Literature DB >> 20467386

Benign transient blueberry muffin baby.

R Bagna1, E Bertino, I Rovelli, C Peila, F Giuliani, L Occhi, M Mensa, R Mazzone, P Saracco, C Fabris.   

Abstract

In this case-report a case of severe fetal anemia of unknown origin is presented. Diagnosis of fetal anemia was made at 24 weeks of gestational age, when fetal ascites was identified. Doppler sonography of medium cerebral artery showed a high systolic speed velocity (ACM-PSV), of 65 cm/s (>1.55 MoM). This value predicts a severe fetal anemia. Funicolocentesis confirmed hyporegenerative anemia, low reticulocytosis and low erythroblastosis. A fetal transfusion was performed. At birth anemia was still present and the baby presented blueberry muffin and liver erythropoietic foci. The blueberry muffin morphology presents as non-blanching, blue-red macules or firm, dome-shaped papules (2-8 mm in diameter). The eruption is often generalized but favors the trunk, head, and neck. Infectious (Toxoplasmosis, Cytomegalovirus, Rubella, Herpes, Parvo, Coxackievirus, Ebstein Barr, Syphilis), hematologic (sferocytosis, alloimmunization, foeto-maternal transfusion), metabolic, neoplastic (congenital leukemia, neuroblastome, congenital rhabdomyosarcome) and systemic (histiocytosis, lupus) pathologies indicated until now as possible disease causes were excluded. In the first day of life the neonate received a RBC transfusion for anemia (Hb=5.1 g/dL; Hct 15,7% at birth), followed within 48-72 hours by rapid disappearance of the rash, that wasn't then histologically examined. During two weeks of hospitalization reticulocytes raised spontaneously from 0.8% to 3.17%. Until two years of age the auxologic and clinical course was regular and the child is now in good health conditions. Due to the absence of systematic disease and the complete regression, no exact diagnosis and prognosis could be established in this case.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20467386

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Minerva Pediatr        ISSN: 0026-4946            Impact factor:   1.312


  2 in total

1.  Extramedullary haematopoiesis resembling a blueberry muffin, in a neonate.

Authors:  Balaganesh Karmegaraj; Sowmya Vijayakumar; Ramanathan Ramanathan; Ramesh Samikannu
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2015-10-13

2.  Fetal hypoxia secondary to severe maternal anemia as a causative link between blueberry muffin baby and erythroblastosis: a case report.

Authors:  Maria Pia De Carolis; Silvia Salvi; Iliana Bersani; Serafina Lacerenza; Costantino Romagnoli; Sara De Carolis
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2016-06-13
  2 in total

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