Background:The importance of Chlamydia pneumoniae respiratory tract infection in childhood is under discussion. Patients and Methods: 798 hospitalized children with respiratory tract diseases were prospectively studied during a 2-year period by polymerase chain reaction and enzyme immunoassay (PCR-EIA) detection from throat swabs. Paired serum samples were used to screen for Chlamydia antibodies. Results: C. pneumoniae was detected by PCR-EIA in 74 children. Prevalence was 11% in lower and 4% in upper respiratory tract disease (p = 0.049) without age dependency. From November to February prevalence was elevated (42/277 vs. 32/521; p < 0.001). Using serology, prevalence of acute Chlamydia infection increased with age (p < 0.001) and the number of coinfections (p < 0.001), without seasonal variation.
The case of a 12-year-old boy with ectopic cervical thymus is reported. This is a rare differential diagnosis in cervical tumors in childhood. The clinical symptoms might present as complications; in rare cases malignant transformations have been reported. The diagnosis ectopic cervical thymus can be achieved only histologically. Due to possible malignant transformation, it is mandatory to excise this thymus tumor totally.
The Chiari-syndrome Type I being a malformation of the posterior cranial fossa often leads to syringomyelia. The disease becomes apparent in adolescence with kyphoscoliosis, headache, vertigo, ataxy, hearing loss, partial paralysis and other neurological disorders. The onset is typically characterized by dissociated anesthesia, due to the frequent localization of the syrinx in the neighborhood of the posterior column of the spinal cord. It is reported a case of an 15-years-old-girl suffering from intensive headache, recurrent left-sided paresthesias and progredient scoliosis. Somatosensory evoked potentials of left ulnar and tibial nerves revealed a complete loss of cortical response. Diagnostic imaging showed an Chiari-malformation I with herniation of cerebellar tonsils and secondary syringomyelia of the cervical spinal cord. After surgical treatment with posterior fossa decompression, C1 laminectomy and partial excision of cerebellar tonsils the patient had a clear improvement in symptoms. Postsurgical the width of cervical syrinx decreases. Now somatosensory evoked potentials of the left ulnar and tibial nerves show amplitude-reduced cortical responses with a normal latency.
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