Unusual cerebral intraventricular hemorrhage and cardiomyopathy related to congenital cytomegalovirus from non-primary maternal infection: a case report
Victoria Malherbe, Stefanie Celen, Katherine Carkeek, Evelina Carapancea, Cinzia Auriti, Fiammetta Piersigilli

TL;DR
A baby with congenital cytomegalovirus infection showed rare brain bleeding and heart issues, highlighting the risks even when the mother had prior immunity.
Contribution
This case report highlights the rare but severe outcomes of congenital CMV from non-primary maternal infection.
Findings
The newborn showed intraventricular hemorrhage and cardiomyopathy due to congenital CMV.
CMV DNA was detected in multiple samples, confirming intrauterine transmission.
The child had a normal neurodevelopmental outcome at 9 months despite severe initial symptoms.
Abstract
Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection, resulting from non-primary maternal infection or reactivation during pregnancy, can cause serious fetal abnormalities, complications in the immediate neonatal period, and severe sequelae later in childhood. Maternal non-primary cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy is transmitted to the fetus in 0.5-2% of cases (1). An African full term male newbornwas delivered by emergency caesarean section. Due to signs of asphyxia at birth and clinical moderate encephalopathy, he underwent therapeutic hypothermia. Continuous full video-electroencephalography monitoring showed no seizures during the first 72 h, however, soon after rewarming, he presented refractory status epilepticus due to an intracranial hemorrhage, related to severe thrombocytopenia. The patient also presented signs of sepsis (hypotension and signs of reduced perfusions). An…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research · Infectious Encephalopathies and Encephalitis · Neurological Complications and Syndromes
