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Volume 05

Neonatal and Pediatric Medicine

ISSN: 2572-4983

World Pediatrics 2019

December 04-05, 2019

December 04-05, 2019 | Barcelona, Spain

32

nd

World Pediatrics Conference

Tonsillectomy in a patient with PFAPA and 7p22 deletion syndrome

Andrei Antonov

Tallinn Children´s Hospital, Estonia

S

yndrome is a rare cause of regular, repeated episodes of fever, sore throat and swollen neck glands in children

although the exact etiology of PFAPA syndrome is unknown; one hypothesis suggests that the presence

of infections and aberrant cytokine regulation are successive steps in a single ethiopathogenic process. The

management of PFAPA is now considered to need the cooperation of ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialist. The

role of tonsillectomy in literature is controversial. Some studies reported high success rates with tonsillectomy,

further investigations are needed with larger numbers of patients. However, it is uncertain whether adenoidectomy

combined with tonsillectomy adds any additional benefit to tonsillectomy alone. A 2-year Caucasian/Azerbaijan girl

demonstrated repeated fever episodes with high levels (90-200mg/L) of C-reactive protein (CRP) since 6 months.

In neonatal period she was observed because of microcephalus, slight developmental delay and growth retardation,

muscle hypotonus and dysmorphic phenotype (broad forehead, hypertelorism, micrognathia and retrognathia,

fluffy eyebrows, long and tight eyelashes, long filtrum, narrow lips). She was consulted by genetic and diagnosed with

7p22 microdeletions. During a period of 10 month she was hospitalized 6 times with the high fever, cervical/adenitis

and sore throat Abdomen ultrasound, chest X-ray, EKG and EHHOKG were normal. Blood test for ANA, HIV, EBV,

Borreliosis, tuberculosis, urine test and urine culture revealed no pathology. Cervical ultrasound showed increased

lymphoid nodules with normal structure. There were no episodes of neutropenia. Procalcitonin level and blood

culture were repeatedly negatives. Brain MRI with spectroscopy was performed to exclude intracranial pathology

because of congenital problems. The patient was under ENT supervision to exclude the presence of otitis media

during the high fever episodes. Adenoid hypertrophy was considered.

PFAPA was diagnosed by a pediatrician (repeated episodes of fever with aphthous pharyngitis, cervical/adenitis and

high CRP levels, absence of neutropenia). Sequencing of genes was performed to exclude MEFV, MVK, TNFRSF1A,

IL1RN and other gene abnormalities, using Illumina TruSight One expanded panel (6700 genes). No monogenic

fever syndrome was revealed.

Prednisolone treatment 1mg/kg per os was used twice with excellent but temporary effect. Adenoidectomy was

performed. The tissue of adenoids and tonsils has all signs of chronic inflammation. After the surgical treatment in

a period of 7 months the patient was ill 4 times with no high fever (gastroenteritis, conjunctivitis, rhinopharyngitis

and varicella with acute otitis media) and just once needed antibiotic treatment.

Biography

Andrei Antonov has completed his Medical School in 2001 from S. M. Kirov Military Medical Academy, Saint-Petersburg, Russia and then postgraduate studies

in ENT from Tartu State University, Estonia. Currently he works as Head of ENT department in Tallinn Children Hospital and also in Tartu University ENT Clinic

and North Estonia Medical Centre, Tallinn.

Andrei Antonov, Neonat Pediatr Med 2019, Volume: 05