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Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center San Antonio School of Medicine June 10-12, 2011 This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to reprint and/or distribute. James H. Brien, DO The 48 th Annual Pediatrics for the Practitioner Symposium June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with commercial interests to disclose. Case #1 4½-month-old Male Presents for evaluation of “pimples” below his lower lip. Onset 2 days ago. Mom squeezed a small amount of pus from the larger one. Soon the baby became irritable with fever and erythema and swelling.

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Page 1: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

James H. Brien, DO

The 48th Annual

Pediatrics for the Practitioner

Symposium

June 11, 2011

James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

commercial interests to disclose.

Case #14½-month-old Male

Presents for evaluation of “pimples” below his lower lip.

Onset 2 days ago.

Mom squeezed a small amount of pus from the larger one.

Soon the baby became irritable with fever and erythema and swelling.

Page 2: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

4½-month-old Male

PMHx + only for being 35 weeks gestation with an otherwise normal pregnancy, labor and delivery.

Was in the NICU for 5 days.

Mother has no Hx of Herpes.

No other HSV or sick contacts.

Immunizations are up to date.

4½-month-old Male

Examination revealed a healthy baby who was alert and interactive.

Vital signs included a fever of 101 F with a cap. refill < 2 seconds. The pulse and respirations are normal.

The only positive findings were the lesions mentioned above, erythema and swelling and the hemangioma as shown - - -

4½-month-old Male

Lab tests:

– CBC = 27,000 WBC’s w/ 60% Gran, 19% Lymphs, 490,000 Plts.

– Drainage was sent for Gram stain and culture and PCR for Herpes.

Results pending.

Page 3: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Erythema toxicum

B. Cutaneous Herpes Simplex

C. Staphylococcus aureus infection

D. Propionibacterium acnes infection

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Staphylococcus aureus infection

Gram stain and culture positive for MSSA.

Treated initially with IV Clindamycin, then Nafcillin followed by Cephalexin PO.

Good outcome.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Erythema toxicum

Common neonatal rash.

Small papules / pustules on erythematous base: 4 – 14 days.

Common on trunk; but anywhere.

Typically contain eosinophils.

Page 4: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Erythema toxicum

No treatment required.

Just reassurance.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Cutaneous Herpes Simplex

May look just like the lesions shown in the patient presented.

Only Without The Cellulitis.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Cutaneous Herpes Simplex

Not unsual to have spreading erythema and a little swelling.

Significant swelling and erythema – may be co-infected.

Page 5: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Propionibacterium acnes infection

The major bacterial cause of acne.

Lesions can become secondarily infected when picked.

Case #28-Month-Old Male

3-days fever to 102 F.

Had erythema of his throat.

Tx for viral pharyngitis.

That PM he began C/O right leg swelling and pain below the knee.

ER Dx cellulitis – IM Ceftriaxone & Rx for PO Amoxicillin.

8-Month-Old Male

Over 3 more days, Sx worsened.

Back to 1º & referred for admission.

PMHx – healthy / No trauma.

Immunizations are up to date.

Examination + for 101 F, P = 180, R = 32, Cap Refill = 2 seconds and painful swelling with erythema from knee to ankle.

Page 6: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

8-Month-Old Male

Lab tests:

– CRP = 104

– WBC = 30,000

IVF & Antibiotics:

– Clindamycin &

– Ceftriaxone

O.R. the next day:

– Pus from tissue but not bone.

8-Month-Old Male

Gram stain of pus + for Gram-pos. cocci in clusters but no growth.

Routine admission nasal screen + for MSSA, not MRSA.

PICC line placed and went home on IV Clindamycin & followed weekly.

C-RP & exam normal at 4 week check.

8-Month-Old Male

At 5 weeks, the PICC came out.

Antibiotics DC’d.

This radiograph was taken on his way home.

Failed to follow up until 6 weeks later.

Close F/Up again established.

Page 7: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

8-Month-Old Male

Exam still normal.

CRP briefly up (21) with URI and later with a minor Staph skin abscess.

No further Tx.

This radiograph is at 3 months after admission.

C-RP remained NL.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Gorham disease

B. Chronic osteomyelitis

C. Osteosarcoma

D. Bone loss due to acute osteomyelitis

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Bone loss due to acute osteomyelitis

Inhibition of osteoblasts and increased activity of osteoclasts.

Mediators stimulated by infection, possibly by some bacteria inducing expression of mRNA encoding for RANKL (receptor

activator of nuclear factor-kappaB ligand) a mediator of this process.

