Summary

DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2013.202705

A 42-year-old gravida 5 para 3 woman delivered a male newborn at 36 weeks of gestation. She had no significant medical problems and her previous pregnancies led to healthy newborns. The current pregnancy was uneventful and the baby appeared healthy (body weight, 3190 g; Apgar score, 8/10/10).



Student Discussion

Student Discussion Document (pdf)

Hervé Delacour,1* Pierre Mornand,2 Sébastien Larréché,1 Jean Etienne Pilo,1 Audrey Mérens,1 and Patrick Imbert2

1Department of Biology and 2Maternity and Pediatry Ward, Bégin Military Teaching Hospital, Saint Mandé, France.
*Address correspondence to this author at: Bégin Military Teaching Hospital, Department of Biology, 69 Avenue de Paris, 94 163, Saint Mandé Cedex, France. Fax +33-1-43-98-54-61; e-mail [email protected].

Case Description

A 42-year-old gravida 5 para 3 woman delivered a male newborn at 36 weeks of gestation. She had no significant medical problems and her previous pregnancies led to healthy newborns. The current pregnancy was uneventful and the baby appeared healthy (body weight, 3190 g; Apgar score, 8/10/10). On the second day of life jaundice appeared. Laboratory tests revealed hyperbilirubinemia (total bilirubin 21.5 mg/dL; reference interval, <8.5 mg/dL), an agranulocytosis [absolute neutrophil count (ANC), <0.04 × 109/L; reference interval, 5–21 × 109/L], eosinophilia (0.83 × 109/L; reference interval, 0.5 × 109/L), and monocytosis (3.8 × 109/L; reference interval, <1.1 × 109/L). Hemoglobin (16.3 g/dL; reference interval, 14.5–22.5 g/dL), total white blood cell count (11.8 × 109/L; reference interval, 9.4 –34.0 × 109/L), and platelet count (200 × 109/L; reference interval, 150–300 × 109/L) were within reference intervals. Microscopic examination of a May-Grünwald-Giemsa–stained blood smear confirmed agranulocytosis. There was no sign of infection. Additional testing included negative blood, gastric aspirate, and ear swab culture results and C-reactive protein concentration within the reference interval. Agranulocytosis was still present the following day (ANC, 0.064 ×109/L). The jaundice was felt to be due to ABO hemolytic disease of the newborn (mother O negative, newborn B negative, direct antiglobulin test positive) and was treated successfully by a 36-h regimen of phototherapy. Conversely, agranulocytosis persisted (ANC, <0.04 ×109/L on day 6).

Questions to Consider

  • What are the most common etiologies of neonatal neutropenia?
  • What additional testing should be performed in evaluating this patient?
  • What are the potential clinical consequences of neutropenia, particularly in the neonatal period?

Final Publication and Comments

The final published version with discussion and comments from the experts appears in the May 2014 issue of Clinical Chemistry, approximately 3-4 weeks after the Student Discussion is posted.

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DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2013.202705
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