Abdullah F. Owayed, MD Douglas M. Campbell, MD Elaine E. L. Wang, MD, FRCPC
Abdullah F. Owayed, MD Douglas M. Campbell, MD Elaine E. L. Wang, MD, FRCPC
Abdullah F. Owayed, MD Douglas M. Campbell, MD Elaine E. L. Wang, MD, FRCPC
Prior to their asthma diagnosis, children with asthma presented with episodes of
pneumonia but were otherwise healthy. They underwent extensive laboratory
evaluation, including sweat chloride and quantitative serum immunoglobulin
measurements. Growth, development, and physical examination findings were all
within reference limits. These children were clinically diagnosed as having asthma
(multiple episodes of partially reversible airway obstruction) or diagnosed by
pulmonary function tests.
Recurrent pneumonia prior to a diagnosis of an underlying aspiration disorder was
seen in 4 cases. One patient who presented following recurrent pneumonia was found
to have oropharyngeal incoordination with hypotonia. This patient was diagnosed as
having nemaline rod myopathy after abnormal findings from electromyographic
studies. The second patient had a brainstem tumor and presented with recurrent
bilateral pneumonia from silent aspiration; neurological signs and symptoms,
including headache, loss of appetite, and weight loss, did not develop until after the
second episode of pneumonia. The remaining 2 patients had familial dysautonomia
(Riley-Day syndrome) but were initially diagnosed as having bronchial asthma. One child
had a family history of the disease prior to hospitalization with pneumonia.
In the group of patients with gastroesophageal re-flux disease, all were diagnosed
as a result of having a pneumonia episode. Ten patients were diagnosed before age
1 year during the first episode of pneumonia. Three patients were diagnosed at age
12 to18 months after recurrent pneumonia.
Two patients with an underlying respiratory tract anomaly (1 with congenital
cystic adenomatoid malformation and 1 with esophageal bronchus) were
diagnosed after pneumonia recurrence. Both patients had recurrent pneumonia
involving the same lung lobes. Seven patients (2 with tracheoesophageal fistulas; 1,
congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation; 2, subglottic stenoses; 1,
tracheomalacia; and 1, bronchomalacia) were diagnosed during the first episode
of pneumonia.
One patient with hypogammaglobulinemia was diagnosed following
pneumonia recurrence. This patient also presented with other features of
immune disorders, including recurrent otitis media, oral candidiasis, and failure to
thrive. Two patients were diagnosed with sickle cell anemia during their first
episode of pneumonia. This was suspected secondary to anemia, race, and/or
family history. The remaining 8 patients had known sickle cell anemia prior to
pneumonia presentation. Five patients with an underlying immune disorder
presented with pneumonia (3 with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, 1 with acute
lymphoblastic leukemia, and 1 with a neuroblastoma). Of the 3 patients with HIV
infection, the diagnosis was suspected during the initial episode of pneumonia
because of the presence of the classic interstitial pattern on chest radiograph
films and multiple etiologic agents on bronchoalveolar lavage specimens,
including Pneumocystis carinii, respiratory syncytial virus, influenza,
parainfluenza, and cytomegalovirus. The patient with acute lymphoblastic
leukemia presented with pneumonia and an elevated white blood cell count.
Our study demonstrates that most patients with recurrent pneumonia are known to
have an underlying illness at the time of pneumonia recurrence. The most frequent
underlying illness is aspiration pneumonia secondary to oropharyngeal
incoordination, followed by immune disorders, congenital heart disease, asthma, resiratory system anomalies, gastroesophageal reflux, and sickle cell anemia.
The remaining patients, however, who presented with recurrent pneumonia
without a known underlying illness diagnosis present an interesting diagnostic
challenge. In more than half, a final diagnosis was determined. Asthma was the
most common illness diagnosed in this population, followed by disorders causing
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