Page 8: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Bone loss due to acute osteomyelitis

RANKL also known as osteoclast differentiation factor.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Bone loss due to acute osteomyelitis

Inflammatory mediators also inhibit production of osteoprotegerin, which helps regulate RANKL.

Found mostly in orthopedic literature.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Gorham disease (disappearing bone):

Rare, congenital loss of bone.

Non-malignant proliferation of vascular channels causing bone destruction.

Usually Dx after pathologic Fx.

Treated surgically.

Page 9: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Chronic osteomyelitis:

Can result in similar loss of bone.

Often associated with:

Hardware.

Inadequate debridement.

Inadequate medical therapy.

Often walled off (Brodie abscess)

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Chronic osteomyelitis:

Usual treatment is good debridement and long-term antibiotics – up to a year in some –mostly oral.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Osteosarcoma:

Pain and / or fracture.

Radiograph with a mass

Page 10: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

Back To Our 8-Month-Old Male

8 months after initial hospitalization the child had external fixators placed to try to promote distraction osteogenesis.

3-Month-Old Male

Diagnosed with pulmonary TB after persistent cough, + PPD and abnormal chest radiograph:

Page 11: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

3-Month-Old Male

Source was grandmother, but her sensitivities were not yet known.

Treatment was started with:

1. Pyrazinamide

2. Rifampin

3. Isoniazid

4. Ethambutol (discontinued when isolate was found to be pan-sen.)

3-Month-Old Male

Good initial clinical response.

Chest radiograph somewhat improved after 1 month, but still abnormal:

3-Month-Old Male

Two months into treatment, he still had a persistent cough with wheezes and course rhonchi.

With a persistent RUL infiltrate on chest radiograph, a chest CT scan was done.

Page 12: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

Repeat Bronchoscopy Showing Mass

3-Month-Old Male

All BAL stains for bacteria, AFB and fungi were negative.

Cultures are pending.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Bronchial abscess

B. Fungus ball

C. Foreign body

D. Endobronchial TB

Page 13: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Endobronchial TB:

Known to have pulmonary TB.

Treat the same as pulmonary TB.

Add steroids (1 – 2 mg/kg/day) to decrease swelling & stenosis.

Completed 6 months of anti-tuberculous treatment & 6 weeks of steroids w/ 3 week taper.

What’s Your Diagnosis?D. Endobronchial TB:

Five mechanisms:

1. Direct extension from adjacent parenchymal disease.

2. Implantation from sputum.

3. Hematogenous spread.

4. Lymphatic drainage from parenchymal disease.

5. Compression & erosion of lymph node into bronchus (most likely).

Case #44-year-old Male

Painful lesion on left knee X 3 days.

Started as a pustule on a red base.

Grew in size along with fever starting the day prior to admission.

No known injury or medical / surg. problems in past medical history.

Immunizations are up to date.

Page 14: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

4-year-old Male

No insect bites noted.

Exam reveals a healthy male with a fever of 102 F and a normal exam, except for a blister-like lesion over the lower part of the left knee with some mild swelling of the joint and pain on ROM testing.

4-year-old Male

Lab tests:

– ESR = 21

– C-RP = 18

– CBC = normal

Orthopedic consult requested MRI.

Page 15: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

T1 T2

4-year-old Male

Further Lab tests:

– Synovial fluid

• Normal appearance.

• Gram stain negative.

– Lesion fluid – cloudy

• Gram stain = Gram-pos cocci.

Cultures Pending

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Superficial Staph abscess

B. Prepatellar bursitis

C. Erysipelas

D. Osteomyelitis of the tibia

Page 16: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Superficial Staph abscess

Culture grew MSSA

Not sure of mechanism; ? Injury.

Why unusual appearance?

Epidermolytic toxin?

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Superficial Staph abscess

MRI:

Normal bones and joint.

Treated with Nafcillin – Keflex®.

No complications on follow up.

Previous questions not answered

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Osteomyelitis of the tibia:

Ruled out clinically and by MRI.

Would not expect to present as this patient.

Expect overlying soft tissue to be more erythematous - -

Page 17: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Prepatellar bursitis

Occurs over top of patella.

Usually associated with injury.

Responds well to drainage and antibiotics.

Typical pattern of swelling.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Erysipelas:

Usually due to group A strep.

Superficial cellulitis involving the lymphatic vessels; producing a diffuse erythema with a sharp line of demarcation.

Occasionally with some pustules and vesicle formation.

Erysipelas

Treat with a penicillin or ceph.

May be due to GBS in newborns:

– Treat BGS with Amp + Gent pending sen.

– Full sepsis W/U.

