ABSTRACT
Objective: To analyze the etiology of hemoptysis in children and to correlate the severity of bleed with the etiology. Methods: This retrospective multicentre study reviewed data from inpatient units of four tertiary care public and private sector pediatric hospitals in Tamil Nadu. Methods: Inpatient case records of children (aged 2 month-15 years) treated for hemoptysis at the four institutions between April, 2012 and March, 2021 were identified, after ethical clearance from respective institutions. Data of children with underlying known bleeding disorders like hemophilia or platelet abnormality were excluded from the study. Hemoptysis was categorized as mild, moderate and severe Results: Of the 73 children who had presented with hemoptysis during the study period, 60 (82.2%) children had mild, 9 (12.3%) had moderate and rest had severe hemoptysis. Idiopathic pulmonary hemorrhage was the most common cause of hemoptysis. The common causes of mild hemoptysis in children were idiopathic pulmonary hemorrhage (n=15, 25%), pulmonary tuberculosis (n=12, 20%) and pneumonia (n=8, 13.3%). Congenital airway anomalies and vascular anomalies were more likely to present with moderate to severe bleed. Conclusion: Etiology of hemoptysis is broad and categorizing them into mild, moderate and severe may give a clue about the possible etiology, there by restricting to the required investigations.
ABSTRACT
Background: Pulmonary infections by rapidly growing mycobacteria are rare in immunocompetent children. Case characteristics: A 2-year-old boy with persistent right upper lobe pneumonia. Observation: Bronchoalveolar lavage culture demonstrated growth of Mycobacterium atocessus. Outcome: Complete resolution of disease with multidrug chemotherapy with imipenam, clarithromycin and amikacin. Message: Persistent upper lobe cavitory lesions can rarely be caused by rapidly growing mycobacteria.