Open-access Advanced megaesophagus (Group III) secondary to vector-borne Chagas disease in a 20-month-old infant

Lactente de um ano e oito meses de idade com megaesôfago (Grupo III) por doença de Chagas adquirida vetorialmente

Abstracts

The authors report the case of a female infant with Group III (or Grade III) megaesophagus secondary to vector-borne Chagas disease, resulting in severe malnutrition that reversed after surgery (Heller technique). The infant was then treated with the antiparasitic drug benznidazole, and the infection was cured, as demonstrated serologically and parasitologically. After follow-up of several years without evidence of disease, with satisfactory weight and height development, the patient had her first child at age 23, in whom serological tests for Chagas disease yielded negative results. Thirty years after the initial examination, the patient's electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and chest radiography remained normal.

Infant; Megaesophagus (Grade III); Vector-borne Chagas disease


Os autores relatam um caso de lactente com megaesôfago do Grupo III por doença de Chagas vetorialmente adquirida, responsável por acentuada desnutrição, da qual se recuperou com a cirurgia de Heller. Submetida em seguida a tratamento da infecção chagásica com benzonidazol, logrou cura, parasito e sorologicamente demonstrada. Seguiram-se anos sem qualquer incidente, com desenvolvimento pondo-estatural normal. Teve seu primeiro filho aos 23 anos, em quem as provas sorológicas para doença de Chagas resultaram negativas. Decorridos 30 anos após o atendimento inicial, continuava com eletrocardiograma e ecocardiograma e/ou exame radiológico do coração normais.

Lactente; Megaesôfago (Grupo III); Doença de Chagas vetorial


CASE REPORT RELATO DE CASO

Advanced megaesophagus (Group III) secondary to vector-borne Chagas disease in a 20-month-old infant

Lactente de um ano e oito meses de idade com megaesôfago (Grupo III) por doença de Chagas adquirida vetorialmente

Anis RassiI,II; Joffre Marcondes de RezendeI; Anis Rassi JuniorII

IFaculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, GO

IIDepartamento de Cardiologia, Hospital Anis Rassi, Goiânia, GO

Address to Address to: Dr. Anis Rassi Hospital Anis Rassi Av. José Alves 453, Setor Oeste 74110-020 Goiânia, GO, Brasil Phone: 55 62 3227-9000; Fax: 55 62 3227-9121 e-mail: arassijr@terra.com.br, anisrassi@arh.com.br

ABSTRACT

The authors report the case of a female infant with Group III (or Grade III) megaesophagus secondary to vector-borne Chagas disease, resulting in severe malnutrition that reversed after surgery (Heller technique). The infant was then treated with the antiparasitic drug benznidazole, and the infection was cured, as demonstrated serologically and parasitologically. After follow-up of several years without evidence of disease, with satisfactory weight and height development, the patient had her first child at age 23, in whom serological tests for Chagas disease yielded negative results. Thirty years after the initial examination, the patient's electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and chest radiography remained normal.

Keywords: Infant. Megaesophagus (Grade III). Vector-borne Chagas disease.

RESUMO

Os autores relatam um caso de lactente com megaesôfago do Grupo III por doença de Chagas vetorialmente adquirida, responsável por acentuada desnutrição, da qual se recuperou com a cirurgia de Heller. Submetida em seguida a tratamento da infecção chagásica com benzonidazol, logrou cura, parasito e sorologicamente demonstrada. Seguiram-se anos sem qualquer incidente, com desenvolvimento pondo-estatural normal. Teve seu primeiro filho aos 23 anos, em quem as provas sorológicas para doença de Chagas resultaram negativas. Decorridos 30 anos após o atendimento inicial, continuava com eletrocardiograma e ecocardiograma e/ou exame radiológico do coração normais.

Palavras-chaves: Lactente. Megaesôfago (Grupo III). Doença de Chagas vetorial.

INTRODUCTION

Commonly, megaesophagus is a relatively late manifestation of digestive tract involvement in Chagas disease. Its occurrence in children is rare. Among 1,761 cases of megaesophagus treated at the Hospital of the School of Medicine of the Federal University of Goiás during a period of 21 years, only 9 (0.5%) cases of children aged 1 to 10 years have been reported1.

Santos et al.2mreported 40 cases in children aged up to 12 years, of which only five were 5 years old or less; the youngest was aged 2 years and 6 months.

Exceptionally, the onset of megaesophagus is even earlier in infants, for example, since it may appear in the congenital form of Chagas disease3-5 and in the vector-borne form of the disease when the diagnosis of the initial period of infection is known6-8.

