Recurrent neonatal group B streptococcus cellulitis and adenitis syndrome with late-onset sepsis
Author:
Guri Alex1ORCID, Scheier Eric2, Balla Uri2ORCID, Chigrinsky Mikhael3, Shapiro Eli3
Affiliation:
1. Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Kaplan Medical Center, School of Medicine , The Hebrew University and Hadassah Medical Center , Rehovot , Jerusalem , Israel 2. Pediatric Emergency Department, Kaplan Medical Center, School of Medicine , The Hebrew University and Hadassah Medical Center , Rehovot , Jerusalem , Israel 3. Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Kaplan Medical Center, School of Medicine , The Hebrew University and Hadassah Medical Center , Rehovot , Jerusalem , Israel
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Group-B streptococcus (GBS) continues to be a significant cause of late-onset neonatal illness. Rarely does it present as cellulitis-adenitis syndrome, and rarely does the infection recur in the same infant after complete recovery.
Case presentation
Here we report a case of recurrent late-onset cellulitis-adenitis GBS syndrome in a term 12-day-old neonate. The infant presented with fever and cellulitis of the right neck. Full sepsis workup was normal and the infant recovered completely with antibiotics. Three days after the completion of antibiotics the patient returned to the emergency department due to fever, toxic appearance and rapidly spreading cellulitis, and adenitis on the left side of the neck. Blood culture revealed GBS. The patient was re-admitted to the hospital and successfully treated with a prolonged course of antibiotics.
Conclusions
This case highlights the importance of treating neonatal cellulitis with fever as bacteremia, and reminds us of the rare possibility of recurrent invasive GBS disease. Moreover, this case illustrates that GBS cellulitis-adenitis syndrome is possibly underdiagnosed in mild cases. Physicians should be aware that neonatal cellulitis can precede the appearance of severe sepsis. Neonates with fever and cellulitis without a clear external port of entry should undergo a complete sepsis workup and receive antibiotic treatment appropriate for bacteremia, even if the blood cultures are negative. Although the recurrence of GBS sepsis is rare, physicians should be aware of this possibility in order to treat the infection early.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynaecology,Embryology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Reference10 articles.
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