2013, Number 6
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Rev Fac Med UNAM 2013; 56 (6)
Disseminated aspergillosis: postmortem findings in a case of maternal sepsis
Salazar MMF, Recinos CEG
Language: Spanish
References: 25
Page: 24-32
PDF size: 372.72 Kb.
ABSTRACT
We describe autopsy findings in a case of maternal death
caused by invasive aspergillosis in its disseminated form.
Case: 20 year old female with previous medical history of
preeclampsia who started with malaise, pelvic pain and fever
during her second pregnancy. A fetal obitus was obtained
after labor although she remained with uterine hypotony
and hemodynamic unsteadiness. She was referred to a general
hospital subsisting with fever, acute pelvic sepsis, deteriorated
ventilatory function, cerebral lesions visualized by
tomography, gastrointestinal bleeding, oliguria and systemic
inflammatory response with bilateral acral lower extremities
necrosis. She died ten days after her arrival and autopsy was
authorized.
Results: Necropsy uncovered lungs with consolidated areas and
extensive haemorrhage, valvular and mural heart vegetations
and numerous cerebral lesions with infarct-like appeareance.
Light microscopy revealed the presence of septate hyphae with
regular acute angle branching invading lung microvasculature,
endocardial surface, myocardium, Virchow-Robin space and
neuropil. The hyphae were also identified in thyroid, trachea,
gastric mucosa and kidney histological sections.
Conclusion: Disseminated aspergillosis is a high-mortality
infectious process that usually affects immunocompromised
patients, specially those coursing with neutropenia. Despite
immunological changes experienced as part of normal
pregnancy, these
per se do not predispose the mother to
infections caused by opportunistic pathogens.
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