Severe Pertussis During Early Infancy from a High-Altitude Region: Two Clinical Cases and Literature Review
Hongju Chen, Sezhen Baima, Xiaoming Xu, Tao Wang, Jing Shi

TL;DR
This paper reports two severe pertussis cases in infants from a high-altitude region and discusses how altitude affects disease severity and treatment.
Contribution
The first high-altitude case series of severe infantile pertussis, revealing altitude-specific risk factors and management strategies.
Findings
High-altitude stressors like hypoxia and hypercoagulability worsen pertussis severity in infants.
Early non-invasive ventilation and anticoagulation improved outcomes in high-altitude pertussis cases.
Exchange transfusion was effective in treating extreme leukocytosis in one case.
Abstract
Objective: To investigate how the high-altitude environment modifies severe pertussis in young infants and analyze its pathophysiological mechanisms and clinical management implications. Methods: Clinical data of two young infants with severe pertussis residing at 3650 m were retrospectively analyzed, including presentation, laboratory findings, pathogen detection, treatment, and outcomes. A literature review explored synergistic interactions between high-altitude factors and pertussis pathophysiology. Results: Case 1 had macrolide-resistant Bordetella pertussis (MRBP, 23S rRNA A2047G) with peak WBC 52.25 × 109/L, and received cefoperazone-sulbactam, piperacillin-tazobactam and azithromycin, and was successfully treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole combined with exchange transfusion. Case 2 had Bordetella pertussis confirmed by PCR with peak WBC 36.55 × 109/L, receiving…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacterial Infections and Vaccines · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
