Un cas rare de méningite à Salmonelle chez un patient pédiatrique immunocompétent

Auteur/ices

  • A Elleuch Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • M Chaabene Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • M Hsairi Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • M Feki Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • M Loukil Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • L Gargouri Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e
  • A Mafhfoudh Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Emergency and Intensive Care, Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Sfax, Tunisia. Auteur·e

Mots-clés :

salmonella, meningitis, infant, complications, antibiotic

Résumé

Objective: to describe the clinical presentation and severity of salmonella meningitis in immunocompetent children. Patient and method: case report of a 7-month-old girl who presented with fever, seizures and altered consciousness. Result: The cause was salmonella meningitis. The major complication was a brain empyema requiring surgery. Despite treatment, the infant never regained full consciousness and died after fourteen days. Conclusion: Meningitis is among the rarest and most dangerous manifestations of salmonellosis. Neurological complications are frequent despite the usage of various and potent antibiotics.

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Publiée

2021-06-30

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Rubrique

Fait clinique

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