Intracranial epidural hematoma in a newborn with DIC secondary to congenital rubella
Imene Dahmane Ayadi, Emira Ben Hamida
Corresponding author: Imene Dahmane Ayadi, Department of Neonatology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis El Manar University, Tunis, Tunisia
Received: 14 Aug 2015 - Accepted: 21 Sep 2015 - Published: 23 Sep 2015
Domain: Maternal and child health
Keywords: Epidural, hematoma, congenital rubella syndrome
©Imene Dahmane Ayadi et al. Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Imene Dahmane Ayadi et al. Intracranial epidural hematoma in a newborn with DIC secondary to congenital rubella. Pan African Medical Journal. 2015;22:63. [doi: 10.11604/pamj.2015.22.63.7713]
Available online at: https://www.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/article/22/63/full
Original article
Intracranial epidural hematoma in a newborn with DIC secondary to congenital rubella
Intracranial epidural hematoma in a newborn with DIC secondary to congenital rubella
Imene Dahmane Ayadi1,&, Emira Ben Hamida1
1Department of Neonatology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis El Manar University, Tunis, Tunisia
&Corresponding author
Imene Dahmane Ayadi, Department of Neonatology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis El Manar University, Tunis, Tunisia
Epidural hematoma in newborns is rare, it occurs more frequently in infants born from nulliparous mothers with delivery difficulties. Intracranial hemorrhage in infants is usually secondary to vascular malformations, anticoagulation, inherited or acquired coagulopathy. Hematological disorders are infrequently associated with congenital rubella. The main defects of the disease associate deafness, cataracts, congenital heart disease, microcephaly and mental retardation. Rubella remains a public health problem in developing countries, in which rubella immunization is not a part of the national immunization program. We report a preterm infant, born at 31 weeks of gestation, by caesarean section for fetal distress. Prenatal ultrasound showed intrauterine growth restriction with marked oligohydramnios. The mother reported pyrexia and rush in the first missed menstrual period. Maternal rubella status was unknown. At birth, clinical examination showed microcephaly, blueberry muffin rash, diffused ecchymoses, splenomegaly, jaundice, lethargy, hypotonia and mutisite bleeding. Laboratory tests showed severe thrombocytopenia at 8 x 109/L, prolonged prothrombin time, anemia at 10.2g/dL, and hyperbilirubinemia. Urgent cranial ultrasound showed epidural hematoma with mass effect on the underlying parietal lobe and the right lateral ventricle with mid-line shift (A). It also revealed hydropcephaly sequelae of prenatal intraventricular hemorrhage; with periventricular cysts and thalamic arteritis, signs of fetopathy (B). Congenital rubella syndrome diagnosis was confirmed by a positive test of specific anti-rubella immunoglobulins M. The outcome was poor with persistence of disseminated intravascular coagulation requiring multiple fresh frozen plasma and platelet transfusion. The infant died on the third day of life secondary to refractive hemorrhage.
Figure 1: (A) epidural hematoma; (B) hydrocephaly