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Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant

An 8-month old girl, weighing 9 kg, was brought by her parents at 8.15 am to the Emergency Department (ED) for a progressive worsening of weakness and acute respiratory failure. On admission, the baby presented with poor oral intake, a weak cry and extremely weak muscular body control. Poor gag and...

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Autores principales: Lonati, Davide, Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro, Fenicia, Lucia, Anniballi, Fabrizio, Landri, Paolo, Giampreti, Andrea, Petrolini, Valeria Margherita, Vecchio, Sarah, Manzo, Luigi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PAGEPress Publications 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3283199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22355516
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/pr.2011.e31
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author Lonati, Davide
Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro
Fenicia, Lucia
Anniballi, Fabrizio
Landri, Paolo
Giampreti, Andrea
Petrolini, Valeria Margherita
Vecchio, Sarah
Manzo, Luigi
author_facet Lonati, Davide
Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro
Fenicia, Lucia
Anniballi, Fabrizio
Landri, Paolo
Giampreti, Andrea
Petrolini, Valeria Margherita
Vecchio, Sarah
Manzo, Luigi
author_sort Lonati, Davide
collection PubMed
description An 8-month old girl, weighing 9 kg, was brought by her parents at 8.15 am to the Emergency Department (ED) for a progressive worsening of weakness and acute respiratory failure. On admission, the baby presented with poor oral intake, a weak cry and extremely weak muscular body control. Poor gag and suck, unreactive mydriasis, hypotonia, lethargy and absence of peristalsis were noted. Laboratory data showed severe respiratory acidosis. Chest X-ray, electroencephalography, encephalic CT scan and MRI were all normal, as were cerebrospinal fluid analysis and viral tests. Orotracheal intubation and continuous mechanical ventilation were applied. The patient received fluids, corticosteroids, aerosol therapy, large-spectrum antibiotics and enteral-nutrition. Further investigation revealed ingestion of an improperly prepared home-canned homogenized turkey meal. Type A botulinum neurotoxin was identified. Trivalent botulinum antitoxin, prostigmine and oral activated charcoal were administered. Generalized flaccid paralysis, areflexic bilateral mydriasis, gastric stasis and deep coma persisted for the duration of the hospital stay, and the patient died of severe respiratory failure and cardiac arrest 12 days after ED admission. Botulism poisoning should be suspected in any infant presenting with feeding difficulties, constipation, descendent paralysis or acute respiratory failure. Supportive treatment and antidotal therapy should be performed as soon as a clinical diagnosis is made. We describe a case of foodborne botulism in an 8-month old infant caused by ingestion of an improperly prepared home-canned homogenized turkey meal, representing the youngest fatal case reported in medical literature.
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spelling pubmed-32831992012-02-21 Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant Lonati, Davide Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro Fenicia, Lucia Anniballi, Fabrizio Landri, Paolo Giampreti, Andrea Petrolini, Valeria Margherita Vecchio, Sarah Manzo, Luigi Pediatr Rep Brief Report An 8-month old girl, weighing 9 kg, was brought by her parents at 8.15 am to the Emergency Department (ED) for a progressive worsening of weakness and acute respiratory failure. On admission, the baby presented with poor oral intake, a weak cry and extremely weak muscular body control. Poor gag and suck, unreactive mydriasis, hypotonia, lethargy and absence of peristalsis were noted. Laboratory data showed severe respiratory acidosis. Chest X-ray, electroencephalography, encephalic CT scan and MRI were all normal, as were cerebrospinal fluid analysis and viral tests. Orotracheal intubation and continuous mechanical ventilation were applied. The patient received fluids, corticosteroids, aerosol therapy, large-spectrum antibiotics and enteral-nutrition. Further investigation revealed ingestion of an improperly prepared home-canned homogenized turkey meal. Type A botulinum neurotoxin was identified. Trivalent botulinum antitoxin, prostigmine and oral activated charcoal were administered. Generalized flaccid paralysis, areflexic bilateral mydriasis, gastric stasis and deep coma persisted for the duration of the hospital stay, and the patient died of severe respiratory failure and cardiac arrest 12 days after ED admission. Botulism poisoning should be suspected in any infant presenting with feeding difficulties, constipation, descendent paralysis or acute respiratory failure. Supportive treatment and antidotal therapy should be performed as soon as a clinical diagnosis is made. We describe a case of foodborne botulism in an 8-month old infant caused by ingestion of an improperly prepared home-canned homogenized turkey meal, representing the youngest fatal case reported in medical literature. PAGEPress Publications 2011-12-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3283199/ /pubmed/22355516 http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/pr.2011.e31 Text en ©Copyright D. Lonati et al., 2011 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial 3.0 License (CC BY-NC 3.0). Licensee PAGEPress, Italy
spellingShingle Brief Report
Lonati, Davide
Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro
Fenicia, Lucia
Anniballi, Fabrizio
Landri, Paolo
Giampreti, Andrea
Petrolini, Valeria Margherita
Vecchio, Sarah
Manzo, Luigi
Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title_full Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title_fullStr Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title_full_unstemmed Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title_short Fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
title_sort fatal course of foodborne botulism in an eight-month old infant
topic Brief Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3283199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22355516
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/pr.2011.e31
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