Background:
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) primarily affects adults and spares children, whereas very little is known about neonates. We tried to define the clinical characteristics, risk factors, laboratory, and imagining results of neonates with community-acquired COVID-19.
Methods:
This prospective multicentered cohort study included 24 neonatal intensive care units around Turkey, wherein outpatient neonates with COVID-19 were registered in an online national database. Full-term and premature neonates diagnosed with COVID-19 were included in the study, whether hospitalized or followed up as ambulatory patients. Neonates without severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) via reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction testing or whose mothers had been diagnosed with COVID-19 during pregnancy were excluded.
Results:
Thirty-seven symptomatic neonates were included. The most frequent findings were fever, hypoxemia, and cough (49%, 41%, 27%, respectively). Oxygen administration (41%) and noninvasive ventilation (16%) were frequently required; however, mechanical ventilation (3%) was rarely needed. Median hospitalization was 11 days (1–35 days). One patient with Down syndrome and congenital cardiovascular disorders died in the study period. C-reactive protein (CRP) and prothrombin time (PT) levels were found to be higher in patients who needed supplemental oxygen (0.9 [0.1–8.6] vs. 5.8 [0.3–69.2] p = 0.002, 11.9 [10.1–17.2] vs. 15.2 [11.7–18.0] p = 0.01, respectively) or who were severe/critical (1.0 [0.01–8.6] vs. 4.5 [0.1–69.2] p = 0.01, 11.7 [10.1–13.9] vs. 15.0 [11.7–18.0] p = 0.001, respectively).
Conclusions:
Symptomatic neonates with COVID-19 had high rates of respiratory support requirements. High CRP levels or a greater PT should alert the physician to more severe disease.
The literature on neonates with SARS-CoV-2 is mainly concerned with perinatal cases, and scanty data are available about environmentally infected neonates. To fill knowledge gaps on the course and prognosis of neonatal cases, we analyzed 1-year data from the Turkish Neonatal Society in this prospective cohort study of neonates with postnatal transmission. Data from 44 neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), of neonates with positive RT-PCR results at days 5-28 of life, were extracted from the online registry system and analyzed. Of 176 cases, most were term infants with normal birth weight. Fever was the most common symptom (64.2%), followed by feeding intolerance (25.6%), and cough (21.6%). The median length of hospitalization was 9 days, with approximately one quarter of infants receiving some type of ventilatory support. Myocarditis (5.7%) was the most common complication during follow-up. Among the clinical findings, cough (odds ratio [
Drug reaction, eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) is an acute and life-threatening disease, characterised by fever, rash and systemic symptoms, including lymphadenopathy, abnormal liver function, interstitial nephritis, pulmonary and cardiac infiltrates and haematological abnormalities with eosinophilia and atypical lymphocytes. The drugs mostly associated with DRESS are anticonvulsants, allopurinol, minocycline and sulfonamides. This syndrome is rarely seen in childhood even though a large number of children have anticonvulsant treatment. An 8-year-old girl was admitted with fever, lymphadenopathy and skin eruptions on her trunk. Her medical history was notable for epilepsy and carbamazepine treatment had been started 5 weeks previously. Laboratory studies showed a white cell count of 6200/µL (normal, 4100-11 200/µL) with 22% eosinophils and a γ-glutamyl transpeptidase level of 296 U/L (normal, 0-23 U/L). Laboratory tests for infections and collagen diseases were in the normal range. Persistence of fever and maculopapular eruption with generalised desquamation and the appearance of cheilitis and facial angioedema suggested a hypersensitivity reaction to carbamazepine. The carbamazepine was replaced with levetiracetam. All clinical symptoms improved within a week with corticosteroids and antihistamine treatment. Six weeks after complete recovery an epicutaneous patch test with carbamazepine was performed and a carbamazepine-induced positive skin reaction was observed at 48-h. Carbamazepine-induced DRESS syndrome is a rare entity in children. An epicutaneous patch test is a useful tool for identifying the inducing agent for the DRESS syndrome and for identifying a safe anticonvulsant drug.
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