Abstract

Congenital tuberculosis (TB) is difficult to detect because the disease presents few or no symptoms in the fetus during pregnancy and nonspecific symptoms in neonates. We reviewed 20 cases of congenital TB reported between 2011 and 2017 and report a case of a mother and her 8 days old neonate with congenital TB. In these 21 cases (including our case), the most common clinical presentations were respiratory distress, fever, and hepatosplenomegaly. The most common chest imaging findings were pneumonia, multiple pulmonary nodules, and miliary pattern. The mortality rate of infants with TB was increased ~2.2-fold if their mothers had no symptoms. The case reported herein concerns an 8 days old neonate with the rare presentation of a 2 days history of fever, followed by abdominal distension without respiratory symptoms. Computed tomography (CT) imaging exhibited a large amount of right pleural effusion. Multiple antimicrobial therapies were administered to the neonate; however, his symptoms persisted. Repeat CT was used to identify a progressed disease with multiple nodules over the lung, spleen, and hepatic hilar region. Standard anti-TB medications were prescribed, and the patient recovered gradually. Both gastric lavage and pleural effusion cultures confirmed the diagnosis of TB. The neonate's mother denied any TB contact history and the diagnosis of any medical disease during pregnancy, but she experienced a fulminant course of miliary TB and was admitted to the intensive care unit 24 days postpartum. She died despite receiving anti-TB treatment. In TB-endemic areas, congenital TB should be taken into consideration when neonates develop fever, respond poorly to antimicrobial treatment, and when their mothers deny any TB contact history.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB), a serious public health problem in many countries, has had the highest rates of incidence and mortality among all communicable diseases worldwide for many years

  • This neonate developed a fever at 6 days old as an initial clinical presentation, and initial chest radiography revealed a large amount of pleural effusion with only mild pulmonary involvement

  • TB infection was confirmed through a positive culture of gastric lavages and pleural effusion

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Tuberculosis (TB), a serious public health problem in many countries, has had the highest rates of incidence and mortality among all communicable diseases worldwide for many years. An 8 days old male neonate was born to an Asian mother through vaginal delivery at 37 weeks of gestation, weighed 2,380 g, and had APGAR scores of 9 and 10 at 1 and 5 min, respectively He was admitted to our hospital with a 2 days history of fever of up to 39◦C but did not have respiratory or gastrointestinal symptoms. A chest CT image displayed diffuse interlobular and intralobular septal thickening with ground-glass opacities (Figure 1F) Because her neonate was highly suspected to have TB infection at that time, acid-fast staining and TB polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of the sputum were performed.

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