Medline ® Abstract for Reference 56
of 'Etiology, clinical features, and diagnosis of neonatal hypertension'
56
TI
Congenital neuroblastoma mimicking early onset sepsis.
AU
Lindner W, Behnisch W, Kunz U, Debatin KM, Pohlandt F
SO
Eur J Pediatr. 2001;160(7):436.
UNLABELLED:
A newborn girl presented with symptoms of severe early onset sepsis but also with systemic hypertension (SH) at age 3 h. Plasma catecholamine (CAT) levels were extremely elevated, reflecting increased release of CAT from a congenital neuroblastoma (NB). Clinical symptoms at time of admission were: prolonged capillary refill (5 s), tachycardia, tachydyspnoea, metabolic acidosis (pH 7.17, lactate 11.8 mmol/l), fever (38.4 degrees C) and SH: 90/50/65 mmHg (systolic/diastolic/mean). The infant experienced organ failure (lung, heart, liver). A retroperitoneal dumbbell tumour was detected. Plasma CAT levels at age 15 h were: noradrenaline 219 nmol/l; adrenaline 13 nmol/l; and dopamine 65.3 nmol/l. SH responded to intermittent alpha-adrenergic blockage. CAT-related symptoms ceased within 1 week. The intraspinal NB was surgically removed when cord compression became symptomatic. The neurological and developmental state is normal at age 17 months. The abdominal NB regressed spontaneously.
CONCLUSION:
A neuroblastoma should be considered in newborn infants presenting with a shock-like condition together with systemic hypertension.
AD
Department of Paediatrics, University of Ulm, Prittwitzstrasse 43, 89070 Ulm, Germany. wolfgang.lindner@medizin.uni-ulm.de
PMID
