Zdorovʹe Rebenka (May 2018)

Neutropenia in children: clinical masks and therapeutic approach

  • S.I. Ilchenko,
  • O.S. Koreniuk,
  • A.A. Fialkovskaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22141/2224-0551.13.4.2018.137025
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. 387 – 393

Abstract

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Neutropenic syndrome is quite common in pediatric practice. Its nature is diverse, and every case of neutropenia needs thorough differential diagnosis to determine the patient’s management. Only a differentiated approach to patients with neutropenia can prevent the development of severe complications of infectious processes. To illustratу this point, we present a clinical case of severe chronic bronchopulmonary disease in a 4-year-old child, who was examined and treated in children’s city pulmonology center. The child was admitted to the hospital with the complaints of persistent non-productive cough, episodic distal rales, loss of hearing. From the history of the disease it was found that from one month of age, the child had repeated otitis, relapsing bronchitis with bronchial obstructive syndrome, repeated pneumonia of different localization. A comprehensive examination including, in addition to standard laboratory tests, diagnostic and diagnostic bronchoscopy, computed tomography of the thoracic organs, revealed a bilateral diffuse catarrhal-purulent endobronchitis, computed tomography signs of diffuse interstitial changes in the lungs and bronchomalacia. A thorough dynamic analysis of hemograms from the outpatient card made it possible to suspect a congenital neutropenia in the patient. Multiple occurrence of neutropenic crises with a decrease in the number of neutrophils to 1,000 cells/μl and lower during the first year of the child’s life and their periodicity of 3–4 weeks confirmed the cyclical nature of neutropenia. The sternal puncture performed with the evaluation of the myelogram revealed no significant changes in the granulocyte number that was probably due to the period of remission of cyclic neutropenia at the time of examination. Thus, severe chronic respiratory disease in this child was clinical mask of cyclic neutropenia, which required a thorough diagnosis. Neutropenia in children should be considered by the practicing physician as a laboratory symptom, which requires understanding, comparison with clinical manifestations and obligatory dynamic analysis.

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