| Literature DB >> 31410333 |
Jacob Abou-Hanna1, Katherine Panning2, Hiral Mehta2.
Abstract
Haemophilus influenzae is a gram-negative coccobacillus that colonizes the nasopharyngeal surface and upper respiratory tract of healthy individuals and includes six encapsulated serotypes as well as non-encapsulated, non-typeable strains. Since the widespread use of the Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) conjugate vaccine implemented in 1990, the majority of invasive illness now seen in the United States is secondary to capsular serotypes other than type b and non-typeable strains with the largest burden of disease affecting the extremes of age-infants and the elderly. We report a case of acute Haemophilus influenzae type f meningitis in a 12-month-old female who was previously healthy and had been fully immunized. She demonstrated clinical improvement on ceftriaxone, but persistent fever and ear-tugging resulted in obtaining an MRI that displayed bilateral subdural empyemas requiring burr-hole craniotomy, central venous thrombosis requiring anticoagulation, and bilateral sensorineural hearing loss requiring cochlear implants. Immunological studies confirmed immunocompetency and appropriate response to her previous Hib vaccination, suggesting a significant impact of bacterial virulence. These complications, with the exception of sensorineural hearing loss, have not been reported in the literature for Haemophilus influenzae type f and should be considered in the care of these patients despite clinical appearance given the severity of complications and potential for acute decompensation. Despite the success of vaccination in reducing invasive disease, cases of H. influenzae meningitis continue to occur via less common encapsulated serotypes with unknown complications, making the management and treatment of these infections more difficult for practitioners.Entities:
Keywords: haemophilus influenzae; hib vaccine; meningitis; sensorineural hearing loss; subdural empyema
Year: 2019 PMID: 31410333 PMCID: PMC6684117 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.4850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Axial, T2-weighted MRI showing bilateral subdural empyemas over the bilateral cerebral convexities most prominent in the right frontal region (arrow) which required right burr-hole craniotomy.
Figure 2Axial, T2-weighted MRI showing resolution of bilateral subdural empyemas (arrow) as compared to the previous figure.
Figure 3Axial, post-contrast T1-weighted MRI displaying persistent labyrinthitis (arrow).
Immunologic studies demonstrating appropriate response to Hib vaccine and normal range total antibodies and complement levels.
| Component | Value | Reference Value |
| H. Influenzae B IgG | 3.37 | >= 0.15 mg/L |
| Total IgG | 569 | 280-1,030 mg/dL |
| Total IgA | 33 | 15-160 mg/dL |
| Total IgM | 108 | 35-140 mg/dL |
| Total Complement, CH50 | 73 | 41-95 U/mL |
| Total Complement, AH50 | 66 | >=46% |
| Tetanus IgG | 0.30 | >=0.01 IU/mL |
| Diphtheria IgG | 0.08 | >=0.01 IU/mL |