| Literature DB >> 29164089 |
Kazumichi Fujioka1, Ichiro Morioka1, Kosuke Nishida1, Mayumi Morizane2, Kenji Tanimura2, Masashi Deguchi2, Kazumoto Iijima1, Hideto Yamada2.
Abstract
We report two cases of pulmonary hypoplasia due to fetal ascites in symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections despite fetal therapy. The patients died soon after birth. The pathogenesis of pulmonary hypoplasia in our cases might be thoracic compression due to massive fetal ascites as a result of liver insufficiency. Despite aggressive fetal treatment, including multiple immunoglobulin administration, which was supposed to diminish the pathogenic effects of CMV either by neutralization or immunomodulatory effects, the fetal ascites was uncontrollable. To prevent development of pulmonary hypoplasia in symptomatic congenital CMV infections, further fetal intervention to reduce ascites should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: congenital cytomegalovirus infection; fetal ascites; fetal therapy; newborn; pulmonary hypoplasia
Year: 2017 PMID: 29164089 PMCID: PMC5681744 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Images of case 1. Fetal magnetic resonance imaging shows massive ascites and compressed lungs (A). Chest X-ray (B) and postmortem chest CT (C) show pulmonary hypoplasia.
Figure 2Images of case 2. Fetal magnetic resonance imaging shows massive ascites, hepatomegaly, and compressed lungs (A). Postmortem chest (B) and abdominal CT (C) show pulmonary hypoplasia and massive ascites with hepatomegaly.