The precocity of the involvement of the digestive tract can be explained by Koeberle9, who demonstrated that denervation of the Auerbach's and the Meissner's plexuses already occurs in the acute phase of the infection and that a 90% denervation results in motor impairment of the organ at the onset of megaesophagus. He expressed this viewpoint in a phrase that has become well known: "The fate of the chagasic patient is defined in the acute phase."

The case we report is noteworthy for describing the youngest child in the known literature on megaesophagus secondary to the vector-borne form of Chagas disease, as well as for its evolution.

The patient was aged one year and eight months, had Group III megaesophagus, according to the radiological classification of Rezende et al.10, with important manifestations of the condition, and was accompanied by one of the authors (Rassi A) for thirty years.

CASE REPORT

Female patient (registration number 350/77), white, born on February 9, 1976 in rural Angical (BA) and a resident thereof, attended to on October 20, 1977.

For 4 months the child had difficulty in swallowing solid food of appropriate consistency for her age. As soon as the food was swallowed, the child regurgitated and then cried as if requesting another portion, which was also regurgitated. Concomitantly, she was getting weaker, gradually lost weight, and cried frequently. Occasionally, she could swallow liquids without regurgitating. When her parents noticed that home medication was not effective and that the child's general condition had worsened, they decided to seek medical attention. Her bowel function was normal. There was nothing worthy of notice in her record. It should be emphasized that no clinical sign recorded suggested an initial period of Trypanosoma cruzi infection, nor did she receive blood transfusion or its derivatives. The child was born full-term, by normal delivery, in a midwifeassisted home birth, with apparently normal height and weight, the result of a second pregnancy, with no gestational complications. She was breastfed up to 11 months of age, started to walk at 13 months of age, and began to speak at two years of age. The child had lived from birth in rural Angical (BA) in a house infested by triatomines. Both parents were alive, as well as a brother (the firstborn), and they were all apparently healthy. The mother underwent an indirect immunofluorescence test for Chagas disease on March 2, 1978, and indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemagglutination, and ELISA tests for Chagas disease on May 8, 2007, both with negative results. The patient appeared to be chronically suffering, was dehydrated and malnourished, in poor nutritional status (Figure 1A), and weighed 7.5kg (15% deficit). The height was not recorded, and the axillary temperature was 36ºC. Her heart rhythm was regular, with a rate persistently above 140 per minute, and her BP was 70/50mmHg. The adipose tissue was greatly reduced, and the skeletal muscles were hypotrophic. The esophagus radiograph showed Grade III megaesophagus (Figure 1B). The chest radiograph showed a normal cardiac area and pleuropulmonary fields. The electrocardiogram showed sinus tachycardia (187bpm).




Indirect immunofluorescence and complement fixation tests for Chagas disease were positive. Xenodiagnoses performed with four boxes, each containing 10 triatomines, were all positive.

The patient was admitted to the Hospital of the School of Medicine of the Federal University of Goiás (Goiânia, GO) on October 20, 1977. After receiving parenteral nutrition for correction of nutritional deficits, she underwent surgery (Heller's extramucosal cardiomyotomy) on April 3, 1978. After surgery, she was able to swallow food normally, showing excessive appetite and gaining weight. By May 17, 1978, she already weighed 10kg, with normal adipose tissue and skeletal muscles (Figure 1C). Then she underwent some exams, which showed the following results: the chest radiograph and electrocardiogram were normal, the esophagus radiograph showed a size reduction when compared to the exam conducted prior to the surgery, and the barium enema revealed a slightly elongated sigmoid.

Aiming at the specific treatment of Chagas disease, we outlined the parasite-serological profile of the patient by xenodiagnosis and serological tests (complement fixation and indirect fluorescent antibody tests) (Tables 1 and 2, which also include the same tests conducted at the first consultation).

She was treated with benznidazole at a dose of 10mg/kg/ day, twice daily (12/12h) for 60 days. As a side effect, she had generalized urticaria, predominantly on the trunk, which lasted for only three days and was treated with a commercial product made of dexchlorpheniramine and betamethasone.

The patient was discharged on July 1, 1978. She remained in Goiânia until December 15, 1980, to undergo repeated control examinations after specific treatment, including xenodiagnosis, conducted fortnightly, and serological tests, conducted quarterly (Tables 1 and 2). She returned to her hometown on December 16, 1980, to reside in a house located in an urban area and not infested by triatomines.

