Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa
Background and objective: To describe the clinical-radiological-pathological characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood exogenous lipoid pneumonia (ELP) and elucidate oil administration practices. Methods: A retrospective study of children with histologically-confirmed ELP at Red Cros...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-298192020-07-22T05:07:26Z Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa Marangu, Diana Mwendwa Zampoli, Marco Gray, Diane Vanker, Aneesa Paediatric Pulmonology Background and objective: To describe the clinical-radiological-pathological characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood exogenous lipoid pneumonia (ELP) and elucidate oil administration practices. Methods: A retrospective study of children with histologically-confirmed ELP at Red Cross Children’s Hospital, South Africa. Caregivers were interviewed to understand oil administration practices. Results: Twelve children of Zimbabwean heritage aged 2.1-10.8 months were identified between 2012 and 2017. Repeated oral administration of plant-based oil for cultural reasons was reported by 10/11 caregivers. Cough (12/12), tachypnea (11/12), hypoxia (9/12) and diffuse alveolar infiltrates on chest radiography (12/12) were common at presentation. Chest computed tomography revealed ground glass opacification with lower zone predominance (9/9) and interlobular septal thickening (8/9). All bronchoalveolar lavage specimens appeared cloudy/milky, with abundant lipid laden macrophages and extracellular lipid on Oil-Red-O staining and documented polymicrobial (6/12) and Mycobacterium abscessus (2/12) co-infection. Antibiotics, systemic corticosteroids and therapeutic partial lung lavage were interventions in all, 8 and 5 patients respectively. Median time to clinical resolution was 1.1 months IQR (0.5-8.0) with radiological resolution only in 2/12 cases. Conclusions: Paediatric ELP resembles pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. Health workers should explicitly probe for a history of oil administration in children with non-resolving pneumonia and consider the diagnosis of ELP in settings where this is a common practice. 2019-02-27T11:22:34Z 2019-02-27T11:22:34Z 2018 2019-02-25T12:35:49Z Masters Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29819 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Paediatrics and Child Health |
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language |
English |
format |
Dissertation |
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Paediatric Pulmonology |
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Paediatric Pulmonology Marangu, Diana Mwendwa Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
description |
Background and objective:
To describe the clinical-radiological-pathological characteristics and treatment outcomes of childhood exogenous lipoid pneumonia (ELP) and elucidate oil administration practices.
Methods:
A retrospective study of children with histologically-confirmed ELP at Red Cross Children’s Hospital, South Africa. Caregivers were interviewed to understand oil administration practices.
Results:
Twelve children of Zimbabwean heritage aged 2.1-10.8 months were identified between 2012 and 2017. Repeated oral administration of plant-based oil for cultural reasons was reported by 10/11 caregivers. Cough (12/12), tachypnea (11/12), hypoxia (9/12) and diffuse alveolar infiltrates on chest radiography (12/12) were common at presentation. Chest computed tomography revealed ground glass opacification with lower zone predominance (9/9) and interlobular septal thickening (8/9). All bronchoalveolar lavage specimens appeared cloudy/milky, with abundant lipid laden macrophages and extracellular lipid on Oil-Red-O staining and documented polymicrobial (6/12) and Mycobacterium abscessus (2/12) co-infection. Antibiotics, systemic corticosteroids and therapeutic partial lung lavage were interventions in all, 8 and 5 patients respectively. Median time to clinical resolution was 1.1 months IQR (0.5-8.0) with radiological resolution only in 2/12 cases.
Conclusions:
Paediatric ELP resembles pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. Health workers should explicitly probe for a history of oil administration in children with non-resolving pneumonia and consider the diagnosis of ELP in settings where this is a common practice. |
author2 |
Zampoli, Marco |
author_facet |
Zampoli, Marco Marangu, Diana Mwendwa |
author |
Marangu, Diana Mwendwa |
author_sort |
Marangu, Diana Mwendwa |
title |
Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
title_short |
Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
title_full |
Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
title_fullStr |
Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
title_full_unstemmed |
Exogenous Lipoid Pneumonia in Children: A Systematic Review and Case Series from South Africa |
title_sort |
exogenous lipoid pneumonia in children: a systematic review and case series from south africa |
publisher |
University of Cape Town |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29819 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT marangudianamwendwa exogenouslipoidpneumoniainchildrenasystematicreviewandcaseseriesfromsouthafrica |
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