Page 18: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

Case #59-year-old Male

Seen for a mildly swollen pre-auric. node and pimple-like lesion lateral to his right eye.

? Insect bite & Tx with Cephalexin.

Not better & Tx with Clindamycin & topical mupirocin (Bactroban®).

Still not better – getting bigger and became ulcerated with satellites.

9-year-old Male

PMHx – healthy; only mild asthma & mild MRSA cellulitis of left arm 3 months ago & a fever blister on his lower lip 4 months ago.

Immunizations are UTD.

No travel or unusual insect or animal exposure.

No trauma.

9-year-old Male

Examination was + only for the pre-auricular adenopathy and the following lesion:

Page 19: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

9-year-old Male

Lab tests:

– Gram & Fungal stains – negative

– Cultures pending.

– HSV and Varicella zoster PCR’s are pending.

Empirically treated with Acyclovir and Clindamycin pending testing.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Cutaneous Herpes simplex

B. MRSA Impetigo

C. Mycobacterium marinum

D. Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis

Page 20: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis

Empiric Tx above had no effect.

All initial tests were negative, including PCR for atypical mycobacteria.

As the lesion persisted, repeated fungal cultures were done.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis

1+ Sporothrix schenckii grew from culture obtained about 1 month after initial evaluation.

Must have had a break in the skin.

Itraconazole PO for 6 months.

Responded well as shown:

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Cutaneous Herpes simplex:

May be indistinguishable.

Similar enough to empirically treat with acyclovir, as this patient did.

Page 21: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. MRSA Impetigo:

Should have been recovered on culture.

Would not produce a chronic ulcer.

Should have produced cellulitis but may look similar.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Mycobacterium marinum

Occurs after skin injury in contaminated water.

May look very similar with chronic ulcer.

Usually on extremity.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Mycobacterium marinum

Diagnosed with good H & P, supported by positive culture and / or PCR.

PPD may be positive.

Treatment with Clarithromycin or Doxy. or TMP/SMX or Ethambutol plus Rifampin for 4 – 6 weeks.

Page 22: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

Case #620-Month-Old Male

Admitted to PICU for acute onset of vomiting, AMS, and fever.

Soon he had a seizure and became obtunded.

PMHx – prev. healthy except:

– Sz 5 mo earlier w/ neg work up.

– Hospitalized 2 weeks ago with pneumonia.

20-Month-Old Male

Immunizations are up to date.

No travel, pets or day care.

No Hx of past ear, sinus or other pulmonary disease.

Examination - 99 F, 137/100, P=150, Resp = 70.

– Pale, obtunded, L-sided weakness and facial droop.

20-Month-Old Male

The rest of his exam = normal.

Lab tests:

– CBC with increased WBC’s

– CMP and UA = normal

– CXR and brain MRI are shown - -

Page 23: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Taenia solium

B. Staphylococcus aureus

C. Streptococcus milleri

D. Pseudomonas aeruginosa

What’s Your Diagnosis?

C. Streptococcus milleri

Grew from one of the abscesses.

Likely the cause of the previous pneumonia and may have been the time of seeding of the brain.

Most common cause in children and adults.

Page 24: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

20-Month-Old Male

Had extensive work up for heart, sinus, pulmonary or immune defects – none found.

Treated 130 days - IV Ceftriaxone.

Clinical improvement to normal.

Serial MRI’s documented resolution.

Remains well over a year later.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

B. Staphylococcus aureus

Less common, but may look the same.

Only a culture will tell.

Page 25: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

What’s Your Diagnosis?

D. Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Usually associated with complicated ear / mastoid infections with temporal lobe involvement - -

What’s Your Diagnosis?

A. Taenia solium – pork tapeworm

Cause of Neurocysticercosis.

Not as large as many abscesses.

Not associated with fever.

May see the scolex on MRI.

Lesions can look very similar.

Page 26: The 48th Annual - Office of Continuing Medical Educationcme.uthscsa.edu/Presentations/Peds2011/Saturday...June 11, 2011 James H. Brien, DO has no relevant financial relationships with

Forty-Eighth Annual Teaching Conference Pediatrics for the Practitioner -UT Health Science Center

San Antonio School of Medicine –June 10-12, 2011

This presentation is the intellectual property of the author/presenter. Contact them for permission to

reprint and/or distribute.

NEUROCYSTICERCOSIS

Presenting signs and symptoms

Seizures 60%

Headaches 15%

Altered mental status 15%

Asymptomatic 15%

NEUROCYSTICERCOSIS

Treat with Albendazole or Praziquantel; recommend consulting ID, neurology and ophthalmology before beginning therapy.

Pre-treat with steroids.