She was followed up for several years without incidents, with normal height-weight development (Figure 1D.) She had her menarche in 1988. She married in 1995 and, in 1999, had her first child, who weighed 2,350g and whose serological tests for Chagas disease (indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemagglutination, and ELISA), conducted in 2007, were negative (Figure 1E). Later reassessments of the patient, a total of 5 in the period between 1987 and 2006, showed continued negative results of xenodiagnosis(Table 1) and serological tests, now with the addition of indirect hemagglutination and ELISA tests but excluding the complement fixation test (Table 2). In these reassessments, the electrocardiogram and echocardiogram and/or heart radiological exams were consistently normal.

DISCUSSION

Although extremely rare, and therefore worthy of disclosure, there are cases of Grade III megaesophagus secondary to Chagas disease in early childhood, either in the congenital transmission form or in the vector-borne transmission form.

In this case, the possibility of a congenital form was excluded by the negative results of the maternal serological tests on two occasions, indicating a vector-borne transmission; the initial period of infection was not diagnosed, which is usual in the natural history of Chagas disease11.

This case demonstrated five important facts: I) the ignorance of the parents, which caused the delay in bringing the child to medical treatment; II) the evolution of megaesophagus to Grade III within a short period of time; III) the importance of the surgical treatment, which allowed the fast recovery of the patient's nutritional status; IV) the value of the etiological treatment, which resulted in the cure of Chagas disease; and V) the interruption of the Chagas disease epidemiological cycle by the elimination of T. cruzi from a human host.

Received in 18/11/2010

Accepted in28/07/2011

References

  • 1. Rezende JM, Moreira H. Forma digestiva da doença de Chagas. In: Brener Z, Andrade ZA, Barral-Netto M, editors. Trypanosoma cruzi e Doença de Chagas, 2Ş ed. Rio de Janeiro (RJ): Guanabara Koogan; 2000. p. 297-343.
  • 2. Santos AM, Jorge J, Santana E, Rosa H, Teixeira AS, Rezende JM. Megaesôfago chagásico na infância. Aspectos clínicos. Rev Goiana Med 1974;20:171-190.
  • 3. Atias A, Almonte C. Megaesófago en un lactante con Enfermedad de Chagas probablemente congénita. Bol Chil Parasitol 1962;17:46-48.
  • 4. Tafuri WL, Lopes ER, Nunan B. Doença de Chagas congênita. Estudo clínicopatológico de um caso com sobrevida de seis meses. Rev Inst Med Trop São Paulo 1973;15:322-330.
  • 5. Bitencourt ACL. Doença de Chagas congênita na Bahia. Rev Baiana Saude Publ 1984;11:165-208.
  • 6. Koeberle F. Enteropatias e enteromegalias. Simpósio Internacional sobre Enfermedad de Chagas. Buenos Aires: Sociedad Argentina Parasitologia; 1972. p. 77-84.
  • 7. Rassi A, Rezende JM, Doles J. Caso de doença de Chagas observado desde o período inicial da infecção, com aparecimento precoce de megaesôfago e megacólon. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 1968;2:303-315.
  • 8. Dias JCP. Doença de Chagas em Bambuí, Minas Gerais, Brasil. Estudo clínico - epidemiológico a partir da fase aguda, entre1940 e 1982. [Tese]. Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais. Belo Horizonte (MG); 1982. 376 p.
  • 9. Koeberle F. Patogenia da moléstia de Chagas. Estudo dos órgãos musculares ôcos. Rev Goiana Med 1957;3:155-180.
  • 10. Rezende JM, Lauar KM, Oliveira AR. Aspectos clínicos e radiológicos da aperistalsis do esôfago. Rev Bras Gastroenterol 1960;12:247-262.
  • 11. Rassi A, Rassi Junior A, Rassi GG. Fase aguda. In: Brenner Z, Andrade ZA, Barral-Netto M, editors. Trypanosoma cruzi e Doença de Chagas. 2Ş ed. Rio de Janeiro (RJ): Guanabara Koogan; 2000. p. 231-245.
  • Address to:
    Dr. Anis Rassi
    Hospital Anis Rassi
    Av. José Alves 453, Setor Oeste
    74110-020 Goiânia, GO, Brasil
    Phone: 55 62 3227-9000; Fax: 55 62 3227-9121
    e-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      24 Apr 2012
    • Date of issue
      Apr 2012

    History

    • Received
      18 Nov 2010
    • Accepted
      28 July 2011
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