Abstract

BackgroundLassa fever is a zoonotic viral infection endemic to the West Africa countries. It is highly fatal during pregnancy and as such reports of neonatal onset Lassa fever infections are rare in scientific literature. We report a fatal case of Lassa fever in a 26-day-old neonate mimicking the diagnosis of late-onset neonatal sepsis.Case presentationThe patient is a 26-day-old neonate who was admitted with a day history of fever, poor feeding, pre-auricular lymphadenopathy and sudden parental death. He was initially evaluated for late onset neonatal sepsis. He later developed abnormal bleeding and multiple convulsions while on admission, prompting the need to evaluate for Lassa fever using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). He died 31 h into admission and RT-PCR result was positive for Lassa fever.ConclusionsNeonatal Lassa fever infection is highly fatal and can mimic neonatal sepsis. High index of suspicion is needed particularly for atypical presentations of neonatal sepsis in Lassa fever endemic areas.

Highlights

  • Lassa fever is a zoonotic viral infection endemic to the West Africa countries

  • We present a unique case of fatal Lassa fever infection in a 26-day-old baby

  • To observing universal precaution for all patients, clinicians and health workers attending to cases of neonatal sepsis might need a higher index of clinical suspicion in neonates presenting with complications of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and meningitis or a history of sudden parental death following delivery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lassa fever is a zoonotic viral infection endemic to the West Africa countries. It is highly fatal during pregnancy and as such reports of neonatal onset Lassa fever infections are rare in scientific literature. We present a unique case of fatal Lassa fever infection in a 26-day-old baby Ogunkunle et al Infectious Diseases of Poverty (2020) 9:110 admitted to the special care baby unit of a referral tertiary health center in North-Central Nigeria with an initial diagnosis of late-onset neonatal sepsis.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call