS, and MHA-TP
---measure Ab specific to T. pallidum
---confirmatory testing of positive results from
nontreponemal tests.
33Malaria
- Plasmodium protozoa (Plasmodium ovale, Plasmodium
vivax, Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium
falciparum). - Transmitted through 1. an infected female
Anopheles species mosquito. 2. blood transfusion
3. congenitally between mother and fetus (rare) - Clinical manifestations 1. asymptomatic during
the initial phase (incubation period)2.
paroxysms of fever, rigors, sweats, headache,
myalgia, back pain, abdominal pain, nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea, pallor and jaundice. - Diagnosis 1. identification of organisms on
Giemsa-stained smears of peripheral blood2.
monoclonal antibody test3. PCR
34Congenital malaria
- Malaria acquired from the mother prenatally or
perinatally. - In endemic areas, congenital malaria is an
important cause of abortions, miscarriages,
stillbirth, premature births, IUGR and neonatal
deaths. - Congenital malaria usually occurs in a nonimmune
mother with P. vivax or P. malariae, although it
can be observed with any of the human malaria
species. - Symptoms and signs most commonly occurs between
10-30 days of age (14hr to several months of age) - Clinical manifestations fever, restlessness,
drowsiness, pallor, jaundice, poor feeding,
vomiting, diarrhea, cyanosis and
hepatosplenomegaly.
35Mycobacteria infection (1)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex M.
tuberculosis, M bovis, M africanum, M. microti,
and M. canetti - Transmission 1. person to person by airborne
mucus droplet (most adults no longer
transmit the organism within several days to 2 wk
after chemotherapy)2. M. bovis may penetrate GI
mucosa or invade lymphatic tissue of
oropharynx (human infection is rare as a result
of pasteurization of milk effective TB
control program for cattle) - Pregnancy and the newborn 1.congenital
tuberculosis is rare because the most common
result of female genital tract tuberculosis is
infertility.2.primary infection just before or
during pregnancy is more likely to cause
congenital infection than is reactivation of a
previous infection.3.tubercle bacilli first
reach fetal liver, then pass into fetal
circulation and infect many organs.4.congenita
l tuberculosis may also be caused by aspiration
or ingestion of infected amniotic fluid.
36Mycobacteria infection (2)
- Lymphohematogenous (disseminated) disease
- Tubercle bacilli are disseminated to distant
sites, including liver, spleen,skin and lung
apices, in all cases of tuberculosis infection. - Lymphohematogenous spread is usually
asymptomatic. - Clinical manifestations ---hepatomegaly,
splenomegaly---lymphadenitis in superficial or
deep nodes---papulonecrotic tuberculids
appearing on the skin---bone and joints or
kidneys also may become involved---meningitis
occurs only late in the course of the disease - Miliary disease (the most clinically significant
form of disseminated TB)---occurs when massive
numbers of tubercle bacilli are released into
bloodstream, causing disease in two or more
organs.---occur within 2-6 mo of the initial
infection---lesions are often larger and more
numerous in the lungs, spleen, liver and bone
marrow than other tissues.---chronic or
recurrent headache (meningitis)---abdominal pain
or tenderness (tuberculous peritonitis)---cutaneo
us lesions papulonecrotic tuberculids, nodules,
or purpura.
37Mycobacteria infection (3)
- Tuberculous
Meningitis - Tuberculosis of the CNS accounts for about 5 of
extrapulmonary cases. It is seen most often in
young children but also develops in adults,
especially those who are infected with HIV. - From hematogenous spread or rupture of a
subependymal tubercle into the subarachnoid space
. - may present subtly as headache and mental changes
or acutely as confusion, lethargy, altered
sensorium, and neck rigidity. - Typically, the disease evolves over 1 or 2 weeks,
a course longer than that of bacterial
meningitis Hydrocephalus is common . - Lumbar puncture is the cornerstone of diagnosis.
- In general, CSF reveals a high leukocyte count, a
protein content of 100 to 800 mg/dL, and a low
glucose concentration. - AFB are seen on direct smear of CSF sediment in
only 20 of cases, but repeated lumbar punctures
increase the yield. Culture of CSF is diagnostic
in up to 80 of cases. - CT and MRI may show hydrocephalus and abnormal
enhancement of basal cisterns or ependyma
38---Congenital tuberculosis---
- symptoms may be present at birth but more
commonly begin by the 2nd or 3rd wk of life. - clinical manifestations respiratory distress,
fever, hepatic or splenic enlargement, poor
feeding, lethargy or irritability,
lymphadenopathy, abdominal distention, failure
to thrive, ear drainage, and skin lesions. - Many infants have an abnormal chest radiograph,
most often a miliary pattern. - Some with no pulmonary findings early in the
course of the disease later develop profound
radiologic and clinical abnormalities. - Clinical presentation of TB in newborn is similar
to that caused by bacterial sepsis and other
congenital infection, such as syphilis,
toxoplasmosis and CMV. - Diagnosis acid-fast stain of gastric aspirate,
middle-ear discharge, bone marrow, tracheal
aspirate, or biopsy tissue (especially liver)
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40Impression
- 1.Mycobacteria tuberculosis
- 2.Enterovirus infection
41Diagnostic procedure
- AFB and culture of CSF from mother gastric
aspirate from neonate - PCR for enterovirus
42Thank you !!