Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Brasilia periphery: a diagnostic challenge

Authors

  • Vitorino Modesto dos Santos Department of Internal Medicine from the Armed Forces Hospital (HFA), Estrada do Contorno do Bosque s/n, 70630-900, Brasilia-DF
  • Diana Aristótelis Rocha de Sá Department of Internal Medicine from the Armed Forces Hospital (HFA), Estrada do Contorno do Bosque s/n, 70630-900, Brasilia-DF
  • Thiago Zavascki Turra Department of Internal Medicine from the Armed Forces Hospital (HFA), Estrada do Contorno do Bosque s/n, 70630-900, Brasilia-DF
  • Nancy Mendonça Ferreira Borges Department of Internal Medicine from the Armed Forces Hospital (HFA), Estrada do Contorno do Bosque s/n, 70630-900, Brasilia-DF
  • Ulisses Mariano Nascimento Department of Internal Medicine from the Armed Forces Hospital (HFA), Estrada do Contorno do Bosque s/n, 70630-900, Brasilia-DF
  • Emanuel Adelino Medeiros Damasceno Catholic University Medical Course, Brasília-DF

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.558

Keywords:

Brazil, Brasília, diagnosis, Hantavirus, Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) is an emerging rodent-borne disease in the American continent, characterized by acute respiratory distress and a high case-fatality ratio. The present work describes a case of HPS, with favorable outcome, whose initial features were mistaken for leptospirosis or other less severe acute infections. METHODOLOGY: The case of a 32-year-old male with an uneventful course of HPS is reported. He was inadvertently infected at work by exposure to a rodent-contaminated environment in Brasília, Federal District vicinity, during May 2008. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Fever, headache and myalgia after exposure to a rodent-contaminated environment raised clinical suspicion. Non-cardiac pulmonary edema, hydrothorax, neutrophilia with band forms 26%, high hematocrit, thrombocytopenia, and elevated liver enzymes were observed. Leptospirosis and dengue were the main differential diagnoses because both pathogens are endemic in the area. Hantavirus IgM antibody-capture ELISA was positive, while tests for dengue, leptospirosis and yellow fever were negative. The prognosis for HPS is ominous and misdiagnoses may increase mortality. Better chances of survival depend on prompt intensive care support. Reports of moderate or less typical cases can raise the suspicion index among primary care and hospital-based physicians about this uncommon but severe condition that often affects previously healthy young individuals from developing countries, and subjects who interact with rodent-infested environments in North America. High awareness of HPS allowed successful management of the patient, even before establishing the diagnosis, by serological tests at the reference laboratory of the Ministry of Health. Clinical suspicion favored warning local health authorities about a new case of HPS.

Downloads

Published

2009-09-15

How to Cite

1.
Modesto dos Santos V, Rocha de Sá DA, Turra TZ, Ferreira Borges NM, Nascimento UM, Damasceno EAM (2009) Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Brasilia periphery: a diagnostic challenge. J Infect Dev Ctries 3:639–643. doi: 10.3855/jidc.558

Issue

Section

Case Reports

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.