Clinical Case Reports (May 2023)

A case of Pierre Robin syndrome in a child with no soft palate and complications from pneumonia in Bangladesh

  • Mohammad Ashraful Amin,
  • Taraque Ahamed Shawon,
  • Naushad Khan Shaon,
  • Sabrina Nahin,
  • Jannatul Fardous,
  • Mohammad Delwer Hossain Hawlader

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.7350
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Key Clinical Message Children with Pierre Robin syndrome (PRS) often have trouble breathing and eating as soon as they are born. If conservative therapy fails to alleviate airway obstruction, surgical surgery may be considered. Patients with PRS require multidisciplinary approaches for treatment. Abstract Pierre Robin syndrome is a common craniofacial abnormality that causes glossoptosis and blockage of the upper airway. This renders it difficult to feed, which leads to severe malnutrition. This condition is also often marked by an absence of a soft palate. We mention a newborn with Pierre Robin syndrome with the absence of a soft palate and pneumonia complications, whose impending respiratory failure was treated successfully. To solve the complex problems that these babies and their families are facing, a multidisciplinary approach is needed.

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