Clinical Profile of 30 Infants With Acute Pulmonary Hemorrhage in Cleveland

Author:

Dearborn Dorr G.1,Smith Paul G.1,Dahms Beverly B.2,Allan Terrence M.3,Sorenson W.G.4,Montana Eduardo5,Etzel Ruth A.6

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Pulmonary Division
 Department of Pediatrics
 Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital
 Case Western Reserve University
 Cleveland, Ohio

2. Department of Pathology
 University Hospitals of Cleveland
 Case Western Reserve University
 Cleveland, Ohio

3. Division of Community Health
 Cuyahoga County Board of Health
 Cleveland, Ohio

4. Division of Respiratory Disease Studies
 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
 Morgantown, West Virginia

5. Georgia Pediatric Cardiology
 Atlanta, Georgia

6. George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services
 Washington, DC

Abstract

Between 1993 and 2000, 30 infants were hospitalized with acute pulmonary hemorrhage at Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland. Most infants presented with severe pulmonary symptoms requiring intensive support, but a few infants had less severe hemorrhage. Three quarters of the patients required ventilator support and blood transfusions. Eleven patients had transitory hemoglobinuria. Five patients died, but infants who survived did well. There are currently no specific treatment modalities, although we have advised moving to a different home and avoiding environmental tobacco smoke. Subsequently, rebleeding from the lower respiratory tract has decreased from 5 of 7 infants to 1 in 21. On the basis of decreased subsequent fatal hemorrhage, high dose glucocorticoids seem to be of some value. Several patients revealed continued low-grade alveolar hemorrhage for months after their initial bleed, even after removal from their original home environments.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference54 articles.

1. CDC. Acute pulmonary hemorrhage/hemosiderosis among infants-Cleveland, January 1993–November 1994. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.1994;43:881–883

2. CDC. Update. Pulmonary hemorrhage/hemosiderosis among infants-Cleveland, Ohio, 1993–1996. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.1997;46:33–35

3. Montana E, Etzel RA, Allan TM, Horgan TE, Dearborn DG. Environmental risk factors associated with pediatric idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis in a Cleveland community. Pediatrics.1997;99(1). Available at: www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/99/1/e5

4. Etzel RA, Montana E, Sorenson WG, Kullman GJ, Allan TM, Dearborn DG. Acute pulmonary hemorrhage in infants associated with exposure to Stachybotrys atra and other fungi. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med.1998;152:757–762

5. Etzel RA, Dearborn DG. Pulmonary hemorrhage among infants with exposure to toxigenic molds: an update. In: Johanning E, ed. Bioaerosols, Fungi, and Mycotoxins: Health Effects, Assessment, Prevention and Control. Albany, NY: Boyd Printing Co, Inc; 1999:70–83

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