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Vol. 42. Issue S1.
Pages 68 (October 2020)
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Vol. 42. Issue S1.
Pages 68 (October 2020)
PP 58
Open Access
Idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome associated pulmonary hypertension in a child
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Y. Akcabelen*, T. Bayhan, G. Cinel, I. Ece, N. Ozbek
Ministry of Health Ankara City Hospital, Ankara, Turkey
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Objective: Hypereosinophilic syndrom (HES) is defined by showing eosinophilic infiltration in any tissue or organ and increased eosinophils in peripheral blood. Other pathologies that cause eosinophil increase must be excluded. Pulmonary eosinophilic infiltration may have different symptoms and signs, but clinical presentation as PHT has not been shown in children.

Case report: A 6-month-old girl presented with dyspnea and hypoxia. A blood cell count and a morphological evaluation of a peripheral blood smear and confirmed hypereosinophilia (white blood cells 40,600/μL, eosinophils 18,900/μL, hemoglobin 10.3g/dL, and platelets 425,000/μL). There was not any cellular morphological abnormalities in bone marrow aspiration examination. Pnomonia and parasites, allergic diseases, clonal abnormalities, cancer and vasculitis that might have caused HES were excluded. Echocardiogram showed 38mmHg for pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP), suggesting pulmonary hypertension (PHT). After exclusion of other causes such as vasculitis, connective tissue diseases, bronchopulmonary displasia, congenital heart diseases, lung diseases, and chronic thromboembolic PHT. The patient was diagnosed with pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with idiopathic HES. Methylprednisolone treatment was started at 2mg/kg/day. PHT and HES were both improved in the evaluation one month later.

Conclusion: Eosinophilic infiltration causes thickening and remodeling of the pulmonary artery intima and media, thereby causing pulmonary hypertension. Thus, PHT can be seen as HES clinical presentation. With corticosteroid therapy, HES and PHT clinical findings can be controlled.

Idiomas
Hematology, Transfusion and Cell Therapy
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