Résumé
Interstitial lung disease in infants, unlike older children and adults, has diverse etiology, including infective, metabolic, autoimmune,genetic, malignant and idiopathic causes. Clinical recognition of the interstitial pattern of lung involvement is important as the etiology andmanagement is entirely different from that of recurrent or chronic lung parenchymal pathologies. We discuss the clinical and pathologicalfindings of an infant with interstitial pneumonia, who succumbed to hospital-acquired sepsis.
Résumé
A 10-year-old girl presented with sudden onset recurrent ventricular tachycardia and symmetrical distal peripheral gangrene. She also had pulmonary thromboembolism and cerebral sinus venous thrombosis. Investigations revealed anemia, hemolysis, hypocomplementemia, and elevated IgM anti-beta2 glycoprotein antibody levels. Electrocardiogram and echocardiogram suggested features of a rare cardiac anomaly, which was confirmed at autopsy.