Abstract

BackgroundNeurogenic pulmonary edema is a rare but serious complication of febrile status epilepticus in children. Comprehensive screening for viral pathogens is seldomly performed in the work-up of febrile children.Case presentationA 22-month-old girl presented with her first episode of febrile status epilepticus, after which she developed acute pulmonary edema and respiratory failure. After the termination of seizure activity, the patient was intubated and managed on mechanical ventilation in the emergency room. The resolution of respiratory failure, as well as the neurological recovery, was achieved 9 h after admission, and the patient was discharged 6 days after admission without any complications. Molecular biological diagnostic methods identified the presence of human coronavirus HKU1, influenza C virus, and human parainfluenza virus 2 from the patient’s nasopharyngeal specimens.ConclusionsNeurogenic pulmonary edema following febrile status epilepticus was suspected to be the etiology of our patient’s acute pulmonary edema and respiratory failure. Timely seizure termination and rapid airway and respiratory intervention resulted in favorable outcomes of the patient. Molecular biological diagnostic methods identified three respiratory viruses; however, their relevance and association with clinical symptoms remain speculative.

Highlights

  • Neurogenic pulmonary edema is a rare but serious complication of febrile status epilepticus in children

  • Seizure termination and rapid airway and respiratory intervention resulted in favorable outcomes of the patient

  • Molecular biological diagnostic methods such as multiplex Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and generation sequencing (NGS) can detect pathogens from clinical specimens with high sensitivity; this leads to co-detection of multiple pathogens from the same clinical specimen

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Summary

Conclusions

Neurogenic pulmonary edema following febrile status epilepticus was suspected to be the etiology of our patient’s acute pulmonary edema and respiratory failure. Seizure termination and rapid airway and respiratory intervention resulted in favorable outcomes of the patient. Molecular biological diagnostic methods identified three respiratory viruses; their relevance and association with clinical symptoms remain speculative

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