Medical Case: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Presenting as Recurrent Pneumonia in Early Childhood
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Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Presenting as Recurrent Pneumonia in Early Childhood (Pediatrics)

Dr. Aaqib Javed., MBBS, FELLOW SHIP IN PEDIATRIC MEDICINE, PRES ONLINE COURSE IN PAEDIATRIC RHEUMATOLOGY, CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH CERTIFICATE

 

Medical Case Details:

A female child younger than three years was referred with a history of recurrent pneumonia and repeated lower respiratory tract infections. Despite multiple treatments and several hospital admissions, her symptoms continued to recur without a clear underlying cause. Considering the possibility of an underlying cardiac disorder, an echocardiographic evaluation was performed. Following the assessment, the patient was referred for further diagnostic workup. A detailed history, comprehensive physical examination, and careful clinical analysis suggested that the problem extended beyond recurrent respiratory infections. The pattern of illness and the overall clinical presentation raised suspicion of an underlying systemic disease. Based on these findings, targeted investigations were advised. The results led to the diagnosis of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). SLE is exceptionally rare in children younger than three years of age, making the diagnosis particularly challenging. As a result, such patients may initially receive treatment for more common pediatric conditions before the underlying disease is recognized. This case highlights the importance of detailed history taking, thorough clinical examination, and sound clinical reasoning in identifying rare diseases. It serves as a reminder that while laboratory investigations and imaging studies are invaluable tools, they cannot replace careful clinical assessment in reaching the correct diagnosis.

 


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    Discussions


    Dr. Atiqur Rahman Khan
    Pediatrician

    This is an interesting and educational case. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is extremely uncommon in children younger than three years of age, making it a challenging diagnosis in routine pediatric practice.

    In a young child presenting with recurrent pneumonia and repeated lower respiratory tract infections, the initial differential diagnosis would typically include congenital heart disease, primary immunodeficiency disorders, aspiration syndromes, cystic fibrosis, primary ciliary dyskinesia, tuberculosis, and structural airway abnormalities. Therefore, considering SLE at such an early stage requires a high index of clinical suspicion.

    I would be interested to know whether the child had any additional clinical features suggestive of lupus, such as prolonged fever, failure to thrive, unexplained anemia, thrombocytopenia, lymphopenia, skin rash, oral ulcers, arthritis, serositis, nephritis, or positive family history of autoimmune disease. These findings may provide important clues toward the diagnosis.

    Pulmonary manifestations of pediatric SLE can include recurrent infections secondary to immune dysfunction, interstitial lung disease, pleuritis, pulmonary hemorrhage, and lupus pneumonitis. In some patients, respiratory symptoms may precede the appearance of more classical systemic manifestations, further complicating the diagnostic process.

    This case highlights an important clinical lesson: recurrent pneumonia should always prompt a systematic search for an underlying cause when standard treatment fails to prevent recurrence. Careful history taking, thorough physical examination, and reassessment of the differential diagnosis remain essential components of pediatric practice. Investigations are most valuable when guided by strong clinical reasoning.

    Thank you for sharing this rare presentation. It serves as an excellent reminder that uncommon systemic diseases can occasionally present with common pediatric complaints, and clinicians should remain alert when the clinical course does not follow the expected pattern.

    15.Jun, 11:01pm

    Dr. Aaqib Javed
    Pediatrician

    After digging and digging I found clues baby some times have arthritis and she has history of one time blood transfusion and on examination I found alopecia I asked about it they said baby have allergy after she came from saudia arbia visit
    I applied SLICC criteria and did AN and Anti ds DNA both positive

    15.Jun, 11:34pm



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