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CASE HISTORY


10 month old boy. Taken to GP with h/o sudden onset of fever, vomiting and lethargy for 4 hours. Mother very anxious about child. GP referred child to walk-in clinic at hospital.


History on admission: Feverish and drowsy – sudden onset. 2 episodes of vomiting, 1 soft stool, no rash.


Assessment on admission: Drowsy and pale, dark rings around eyes.
Temp 37.7
CVS: P 181, BP 120/52, CRT 4 secs. Child peripherally shutdown.

RS: RR 32 breathing laboured and child cyanosed.
SaO2 100% in oxygen.
NS: GCS10 then 9, no neck stiffness.

Fine blanching rash on abdo/chest. 1 petechial spot on abdo.


Diagnosis: meningococcal septicaemia


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QUESTIONS ON CASE 5


     Q 7 of 11: Reasonable diagnosis?

Yes <correctNo

CORRECT : Yes, symptoms and signs of septicaemia with clear evidence of cardiac compensation and respiratory decompensation (due to acidosis, hypoxia and capillary leak syndrome).
Further Information

Characteristics of meningococcal disease

The two major clinical forms of meningococcal disease are meningitis and septicaemia. Most patients will have a mixed presentation. A minority will have pure septicaemia and it is these patients who carry the worst prognosis and maximum effort must be made to identify them early12. There are important differences in the pathophysiology of meningitis and septicaemia which underlie the clinical presentation and management of the two main forms of the condition (see pathophysiology).


Disease pathway

Disease Pathway


Clinical features of severe disease

The diagram above illustrates the main causes of death from MD. In the majority of patients, one disease process predominates. Patients presenting with mixed disease will also tend, as the disease worsens, to become either profoundly septicaemic or profoundly meningitic. A few will have combined severe septicaemia with shock and severe meningitis with raised intracranial pressure and these need expert management. Patients presenting with septic shock without meningitis carry the worst prognosis8 13. Although a few patients with meningitis will die from raised intracranial pressure, most deaths from MD result from shock and multi-organ failure14.




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