Staphylococcus aureus has increasingly been recognized as a cause of severe invasive illness. We describe three children who died at our institution after rapidly progressive clinical deterioration from this infection, with necrotizing pneumonia and multiple-organ-system involvement. The identification of bilateral adrenal hemorrhage at autopsy was characteristic of the Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome, a constellation of findings usually associated with fulminant meningococcemia. The close genetic relationship among the three responsible isolates of S. aureus, one susceptible to methicillin and two resistant to methicillin, underscores the close relationship between virulent methicillin-susceptible S. aureus and methicillin-resistant S. aureus isolates now circulating in the community.
Although many of the congenital syndromes that used to be lethal no longer are, they are still routinely referred to as “lethal anomalies.” But the label is not only inaccurate, it is also dangerous: by portraying as a medical determination what is in fact a judgment about the child's quality of life, it wrests from the parents a decision that only the parents can make.
This article describes case studies of five children treated with vasopressin for refractory hypotension. In addition, physiology and pharmacology of vasopressin are reviewed in a comprehensive survey of the literature from 1966 until the present. In all five children, blood pressure increased immediately after vasopressin administration. The preliminary success of vasopressin for hypotension the setting of vasodilatory shock is promising. This limited use of vasopressin in the setting of refractory hypotension in these patients appears to be safe; the appropriate patient population and dose regimen are not yet determined.
The routine use of the NHBD has the potential to increase organ donation at our institution by 42%. We discuss the ethical issues relating to NHBDs required to properly include these patients as potential organ donors.
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