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The septic appearing infant: approach and case discussion. Muhammad Waseem, MD Pediatric Emergency Medicine Lincoln Hospital Bronx, NY. Another Sepsis Work-up. Early Discharge. New diagnoses in ED Inborn errors of metabolism Congenital anomalies. Septic-Appearing infant. ABCs
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The septic appearing infant:approach and case discussion Muhammad Waseem, MD Pediatric Emergency Medicine Lincoln Hospital Bronx, NY
Early Discharge • New diagnoses in ED • Inborn errors of metabolism • Congenital anomalies
Septic-Appearing infant • ABCs • Cultures & antibiotics • “An ill-appearing infant is septic until proven otherwise” but widen your differential
Case #1 • 10-day-old-term infant drinking 3-4 oz at first • Decreased appetite & vomiting • Sleepy
“ill appearing” • Flat fontanel • Dry mucous membrane • Enlarged liver • Slight hypotonia • Glucose 25 40 (after correction)
Presents in first 2-3 week • Septic-appearing • Irritability or lethargy • Vomiting
Hypotonia • Hepatomegaly • Hypoglycemia • Breath odor • Sweaty feet or stale urine
Coma • Seizure • Respiratory distress
“limited repertoire” of symptoms • Non specific • Symptoms may overlap • E.coli sepsis (galactosemia) • Clinically indistinguishable High index of suspicion
Clinical presentations • Vomiting • Lethargy • Coma • Seizure
Jaundice • Odor • Body • Urine
Inborn error of metabolism • Encephalopathy without acidosis • Encephalopathy with acidosis • Hepatic syndrome
IEM with No Acidosis • Maple Syrup Urine disease • Urea cycle defects
IEM with acidosis • Organic aciduria • Lactic acidosis
Hepatic Syndrome • Galactosemia
Acute Evaluation • Glucose • pH & HCO3 • Electrolytes • Ammonia • Lactate • Pyruvate
Ammonia level • Susceptible to artifacts • Must be placed in ice • Immediate processing • < 80 mcg/dL • Hundreds to thousands • Readily traverses BBB • Central hyperventilation
Urine • Organic acids • Amino acids • Ketones • Reducing substances
Hypoglycemia • Acidosis • Hyperammonemia
Hyperammonemia • Urea cycle defects • Organic acidemia • Transient hyperammonemia of the newborn
Urea Cycle Defects • Early respiratory alkalosis • Marked elevation of ammonia • Abnormal plasma amino acids
Urea Cycle Defects • Ornithine-transcarbamylase (OTC) • Carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS)
10% glucose & lipids 1 g/kg • Minimal proteins • Essential amino acids (0.25 g/kg)
Sodium benzoate 250 mg/kg • Hippuric acid • Sodium phenylacetate 250 mg/kg • Phenylacetylglutamine
Organic Acidemia (OAs) • Methylmalonic acidemia • Propionic acidemia • Isovaleric acidemia
Severe acidosis • Ketosis • Hyperammonemia • Seizures • Unusual odor (urine)
Neutropenia • Thrombocytopenia • Urine organic acid
Hydration • Glucose infusion • Bicarbonate
Lactic Acidosis • Small for gestational age • Dysmorphic features • Multiorgan disease • Seizures
Lactate/pyruvate ratio • Elevated anion gap • Arterial specimen
Galactosemia • Not manifest until galactose is introduced • Most formulas contain lactose • No galactose in soy formulas
Vomiting • Lethargy or irritability • Feeding difficulties • Poor weight gain • Convulsion
Jaundice • Hepatomegaly • Hypoglycemia • Mental Retardation • Hepatic Cirrhosis • E. coli Sepsis * Reducing substances in urine * Must be done before transfusion
Phenylketonuria • Phenylalanine hydroxylase • Normal at birth • Mental retardation • Gradual onset • Vomiting
Fair skin • Blue eyes • Seborrhea or eczema • Hypertonia • Seizure
Guthrie test • Phenylalanine • 48-72 hrs • After protein feeding
Maple Syrup Disease • Decarboxylase • Branched chain amino acids • Leucine (neurotoxic) • Isoleucine • Valine
Precedes screening test results • Normal at birth • First week • May present as early as 24 hours
Feeding intolerance • Lethargy • Hypotonia • Posturing • Seizures
Typical odor • Burnt sugar or caramelized sugar • May not be prominent • Metabolic acidosis • Late finding • Hypoglycemia • No improvement after correction
Newborn Screening • Phenylketonuria • Maple Syrup Urine Disease • Galactosemia • Homocystinuria • Hypothyroidism • Sickle cell disease • Biotinidase deficiency • HIV
Case #2 • 4-week-old-term infant presented fussy, crying & irritable • Vomited greenish material • Tachycardia • Slightly distended abdomen
Malrotation &Volvulus • First 2 months • Intense & constant pain • Crying, drawing up their knees • Poor feeding • Bilious vomiting • Abdominal distension • No distension in high volvolus
Case # 3 • 4-week-old presented fussy with decreased appetite • Cyanotic;does not respond to O2 • Tachycardic • Grunting respiration • No hepatomegaly • Normal Chest X-ray