All issues > Volume 44(9); 2001
- Case Report
- J Korean Pediatr Soc. 2001;44(9):1075-1080. Published online September 15, 2001.
- A Case of Cytomegalovirus Colitis which Occurred During Treatment of Hemophagocytic Syndrome
- Sang-Nam SN Bae1, Sung-Ryon SR Ahn1, Yun-Jin YJ Lee1, Young-Tak YT Lim1, Jae-Hong JH Park1, Kyung-Un KU Choi2, Chang-Hun CH Lee2
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1Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Busan National University, Busan, Korea
2Department of Pathology, Busan National University, Busan, Korea
- Abstract
- Cytomegalovirus(CMV) colitis is an important opportunistic infection in immunocompromised individuals.
The clinical symptoms are abdominal pain, diarrhea, colonic hemorrhage and perforation.
The endoscopic appearance shows three characteristic features with focal or diffuse inflammatory
changes, submucosal hemorrhagic spots, and well demarcated ulcers. We experienced a case of
CMV colitis in an 8-year-old girl presented with Stevens-Johnson syndrome, vanishing bile duct
syndrome and infection-associated hemophagocytic histiocytosis, which developed during chemotherapy
with etoposide and dexamethasone for hemophagocytic syndrome. The impaired immunity
caused by chemotherapy is the most likely possible cause of CMV colitis in this case.
We confirmed this case by endoscopic findings, the presence of cytomegalic cells on mucosal biopsy
specimens, immunohistochemistry with monoclonal antibody to CMV antigen, and serologic
study, and report with a brief review of the literature.
Keywords :Cytomegalovirus, Colitis