Among 276 paediatric cases of brucellosis seen over a 7-year period, 16 patients (5.8%) with pancytopenia were identified. The most frequent presentations were fever, malaise, anorexia, weight loss, arthralgia, and hepatosplenomegaly. Fourteen patients (87.5%) had positive blood and/or bone marrow cultures for Brucella melitensis. Bone marrow aspiration specimens showed hypercellular-ity in 14 patients and normocellularity in 2. Histiocytes, eosinophils and plasma cells were increased in every marrow aspirate, and haemophagocytosis was observed in 14 patients (87.5%). Non-caseating granulomas were present in the bone marrow biopsy of 11 patients (68.8%). The pancytopenia was transient, and resolved on treatment of the Brucella infection.
Very few data on the frequency and diversity of haematological abnormalities occurring in brucellosis in children have been reported. In the present study 110 children (56 boys and 54 girls; age range, 2 months to 14 years) with proven brucellosis were investigated to determine the haematological changes during the active course of this infection. Anaemia was detected in 48 (44%) patients, of whom four had evidence of haemolysis. Leukopenia occurred in 33% of the cases, with neutropenia and/or lymphopenia being the most striking features encountered. Thrombocytopenia was found in six (5%) patients and pancytopenia in 15 (14%) patients, of whom one developed disseminated intravascular coagulation. Clinically detectable bleeding occurred in five (4.5%) patients whose platelet counts were significantly low. Hypersplenism, haemophagocytosis and granulomatous lesions of the bone marrow appear to play a fundamental role in producing these abnormalities of the peripheral blood. Brucellosis may be considered in patients whose blood picture reveals haemolytic anaemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia or pancytopenia, particularly when the disease is epidemiologically suspected.
The haematological manifestations were reviewed in 94 patients (55 males and 39 females) with visceral leishmaniasis. Their ages ranged from 4 months to 12 years (mean per cent 1.8 years). All patients had splenomegaly and were anaemic, while (73 per cent) were neutropenic and (56 per cent) thrombocytopenic. Coagulation abnormalities were encountered in 10 (11 per cent) patients; in four patients this was associated with disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. Bone marrow was hypercellular in (90 per cent), normocellular in (5 per cent), and hypocelluar in (4 per cent). Also variable degrees of erythrophagocytosis and leukophagocytosis were noted with preponderance of histiocytes (46 per cent) and granulomatous formation (25 per cent). Low haemosiderin content in the bone marrow was noted, which together with the finding of high serum ferritin is consistent with anaemia of chronic inflammation. Hypersplenism, haemophagocytosis and granulomatous lesions of the bone marrow, chronic inflammation, and dietary factors appear to be the most important factors in the causation of the haematological changes in visceral leishmaniasis.
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