We report the first case of endocarditis caused by a Gordonia species genetically related to G. sputi but exhibiting some atypical biochemical features in a 31-year-old woman with a central venous catheter. This unusual pathogen may be a new cause of opportunistic infections in patients with severe underlying diseases.
Critical illness polyneuropathy (CIP) is a reported cause of varying degrees of neuromuscular weakness in patients with multiple organ failure. Little is known concerning predictive factors of neurological recovery. The critical care conditions, neurological explorations and 2-year clinical follow-up of 19 patients who suffered from severe forms (quadriplegia or quadriparesis) of CIP were analyzed. Characteristics of patients who recovered clinically were compared with those of patients who did not. Two patients died within 2 months, 11 recovered completely, 4 remained quadriplegic and 2 remained quadriparetic. All patients suffered from sepsis, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and a catabolic state before the onset of CIP. Outcome appears difficult to predict with clinical or electrophysiological data. Three parameters were significantly correlated with poor recovery: longer length of stay in the critical care unit, longer duration of sepsis and greater body weight loss. A relationship seems to exist between the severity of CIP and that of sepsis and its associated hypercatabolism. The favorable outcome usually attributed to CIP must be reconsidered. The authors recommend aggressive measures against sepsis to limit CIP and its sequelae.
Congenital malaria is the presence of malaria parasites in a blood smear obtained from a neonate usually within 24 hours to 7 days of life. It has for long been regarded a rare condition. However, recent data indicate that congenital malaria complicates around 35.9% of live births globally, 0–37% in Sub-Saharan Africa and about 4–6.1% in Eastern Uganda. We present a 2-day-old neonate who presented with fever, irritability, and failure to breastfeed. Laboratory tests indicated that the neonate had a positive Giemsa-stained peripheral smear for Plasmodium falciparum, with a positive malaria rapid diagnostic test (MRDT) for P. falciparum malaria. The mother had a negative peripheral film for malaria and a negative MRDT. The neonate was managed with intravenous artesunate with improvement.
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